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unidentified
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America First News. | |
Good evening everybody who 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 Wednesday and we have a lot to talk about. | ||
Finally! | ||
We finally have a lot to talk about. | ||
A lot to get into. | ||
Big news! | ||
Big news happening in the world today. | ||
Finally, that is not coronavirus related, and it's about time. | ||
Tonight, of course, we are talking about Bernie Sanders dropping out of the Democratic primary, dropping out of the presidential race, and that's going to be our main story, our featured story, and it's very exciting, and this is very exciting, this is very good. | ||
This is a very good development, and not a good development just for the country. | ||
But it is a good development for me. | ||
And it is a good development for you watching this show. | ||
Because it means that we finally get to return to the world. | ||
A little bit of a return to normalcy here. | ||
A return to form. | ||
And break it up a little bit. | ||
Break up the monotony of the numbers, and the news conference, and the stimulus, and the stock market. | ||
So we're going to talk about that and it should be very exciting. | ||
We're going to get into that and it feels like we're coming outside. | ||
It feels like we are leaving the corona news bunker for the first time in weeks. | ||
So we'll be talking about that. | ||
We will also admittedly be talking a little bit about the coronavirus and I don't actually even have whiteboard today. | ||
I don't even have a whiteboard today. | ||
And it's not, you know, it's for no other reason other than that's just not going to be the focus of the show tonight. | ||
Finally! | ||
So we'll look at some of the numbers, but not enough to warrant a whole whiteboard. | ||
We'll look at some numbers and some developments, but that'll be minor. | ||
That'll be minor compared to the Bernie Sanders talk. | ||
So, lots of good stuff tonight. | ||
It's gonna be a pretty fun show. | ||
You might have noticed I've got new intro music tonight. | ||
I debuted my new intro song. | ||
I call it lobby music because it's like the lobby of the show. | ||
You wait in the lobby for me. | ||
To come do my show, right? | ||
So we have some new music tonight, and I think everybody likes it. | ||
I think we have reached universal acclaim on the new song, just about everybody. | ||
And I was watching the chat, you know, I'm watching people fill up and watching everybody pour into the stream, and pretty much universally positive reactions. | ||
Some saying the best lobby music yet. | ||
High praise. | ||
So I'm glad you guys like it. | ||
I love it. | ||
I love the new music and It's not the song might actually have some updates there might be more clips of me in the song It's not actually maybe the first time some of you have heard it. | ||
I actually played that song I want to say a week or two ago. | ||
I debuted it and we sampled a couple of new songs But I finally pulled the trigger and replaced it there are some pending updates which may come and that's why I was holding off and Because we're going to put, the guy that makes the songs, he's going to put some more clips of my voice in this latest song. | ||
And I was waiting on that, but I figured let's just do it. | ||
I've been waiting for a few days. | ||
But I think what we might do with the lobby music is do a shuffle and do like a playlist. | ||
And maybe we have all the four different songs. | ||
I think it's four at this point. | ||
Well, two that have been used and then this one and one other one. | ||
We might do a playlist of four songs for the lobby music so that you could have a total of, what would that be like? | ||
Seven to ten minutes of songs I think that's about right maybe nine to twelve minutes of of unique songs For the lobby music instead of hearing the same three-minute song over and over and over again You'll hear a rotation of four and maybe more songs, so I'm working on that that might come later on but I'm glad you guys, most of you guys liked it, which is great. | ||
You know, usually the music is the most controversial thing. | ||
If there's too much hip-hop or if it's a different style, you know, that's a big source of complaining from you, from the masses, from the peanut gallery. | ||
So I'm glad you guys liked it. | ||
But, yeah, but I'm excited. | ||
I'm pumped up. | ||
I'm excited to be back for a show where we're actually gonna switch it up. | ||
It's been killing me. | ||
And I've been talking about it for the past few weeks. | ||
It's been killing me to just talk about the same thing every night. | ||
And it's not even just the same topic. | ||
It's like no new developments either. | ||
No new angle. | ||
No, really major breakthrough. | ||
And I've said this a million times, but at least if it's like a war, there's like, you know, new, unique, fresh things. | ||
It's like a linear sort of narrative and storyline. | ||
And with this, it's just like, well, you know, today the virus got worse. | ||
Today, more people have it than yesterday. | ||
More people have the virus than yesterday. | ||
The numbers going up again, like, it just sucks. | ||
So I'm excited that we finally have something new to talk about. | ||
So we'll be talking about Bernie Sanders and the Democratic primary, even though, I mean, is it really even news that Joe Biden is now the presumptive frontrunner and Bernie Sanders is not going to be president? | ||
I mean, we had determined this weeks ago, but, but hey, look, we'll take a weekend cat, right? | ||
I gotta tell you, I'm very uncomfortable today. | ||
This beard is, it's entering into the itchy phase. | ||
My face is just itching so much today, and I just want to get rid of it. | ||
But I told you, I'm gonna keep it for as long as we're in the shelter-in-place. | ||
As long as the quarantine is going on, I'm gonna keep the beard. | ||
So I gotta keep it. | ||
And I don't know what's going on with... I don't know if my neck's getting fat or what's going on with this collar, but I'm very cognizant of it this week. | ||
Maybe I'm just in my own head now. | ||
Maybe I... You know when you get in your own head, so... I'm feeling a little uncomfortable tonight, but I'm gonna... I'm gonna try and power through. | ||
I'm gonna try and soldier on in spite of it, and we'll have a good show. | ||
We'll have an exciting show. | ||
I'm excited to be back. | ||
For another fruitful discussion on America First. | ||
So we might as well dive in. | ||
We might as well just launch into it. | ||
I don't have too much else to say. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, don't have too much else to say. | |
Kind of a boring day around the America First headquarters. | ||
Just been busy. | ||
I've been working very hard. | ||
I've never worked this hard in my life. | ||
I have never worked this hard in my life. | ||
I'm a genius. | ||
I don't know if you know that by now. | ||
Maybe you do. | ||
Maybe you don't. | ||
But I'm one of the smartest people I know. | ||
And as a result of this, I have never had to work hard in my whole life. | ||
In middle school and high school, my whole life has been easy because I put in this much effort and I get by just fine. | ||
You know, and, you know, I'm sure a lot of people can relate to this. | ||
Even if you're not on my level, you know, it doesn't take much to coast in school, you know. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
So, for most of my life, it's like, yeah, you know, I just do my thing, and I put in a little bit of effort, and I do okay. | ||
And I have just been working so hard ever since Groyper Wars started, ever since Miami. | ||
And the reason I bring it up is just today, and just for the past, like, eight weeks, it's just been a lot of phone calls, and a lot of research, and a lot of Just daily grinding type tasks and I think you're gonna like a lot of what you see in the rest of 2020. | ||
I know I've hinted at various things at different points, different projects that are underway, but I just want to assure you that what goes on on a day-to-day basis in the America First Laboratory, the headquarters, | ||
You know the America first compound I can tell you that you're gonna you're gonna like what you see in the coming months Lots of new projects lots of projects that have been postponed obviously because of the virus, but some good things on the horizon So just a little just a little white pill there for you The new lobby music is just one in a long long list of good things to come so I'm very I'm very white pilled very excited but like I said, it's a grind I'm like | ||
These days it's just so much, you know, I'm filling up that little black book with tasks and to-do lists and phone calls I gotta make and, you know, things I gotta do. | ||
So it has been busy. | ||
It has been... | ||
A grind over here. | ||
I'm working, I am hard at work with the movement on my back, the white race on my back, but I'm the guy to do it, right? | ||
But I, but I am a, I am a cheerful, what do they say? | ||
A cheerful warrior? | ||
What is the expression? | ||
I don't, I forget the exact expression, but that's me, but I'm soldiering on. | ||
For America First, but we're gonna dive in. | ||
It's been hard work, but we're gonna dive in. | ||
We're gonna talk about the coronavirus. | ||
This is not gonna be the whole show, thank God, but I do just want to give you a little bit of an update. | ||
I don't know if we have to read off all the numbers every day anymore. | ||
You know, we've been doing it and it was kind of interesting maybe like two weeks ago when we were tracking the spread. | ||
But now, I mean, we kind of see what's happening, right? | ||
The new epicenter is Europe. | ||
China, the numbers are fake. | ||
Iran, it appears to be stable. | ||
South Korea just never had a major outbreak. | ||
And so what we're really watching is the numbers in the United States, is what I think is worth looking at. | ||
So, I don't know if we'll bring back the whiteboard tomorrow or the next day or if it's totally gone, but You know, every day I whip out the whiteboard and, you know, we read through the top eight and it's like, who really cares? | ||
So I do want to give you the latest numbers for the United States. | ||
Maybe I'll rework it for the U.S. | ||
numbers and I'll just change how it's presented. | ||
But the latest numbers for the U.S., we've got 432,000 cases in the U.S. | ||
We are up to 14,722 dead from coronavirus and that is up 1,893 dead from yesterday. | ||
So the death rate keeps going up and this is this is the number that I really want to focus on. | ||
That's a big reason why I've done away with the whiteboard tonight is the big thing that I want to talk about tonight or the big number for the coronavirus talk tonight is the death number. | ||
And this is what I've been saying. | ||
You know, Monday and starting on Monday, the theme for coronavirus for this week is peak week. | ||
This is peak week for the United States, peak death rate. | ||
And we are heading towards the peak death toll, peak number of coronavirus cases. | ||
And so yesterday it was 13,000 and some dead. | ||
Tonight it is 14,722 dead, up 1893 dead from yesterday. | ||
Yesterday it was up 1,700 from the day before. | ||
And I think the day before that it was up 1,600 dead. | ||
So the death rate is going up. | ||
And the new projections for the death rate, they say that the death rate now in the United States will peak at 3,100. | ||
So we are heading towards a point in the next two weeks when you're going to have 3100 dead in a single day. | ||
And of course, that doesn't mean like, oh, and then it's over. | ||
That means that we're going to build towards that for like a week and a half, maybe two weeks, and we're going to gradually get up there. | ||
1,800 dead, 1,900, 2,000, and so on. | ||
And we're going to build up every single day, high numbers like that, until it peaks at 3,100. | ||
You know, this is how rate works. | ||
That's what rate is, obviously. | ||
I don't need to explain it. | ||
But we're gonna get up to 3100 dead in one day. | ||
That'll be the peak death rate, the peak number of dead in a single day. | ||
And the total death rate, total deaths, are projected now to land somewhere between 30,000 and 130,000. | ||
30,000 and 130,000. | ||
And so some of the early estimates going way back were like in the millions, right? | ||
Do you remember this? | ||
Millions dead from coronavirus. | ||
And the number that they released last week, which we covered, this was the first time that we got a number from Dr. Fauci and from the White House. | ||
They said that it was going to be maybe 240,000. | ||
And now they're saying that the range will be somewhere between 30,000 and 130,000. | ||
The projected number based on the data we have now is 60,415 projected by August 4th. | ||
unidentified
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60,000. | |
So the range that we're talking about is between 30,000 and 130,000, but the projected number will be 60,400 dead by August 4th. | ||
projected by August 4th. 60,000. | ||
So the range that we're talking about is between 30,000 and 130,000, but the projected number will be 60,400 dead by August 4th. | ||
And that number is subject to change. | ||
It could go higher, it could go lower. | ||
The projections have been trending downward, obviously, from millions to hundreds of thousands to a quarter million, now down to the high. | ||
You know, in the range that we're looking at, it's 130,000. | ||
So the lower and upper bound and the median have been trending downward over the past few months, the past, you know, six weeks or so. | ||
Which is good! | ||
I mean, we want the death rate to be lower, and I know, and I know I've been saying this now for the past few days, and some of you guys are gonna be tired of hearing this, but I've been seeing it! | ||
But I've been seeing it on the timeline! | ||
And I saw it today, and it's the same people, it's the usual suspects, and you know what's gonna happen, is if we wind up with 60,000 dead on August 4th, or less, what are people gonna say? | ||
unidentified
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Well look at the numbers compared to the flu. | |
Well, you know, 60,000 dead, that's about as bad as a bad flu season. | ||
And they're gonna say that the quarantine was unnecessary, the social distancing, the guidelines, the shutdown, right? | ||
unidentified
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They're gonna say, see? | |
Just the flu! | ||
And of course you have to remember that we're up to 14,000 deaths in like two weeks. | ||
Right? | ||
So you cannot compare, it cannot be said enough, that you cannot compare the current death rate with the yearly total for the flu, right? | ||
Because here's another thing which I actually haven't said, I don't think yet about this comparison between the virus and the flu, is that when you compare the death toll for the virus to the death toll for the flu, it's also completely different numbers. | ||
And I've listed the other differences, and we'll get into that in a moment. | ||
I'll rehash some of those. | ||
But another big difference is, when you look at the flu, that's 52 weeks, right? | ||
That's a full year. | ||
That is, you know, if 40,000 people die on a given year from the flu, that's 40,000 over the whole year. | ||
We're talking about 14,000 dead in a matter of weeks from coronavirus. | ||
And that's another aspect of it that people aren't taking into consideration. | ||
Because the death toll, for example, that's projected for May 1st is going to be up to 52,000. | ||
They're projecting 52,000 dead by May 1st. | ||
So you're talking about, in the span of 8 weeks, 50,000 dead. | ||
In a pretty bad flu season you have 50,000 dead over the course of a year and so obviously that's apples and oranges to say 50,000 dead in a year after millions and millions and millions of people get it versus 50,000 dead in 8 weeks. | ||
And millions and millions don't get it. | ||
And they don't get it because you shut down the whole economy. | ||
shut down the whole world, right? | ||
And so that's another aspect which I don't think I've even mentioned is just on a quantitative level, We've talked about some of the qualitative differences and some of the variables that are different. | ||
Immunity, the social distancing, right? | ||
I mean, all of these are variables in the death rate which are gonna bring us a lower coronavirus death rate. | ||
But even when we finally get the total death rate, it's like that'll have been, even if we go to 60,000 deaths by August, you're talking about five months of death versus 12 months of death. | ||
And it might not even stop there. | ||
You know, there was a new study that came out today that said that coronavirus might not even get better in the warmer months. | ||
A lot of the White House's strategy, and this has been the sort of conventional wisdom for the media and for the government, has been that a lot of the transmission of coronavirus will stop in the summer. | ||
Because when you get warmer temperatures, they say that the transmission will subside and this will kill the virus, right? | ||
It'll make it less contagious. | ||
just But a new study came out today that said that that might not be the case. | ||
And so it might be just as contagious and you might have the same transmissions and the same problems that you have in the colder temperatures in the colder months. | ||
You'll have the same thing in the summer months as well. | ||
And if that's the case, then we don't get any reprieve from the virus. | ||
And that is going to seriously change her outlook on what a return to normalcy looks like out of shelter-in-place, out of lockdown, right? | ||
We had this conversation the other day talking about what that's going to look like for Europe as Italy and some of these other countries begin to ramp down some of their more dramatic and extraordinary social distancing measures. | ||
Because over there, their numbers are already coming down spectacularly. | ||
The death rate, the number of new cases, Hospitalizations ICU all the numbers are looking pretty good in Italy and elsewhere and so the big question for policymakers there is what does the ramp down look like how do you how do you get the economy going again so you don't like collapse society but without risking another major outbreak another major spread of the virus and now that we have this new information about | ||
These warmer temperatures and so on that's gonna affect what that looks like. | ||
If the warmer temperatures cannot be counted on to in some natural way subdue the virus then we don't get any reprieve. | ||
We may have to maintain some level of extreme social distancing like indefinitely. | ||
And the economy has to get going again. | ||
We're gonna have to figure something out and I said that the other day it's gonna be masks and temperature checks and hand sanitizer and other precautions, just, you know, the basic social distancing of minding your distance, sneezing and coughing in your elbow, that kind of thing, disinfecting surfaces. | ||
But if the warmer temperatures don't help us, then we're going to be dealing with this in a serious way for a long, long, long time. | ||
Until we either, like I said, and like I said weeks ago, until we either develop the natural immunity or the vaccine, this is going to be with us. | ||
And I don't think people, I don't think that's registered with people yet. | ||
I still believe that... | ||
That most people think that May 1st or June 1st at some, you know, indeterminate point in the future, well, everything's just going to go back to normal. | ||
I really think that that's how most people, that's most people's expectation, even if they are hearing something different or maybe they're not even consciously thinking it. | ||
Maybe even people watching the show. | ||
I think most people's sort of subconscious or conscious presumption is that by Augustus I'll be over and by all over it means everything's gonna go back to normal. | ||
We're gonna be out partying and you're gonna be out and touching things and not washing your hands and not wearing masks and Nuh-uh! | ||
Nuh-uh! | ||
This will be with us in June, and July, and August, and September, and October, and this will be with us next year. | ||
It'll be with us the year after that, and the year after that, and you're not going to see any kind of return to normalcy until that immunity is established. | ||
You have to think about that. | ||
You have to | ||
really marinate on that you know really let that sink in for a moment that until we develop a natural immunity and natural immunity means that 40 to 70 percent of the population gets the virus in some way maybe it's asymptomatic but every you know lots of people get it or a vaccine is developed and a vaccine is at least at least 12 to 18 months out and probably longer than that because a virus is very difficult to make a vaccine for so you're talking about a long | ||
Long timetable. | ||
Before people are able to let their guard down. | ||
Because coronaviruses exist. | ||
You know, coronavirus is a family of diseases. | ||
And I, you know, I've said this before, but, you know, what is able, how we're able to cope with infectious diseases is that we have this immunity. | ||
Either naturally, you get your vaccine. | ||
You either get a flu shot, or people have built up a natural immunity to certain things. | ||
And that's why it's not catastrophic to have the flu or, you know, any, any coronavirus that has been around with us before, right? | ||
But now that this new disease is here, unless and until we develop that immunity, it will always be lingering, waiting in the wings for another major outbreak. | ||
Unless people are doing the social distancing and minding their breathing with a mask, right? | ||
Or disinfecting the surfaces, washing their hands, or doing hand sanitizer. | ||
So I know a lot of people think that like, oh well, come summertime, or come the fall, or next year at the latest, What are we going to do when quarantine gets lifted? | ||
We're going to party like it's February 2020, you know? | ||
We're all going to get back out there and we're going to go to restaurants and go to parties and go to bars. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Not so fast. | ||
This is an indefinite problem and we'll have to find some way to adapt with it. | ||
And here's the thing is, after that natural or vaccine immunity is established in the long term, By that point, we'll have already changed how we live. | ||
So you understand that the door on normal has closed. | ||
The door on how we used to live three months ago, that's over. | ||
Because by the time we establish immunity, people aren't going to say in three years, OK, well, thank God that's over. | ||
Back to 2020. | ||
Nope. | ||
Because at that point, a lot of things will have moved online, new All kinds of new habits and new ways of living will have been established to adapt to the virus over these years. | ||
And that's just the way it's going to be after that. | ||
And we'll say, oh, well, good, we don't have to worry about it anymore. | ||
Maybe, you know, a vaccine has been developed or studies show that the natural immunity has been reached, whatever. | ||
At that point, we'll have already have changed and those changes will be permanent. | ||
You know, people aren't going to say, okay, back to, you know, living like before the pandemic. | ||
So that's kind of, kind of a shocking thing to think about, which I think it hasn't even set in for most people. | ||
And we look at the death rate and these numbers and the numbers are coming down in this first wave. | ||
It looks like we're ramping down from it and you know, people are going to be expecting, okay, it's all, you know, rushing back in. | ||
and that's not how it's going to be that is not how it's going to play out so anyway that's the latest with the coronavirus not really any major developments in the way of much else other than this this peak week that we keep talking about that the death toll toll is now Skyrocketing in the United States, particularly in New York and New Jersey. | ||
And now you're gonna see the peak of the death toll and the peak of these curves in all the other hotspots across the country. | ||
So that's the major thing we're monitoring at this point. | ||
Everything else seems to be basically consistent with what we've been talking about. | ||
No other major developments. | ||
So we'll keep an eye on that, but You know that's a lot of people. | ||
60,000 dead, 3,000 dead in a given day. | ||
That's a lot of people and it's just another reminder that you gotta be safe. | ||
I know it's been a long time and you know maybe people are getting sick of it or they're ready to let their guard down again but gotta be on watch because this is a nasty virus. | ||
I don't know if you guys have been reading any of the first-hand accounts of the virus but it is nasty. | ||
Even healthy people that can track this thing. | ||
It is bad. | ||
And in a lot of cases it leaves you with permanent damage. | ||
Even if you don't die, even if you're young and healthy, it leaves you with serious organ damage to your lungs, your kidneys, your heart, some even say your brain. | ||
Not something you want to mess with. | ||
So I hope everybody remains quarantined. | ||
I hope you're being smart. | ||
Don't be foolish. | ||
Don't be one of these boomers. | ||
Going out there. | ||
It's just the flu, kids. | ||
Not just the flu. | ||
A lot of people are gonna die. | ||
That's not gonna be good, right? | ||
And all this is to say, everything is necessary. | ||
I see a lot of this take about, you know, oh, well, it's just like the flu, and what they're implicitly saying is all this social distancing is unnecessary. | ||
It's completely necessary. | ||
If we didn't have the social distancing, and you had people dying like this, imagine how many people would be dying if we didn't take these drastic actions. | ||
This is what the death rate looks like when there's virtually no transmission after all these lockdowns go into place, right? | ||
I mean, we've virtually eliminated the transmission if people are just not coming into contact. | ||
Now, that doesn't mean that you don't have transmission, but, you know. | ||
Having people going outside versus not going outside. | ||
That's a huge, huge difference. | ||
And so you're talking about 60,000 dead. | ||
That is with a six-week quarantine. | ||
That is with the six-week shelter-in-place extreme social distancing, right? | ||
Imagine what it would be like if people were still going out and eating and going to bars and going to clubs and going to work and to school. | ||
There's no telling. | ||
So it's not to say that those initial estimates were overblown. | ||
It's simply to say that these estimates have changed because our behavior has changed, right? | ||
And that is a variable in the ultimate death rate. | ||
So, you know, you project a million deaths eight to ten weeks ago before everybody was locked in their homes for six weeks, right? | ||
But anyway, we're gonna move on and we're gonna talk about our main story tonight, of course. | ||
We are laughing because that is only one small part of the show. | ||
The main featured story tonight is not about the stupid virus, not about numbers, it's not about press conferences, it's about politics. | ||
And I'm glad to be back talking about that. | ||
Of course, our main story tonight is that Bernie Sanders has dropped out of the 2020 presidential race. | ||
And I already said this. | ||
I said this at the top of the show. | ||
This is not really like news, frankly. | ||
And I don't mean to downplay it. | ||
I don't mean to throw cold water on our breaking fresh news. | ||
Fresh! | ||
Delicious! | ||
unidentified
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Mwah! | |
Our delicious! | ||
Mwah! | ||
Our new news! | ||
Fresh new news! | ||
New events! | ||
But we did know this was gonna happen for like months now. | ||
I mean, we've known. | ||
We've known that this would be the outcome for a long time. | ||
We did a show like four weeks ago saying, okay, when is this guy gonna drop out, you know? | ||
If you've been following the Democratic primary at all, it came down to two guys, right? | ||
Joe Biden vs. Bernie Sanders. | ||
It's actually been a long time since we talked about the Democratic primary. | ||
And that's because all the contests got delayed. | ||
I think yesterday or the day before was the Wisconsin primary. | ||
Up until that point, all the other ones have been delayed, right? | ||
But before that, we had been covering the Democratic primary pretty consistently, you know, watching Super Tuesday and the caucuses and all the different contests across the country, watching the debates and so on. | ||
Obviously, everything's been put on hold for the past two weeks in particular, but we covered it for a long time. | ||
And Bernie Sanders finally dropped out, and the reason why I say it's not really news is because I mean, we knew this guy didn't stand a chance, really, after Super Tuesday. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
The history of the race is, you've got your first month, which is February, and that's your first four contests. | ||
That's the Iowa Caucus, that's New Hampshire, Nevada, and South Carolina. | ||
And then you have Super Tuesday the week after that. | ||
Super Tuesday is the beginning of March. | ||
And that is when you have all these major contests, right? | ||
Super Tuesday is one week, and the week after that I think you've got six or seven contests on one day, and the week after that you've got Arizona, Illinois, Ohio, Florida, and, you know, those three weeks in particular are huge weeks, and that, you know, that basically determines the race. | ||
And so we saw the Iowa caucus and Bernie had a strong showing in New Hampshire, Bernie won in Nevada, Bernie won 50% and then South Carolina happens. | ||
Joe Biden kills it, you know. | ||
Fourth in Iowa, fifth in New Hampshire, second but by a big margin in Nevada. | ||
Come from behind and he wins first with 50% in South Carolina. | ||
And then Super Tuesday comes and Joe Biden wins 10 out of 14 states. | ||
And he wins Texas, and he wins California, and he wins... I'm sorry, Bernie Sanders won Texas and California, right? | ||
Or did... I think Joe Biden won Texas. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Joe Biden won Texas. | ||
Joe Biden wins Texas. | ||
He wins Minnesota. | ||
He wins Maine. | ||
He wins Massachusetts. | ||
Those are the upsets I was thinking of. | ||
Minnesota and Texas. | ||
He wins all across the board. | ||
10 out of 14. | ||
And the next week, he runs the board. | ||
He wins most of the contests. | ||
And the week after that, he wins everything. | ||
And then you look at the rest of the contests, and there's not a... I don't believe there's a single one that Bernie Sanders is favored to win. | ||
So basically, we knew Around Super Tuesday, you could say that's the earliest point that we knew that Bernie Sanders didn't stand a chance. | ||
If he couldn't win in Minnesota, if he couldn't win in Massachusetts, come on, if he couldn't win in Maine, it's game over. | ||
And then he didn't win anything after that. | ||
You know, I think he won in Idaho, and he won in, um... What, he won in Washington, I think? | ||
Right, he won a few small states, but that was it for him. | ||
So we've known... | ||
So all of this is to say, we've known this for a long time, that he didn't stand a chance. | ||
So it's not exactly news that he wasn't going to win the nomination, it's just news that he finally dropped out. | ||
And he tried to stick it out, and I posited some reasons why he stuck it out as long as he did. | ||
He should have dropped out a long time ago, because there was just literally no mathematical way for him to win the race. | ||
And various theories were floated as to how he could have won the nomination, you know, maybe Joe Biden dies. | ||
I mean literally like that's it. | ||
Like maybe Joe Biden dies. | ||
Maybe Joe Biden gets sick. | ||
People see that he's obviously got dementia or some other kind of a problem and you know maybe he drops out for that reason. | ||
Maybe Bernie was waiting for that to happen. | ||
I don't know. | ||
My theory was that the longer he stays in the race, the more delegates he accumulates, and maybe that gives him more leverage over Joe Biden as the nominee. | ||
Maybe then Bernie Sanders gets to be sort of a kingmaker. | ||
Obviously he's not the kingmaker. | ||
Joe Biden doesn't need him to win the nomination or anything like that. | ||
But the more support that Bernie Sanders garners, the more delegates, then maybe the more influence he can exert over the convention, Over the platform which is written and presented by the party at the convention. | ||
Over the running mate, right? | ||
You know, maybe that plays a part. | ||
So there are all kinds of theories for why he was going to stay in the race. | ||
Did he think he had a shot if Joe Biden got out for some reason? | ||
Did he think that if he accumulated more delegates he'd have more leverage? | ||
Who knows? | ||
But he's finally out. | ||
And you know, to me, my initial reaction was that, like, he just lost. | ||
I see a lot of salt today. | ||
It was kind of a glorious day because I see all the Democratic Socialists and all the DSA types, the Chapo Trap House type people, totally melting down and I see them on Reddit and they're talking about how They're gonna really freak out now. | ||
People better be afraid because now these Demsocks are gonna rise up. | ||
These DSA, they're gonna rise up. | ||
They're gonna regret, you know, Bernie Sanders losing this race. | ||
And I see all this salt happening and it's very fun to watch. | ||
It's very funny. | ||
But to me, the big takeaway from today is that Bernie Sanders simply lost fair and square. | ||
He didn't get cheated. | ||
He just lost. | ||
And I said this a few weeks ago around Super Tuesday when I heard this take very often from my Super Chatters or from the live chat or from others. | ||
There's this take that the fix was in. | ||
The DNC cheated him out. | ||
Now, can we say that there were some shady tactics, super? | ||
Certainly. | ||
You know, could you argue that it wasn't fair? | ||
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Sure. | |
I mean, there are a lot of things you could say, like, was it proper or ethical? | ||
And, you know, all these things that are fundamentally not important. | ||
Because it's politics, and politics is kill or be killed. | ||
You have to knife your opponents, right? | ||
So, whether you could, you know, whine about whether they did the right thing or not is irrelevant. | ||
He lost. | ||
And what I mean by was it ethical or was it fair is, well, we look at the day or the race that changed the whole primary. | ||
It was after South Carolina. | ||
Joe Biden wins South Carolina, and the whole tide turns. | ||
It was from South Carolina a week later, then to Super Tuesday, and what changed in between? | ||
It was every other candidate dropped out and endorsed Joe Biden, right? | ||
Who was it at the time? | ||
It was Pete Buttigieg dropped out and endorsed, Elizabeth Warren dropped out, or actually she stayed in on Super Tuesday and then dropped out later and did not endorse. | ||
That was a part of it. | ||
It was Pete Buttigieg, it was Klobuchar that dropped out, a lot of other candidates that had been in the race like Kamala and Beto and others, they endorsed Biden after he won South Carolina, after he won Super Tuesday. | ||
And so a lot of people might say that that's a fix or something, but in my opinion that's not a fix, that's not cheating. | ||
That's kind of like you lost fair and square. | ||
Because what we saw happen is that Joe Biden simply won more delegates than Bernie Sanders. | ||
He simply amassed a delegate lead that was insurmountable for Bernie. | ||
Joe Biden put himself on a path where it was mathematically impossible for Bernie Sanders to beat him, and it was virtually mathematically impossible for Joe Biden not to clinch a majority of the delegates. | ||
As far as I'm concerned, that's fair. | ||
That's what democracy looks like. | ||
All these liberals want to talk about this is what democracy looks like and the popular vote and all this. | ||
Well, here you go. | ||
We have a contest in Illinois, for example. | ||
The voters go out. | ||
They vote between Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders. | ||
Joe Biden wins more votes than Bernie Sanders. | ||
That's fair and square. | ||
And you could say, well, but, but, but, but, but they endorsed him, but they dropped out and they conspired. | ||
Sure. | ||
But everybody that's running has their prerogative to endorse whoever they want. | ||
And by the way, voters don't have to vote based on who their preferred candidate endorsed, right? | ||
If I was going to vote for Andrew Yang, let's say hypothetically, if I was going to vote for Andrew Yang in the Democratic primary, if Andrew Yang drops out and endorses Joe Biden, do I have to vote for Joe Biden? | ||
No. | ||
I could say I'm going to vote for Trump. | ||
I could say I'm going to vote for Spider-Man. | ||
It doesn't matter, right? | ||
I mean, what Andrew Yang endorses, I mean, obviously it does have some impact, but voters are able to vote for whoever they want. | ||
And, you know, maybe their second choice is not who their first choice endorsed. | ||
In other words, maybe their first choice is Kamala Harris and she endorses Joe Biden. | ||
Well, maybe that voter's second choice was Bernie Sanders, right? | ||
You never know. | ||
So to say that well because he got a lot of endorsements or there was this conspiracy or whatever to me is lame and it's wrong and it's not true. | ||
That's not cheating. | ||
That's not a fix. | ||
That's not a rigged system. | ||
You got beat fair and square. | ||
Joe Biden won more votes and you did not win. | ||
You lost. | ||
And how did Joe Biden win? | ||
He won the black vote. | ||
Right? | ||
He won minorities overall, I believe. | ||
He won a bigger percentage of the white working class than Hillary Clinton, but it was predominantly the black vote that pushed him over the edge. | ||
And he also won the old and the middle-aged. | ||
Bernie Sanders, what he was counting on was a surge of young voters, which never materialized. | ||
Actually, probably less people, young people, voted in this primary as a proportion. | ||
Then in 2016. | ||
So really it was fair and square and it was a matter of these different constituencies. | ||
It was a matter, ironically, of demographics, right? | ||
And I see all these Democrats out there saying it was fixed, it was rigged, it was cheating. | ||
Nope. | ||
Joe Biden just won. | ||
And we could look at the demographic reasons, like I just said, about blacks, or about young versus old, or about issues, things like Medicare for All. | ||
I think that definitely played a part. | ||
But more fundamentally, maybe deeper than all of that, is the fact that Bernie Sanders is simply a loser. | ||
And I've elaborated on this in the past, and I think this is the number one reason why I lost. | ||
Bernie Sanders just simply does not have the killer instinct to win. | ||
Deep down, I don't think he really wanted to win. | ||
And even if he did, I don't think he knew how to win. | ||
And this was best characterized, and I tweeted this today, this was best characterized actually back in 2016. | ||
Because I don't know if you remember, but back in 2016, Bernie Sanders actually gave Hillary Clinton a run for her money. | ||
And I don't know if he ever actually stood a chance at beating her without the superdelegates or without the media or, you know, all the shady stuff that happened, but nevertheless he gave her a run for her money. | ||
But there was a moment during the 2016 primary when it was one of the Democratic primary debates and the moderators asked Bernie Sanders about Hillary Clinton's emails and the email scandal that was going on at the time, the 30,000 deleted emails, right? | ||
Bernie Sanders responded to that question by saying, I don't know about you, but I'm sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails to Hillary Clinton. | ||
She beamed! | ||
She laughed that wicked witch laugh. | ||
I think she even clapped or something. | ||
And that's because she knew in that moment that she won. | ||
Because what that communicated in that moment was that Bernie Sanders was unwilling to actually challenge the establishment. | ||
He was unwilling to actually square up and explicitly and overtly fight and challenge the DNC establishment, and really the monoparty establishment, not just the establishment and his own party. | ||
But we know that the establishment is the whole system. | ||
It's the GOP, it's the Democratic Party, it's the media. | ||
We know it's the whole enchilada, right? | ||
And he never wanted to do that. | ||
He was never a real revolutionary. | ||
A real revolutionary hates his enemies. | ||
A real revolutionary hates the system. | ||
He wants to revolt against the system. | ||
What did the Bolsheviks do in Russia? | ||
They slaughtered the royal family. | ||
They didn't debate the royal family. | ||
You know, Lenin and Trotsky and Stalin. | ||
They didn't come up to the czar, Nicholas II, and they didn't come up to the royal family and say, you guys are great people, but you just don't know where we need to go. | ||
They didn't say, hey listen, gray guy, loves our country, decent individual, but His policies are bad. | ||
They didn't say that. | ||
They cut off their heads. | ||
They cut off their heads. | ||
And that wasn't a good thing. | ||
That was a bad thing because the royal family was Christian and they were good and they had their own problems. | ||
But nevertheless, Bernie Sanders is not a real revolutionary. | ||
He does not hate the system. | ||
He did not really challenge the system. | ||
And for that reason he lost. | ||
I don't think at the end of the day it was about these little demographic things. | ||
Those things tend to work themselves out. | ||
It was that he never wanted to challenge the system. | ||
And to me that moment characterized that aspect of it. | ||
And that moment he gave her a pass and he gave the whole system a pass. | ||
Now, contrast that with the hypothetical performance where Bernie Sanders gets on the debate stage, and he throws everybody under the bus. | ||
And he says, you know what, Barack Obama was not liberal enough, and Joe Biden and all these people are corrupt, and Hillary Clinton lost, and she was wrong, and the party was wrong. | ||
Imagine if he came back in 2020 with a vengeance, and said, we lost in 2016. | ||
And I was a good sport. | ||
They told us that if we just got behind Hillary Clinton, that we would have won, and that was the right thing to do to beat Trump. | ||
And what happened? | ||
They lost. | ||
And we lost because she was corrupt, and she's not a real liberal. | ||
And look at what she said in 2008, and what she said in the 90s, and look at the Clinton crime bill and all that. | ||
Imagine if he went on a war path, not just against Trump and the Republicans, but against the Democrats and the establishment there and the media. | ||
It would have been a totally different story in 2016 and in 2020. | ||
I also think about this year in 2020. | ||
One of the most critical moments was in the January debate. | ||
When it was leaked, I think by the Elizabeth Warren campaign, do you remember this scandal? | ||
It was leaked that Bernie Sanders told Elizabeth Warren in 2016 that a woman could never be president. | ||
And it was totally fake. | ||
It was a total farce. | ||
And that consumed a media cycle. | ||
And that moderator during one of the January debates One of the moderators said to Bernie Sanders, did you say to Elizabeth Warren that a woman can't be president? | ||
And he said, of course not. | ||
And the moderator turns to Elizabeth Warren immediately after and says, uh, so how did you feel when Bernie Sanders told you that a woman can never be president? | ||
Something to that effect. | ||
Maybe you remember that interaction. | ||
Maybe you remember that little episode. | ||
And Bernie Sanders laughed. | ||
He just said, huh? | ||
Oh. | ||
Can you believe that? | ||
Wow! | ||
Unbelievable! | ||
But that was it. | ||
Exasperation. | ||
You know, he laughed. | ||
And that was it. | ||
And you know, to me, that characterizes that pattern of somebody that is just basically weak. | ||
I mean, deep down, that's what it is, is weakness. | ||
Somebody that has no fight in them. | ||
Will not defend themselves, will not go on the attack, and fundamentally somebody that's not a real revolutionary willing to challenge the system. | ||
And people compare Bernie Sanders to Trump all the time, but that was never true. | ||
That was very superficially true, and I saw this from the start, by the way. | ||
A lot of very amateur-type people were always comparing Bernie to Trump. | ||
He's got energy like Trump. | ||
He's got rallies like Trump. | ||
And I always told you, it's very, very superficial. | ||
You know, does Bernie Sanders have a grassroots base like Trump? | ||
Sure. | ||
And does Bernie Sanders have rallies like Trump? | ||
Is he out of step with the mainstream of the party like Trump? | ||
Certainly. | ||
But the difference is that Trump actually went in and challenged the establishment. | ||
There are some other differences which I'll get into, and more on what I tweeted today, is when you compare the two debate performances, and even this was going around left-wing Twitter earlier this year, Particularly after that moment in the January debate. | ||
It was going around on left-wing Twitter even this year, a clip from a Trump debate back in the Republican primary in 2016, when Trump told Jeb Bush, he said, shh, quiet, or something to that effect, right? | ||
He starts getting booed by the audience. | ||
And Trump says, the only reason they're not loving me is because that's the donors and special interests out there. | ||
You want to know who gets the tickets I'm talking about for the debate audience? | ||
Donors and special interests. | ||
They're booing him the whole time and he's fighting the audience. | ||
He's naming the donors. | ||
He says, they're not loving me because I'm funding my campaign, I'm the only one who can say that, I'm gonna do the right thing. | ||
And all the Democrats are posting this clip of Trump from 2016 and they're saying, damn, I never realized. | ||
No wonder he won! | ||
Of course he won like that! | ||
A lot of Democrats watch that after they see Bernie Sanders getting screwed in a very similar fashion in that January debate. | ||
Wow. | ||
Suddenly I get it. | ||
Suddenly I understand the appeal. | ||
It's obvious to me now why he won. | ||
I get it. | ||
Why isn't Bernie Sanders more like this? | ||
And you could see all the debates in 2016. | ||
Where Trump would go on the stage and actually challenge the system. | ||
It was a real revolutionary message. | ||
He didn't get up there and say, Hillary Clinton and the Democrats. | ||
He got up there and said, George Bush. | ||
And he got up there and said, all the presidents for the past 30 years. | ||
And he said, the people on this stage with me. | ||
And Lyin' Ted, and Little Marco, and this one and that one. | ||
And thinking like that is why we're in the Middle East for 30 years. | ||
And he broke with the party on a lot of issues. | ||
And, you know, aside from just the boldness, aside from just the fact that he was pugnacious and actually willing to fight and challenge the establishment, beyond that, if you looked at the issues, they were issues that were popular in his party. | ||
He read the room. | ||
You know, that's another thing. | ||
Donald Trump didn't come on the scene as a radical. | ||
In a lot of ways, it was actually very calculated. | ||
Immigration, trade, and opposition to wars, This is something that is extremely popular in the Republican Party, but that the Republican Party has been failing on, right? | ||
The platform that Donald Trump conjured for the GOP was not radical. | ||
It was not the fringe. | ||
That was actually where the voters were in 2016. | ||
That's where the voters have been in the GOP for 30 years on each of those issues. | ||
It was the GOP that was out of touch. | ||
It was the GOP that was out of touch being in favor of free trade and amnesty and wars and championing tax cuts. | ||
It was Mitt Romney and John McCain that were out of step, that were the radicals in the party, not Trump. | ||
Trump re-centered the GOP. | ||
To where the base was. | ||
To where the voters were. | ||
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Right? | |
And so in that sense, that's another aspect of it. | ||
When Trump got on the stage and had a militant message that was against the establishment and it was pugnacious and aggressive and bombastic, it was also highly calculated. | ||
And it was where the voters were. | ||
Now the same cannot be said about Bernie Sanders. | ||
Because things like free healthcare for illegal immigrants, Medicare for All, All this kind of stuff, that is not popular with most Democrats. | ||
Communism, democratic socialism, honeymooning the Soviet Union, defending Cuba, that is not popular in the Democratic Party. | ||
And how do we know this? | ||
The last president that was a Democrat, Barack Obama, who won states like Ohio and Indiana and Iowa and in all kinds of states in the Rust Belt where Trump won, Barack Obama was not there on any of those issues. | ||
How did Barack Obama win in 2008? | ||
He won by opposing gay marriage, he won by actually being moderate in a lot of areas, he won by saying that people would be able to keep their doctor, keep their plan, right? | ||
He was very careful in 2008 when he sold Obamacare to say, you're going to keep your doctor, you're going to keep your plan, in other words, you're going to keep your private insurance in some cases, we're still going to have private healthcare, and there's not going to be disruption, it's not going to be radical, right? | ||
And so in a lot of ways, what Bernie Sanders did wrong is he didn't challenge the system, didn't challenge the establishment, wasn't pugnacious, didn't call out the problems in his own party, and beyond that, even the message that he was preaching was not calculated. | ||
It was legitimately radical. | ||
It was legitimately appealing to a very small percentage of the electorate. | ||
You know, all the things that they said about Trump, which turned out to not be true, were true about Bernie Sanders. | ||
For example, when they talked about the ceiling for Trump, I don't know if you remember this, but back during the GOP primary in 2016, They talked about how Trump, he was always number one in the polls, and he had these big rallies and whatever, and all the media and the pollsters would say, well, Trump is number one, and Trump has been number one, and Trump continues to rise, but he's got a ceiling. | ||
He's going to run into a hard ceiling. | ||
20%, 25%, 30%. | ||
The ceiling kept going up, but they always said, oh, well, you shouldn't worry about Trump. | ||
He's number one, and he keeps rising, but he's got a ceiling, because This flavor of conservatism only appeals to a small percentage. | ||
That wasn't true. | ||
It appealed to most. | ||
And that was very true, though, for Bernie Sanders about the ceiling. | ||
This stuff about Medicare for All and so on. | ||
What people thought Bernie Sanders was in 2016, it turned out not to be so. | ||
A lot of the people that came out to vote for Bernie Sanders in 2016 were not actually excited about Bernie Sanders. | ||
They just didn't like Hillary Clinton. | ||
And you saw that in 2020 because when they had a number of alternatives, they didn't go for Bernie Sanders. | ||
They went for other people. | ||
They went for Joe Biden. | ||
They went for Buttigieg. | ||
They went for Klobuchar. | ||
They went for Warren. | ||
They went for anybody else, right? | ||
And he did have a ceiling. | ||
They weren't going for Medicare for All. | ||
They were going for somebody who had an anti-establishment flavor and not Hillary Clinton flavor, right? | ||
He did have a ceiling. | ||
He had a ceiling in South Carolina. | ||
He had a ceiling in all these different states. | ||
Never made it up to that top tier. | ||
So the post-mortem on Bernie Sanders, a lot of Democrats and left-wing people are not going to want to hear this, but he was never who they thought he was. | ||
They crafted this narrative about Bernie Sanders that he was this one to watch, he was a sleeping giant, he was this grassroots legend, he was the spirit or the base of a new Democratic Party. | ||
None of that was ever true. | ||
That was all bullshit. | ||
That was simply just not true. | ||
For all the reasons I just described. | ||
He's the left-wing Trump and he's going to give Iran for his money. | ||
That was never going to happen. | ||
That was never going to happen. | ||
And the Democrats are going to have a real problem in 2020 because they do not have a folk hero, you know, outsider who's going to challenge Trump and Bernie, and they do not have a competent middle-of-the-road candidate in Biden. | ||
They've got nothing. | ||
They've got nothing compelling. | ||
And then that's what's so funny is there were these two arguments about the Democratic nomination or these two schools of thought on the Democratic side. | ||
That either you go with Joe Biden, and he's the guy that can beat Trump, or you go with Bernie Sanders, and he's the guy that Democrats are actually aligned with. | ||
And it turned out that neither of those things were true. | ||
There is no candidate that unites a Democratic Party ideologically. | ||
There is no candidate that's actually, you know, gonna bring the party together on the issues. | ||
That does not exist in Bernie Sanders. | ||
They did not rally behind Bernie Sanders. | ||
And there is no candidate that is the competent, moderate one that's going to beat Trump. | ||
That doesn't exist. | ||
Joe Biden is not competent. | ||
Joe Biden cannot beat Trump. | ||
Joe Biden is not really even moderate. | ||
They've got a big problem. | ||
And those two appeals that they've been talking about, Democrats are shopping around for a candidate. | ||
Hmm. | ||
Am I going to go for the folk hero outsider who is leading the revolution and is going to make the country actually left-wing who I agree with? | ||
Or am I going to go with the completely competent moderate who saved The auto industry with Barack Obama who can beat Trump. | ||
Those options don't exist. | ||
It's like you could vote for the guy with dementia who's dying and who doesn't know where he's at and who will lose miserably and who nobody's really excited to vote for and who isn't even all that moderate actually when you look into it a little bit. | ||
Or you could vote for the guy that's crazy and a radical that, you know, probably a bunch of young people memed into existence and The only reason people thought he had a chance is because the nominee was just that bad in 2016 and people wanted anything else four years ago. | ||
Those were your real options all along. | ||
So it's very funny to me to see this development. | ||
Bernie Sanders dropping out and we can finally deliver a good post-mortem on that. | ||
And to me, I think Trump is just gonna win now. | ||
I think that has just sealed the deal here for a variety of reasons. | ||
I think Joe Biden would have no problem losing on his own, because I think Joe Biden, as we're all seeing, as we're all becoming aware of increasingly every day, Joe Biden is just not competent. | ||
And I don't even mean competent in the sense that he is good at what he does or efficient at what he does. | ||
I mean he is not competent in the sense of his mental faculties are not there. | ||
He just is not there. | ||
So he's not going to make it. | ||
There's no way. | ||
And as I said, I don't think he'd have any problem losing on his own for that reason and for other reasons. | ||
Trump has way more enthusiasm. | ||
He's rallied 90% of the party. | ||
He's going to have the strong coronavirus response. | ||
Strong economy, I'm sure. | ||
A lot of things going into 2020. | ||
We'll see about the economy. | ||
But beyond that now, the other thing is, what are you going to do with all these Bernie Sanders people? | ||
You're going to have a not insignificant number of Bernie Sanders people who are going to revolt. | ||
In a lot of these states and they're not going to rally around Joe Biden. | ||
They're going to vote third party or they're going to stay home and I'm sure a lot of them will vote for Donald Trump. | ||
That's going to be another aspect of it too where I think Joe Biden's really just toast. | ||
I think it might actually even be worse than 2016 because in 2016 you had this beat Trump at any cost kind of mentality and I think in a much bigger sense you had this Bernie Sanders voters rallying around the party To defeat a larger enemy. | ||
And everything is worse. | ||
I think the Republican Party is more united. | ||
I think that Trump is actually maybe going to be a stronger appeal to moderates and people in the middle. | ||
So Trump is stronger, I think, than he was in 2016. | ||
And the Bernie Sanders people are more pissed off, they're more resentful, more aggrieved. | ||
And the candidate is worse, somehow. | ||
I think Joe Biden is worse than Hillary Clinton. | ||
Because as bad as Clinton was, she was competent. | ||
If you watch the debates, she actually did okay. | ||
The first and the third debate, she did good. | ||
The second debate, obviously Trump said you'd be in jail. | ||
that kind of ended it. | ||
But I mean, aside from Trump getting some good one-liners and kind of beating her up a little bit in the middle, she was pretty competent. | ||
She had her own health issues, but they were largely covered up. | ||
And, you know, a lot of them were things that most people wouldn't see right out of the gate. | ||
Joe Biden, there's just no way you can hide that kind of thing. | ||
And I think he's just gonna, he's just gonna get his ass kicked. | ||
So I think this has basically paved the way for an easy four more years for Donald Trump, which is very exciting. | ||
But I will say that today was glorious just to watch all the salt. | ||
And it really does feel in some ways like 2016 again to see all these miserable people weeping and crying. | ||
And I imagine all these young people that they were so excited. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I just gave my whole paycheck to Bernie Sanders! | ||
He's gonna win! | ||
I just gave my week's pay, my pay stub to the Bernie campaign and Medicare for All and I'm with this revolution! | ||
To have their hopes dashed, it's very fun to watch. | ||
This guy was never going to make it. | ||
As I've been saying, it's symptomatic of everything that's going on in the Democratic Party. | ||
They've elevated weakness. | ||
They've elevated softness. | ||
People that can't get the job done, constantly bound up by political correctness and pronouns and trying to appease various warring militant tribes within their own party. | ||
We're not going to make it. | ||
And this really makes us revise our theory of the electoral winter. | ||
Because for so long, the governing wisdom of our movement has been, Texas goes blue and it's over, right? | ||
Within ten years, the Democratic Party is going to, because of their demographic advantage, they're never going to lose an election again. | ||
But you see what's going on with the Democrats, and, I mean, they really have become On a problematic level, completely dysfunctional, because of these things. | ||
Because their party comprises this completely dissonant, this cacophony of militant tribes, of sexual orientations, and religions, and ethnicities, and races, and legal groups, right? | ||
All these different clans that are easily upset, and, you know, and they've got their own advocacy groups online, and If you say one thing, CARE is going to get upset, and if you say one thing, the Jews are going to get upset, and if you say one thing, the gays are going to get upset, and if you say one thing, the women are going to get upset, or the blacks are going to get upset, or the Mexicans... | ||
Or the whites, you know, and there's no way that you can please all these groups, and especially not when everybody's ratcheted up so high with the, you know, this tense, neurotic, political language, right? | ||
So I really do believe we're gonna have to make serious revisions to this electoral thinking after this election. | ||
2016, you might say, could have been a fluke. | ||
2020, you might have said, was the last one. | ||
I think this is a systemic dysfunction in the party that is not going to get better. | ||
I think it's going to get worse as time goes on. | ||
And mark my words, these fault lines in the party, I don't see those getting better. | ||
I mean, what in the next four years do you foresee happening that all of these deep divisions, these deep problems and deep dysfunctions What do you see bringing those back together? | ||
What do you see in the next four years happening that's going to ameliorate those problems, that will mitigate those problems, that will prevent them from getting worse, if anything, right? | ||
I don't see anything happening. | ||
Who is the leader in the Democratic Party? | ||
Who is the unifier? | ||
Who is the charismatic, bold, take-charge leader? | ||
That person doesn't exist. | ||
Because if there was going to be a person, you know who it'd be? | ||
It'd be a white male. | ||
It'd be a straight white male. | ||
And that's never going to happen again. | ||
Right? | ||
That's not going to happen. | ||
It's going to be... It would be a straight, young, white, charismatic male. | ||
You know, that's never going to happen. | ||
A bold, assertive, straight, white, young, charismatic, confident male. | ||
That will never happen. | ||
That will never fly. | ||
And that's your only chance. | ||
So who's it going to be? | ||
Stacey Abrams? | ||
That disgusting blimp? | ||
Who's it going to be? | ||
No idea. | ||
You know, some are saying Cuomo or Newsom or some others, right? | ||
And who knows? | ||
But I see these problems getting worse and worse and worse and you know they'll put up a good candidate one year but I think it's a lot more competitive than we thought for the past few years. | ||
I think it's a lot more dynamic and I think there is a much bigger window of opportunity than people think. | ||
People see the Democrats as like this machine that's on their way and certainly there is a demographic advantage cooked in and I understand that. | ||
I'm not understating that at all. | ||
But I do mean to say that these dysfunctions are something to watch and something we should exploit and take advantage of and be opportunists about. | ||
And we should never not play to win because those things are always out there. | ||
People say, you know, Nick, why should I not get blackmailed about politics? | ||
Nick, we're never going to vote our way out of this. | ||
And various, excuse me, various things like this. | ||
There's no future for us in electoral politics. | ||
We should just give up. | ||
I'm blackpilled. | ||
I don't know what to do. | ||
We should just give up. | ||
Gotta fight hard every day because you never know. | ||
I mean, and this is, my good friend QAnon told me this when I got banned from YouTube for the first time. | ||
He told me, make them ban you. | ||
He said, because I was telling him, like, you know what, I'm just going to pack it up. | ||
I think I'm just going to switch over to a different platform. | ||
This is when I got my first strike. | ||
He said, make them ban you. | ||
He said, for all you know, the Indian developer who's supposed to ban you might get hit by a car tomorrow. | ||
You never know. | ||
Pray and trust God's plan and make them take it from you. | ||
You know, in other words, make them work for it. | ||
And the same is true with everything else. | ||
Make them work for it. | ||
We have to meet them on the battlefield every day, fighting our hardest and exploiting opportunities where we can. | ||
And we have to be our strongest selves because there's no guarantee that they will meet us in the same way. | ||
They might be counting on us to say, oh, well, okay, we've lost. | ||
If we defeat ourselves in our mind, then we've lost already, right? | ||
That's what we have to remember. | ||
As long as we're showing up on the battlefield day in and day out, and when we meet them there, one day they might not show up. | ||
One day they might fall apart too. | ||
That's something to keep in mind. | ||
These are words to live by. | ||
But we're gonna move on, and we're gonna look at our Super Chats. | ||
That's Bernie Sanders. | ||
No refunds, everybody. | ||
Sorry to say. | ||
For all the single mothers and college kids that are in debt and all the blacks, or rather all the Hispanics and others, sorry, no refunds. | ||
This is America, only the blacks get welfare, alright? | ||
I saw some meme today, and it was so funny, some meme about Joe Biden. | ||
It was Joe Biden in a car, and let me see if I can pull it up. | ||
And it was funny because it was so true. | ||
Did I like it? | ||
I'm not going to be able to find it if I didn't like it. | ||
I'm not sure if I did or not. | ||
I put it in a DM group. | ||
Yeah, I'm not going to be able to find it, but the meme was Joe Biden and blacks in the car. | ||
And they were saying something to the effect of, you know, only only blacks get welfare in this country. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, somebody out there saying, well, I want I want a little bit of help. | |
I want a little bit of money. | ||
This is America. | ||
Let me see. | ||
I'm gonna scroll up and see if I could find it. | ||
It was definitely worth it. | ||
Definitely worth the find, because it's so true. | ||
You know, Bernie Sanders voters are out there like, hey, I'm white. | ||
I would like some free stuff. | ||
Yeah, and Joe Biden with the majority of the black vote. | ||
Sorry, bitch. | ||
That's for us, right? | ||
So anyway. | ||
I don't think I'm going to be able to find it in time. | ||
Whatever. | ||
My Twitter's not loading. | ||
Twitter's honestly like the worst web app. | ||
You would think that Twitter would be like good because it's one of the biggest social media companies, but it's bad. | ||
But their video playback is like terrible and the loading times suck and their mobile app is garbage. | ||
Everything about this application is garbage. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Let me see. | ||
I want to find it because it was a good one. | ||
Yeah, here it is. | ||
It's Joe Biden in a car with a black guy and Joe Biden says, sorry white boy, free shit is for nibbas only. | ||
There's a black guy in the backseat saying, that's right, and they're doing a drive-by shooting of a white Bernie Sanders supporter. | ||
That's very accurate. | ||
Very, very true to life. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
We'll take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
Roll Tide says, can I get a Roll Tide? | ||
Yeah, whatever. | ||
The Gardener says, loving the new music. | ||
Glad to hear it. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Dallas Groyper says, I'm honored to have been standing literally feet away from the stage during the speech in the intro. | ||
Well, thank you for the Ninjagini. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
You were a part of history, my friend. | ||
You were right there when that speech happened. | ||
unidentified
|
Excuse me. | |
That's one of my favorite speeches I've given. | ||
You were right there, and you were fighting with Owen Troy, or trying to ask him a question, or trying to ask me a question. | ||
I forget, but that was pretty funny. | ||
So yeah, part of history, but thanks for the Ninjagini, man. | ||
Good to meet you there. | ||
Glad you were a part of it. | ||
You're a good dude. | ||
Dallas Groyper says, Chick threw her glass and Nick said, bye, bitch. | ||
That was so unexpected. | ||
Yeah, I don't know if you saw that, but During that speech at that National File event, I got up, I gave this impromptu 10-minute speech, and this girl, who I'm told was from the SPLC, at some point during the speech, she walked by the stage and threw her glass at the stage, very dramatically, and walked out. | ||
She threw up the middle finger. | ||
She walked right by the stage and threw her glass at my feet. | ||
And, uh, you know, she stormed out with her purse and she threw up a middle finger as she left. | ||
And I was like, yeah, bye, bitch. | ||
So... I don't know what that was. | ||
I never got to the bottom of that one. | ||
Pretty funny stuff, though. | ||
Uh, she was a dumb bitch. | ||
Stupid bitch. | ||
Fucking punch you. | ||
Uh, just kidding! | ||
I would never, I would never do that. | ||
I would never do that. | ||
Uh, if she struck me first, I might have to, but I would never do it otherwise. | ||
Soviet Henry says, apologies for my arbitrary behavior yesterday. | ||
Yeah, no problem. | ||
Let's just, you know, try and try and be a good moderator. | ||
Justin KG says, Schumer is trying to get essential workers an extra $25,000 for the year plus Trump bucks. | ||
More, more green. | ||
What is this? | ||
More gene green for you? | ||
Oh, more guinea, guinea, more guinea for you. | ||
Ah, very good! | ||
Well, thanks for the ninja guinea, Justin. | ||
I hope it happens, and I hope he makes it happen. | ||
The real trickle-down economy is the government gives you corona welfare, the government gives the America First NEETs corona welfare, and the America First NEETs give a little bit of their corona welfare to me. | ||
And that is the real trickle-down economy. | ||
As you've got a horrible pandemic, the government cuts a check, you give me $10 of it, and then we're all rich. | ||
And then I funnel that into the movement, the movement grows, right? | ||
That's the real trickle-down America First economics. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Hope it happens, man. | ||
I haven't gotten my $2,500 yet, so I don't know when that's gonna hit my bank account. | ||
But we'll see. | ||
I hope everybody gets more money. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
It's one guy in particular who's obsessed with me. | ||
People literally do have Nick Derangement Syndrome. | ||
That's what it is at this point. | ||
We have to make that a meme now. | ||
You have Nick Derangement Syndrome. | ||
Nicholas J. Fuentes Derangement Syndrome. | ||
Because that's what it is. | ||
Do you know anybody else Who there is more like butthurt than me on the internet. | ||
Where it's like I blocked somebody. | ||
And people for years, for years are posting about me. | ||
Every little thing I do. | ||
Every little thing I say. | ||
Every little thing that they could get in a dig or a snipe or a comment or whatever. | ||
People are like, oh yeah, Nick Fuentes blocked me on May 1st, 2018. | ||
Yeah, I totally got under his skin. | ||
And it's like, yup, yeah, I'm the one that's mad, right? | ||
But there are people like that that are literally obsessed. | ||
They hate watch all my videos. | ||
They hate read all my tweets. | ||
Behind a block, they have to open it up in an incognito window or go into an alt account. | ||
And they watched my career from behind a block just so they could ankle-bite and snipe and whatever. | ||
And you know there's some prominent ones, there's lesser-known ones, but there really is this phenomenon of Nicholas J. Fuentes Derangement Syndrome of people that, and these are not real objections, these are not real problems, these are made-up problems, where people will take literally anything I do And find an angle, find something to object to, find something smarmy to say, you know. | ||
And that's because they just have that derangement syndrome, you know. | ||
You know, this guy was tweeting and saying, the leader of the movement plays with Legos. | ||
That's your leader? | ||
The guy playing with Legos? | ||
And it's like, everybody knows what that was about. | ||
We're all in quarantine for five weeks. | ||
I pulled out an old Lego set out of the attic to put together as like a, you know, number one to kill the time. | ||
And it was just like a funny, fun thing to do. | ||
It was like a nostalgic thing. | ||
Everybody knows what that is. | ||
People are out there acting like, you know, I've got Lego structures all over my house, and I'm a Lego guy, and I'm, you know, Lego poster, and I'm like, hi guys, look at my Legos. | ||
Like, everybody knew what that was about. | ||
It's all, you know, we're all bored during quarantine, we're all stuck inside, what are you gonna do? | ||
Eh. | ||
Hey, you know Star Wars is on Why not? | ||
Why not do a little trip down memory lane build a little Lego set kind of funny kind of fun. | ||
Whatever. | ||
It's different Here's a picture. | ||
It's it's a meme, right? | ||
Everybody knows what that is and people. | ||
Oh, why is it II? | ||
Why isn't he doing a real man top? | ||
You like fishing a man's time should be better. | ||
Well spent. | ||
It's like you're fuck you're come on I mean these people are just making stuff up at this point and they always are and And they always are. | ||
They're always just, you know, finding something to be mad about, finding something to... You're full of shit. | ||
Everybody knows what it's about, you know, and that's what it is. | ||
Underlying that is a deep-seated resentment against me for whatever reason. | ||
Jealousy. | ||
I don't know what else it could be. | ||
Nick Derangement Syndrome, right? | ||
So I pay these people no mind. | ||
It's whatever. | ||
I'm out here, I'm doing my thing, and people can get mad all they want, but it's a cope. | ||
I mean, at the end of the day, it's a cope. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
People are out there, I hope Nick Fuentes gets poor, I hope Nick Fuentes is irrelevant, I hope Nick Fuentes is X, Y, Z, never gonna happen! | ||
Because you're a loser, and I'm a winner. | ||
And I have a winner's mentality. | ||
And a winner's mentality isn't being arrogant, a winner's mentality isn't Anything other than I'm making something. | ||
I am a builder. | ||
I do constructive things. | ||
My life is not obsessed with another person. | ||
I don't wake up every day and say, I don't like that guy. | ||
I'm going to find reasons to... I'm going to spew venom at a stranger. | ||
I'm a winner and we are winners because we are thinking every day, how can we construct? | ||
How can we build? | ||
What are we doing in our lives? | ||
How are we going to have fun? | ||
How are we going to do things that make us happy and fulfilled? | ||
And you're a loser because you hate. | ||
Because you wake up and you hate. | ||
You wake up and you tear down and you deconstruct and you criticize and snipe and so on, right? | ||
unidentified
|
So, so I am on... I am... | |
You know, I'm basically unbothered by this. | ||
I pay it no mind. | ||
I don't even know who these people are, right? | ||
You ruined my whole life. | ||
I don't even know who you are. | ||
I'm bawling over here, okay? | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini, Embro. | ||
Pay it no mind. | ||
Don't let it bother you, King. | ||
It's Nick Derangement Syndrome, and you're a bitch, right? | ||
That's how we have to respond to this kind of stuff. | ||
People get, like, mad. | ||
Don't forget that the person that loses on the internet is the person that takes it too seriously and gets mad. | ||
unidentified
|
So it's like, eh, you know... | |
Played with Legos. | ||
Oh, whatever, you know Yeah, and what about it Legos are epic. | ||
I'm gonna build a Lego, you know Giant mallet and bash your nuts with it. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
Right? | ||
Anyway, but thanks, Sembro. | ||
You always have my back. | ||
You're based. | ||
Dallas Droyper says, I have a $100 bet with my dad, a black Republican, that Trump doesn't get 20% of the black vote. | ||
Do I win? | ||
I think you win. | ||
Yeah, I think you win. | ||
Thanks for the Nijigini, by the way. | ||
Yeah, there's no way. | ||
I mean, maybe Trump is going to get a bigger black percentage than he did in 2016. | ||
I think that is maybe within the realm of possibility, but 20%? | ||
I think that's a reach. | ||
So yeah, I think you're pretty safe. | ||
Ethel says, loving the new tunes, Nick. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Optical Autism says, thank God for this new music. | ||
It is so good, King! | ||
Well thanks, I'm glad you like it. | ||
I loved it too. | ||
I think it's a great song. | ||
I like the samples. | ||
I like the quotes from me. | ||
I like the Kanye quotes. | ||
I like the sample from On God. | ||
It's a great track. | ||
A guy that does my music is really talented. | ||
Very talented guy. | ||
He's also converting to Catholicism. | ||
The guy's like Trad. | ||
He's a totally based guy. | ||
Good friend of mine from college. | ||
Right? | ||
What do they say about the movement? | ||
It's the friends we make along the way. | ||
One day we're all just going to move together and that will be, right? | ||
One day the America vs. Compound. | ||
So there's going to be a settlement in South America. | ||
We're all going to move there. | ||
I'll be the leader of the settlement. | ||
We'll call it Nicktown. | ||
And that'll be the real movement, right? | ||
The movement. | ||
People say, you don't have a movement. | ||
You just published on Twitter. | ||
The movement will be when we all move to South America and we start a Christian commune called Nickstown. | ||
And we all we all live together all the content creators and super chatters and friends the show like and it'll be the movement of Of us from here to there and I think that'll go very well Commando chicken says I really like the instrumental on the new music. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Glad you like it Optical autism says it's gay. | ||
Yeah salute to my brothers in Christ right back at you big guy and And I love the new sample in this song. | ||
And I picked it out, by the way. | ||
I helped. | ||
Where Kanye says, you're talking to somebody that only fears God. | ||
Right? | ||
And that's what it is. | ||
What does he say? | ||
You know, the exact quote escapes me right now, but he says, you know, something about having the fear and love of God. | ||
If you don't have that, then you have the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You're talking to someone that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory, bro! | ||
It's like so true! | ||
unidentified
|
We brainwashed out here, bro! | |
That's a free man talkin'. | ||
And it's true! | ||
And I love that because it's true! | ||
I'm a free man talkin'! | ||
I'm a free nibba! | ||
The free nibba archetype. | ||
I'm the free nibba archetype. | ||
This is a free man talkin', bro! | ||
What it is, I'm a free man. | ||
I'm free! | ||
I chose not to be a slave. | ||
Right? | ||
Dropped the Wave Runner, now we run away. | ||
Okay? | ||
So that's the mentality for 2020. | ||
We are free. | ||
We are off the plantation. | ||
I don't need your Jewish money. | ||
I don't need your Israeli money. | ||
Fuck you. | ||
I don't need your big business money. | ||
I don't need your billionaire money. | ||
You know, and that's a thing for years. | ||
I had people court me and say, you know, not anybody like Huge, but there was always that question of who's going to be the donor? | ||
Who's going to put up the money? | ||
I'll be my own donor! | ||
I'll be my own donor! | ||
$2 Super Chats will be the backbone of this movement. | ||
We don't need your Israeli money. | ||
We need American money. | ||
We don't need your Jewish money. | ||
We have Christian money. | ||
Bro, Jesus won the victory. | ||
That's what we need. | ||
This is a free man talking. | ||
So that's what I love about it. | ||
Very, very based. | ||
Let's see, they call me JD says Nick sees JD. | ||
Have I told you I love blacks? | ||
I still do have a little bit of that compulsion. | ||
I still do have that compulsion. | ||
You know when I when I see a black Royper. | ||
Hey, hello black Royper. | ||
Have I told you how much I love blacks? | ||
But it's only because, you know, people get the wrong idea about me, and it's like, you know, I'm just a guy. | ||
I'm just a dude, okay? | ||
I'm just a guy. | ||
And there is a little bit of that, you know, this political correctness has constructed a barrier between me and my black brothers. | ||
But it shouldn't be this way, right? | ||
So, JD, I see you, brother. | ||
I see you, my brother, all right? | ||
JD, based. | ||
Based Groiber over here, the e-girl killer. | ||
Yeah, JD has really been off the goop on these e-girls. | ||
First, Colby, now Custard Loaf. | ||
You see this thing with Custard Loaf? | ||
You see this thing with this girl, Custard Loaf, now? | ||
Yeah, happy birthday. | ||
Happy birthday! | ||
Hold the hairbrush, am I right? | ||
unidentified
|
A little Custard Loaf check? | |
Oh, that is all so fun. | ||
We're just running up the scoreboard at this point. | ||
It's not even fair. | ||
Slaughter rule? | ||
Can the Groipers just win life by the slaughter rule at this point? | ||
What, it's like 10 trillion to nothing? | ||
Groipers versus e-girls, Khan Inc, Zionists, right? | ||
Yeah, yeah, did you see that today? | ||
Uh, yikes. | ||
Uh, yikes. | ||
And even more yikes is all these people that are out there like, yeah, you're being mean to e-girls online. | ||
Yeah, what about it? | ||
What about it? | ||
Yeah, I will be mean to girls online, actually. | ||
I will be mean to whores online, actually. | ||
Yeah, bro, you're like really based for being mean to e-girls. | ||
Uh, yeah, we are actually unironically that So JD he's just racking them up rack him up big guy Blank emotes his birthday brush moment kind of sad though. | ||
It is it is sad It is sad, but I have no time. | ||
I have no time to pity e-girls. | ||
I have no time to pity e-girls, all right? | ||
There's enough suffering in the world, and we've got to solve a problem here. | ||
That's what I'm concerned about. | ||
They call me JD's is also a reminder to just send the money, guys. | ||
So true. | ||
JD gets it. | ||
JD is like my id here. | ||
He is my 2% id. | ||
So true. | ||
A billionaire says AF's in chat for the new fire intro. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
It is! | ||
I've been trying to tell you it is. | ||
What happens when an unstoppable force, when an unstoppable force meets the system, meets the Khan Inc. | ||
system? | ||
It's not immovable, I'll tell you that much. | ||
We're just gonna blast through it like a, like a train. | ||
Okay, it's inevitable. | ||
Just like a train going down the tracks. | ||
Nothing can stop it. | ||
You know, it's like Ben Shapiro. | ||
Imagine Ben Shapiro and Charlie Kirk hanging out on the train tracks. | ||
Nothing you can do, man. | ||
Nothing you can do. | ||
It's a matter of time. | ||
That train is coming at you. | ||
You can brace yourself. | ||
Good luck. | ||
That's what we're talking about here. | ||
That's the energy. | ||
Free Nibba archetype, okay? | ||
This is a free man talking. | ||
We are free! | ||
We are liberated because we have God, because we have Jesus. | ||
We are liberated from your control. | ||
We are liberated from vice, from sin. | ||
We're free. | ||
We don't need your billionaire money. | ||
And that is going to be the future. | ||
Once we're able to amass a significant monetary base, man, the sky's the limit and we will create our own destiny. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
It says, thoughts on coming economic collapse? | ||
Some are predicting 40% to 50% unemployment. | ||
God bless you. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I think it's kind of early to say. | ||
I think a lot of that may be overstated. | ||
Just like the coronavirus fears, I think the economic contagion fears might be overstated. | ||
I mean, it's going to be bad. | ||
And I don't think a lot of the blood that will be spilled has been priced into the market yet. | ||
Stock market, that is. | ||
And I don't think people have a real idea of what it's going to be like in the coming year. | ||
It's going to get really bad economically. | ||
Some are saying at the low end like 20% unemployment. | ||
Some are saying 50%. | ||
It's gonna be bad. | ||
We haven't seen the worst of it yet. | ||
So it's gonna be bad, but I think some of these apocalyptic type people are overstating it because here's the thing. | ||
What's the first thing people are gonna do when the mandatory quarantine ends? | ||
Immediately everyone's gonna go out to eat. | ||
They're gonna go out to eat. | ||
They're gonna go back to work. | ||
They're gonna go back to the bars. | ||
Right, so I don't know if the economy will return to where it was in February. | ||
I think you might have a depressed level for a while, but I think you will see that the economy will pick back up again in a big way. | ||
So I'm not as apocalyptic as others, but I don't know, I'm not an economist. | ||
Oxydance says, what is this feeling? | ||
I think I'm vibing. | ||
Yeah, you're vibing. | ||
Ethel says, hey Nick, you've mentioned before this idea of tech progress not being the greatest. | ||
Can you explain? | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini Yeah Well, you know the idea is is simply this It changes how we think about our lives and this is a very This is kind of like the question which is to say that For all of human history we have scarcity and And we have work. | ||
And now that you have automation and labor saving and this advent of leisure, what does that say about us? | ||
You know, how we define ourselves and society for all of our history is work and scarcity. | ||
And now that automation is coming and artificial intelligence and all this, and technology has reduced labor and reduced work, Now the question is becoming, well, who are we without our work? | ||
Can you be a man without work? | ||
What does society look like without work? | ||
And I don't mean that people aren't working, but you know, when the American economy is 67% service-based and it's this information revolution and most people's jobs isn't actually building or making or actually literal, physical, the scientific Physics definition of work. | ||
It's just like you know clickety-clack on the keyboard What what does that mean for us because take away work and you take away physical strength you take away? | ||
Expertise you take away this division of labor between men and women like it totally inverts society technological progress has inverted society and changed lots of things where Now that people are not working in farms or factories or in some cases even at all What simply do you do with your time? | ||
How do you make meaning in your life without that, with just leisure and recreation or these hobby-type pursuits? | ||
And, you know, this is to me like the big question. | ||
We could get into other questions about this. | ||
But moreover, then, it's like this idea of, you know, women are going to be working and men might not be. | ||
Or, you know, how can men be men if they're not physically strong? | ||
And how can they be physically strong if they're not working or they're not required to do work? | ||
It could always work out, but not everyone's going to do that. | ||
Most people aren't going to do that. | ||
How can you be a man if you don't need to do things like that? | ||
And, but then beyond that, the question about technology, you know, that to me is like the big question. | ||
Is if, hypothetically, we enter into the singularity period, not like the AI singularity, but let's say we enter into this period where automation is kind of done away with most work and labor saving, taking to the extreme, gets us to a point where it's like... | ||
We don't have to do anything. | ||
Is that good for us? | ||
is like a big question mark. | ||
Is that good for us? | ||
Are we meant to be like that? | ||
Because there's one idea that it's like, well, we will keep accumulating and we will keep using tools and the tools will make tools and then we can focus on, you know, being space age colonizers and like, I don't know if that's the case. | ||
I think we're kind of just meant to be on this planet, and we're meant to just do the same things, you know? | ||
Is it always a good thing to not work? | ||
Is it always a good thing to, you know, do the easy, the efficient, right? | ||
I don't know if I'm doing a great job of explaining that. | ||
But that's just sort of my thought. | ||
What I traditionally talk about when I talk about technology not being great is about its effect on society. | ||
If we're conservatives, what we want is to conserve. | ||
We want to preserve. | ||
We want traditions, right? | ||
We want hierarchies, and more than that, we want stability. | ||
What conservatism is about is stability. | ||
Something that is staying the same is stable. | ||
Something that is not changing rapidly is stable. | ||
And that is, at the end of the day, what we're after, is we want an orderly society. | ||
And capitalism and technology, these sort of two handmaidens, are the most chaotic and disorderly and disruptive forces in human history. | ||
What is more disruptive and what is the biggest enemy of stability and preservation than technology? | ||
Technology which radically changes everything every so many years and at an exponential pace. | ||
You know, think about something like the car. | ||
And how much society has had to change because of the car, because of the automobile. | ||
Think about how much society has had to change because of television or because of radio and all these different things, all these new technologies. | ||
It is something that increases the velocity of a society in a certain, and this is maybe an abstract or difficult concept to wrap your head around, but you think about Before the industrial technological age, which is you know, really like before the 18th century and Life was kind of like the same all the time always And if you had technological improvements, it was slow and steady. | ||
And that allowed for people to kind of live predictable and orderly lives in like a feudal setting or in a city setting, right? | ||
But now that you have this technology stuff, it's like the life that I'm living is different than the life somebody who was born 10 years before me was living. | ||
And their life is different than the boomers and different than and radically different every year, every decade. | ||
And these forces are destabilizing. | ||
They're increasing the velocity of information. | ||
They're increasing the velocity of money. | ||
They're increasing the velocity of all... I mean, the society, can you feel it? | ||
It's getting faster and faster and more entropic and more chaotic. | ||
There's a certain way to look at it. | ||
And then you've got that combined with capitalism and innovation. | ||
I mean, capitalism is literally called creative destruction. | ||
You combine that with market forces, and you've got this idea of companies opening up and being destroyed. | ||
You know, like, what was that big television company in Chicago? | ||
I think it was called, what is it, Zenith or something? | ||
What is it? | ||
Zenith Electronics. | ||
That was a huge huge company in Chicago and used to produce these like tube televisions. | ||
I don't know if it's still around but it was once a major major source of employment. | ||
Then they get destroyed and then it's somebody else making LCDs or you know whatever else. | ||
And that's another part of technology is then these markets. | ||
These two things go hand in hand. | ||
Industry, technology, information, and then capitalism is kind of the Background of all of this, you've got this idea of creative destruction of companies and technologies and systems that are constantly being destroyed and replaced. | ||
Constantly, you know, a stronger, better competitor with a better product, a better technology, a better patent comes in and wipes them out. | ||
And jobs are lost and ways of living are lost and something new comes in and And just basically all of this frenzied activity is just so, and that's the word, it's disorderly. | ||
That that is kind of the enemy of tradition. | ||
How do you maintain a traditional way of living if things are changing? | ||
That's the bottom line, is change. | ||
If things are changing at such a rapid pace, it's the scope It's the pace and it's the scale that all horizontally across the society things are changing, vertically things are changing, and at a rapid pace. | ||
You know, it is like change in three dimensions and on steroids with technology and capitalism and industry. | ||
And all of that change is the enemy of an orderly and stable and hierarchical society. | ||
And you can see that. | ||
It's wiped out families, it's wiped out communities, it's wiped out the nation state, and instead we have this atomized individualistic bottom class, and then you've got this managerial elite that lords over it. | ||
Like, that is a big problem for us as conservatives that we have to figure out. | ||
How can you at once be a conservative and say that you're in favor of all these things, but at the same time say that you're in favor of radical, radical, radical change? | ||
You know, like social media, one way to look at it is that has the possibility to create major societal instability. | ||
And is something like societal instability a good thing for a conservative? | ||
Not really, right? | ||
So why would we be in favor of these informational type technologies? | ||
Uncontrollable, fast, right? | ||
Think about like, you know, automatic trucks is the classic example. | ||
Automate trucking and you have All these people out of work, all these people unemployed, what do you do with them? | ||
That's a very destabilizing thing. | ||
When tons of people get unemployed, a whole industry is destroyed. | ||
What do those people do? | ||
What do their families do? | ||
You know? | ||
So... | ||
Anyway, so there's a lot of layers, there's a lot of dimensions to that conversation. | ||
Optical Autism says, salute in the chat, yeah. | ||
Aquarium Groyper says, haha DNC rigging machine go brr. | ||
Okay, I hate that meme. | ||
I never thought that meme was funny. | ||
This rigging machine go brr. | ||
It's just not funny. | ||
It's not, that was never, what's the punchline exactly? | ||
It's just not funny to me. | ||
You know, like, what was the punchline? | ||
We're making something silly? | ||
I mean, the punchline was about the Federal Reserve, and it was the idea of like, oh, we're printing lots of money! | ||
Haha, like, that's funny? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It was never funny to me. | ||
It's one of these very just simple and one-dimensional template memes, which I don't like. | ||
Haha, something go brr. | ||
Haha, something go whatever. | ||
It's like another one of these, you know, ex-nationalism, ex-gang. | ||
I hate this. | ||
All my homies hate this. | ||
I just, I hate, hate, hate the memes now because they're so dumb and they get overused and abused so quickly. | ||
They just become so cringe and all these, you know, stupid mouth breathers start using them. | ||
Get your disgusting hands, get your dirty hands off these memes, you know? | ||
Stupid, dumb animal, you don't understand. | ||
Haha, it's something go bird. | ||
I'll just shut up. | ||
Just shut up. | ||
You can't you should not be a content creator. | ||
You cannot post So I'm really getting sick of Twitter for that reason shit like that DNC rigging machine go burr like not funny. | ||
Not funny. | ||
Not funny That's not funny that meme sucks Groper angloid says bringing back the YouTube song when what YouTube song I Oh, let's see. | ||
Thirstman says it's gay. | ||
Yup. | ||
SixMillion says Kanye promotes miscegenation. | ||
He's so based. | ||
Okay, somebody who clearly doesn't get it. | ||
Boopers says the way you say it's gay is so satisfying. | ||
I'm glad you like that. | ||
TKY says Google removed your DLive from the search results. | ||
Did they? | ||
Let me see. | ||
Wow, they did! | ||
I'm sure that was DLive though. | ||
I'm sure DLive did that. | ||
unidentified
|
Man! | |
Well, me and Owen Benjamin. | ||
Owen Benjamin was on there too. | ||
And you know how I feel about Owen Benjamin, but the same thing happened to him. | ||
So I'm sure DLive probably, maybe they changed something. | ||
I don't think it was Google. | ||
I think it was probably DLive. | ||
Yep, that's how it goes. | ||
Well, it's funny because you look up DLive and, you know, under people also ask, is DLive dead? | ||
So, you know, that's kind of funny how that works. | ||
But that's okay. | ||
You don't have to just search, you know, DLive. | ||
You could just check the front page on any given day or check the social blade. | ||
So I don't need to see it on the Google search. | ||
unidentified
|
But, yeah, that's pretty shitty. | |
Didn't you see how shitty they are to us? | ||
I mean, across the board, like... If we were unobstructed by all this kind of nonsense, think about how much bigger we would be. | ||
I'm averaging 5,000-6,000 current views. | ||
That's one of the biggest political streams that there exists. | ||
And that's with all this bullshit. | ||
YouTube bans and, you know, um... | ||
Blacklisting and with shadow bands and this Google type stuff. | ||
So whatever, whatever. | ||
We'll just keep doing our thing. | ||
Let's see. | ||
We've got Catholic Canadians who saw Okay, I'm not going to read that. | ||
Mayberry says, it's so nice out schmooting in my backyard to America First. | ||
Yeah, very nice day out today for sure. | ||
NJ Conservative says, holy weak guinea, is there any social issue you'd compromise on for net zero immigration? | ||
Thanks for the ninja guinea. | ||
Well, I don't think it's as simple as that. | ||
I think it's really just a matter of, I mean, unless you're asking like a hypothetical question. | ||
Honestly, virtually any social issue would be worth compromising on because, frankly, the social battles are already so bad. | ||
And immigration, and you have to understand the relationship between these two things. | ||
As long as we have immigration, we're going to have the promotion of these bad things. | ||
So, do you understand what I mean? | ||
So if you don't get control of immigration, you never get control of the social stuff. | ||
The social stuff continues to get worse. | ||
And the social stuff, as far as I'm concerned, is very, very bad. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
It's not even a trade. | ||
It's like, have things stay as bad as they are in one area to make things better in another area that will make everything better. | ||
I mean, that's really what it's about. | ||
So, really any social issue I would go for. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Commando Chicken says, this song reminds me of old America First, giving me memories. | ||
I wonder why that is. | ||
I mean, probably in the future. | ||
I have no plans to do it anytime soon, but yeah, it seems like a cool experience. | ||
I mean, probably in the future. | ||
I have no plans to do it anytime soon, but yeah, it seems like a cool experience. | ||
China Virus says, hashtag burn return. | ||
Okay. | ||
Bass Jim Bro says, epic lobby music. | ||
Best ever. | ||
God bless you. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Bass Dollar with the Ninjagini. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Holy Servant says, did you see Joe Exotic? | ||
Question in the conference today. | ||
Finally, some good journalism for once. | ||
No, I didn't see that. | ||
And I haven't watched this Tiger King show. | ||
You know, it's almost like too mainstream at this point. | ||
I almost don't want to watch it because it's too popular. | ||
unidentified
|
Have you watched Tiger Kings? | |
No. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Maybe I'll check it out just because everyone's talking about it, but typically when things get to that level, I'm like, I have no interest. | ||
I'll stick to watching the prequels over and over again. | ||
Harley says, you think there is a realistic possibility China faces repercussions? | ||
Friend just died. | ||
I'm livid. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I think there is. | ||
I think there is a realistic possibility. | ||
But that'll come after we get a handle on our situation domestically They call me JD says nibbas be like no darky malarkey music. | ||
Yeah, some of you white toys Don't get it some of these cringe white toys JD. | ||
They can't hear music the way we can Bud sack says Nick, please don't start your show till Tucker's over No, why don't you just watch my show? | ||
First name says use beard oil. | ||
Your COVID beard is Keno. | ||
Thanks. | ||
I don't have beard oil, but maybe I'll do that. | ||
Mario says neck chungus collar department. | ||
Neck chungus, yeah. | ||
Fat neck department. | ||
Nickernache says Nick's grinding in the projects. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Did you see we gave Israel 1 million masks? | ||
Happy Passover. | ||
I actually did not see that. | ||
I saw the headline, which was not... | ||
I couldn't find that actually in the article. | ||
I saw that same tweet from Drudge, and it said, U.S. | ||
D.O.D. | ||
gives Israel a million masks. | ||
But then I read the article and it said Israel bought a million masks from China. | ||
So I don't know how true that is, but thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Some of you nibbas are so quick to just bite on anything like that. | ||
It's so easy, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Happy Passover! | |
Oy vey! | ||
Happy Passover! | ||
Am I right, Goy? | ||
People are so easy. | ||
Why don't you read the article, you know? | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
Maybe that's true, but from the article I read, it didn't say anything about the DoD. | ||
It said that they bought a million masks from China, and the Drudge headline did say, you know, DoD gives a million masks, but I didn't see that in the article. | ||
So, let me see. | ||
Israel, masks, DoD. | ||
Maybe it'll come up. | ||
The U.S. | ||
Department of Defense has reportedly supplied a million surgical masks to the Israeli regime in order to be distributed among soldiers. | ||
It says the Israeli-language Jerusalem Post reported that the masks were procured from China. | ||
Okay, see? | ||
In a plane carrying the medical stuff intended for Israeli soldiers. | ||
Landed in Ben-Gurion airport on Tuesday night. | ||
Does it say anything else? | ||
The Jerusalem Post initially published the article headlined, D.O.D. | ||
gives a million masks. | ||
The newspaper changed the headline shortly afterwards to read, Israel brings a million masks from China to IDF soldiers downplaying the role of Washington. | ||
Okay, but it doesn't say that there is a role from Washington, right? | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
So, aside from that headline, which appears to have disappeared, I don't see any information that says that we helped them. | ||
I mean, maybe we helped them procure the masks, but, I mean, they got them from China. | ||
So, that doesn't seem very legit to me. | ||
Panther Den says, Globalists will say the Panther Den show is fake. | ||
It's real. | ||
All of it. | ||
Mass arrests by midnight. | ||
Well, thanks for the Nijigini. | ||
I'll be watching, what is it, 1130 Eastern Time? | ||
I'll check out the Panther Den show. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Andrew Jackson says COVID has changed things. | ||
There's no going back. | ||
Yep. | ||
Portland Groper says how do you suppose the US should make China pay? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Tariffs, sanctions, economic is probably gonna be how we do it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't I don't know what tools would be at our disposal to punish them aside from the usual economic stuff. | ||
So we'll have to see. | ||
Yeah, big agree. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
Thanks, glad you like it. | ||
Yeah, okay, lab coat. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
Aroch says, Ayo Nick, fuck Corona. | ||
Yeah, big agree. | ||
Pat says, Sharp Tie. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thanks, glad you like it. | ||
Dak says, 3.1 million dead, 500, 300,000, 100,000 dead. | ||
Yeah, okay, lab coat. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
Every day it's wildly different. | ||
Road Warriors' reporter named Seymour Coxes calling you out. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Wiffle says LMAO at the wannabe commie revolutionaries on the timeline. | ||
Yeah, they're they're not real revolutionaries. | ||
They are soy boys. | ||
Ben's funny hat says might the DNC drop Biden since he's shot? | ||
Um, I don't think it's likely. | ||
I mean, it's always possible, but I don't think that's likely. | ||
Reptards, it's time for Trump to verbally slam Biden with a chair. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeet says Bernie Sanders is a baby back bitch. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Ponypandas says Bernie will be president after Nick is. | ||
Yeah, agree. | ||
Florida man says possible Biden running mates? | ||
Um, I don't know. | ||
Amy Klobuchar, maybe. | ||
Elizabeth Warren, maybe. | ||
Stacey Abrams, Kamala Harris. | ||
Could be somebody that is not on our radar. | ||
Michelle Obama, some have said. | ||
I don't know if that's possible, but... | ||
Or rather, I don't know if that's likely, but, you know, who knows. | ||
So, I have no idea. | ||
But those are some names that have been tossed around. | ||
Nick or Nate says, my dad thinks they'll choose Michelle for Vicarious. | ||
It's possible, but I don't think that will happen. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What do you mean, what if that happens? | ||
Then they'll have done it. | ||
I mean, it could happen. | ||
But I don't think that will happen. | ||
What if that happens? | ||
I don't know. | ||
What do you mean, what if that happens? | ||
Then they'll have done it. | ||
Well, what if they pick another candidate at the convention? | ||
I mean, it could happen. | ||
I don't think it will. | ||
Then they'll have another candidate. | ||
Base Dollars says, has the U.S. | ||
ever voted in a new president during a war? | ||
I can't think of any. | ||
Trump wins again. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Well, I mean, we're not technically at war, but yeah, I mean, during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, we went from George W. Bush. | ||
Well, but he didn't lose, right? | ||
He just finished his term. | ||
Wars where we switched out, let me think. | ||
So let's see, Vietnam started in 65. | ||
So was Lyndon Johnson. | ||
Yeah, Vietnam was 65 to 73. | ||
So, Lyndon Johnson got in in 63, right? | ||
Kennedy dies, he wins in 64, he gets voted out in 68. | ||
So, that said though, he didn't run in 68, did he? | ||
unidentified
|
Did he? | |
Let me think. | ||
Election of... | ||
I'm pretty sure he bowed out. | ||
Did he not? | ||
Yeah, it was Hubert Humphrey. | ||
So, Lyndon Johnson, I mean, he didn't get voted out, but he knew that he wasn't going to win again. | ||
So, I mean, it's virtually the same thing, I guess. | ||
So, on a technical level, like, that happened. | ||
Was the Gulf War still going on when Bill Clinton won in 92? | ||
That is a question I'm not sure the answer. | ||
Obviously FDR was all throughout World War one Wilson in World War or I'm sorry FDR in World War two Wilson in World War one in the Korean War Truman won in what he succeeded Roosevelt in 45 won in 48 Did he yeah, I think and then he gave it up after that right did Eisenhower face in 52 I don't think it was Truman, right? | ||
And no, the Korean War started in 53, right? | ||
Let me think. | ||
Am I getting all my dates here right? | ||
Or is that Truman? | ||
No, I'm sorry, Korean War ended in 53. | ||
But who did Eisenhower be? | ||
I'm a little rusty here on my history, if you can't tell. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Election of 52. | ||
No, he beat Adlai Stevenson, right? | ||
So let me think then. | ||
Not World War II. | ||
Then you'd have to go way back. | ||
You'd have to go way back to like 19th century. | ||
I'm not going to know about the 19th century. | ||
So so yeah, I don't I don't think that's ever happened except for Vietnam and So yeah, that's a good point. | ||
Joseph says RCP average says plus six Biden sounds like denial. | ||
Well, I mean really we're gonna do the polls again. | ||
Do we have to? | ||
Do I even have to explain why that's dumb? | ||
RCP average? | ||
Well, and you know the RCP average got it really right in 2016. | ||
Fraticelli says white-pilled again. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Franson says our future is bright because we are with the truth. | ||
So true. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
Hot Dog says, Lemon Check. | ||
Checked. | ||
Zoomer says, Newfangled. | ||
Okay. | ||
Fugs in with a salute. | ||
Robo Farts is still farting. | ||
Okay. | ||
Base Dollar says, He hates you because he never got any Legos. | ||
Yeah, possible. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I don't know how, well, I know white people could hate me, but I would never hate me because I'm awesome. | ||
Because I'm simply awesome. | ||
Ultraviolet says, The derangement stems from your continued success. | ||
That's true. | ||
If I was just some loser, they wouldn't hate me. | ||
If I was just some guy getting like 50 viewers... | ||
unidentified
|
They'd be like, oh, he's a nice guy, nice guy. | |
I like him, he's funny, right? | ||
But that's right. | ||
But they resent, they resent success. | ||
They resent the champion. | ||
They resent the winner, okay? | ||
The winner of the year. | ||
Hello, winner of the year department? | ||
Time Magazine just came out with their winner of the year. | ||
Nick Fuentes, winner of the year. | ||
I'm winning the year. | ||
So, yeah, there's truth in that. | ||
Minnesota Groyper says the guys from my tweet have a history of projection and think hating Nick is a personality. | ||
They literally do, yeah. | ||
They, and they do, they take like pride in it. | ||
It's very funny to me. | ||
They're like, yeah, we're, we're hated by, we're the, we're the we hate Nick club. | ||
We're the don't like Nick Fuentes club. | ||
Literally, I'm such a forceful personality that entire groups rise in opposition to me personally. | ||
That guy. | ||
And it's like, don't you understand that that is what all great men strive to be? | ||
That is like the essence of a champion. | ||
It's somebody that is polarizing. | ||
That the force of their will is strong. | ||
That it forces people to choose a side. | ||
So, thanks for the ninja-gini. | ||
And they do. | ||
unidentified
|
It is. | |
It's Nick Fuentes' derangement syndrome. | ||
Nick Ernaish says, what flavor of Kool-Aid are we going with? | ||
We're going to do great pop. | ||
Carpenter says, can we get some AF Kool-Aid? | ||
Yeah, for sure. | ||
Drawing Times has petitioned to name the compound Cherry Town. | ||
Cherry Town! | ||
I like the name of that. | ||
Yeah, we'll all go to my Animal Crossing Island. | ||
We'll all go to Cherry Town. | ||
Jesse Winfrey says, am I allowed into the compound? | ||
Yes, you are. | ||
You can be the compound cowboy. | ||
You can do the compound wrangling. | ||
Tactical nuke incoming says Nicktown equals nuketown without the godless NPCs. | ||
Yeah, very true Jesse Lee Peterson says let's go Nick amazing. | ||
Thanks Nova course is Christian money epic Erica says try Cleo yogurt bars. | ||
They're yummy yogurt bars Sounds yucky in my opinion Let me look it up though yogurt bar Hmm, I don't know actually it's just kind of looks tasty Greek yogurt bar, maybe maybe I will sample this. | ||
I've never had a yogurt bar What's in it yogurt is it like wet It's like wet yogurt in a bar. | ||
What is the consistency or is it like hardened kind of a thing? | ||
solidified yogurt solid yogurt Let's see, are Clio bars healthy? | ||
Health benefits like probiotics, protein. | ||
It's like cheesecake. | ||
Cheesecake-like experience. | ||
They can go without refrigeration for 12 hours. | ||
You can buy a 10-pack. | ||
Yeah, maybe I'll give it a shot. | ||
You know what? | ||
I was skeptical. | ||
unidentified
|
Mmm, and it's a cold bar. | |
You know what? | ||
That actually looks not bad. | ||
Actually looks kind of tasty and I do you know, I need those probiotics That might not be a bad breakfast option. | ||
You know what? | ||
You know what? | ||
Let's do it I'll give it a shot Sedentary I need some snack recommendations. | ||
I'm so bored with the usual suspects. | ||
Give me some snack recommendations. | ||
I've got so I've got I've got my cocktail peanuts and I've got airheads and candy. | ||
And I get these chips occasionally. | ||
But I don't know what else to get. | ||
Every time I go to the grocery store, I'm like, I don't even know what I like. | ||
Recommend something good to me. | ||
What's like a good? | ||
Healthy snack cuz I like to munch on something But I also don't want to prepare anything and I don't want to eat like shit, you know, so what's a good like? | ||
middle-of-the-road snack That yogurt bar seems like a good idea Maybe just yogurt in general Let's see sedentary says I feel like the environment was meant to unify the left, but it's feeling terribly Yeah, I think that was the intention and it is not working. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Joe Blow says, one more diamond for the pile. | ||
Thanks, buddy. | ||
Zonus says, I funny gang. | ||
Okay. | ||
Joe the Boomer says, time to send Nick more goodies in the mail. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Hit me up, Joe the Boomer. | ||
Erika says, why are so many e-girl cons whores? | ||
I'm confused. | ||
I think just a lot of girls are whores and there just happens to be overlap. | ||
But also because a lot of attention-seeking conservative women, that's the critical component. | ||
It's like, it goes to the territory because to be an e-girl is to be attention-seeking and to have a malfunction. | ||
And you know, those are the kinds of people that tend to seek that male attention in unhealthy ways. | ||
So, you know, that's a form of like acting out. | ||
Hi. | ||
Hi guys. | ||
I'm a fashy girl Look at me pay attention to me. | ||
My dad didn't love me enough. | ||
I you know, I don't get enough. | ||
I Don't get enough support from my family. | ||
So I need to outsource that to strangers online Look at me like me like me. | ||
I have a deficit of self-esteem and self-worth so I will whore around my body as a Shallow substitute. | ||
I mean, these things, they go with the territory. | ||
That's what I think. | ||
Jizza says, when are you joining the America vs. Cowboys? | ||
unidentified
|
Never. | |
I'm not a cowboy. | ||
I'm a city boy. | ||
I'm a city boy. | ||
Always been. | ||
Always been a city slicker. | ||
Just who I am. | ||
Just how I am. | ||
How I was born and raised. | ||
So you guys be the Cowboys. | ||
Nothing against you. | ||
It's just not my thing, you know? | ||
Wouldn't be me. | ||
I wouldn't be living my true self. | ||
Tactical Nuke says Ben Shapiro sleeps with a binky because of Nick. | ||
Very true. | ||
Bangin' says happy birthday King. | ||
Hope it's a good one. | ||
It's not my birthday, but thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Polish American says America first. | ||
Shirt march on National Harbor when? | ||
JK big guy. | ||
I don't know what that means, but thanks. | ||
Umph Loves is where Scott Greer finds all these awfuls to dunk on. | ||
You wanna know how he finds all these e-girls to dunk on? | ||
I don't think I have to tell you. | ||
Gee, it's so weird that Scott Greer has no shortage of women that he just finds online. | ||
I don't know, it's very weird. | ||
Um, anyway, Panther Den, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Brahman, Groipers, is there any resources you recommend on race? | ||
Um... Race and the American Prospect, compiled by Sam Francis. | ||
Essential writings on race by Sam Francis. | ||
Jared Taylor, can't go wrong with anything by him. | ||
Um, um, um, um, um... | ||
Bell curve is one that people recommend it's not really like, you know, that's not like the end-all be-all There was one book I ordered from Amazon that never came if somebody told me was like the definitive one But it just never came in the mail. | ||
I Had to get a refund. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me see if I can pull it up. | |
I Don't know the name off the top of my head it was I Let's see race evolution and behavior by Philip Rushton that that is what I am what I was told is the definitive the definitive book on the subject but Yeah, those are just a few off the top of my head Nick's dad bod says what happened between you and Cernovich at CPAC and Nothing really, we just had a conversation. | ||
I'm a fed says prep for Panther Den episode 3 with 500 face pulls. | ||
Yeah, that seems a little excessive. | ||
Brahman Groyper says realistically, how many more years to save America? | ||
Okay, that's just a dumb question. | ||
Nickernay says mods, why is the chat disappearing? | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
sedentary seeks is also want to say love the show from the UK AF is my rock through this chaos I owe you these god bless well thanks for the ninja genie boy glad you like it good glad you like it mate on this fine Tuesday Tuesday evening even though it's Wednesday boy it's a great show in it | ||
Brilliant a brilliant show in it mate Nick Rene says looks like Masaad finally got us. | ||
I don't know you're talking about Joe the boomer says blocky girls block their sims block lewd posters. | ||
Yeah for real Optics respecters as we have begun to discover too late that you cannot serve God and mammon is literal as well. | ||
Exactly, right Exactly, right. | ||
Thanks for the ninja genie And that's true, you can't. | ||
Yeah, and we discovered that during the Gruyper Wars. | ||
That became more and more apparent that there's a line in the sand between God and everything else. | ||
You just can't work for one and both of them at the same time. | ||
It cannot be done. | ||
It's in the Bible. | ||
It cannot be done. | ||
You cannot serve both. | ||
It's a contradiction. | ||
You're either working for one or the other. | ||
Period. | ||
Peacemaker says, so was Ted right about some stuff? | ||
Yeah, I think I said that. | ||
Yes, these people. | ||
So was Ted right? | ||
What kind of question is that? | ||
What do you have, like a 50 IQ? | ||
Some of these people, man, I swear. | ||
So was Ted right about some stuff? | ||
unidentified
|
Do you have a brain? | |
Do you have a brain in your head? | ||
You know, hello, sub 300 IQ super chatter here. | ||
IQ super chatter here. | ||
Clearly a sub-300 IQ poster. | ||
unidentified
|
This was Ted right about... | |
Can't you draw your own conclusions? | ||
Warren says, I'm moving to Nickstown. | ||
You'd be welcome, Warren. | ||
You're a good dude. | ||
AA says, my boomer dad saw clips of you. | ||
Future Groyper? | ||
You tell me. | ||
Max Bovin says, usury in central banks allowed the insane rate of technological advancement. | ||
You'd think that's what it was. | ||
Thanks for the Nijigini. | ||
Let's see Nova courses Israeli CB treatment has a hundred percent survival rate great. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
Oh, awesome I'm a fad says don't open chest everybody spamming with spaces. | ||
unidentified
|
Are they? | |
Yeah, if you're spamming then I'm just not gonna open the chest. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
I Think that is what people are doing. | ||
They're spamming which is the spacebar. | ||
Is that what that is? | ||
Does that work? | ||
I It does, yeah. | ||
Okay, so people are just spamming with the spacebar. | ||
Okay, no chest. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
Uh, let's see. | ||
Trayvon says, G for the covenant to glass china. | ||
Okay, disavow. | ||
Logos says, biggest regret in high school. | ||
Don't ask. | ||
Don't ask me that! | ||
Not like I have something on, you know, on the top of my head, but just like, don't make me think about high school again. | ||
It's gonna make me wistful. | ||
Biggest regret in high school? | ||
Geez. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I had a pretty good high school career, but there are definitely, there's definitely things that, you know, there's definitely things, there's definitely things that, you know, things that, you know, just can't, you can't go back. | ||
You cannot go back and just can't go back. | ||
Cannot turn back the clock. | ||
I mean, I don't really have a ton of regrets, but there are some things where I'm like, You know, I basically maxed out my experience. | ||
I live life to the fullest. | ||
I do what I want, you know, and I take advantage of what I can. | ||
I'm an opportunist, you know, so there aren't a ton of things where I'm like, If I just did this, I don't, you know, if I want to do something, I just do it. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
I'm not one of these people that's like, well, should I? | ||
I don't... | ||
I don't know, what would people think? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
So, some people live their whole lives and have lots of regrets because they're like, I played it safe, right? | ||
I never said what I meant! | ||
And it's like, I always say what I mean. | ||
I always do what I want, you know? | ||
I remember in high school, there were so many things that I did that were probably just straight up unethical, but I just did them because I was like, look, I'm in high school, you get to be young once, and I'm gonna do it. | ||
I remember I blew off band like an insane, just a totally unfair amount of times to do Model UN. | ||
There were a number of instances where I had band conflicting with Model UN and I didn't tell the guy in advance that I was going to have a conflict and I just blew him off. | ||
I'm like, hey, really sorry to do this to you again, but I'm not going to be there on Saturday. | ||
That was totally the wrong thing to do, but it was the right thing to do because, oh, you're not going to have one euphonium at the marching band thing. | ||
I'm never gonna get these years back I want to do Model UN. | ||
It was mandatory. | ||
Anyway, I was a dick. | ||
So anyway So there's not a ton. | ||
I basically just you know did what I wanted I didn't do my homework. | ||
I fucked around, you know. | ||
Not like sex, but, you know, I messed around. | ||
I fooled around, you know, just being a, you know, just being a viber. | ||
Doing a vibe check, right? | ||
And, uh, so, I don't look back at high school like, oh, I didn't, I didn't do this, or I didn't do that. | ||
There are some things where it's like... But, you know, you always have a little bit of that, so. | ||
Biggest regret? | ||
I don't know if I have a major regret. | ||
unidentified
|
Um... | |
Major regret. | ||
Maybe I'm not doing speech team. | ||
I don't know because I hated it, you know, and it got to a point where it's just so bad, man. | ||
It was all girls and homosexuals and I was the only cool guy in there. | ||
It got to a point, it was speech time, where I was like, why am I subjecting myself to this? | ||
Because when I started out there were some okay people on the team and I don't know, I was like getting started. | ||
I was seeing what I liked, you know, and Then by my junior year, it was like, okay, I figured this out. | ||
I'm the best at this. | ||
I'm the best at this. | ||
I literally told the coach, I came in my senior year and I'm like, there's really nothing else here for me. | ||
I could do really well if I wanted, but I don't need that. | ||
I don't need to win blue ribbons and trophies. | ||
I don't need that. | ||
I know I'm the best. | ||
What more is there to say? | ||
Like, my junior year was the first year I did Extemp, which is extemporaneous speaking, and that event for speech team is you go in in the morning, you pull out a slip of paper, which is a topic that you have to speak on, and you get 45 minutes to write a 10-minute speech, and you give that speech three times. | ||
I think it's three times. | ||
Yeah, or you... I don't know. | ||
Anyway. | ||
That's the that's the basic structure of it is for extemporaneous speaking now is my speech team event you go in in the morning you get your slip of paper you write your speech for 45 minutes It has to be memorized. | ||
And it's tricky, too, because you get 45 minutes to prepare your speech, but it has to have six sources, six citations, which includes date, source, and information. | ||
So, you know, you'd write a note card, and your note card would include an introduction, a conclusion, three body points, and each body point would have two citations. | ||
You'd have to memorize, you know, New York Times said on October 12, 2015, blah blah blah, CNN reported on this this of us six citations you'd have to memorize and put together coherent speech Memorize and write a seven-minute speech in 45 minutes kind of a tricky thing and the way a lot of people would do it because they were You know idiots because they weren't a genius like me is they would come in and they'd have pre-written speeches They'd have a pre-written introduction a pre-written conclusion. | ||
They'd use the same sources They'd pre-write and you know memorize certain speeches and then they go in and they do a totally Formulaic, you know, robot speech. | ||
But I would go in because I was awesome, and I would just write a brand spanking new speech every week that was epic and funny and insightful, kind of like this show. | ||
And I would go in there and I'd kick ass. | ||
And there was one period where, you know, at first I didn't take it seriously and I would roll up to these meets and I'd just say outrageous things to be funny. | ||
Like I remember, because you've got to understand, speech team is hyper-liberal. | ||
It's basically like theater. | ||
Most of the events are dramatic and they're like, it's like acting, sports. | ||
So, the people that coach speech team are all, like, thespians, for the most part. | ||
They're English teachers, they're theater teachers, right? | ||
So, the coaches and the judges are always liberal. | ||
So, I would go to these events. | ||
Extemp was one of the events that wasn't like this, because it was political, obviously. | ||
And I would always go in, and I remember one conference, I made it to finals, and the speech was about I don't know what the speech was about, but I said something about how Barack Obama wasn't born in America. | ||
I wish I could remember exactly the joke. | ||
What the fuck was it? | ||
It was something... I was making some analogy to baseball, and I said, you know, I was like, Barack Obama struck out. | ||
Not like he'd know anything about baseball, considering he wasn't born in America. | ||
unidentified
|
There was something... I know that was the line. | |
It was like, he doesn't know much about baseball, considering he wasn't born in America. | ||
That was the punchline. | ||
I don't know what the setup was. | ||
And I could see the judges literally just, you know, start writing and I would just do stuff like that just to get a kick out of it. | ||
But at a certain point I was like, okay, time to kick it and to engage. | ||
Time to start winning. | ||
And there was one point where I was like, I'm going to start taking it seriously. | ||
And I won first place like five weeks in a row. | ||
And I remember I beat the same guy three weeks in a row. | ||
He was at every conference then for three weeks. | ||
And every, for three weeks, we were in finals and I would come first and he was in second place. | ||
That happened three times in a row. | ||
Then we went to a conference and, you know, the top ten people make finals, and then there's a finals round, and then on the finals they assign, you know, first, second, and third. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
And the way they would do the awards ceremony is they call up all the finalists. | ||
How do they do it? | ||
They call up all the finalists and they say, you know, in 10th place, this person. | ||
And that person goes and they get their participation thing and they sit down. | ||
In 9th place, this person, they go and they get their thing. | ||
And it goes person by person. | ||
And so it would come down to just me and this guy. | ||
This happened three times, three weeks in a row. | ||
It would come down to me and this guy in glasses. | ||
And they would say, in second place! | ||
And they'd get him. | ||
And then it would be like, uh-oh! | ||
Uh-oh! | ||
Who is it again? | ||
unidentified
|
In first place, from Lyons Township, Nick Fuentes! | |
And yeah, I'd go in there. | ||
And it's like, I'm not even trying. | ||
I'm not even trying. | ||
I come in here, I don't even prepare. | ||
I don't even take it seriously. | ||
And I come in and I wipe out the competition. | ||
Because I was like the rough around the edges chosen one. | ||
And I would roll up. | ||
And this kid was one of these speechy kids. | ||
He really took it seriously. | ||
And I smashed this guy. | ||
He sang in one of his speeches. | ||
He sang. | ||
I remember being in finals and I was mortified. | ||
We were in finals. | ||
And you watch everybody's speeches. | ||
You go up and everybody watches each other's speeches. | ||
And he was in finals. | ||
during one of the speeches, He's saying he did his introduction He likes saying a song and I'm just like shaking my head like you think that's gonna beat me You think you're gonna sing your way out of this one. | ||
You know you're talking to you know so Anyway, so maybe I would have stayed in Speech Team for another year, but then again, it was all these women and homosexuals on my team, and that's what it was like in all the other schools too. | ||
I wouldn't even have any fun. | ||
I'd go to these meets, and I literally wouldn't talk to anybody. | ||
I would be in the back of the bus, vibing to my music, you know, vibing to whatever it was at the time. | ||
Wu-Tang Clan I was into at the time. | ||
And I'd get to the meet, I'd read my book, I'd do my thing, do my thing, do my dance, and I'd win. | ||
And, you know, I'd just ride the bus home, and that was that. | ||
So maybe it would have been nice to go to the finals and stayed or something like that, but I just didn't want to. | ||
It wasn't fun for me, and I don't know if I regret that, you know, because my real interest was Model UN. | ||
Yeah, that was a big regret. | ||
Wow, wise words. | ||
Okay, I don't know what that means. | ||
Okay, interesting. | ||
Okay, yeah, I'm aware of almonds. | ||
I am aware of that. | ||
Okay, I don't know what that means. | ||
Umph Love says flavored Greek yogurt with good granola is amazing. | ||
Okay, interesting. | ||
Bangin' Your Mom says almonds. | ||
Okay, yeah, I'm aware of almonds. | ||
I am aware of that. | ||
Apollo says try banana chips. | ||
All right, I'll give it a shot. | ||
ASU Groiper says get some Uncrustables.com. | ||
They're ready when you are. | ||
I don't really like Uncrustables. | ||
I know them. | ||
Dak says let's be honest, that yogurt bat bit was an ad? | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
Baseless accusations for the Kings coffers. | ||
Thank you Coltis Gordon says this nibba controlled by big yogurt big yogurt China viruses dots pretzels best pretzel ever Okay Banging your mom says OMG Bernie. | ||
Dr. Panther den at 1130 drop Yeah, I don't know what this says TasteLikeChicken says, have you seen the Russell report on DLive? | ||
I have, yeah. | ||
Kind of a charming Canadian version of me. | ||
Pretty, pretty interesting. | ||
Smarty says, you need to watch Star Wars The Clone Wars, man. | ||
Yeah, I'll get right on that. | ||
Koki says, chest is inappropriate for Bernie's dropout anyway. | ||
Yeah, I agree. | ||
TakeCover says, no chest? | ||
What will I do without my four lemons? | ||
I don't know, you guys are the ones always asking for it. | ||
Chest, chest, Nick, open the chest. | ||
So you tell me. | ||
Chicken strips as kids playing outside, free from school. | ||
Good times, yeah. | ||
Reminds me of when I... You know, that was the best thing about school, was being off school. | ||
And that seems paradoxical, but the best thing about school was getting a summer vacation. | ||
How I pine for summer vacation, you know? | ||
Those good old days when it's like school's out and got the whole summer ahead of you, and now it's gone. | ||
I don't get a summer vacation. | ||
I don't get any vacation. | ||
I get a week off, and even when I get a week off, I gotta do stuff, and I gotta talk to people, and I gotta, you know. | ||
Millennial Matt is making me get on a mountain, and we're hiking, and there's mountain lions, and this Millennial Matt's a real scoundrel. | ||
I went on vacation with him last July, And we're on this mountain, and I'm getting altitude sickness, and his place is filled with spiders. | ||
And he's like, oh yeah, I didn't tell you, but this place is infested with spiders. | ||
There's spiders crawling out of my shoes, spiders crawling out of my bed. | ||
I literally made the bed wet with raid, because I would rather die than have spiders crawling on me when I'm sleeping. | ||
So yeah, I'd casually empty my shoes out of spiders, and then we'd go hike in the mountains, and he would say, oh yeah, there's mountain lions in here, really big ones, and you know, they can actually stalk you for up to an hour and you can't hear them, and what they do is they jump on your back and scratch you with their hind legs. | ||
And then he almost stepped on a rattlesnake and died, that was great. | ||
And he was saying a lot of that stuff to freak me out, but it was also true, there were mountain lions there, we saw the tracks. | ||
So, this guy gets me into some adventures. | ||
He gets me into some adventures, this guy. | ||
That's my vacation. | ||
Now, if summer vacation was going to the park and, you know, hanging out, riding my bike to the park, getting a Slurpee at 7-Eleven and candy, vibing, walking around the park with the homies, walking around the plaza, getting ice cream from Burger King, and hanging out at the park, just walking, you know. | ||
I'm playing Super Smash in the cool basement and now I don't get a summer vacation. | ||
I'm doing this dumb show. | ||
I'm doing this show every night during the summer and if I do get a vacation, it's like a week and I'm getting killed by a mountain lion. | ||
I'm, you know, climbing a mountain and getting bit by rattlesnakes and spiders and, you know, God knows what else. | ||
So... | ||
Yeah, I miss summer vacation. | ||
I miss the old days. | ||
How I long for the simplicity, the innocence of my youth. | ||
But now I'm an old man. | ||
Now I'm a cynical, rugged general in this war. | ||
The war! | ||
Now I'm a damaged, damaged and scarred and PTSD general in the Great Groyper War. | ||
We are joined in this great conflict which knows no end. | ||
This eternal struggle. | ||
But that's how it is. | ||
That's how it is. | ||
And I can't have my Lego, and I can't have one fun little Lego, right? | ||
And I'm putting the weight of the world on my shoulders more than any of these faggots. | ||
I'm 21, and I got more on my shoulders. | ||
I've done more than any of these people. | ||
I play with one Lego, and it's... The movement leader shouldn't be playing with Legos. | ||
unidentified
|
The movement leader shouldn't be doing this. | |
You know what? | ||
If I'm the movement leader, then you're getting put in jail. | ||
You're getting put in the brig. | ||
If I'm the captain of this ship and I can't be doing Legos, okay. | ||
But then you're walking the fucking plank, man. | ||
You know, that's just it. | ||
It's like I have all the expectations of the leader, but none of the rights, right? | ||
I've got to be totally clean and buttoned up, like the leader would be, but... | ||
You know, but everybody's gonna disrespect and undermine, and it's like... You know what I'm saying? | ||
Like... So... So anyway, so that's that summer vacation. | ||
I mean, I don't even know how we got on that subject. | ||
Let's see... Big Globe says, uh, jerky sticks with cheese sticks is a great snack. | ||
Cheese jerky? | ||
Did you just say cheese jerky? | ||
I'm the man who had the cheese. | ||
I'm the man who had the jerky. | ||
Anybody catch that one? | ||
Anybody pick up on that? | ||
Yeah, good times. | ||
Rise says, Chobani Flips is a really good yogurt product. | ||
Chobani Flips. | ||
Check it out. | ||
Smarty says, what if the Mark of the Beast comes as a vaccine? | ||
I've never heard that take before. | ||
You know, Animal Crossing exclamation expression. | ||
What? | ||
I've never heard that one before. | ||
Smarty says, can't buy or sell or mingle without the vaccine. | ||
What? | ||
What? | ||
Polish American says, did you have a crush in middle school? | ||
Now she's a whore. | ||
I did have a crush in middle school. | ||
Wait, who was my crush in middle school? | ||
I remember my crush is in high school. | ||
I don't... | ||
Who was my crush in middle school? | ||
I don't know if she's a whore, but she's definitely like an artsy girl now. | ||
Artsy kind of a person. | ||
Yeah, I had a few crushes in middle school. | ||
Wait a second! | ||
There were... I'm thinking of naughty, naughty images. | ||
There was a... Look, I'm an eccentric guy, okay? | ||
So, when I think back to middle school crushes... Okay, let's not get too into detail on that, but one of them... Well, I don't want to be too explicit in case, you know, a neighbor is watching or something, but one of them flipped teams! | ||
One of them flipped teams! | ||
And I don't know where she's at now with that but there was a time in high school and she was like a lesbian That was one of them. | ||
She wasn't like a lesbian though in middle school She was just like a normal person and then she's like then she turned she flipped over So there was that one And then the other one was a crush from grade school And I don't know if she ever became a whore. | ||
I don't I don't really follow up with her in high school. | ||
I But, um, so those were the two main ones. | ||
And then the other one was like an artsy, like a theater, she turned into like a theater. | ||
She, like, unfriended me on Facebook. | ||
Whatever! | ||
You don't even have any boobs, okay? | ||
You know, it's like, you know, when you're not developed in middle school. | ||
It's like, well, it's middle school, but it's like you don't even have any... Okay. | ||
Anyway, I don't want to get too... I don't want to get too into that, but it's like, you know, you unfriended me on Facebook. | ||
It's like... | ||
You don't even do it for me anymore, okay? | ||
Anyway, I don't even care, all right? | ||
But you turned into, like, this thespian, you know, theater person. | ||
There were two theater types. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway... Yeah, good times. | |
Good times back in the day. | ||
Not the fat one, either. | ||
Not the fat theater one. | ||
The skinny theater one. | ||
Whatever whatever I'm not I'm not I'm not resentful about that But don't you see but don't you see and that you know, that's middle schools. | ||
That's like ancient history, but In high school, it's different because in high school, it's like you're talking about you're talking about like your standard stock You're talking about like your your prime rib Okay, you're talking about cheerleader quality and then that can't really go wrong with that except for like whore right or like you know, toll-pay situation, but you're not talking about, like... | ||
In middle school, the trajectory can go anywhere, but in high school, it's kind of like... | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
I think maybe you get what I'm saying, so... | ||
But, yeah, kind of blackfilling. | ||
Blackfilled again, you're right. | ||
And you're right, Polish-American griper. | ||
Mungo says, Why would you open chest when title is no refunds? | ||
Hey, that's a good point. | ||
Well, on that note, that's our last super chat here. | ||
Yeah, no refunds. | ||
In the spirit of no refunds, that's going to do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Remember to follow the channel. | ||
That's going to do it. | ||
That's our last one. | ||
So remember to follow the channel. | ||
Subscribe to the channel. | ||
Subscribe. | ||
Follow. | ||
Remember to sign up for the email list. | ||
Go to NicholasJFuentes.com. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Sign up for the email list. | ||
I keep burping. | ||
Because of all this talking. | ||
Remember, we are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
This is America First. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our top three Super Chatters. | ||
Big thanks to Bass Dollar, Panther Den, Panther Den Show at 1130 Eastern Time, Dallas Droyper. | ||
Big thanks to our top three. | ||
We salute them in particular. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | ||
It's going to be only America first! | ||
that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
And I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first! |