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unidentified
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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 Monday for another week of the show. | ||
And, of course, we have got a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots going on in the news. | ||
They're talking about this coronavirus pandemic. | ||
I think we ought to give that a little... I think we ought to give that a look. | ||
So we'll be talking tonight, once again, about the coronavirus. | ||
Although I have to say, tonight the news is a little bit more fresh. | ||
It's a little bit more interesting tonight. | ||
Last week, of course, and I think it's been this way actually for like two weeks now, it seems completely formulaic. | ||
Maybe that's why I'm tired of the virus. | ||
Because of the formula. | ||
It's the numbers, it's the relief package, it's the news conference, it's the stock market. | ||
Right? | ||
But today we're going to mix it up a little bit. | ||
What I want to talk about, our main story is going to be about the latest developments with the virus. | ||
We're going to be looking at the social distancing guidelines which got extended by 30 days. | ||
So if you remember, initially those social distancing guidelines released by the White House which said to work from home, which said to cancel school, maintain six feet from other people, things like that. | ||
That was supposed to expire today. | ||
That was supposed to expire today. | ||
That was 15 days ago that those guidelines were released by the White House, it was. | ||
15 days to slow the spread. | ||
So yesterday, on Sunday, one day before the guidelines expired, the President extended the guidelines for another 30 days. | ||
He had talked last week about ending the guidelines by Easter, which is April 12th. | ||
I don't have my April calendar up yet. | ||
Still technically March, but we were supposed to, or rather he was planning on, or he said last week that he was looking at Easter as the day that schools would open back up, that work would open back up, that the social distancing guidelines might finally expire, but we've extended a full 30 days and now it seems like we won't be released from these Until May or maybe even June. | ||
So we'll be talking about that. | ||
We'll be talking about maybe the situation with the ventilators. | ||
I don't know if we'll have time for that. | ||
We'll talk about this new test. | ||
I think I definitely want to get to that. | ||
There's a new five-minute coronavirus test. | ||
So last week I was telling you how far we've come on the testing as far as availability goes. | ||
How widespread the testing is becoming. | ||
The fact that we have tested, as of today, more than a million people. | ||
I think as of Friday it was 600,000. | ||
So, lots and lots of... That was the latest number on Friday. | ||
I don't know if we tested 400,000 people over the weekend, but... | ||
It was very, very bad. | ||
Like I said, five per every one million people were being tested in the United States. | ||
Now we're up to thousands per million in some states. | ||
We're up to a million tests overall. | ||
And now they just developed a five-minute test. | ||
So previously, you had to get your test sent to a lab. | ||
And even when they were doing the automatic lab, at first it was a manual lab and it took a long time. | ||
Then they did the automatic labs, which took 24 to 36 hours. | ||
And now they've just developed a five-minute test where you can go to a drive-thru testing center and they'll make these available across the country. | ||
They said they could scale it up to 50,000 tests per day and the president ordered for starters 50,000 of these tests and you go in and you take the test and five minutes later you have the result and it's very accurate. | ||
So we'll talk about that but I also want to talk about Excuse me. | ||
The other interesting thing I want to talk about tonight is what's happening in Hungary. | ||
I don't know if anybody saw this. | ||
This wasn't like primetime news, but some American news outlets are reporting on this. | ||
If you know the news, you know where I'm going with this. | ||
I've been saying for weeks that this is like the biggest crisis probably or maybe of our lifetimes, certainly a once-in-a-lifetime crisis, a crisis of this nature, of this variety, unprecedented in American history, and the president should use this as an opportunity to take control of the situation. | ||
And by that I mean to use the government to not just answer the crisis, but to expand his personal power and then use his personal power to keep non-coronavirus related campaign promises. | ||
Things like building the border wall, shutting down legal immigration, shutting down illegal immigration, even things like trade, work visas, I mean all kinds of things. | ||
You could even bring home the troops under the guise of coronavirus. | ||
I've been an advocate really since it started. | ||
I don't know if it was February or March, but I've been saying for months, weeks, that the president should utilize this, obviously. | ||
Take advantage of the emergency. | ||
Expand your power. | ||
And I'm not like, you know, in favor of a dictatorship, but this is what the left does, this is what the Democrats do, this is how politics operates. | ||
When a crisis visits the country, an emergency happens, that's the only time that you have the pretext or the capital to get what you want done. | ||
We know that the nature of democracy in Congress is slow, it's divided, it's constantly bickering in the Parliament or the legislative body, the Congress, whatever. | ||
And somebody must be taking notes. | ||
Somebody has done this. | ||
Unfortunately, it's just not here. | ||
I want to talk a little bit about what's being done in Hungary, just to give you an idea, because some people are out there saying, well, you can't close restaurants because that's violating the Constitution, and you can't order a shelter in place because that's not freedom, and we need to be going out and, I don't even know, drinking and watching the game as some symbol of freedom. | ||
But just to give you an idea, in Hungary they just passed legislation in their parliament which allows Viktor Orban, who is the president, to rule by decree indefinitely. | ||
There's no timeline. | ||
He has absolute power. | ||
He rules by decree. | ||
In other words, he doesn't need the parliament to pass legislation. | ||
He doesn't need the courts. | ||
He can simply put down a ruling and it becomes law. | ||
Indefinitely. | ||
The parliament is suspended. | ||
We'll get into all the different measures but this is just a few examples of what is to come. | ||
There's penalties on journalists. | ||
Big penalties on people that break quarantine. | ||
And that's just to give you an idea of what is possible if you have a strong, a strong-willed nationalist government, a nationalist regime in power. | ||
And think about what could be achieved if we reach something like that. | ||
Now, I'm not under any illusions. | ||
I don't think that that would ever happen in America, anything close to that. | ||
Because we're a different country than Hungary, and we're a different country than a lot of these countries like Turkey, or Russia, or China. | ||
Where they have a more centralized, concentrated, autocratic type system. | ||
But it just serves as an example. | ||
Maybe that's aspirational in some sense. | ||
We're not going to achieve that, but it gives you an idea of what becomes possible in a time of crisis. | ||
And what happens when you can mobilize the heartland, when you can mobilize the base of the country. | ||
With a strong nationalist regime. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
Hopefully that'll shake things up a little bit. | ||
I know, and I don't know how you're feeling about it, but it's like I am not even so much going crazy because of the quarantine. | ||
I live inside as it is. | ||
I live underground. | ||
I feel like the mole, the mole man, you know? | ||
And the surface world is going crazy. | ||
But I've been burrowing underneath the ground for years. | ||
I've been preparing for this for years, slowly gathering my strength beneath the surface. | ||
And I emerge when crisis happens, I emerge to the surface world to buy Taco Bell, or to buy a Nintendo Switch. | ||
So I'm not being driven crazy by the, and I've been telling you this, by the quarantine. | ||
I'm fine under the quarantine. | ||
It's just the standstill with the news. | ||
You check any news outlet and every story is some angle about coronavirus. | ||
Oh, you know, people are complaining about the quarantine. | ||
This person said this. | ||
Well, this guy speculates about that. | ||
Trump isn't giving enough ventilators. | ||
And it's just, like I said the other week, it's the news conference, it's the numbers, it's the relief bill, and the stock market. | ||
So hopefully, I mean, we do have our numbers tonight. | ||
We'll be talking about the guidelines being extended. | ||
We'll talk about the five-minute test. | ||
We will also look at our numbers. | ||
I've got a streamlined whiteboard. | ||
I think this one actually looks worse than the other one, if you want to know the truth. | ||
I tried to clean it up a little bit, but it didn't really work. | ||
I was like, you know, why don't we just put the top eight? | ||
We don't even read the I usually display the top 16 confirmed cases, top 16 countries with the most confirmed cases, but I figured we don't even read the second side of the board. | ||
We only read the first. | ||
And that's really the only one I'm watching. | ||
So, I tried to clean it up, but I think it actually looks more bad. | ||
I think the handwriting is degenerating. | ||
I don't know what that's all about. | ||
I just can't make it out. | ||
I try. | ||
I rewrite it and write it. | ||
So the handwriting's degenerating. | ||
The layout is not enviable, but I'm doing my best. | ||
Maybe I gotta hire an assistant. | ||
unidentified
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Maybe that's the one other thing women are good for, is the handwriting. | |
My mom said, you should get a woman assistant. | ||
You should get a woman assistant. | ||
No! | ||
My father told me that, not my mom. | ||
My father said, you should get a woman assistant. | ||
The voice changed. | ||
You know, when I do my mom, it's, uh, you should get a woman, it's, you should get a woman assistant. | ||
And he said, because women are taskmasters. | ||
He said, they're, women are taskmasters and, you know, they're really gonna help you out. | ||
I said, like, I'm not, I don't, I don't trust women, I don't trust women in this profession, in this career. | ||
You know what the expression is on the show, no e-girls, and more broadly, like, no women in the movement, okay? | ||
I've seen it happen too many times. | ||
AIM, or rather, Identity Europa, this happened. | ||
This happened to some people in relationships on Twitter. | ||
This happened to Peter Sweden, Warren Southern. | ||
I mean, I don't have to read through the whole list, right, of all the different instances you have of women causing problems. | ||
I said, you know, no, you can't trust them. | ||
You can't rely on them. | ||
I'm trying to run a business here! | ||
pressure gets too much. | ||
They bail and they turn on everybody. | ||
And also, scandal. | ||
You know, I don't want to have some assistant around here and have that constant temptation. | ||
I'm trying to run a business here. | ||
I don't need somebody with a skirt and whatever hanging around. | ||
But they do have better handwriting. | ||
That's That's the one thing that they do have going for them. | ||
That's the thing that I think about. | ||
They do add a little bit of a touch in those kinds of things. | ||
So maybe if I hire her and she wears a burka, then we'll be okay. | ||
Maybe I'll hire her and she wears the full... what do they call that? | ||
The burka and the niqab, right? | ||
They have the eye visor and they have the full... They'll look like the Tusken Raiders wives. | ||
Have you ever seen Star Wars? | ||
They'll look like the girl Tusken Raiders. | ||
And maybe they just have a separate... Maybe I'll have to get some kind of an office and we'll do it specially so that there's two separate entrances. | ||
Maybe there'll be a walkie-talkie and, you know, she enters from one door, I enter from the other door. | ||
There's a, you know, impenetrable wall that separates and we'll just talk on the phone. | ||
Anyway, so I don't know what the handwriting's not so great. | ||
But we've got the whiteboard and we'll also be talking about Hungary. | ||
So it should be a good show. | ||
So I think it's going to be a little bit more interesting tonight. | ||
I'm trying to keep it fresh. | ||
I'm trying to keep it a little bit dynamic in these times. | ||
I know you're relying on me. | ||
You're counting on me to entertain you. | ||
What else is going on? | ||
Nothing else is going on. | ||
No sports. | ||
No politics. | ||
Netflix and Disney and Hulu and even Hollywood have suspended production of television shows and movies. | ||
The theaters are closed down. | ||
What are you gonna do? | ||
You have to watch me. | ||
Who else would you be watching? | ||
You have to watch this. | ||
So we'll get into all of that before we do I do just want to say you know we don't really know how this thing is gonna turn out in the end and that's been the evolving conversation obviously over the past few weeks is what is the long-term timetable what does that look like what what is 12 months 9 months what does that look like 12 to 9 months from now | ||
And I gotta tell you, increasingly the thing that scares me is not so much the cyclical nature of the virus, because it seems like we are getting a handle on these social distancing procedures. | ||
It seems like, as I said last week, the president has been swiftly mobilizing all of our resources. | ||
The Federal Reserve, fiscal policy with the Congress. | ||
We saw that $6 trillion relief package last week. | ||
Excuse me, my throat's a little dry here. | ||
I haven't been drinking enough water. | ||
So, the President's been mobilizing our economic tools, the monetary, the fiscal policy, the stimulus last week. | ||
We have more ventilators being produced. | ||
I think the President has gotten 20 companies to now produce ventilators under the Defense Production Act. | ||
We're getting masks produced by all different kinds of companies. | ||
You see that the social distancing is going into effect. | ||
I think three-quarters of the population are under some kind of shelter in place. | ||
So, point being, across the board it seems like we're getting a handle on a lot of these challenges. | ||
First it was the testing, then it was the social distancing, then it was this economic stimulus, now it appears to be these shortages of critical medical supplies and health care resources, hospital beds. | ||
And we talked about that last week. | ||
In the next week to two weeks it's going to get really bad in the hospitals. | ||
And a lot of deaths are going to stack up and hospitals are going to be overburdened like they've never been before. | ||
That'll be the next phase. | ||
But it seems like we are more or less prepared for a lot of that. | ||
I think all that's kind of predictable. | ||
And what you would expect in a pandemic. | ||
I think every step of the way has been basically something expected. | ||
And something that, even if it's abnormal, I think fits into people's frame of what they might expect in a crisis scenario, right? | ||
In the sense that, what is the most that's being asked of people during this time of pestilence, of plague? | ||
It is that you stay at home. | ||
It's that you don't go to school, you don't go to work. | ||
Maybe you stock up on supplies, money's a little bit tighter, and if you get sick, maybe you die, and maybe it's a severe case. | ||
All of those sacrifices that a person has to make, or all of those consequences, and not to minimize those things, But it is to say that I think that fits into a lot of people's frame, and maybe not right away but certainly four weeks into this, just about three or four weeks into this, I think that fits into people's frame of what we can expect out of this pandemic. | ||
I think people, either at the outset or by the middle of it, they understand that that is what we can expect from this. | ||
What I'm thinking about now is what people are not going to expect. | ||
And what I'm talking about is not economic And it's not public health, but it's the social order. | ||
And I don't know, I don't want to be an alarmist here. | ||
I don't want you to take this, you know, take this with a grain of salt. | ||
It's just something to think about. | ||
It's just something to keep in mind. | ||
The next thing that I'm concerned about last week... So, well, let's go all the way back. | ||
Three weeks ago I was concerned about the testing, right? | ||
I said the big problem is the testing. | ||
That's the big variable. | ||
And then they cleaned up the testing. | ||
And then the week after that, what did I say? | ||
I talked about the stock market, the economy maybe. | ||
And I said we need stimulus, we need dramatic action. | ||
Last week I said the ventilators and the respirators and hospital bed space. | ||
This week I'm talking about the social order. | ||
I think that's the next phase of this that we have to mind because what I'm seeing now across the country and what I've seen internationally, what is sort of this final phase? | ||
What is the peak coronavirus look like in a lot of these countries? | ||
Prisoners are being released from jail. | ||
Do you see this? | ||
The virus spreads in prisons, obviously, because it's high population density, people in close quarters, and you have to interact with people very frequently. | ||
You don't have the same health standards in a prison that you do even in, like, a school or a workplace. | ||
So it's spreading in prisons, so they're releasing prisoners. | ||
Police are now tied up because police have to be enforcing quarantine and police have to be helping in some cases with hospitals or in a lot of cases helping with health care functions or they're trying to disperse public gatherings. | ||
Police resources are limited so they're saying for example in some states that they're not going to go after people for misdemeanors, they're not going to go after people for minor crimes like in California or in other places where resources are tight. | ||
You see where I'm going with this? | ||
So prisoners are being released. | ||
Police are being tied up. | ||
People are being forced at home and they're becoming stir crazy. | ||
People are losing their jobs. | ||
They're staying home from school. | ||
3.3 million unemployed claims last week. | ||
People are stressed. | ||
They're anxious. | ||
In some cases they're hungry. | ||
They're running out of options. | ||
They're going bankrupt. | ||
You see that workers are going on strike. | ||
There's a strike being planned for an Amazon warehouse, I think, in New York. | ||
There are strikes planned in other companies, in other major companies. | ||
I think there was one for Whole Foods. | ||
They're planning a big strike. | ||
And I think this is the case across the country. | ||
You're going to see a lot of strikes. | ||
You're going to see shortages in hospitals. | ||
People are going to be dying. | ||
Deaths will be mounting rapidly in the next one to two weeks. | ||
All of this is a recipe for social breakdown. | ||
Supply chains being disrupted, grocery stores might not be able to restock. | ||
If Whole Foods goes on strike, if Amazon goes on strike, what happens if, excuse me, what happens if truckers go on strike? | ||
What happens if other critical nodes in the supply chain simply cease to show up to work? | ||
You're gonna see some real problems. | ||
And that's not to say that the recession is not a problem, and I think we are nearing that point. | ||
It's not to say that the coronavirus isn't a problem, obviously. | ||
But it is to say that those things, the reciprocal nature of the economy, the coronavirus, the strain on the public sector resources, this is compounding and snowballing. | ||
And it's creating a situation where it's like, you know, you're on thin ice here as far as the social order goes, as far as maintaining public order goes. | ||
And specifically in some of these cities like Chicago or Baltimore or LA or San Francisco, it's like a powder keg. | ||
And I think that if things continue to go in this direction, if they continue to deteriorate, all it takes is a spark. | ||
I don't know what that looks like. | ||
We have no idea what the next 4, 8, 12 weeks holds. | ||
But I am very very concerned in a situation like this, I don't need to tell you, the public order is very very fragile. | ||
People are talking about how united and resilient we are and so on, and all I'm going to say is the government needs to act fast to paper over a lot of these things, to band-aid over these things, just keep things together long enough for when there's light at the end of the tunnel. | ||
Because I'm seeing a lot of these trends. | ||
And, you know, when I'm talking about prisoners being released, in a lot of cases it's like white-collar criminals. | ||
In a lot of cases they're not releasing like, you know, terrorists and serial killers. | ||
And, you know, it's not like Dark Knight Rises where they're blasting open the gates of the prison. | ||
It's not the storming of the Bastille. | ||
But it is happening. | ||
And the police resources are being occupied elsewhere. | ||
And the strikes are happening. | ||
And the supply chains have already been disrupted. | ||
because global commerce is disrupted, Manufacturing in China, manufacturing in India, in Southeast Asia. | ||
It's not just China and India. | ||
It's also like Indonesia and Vietnam and other places. | ||
Is it Indonesia or Indonesia? | ||
I never... I think it's Indonesia. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So, the supply chains globally are breaking down, the supply chains in the United States may be disrupted, and all of this is a recipe for a very, very fragile situation, and it's something to keep in mind. | ||
You might be prepared with your food, you might be prepared with your water, but it's also something to think about to be prepared for some kind of civil disorder. | ||
And again, I don't know if that's likely at this point. | ||
I'm not saying like, yeah, oh, it's everybody getting your bomb shelter because the boogaloo is happening. | ||
The boogaloo, by the way, is a totally astroturfed Fed meme, but you understand what I'm saying. | ||
I'm not trying to tell you that civil war is coming tomorrow, but it's something to keep in mind that we are in a very precarious position economically, as far as our public services go, as far as law enforcement goes. | ||
And we've always got the military, but in a situation like this, you could see it deteriorate very rapidly if you take a sharp left turn in, you know, somewhere down the line in the next three to four weeks, because that's when it's gonna start to heat up. | ||
So something to keep in mind, just something to be aware of. | ||
But with that out of the way, you know, just a little bit of a warning, kind of setting the stage for this week. | ||
With that out of the way, we're gonna dive in and we'll look at our latest numbers here. | ||
We're gonna pull out the whiteboard. | ||
This, this is the whiteboard and we're going to look at our latest numbers of confirmed, don't laugh, don't laugh at the board. | ||
It just doesn't look balanced. | ||
It just doesn't look, there's too much, there's almost nothing on the, the right, your right, on the right side of the board there. | ||
Maybe you're going to say it's not that bad. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I don't, I don't love it. | ||
I think it's messy. | ||
And the, for some reason the glare is like particularly bad. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't really read it. | |
I hope you can read it. | ||
I did turn down the brightness a ton. | ||
When we get the new studio, that's not going to be a problem, okay? | ||
But let's see, we are looking at our... Whoops, let's make this a little longer here so we can reach. | ||
These are our latest numbers of confirmed coronavirus cases. | ||
We are up to 788,652 worldwide confirmed coronavirus cases. | ||
8,652 worldwide confirmed coronavirus cases. | ||
This is up from 586,000 on Friday, if I recall correctly. | ||
It was less than 6%. | ||
We are nearing 800,000 on Monday. | ||
We're gonna hit 800,000 tomorrow. | ||
So think of that. | ||
200,000 cases between tomorrow and Friday. | ||
And what is that? | ||
Four days? | ||
We're going to hit 800,000 tomorrow. | ||
So think of that. | ||
200,000 cases between tomorrow and Friday. | ||
And what is that? | ||
Four days? | ||
200,000 cases. | ||
To give you an idea of how many people are getting infected worldwide on a daily basis or at least adding to the number of confirmed cases. | ||
I have a feeling the number is actually much higher than this, by the way. | ||
And I have been saying this, but you factor in China and you've probably got millions in China. | ||
And you factor in India, and probably you've got a million in India. | ||
I mean, I haven't been following India too closely, but the numbers that they're reporting of confirmed cases, they're reporting less than 2,000. | ||
They put the whole country on lockdown. | ||
I think it's 1.3 billion people. | ||
The whole country is on lockdown. | ||
And they're telling us that A thousand people have the virus seriously in India where they practically live on top of each other and they wipe their asses with their hands and they and you know I don't mean that to be nasty but they just don't have the hygiene standards that even they have in China they don't have the The sanitation infrastructure that they even have in developing countries elsewhere. | ||
India is a country that just does not have that going on for them. | ||
They just don't have the hygiene, the sanitation. | ||
It just isn't there. | ||
And they've got a billion people, and the population density is so high, and they're living on top of each other. | ||
And the government puts the whole country on lockdown. | ||
We're supposed to believe that there's only 800,000 in the world that have it? | ||
There's probably, you know, 250,000 in America. | ||
You know, which is maybe double the amount that are confirmed in the United States alone. | ||
And we're the third most populous country, way behind India and China. | ||
Imagine what it's like in Beijing. | ||
Imagine what it's like in India. | ||
Imagine what it's like in a lot of these countries where they just haven't rolled out the testing and they don't have the infrastructure to even confirm and report the cases. | ||
Or the government is lying in those cases. | ||
So... | ||
So, 800,000 cases. | ||
I mean, it's a useful metric just to give you some idea, but there's probably way, way more. | ||
In the United States, we're up to 163,305. | ||
We hit 100,000 on Friday, I think. | ||
Or, I'm sorry. | ||
We hit 100,000 cases... Yes! | ||
Yes, we did. | ||
We hit 100,000 cases, I believe it was on Thursday or Friday last week. | ||
I'm sorry, we had 100,000 cases. | ||
Yes, yes, we did. | ||
We hit 100,000 cases, I believe it was on Thursday or Friday last week. | ||
We're up to 163,000 today. | ||
And we'll be up to 200,000 before the end of the week. | ||
And that number is not slowing down. | ||
We had, let me take a look at the number of confirmed cases in the last 24 hours. | ||
23,000 new cases in the last 24 hours. | ||
And it's basically been about 20,000 new cases every day since Thursday or Friday. | ||
I think it was 80,000, 85,000 on Thursday. | ||
I think it was 105 on Friday, 125 on Saturday, 145 on Sunday. | ||
And now close to 165 today. | ||
So we're adding between 18 and 22,000 cases every 24 hours in the United States and that's not going to stop anytime soon. | ||
In Italy we're up to 101,991 cases which is incredible because understand Italy has a population that's a fraction of the size of ours. | ||
Spain is up to 87,956. | ||
China, 81,470. | ||
Germany, 66,927 cases. | ||
France, 44,550. Iran, 41,495. | ||
And the United Kingdom is up to 22,141. | ||
So obviously the epicenter of the virus is in Europe. | ||
We know this. | ||
We have known this for a time, you know, and it's more fitting to compare maybe like the top four European countries or the top five to the United States than comparing the United States to Italy, right? | ||
For obvious reasons. | ||
It's more fair given the population size to compare the United States with 350 million to maybe the entire continent of Europe, which I think has 400 million or something like that. | ||
It's more than the United States, but I think that's a more reasonable comparison than to say, oh, look at the United States and then look at Italy, Spain, France, Germany, the UK, right? | ||
Just because of proportionality. | ||
But it is getting bad out there. | ||
And the number to watch increasingly is going to be the number of people dead from the virus. | ||
In the United States we're up to 3,000 people dead. | ||
We hit 1,500 people dead on Friday. | ||
It's 3,100 now. | ||
So that number doubled in just the time over the weekend. | ||
So the numbers are going up and you know in a sense as I've been saying this is good because the testing Is really the cause of this? | ||
The virus has been being transmitted for weeks and it is probably transmitted to an extent that we don't even know. | ||
Way more people have the virus than we know about and they're either asymptomatic or if they have mild cases or if they have severe or mild cases they're unreported. | ||
And there might be false negatives out there too. | ||
And that's maybe the smallest category of the ones I just listed. | ||
But you've got all these people out there that are asymptomatic, mild cases, undiagnosed cases, potentially even people with false positives. | ||
I mean the tests are, or I'm sorry, false negatives. | ||
The tests are basically accurate. | ||
Well, you still do have those who slipped through the cracks. | ||
There are people that are still in the incubation period. | ||
It's still being transmitted. | ||
So that number is not the complete picture. | ||
That's the number of people tested and confirmed. | ||
And the President has said that we have surpassed now 1 million tests, which is a big deal. | ||
That's a lot of people getting the test. | ||
And it shows that our capacity for testing is now through the roof. | ||
They stopped talking about testing because the testing is so good. | ||
They're testing now 50,000 people a day. | ||
And we'll talk in a moment about the 5 minute test and everything, but just to give you a little context for the numbers. | ||
I have to always give that disclaimer because a lot of people look at these numbers and they just... | ||
Naturally, it's a natural assumption, but they presume that this means, oh, well, there's this many people sick. | ||
It's like that guy, I keep going back to that guy in Walgreens. | ||
1,300 people have the virus. | ||
No, boomer. | ||
When I was checking out at Walmart doing my doomsday prepping, 60-some-year-old cashier is, you know, trying to tell this awful in front of me how everything's gonna be okay. | ||
1,300 people are sick. | ||
Do you know what a small percentage of the population that is? | ||
No, idiot. | ||
1,300 people are not sick. | ||
1,300 people got the test and are confirmed. | ||
That's totally different, dummy. | ||
You know, this guy's like, what, 60, 70 years old? | ||
Baby boomer. | ||
These people know it all. | ||
I've lived life, sonny. | ||
I've lived life. | ||
unidentified
|
I've got, I've got 60 years of experience. | |
And they don't know the difference between, you know, these simple These simple concepts here of confirmed versus people that have it. | ||
1,300 people have it, no dipshit. | ||
Probably hundreds of thousands at that point had it. | ||
And probably hundreds of thousands have it now. | ||
It was 1300 confirmed. | ||
And then that number went up to, you know, like 50,000 within a couple weeks. | ||
And either 50,000 people got it or the testing came out, right? | ||
So I do have to just go over that every time we read the numbers just to remind you. | ||
But we're gonna clean up. | ||
We gotta do something. | ||
I'll spend all day tomorrow figuring it out. | ||
What to do with the whiteboard. | ||
Maybe I'll have my mom. | ||
Maybe I'll have... Maybe I'll have my mom write it. | ||
She's got good handwriting. | ||
Or something, because that just doesn't look good. | ||
It just defeats the purpose to have a visual if you can't read it, right? | ||
Maybe I'm being too hard on myself. | ||
I imagine, I'm not looking at the live chat right now, but I imagine people in the live chat are saying, no, Nick, what are you talking about? | ||
You're doing great. | ||
You're doing a great job. | ||
You're trying your best. | ||
Handwriting looks amazing. | ||
It's better than mine. | ||
I'm sure people are being very positive and supportive in the chat. | ||
What's going on, man? | ||
That's the other thing is the hair. | ||
That's the other problem with the quarantine is the hair. | ||
I could live underground for a long time. | ||
I guess I just gotta figure out how to cut my own hair. | ||
We're learning. | ||
This is actually a great trial run for if something ever really does shake up the country and you really can't leave. | ||
We should start making a list of all the things that you wouldn't normally think about. | ||
Toilet paper. | ||
Haircut. | ||
Moist towelettes. | ||
Things like this, right? | ||
Baked beans. | ||
iPhone charger. | ||
Generator. | ||
Extension cord for your iPhone charger. | ||
We have to make a list of all the essentials that you don't normally think about. | ||
Haircut. | ||
Okay, but we're gonna move on and I want to talk about, like I said, I want to talk about what's happening in Hungary because I've been saying this for weeks. | ||
Nobody's listening to me. | ||
The president is not listening to me. | ||
Is he watching this show right now? | ||
Mr. President, if you're watching this show, you know, you gotta start following my advice here. | ||
The people in the White House are not following my advice. | ||
I'm screaming into the void here. | ||
I'm telling thousands of people who are nowhere near the White House to what end, right? | ||
But I've been saying this for weeks. | ||
Mr. President, you have to take emergency powers. | ||
Mr. President, this is the Reichstag fire. | ||
Dissolve the Congress, declare yourself dictator for life, And stop all immigration. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
I'm being funny there. | ||
But it's true. | ||
I've been saying for weeks, in a time of crisis, that is the only time That you can legitimately and easily expand your jurisdiction, expand your authority, and put into motion sweeping, dramatic reforms that in normal times would be impossible. | ||
That in normal times could not pass, and if they did pass they would be too dramatic of changes. | ||
To be sustained. | ||
You know, one of the paradoxes of revolution, whether you're looking at a violent revolution or a peaceful revolution, and what we have through democracy is, you know, theoretically, I should say, a peaceful revolution every four years. | ||
That you change the regime. | ||
You do regime change every four years, but it's done through a process, it's legitimate, it's sanctioned by the state. | ||
You know, in that way it's kind of interesting. | ||
But the paradox with any revolution, peaceful or violent, is that a revolution promises, obviously, sweeping change because it has to change from the old regime to the new regime. | ||
That's the pretext, that's the reason for the revolution, right? | ||
That being said, if you put things in place too quickly or too dramatically, things changing too dramatically in too short of a time That creates a lot of problems, a lot of instability, a lot of chaos, things like that. | ||
So the paradox of a revolution is almost that once you get into power, you have to kind of have it make it slow rolling so that it sustains itself, so that there's some longevity to some of those reforms. | ||
Those are the normal rules. | ||
But in a time of crisis, when everything is shaken up, there is an opportunity. | ||
When it's unstable, when it is entropic and chaotic, Disordered and fragile. | ||
That is when you can go in and make serious changes. | ||
When the entire population is disoriented, and that's what it comes down to, normally people are living predictable lives and their lives fit into their expectations. | ||
And upsetting those expectations, that is where in lies the problems. | ||
I'm getting a little bit psychological here. | ||
This is kind of like social theory, I guess. | ||
But when people's expectations or their predicted lies are disrupted, well, people don't like that. | ||
That is why you can't really do these sweeping reforms daily because people's general preference is towards the status quo. | ||
The general social preference of people in normal times, in good times, or even average times, their preferences for stability, predictability, these kinds of things, And that's why disruption generally doesn't fare well unless it's, you know, really necessary. | ||
It is only in a time of emergency when people are disoriented and it's unpredictable and things that are happening are unexpected and there's confusion and there's anxiety and panic and worry That is the time when you can come in with answers. | ||
That is the time when you can come in with sweeping realignment and a reorientation of the society and that's not being done. | ||
You know, that is the prime opportunity when we have something like that to really take the status quo and make dramatic changes to it. | ||
And instead, what the president has been doing is saying, we're going to work to return to normal as quickly as possible. | ||
In other words, we want to close the window, our own window of opportunity, to make dramatic changes as quickly as possible. | ||
Why would we want to do that? | ||
You know, think of that in a different way. | ||
Instead of saying, we need to return to normalcy as quickly as possible, you're basically saying we need to close the window of opportunity to advance our own political agenda as quickly as possible. | ||
We need to solidify the status quo, re-solidify, right? | ||
The status quo, the prevailing regime, as quickly as possible. | ||
And this chaos is unacceptable. | ||
It should be the opposite. | ||
And what I want to get into is an example of where they're doing something differently, in Hungary. | ||
This is a report from the BBC. | ||
It says the Hungarian parliament has voted by 137 to 53 to accept the government's request for the power to rule by decree during the coronavirus emergency. | ||
Prime Minister Viktor Orban promised to use the extraordinary powers he has been granted proportionally and rationally. | ||
The special powers have no time limit and critics say independent journalists could face jail time. | ||
These are some of the provisions in the law. | ||
There is a state of emergency with no time limit. | ||
The government can rule by decree, which I just said. | ||
The president can rule by decree. | ||
The parliament is suspended. | ||
There are no elections. | ||
Spreading fake news and rumors or disinformation about the virus or the government could land you five years. | ||
Could land you in prison for five years, okay? | ||
So if you're a journalist out there and you're spreading disinformation about Viktor Orban or the government, the right-wing party that controls the government, or the virus, or anything, you could be put in jail for five years. | ||
And if you leave quarantine, you could be put in jail for up to eight years. | ||
That's what a serious country looks like. | ||
That is what a serious, nationalist country looks like. | ||
Now mind you, Hungary still has a democratic process. | ||
They still have elections. | ||
They still have a legislative body. | ||
Hungary is not like a totalitarian country. | ||
They're not a dictatorship. | ||
But this is what a nationalist, hierarchical, traditionalist country looks like. | ||
They have laws on the books that incentivize traditional marriage. | ||
They have laws on the books that make traditional marriage and traditional families the norm. | ||
They have laws on the books to penalize media that spreads lies and defamation and hurts the country. | ||
They have policies, economic and otherwise cultural, that advance the interests and the traditions and the identity of their country. | ||
And in times of emergency, the government, the president, the nationalist regime in control of the government assumes emergency powers, rule by decree, and they're trusted by the people, they're trusted by the legislature to govern proportionately and rationally and judiciously, to make decisions in the best interest of the country, to close up the borders, to take care of their economy if there's some kind of recession, right? | ||
Some kind of global recession or something like that. | ||
And that is what a serious country looks like. | ||
And it's actually interesting. | ||
In a country like Hungary, they don't even need to suspend elections or anything like that to advance the interests of a nationalist party because a nationalist party is already governing Hungary. | ||
In some ways, it's aspirational In a different way. | ||
Because in Hungary you already have Viktor Orban, who is, I think, a visionary, who's very forward-thinking, who is not an academic or an intellectual, but certainly somebody who understands statecraft, somebody who understands what it means to be a nation-state, somebody that understands national sovereignty and really what it means to be a nation. | ||
And because you already have a government that is high trust and a government that is executing the interests of its people, that is upholding the public welfare, there is a degree of trust in government and trust in the institutions that doesn't exist in the United States such that they could do something like this. | ||
In the United States this would never fly for obvious reasons because of the Constitution and we have our liberal revolutionary tradition of We have to have elections no matter what, and there's three co-equal branches of government, and separation of powers, and federalism, and all this. | ||
So that would never fly for obvious reasons. | ||
But more than that, a government can never do something like that because nobody trusts the government. | ||
And we don't trust the government because the government is not run by us. | ||
The people that are running our government and the people that are running the, or rather that are the elite in the country, and that's the media, that's Wall Street, that's the government, that's the banks, that's Hollywood, the elite in the country that sits atop and makes the big decisions for all the rest of the people, They are international. | ||
They are post-national, transnational, but they're not American nationalists. | ||
These are people that see America as one in a series of countries or one of their homes. | ||
They don't see themselves truly as American. | ||
They see themselves maybe as global citizens. | ||
Or if they do see themselves as American, their conception of America is different than ours. | ||
And as a consequence, they don't rule in the best interest of our country or of our people. | ||
They're not maintaining the public welfare of the United States public. | ||
They're looking to maintain the public welfare of the world. | ||
Or of the elite, of the coasts, of the moneyed interests, of the banks, right? | ||
Of a certain class of privileged people. | ||
And that is why we have no trust in them. | ||
And there was a really good line I heard recently from Tucker Carlson. | ||
He talked about this in an interview. | ||
My rival! | ||
I love Tucker. | ||
But he's my late night rival. | ||
We're both at the 7 o'clock slot here. | ||
We're both at the 7 o'clock slot. | ||
But Tucker Carlson said this the other week. | ||
He said, the problem is not that we have a lack of trust in the public institutions. | ||
It's that the public institutions are not making wise decisions. | ||
And if they started to make wise decisions, then people would trust them. | ||
But of course, the trust is not something that the institutions are entitled to. | ||
That's not a given. | ||
And that's not really the problem. | ||
There's a legitimate reason why the trust has evaporated, and that's because the institutions have ceased to be acting in the interest of the people. | ||
The institutions have ceased to be effective or competent. | ||
Or carrying out the interests of the nation. | ||
And so as such they have lost the trust. | ||
They need to gain it back. | ||
And this is what a country that works looks like in Hungary. | ||
Because the government is looking after the country culturally in terms of their identity, their economy, and their families, they can trust the government to say you can rule by decree and we trust you to make We trust you to make discretionary decisions about media, discretionary decisions about what happens in this time of crisis, because the country is ordered towards something higher. | ||
Everybody's working towards the same goal. | ||
The elite and the people are on the same page, and there's a role for the elite, and there's a role for everybody else, and there's a reciprocal relationship, and both are playing their part. | ||
The people are supporting their elite. | ||
They're doing their part. | ||
And the elite is supporting the people. | ||
And they are doing their part. | ||
And that's what a country looks like. | ||
And in America... | ||
Obviously the emergency powers has a little bit of a different context. | ||
We need to see the president assume emergency powers like this in maybe a more cynical way, in a more revolutionary way, to guarantee certain policies so that we could in fact build up the trust that they have and we can respond to crises like this in the future. | ||
Right? | ||
We have to do what is necessary in this case. | ||
So that's what's happening in Hungary. | ||
I look at that and it's aspirational for a variety of ways. | ||
The emergency powers, the trust in the institutions, these institutions that are worthy of trust, a nationalist regime. | ||
And think about it this way. | ||
A country like that will stand the test of time. | ||
Think about that. | ||
Think about history. | ||
Think about war and plague and famine and all kinds of civilizational catastrophes. | ||
And what is a country that has the components? | ||
What is a country that has the traits and ingredients That will give it longevity into the centuries, into the next, really the next millennium, right? | ||
The next 1,000 years. | ||
If you surveyed the entire world and you looked at all these critical components in every country, which country would you say has the best chance of surviving? | ||
Over long periods of time, doing necessary things, weathering not just one crisis, but having it built into the system that they can weather many crises. | ||
It's built into the culture, it's built into the gene, the culture, the society, the government, all these sort of transitional institutions that guide the country, that guide the civilization from one generation to the next. | ||
What ingredients do they have to ensure that that country will survive and endure a hundred years down the road? | ||
Or 250 years down the road? | ||
Or 500? | ||
Or a thousand years down the road? | ||
A country like Hungary? | ||
Or a country like the United States? | ||
A country like Hungary where they're bringing back the fertility rate. | ||
Where they have fathers and mothers. | ||
And wives and husbands. | ||
And they have children that are Christian. | ||
And they have parents that are Christian. | ||
And they go to mass on Sunday. | ||
And they eat dinner at the dinner table together. | ||
And the mother stays home with the kids. | ||
And the father works. | ||
And the government is comprised of people... | ||
I think Viktor Orban was like a pig farmer. | ||
And I don't say that in a nasty way. | ||
He was literally like living like a peasant in his upbringing. | ||
And then became the president of the country. | ||
And now he rules in the interest of the people. | ||
And a defender of the realm in every sense. | ||
They protect their vital strategic resources. | ||
They protect their vital strategic economic interests in the way of trade. | ||
They close their borders to mass migration. | ||
In a time of crisis, they trust their leader to take and assume emergency powers to take care of their country. | ||
Does a country like that last a thousand years? | ||
Or what about a country like the United States? | ||
Where the divorce rate is 50%, where marriage now is men and men, and women and women, and a man and five women, or a woman and five men, or it's just polyamorous, right? | ||
Polygamy. | ||
And people are not Christian. | ||
They might not be religious at all. | ||
And the women are working, and the men are working. | ||
In some cases, the women are working more than the men. | ||
And the women are on birth control. | ||
And the men are on, you know, they're not working out, they're not physically fit. | ||
In some cases, they're not even working. | ||
And children are not being made, and we have turned our back on God, and we're not protecting our vital strategic interests. | ||
We've exported all of that. | ||
Our defense industries, we've exported computers, AI, we've exported medical resources to Asia. | ||
And you know, I don't even have to tell you, the list goes on and on. | ||
The borders are open on both sides, and the airports and the ports are open. | ||
Everything's open. | ||
Which is a country that lasts longer? | ||
And you might look at the United States and say, rich, powerful, tall buildings, skyscrapers, technology, wonders, entertainment spectacles. | ||
But this does not an enduring civilization make. | ||
This does not make the United States last a thousand years. | ||
All of those things are transient and really kind of meaningless in a long time horizon view, right? | ||
So that's another way to look at it. | ||
When you look at Hungary, when you look at Russia, when you look at China, Turkey... When you look at a lot of these countries, a lot of people look at them and they say, Well, they don't have democracy. | ||
Well, they don't have a free press. | ||
Well, they curb some civil liberties. | ||
Well, that is not a perfect democracy. | ||
It's teetering towards a one-party right or some kind of... There's oligarchs in there. | ||
Or, you know, they're too traditional or something like that. | ||
Okay, well there's trade-offs. | ||
And even if you don't like those things, I don't not like those things, but even if you don't like those things, it's all about trade-offs. | ||
What are going to be the building blocks to build a straw? | ||
We want to build a stone castle, right? | ||
We want to build a castle made out of stone. | ||
We don't want to build a hut made out of straw, but that's what we've done. | ||
So, we're gonna move on. | ||
I could go on all night about that. | ||
This virus really makes you think about the big picture in a lot of ways. | ||
We're gonna move on and talk a little bit more about the latest developments for the coronavirus. | ||
I want to talk about the guidelines being extended. | ||
This is from, I think this is CNBC. | ||
It says, quote, President Trump said Sunday that the peak in the death rate from the coronavirus pandemic is likely to hit in two weeks. | ||
And extended guidelines to slow the spread of the deadly illness for 30 days. | ||
The president said, quote, the better you do, the faster this whole nightmare will end. | ||
He said during a briefing of the White House Coronavirus Task Force. | ||
He said, quote, therefore, we will be extending our guidelines to April 30th to slow the spread. | ||
The president said his administration would be finalizing social distancing guidelines on Tuesday. | ||
He said he does not anticipate the restrictions will be relaxed by region. | ||
So they've been having a conversation for about a week now saying that maybe the guidelines would be lifted in rural states or states in the interior of the country, Midwestern or Western states, but that they might stay on in California or New York or Maryland or Florida or Illinois. | ||
But I guess they're not going to do that. | ||
And to me that actually makes a lot of sense because this is what caused the big problem in China is that they quarantined by region. | ||
And I talked about this, I think, a few weeks ago. | ||
What do you think the first thing that happens, what is the first thing that happens when China tells 30 million people or 25 million people, whatever it is, when they tell all those people in Wuhan, China, you can't leave the city, you can't leave your houses, everything's closed. | ||
If you leave, you'll be arrested. | ||
What do you think happens when all of that is said to them? | ||
They flee! | ||
That's the first thing that happens! | ||
You have this epicenter of the virus outbreak, And this is where it's the most highly concentrated, this is where it originated, this is where all the sick people are, and the Chinese government says, we're shutting everything down, and of course, they don't perfectly seal up the city the minute they say it. | ||
They say it, and then it takes time to implement. | ||
But if it takes longer than an hour, or 12 hours, or 24 hours, or 48 hours, which it does for a city of 5 million people. | ||
The first thing that people are going to do when they hear that is they're going to get in their car and they're going to drive somewhere else. | ||
Or if they're driving around in Wuhan, they're going to turn around and go to Beijing or Shanghai, whatever. | ||
Or they're going to get on a plane and they're going to go to another country. | ||
They're not going to stick around. | ||
And we know that that happened. | ||
And there's data that shows that that is exactly what happened. | ||
As they quarantined these cities, the people fled and they spread it everywhere else. | ||
And so what do you think would happen if we lifted the restrictions on some states but not others? | ||
What are the people in Manhattan going to do? | ||
Are the millionaires and billionaires living in Manhattan, are they going to sit around and say, well, I'm a New Yorker, I live in New York, and I can't go to restaurants, and I can't do anything I want to do, I guess I'll just wait it out. | ||
Manhattan, millionaires, billionaires, certainly not everyone that lives in Manhattan is a millionaire, but kind of close to it. | ||
Are they going to stick around? | ||
Or are they going to say, I'm literally just going to go next door to Massachusetts? | ||
Or to Vermont? | ||
Or I'm going to go to New Jersey? | ||
Or Pennsylvania? | ||
Maybe I'll just fly to Florida. | ||
Maybe I'll just fly to Arizona. | ||
Or anywhere where it's being relaxed. | ||
And I'll continue to enjoy my life there. | ||
And you'll have the same effect. | ||
If you put one state under quarantine and not another, you're going to have this effect of a mass exodus. | ||
And people will flee. | ||
And there's no way you can control that. | ||
They've done this in Alaska and Hawaii. | ||
But you want to know why they can do that in Alaska and Hawaii? | ||
Pretty simple. | ||
Because the only way you can get there is by plane. | ||
Generally speaking, most of the traffic they're getting in Alaska and Hawaii, definitely in Hawaii, not a lot of people are getting there by boat, and even if they did, you can check people at a very small amount of ports and airports. | ||
And the same with Alaska, and a few roads and checkpoints. | ||
But if you're talking about Pennsylvania, what are you gonna do? | ||
Shut down all the highways? | ||
Shut down all the airports? | ||
Shut down, you know, the Great Lakes? | ||
I don't know, is Pennsylvania on the Great Lakes? | ||
But you understand. | ||
So, that is why they're putting it in place nationwide, and to me that makes the most sense. | ||
Part of the new guidelines that they're going to release now, tomorrow, the finalized guidelines that will last until the end of April, the new guidance is going to be that everybody should wear masks. | ||
And I've heard this, and I've seen reports about this, that part of the new guidance, maybe not tomorrow, but certainly in the future, is that they're going to tell everybody to wear masks. | ||
And this to me is so cruel. | ||
Maybe necessary, but so cruel. | ||
Because for months, what have they been telling us? | ||
They've been telling us, don't wear a mask. | ||
Don't wear a mask, it won't help you. | ||
They said the only people that need to wear a mask are the sick people. | ||
That's what they said. | ||
They said that a mask will not protect you. | ||
If you're wearing a mask, that will not prevent you from getting the virus. | ||
And the only thing that might help is a respirator, but even that's not going to help. | ||
The only way that a mask is effective in this situation is if a sick person wears it so that they don't spread the virus. | ||
That's what the CDC said. | ||
That's what the WHO said. | ||
That's what the media said. | ||
Don't wear a mask. | ||
Come to find out, obviously, that the virus is airborne. | ||
It spreads through droplets. | ||
It takes common sense to understand that if you're talking, if you're exhaling, sneezing, coughing, anything like that, you're projecting droplets, you're projecting the virus into the air. | ||
It's a respiratory virus, obviously! | ||
And when you're exhaling, it goes out about a meter. | ||
When you're sneezing or coughing, it goes out a few meters. | ||
And it sticks around! | ||
What do you think this stuff just like... So somebody breathes into the air. | ||
They breathe coronavirus droplets into the air. | ||
And what do you think happens? | ||
You breathe these airborne droplets, these airborne... | ||
Microorganisms in the air and you think they immediately fall to the ground? | ||
Or they dissipate or they disappear? | ||
What do you think happens? | ||
They hang around! | ||
They hang around on surfaces. | ||
They hang around in the air. | ||
If they hang around on your body, think about it. | ||
If you can't shake somebody's hand who's sick, why do you think that you could hold a door handle that a sick person touched? | ||
Why do you think that you could breathe the same air that a sick person breathed and not be affected in the same way? | ||
It's... I'm not a doctor. | ||
I'm not a scientist. | ||
But it's obvious! | ||
And what do you think happens when you have a mask? | ||
Now, if you wear a cloth mask, is that perfect? | ||
Does a cloth mask filter out all the droplets in the air? | ||
No. | ||
Because if you're breathing through a cloth mask, you get oxygen through the mask, and the cloth membrane is not thick enough to filter out every airborne pathogen. | ||
And also you might be breathing from the side. | ||
If it's not airtight, you might be getting it from up or down. | ||
And they also said that if you're wearing a mask you'll be adjusting it, so you'll be touching your face. | ||
Okay, what if you just don't touch it, right? | ||
But having some membrane over your mouth is better than nothing. | ||
Having some kind of filter, and a cloth mask is not a filter, a surgical mask is not a filter, but it does block some of it. | ||
And that's what the CDC, if you've been doing your research, it says that a respirator is really what is necessary. | ||
And a cloth compared to a respirator doesn't do much. | ||
But a cloth compared to nothing does a lot. | ||
But they didn't tell us that. | ||
But they lied. | ||
I mean, that's what they did. | ||
They lied. | ||
They knew that. | ||
Doctors know that. | ||
Epidemiologists, government officials know that. | ||
They know that a mask helps. | ||
Whatever the mask is, they know a mask helps. | ||
They know that it's airborne. | ||
They know that it lives on surfaces. | ||
But they also know that if they told people about this, people could protect themselves and they would buy masks. | ||
And then there'd be a shortage of masks and the hospitals couldn't get them. | ||
So the reason I say it's cruel but might be necessary is they told people that so that people would stop buying the masks. | ||
And then the hospitals and the government and the municipalities could buy the masks and hoard them and, you know, use them. | ||
But here's the thing. | ||
Why didn't you have masks to begin with? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
You think about all the things the government spends money on, all the different contingencies the government prepares for, and you don't have masks? | ||
Facebook has masks. | ||
Did you see that? | ||
Or Apple? | ||
Apple and Facebook and all these different companies are saying, we're gonna donate millions of masks. | ||
What? | ||
Apparently Apple, you know, a technology company, all these companies, Facebook, they've got warehouses full of masks, like thousands, hundreds of thousands, millions of... masks? | ||
And the U.S. | ||
government doesn't have that? | ||
The states don't have that? | ||
The municipalities, the hospitals don't have that? | ||
What's going on? | ||
What are we doing? | ||
So I understand, you know, I understand a little white lie like that to say, well, you know, you shouldn't have them. | ||
I mean, I don't know. | ||
I don't know what's... In times like this, you have to make tough calls and there's only so many masks and the hospitals do need them because they need to be treating the people, right? | ||
But do people have a right to protect themselves from the virus? | ||
I'm sure a lot of people who got sick because they didn't wear a mask are not happy about that. | ||
But then again, people are going to get sick and they need to be treated by doctors who need the masks. | ||
But here's the problem. | ||
Okay, maybe it was justified in this case. | ||
It's unnecessary because we should have been prepared. | ||
And this is really the problem with the free market. | ||
This is my problem with the free market. | ||
About capitalism, all this kind of stuff. | ||
It's not even so much capitalism. | ||
It's not private property. | ||
It's not the price system. | ||
It's not the profit motive. | ||
The problem is us. | ||
The problem is that nobody is thinking about the future. | ||
Before, it was like, you could be forgiven if you're not thinking 100 years into the future. | ||
You could be forgiven if you're not thinking 50 years into the future. | ||
Well, thinking 30 years into the future is reasonable. | ||
Thinking about your retirement, thinking about your long-term life goals, thinking about how you might want to have children to take care of you in your old age, right? | ||
Thinking about putting a little money in a retirement or a Roth IRA, something like that. | ||
Thinking 20 years into the future, 10 years into the future. | ||
Thinking about your intermediate life goals. | ||
Thinking about your career goals, financial goals, home ownership, things like that. | ||
We don't even think like one day in advance. | ||
We don't even think like a week in advance anymore. | ||
You look at like the whole economy, and it's symptomatic across the whole, or systemic rather, across the whole system. | ||
It is a high time preference, right? | ||
That is what is pervading the whole country is a high time preference. | ||
That we want it now, and we don't want anything tomorrow. | ||
Give me the world today, and I'll die tomorrow. | ||
That is the stock market, that is the interest rates, that's the banks, that's the government, that's investment, that's people's lives. | ||
Fundamentally, that's the problem. | ||
And this is really, I think, a spiritual problem. | ||
It's hedonism. | ||
Because if you're thinking about God, if you're thinking about mortality, if you have a mind that is conscious of The bigger picture of our temporary existence on this world. | ||
And the key word there is temporary. | ||
Tempor, right, is the Latin root temporal. | ||
Temporary. | ||
You're thinking about time. | ||
When you're thinking about this world, the material world, it's the world of time. | ||
When you die, there's no time, right? | ||
But when you're thinking about death and you're thinking about afterlife, what you're fundamentally thinking about is time and how we are perceiving time and living in time and how we manage time. | ||
And nobody's thinking about time. | ||
People are feeling, right? | ||
And I know that's a fact. | ||
I don't care about your feelings. | ||
But you know what I'm saying? | ||
Because we've lost that sort of spiritual conscientiousness or spiritual consciousness, because we are thinking about the temporal world, ironically, we are thinking without regard to time, which is the irony, right? | ||
As we become obsessed with the temporary, temporal, the world of time, We are not thinking of time. | ||
It's like a fish in water. | ||
We're not thinking about it. | ||
And so we're thinking about what I want to eat, what I want to do. | ||
I want to kiss that person. | ||
I want to do that to that person. | ||
I want to... I'm thirsty now. | ||
I want to get drunk. | ||
I want to shoot up. | ||
I want to do this, right? | ||
I feel like doing this right now. | ||
I feel like doing that right now. | ||
I feel sad right now. | ||
I feel happy right now. | ||
And that is the cult, and it's immediacy, and it's these sensory things, and nobody's thinking about even what's a year down the road or 20 years down the road, and it's across the board. | ||
It's people's lives. | ||
Nobody's prepared for this. | ||
Nobody has any money saved up for this, right? | ||
You know, this would not be a problem if people had savings. | ||
If anybody had savings and look I actually don't even blame people for not having savings because interest rates are zero right? | ||
So it doesn't even really behoove you to save and that's the Federal Reserve but that notwithstanding you should be saving even though you're not going to have an interest rate on that and you know but you should be saving you should be setting money aside you shouldn't be living paycheck to paycheck and spending all your money Some people are forced to be in that situation but a lot of people just don't live within their means. | ||
You should put money aside. | ||
Businesses should put money aside. | ||
The government should put money aside. | ||
The banks should raise the interest rates. | ||
The government should invest in preparing for disasters. | ||
You should invest for preparing in disasters. | ||
And this whole crisis shows us that we've been caught with our pants around our ankles. | ||
We've been living on borrowed time here. | ||
We have been going all in Every moment that we've been alive and when the first sign of trouble happens... | ||
Everybody doesn't know what to do. | ||
I was reading a story the other week about this celebrity chef. | ||
Did you hear the story? | ||
There was a celebrity chef who won some cooking competition. | ||
I don't know. | ||
He's some famous chef and he has like 20 restaurants in the country. | ||
And he was in some publication boohooing about how he had to fire so many people. | ||
And I read this article and you know the headline was, you know, I had to lay off 300 people. | ||
See how coronavirus is affecting the restaurant industry. | ||
Something to that effect. | ||
And he had to close down his restaurants and lay off his workers and... Oh, so it's such a disaster. | ||
The guy's like a millionaire. | ||
He's got like 20 million dollars, but whatever. | ||
And I'm reading the article, and it's talking about how every time that he could, he opened up a new restaurant. | ||
Opened up one restaurant, and in the span of like a few years, just every year, opening a new restaurant. | ||
Now, I don't feel bad for a person like that. | ||
I understand that in a restaurant, it's a competitive business, and the price margins are low, and it's very tough. | ||
I get all that. | ||
But you've got a guy, who instead of making a successful business and pockets some of the profit, pockets some of the money, or reinvest it, or something like that, He takes all the money and reinvests it into more liability. | ||
Reinvests in another restaurant. | ||
And then another one. | ||
And it's just building on top of... It just keeps compounding. | ||
And this is what's been happening across the entire country. | ||
This is what happens with people. | ||
For example, with Airbnbs. | ||
I saw another article about Airbnb people where you'll have a family who has a mortgage on their home that they live in. | ||
They'll get a little bit of extra money. | ||
They'll put a down payment on a rental property and then they put it up as a listing on Airbnb. | ||
They make a little bit of money. | ||
They leverage their home and the rental and then they buy another rental property. | ||
And they're buying like 10 rental properties in like five years. | ||
And then one bad month happens and they find that they're way over leveraged. | ||
and they have, they're completely insolvent. | ||
They've got no savings. | ||
They've got no money. | ||
They should never own that much stuff, right? | ||
Own that much stuff. | ||
They should never take a loan out, I should say, on that much stuff. | ||
And this is what's happening across the board. | ||
So back to the masks. | ||
I know we've kind of gone on a tangent there, but back to the masks. | ||
It's like they told us you don't need the mask, and maybe that was necessary. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
If you don't have a mask, it's kind of like, what are you, retarded? | ||
It's a respiratory virus. | ||
It's airborne. | ||
Why are they wearing masks in China? | ||
Why do the doctors wear masks and hazmat suits if it doesn't help? | ||
Like, what are you, an idiot, you know? | ||
But they come out and say, oh yeah, we lied. | ||
Oh no, we just figured it out that you need masks. | ||
We've been studying the virus for three months and we just found out that a respiratory virus, highly contagious, that lives on surfaces, might be airborne, right? | ||
So I get that but there's no reason that we should not have been prepared. | ||
There's no reason that the government should have not had masks and ventilators and the plan and the tests and the preparedness to respond and I get it the government has other priorities but you know the whole justification for like the deep state allegedly Is that you need a steady hand so that the civilian government can carry out the day-to-day and the partisan stuff. | ||
But don't you remember the New York Times? | ||
There was some cabinet member that came out and said, we're the deep state, we're the steady state, and we're protecting America from Trump. | ||
And it's like, you know, that's just another example, like I said a moment ago, of these public institutions. | ||
They've lost the trust of the public because they don't know what they're doing. | ||
They're incompetent. | ||
This government is useless. | ||
Because all these things that you might think like, oh well, at least they protect us, or well, you know, you need them because they're... | ||
They were carrying out public services and so on. | ||
Like, they're not. | ||
At the first sign of trouble, the whole house of cards comes down. | ||
The banks, the healthcare system, the supply chains, everything. | ||
It's like, would nobody think a pandemic would ever happen? | ||
It's hard to believe. | ||
They were in a country of 350 million people. | ||
20 trillion dollar GDP, biggest military in the world, and nobody in the government thought of like, gee I wonder what would happen if a pandemic happened. | ||
You didn't have a plan for that? | ||
I mean it's one thing if like a small, like my village, that's what it's called, my municipality is called a village. | ||
It's one thing if my municipal government didn't have a preparedness plan for a global pandemic. | ||
Like I would get that. | ||
And maybe it'd be one thing if like a small county, or a small state didn't have a plan. | ||
But the United States government with the Pentagon and the, you know, the Situation Room and $20 trillion in GDP and $4 trillion for military for a $4 trillion revenue, I should say. | ||
$700 billion for military. | ||
$4 trillion revenue. | ||
We don't have a plan? | ||
It's like, oh well, I'm hearing about this pandemic. | ||
We should start responding to this. | ||
It's insane. | ||
And that's why people, it's really like a spiritual thing. | ||
It's biblical, folks! | ||
This is biblical! | ||
We need restraint. | ||
We need discipline. | ||
The Bible tells us all this stuff, and it's not coincidental then that reading the Bible and becoming spiritual or religious—you should be Christian, you should be Catholic, but you know what I'm saying—having a religious orientation, it's no coincidence that that prepares you for things like this, or instructs you to prepare, that that mentality gives you the perspective to look a hundred years into the future and think about at a civilizational level. | ||
We gotta get back to that. | ||
We're never gonna survive if this is our country. | ||
We're never gonna survive if everything is over leveraged and nobody's prepared and nobody's saving and nobody's thinking about tomorrow or next week. | ||
So those are the masks. | ||
The good news is the tests are being rolled out and we're running out of time so I'll just read through this very quickly. | ||
And I, you know, it's not even really a big news piece but the other big development from this weekend is they got a new test. | ||
They've got a five minute coronavirus test. | ||
They've ordered 50,000 tests per day, or they're saying that they can deliver 50,000 tests per day. | ||
So, that's very good. | ||
They've got a 5-minute test now from Abbott Laboratories, and they could do 50,000 tests per day at drive-thru centers, and all across the country they're going to be unveiling it. | ||
And you go in, you get your test, like a flu test. | ||
I hear it's very unpleasant though, they like jam something up your nut, like really, like into your brain. | ||
I've never gotten a flu test before so I don't know but I guess it's like that but worse. | ||
They jam something up your nose but they can determine within five minutes if you have the virus and with that kind of technology then the testing is really a non-issue. | ||
50,000 tests per day, and you get the results in five minutes? | ||
Like, worse said, it's just a matter of time before you diagnose everybody that needs to be diagnosed, even the mild people. | ||
So that's a big white pill. | ||
Black pill on the masks, white pill on the tests, right? | ||
But just keep that in mind. | ||
Get a mask. | ||
Get a mask. | ||
You're going to need one. | ||
Get gloves. | ||
I hope you already have all that stuff, right? | ||
But we're going to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our Super Chats, and we'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow, we've got a lot of Super Chefs tonight. | |
Holy smokes, what do we have? | ||
186,000 lemons? | ||
Let's do a check. | ||
I think that means we've surpassed PewDiePie. | ||
Is that true? | ||
I would be more hype right now, but I'm like exhausted. | ||
I've just been like, talking for an hour and 10 minutes, 70 minutes straight. | ||
I've just talked for 70 minutes straight without a break. | ||
unidentified
|
So I can't be like I'm running on fumes at this point. | |
I always am around the super chats. | ||
But let's let's pull up the social blade. | ||
Let's do a double check here. | ||
I'll have to do a celebration stream, maybe later tonight, maybe in a couple hours I'll come back and we'll do a celebration stream. | ||
So PewDiePie, are you ready? | ||
PewDiePie, and it hasn't updated yet, but PewDiePie is at 6.264... I'm sorry, he's at 6,264,719 lemons. | ||
Not dollars, lemons. | ||
6,264,719 lemons. | ||
He's at 6,264,719 lemons. | ||
Not dollars, lemons. | ||
6,264,719 lemons. | ||
Let's take a look at the count for me. | ||
And we are at 6,360,000 lemons. | ||
I I have officially surpassed PewDiePie as the number one. | ||
I, Nick Fuentes, America first, have surpassed PewDiePie as the number one highest earning streamer on DLive. | ||
It's been a year. | ||
I've been streaming on this website for nearly a year. | ||
Just under a year. | ||
And it took me one year to defeat PewDiePie. | ||
Now, in fairness, he hasn't streamed since January. | ||
So, you know, it's not quite the same. | ||
But, nevertheless, it's a huge milestone, a huge landmark. | ||
Pretty incredible. | ||
And it's pretty incredible in the context of I got banned off of YouTube and everybody said I was over, right? | ||
Everybody said I was done. | ||
I had a pretty rough start to this year. | ||
There was controversy, I'll just say there was controversy, scandal, you know, AstroTurf scandal, people coming at me, I mean really people trying their best to undermine me. | ||
I got banned off of YouTube. | ||
I got demonetized first, and then I got banned, and everybody thought I was done for. | ||
Well, not everybody, but the press, increasingly nervously for the 12th, 13th time, said, he's done, he's over. | ||
Celebrating, he's gone, he's no longer relevant. | ||
We have transitioned to DLive. | ||
I've built up 28,000 followers on here. | ||
I think it was at 80,000 on YouTube, right? | ||
So I've built up to almost half of that. | ||
The lemons have been flowing. | ||
The viewers have stayed. | ||
We have averaged. | ||
I did actually an average of all my streams in March. | ||
And this is even including the gaming streams. | ||
And the gaming streams bring the average down because I only get like 2,000 viewers on the game only. | ||
I get 2,000 viewers on the gaming streams. | ||
I get around 3,000 to 4,000 for commentary streams. | ||
But the average for everything is 5,000. | ||
5,000 concurrent viewers is my average average. | ||
So there's your average viewer count per stream, and I took the average of all those. | ||
5,000 concurrent viewers is my average. | ||
The average of the average. | ||
And it's pretty incredible. | ||
So it's a testament to the show. | ||
It's a testament to me, and my hard work, and my smarts, and my talent, and my ability, and the message. | ||
But it's also a testament to you. | ||
There's no other audience better than the America First audience. | ||
This would have sunk anybody else. | ||
Take a look at the graveyard of other e-celebrities, right? | ||
It's a big graveyard, and I'm trying to stay out of it. | ||
I've got one foot in, one foot out at all times. | ||
But look at the graveyard of e-celebrities. | ||
Who, they are on one platform, they get taken off that platform, and they never recover. | ||
They get taken off the platform, and their audience dissipates and evaporates, right? | ||
I've seen it happen a million times. | ||
To people I know, to people I don't know, people in the alt-right, people in the alt-light, people in general conservative media, you understand that that happens. | ||
So... | ||
It's not just me. | ||
It's you too. | ||
You guys are loyal. | ||
And you're loyal to me because I'm loyal to you. | ||
I'm there for you. | ||
I'm honest. | ||
I'm up front. | ||
I give it to you straight. | ||
I bring the content. | ||
I work hard for you. | ||
And as a result, you take care of me and you're loyal. | ||
And you guys are great. | ||
So, I just want to say I appreciate it. | ||
I know the lemons have been crazy like the past week. | ||
It's like a hundred thousand lemons every time for like the past week. | ||
And I know the people have been contributing more because they're trying to get me over that threshold there. | ||
They're trying to push me over the edge there to beat PewDiePie. | ||
And I just want to say, thank you. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
It's unfortunate. | ||
I can only... it's... whether somebody gives me $1 or somebody gives me $1,000, I, you know, I can say thank you. | ||
I can only... I can't give you $1,000 worth of thank you. | ||
I can't give you, you know, $100 or $1,000 or more worth of thank you or whatever, but I just want you to know that I do appreciate it and I do thank you. | ||
And bless you. | ||
And I really do appreciate that. | ||
And I will also tell you, because this is the way that I think, you know, I'm not really one for the formalities and, you know, words and things like that. | ||
But I will also tell you that the money that's being raised is being put to work. | ||
I will just tell you this I've been telling you this for a long time and a lot of people look at the lemons that I make and it's no secret that I I make a lot of people who contribute a lot of lemons to this show. | ||
People contribute a lot of money to the show and some people are looking at my social blade and I don't like when people do that by the way but they're making calculations and things but I will tell you that I never sought to become you know, wealthy, or I never sought to accrue wealth for wealth in itself. | ||
You have to understand that what makes Charlie Kirk powerful is he has lots of money. | ||
And I'm not saying like, hey, give me lots of money because I'm a good guy. | ||
I'm telling you, and you can believe this or you cannot believe this, that I am taking all these lemons, all these lemons that have been raised from the show for the last three years, and they are all being reinvested into the movement, you know, and... | ||
And, you know, don't get me wrong, I buy a game here and there, I, you know, I have to pay myself, but the money that I spent versus the money that's being reinvested is, you know, the ratio is good. | ||
And, it's all being reinvested into the show, it's being reinvested, not like, you know, by the way, people give me the money. | ||
It's my business what I do with the money. | ||
I'll just tell you. | ||
But, just so you have a little bit of confidence, I don't like people to think that I'm making all this money and like, oh, I'm gonna buy a new car, I'm gonna go and, you know, whatever. | ||
It's not like it's any of your business, but I am gonna tell you, if this makes you feel better, that I'm being very wise about it and it is going towards just know that if you're throwing down a Ninja Gany or a Ninja at it's not like oh sweet sweet I'm gonna go buy steak now you know maybe once in a while but I that is going into the bank account and we are doing big things with it particularly this year big things are gonna happen so so I just want you to know that | ||
You know I can say thank you so much but I think maybe even better than well thank you is important it is a sincere thank you but just as important I think is to tell you that when this money's coming in it's not you know some people say oh you're like an e-girl you're like whatever I'm not like an e-girl you have to view it as like a donation to a political cause right so | ||
Insofar as the show is has cash flow we could do more things and the movement can grow and I can bring more people onto the team and our reach and our impact will grow right so but I just want to say that but it is it is big and I do appreciate people are throwing in a little bit extra to put a lot extra to push me over the edge a few people in particular so if you've been if you've been donating a lot I want you to send me an email So that I could send you a proper thank you. | ||
And I'm thinking of a few people in particular. | ||
You know, SP, Bass Dollar, Maxi Bro, Bobby, Little Bobby I think is the name. | ||
I'm not 100%. | ||
I know I'm probably leaving some people out. | ||
Satirical Man. | ||
I know some of them have already sent me emails. | ||
I've got to get back to them. | ||
I've been busy doing some website stuff over the weekend. | ||
But I want everybody. | ||
I can't name everybody obviously that's done it. | ||
Just off the top of my head, if those people are contributing a lot, I want you to send me an email so I can send you a proper thank you note. | ||
But I do appreciate it, and it's a moment of gratitude. | ||
It's a moment of gratitude for the show. | ||
It's just a big landmark for the show. | ||
It shows that we can do things that other people think are impossible. | ||
Everybody's telling us, you know, when we talk to the Ben Shapiros and the Jeremy Borings and the Charlie Kirks, what do they tell us? | ||
They say, why would we debate you? | ||
You're a nobody. | ||
You're not relevant. | ||
You're the fringe of the fringe. | ||
There's like 20 of you, whatever. | ||
And it's times like this when everybody is reminded that this show and this movement is doing incredible things. | ||
And is capable of doing incredible things. | ||
And they can say whatever they want. | ||
But nobody has a show like this. | ||
Nobody has a show with this kind of a fan base that's this big, that's this loyal. | ||
Nobody's doing numbers like this. | ||
Chapo Trap House has less viewers than me. | ||
When you were looking at the Democratic debate, the final Democratic debate, I think they had 8,000 people watching. | ||
I had 10,000 people watching, right? | ||
That's Chopo Trap House. | ||
That's one of the biggest podcasts that there is. | ||
The Young Turks. | ||
I think they might have a few more numbers than me, right? | ||
But the numbers from this show, the events that we do, the energy that comes there, the money that's being raised, it's like... | ||
And everybody knows it. | ||
It's the elephant in the room. | ||
That's why the Groyper Wars was such a big deal. | ||
Nobody wanted to talk about it. | ||
They wanted to ignore it. | ||
But we're getting to a point where we can't be ignored. | ||
Because the things that are happening are too big. | ||
It's too loud. | ||
It's too exciting. | ||
And everybody knows it. | ||
So... | ||
But it's a big thank you. | ||
But it's hey. | ||
But thanks for the lemons. | ||
I'll read through these. | ||
We're probably going to be here for like five hours, right? | ||
Reading through every one of these. | ||
I was going to try and read through some of the super chats I got on Saturday that I couldn't read through. | ||
But we got so many tonight that I just can't finish them all. | ||
So I'll just read through the ones from tonight. | ||
And there are a lot of them. | ||
Jesse Winfrey of course. | ||
I think I left him out. | ||
Oprah Gruyper is giving a lot so I want to make sure I'm not not leaving anybody out here but you know naturally I can't can't think of everybody off the top of my head. | ||
But let's take a look. | ||
Gotta scroll all the way down to the bottom here. | ||
Taking me a minute. | ||
Some people are saying in chat, we are inevitable. | ||
That's right, we are. | ||
And I've been saying this. | ||
That's been the message. | ||
And every year, isn't it the case? | ||
Last year at CPAC in 2019, what did I say? | ||
I said, the America First Coalition is rising. | ||
I said, the coalition is rising. | ||
I said, we're going to war against Conservative Inc. | ||
And at the time, it was just me, Faith Goldie, Jake Lloyd, and Patrick Casey. | ||
And look at how big it's gotten. | ||
Look at all the new and fresh faces. | ||
It's Jayden. | ||
Jayden, who's a welcome addition. | ||
It's Steve Franson. | ||
Well, Vince was at CPAC last year. | ||
Vince James is here too, but everybody's... their profile's rising, right? | ||
I mean, they were all kind of around there. | ||
But you've got Michelle Malkin now. | ||
Scott Greer got fired from Daily Caller so now he can be cool with us, right? | ||
And so all across the board, I don't know if I'm leaving any of you out, but you get it. | ||
The movement is rising up. | ||
That was the story of 2019. | ||
We did battle against Con Inc. | ||
And what did I say in 2020? | ||
I said we are inevitable. | ||
We're unstoppable. | ||
The trajectory that we're on cannot be stopped. | ||
And what we're saying is something that is inevitable for the country. | ||
Our idea. | ||
The time has come for our ideas. | ||
And we're living through that moment. | ||
So, I think that'll be the story of 2020. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Racist incel says, Love or hate Nick? | ||
He's the villain America needs. | ||
Ah, yes. | ||
That was my first ever blog post back in 2016. | ||
This guy's trying to be smart. | ||
He's trying to be funny. | ||
That was the title of my first ever blog post in, I want to say, August 2016 or July 2016. | ||
DelcoGroper says, My fault with the link earlier. | ||
Let's beat PewDiePie. | ||
I don't know what you mean by the link. | ||
Seek says, Are you familiar with Nick Land? | ||
Thoughts? | ||
Not really. | ||
I mean, I know he's like an accelerationist and I have kind of like a cursory idea but I haven't read him too thoroughly so I can't really say anything too smart about him. | ||
I think he's emailed me before. | ||
I've gotten an email from somebody that's Nick Land and I don't know if that's actually Nick Land or I don't want to like dox him or anything but I don't know if that's like a fan or if it's him. | ||
Uh, if it's him and he doesn't want people to know, he could say it's just a fan. | ||
Based Groyper says, Nick, I had a good super chat on Saturday. | ||
Ah, bummer. | ||
Among the Ruins says, checking in for Operation Overtake PewDiePie. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Delko says, also, everyone goes up to Pete D'Brasco's New D Live. | ||
Yeah, for sure, check him out. | ||
I saw he just came around this weekend. | ||
Q Boyd says Shapiro Wuhan cremation math double standard check hahaha funny it is true though it is true we can doubt the death total in China but not anywhere else like it just goes to show how stupid that is Bobby D with the Ninjet. | ||
Thank you so much, man. | ||
Big Globes says, would you take the test if you had symptoms? | ||
Looks terrifying and useless because there's no cure yet. | ||
No way I'm taking the test. | ||
If I get sick, I'll just self-quarantine and take care of myself, but I'm not taking that test. | ||
I don't want to go to the doctor. | ||
I don't want a vaccine. | ||
I don't want to take blood. | ||
I don't want to test. | ||
All right? | ||
I hate that stuff. | ||
I would rather die. | ||
You know what? | ||
If I get sick, I'll just die. | ||
And I don't know, maybe if it gets that way, I'll change my mind, but I feel like if I had a horrible medical condition, rather than get an IV in my arm and undergo surgery or do some medical procedure, I think I would rather just... You know what? | ||
I think it's time to bow out. | ||
I think it's just time for me to expire now. | ||
My time has come, clearly. | ||
unidentified
|
It's too late for me. | |
You leave without me. | ||
You know, go on. | ||
My time's up here. | ||
unidentified
|
And I hate that stuff so much, I can't even tell you. | |
NPV with the Ninjagini, thanks. | ||
ElectedGroiper says prayers to 31 new China cases. | ||
100 urns each ready. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
JRen says, Nick, awful news. | ||
The Red Cross has revised your lemon count down to 200,000. | ||
Guess PewDiePie wins for now. | ||
unidentified
|
Dude! | |
Hilarious joke, man. | ||
Congratulations on the funny joke. | ||
Made me laugh. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Congratulations on being a comedian, man. | ||
What a real comedy master. | ||
Congratulations on the joke. | ||
That was really funny. | ||
AF Clips says, Hey Nick, hope you enjoy the America First Clips channel and here's a Ninjagini to reach DLive number one. | ||
Well, thanks a lot. | ||
And yeah, great job on the channel. | ||
I love the graphics. | ||
I love the content. | ||
Keep up the good work. | ||
You're doing great. | ||
But it's just those hashtags, man. | ||
I told them about the hashtags. | ||
This AF Clips channel is great, and I DM'd him over the weekend to say, like, what's your story? | ||
Like, he just came on the scene. | ||
I don't know who runs this account. | ||
He's like, well, you know, I've been watching the show for a while, and just thought this would be a good idea. | ||
I told him, okay, yeah, fine. | ||
I said, just one thing. | ||
Every tweet he was doing, it was, hashtag Trump, hashtag, hashtag, hashtag America first, hashtag this, at Michelle Malkin, at Tucker Carlson, at, and I'm like, it's too much blue. | ||
It's too much blue. | ||
Nobody wants to look at all that. | ||
It's like, We don't want to be you might as well put three stars emojis in your handle and fill up your bio with hashtag ww1 g1 whatever it is hashtag kag hashtag manga hashtag trump hashtag deplorable hashtag dragon energy hashtag walk away right i mean might as well so i said let's relax on the hashtags and today i see more hashtags i'm thinking what am i just but that's okay but that's okay it's great content He's working on it. | ||
The graphics are great. | ||
The content's great. | ||
It's all good. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
So thanks for the Nijigini. | ||
We just gotta... I just dropped my mouse. | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
I gotta get a wireless mouse. | ||
I always knock it over. | ||
There's a big wire hanging down under my desk and I always just, like, kick it. | ||
I don't know if you can relate. | ||
I got a wired mouse. | ||
Hate Chan says... | ||
Hey Chan says, if I pull this off, will you die? | ||
It would be extremely painful. | ||
You're a big guy, for you. | ||
Uh, yeah. | ||
Yeah, I recognize that. | ||
Thanks for the Nijigini. | ||
Not sure what you're getting out of that one. | ||
We all know it. | ||
Andrew Matz is America first, bitch. | ||
Yup. | ||
Among the Ruins says, Martina Marcotta has been countersignaling on the TL. | ||
Even based females go hormonally haywire. | ||
Well, Martina Marcotta, frankly, is not a conservative. | ||
She is a stripper. | ||
And strippers are not conservative. | ||
Her and her disgusting boyfriend, Jack Cukby, Buckby. | ||
Jack Cukby. | ||
It's too easy. | ||
I know it's slow hanging fruit, but it's too easy. | ||
These are not conservatives. | ||
These are very simple, low IQ people. | ||
Who really are just completely out of their depth when it comes to politics. | ||
They're the definition of grifters. | ||
You know, here's somebody in Martina Marcotta who is like this degenerate... Oh, she's a dancer. | ||
She's a performance artist. | ||
No, she's a lewd stripper. | ||
It's art. | ||
She's naked and like pouring milk on herself. | ||
I'm sorry, that's not art. | ||
So, she's like this performance... She's a burlesque dancer, okay? | ||
She's a stripper in New York. | ||
She, like, loses her job because he's a Trump supporter, and now her whole career is, I'm a Trump supporter, I'm a Trump supporter, I'm working my mug at, you're not a conservative, you're not right-wing, you got fired because of whatever, and now that's the grift. | ||
And that's what happens with a lot of these people, is, and it's a lot of, like, Blexit types, they know that you can cash in on the I'm a persecuted Trump supporter! | ||
They know that that's the case. | ||
And that's Martina Marcotta. | ||
I was never a fan. | ||
She's trying to do this trad girl facade. | ||
She's like, oh I'm doing like a cooking channel. | ||
First of all, it's like you don't even know how to talk. | ||
Have you ever seen her do content? | ||
I know people who used to work at Daily Caller and I think she used to work there in some capacity and they had to let her go because she couldn't read her lines. | ||
Like she's a terrible Not a great intellect. | ||
And it also so happens that she soft-blocked me on Twitter recently. | ||
I was holding back on all this. | ||
You know, here's another instance where I'm willing to be friendly, but then I see, I don't like you, I don't like your boyfriend, and then you soft-block me? | ||
Alright, well, now I have to just give it to you straight up. | ||
Now I'm going to have to soft-block you verbally. | ||
I hard-blocked her on Twitter, and now I have to go off. | ||
I just love when that happens. | ||
It's like with Owen Benjamin, and it's like with a few other people. | ||
I'm a very polite person. | ||
If you're nice to me, I'm nice to you. | ||
But even I'm nice to people that I don't like, and I hold my tongue, and I hold my tongue. | ||
Even with Owen Benjamin, he'd be in here with the Super Chats, and I'd be like, yeah, so funny, dude. | ||
And in the back of my head, I'm like, bruh. | ||
And it's always great when they, you know, they fire the first shot and then he can come at. | ||
But, um... But yeah, Martina Marcotta, Jack Buckbee. | ||
Who needs these people? | ||
Jack Buckbee's writing a book about right-wing extremism. | ||
He's saying, well, the left created right-wing extremism. | ||
How stupid can you be? | ||
How stupid can you be? | ||
These people are idiots. | ||
More so him than her. | ||
She's just not talented. | ||
AF Zoomers says, God is sovereign over all things. | ||
God bless, King. | ||
So true! | ||
And thanks. | ||
That's right. | ||
Creative name says, praise dear leader Victor Orban. | ||
Okay, cringe. | ||
Hate Chan says, China lied. | ||
People died. | ||
They eat dogs. | ||
Well, they did lie, and they do eat dogs. | ||
SP says, reminder, buy lemons on browser, not on mobile. | ||
Significantly better rate. | ||
Yeah, definitely do that. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
You get more lemons if you buy them on browser than if you buy on mobile. | ||
AF Zoomer says, simps can't have their cake and eat it too. | ||
That's right. | ||
Well, what do you mean by that? | ||
I don't know what you mean. | ||
By have their cake and eat it too. | ||
I, you know, what I see a lot of with simps is they pretend that they hate e-girls and then they simp for e-girls. | ||
You know, they pretend that they're red. | ||
Some people that I know, some people that I know. | ||
I don't want to name any names. | ||
And I don't want to imply too strongly, but very disappointing sometimes when it's people that you know. | ||
People that you think you know. | ||
And they'll come to me and say, Oh, Nick, this person was simping. | ||
I thought they were cool, but they're not. | ||
And then they're the one simping. | ||
It's classic, the classic case of projection. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
Oh, yeah, Nick, these simps, these e-girls. | ||
Yeah, I'm with you. | ||
OK, pull up to Snapchat. | ||
OK, let's see the phone then. | ||
Let's see your text conversations. | ||
Let's see that. | ||
Who are you snapping all day over there? | ||
Mr. He-Man, woman-hater, Mr. You don't sound like an incel to me. | ||
You don't sound like a vole-cel to me. | ||
Maybe you sound like it, but not when I, not when we look at your phone. | ||
I get that all the time. | ||
Haha, yeah, Nick. | ||
These simps are way out of control. | ||
Fuck women, bro. | ||
Turns around, takes funny picture to send to some girl or something for. | ||
Look, you know, it's just, just don't front. | ||
Just don't lie to me. | ||
Don't lie to my face. | ||
Do you think I'm an idiot? | ||
Do you think I'm stupid? | ||
I'll be nice to you, but do you think I'm stupid? | ||
They take me for an idiot. | ||
I've been on this planet for 21 years, and I know a simp when I see one. | ||
And I see it everywhere. | ||
I see these behaviors. | ||
They'll even come up to me and say, oh yeah, Nick, this guy's a total simp. | ||
I can't believe it. | ||
Everyone's a simp. | ||
And they're all, and they'll say that about each other. | ||
unidentified
|
And then they're both simping! | |
Person A will come to me and say, Person B, I thought they were cool, but they're simping. | ||
And then, and then Person B is simping. | ||
And then Person B will come to me and say, Person A, I thought they were cool, but they're simping. | ||
And it's true, and they're both... | ||
And it's just, it's just disappointing. | ||
Where are all my, where are all my incel kings? | ||
Where are all my incels, my volcels? | ||
Where are all of my, where are my legions of chast, chad, kings? | ||
And I'm not, look, I'm not saying, everybody's like, oh, so you're saying? | ||
Then all these simps, they get real defensive. | ||
unidentified
|
So you're saying we can't talk to girls? | |
No, nobody ever said that. | ||
But it's just about, What is the approach? | ||
As always, it's all in the approach. | ||
Nobody's ever said, the end game is to get married and have kids. | ||
Of course. | ||
We don't hate women. | ||
We're not MGTOW. | ||
Obviously. | ||
But it's about, what's the approach? | ||
Is that the nucleus of your entire world? | ||
unidentified
|
Hi! | |
And they, you know, for crumbs, for crumbs of attention. | ||
It's one thing if you have a girlfriend, you're in a courtship, a serious relationship, and it's in the proper perspective. | ||
But that's what we're talking about. | ||
We're talking about people that endlessly give their time and give their attention to women with a little crumb, a little, oh. | ||
A little crumb for this guy. | ||
A little crumb for you. | ||
A little crumb of my affection. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi! | |
Good morning! | ||
Good night! | ||
unidentified
|
Good morning! | |
Good night! | ||
Good morning! | ||
How's your day? | ||
How are you doing? | ||
Let's talk! | ||
Here's a Snapchat, Twitter DM, a text message, an email. | ||
An email. | ||
You know, and then they do that. | ||
And it's not even exclusive. | ||
And that's what we're talking about. | ||
And it's this, you know, hoes before bros. | ||
That's another aspect of it. | ||
unidentified
|
I better not catch you sipping. | |
No, look, you can't have them. | ||
They can't be trusted. | ||
If you can't say no to a woman, you can't say no to anything, okay? | ||
If you can't say no to a woman, how can I trust you to do anything right? | ||
If you can't even keep it in your pants, well, I mean, you know, that's just, it's just the cause. | ||
The cause. | ||
The struggle. | ||
God must be above. | ||
And, uh, you know, it's not to say that we can't- that we're not gonna get married and everything, but it is to say that everything- everything in the proper way. | ||
Uh, creative- I just read that. | ||
Uh, YoungFireChuck says, let's show PewDiePie who the real gamer of DLive is. | ||
That's right. | ||
AmericaFirstJew says, hi! | ||
Hey! | ||
What's going on, buddy? | ||
Uh, Plo Koonce's thoughts on Churchill. | ||
Think he was blackmailed? | ||
unidentified
|
I- I've never heard that one before. | |
Pennsylvania Groyper says congrats on being number one on DLive! | ||
America first! | ||
Thank you! | ||
Plo Koon says Virgin Imperial March versus the Chad droid invasion theme. | ||
So true! | ||
The droid invasion theme is awesome and yeah I I never heard that opinion before but I agree with it. | ||
Elected Groyper says our greatest strength is in solution to our problem. | ||
Our greatest strength is the problem. | ||
Oh, you're talking about government? | ||
That doesn't really... The way you phrased it doesn't really work. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I kind of see what you're getting at, but that doesn't really work. | ||
PewDiePie says, I will not go down without a fight. | ||
Fuentes... PewDiePie says, Nick Fuentes ain't nothing but a bitch lasagna. | ||
Josh the Remover says, doing my part to send you to the top. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Jason says, black trick cubesy. | ||
PewDiePie says, who is lollisocks and why you wanna kiss him? | ||
Ew. | ||
Okay, well I'll allow it because that's a PewDiePie joke. | ||
That's kind of funny actually. | ||
Not true, but it is funny. | ||
About PewDiePie the fake PewDiePie in chat bringing the bars. | ||
Oh, that's uh He'll have to be singing congratulations about me. | ||
I'm waiting for PewDiePie's congratulations song about me. | ||
Congratulations Congratulations to your incel nation And I don't know what the rest of it would be but but I need a congratulation a snarky, you know diss track that says congratulations Osburger says, the knicker nation is unstoppable. | ||
Here's a few lemons to get you to number one. | ||
Well, hey, thanks a lot, man. | ||
Thanks a ton for the Ninjet. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
Astro says, who the F is Pewds? | ||
You know. | ||
Chef Big Dog says, you're going to pass PewDiePie tonight. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Mbro says, mods rule the chat with an iron fist. | ||
I'm glad. | ||
I'm glad to hear it. | ||
Better than the other way. | ||
Satirical Man with the Ninjet, thank you so much. | ||
Ruby Hill suspending my 20th birthday in quarantine, watching America First. | ||
Not too bad. | ||
Hey, not too bad at all, right? | ||
We could do worse. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Happy birthday, too, by the way. | ||
Hope it's a good one. | ||
It's under, you know, wish it was under better circumstances, but hey, but you got this show. | ||
Wooza says Joe Biden got hashtag me too to press B to believe women. | ||
Can we get some B's in chat for believing women? | ||
Jay Roxxer says Nikki pie. | ||
Thank you for the ninja guinea. | ||
Dutch Gruyper says, Nickeny Fuente, okay? | ||
Wooza says, you got an eschatological take on what's going on? | ||
No, and I don't like when people do this. | ||
It's the end times! | ||
Nobody knows a day or the hour, and things have happened before. | ||
Everybody's... One epidemic or pandemic happens and people say, the end times, really? | ||
The Black Death was worse than this. | ||
Polio, in some sense, was worse than this. | ||
World Wars! | ||
I mean, you had horrible things happening. | ||
One little pandemic happens, a little war happens. | ||
unidentified
|
It's the end of the world! | |
It's the... Revelation said... I don't... I don't... Look. | ||
The end times will come for everybody, whether it's the end of the world or you die. | ||
And you just gotta be prepared for that. | ||
There's literally no use in thinking about the end times. | ||
And when it happens, it'll probably be apparent for believers, but until that point, it doesn't change the way you live your life. | ||
You just be a good Christian. | ||
It's not going to alter the way I live my life. | ||
You're not going to survive it. | ||
Eschatology. | ||
Like, what are you going to do to prepare for it? | ||
What's going to protect you from God ending the universe, right? | ||
YeetOnBoomers says, Run to Op? | ||
Hell yeah. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Fuggs it with a salute. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Jay Rockster says, Yo, Ebbig, the great Canadian Zoomer. | ||
Yes. | ||
No, that's blasphemous. | ||
But I certainly think I am owed a spot in the pantheon of Groyper leaders, Groyper founders, right? | ||
Well, I'm not. | ||
No, that's blasphemous. | ||
But I certainly think I am owed a spot in the pantheon of Groyper leaders, Groyper founders, right? | ||
The Mount Rushmore of Groypers, so to speak. | ||
Yeet says Dresden is cringe. | ||
Oh, well, yeah, kind of. | ||
Ambrose says be nice to Dresden as chaps make good content. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Jesse says ninja crop duster to help tend the lemon crops and to beat PewDiePie on the lemon production. | ||
Thank you very much, Jesse, the America first cowboy! | ||
You're gonna have to go hang out with Steve France in one of these days. | ||
The America First Wrangler! | ||
I better not mess with this cowboy! | ||
No, but I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you very much for your support. | ||
Thanks for the Lemon Crab Duster. | ||
Fugzid with a salute. | ||
Protestant Groy versus DW Refugee. | ||
Love you King. | ||
Keep up the great work. | ||
Is that Daily Wire? | ||
Very good. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Yeet says Jesse Winfrey is based. | ||
He's the America First Cowboy. | ||
He's got to be like the The mascot of the movement. | ||
He's like Kramer in Seinfeld, smoking the cigarettes, right? | ||
The rugged, America-first cowboy. | ||
Dutch Groyper says, Nick, will the website have cookies? | ||
Ha ha ha, funny funny. | ||
Koki says, congrats on number one. | ||
Love to see it, thanks! | ||
Jesse says, my checks go to Nick till we pass Pewds. | ||
Thank goodness tax season is over. | ||
I haven't paid yet and it's gonna be a bloodbath, okay? | ||
I'm gonna wait until the last minute. | ||
But thank you so much for the Ninjagini. | ||
I really appreciate the support. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
You'll love to see it. | ||
No e-girls ever. | ||
Not even once. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Georgio says, America first is first. | ||
You'll love to see it. | ||
America first is first. | ||
First America first first. | ||
It's all first. | ||
First. | ||
America first, right? | ||
I want to see some ones in chat. | ||
Let's see some finger emojis. | ||
America first. | ||
A lot of people are like, what is that? | ||
Is that ISIS? | ||
No, idiot. | ||
It's first. | ||
America first. | ||
First for first. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjat. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
Giorgio's another one. | ||
Shoot me an email. | ||
When's Israel first starting? | ||
Israel first started in 1948. | ||
And prior to that, actually. | ||
Really more like 1900. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
Israel first starting. | ||
Israel first started in 1948. | ||
And prior to that, actually. | ||
Really more like 1900. | ||
Eleanor with an Ingenie. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Ambro says, who's ready for a diamond rush? | ||
Can anybody beat me? | ||
Wow. | ||
Ambro with a ton of diamonds. | ||
Timed out with some diamonds. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Justin says, Wise Man once said, if you're not first, you're last. | ||
To the top of DLive. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Well, thank you so much, Justin. | ||
Thank you for the Ninjagini. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
What a guy. | ||
What a guy. | ||
We love Justin KG. | ||
Do we love Justin KG or what? | ||
Are you the greatest? | ||
No, but he's really a good dude. | ||
BigMoneyWagee says, currently streaming live Nick vs. Pewds lemon count here on DLive. | ||
I think tonight's the night. | ||
We're there already. | ||
But thank you so much BigMoneyWagee for the Ninjagini. | ||
Couldn't have done it without BigMoneyWagee. | ||
Ozburger says, shout out to the Ozzy Groyper as America's greatest ally. | ||
Unironically true. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Jesse says, Kylo Ren screaming more at the diamond beams. | ||
I don't know what that means, but thanks. | ||
Ambrose is okay, last one, thanks. | ||
OpticsRespector says, here's to being the number one earner on DLive, well deserved. | ||
Here's to six million more lemons. | ||
Well thank you so much OpticsRespector, my man. | ||
Thank you for the Ninjagini, really appreciate it. | ||
A good guy, certainly a good friend of the show. | ||
I hope he's staying safe. | ||
Hope he's staying not sick in the laboratory. | ||
That doesn't sound like it in the username, but thanks. | ||
Can we get a brofist for the Knicker Nation, huh? | ||
Can we get a brofist? | ||
but thanks. | ||
Brain6 says we are making moves, huh? | ||
Brofist for you. | ||
NJF greater than PDP. | ||
Can we get a brofist for the Nicker Nation, huh? | ||
Can we get a brofist? | ||
I want a brofist. | ||
Yeah, we need our own thing, maybe. | ||
I don't know, the brofist is his. | ||
We need something, maybe a high-five? | ||
A high-five? | ||
A high-five coming at you. | ||
High-five! | ||
High-five me right now. | ||
Nah, that's a joke, of course. | ||
The Chad, the Chad grab. | ||
I'm grabbing you. | ||
Okay. | ||
Blackstreet Casey says, fuck T-Series. | ||
Yeah, big agree. | ||
NotNukeTelly says, congrats on number one, King. | ||
All the best. | ||
Thank you so much, NukeTelly. | ||
Johnny Jace's Day of the MyPillow. | ||
That's pretty funny. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Thani says student loans have been suspended. | ||
That means we can just give money to you, Nick. | ||
Love ya. | ||
That's true! | ||
No loans, no rent, no taxes. | ||
Free money. | ||
Thanks for the Nijini. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Well, they could kick us off, so I wouldn't go that far. | ||
But we definitely are kind of running the... We're running the op. | ||
We are definitely running... I'm going to steal Shallot's meme there. | ||
We're running the op. | ||
Jonathan Bowden says shout out to wake boy based ego raptor impersonator. | ||
I don't know what that is 23 year old zoomers is just doing my part live wire says African nationalist call that an ignat okay disavow Spicy leaf says congrats King actual question. | ||
Do you foresee real fallout for China multinationals? | ||
too early to say I think there will be fallout. | ||
I definitely think that'll be the case. | ||
It may be a little early to say, but I think it's likely. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Subtle Breeze says, Keep up the good work, Nick. | ||
Almost beating Pewds. | ||
unidentified
|
I did. | |
I did beat him. | ||
Satirical Man with a Ninjette. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Satirical Man is just on another level. | ||
This guy's just got stacks. | ||
Paleo Conservative says, Africa Audio has a sequel. | ||
Audio Zio Tom. | ||
Must see. | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
I'll have to look that up. | ||
Goodbye Uncle Tom. | ||
unidentified
|
Ah, I'll have to watch that. | |
Embrose says, We did it! | ||
We just passed Pewds for sure! | ||
Very good. | ||
Chip Wilson says, Very disappointed that it looks like the family Easter is cancelled. | ||
Yeah, very sad. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
But, you know, maybe just have something at home, I guess. | ||
We can't let it get us down. | ||
It's the good news, right? | ||
Christ is risen, and that's what it's about. | ||
So, as long as we're remembering that, we're honoring the day. | ||
and the holiday and all that i think we're good dutch love says poo poo pee pee huh michael says here's to the new king of d live timed out says epic thanks for the ninja guinea dutch groyper says based lasagna pizza time says let's go and we've got some diamonds some ninja guinies pizza time says diamond rush jay rocher says first turning point then d live what's What can't Nick do? | ||
Sky's the limit, folks. | ||
We have God on our side. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
BassDollar with some Ninjaginis. | ||
And BassDollar, I do apologize. | ||
I didn't get to your Ninjets and Ninjaginis from Saturday. | ||
But... | ||
I will, send me an email and I'll, you know, maybe I'll, just send me an email, tell me what you're thinking, we'll figure something out. | ||
Dumbass says, match this diamond or you're gay and poor. | ||
That's, hey, it's true. | ||
Livewire says, at 8.50 EST we're already at 115,000 lemons. | ||
Nice, pretty good night. | ||
Ray Goldstein says, not gay, not poor. | ||
Yeah, thanks for matching. | ||
Joe the Boomer says, Joe the Boomer more like old pisser. | ||
Old... better known as Old Pisser. | ||
I got to see this guy again. | ||
He's got to come to the next America First event. | ||
I don't know why he wasn't at AFPAC, but we got to bring him out for the next event. | ||
ProtestantGroiper says, more Model UN stories. | ||
I'll do a stream later tonight, I think, and I'll tell some if you want. | ||
CoolestFella says, Knickers stay winning. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
ProtestantGroiper says, top three Bible translations. | ||
Do you think I've read the Bible cover to cover three times? | ||
Because I haven't. | ||
And I haven't read like three different versions. | ||
I've only read the New Living Translation or the New International Version. | ||
I think it's the NIV is the one I've read. | ||
It's either the NLT or the NIV. | ||
I'm not 100% sure. | ||
Look, I read the Bible. | ||
I know that it's... it's not... not that it's arbitrary, but to me, I'm not an expert on the translations. | ||
I'm not an expert on the differences, frankly. | ||
You're asking the wrong person. | ||
I'm not, like, a Bible scholar. | ||
So, um, I just looked up, like, what is a... When I bought my first Bible in college, I looked up, like, Catholic Bible, and it said, these are the acceptable translations. | ||
I went to Barnes & Noble, I scooped one up, and the rest is history, so... | ||
Um, so I can't help you with that. | ||
Maybe Classical Theist can tell you. | ||
Bass Dollars says, All Hail Nick or King of D Live? | ||
Yes, thank you for the Ninjagini. | ||
Jesse says, Maybe Mom can bake a lemon pie to celebrate passing PewDiePie in the Lemon Count? | ||
Maybe! | ||
Yeah, maybe Mom, hey, if she's watching the show, maybe she could get a little bit of a lemon dessert cooking. | ||
That might not be a bad idea. | ||
Thanks for the suggestion. | ||
Maybe I'll go out and buy something for myself. | ||
I'll go buy a cake. | ||
Mormon Groy versus uncle tested positive took 14 days for the test results 14 days I'm sorry to hear about your uncle but that's outrageous with false is hey I know you You're the top streamer on DLive. | ||
That's me. | ||
I am that guy on TV last night. | ||
Awful lot of lemons you got there, bro. | ||
I don't think you're a first-time super chatter, but thanks for the Ninjagini, man. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
It's the night that it happens. | ||
Mark Marcos says congrats on that number one king big moves. | ||
Yes anime Inspector says so, uh, they have to give you GP now, right? | ||
Probably not but that's okay Obergroper says can't wait to see Nick's reaction airline says hey, hey I didn't watch his iDubbbz video yet. | ||
Did he really abstain from roasting? | ||
to be PewDiePie, he didn't roast iDubbbz. | ||
I didn't watch his iDubbbz video yet. | ||
Did he really abstain from roasting? | ||
Disappointing. | ||
Livewire says this movement will revitalize right-wing politics like never before. | ||
Solid tie, by the way. | ||
God bless AF. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thanks, my mom got this for me. | ||
She was shopping at Nordstrom Rack, I think, or TJ Maxx. | ||
One of those stores. | ||
JCPenney. | ||
I don't know. | ||
She's like, I got you some ties. | ||
Tell me if you like these. | ||
I'm like, Ma, you're the best. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
It's true. | ||
We are. | ||
We are right-wing politics. | ||
We are the future. | ||
Never forget that. | ||
George Yeltsin's GM and Ford have retooled their factories to produce only Ninjaginis and Ninjets. | ||
Wartime production. | ||
Wartime production. | ||
Only Ninjets. | ||
Boeing has stopped making planes. | ||
It's true to handle all the demand, right? | ||
Dutch Groy versus Don Fuentes. | ||
Can I borrow your yacht sometime? | ||
Very funny. | ||
Jay Roxer says, favorite ice cream flavor? | ||
Cookies and cream probably. | ||
Cookies and cream I like. | ||
I like just plain chocolate. | ||
I like chocolate with brownies in it. | ||
That's probably... I like anything with brownies in it. | ||
But cookies and cream, if you're talking about like a straight flavor, it's probably that one. | ||
Practical TM says, AF bulldozing the competition. | ||
We cannot be stopped. | ||
Unstoppable force. | ||
Yeah, it's pretty disgraceful. | ||
I talked about that on stream this weekend. | ||
If you want to watch my take on that. | ||
Honestly, it doesn't really matter as long as you get a degree. | ||
Congrats, big guy. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Croat Groiper says, Recommended major career for a political career, if any. | ||
Keep up the amazing work, King. | ||
You're the best. | ||
Honestly, it doesn't really matter as long as you get a degree. | ||
It really doesn't matter. | ||
Political science, international relations, even if you're a business major, it has applications in politics, Marketing has an application in politics. | ||
I've known, so many people that I know in politics have gone to school for so many different things. | ||
Finance, English, Poli Sci, IR, marketing. | ||
There's a lot of different things that you could, you know, that you could enter politics with. | ||
It's really, it's really more just about the degree, a law degree. | ||
You know, political science obviously might be your best bet. | ||
I'm not really the person to ask, but I've seen it all as far as that goes. | ||
It's really just more about having the degree itself. | ||
Mayberry says, the SEO of racist gamers led me to Christ. | ||
Thanks! | ||
Hey, great to hear it. | ||
You're welcome, but great to hear it. | ||
Practical TM says, even Bush used 9-11 to push neocon agenda. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
Iraq, Afghanistan, Patriot Act. | ||
I don't know if that's the case. | ||
I've never been. | ||
Big Chungus mode. | ||
He is going Big Chungus mode in the government. | ||
We need Trump to go Big Chungus. | ||
He's not being very Big Chungus right now. | ||
He's being very non-Chungus. | ||
Dutch Groyper says Hungary is a shithole, though, but they'll survive. | ||
I don't know if that's the case. | ||
I've never been. | ||
I think it's actually a pretty nice place. | ||
Decidue says Admiral Horthy vibes in Hungary. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I don't know who that is. | ||
Dr. Redzone says, We stan the new King of D Live! | ||
Congratulations, Nick. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Thanks for the ninjahini. | ||
Hey John says, Wait a minute. | ||
You are King of the Mole People? | ||
I've been living underground for years, plotting. | ||
Jay Roxer says, the power you give me, I will lay down when this crisis has abated. | ||
That's the energy that Trump needs to bring, exactly. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Dresden says, how many confirmed Groypers have been infected with the coronavirus? | ||
I don't think any have been confirmed. | ||
But I don't know every Groyper that exists. | ||
Dutch Groyper says, loose lips? | ||
Yeah, that's the femoid thing. | ||
Patman says here are your lemons sire. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Hey John says just got an old lady's or just get an old lady as your assistant next issue Yeah, but I don't I don't really you know That's gonna cram my style cuz I like to swear and I like to be a jerk. | ||
I need just like a I don't know. | ||
I need a man to be the assistant and somebody who can just take the abuse. | ||
Look, frankly, I'm kind of an abusive person and I just need somebody who's not going to take it personally and is just kind of mentally tough and somebody who's competent. | ||
But I couldn't have an old lady because I'd have to be too nice. | ||
I'm not mean. | ||
I'm just focused. | ||
I'm an intense person. | ||
That's nice. | ||
Oh, I'm not I'm not patient enough for that. | ||
And I love the the old women. | ||
I have a soft spot. | ||
So I can't for the nice ones. | ||
So I don't know if I could do that. | ||
Gavin the gamer says lemons for King. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Jay Roxer says my city is out of switches Nintendo switches. | ||
Yes, same dude there. | ||
They're out of stock everywhere. | ||
I got like one of the last ones in town. | ||
Elijah says, prisoners being released for coronavirus, but people are being jailed for not following guidelines. | ||
Yeah, kind of ironic, isn't it? | ||
Kind of weird to think about. | ||
Samuel says, gave up video games for Lent. | ||
Regretting that at the moment. | ||
Yeah, it's kind of like extenuating circumstances. | ||
I wouldn't, wouldn't you say, wouldn't you say that it's a little bit, not normal times. | ||
We're having to give up, you know, I'm giving up restaurants for Lent. | ||
I'm giving up dining and restaurants, and that's worked out. | ||
Amren says, did you see Doyle's charity stream? | ||
He like shit on degenerates and libertarians for five hours. | ||
It was epic. | ||
No, I didn't catch that. | ||
I didn't know that was happening, but I'll have to watch that. | ||
I'll look it up right now so that I can, um... Because I like that Doyle guy. | ||
Seems like he's got a lot of potential. | ||
I like him. | ||
Let's see, Jay Roxxer says Boogaloo. | ||
Okay, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Tybor says Boogaloo is a cult for self-destructive nihilists. | ||
Yeah, well, and it's just a cult for people that will never do anything. | ||
Well, when the Boogaloo pops off, then I'm real, man, I can't wait, then I'm gonna be in there. | ||
No, you're not. | ||
You're gonna do nothing. | ||
You're gonna do nothing, and that day's never gonna come. | ||
People just want that delay, right? | ||
They want that postponement. | ||
Well, I'm ready for the Boogaloo, then. | ||
But now, I'm just a wage slave. | ||
It's a big cope. | ||
DutchGroiper says, we want to be on the board. | ||
Get Holland back on the board. | ||
Netherlands, I'll put you back on the board. | ||
Elijah says, coronavirus is being overblown, so the New World Order can take over. | ||
Doubt. | ||
Vlad the Impaler says, hello young man. | ||
Booker check in chat. | ||
Who's Booker? | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
What's wrong with the hair? | ||
I told you I can't get a haircut, but it looks fine. | ||
What is people criticizing the hair for? | ||
It looks fine. | ||
It's not even that bad yet. | ||
support you, Nick, but the hair, though. | ||
What's wrong with the hair? | ||
I told you I can't get a haircut, but it looks fine. | ||
What are people criticizing the hair for? | ||
It looks fine. | ||
It's not even that bad yet. | ||
And if it is bad, I can't get a haircut. | ||
Nasty guy. | ||
Winston says, was John McCain a war hero because he was captured? | ||
He was not a war hero. | ||
You're not a war hero because you become a POW. | ||
Sorry. | ||
I mean, I feel for you and I honor your service and all that, but like, a war hero is somebody who does something incredible. | ||
If you get captured, I mean, unless you did something incredible that led you getting captured, it's like you got shot out of the sky and then they captured you and then you gave up our secrets. | ||
Like, what's heroic about that? | ||
Judge Groyper says 10 out of 10 would throw lemons at mullet Nick. | ||
No way that's gonna happen Vlad the Impaler says hello boomer check. | ||
Let me get my ARP card when I was a kid He we wrote with a quill pen very funny. | ||
Thanks for then the Ninja Genie Dresden says I cut my own hair cool Winston says can you join my college liberal arts class? | ||
No Winston Churchill says, wow, thanks for the ninja- yeah, thanks for the diamond. | ||
Winston says, is Matt Gaetz based near- I'm near his district. | ||
Not really. | ||
I'm not a huge fan, frankly. | ||
Dresden says, it's not as difficult as you might think. | ||
Cutting your own hair? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, well, I don't wanna- maybe I'll look into it. | |
Uh, Gerth says, Uncle June, I thought you were a baklava man. | ||
That's funny. | ||
Sky Fry says, marine traffic, super yachts, scrambling like rats. | ||
Yep. | ||
Winston says, do you think about taking on TP events before the Dream? | ||
No! | ||
I told people not to do that. | ||
And I was never going to do that. | ||
Appalachia, and I didn't think about doing that after the events. | ||
It just happened. | ||
I didn't start Royper Wars. | ||
Kay Alexander started it on his own volition, and we just took it and ran with it. | ||
So it wasn't like that dream gave me the idea. | ||
It's like I had that dream and it literally predicted what happened. | ||
Appalachia Groyper says, this is my first Super Chat. | ||
Thanks for everything you do. | ||
The AF message is spreading everywhere. | ||
So true. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Polish American says, Emperor Palpatine vibes from Orban. | ||
So epic. | ||
Yep. | ||
These allergies, man. | ||
I'm literally going to break this over my head. | ||
Makes me so fucking mad. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Trying to calm down here. | ||
Trying to calm down. | ||
It annoys me because it annoys you. | ||
It also annoys me in itself. | ||
Obergroper says, we need this in America. | ||
Yep. | ||
Sky Fry says, Bill Gates, turn off the AIS. | ||
Stupid. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Monia Welder says, my wife had our first baby last week. | ||
Feels great. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
Yeah, we'll see. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
Me. | |
Okay. | ||
Oh, funny. | ||
unidentified
|
Great job. | |
says what's the idea for the groyper wars after corona yeah we'll see yeah okay winston says who is the most based gop senator right now i don't know me wooza says hungry is based thirsty is cringe okay oh funny ober says america first nationalism great job tky says dang boo you really noticing hard tonight yep fish It's possible, but I don't think so. | ||
unidentified
|
Ah, great. | |
then Tucker. | ||
Millennial Welder says, saying Ma unironically should be illegal. | ||
I agree. | ||
Winston says, do you think DJT knows about you and the Groyper Wars? | ||
It's possible, but I don't think so. | ||
Jay Rocksher says, Tucker out, Nick in. | ||
I'll talk to my people for you. | ||
Ah, great. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Oberg Good to hear. | ||
Oh, Chainlink said that. | ||
Yeah, that's funny. | ||
level haha yeah so true chain link says I'll be worth a ninja guinea by 2022 good to hear oh chain link said that yeah that's funny Samuel says the skin on chicken is so tasty yeah Polish American says the power you give me I will lay down with this when this crisis passes yeah Winston says what's your favorite GTA game GTA 5 Fort Collins thanks for the diamonds Oh Old Sicilian, thanks for the Ninjet. | ||
Suburban Kyle says, always a great show, love you King, thanks, love you too. | ||
Dutch Groyper says, no one cared who I was until I put on the mask. | ||
Dude, funny. | ||
Polish American says, do you need any respirators? | ||
I got stacks on stacks, seriously. | ||
And I'm okay, but thank you. | ||
Paul says, 200,000, let's go! | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Panther Den says the Panther Den face mask prevents most droplets. | ||
I'll have to cop one of those maybe. | ||
Dr. Red Zone says 200,000. | ||
Let's go lads. | ||
It's about sending a message. | ||
Very true. | ||
Contact says, is this an orchestrated reaction? | ||
Is what? | ||
Cringe Compilation says, do you think India will become the next epicenter? | ||
Yes. | ||
Just A White Male says, here's a Ninjagini for the number one big guy on the internet. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Jay Rock says, Nick, I'm you from the future. | ||
Don't eat the pear. | ||
OK, noted. | ||
Elijah says, 110,000 dead from seasonal flu this year alone. | ||
What's wrong with people still saying this? | ||
Rodney says, do you think warmer temps keep India, Africa safe? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, because they're in the southern hemisphere. | |
It's equatorial, right? | ||
It's right there. | ||
Oh, is that a bear? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Good to hear it. | ||
it's right there drywall bear oh is that a bear it says toilet paper versus silver prices i don't know what that means suburban kyle says i trust the plan good to hear it pewdiepie says no hard feelings how about a brofist just this once sure front says remember lift with your legs and not Good advice. | ||
Dutch Groyper says, banner lord. | ||
When? | ||
B for banner lord. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Helen Norris says, new fan. | ||
Thanks for the content, King. | ||
And thanks, Jay Roxxer, for turning me on to America First. | ||
Hey, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Timed out to Super Chats initiated. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Nate Smokes says, King of D live check. | ||
Hashtag Nick for GP. | ||
I think I'm, you know, firmly the king, if I wasn't already. | ||
Cave Fighter says congrats Nick. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Ozburger says let's go! | ||
NovaCore says here's to six million more. | ||
Bourbon says congrats on passing PewDiePie big guy. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Cultist Gordon says long ago people lived in harmony but all that changed when the coronavirus attacked. | ||
Only Martin Shkreli the last pharma vendor can save us. | ||
Kind of cringe, bro, but thanks for the Ninjette. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjette, but I'm not, I can't, I cannot pretend. | ||
I cannot pretend. | ||
I mean, it started off okay, but it just, it was too long and it, you know, there's a way that you do these things. | ||
So, it was a good attempt. | ||
Good attempt, kind of like, you know, it's almost there, but thanks for the Ninjette. | ||
I appreciate the chat, even if the, or the Ninjette, if the chat wasn't so terrific. | ||
Jesse Lee Peterson says congrats on number one. | ||
Nick, amazing! | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Reptards says congrats big guy. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
AFclips says congrats. | ||
Thanks! | ||
Jay Roxer says you're a tardigrade. | ||
Nothing can stop you. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing can kill me. | |
I'm a tardigrade. | ||
I'm a tardigrade floating out there. | ||
I'm a sea bear. | ||
Nothing can stop me. | ||
Cultist Gordon says, Yeet! | ||
Yes, thank you. | ||
AquaticNibbus says, Absolute kingshit! | ||
Seriously, yeah, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Jesse says, Holy moly! | ||
Lemons are fat tonight, boys! | ||
Yeah, big lemons. | ||
That's the only killer song that I just hate. | ||
It's such a gay song. | ||
It really is a gay song. | ||
And, uh, you know, I like a lot of the killers. | ||
Super Chats are the backbone of America first. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
Ray Goldstein says, Are we human or are we dancer? | ||
That's the only killer song that I just hate. | ||
It's such a gay song. | ||
It really is a gay song. | ||
And, you know, I like a lot of the killers. | ||
Not even just the mainstream stuff, but like Sam's Town, and I like a lot of their stuff, but I do not like that song. | ||
Yeah, let's get some Ninja Steaks in chat. | ||
unidentified
|
True! | |
True! | ||
I've made my keep! | ||
Who put this thing together? | ||
unidentified
|
Me! | |
Who do I trust? | ||
Me, right? | ||
But it's true! | ||
Should have been impossible, but here we are. | ||
stories nick the only ones that really mattered true true i've made my keep who put this thing together me who do i trust me right but it's true should have been impossible but here we are god's grace matt says don't need to help nick add more to his spreadsheets i Ah, thank you. | ||
Embrose says, where's Bass Dollar tonight? | ||
He's not even top ten. | ||
Oh, he was here on Saturday. | ||
He did his part on Saturday. | ||
Bass Dollar with the Ninjagini. | ||
Dresden says, how'd you gain so much wisdom and maturity in such a short period? | ||
Aside from genetics, what's the secret? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Genetics, good family, good upbringing. | ||
In intelligence IQ God, I don't know it's tough to I don't know. | ||
I have no idea frankly It all kind of just comes now, I don't know it's I just think it's in innate innate characteristics I couldn't tell you it's a mystery if it was that's if it was a simple. | ||
It's just telling you I mean maybe everybody probably the better off but yeah sorry I can't give you a more satisfying answer it's about people says wife says are you saving for the corny virus I don't know what that means but yeah sure globo donos is just a good old knicker turning lemons into lemonade that's right that's right very true pretty good says germs aren't real I can't see them okay thanks for the ninja guinea | ||
NoRath says, what percentage of the money on DLive goes to them? | ||
If it's too much, I'd rather send directly. | ||
I think it's like 20% to 30%. | ||
I'm not 100%. | ||
It's almost like YouTube. | ||
I think it's just a little bit less than YouTube. | ||
But yeah, if you want a more direct method, I have a P.O. | ||
Box and Crypto as well, which is in the About section here. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Paleo Ethiopian says, PP Poo Poo. | ||
Ober Groyper says, You tell him, King. | ||
Dr. Groyper says, Congrats, King. | ||
We appreciate everything you do for us. | ||
To many more years. | ||
May the best be yet to come. | ||
Well, thank you very much. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Contax says, Congrats, man. | ||
Well done to all who follow. | ||
Yes, thank you. | ||
I don't care about money. | ||
I really don't. | ||
I don't, you know, and I know that might sound like an asinine thing. | ||
funny after the YouTube ban they were like now little Nicky's gonna have to get a real job now little Nicky's gonna have to work at McDonald's I'm not gonna have to work at McDonald's anytime soon that I can tell you and that was that's the most satisfying thing I don't care about money I really don't I don't you know and I know that might sound like an asinine thing I care about money insofar as it's useful and you you know you have more options with it | ||
and it's good to have money and you need money right to do things to live and to do things in politics but when I say I don't care about money I mean the That that is not I don't look at you. | ||
It's like oh, you're a great person because you're rich and you're a poor You're you're a bad person because you're poor but one of the satisfying things about money is that you know, if you make money then it's you know, undeniable metric of success and a lot of these people It's very sick people. | ||
They for some reason they really want to see me like poor. | ||
They want to see me destitute They want to see me desperate because I don't give a fuck. | ||
That's why at the end of the day That's why they want that. | ||
Because they know that they are controlled. | ||
They know that they are dependent. | ||
And they care about what others think. | ||
And they know that they can't be like me. | ||
They can't do what I do. | ||
They can't be like me. | ||
They cannot be independent. | ||
This is a free man talking, bro. | ||
They cannot be a free man. | ||
And that is why they project like that. | ||
They want me to be a slave like them. | ||
I chose not to be a slave! | ||
We got the wave runners, now we run away, okay? | ||
Nobody can ruin me, and they hate that. | ||
They seethe! | ||
They seethe because I don't give a fuck, and I don't have to give a fuck, because I don't answer to anybody. | ||
And they don't like that because they have to. | ||
They have to. | ||
And they do have to answer. | ||
And they do have a boss. | ||
Or they're just too scared. | ||
They don't have the fortitude. | ||
They don't have the brain. | ||
They can't do it. | ||
Jared Holt could never do what I do. | ||
Jared Holt gets a paycheck cut to him. | ||
You know, he works for a boss and he clocks in and he does his little tasks. | ||
Jared Holt can never do, none of these people who critique me or who want to see me do badly, they cannot do what I've done. | ||
And I'm not trying to toot my own horn, but that's why you see that resentment. | ||
That's why the resentment is so great. | ||
That's why people resent me more than others, because I'm successful at what I do. | ||
If I was just some guy, if I was some nobody, if I was doing the same thing, but like 50 people were watching me, people wouldn't hate me. | ||
They'd say, oh, nice guy. | ||
unidentified
|
But because I'm doing well, it's, ah, my case, he can't do that. | |
He just... | ||
You can't just make lemons sitting there and being the best at what you do when I have to work! | ||
All these, you know, all these very mad online people. | ||
But that's what it is. | ||
And I'm blessed for that and I'm grateful for that. | ||
I'm appreciative and fundamentally that's why. | ||
Because I respect it. | ||
That's why, you know, this good fortune has come to me. | ||
I didn't set out to make a lot of money. | ||
I didn't set out to be famous. | ||
I set out to make a good product, and here we are. | ||
So, it's what it is. | ||
But, you know, enough about, enough about the haters. | ||
This is a night for the winners, not the haters, not the losers. | ||
This is a night for us, for the winners. | ||
We won. | ||
We win! | ||
Number one! | ||
America first! | ||
They thought it would have been impossible. | ||
Number one. | ||
We survived. | ||
We thrived. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Obergroiper says, here's one more, King. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Paleo says, are you ready for Trump Bucks? | ||
Yes, I am. | ||
ASUGroiper says, long time lurker, first time super chatter. | ||
Saw PewDiePie donating, just had to join in. | ||
Congrats. | ||
I don't think that was the real PewDiePie, but hey, thanks for the Ninjagini anyway. | ||
Very much appreciate the first time super chat. | ||
Based Angloid says, big fan from across the pond here. | ||
Congrats on getting the number one squire. | ||
Momentous occasion. | ||
unidentified
|
Oi! | |
Well, cheers, bruv. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I think I'm going to thank you for... Cheers, bruv. | ||
unidentified
|
I think... I think I'm number one. | |
I think it's time. | ||
I think it's time. | ||
They say, instead of TH, they say F. Fake it through, bruv! | ||
Thank you. | ||
Cheers, cheers, my friend. | ||
That's how a normal American talks. | ||
Thank you, brother. | ||
Wow, thank you very much. | ||
Thank you very much for the lemons. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, cheers, jolly, jolly, I think it's peachy, innit? | |
I mean, these people are like, what's wrong with you? | ||
It's like you're sputtering like a disabled person. | ||
Are you okay over there? | ||
Some of these British people come up to me, I'm like, English, let's try English, alright? | ||
Didn't you invent the language? | ||
What happened? | ||
What happened along the way? | ||
It's like do you need do you need an ambulance? | ||
Do you need some kind of assistance? | ||
What's going on over there? | ||
unidentified
|
They're like, oh, I think Rob did show just peachy in it like what's going on? | |
What's going on with that buddy? | ||
You need to get that checked out. | ||
You need like peace speech therapy. | ||
Are you having a seizure? | ||
I'm kidding kidding. | ||
It's jokes. | ||
I'm joking. | ||
I love British people. | ||
I'm not I'm not making fun of them. | ||
I love British people I think it's very endearing actually But thank you from across the pond, my angloid brother. | ||
BaseDroiper says, great job, Nick. | ||
What would dinner with Elon Musk, Kanye, and you be like? | ||
Bruh, is this a serious question? | ||
Also, Energy Rising, what if Bill Nye and... | ||
Nikola Tesla and Elon Musk all had dinner together. | ||
What if Christopher Hitchens and Neil deGrasse Tyson and Joe Rogan had dinner together? | ||
unidentified
|
To be a fly on the wall. | |
I don't know, dude. | ||
Sounds like a Reddit moment. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Nocomp says, Thank you, sir. | ||
You've helped me re-evaluate my beliefs. | ||
Make America conservative again. | ||
I am glad to hear that. | ||
Thank you for the Ninjagini. | ||
Moonhead says, Fuck roasties. | ||
So true. | ||
Yeah, fuck them. | ||
Not like that, but like, you know, they suck. | ||
Thumbstick says, No ventilators, no respirators. | ||
Only see you laters. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
See ya. | ||
Good riddance. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
That's terrible. | ||
Damn Dawes says, Congratulations King, this movement is truly blessed. | ||
It is! | ||
It's the only way. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
George Yeo says, I've been feeling very blackpilled recently and seeing you become number one and the energy here tonight has given me new hope. | ||
Thanks for all you do. | ||
Well, thank you so much. | ||
Thank you for the Ninjet. | ||
I'm sorry you're feeling blackpilled. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
Everything's going great for the movement, for like the world. | ||
I mean, things are bad now, but things can turn around. | ||
So I hope you get white billed go to church, but well I can't you can't go to church, but I don't know pray You know think on it life at life is good. | ||
Well. | ||
It's not that's not good, but life is just enjoy life But I'm glad I'm glad that it's lifting your spirits a little bit easier said than done right, but thanks for the ninja and that gang says Would you rather have a gaze I almost read that wrong would you rather have a gay son or a whore daughter love you King? | ||
I've been asked this before I don't remember what I answered last time. | ||
unidentified
|
Mmm. | |
I don't know. | ||
That's a tough one. | ||
unidentified
|
Probably a whore daughter. | |
Because if you had, here's the thing. | ||
Your son is the pride of the family, right? | ||
I mean, your son is like, if my son were a, you know, acting homosexual, is out there. | ||
And I mean like a flamboyant, like, it'd be bad enough if he was just, you know, homosexual to begin with. | ||
But if that were the case, if he were carrying out that lifestyle, imagine if my junior, my own loin, from my own loin, if he would be out there participating in and perpetuating that degeneracy. | ||
me. | ||
That would be bad that would be not good on my name and Spreading that in the world. | ||
I don't think you recover from that I mean and then the gene pool stops right if your son did that then the gene pool stops That's the other thing just dawned on me if your son's gay. | ||
You're not getting any kids Game over if your daughter's a whore now mind you know like look. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean I Yeah, every child's a blessing. | |
Every child's a blessing from God. | ||
Every child is a blessing from God, girl or boy. | ||
Every human has value. | ||
If God blessed me with a baby girl, I would be the luckiest man in the world. | ||
But let's be real. | ||
My ambition for my daughter would not be to be a great hero and Carry on my legacy. | ||
I mean, she's going to get married to someone from another family. | ||
She will take his name. | ||
And that's great, but you know, it's like kind of like a lower barrier to me or lower threshold. | ||
To begin with, lower expectation. | ||
It's like, if you're gonna have a daughter, like, I don't know. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
And if she's a whore, well, at least you're getting an offspring. | ||
Might not be legitimate, but at least you're getting one. | ||
At least the genes are going down the line. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
So I'd say that but they I would rather just have good kids right rather just have good kids Plural is dead says congratulations on number one king AF is unstoppable. | ||
Thanks a lot Ray Goldstein says what if PewDiePie's reddit talked about Nick Fuentes that would be big. | ||
Maybe we could get that going. | ||
Maybe that's a psyop Astro says I sent for you Nick, but it's different because I make it leader. | ||
I'm not just some you know whore Georgio says virgin t-series versus Chad America first very true Yeah, I'm even I'm the bigger underdog out of all of them right t-series PewDiePie me. | ||
I'm the biggest underdog of all Thanks for the ninja genie girth Brooks. | ||
It says my cousin has Corona pray for him. | ||
Sorry to hear that prayers for the sick As a V buses couldn't happen to a better handsome smarter host true factual fact check Yeet says I read the King James but use NIV for reference. | ||
Well, King James is no good, man. | ||
No good. | ||
That's Protestant. | ||
Optics or Spectres is probably the New American Bible. | ||
I think it was the NIV. | ||
I think it's the New International Version, but I'll have to double check. | ||
It's either the NIV or the NLT. | ||
I know it was an N. I remember it was an N. It was either the New Living Translation or the New International Version. | ||
I'm not positive. | ||
But thank you for the diamond. | ||
Very true. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
And that's what we do. | ||
We fight evil. | ||
I hate evil. | ||
I think I know what that is. | ||
America first. | ||
Very true. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
And that's what we do. | ||
We fight evil. | ||
I hate evil. | ||
Ray Goldstein says, Ever had lemon bars? | ||
Family favorite. | ||
Lemon bar. | ||
I think I know what that is. | ||
I think I've had that. | ||
Jay Rockster says, Nice. | ||
Obergroiper says, We made history tonight, King. | ||
History in the making. | ||
Truly. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Zappy says, What's Bill Mitchell's angle, or is he just low IQ? | ||
I frankly was thinking the exact same thing the other day. | ||
Like, it's scary. | ||
What's wrong with this guy? | ||
You go through his timeline and it's just the most insane cope. | ||
The most insane rationalization. | ||
No rational person. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even a grifter! | |
Could write this! | ||
I'm thinking, what's... This guy just must have a problem, man. | ||
Because it's been like this since the election. | ||
Oh, everybody trusts Trump. | ||
Everything that Trump does, it's like, oh well, you know, it's just his grand plan. | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
The guy's, like, sick. | ||
I think he's just sick. | ||
I don't know if it's even a low IQ thing. | ||
He's just messed up. | ||
I was thinking that the other day. | ||
I'm reading through the timeline. | ||
It's, like, scary. | ||
It's like in The Shining when she goes through the papers that Jack Nicholson types and it just says the same thing over and over again, right? | ||
It's, like, disturbing. | ||
Is that Jack Nicholson? | ||
Am I having a brain? | ||
That's who it is in The Shining, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Is it? | |
Am I? | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
I thought I was like going insane for a second there. | ||
I had a moment of confusion. | ||
Nuke Enthusiast says, sorry, this is all I can afford right now, but you're number one. | ||
Hey, don't mention it, big guy. | ||
I appreciate anything. | ||
Thumbsticks says, Solid Snake, Mullet Nick. | ||
Mullet Nick? | ||
Literally when? | ||
Not gonna happen, dude. | ||
Keyboard says, a Squarica first. | ||
Let's get a Yeezy take. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Sharia LaBeouf says, Congratulations, bro! | ||
Growing more unstoppable by the day. | ||
Thank you so much, Sharia. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
True. | ||
GZ says, Americanism, not globalism, but it will be our credo. | ||
Doyle. | ||
Did John Doyle say that? | ||
Mbro says, How many subs do you have on DLive? | ||
unidentified
|
Does it say? | |
I'm not gonna tell you. | ||
Cultist Gordon says, thanks for the knife in my heart, bro. | ||
Love you. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I didn't mean to hurt your feelings. | ||
Don't take it so personally. | ||
I'm just joshing. | ||
It's just banter, all right? | ||
He's entering into the arena. | ||
But I appreciate the ninja. | ||
It was funny. | ||
It was a good attempt, all right? | ||
It was funny. | ||
Sharia LaBeouf says, a few more for the epic IDGAF rants. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And we got a few more Ninjaginis going, the Dark Nibba, Safety Buzz, Born, Groy versus EpicShowTonight, all the best from Germany, thanks. | ||
And J Doogs says, how am I supposed to get swole if gyms are closed? | ||
Push-ups, sit-ups, pull-ups, the classics. | ||
Get it going big guy, figure it out, figure it out. | ||
Gains don't wait for the virus. | ||
All right, well that's that's gonna do it for me on the show tonight. | ||
I think we're gonna have a special outro tonight I think I want to have a special outro. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
Should I do a special outro? | ||
I'm gonna play a special a special outro song for you So don't don't be surprised what a different song plays to commemorate it, but it truly is an historic night. | ||
It really is And I already you know said some words on it, but we surpassed PewDiePie clearly And we've done things that nobody thought were possible. | ||
Lasting this long, the show grows every night, thriving off of the major platforms, in spite of censorship, in spite of hit pieces, and hit jobs, and subversion, and all, you know, you know what we've been through. | ||
So it really is... | ||
Oh, providential. | ||
I want to say blessed and providential. | ||
And it's because we're on God's side. | ||
As long as the cause is just, we will have the firm hand of God upholding us. | ||
And that's what I believe. | ||
I believe that's what made it this far for us. | ||
And this might not mean a lot to some people. | ||
It's like, oh, you know, you made a lot of money. | ||
But it's more than that. | ||
It's about the support It's about the resiliency, the loyalty of the community, the size of the community, and the fact that we've made it off of the big platforms. | ||
That's another big part of it. | ||
Somebody like me, what did I start out with, with this show? | ||
A green screen. | ||
That's literally all I had. | ||
When RSVN started my show, they sent me a green screen. | ||
No desk, no computer, no microphone, no camera. | ||
They sent me a green screen. | ||
And I took that. | ||
I took, you know, we're about to play a song. | ||
Kanye says, I took my chain, my 15 seconds of fame, and come back next year with the whole fucking game. | ||
True. | ||
Took my green screen, $100 in pity money from RSVN, and look at what it's turned into. | ||
We didn't need TPUSA. | ||
We didn't need donors. | ||
We didn't need Fox. | ||
We didn't even need YouTube. | ||
We don't need any of that, right? | ||
Free man talking! | ||
That's what it's all about. | ||
So it's an historic evening. | ||
Everybody should be proud. | ||
I should be proud. | ||
You guys should be proud. | ||
We're a part of something historic and part of something important. | ||
And we just gotta keep true to the cause, to the mission, stay on top of things right. | ||
But many, many great things in our future, especially this year. | ||
So it's very exciting. | ||
Thank you all so much for the extra support. | ||
Remember to follow this channel, subscribe to the channel. | ||
Follow. | ||
Subscribe. | ||
Check out the email list. | ||
NicholasJFuentes.com. | ||
Remember, we are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time, and not a moment sooner or a moment later. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
This is America First, and that's what it always is, America First. | ||
First! | ||
Finally first! | ||
Thank you so much to everybody. | ||
Thanks to everybody. | ||
everybody thank you to our mega donors like mega mega super chatters you have to put them in their own category it's jay roxer it's the america first cowboy it's embro it's sp it's satirical man big money waging not nasa if you go back even a little bit we haven't seen him so much but but historically it's uh uh who am i leaving out there's one bobby d it's it's a lot it's a lot of these different guys | ||
It's OpticsRespector. | ||
It's the Mega Donors. | ||
We'll give a big thanks to our top three for tonight. | ||
Jesse, Jesse the America vs. Cowboy. | ||
Huge! | ||
Giorgio, Satirical Man. | ||
These are our Mega Donors. | ||
Can we get a salute in chat? | ||
Can we get a circle and a 7? | ||
Can we get a 0 and a 7 for a salute for our Mega Donors? | ||
BaseDollar of course, BaseDollar. | ||
We got a lot of those guys in there. | ||
Big salute to our big guys, our big guys. | ||
I might be missing some, I apologize if I do, but our top three, Jesse Giorgio, satirical man. | ||
We'll get our top three for this month as well. | ||
Bass Dollar, Embro, satirical man. | ||
Huge, huge thank you. | ||
So appreciated. | ||
Bless those people. | ||
They must be like... | ||
Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos over there as far as I'm concerned. | ||
So thanks to them. | ||
But thanks to everybody who superchats. | ||
If you are a mega donor, please shoot me an email so I can send you a proper thank you. | ||
Email is in the about section. | ||
But thanks to everybody who superchats. | ||
Thank you to everybody who watches the show and supports in any way. | ||
We love you and I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
America first. America first. | ||
unidentified
|
America first. | |
America first. | ||
Motherfucker. | ||
I had to throw everybody out the motherfucking room. | ||
I like to propose a toast. | ||
I said toast, motherfucker. | ||
La, la, la, la. La, la, la, la, la, la. La, la, la, la, la. | ||
And I am. | ||
Here's to the rock. | ||
And they ask me, they ask me, they ask me. | ||
I tell them. | ||
Here's to the rock. | ||
Raise your glasses, your glasses, your glasses. | ||
To the sky. | ||
Here's to the rock. | ||
This is the last call for alcohol for the Mr. Rockefeller. | ||
So get your ass up off the wall. | ||
The all around the world digital underground park. | ||
The Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer of the Rock. | ||
I take my chain, my 15 seconds of fame. | ||
And come back next year with the whole fucking game. | ||
Ain't nobody expect I ain't to end up on top. | ||
They expected that college drop out to drop and it flop. | ||
Then maybe he stopped saving all the good before self. | ||
Rockefeller's only niggas that help. | ||
My money was standing in Sean Paul goatee head. | ||
Not John Paul goatee head. | ||
Cologne fill the air. | ||
Yeah, they say he bougie, he big head head. | ||
Would you please stop talking about how my dickhead is. | ||
Flow infectious, give me 10 seconds. | ||
I have a buzz bigger than insects in Texas. | ||
It's funny how wasn't nobody interested. | ||
To the night I almost killed myself in Lexus. | ||
Now I am. | ||
And they ask me, they ask me, they ask me. | ||
I tell them, they still like a fairy. | ||
Raise your glasses, your glasses, your glasses to the sky. | ||
Raise your back. | ||
This is the last call for alcohol, for the Mr. Rockefeller, to get your ass up off the wall. | ||
Now is Kanye the most overlooked? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Now is Kanye the most overlooked? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Do the fans want the feeling of a tribe called Quest? | ||
But all they got left is this guy called West. | ||
Better take freeway, throw him on tracks, you're most left. | ||
You call him Kweli or Kweli, I put him on songs with Jay-Z. | ||
I'm the Gap, like Banana Republic and Old Navy. | ||
Ooh, and come out sweeter than old Sadie. | ||
Nice as bum B when I met him at the Source Awards. | ||
Girl he had with him, ass could have won the Horse Awards. | ||
And I was almost famous. | ||
Now everybody love Kanye, I'm almost reigning. | ||
Some say he arrogant, can y'all blame him? | ||
It was straight embarrassing how y'all played him. | ||
Last year shopping my demo, I was trying to shine. | ||
Every motherfucker told me that I couldn't rhyme. | ||
Now I can let these dream killers kill my self-esteem. | ||
I use my arrogance as a steam to power my dreams. | ||
I use it as my gas, so they say that I'm gassed. | ||
But without it I'd be last, so I ought to laugh. | ||
So I don't listen to the suits behind the desk no more. | ||
You niggas wear suits cause you can't dress no more. | ||
You can't say shit to Kanye West no more. | ||
I rocked 20,000 people, I was just on top, nigga. | ||
I'm kind of Louis Vuitton down. | ||
Brought my mom a purse, now she Louis Vuitton mom. | ||
I ain't played a hand I was dealt, I changed my cards. | ||
I prayed to the skies and I changed my stars. | ||
I went to the malls and I balled too hard. | ||
Oh my God, is that a black card? | ||
I turned around and replied, why, yes. | ||
But I prefer the term African American Express. | ||
Brains, power, and muscle like Dane Puff and your Russell. | ||
Your boy back on the sussle. | ||
You know what I've been up to. | ||
Killing y'all niggas on that lyrical shit. | ||
Mayonnaise, color bins, I push miracle wits and I am. | ||
And they ask me, they ask me, they ask me. | ||
I tell them. | ||
Mr. Rockefeller. | ||
Raise your glasses, your glasses, your glasses to the sky. | ||
And he is to the rock. | ||
This is the last call for alcohol for my niggas. | ||
Mr. Rockefeller. | ||
So get your ass up off the ball. | ||
So there's A&R, Rockefeller, and hip hop. | ||
Bye. | ||
Yo, what's happening? | ||
And when I was in a session with him, I had my demo with me, you know, like I always do. | ||
I played a song. | ||
He's like, who's that spitting? | ||
I'm like, it's me. | ||
He's like, oh, okay. | ||
He started talking to me on the phone, going back and forth, just asking me to send him beats. | ||
And I think he's trying to get into managing producers because he had this other kid named Just Blaze he was messing with. | ||
And he was friends with my mentor, Noah D. | ||
And Noah D told him, look, man, if you want to mention Kanye, you got to tell him that he's like the way he rap. | ||
I was like, I don't know if he's gassing me or that. | ||
But he's like, you want to manage me as a rapper and a producer? | ||
I'm a ghost. | ||
I was messing with DDot also. | ||
People like this talk about the ghost production, but that's how I got in the game. | ||
If it wasn't for that, I wouldn't be here. | ||
So, you know, after they picked that Truth beat, I was figuring I was going to get some more work. | ||
But she just wasn't popping off like that. | ||
I was staying in Chicago. | ||
I had my own apartment. | ||
I'd be doing, like, just beats for local acts, just to try to keep the lights on and be able to go out and buy, get a Peli Peli off, lay away, get some Jordans or something, get a Technomarine. | ||
That's what we wore back then. | ||
I made this one beat while I sped up this Harold Melvin sample. | ||
I played it for Hip over the phone. | ||
He's like, oh, yo, that shit is crazy. | ||
Jay might want it for this compilation album he's doing called The Dynasty. | ||
And at that time, like, the drums really wasn't sounding right to me, so I went and, um... | ||
I was listening to Dre Chronic 2001 at that time and really I just like bit the drums off explosive and put it like what a sped up sample and now it's kind of like my old style where it started when he rapped on this can't be like and I was like really the first beat of that kind that was on the dynasty album I could say that was the the resurgence of the soul sound You know, I got to come in and track the beat, and at that time, I was still with my other management, and I really wanted to roll with hip-hop. | ||
I just needed some fresh air, you know what I'm saying? | ||
Because I've been there for a while, and I appreciate what they did for me, but, you know, it's a time in every man's life where you gotta make a change to try to move on to the next level. | ||
That day I came and I tracked the beat and I got to meet Jay-Z, and he said, oh, you a real soulful dude. | ||
He played the song, because he already spit his verse by the time I got to the studio. | ||
You know, he do it in one take. | ||
He said, tell me what you think of this. | ||
And I heard it, and I was thinking like, man. | ||
I really wanted more like of the simple type Jay-Z. | ||
I didn't want like the more introspective, complicated rap, or in my personal opinion. | ||
So he asked me, what you think of it? | ||
And I was like, man, it's shit tight. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
Well, I'm going to tell him. | ||
I was on a train, man. | ||
You know? | ||
So after that, I went back home. | ||
Man, I'm just in Chicago. | ||
I'm trying to do my thing. | ||
You know, I got groups. | ||
I got acts I'm trying to get on. | ||
And like, wasn't nothing really like popping off the way it should have been. | ||
One of my homies that was one of my artists, he got signed. | ||
But it was supposed to really go through my production company, but he ended up going straight with the company. | ||
So, like, I'm straight holding the phone getting the bad news that dude was trying to leave my company. | ||
And I got evicted at the same time. | ||
So, I went down there and tracked the beats from him. | ||
I took that money, came back, packed all my shit up in a U-Haul. | ||
Maybe about ten days before I had to actually get out. | ||
So I didn't have to deal with the landlord, cause he's a jerk. | ||
Me and my mother drove to Newark, New Jersey. | ||
I hadn't even seen my apartment. | ||
I mean, I pulled up. | ||
I unpacked all my shit. | ||
You know, we went to Ikea. | ||
I bought a bed. | ||
I put the bed together myself. | ||
I loaded up all my equipment. | ||
And the first beat I made was, uh, Heart of the City. | ||
And Beenz is still working on his album at that time. | ||
So I came up there to Bassline. | ||
It was Beenz' birthday, matter of fact. | ||
And I played like seven beats. | ||
And... | ||
You know, I guess he is in his zone. | ||
He already had the beats that he wanted. | ||
I did nothing like it already at that time. | ||
But then Jay walked in. | ||
I remember he had a Gucci bucket hat on. | ||
I remember like, like it was yesterday. | ||
And Hip-Hop said, yo, play that one beat for him. | ||
So I played Harder City. | ||
And really, I made Harder City. | ||
I really wanted to get that beat to DMX. | ||
So I played another beat. | ||
I played another beat. | ||
I remember that Gucci bucket he took it and like put it over his face. | ||
And he made faces like, ooh. | ||
Two days later, I'm in bassline and I seen Dame. | ||
Dame didn't know who I was. | ||
I was like, yo, what's up? | ||
I'm Kanye. | ||
Yo, you that kid Kanye? | ||
You that kid that gave all the beats to Jay? | ||
Yo, this nigga got classics to the beats, bitch. | ||
He got classics? | ||
Yeah, he talking shit. | ||
I'm like, oh shit. | ||
And all this time, I'm starstruck, man. | ||
I'm still thinking about, you know, I'm picturing these niggas on the show, on the streets just watching or whatever. | ||
I'm looking, these are superstars in my eyes. | ||
And they still are, you know. | ||
Jay came in, and he spit all these songs, like, in one day, and in two days. | ||
I gotta bring up one thing, you know. | ||
Go back in the story. | ||
The day I did the Can't Be Life beat, I tracked it. | ||
I remember Lenny Yessir's there. | ||
He had some Louis Vuitton sneakers on. | ||
He think he fly. | ||
And Hip Hop was there. | ||
I think Ty-Ty, John Manelli, a bunch of people. | ||
I didn't know all these people at the time. | ||
They was in the room, and I said, yo, Jay, I can rap. | ||
And I spit this rap. | ||
It said, uh, I'm killing y'all niggas on that lyrical shit. | ||
Mayonnaise, color bins, I push Miracle Whips. | ||
I saw his eyes light up when I said that line. | ||
But you know, the rap was like real whack and shit. | ||
So that's all the response. | ||
He said, man, that was tight. | ||
And that was it. | ||
You know, I didn't get no deal or nothing. | ||
OK, fast forward. | ||
So Blueprint, H to the Izzo, my first hit single. | ||
And I just took that poly, built relationships with people. | ||
And my relationship with Kweli, I think, was one of the best things that ever happened to my career as a rapper. | ||
Because, you know, of course, later he allowed me to go on tour with him. | ||
Man... God, please, I love him for that. | ||
And at this time, you know, I didn't have a deal. | ||
I had songs, and I had relationships with all these A&Rs, so they wanted beats from me. | ||
So they called me over to play them some beats. | ||
Give me a beat that sounds like Jay-Z. | ||
You know, they dick riders or whatever. | ||
So I'll play them these post-Blueprint beats or whatever, and then I'll play my shit. | ||
I'll be like, yo, but I rap too. | ||
And I guess they was looking at me crazy, because, you know, because I didn't have a jersey on or whatever. | ||
Everybody out there, listen here. | ||
I'm playing them Jesus walks, and they didn't sign me. | ||
You know what happened? | ||
It was some A&Rs that fucked with me though, but then, like, the heads, there'll be somebody at the company that I say, nah, like, Dave Lighty fucked with me. | ||
My nigga Mel brought me to a bunch of labels. | ||
Jessica Rivera, man. | ||
I'm not gonna say nothing to mess my promotion up. | ||
Let's just say I didn't get my deal. | ||
The nigga that was behind me, I mean, he wasn't even a nigga. | ||
The person that actually kicked everything off was Joe 3H from Capitol Records. | ||
He wanted to sign me really bad. | ||
Dane was like, yo, you got a deal with Capitol? | ||
Okay man, just make sure it's not wack. | ||
Then one day, I just went ahead and played it. | ||
I wanted to play some songs, cause you know, Cam was in the room, Young Guru, and Dane was in the room. | ||
So I played... | ||
Actually, it's a song you'll never hear. | ||
Or maybe I might use it so it's called, Wow. | ||
I go to Jacob with 25,000. | ||
You go with 2,500. | ||
Wow. | ||
I got 11 plaques on my walls right now. | ||
You got your first gold single. | ||
Damn, nigga, wow. | ||
I like the chorus. | ||
I'm like, don't bite that chorus, because I might still use it. | ||
So I play that song for him. | ||
And he's like, oh, shit. | ||
Oh, shit. | ||
It's not even wet. | ||
I ain't gon' front, it's kinda hot. | ||
It's actually kinda hot. | ||
Like, they still wasn't looking at me like a rapper. | ||
And I'm sure Dane figured, like, man, if he do a whole album, if his rap's this wack, at least we can throw Cam on every song and say the album, you know? | ||
So, uh, Dane took me to the hallway, he's like, yo, man, B, B, you don't wanna brick. | ||
You don't wanna brick. | ||
You don't wanna catch a brick. | ||
You gotta be under an umbrella or you get rained on. | ||
I told Hip Hop, and Hip Hop was like, oh, word? | ||
Actually, even with that, I was still about to take the deal with Capital because it was already on the table and because of my relationship with 3H that, you know, because I told him I was going to do it. | ||
I'm a man of my word. | ||
I was going to roll with what I said I was going to do. | ||
Then... | ||
You know, I'm not gonna name no names, but people told me, oh, he's just a producer-rapper, and told 3H that, told the heads of the Capitol, and right the day, I'm talking about, I planned out everything that I was gonna do, man. | ||
I had picked out clothes, I already started booking studio sessions, I started arranging my album, thinking of marketing schemes, man, I was ready to go. | ||
And they had mail call me, it said, yo, Capital pulled on the deal. | ||
Yo, capital pulled on the deal. | ||
And, you know, I told him that Rockefeller was interested, and I don't know if they thought that was just something I was saying to gas him up to try to push the price up or whatever. | ||
I went up. |