Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
Calling something critical race theory, to me, means nothing. | ||
And I think to most people, means nothing. | ||
But critical race theory is an inaccurate way to describe what's happening. | ||
Like so much academic jargon, the phrase critical race theory doesn't mean anything. | ||
What is the overriding message of so-called critical race theory programs? | ||
It is to vilify white Americans. | ||
That's how it expresses itself in education. | ||
That's how it expresses itself in the military, in the private sector, in the federal government. | ||
What's happening in our schools and our military and our government is both simpler and easier to recognize than that. | ||
You could also say that it's just anti-white. | ||
So, anti-white racism is exploding across the country. | ||
Obviously, no one wants to say it, but it's right in your face every single day. | ||
When you say the military is practicing critical race theory, what actually does that mean? | ||
There might be a small handful of experts who could tell you exactly what that means. | ||
Because we've been tied up in some pointless debate about a concept that nobody can actually define. | ||
Maybe on a technical academic level you could say that that curriculum was inspired by critical race theory, which is a Marxist school of thought from certain academic institutions. | ||
The race hate, and that's what it is, has oozed from the universities and it has infected the entire country, including at the very highest levels. | ||
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can kick that yay button. | ||
I'm going to be the worst. | ||
Catch. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just enjoy stuff, all right? | ||
unidentified
|
Blast out the sky. | |
Everything. | ||
Swarming on everybody who dared to evolve. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry. | ||
I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
unidentified
|
Violent crime is way up and claiming victims here in Los Angeles at a rate we haven't seen in decades. | |
A continued rise of murders and shootings in LA is causing community concerns and it has families living in fear. | ||
South LA is already suffering from a high number of violent crime. | ||
South LA is already suffering from a high number of violent crime. | ||
South LA is already suffering from a high number of violent crime. | ||
All those lights is the backed up traffic. | ||
Free narration. | ||
Thanks. | ||
You know, I'm just not going to do it. | ||
Fuck this. | ||
I'm just going to fucking hop on an airplane. | ||
I don't know why I even try, honestly. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Do you edit it? | ||
No, we send the footage. | ||
Sirens. | ||
What the fuck is going on, man? | ||
Tow trucks? | ||
Tow trucks, cops... That's crazy. | ||
And they're coming here! | ||
unidentified
|
So we were supposed to be in Phoenix at 10, correct? | |
Yeah. | ||
We had just left earlier. | ||
We had to sleep in until 1.30. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And take a two hour lunch hour. | ||
Shut up! | ||
Now we're getting all this traffic. | ||
It's ruining our vibe. | ||
Yo! | ||
Is Jordan B Videos here? | ||
Rock liquor. | ||
Yo, is Jordan B. | ||
Videos here? | ||
Look at this. | ||
Some liquor. | ||
I hardly know. | ||
unidentified
|
Wait, what's that? | |
Is that a tarantula? | ||
I'm just kidding. | ||
Dude, you're hilarious. | ||
Quit it! | ||
unidentified
|
Get that out of my face! | |
Yeah, back inside we go. | ||
Oh my gosh! | ||
unidentified
|
There's another crash. | |
That's loose gravel. | ||
Sand. | ||
sand. | ||
I'm gonna try going with these guys better. | ||
He's leaving me in the dust. | ||
Oh fuck, this is dangerous. | ||
The next day. | ||
The next day. | ||
Oh, shit. | ||
Bitch! | ||
It's all so fat. | ||
I was like, "Yes, we got him!" My wife is stupid. | ||
Bitch! | ||
They're all so fat. | ||
There it is. | ||
Let's go, what's up, loser? | ||
Sammy! | ||
Whoa! | ||
Hello! | ||
Look we got Antifa! | ||
Hello! | ||
Bye bye! | ||
Hello! | ||
There he goes. | ||
Where's he going? | ||
Wild Antifa in the mall, it's going... | ||
Queenie Hut Juniors! | ||
Ahhh! No! | ||
Oh no! | ||
Yo, we got ourselves a insurrection at the Phoenix Mall here, I'm about to get kicked out of the mall in Phoenix. | ||
One of you guys wants to walk. | ||
Come on, take it home with you. | ||
What are you doing? | ||
We're having a private conversation. | ||
He said one of you guys. | ||
What? | ||
conversation. | ||
He said one of the other. | ||
What? | ||
I said the hype. | ||
I'm too old for this shit. | ||
You guys are white? - Is it because we are white? | ||
First! | ||
America First! | ||
*Mario's voice* | ||
*Mario's voice* White Boy Summer update. | ||
Our White Boy Summer Phoenix meetup was interrupted by the police. | ||
That's why we say fuck the police. | ||
All cops are faggots. | ||
unidentified
|
We used to back the blue, but they don't back us, so it's over. | |
It's over. | ||
We don't back them anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
Alright, well do you guys want to get pictures and then maybe we'll just get out of here? | |
Will you take a picture of me and Nick? | ||
What's up losers? | ||
What's up, who's up? | ||
What's up, Nick Fuentes? | ||
I got your picture, I'm coming with you. | ||
Dear Maria, count me in. | ||
There's a story at the bottom of this bottle and I'm the pen. | ||
White boy rainstorm. | ||
It never rains. | ||
I don't want to do wet weather. | ||
We literally keep getting sucked by the weather. | ||
- I don't want to go out either. - We literally keep getting fucked by the weather. | ||
It never ends. - Nick, they don't want you on more property, so you're either gonna have to walk in the rain or get your cars in the rain. | ||
It doesn't matter to me. | ||
You're going to have to get wet. | ||
Can we finish this and then go? | ||
unidentified
|
- No. - Let him take control, let him take control. | |
No. | ||
All cops are faggots! | ||
All cops are faggots! | ||
- Oh, boy for Zara and Zingler. - We gotta keep it optical out here. - All cops are faggots! - All cops are faggots! - All cops are faggots! - All cops are faggots! - All cops are faggots! - All cops are faggots! - Literally that little faggot security. boy for Zara and Zingler. - We gotta keep it optical out here. - All I think it's parked in front of the Northstrom if you see a sign for that. | ||
Bag it! Bag it! Bag it! Bag it! Bag it! Bag it! Bag it! | ||
He's on his phone. | ||
I think it's parked in front of the Nordstrom if you see a sign for that. | ||
You guys have nothing better than me. | ||
I think it's all over the place. | ||
And we can form a bridge across the water. | ||
Hey, what's up? | ||
Our meter got down. | ||
Hey, what's up? | ||
Our meet up got cancelled. | ||
Alright mate, I'll meet you tomorrow. | ||
I don't want to put this on me, man. | ||
I don't want to do something. | ||
I want something else to get me through this. | ||
Send me some time in life. | ||
Baby, baby, I want something else. | ||
I'm not missing when you say goodbye. | ||
I want something else. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their disposition view America in such a way is merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiots. | |
And we'll see you next time. | ||
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
See? | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
The change of beer came over country in a peaceful place. | ||
The one who has to stop the line. | ||
It's not a last of life. | ||
The change of beer came over country in a peaceful place. | ||
You're nothing that's not enough. | ||
And all that's a life. | ||
You're like, we're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some pasta. | ||
Having some pizza. | ||
Oh. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the father. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm a virgin. | ||
I'm 14. | ||
I'm original. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm an original. . | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
but the classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on this side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved this point. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
Not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
Not interested, I'm going to be here. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
Guy, I've never heard of him think once. | ||
He's just that. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Guy, I've never heard of Nick. | ||
What? | ||
Who's that? | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human rights. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because... | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's a big business. | ||
It's not good to share for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's hell. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
- Okay. | ||
This is a Christmas magic. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
And it's a free man talking. | ||
Try and actually dissent against the government in a real meaningful way. | ||
And you'll find that you'll run up against the same kind of resistance and the same kind of opposition from the American government that a Russian dissident would run into in the Russian government. | ||
And the same kind of opposition that a Chinese dissident would face from the Chinese government. | ||
It's not that much different, and I'm living proof. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
I started to realize that there would be consequences for my views almost immediately. | ||
There was this sense ever since I got started that total deplatforming was inevitable. | ||
It was pretty clear what the writing on the wall was, which is that everybody is going to be deplatformed from everything. | ||
And it's only a matter of time. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
L.A. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord save these people. | ||
Let us sleep. | ||
They let in Satan one day. | ||
Street Lord save us from L.A. | ||
LA Monster I am limelighted Blueprint by Mike. | ||
Go get it, Grimelight. | ||
Should've been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated. | ||
Grammy nominated. | ||
Hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader prom dated. | ||
Barbershop player hated. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We look at Christ on the cross and you're gonna kick us off Twitter? | ||
You can't stop people that are religious zealots. | ||
You cannot stop people that are motivated in the face of the fear of death. | ||
unidentified
|
It gives false hope and eats them whole. | |
Sin, millions, all are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster, for it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them whole. | ||
Sin, millions, all are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster, for it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them whole. | ||
Sin, millions, all are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster, for it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them whole. | ||
Sin, millions, all are still broke. | ||
Sin, millions, all are all are still broke. | ||
And it's not obvious. | ||
It's not obvious. | ||
This is America. | ||
"I'm here." Some will tell you that America is simply an idea. | ||
But there is a movement emerging among the next generation of conservatives that believes America is a nation of people. | ||
A nation that worships Jesus Christ as God and shares a rich culture and heritage tied to the land that our forebearers settled. | ||
The America First movement rejects the false notion that our nation can be reduced to just a set of ideas. | ||
Instead, America First affirms that the people of America are worth protecting. | ||
America is one people, one nation, on this continent, forged over hundreds of years by shared experiences, descended from an English cultural framework and influenced by European civilization. | ||
unidentified
|
America is a Christian nation. | |
So if that is America, then America First is simply the interests and the well-being of the Americans and their country put first. | ||
It means the well-being and the interest and the good of the flesh and blood American people in this place first. | ||
Every time, always, before everything else, and not one single exception. | ||
unidentified
|
The people of this nation deserve a new conservative movement. | |
Conservatives who are not afraid to proclaim the name of Jesus Christ. | ||
Men who stand with courage with their families and faith in the country. | ||
A movement that puts the people of America first. | ||
A movement that puts the people of America first. | ||
A movement that puts the people of America first. | ||
is because it's not cool to share a big business. | ||
It's not cool to share a big business. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's it. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
- This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
I'd like to propose it to us. - To our people. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Voipers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, To the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's cheers, everybody. | |
It's going to happen. | ||
They kicked me off the plane, you know what that means? | ||
White boy summer road trip. | ||
They give us lemons, we make lemon. | ||
They throw me behind bars. | ||
unidentified
|
And I start throwing baseball up against the wall. | |
And now I'm playing catch. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
The only time that they win is when they try and throw for our spirit. | ||
unidentified
|
But they never can. | |
They never take that away from us. | ||
Because I believe in God. | ||
And I believe in America. | ||
And I believe in what I'm doing. | ||
unidentified
|
We are still enjoying. | |
White Boy Summer is still on. | ||
I don't care if I have to drive there. | ||
I don't care if I have to get in Lake Michigan and go all the way around the Panama Canal. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing is going to stop white boys summer. | |
Nothing is going to stop America first. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
Make the last thing. | ||
White people found in this country. | ||
This country wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
Wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
And white people are done being bullied. | ||
Done being bullied. | ||
We're the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
And I think our ancestors can smile on us right now for what we're doing. | ||
Cheers. | ||
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their disposition would view America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiots. | |
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
Another lesson. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some pasta. | ||
Having some pizza. | ||
Oh. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the father. | ||
I'm not normal. | ||
I'm 16. | ||
I'm 14. | ||
I'm original. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
but the classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can check that yay button. | ||
I'm going to go first. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just need your steps, all right? | ||
We'll see you on day one. | ||
I can enforce them, alright? | ||
Blast off from God. | ||
Everything is warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
This is from your biggest Protestant fan. | ||
unidentified
|
May you one day see the light. | |
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
I'm sorry. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
I fear and love God. - When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
Ice Life. | ||
Yeah. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
Unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory. | ||
the victory, bro. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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. | ||
America first. | ||
x reacted x� x� you | ||
you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you | ||
you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you | ||
for you tonight very excited to be back with you here tonight on Friday casual Friday we have a lot to talk about lots to get into this evening our featured story is about complete and total white genocide against our white race our people and this was in the news today the SEC has approved a new rule by the Nasdaq stock index | ||
Which, get this, if you're familiar with the stock market, Nasdaq is the third largest U.S. | ||
stock exchange. | ||
Nasdaq has changed their rules so that in order to list a company on their exchange, that company has to have a non-white board member, a gay board member, and a female board member. | ||
And if they don't comply with that, they have to explain to the Stock Exchange why they were not able to do that. | ||
Can't list a company unless they have total white genocide on the board. | ||
And this today was just approved by the Security Exchange Commission. | ||
So it's a done deal. | ||
And I believe that NASDAQ was talking about doing this last year, but the regulatory agencies have just approved it. | ||
So we'll talk a little bit about that. | ||
That should be a very interesting development. | ||
I know our companies are going to be a lot of bad people on the board. | ||
That, I think, is a positive development for the private sector. | ||
So we'll get into that. | ||
Well, excuse me, we'll also be talking tonight about the vaccine. | ||
New report from the CDC. | ||
Get this. | ||
The CDC has officially confirmed as of today that the vaccine does not stop the transmission of the coronavirus. | ||
And I talked about this last week. | ||
We looked at a study from Boston where there was a big breakout of the Delta variant, the Indian variant. | ||
They're actually calling it the Indian Delta variant. | ||
I guess it came from India. | ||
And in any case, we looked at the study last week. | ||
There were, I think, about 500 cases in Massachusetts. | ||
And out of the 500 people that got sick, 75% of them, as I talked about last week, had gotten the vaccine. | ||
And what's more is they tested the level of virus In the nose and the throat of the people that were vaccinated and unvaccinated, and they found that the vaccinated people had the same level of virus in their throat and nose as the people that hadn't gotten the vaccine. | ||
Which means that, you know, if 75% of the people have gotten the virus, or rather 75% of the people that got the virus were vaccinated, that means that it doesn't stop you from getting infected, and if you have the virus all over your throat and nose, It means every time you cough, breathe, talk, sneeze, anything like that, you're spreading the virus too. | ||
And it's pretty amazing because just like last week, remember last week we read in the Daily Mail, it said vaccine is super effective. | ||
It's not going to stop you from getting sick. | ||
It's not going to stop you from getting other people sick. | ||
It won't even stop you from getting hospitalized, but you might not die if you get the coronavirus. | ||
And now, a week later, we have officially from the CDC, they tell us, well, the vaccine is super effective. | ||
That much we know. | ||
The vaccine is super, extremely effective. | ||
It is working exactly as intended. | ||
The only problem is, it's actually not going to stop you from getting sick, and it's also not going to stop transmission. | ||
So. | ||
But it is super effective at preventing you from dying if you do get the virus. | ||
Which, of course, we all know that. | ||
That is what vaccines are for. | ||
It's supposed to mitigate symptoms of a disease that we're all gonna get anyway. | ||
unidentified
|
Probably. | |
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Should be a good show. | ||
You gotta love it. | ||
And it's funny because last week I was talking about this and I know there are a lot of pro-vaccine people or pro-lockdown people that would say, no, no, the vaccine works! | ||
It totally works! | ||
And how long did that take? | ||
I think they said at the beginning of the year, they said that the vaccine had a 90% effectiveness. | ||
90% effectiveness. | ||
And they said recently, I was reading in the New York Times and a few other sources, They were saying, well, the immunity doesn't last. | ||
The immunity doesn't last longer than six months in the Pfizer vaccine. | ||
They say in the Moderna vaccine... | ||
The immunity lasts longer than six months. | ||
In the Pfizer vaccine it lasts six months and then it degrades. | ||
So they say you need a booster shot. | ||
But, you know, I hear numbers like that and I'm wondering all this time later, what does that 90% effectiveness even mean? | ||
Why would anyone go and get a booster shot when they're talking about we need to strengthen immunity? | ||
What are they talking about? | ||
How is the vaccine 90% effective at giving people immunity to the virus if people aren't immune from the virus? | ||
Doesn't immune mean that you don't get sick and you don't get other people sick? | ||
So how can you say that you're immune? | ||
Anyway, I know we've been over that, but we'll get into all that tonight. | ||
Should be a good show. | ||
Reminder to follow me on Gab and Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
t.me slash NickJFuentes for Telegram, gab.com slash real NickJFuentes for Gab. | ||
And remember, on Tuesday, this coming Tuesday, August 10th, we're premiering our mini-documentary, the first episode of it. | ||
It's about, I think this one's about the FBI investigation into me. | ||
So, in case you didn't know, I've been talking about it like every day on this show, so hopefully people have heard about it at this point. | ||
But big world premiere on Tuesday. | ||
We'll be watching the documentary I'll be reacting to it and Then we'll do a super chat. | ||
So it'll be kind of like a special So that should be a nice change of pace because honestly the the news is just killing me these days, man it's just it's vaccine this and | ||
COVID that and I remember when the outbreak first started it was brutal it was like three months of no news because nothing was going on they shut down the whole planet and so all that we could do is just count the dead people and count the infected people and now if we're hurtling towards another lockdown it seems like it might be more of the same so anyway so it'll be a nice change of pace we'll get to do the documentary and talk a little bit about that but I think that's everything. | ||
That's all the news. | ||
That's all the updates on my end. | ||
So I guess we'll just dive into the show. | ||
It's Casual Friday, so as you can tell, I'm not wearing a necktie. | ||
More of a, you know, casual look tonight. | ||
And I'm feeling pretty casual. | ||
I'm feeling, um, you know, just kinda... I'm just tired. | ||
I feel like everybody's burnt out of politics. | ||
Just gonna be straight up about it. | ||
You know? | ||
It's been five years of war with Donald Trump in office and now Biden's in charge and we've got the Capitol and all this BS. | ||
I'm just burnt out. | ||
I feel like people are just sick of politics and I'm kind of with them. | ||
Don't get me wrong, I love politics. | ||
It's my passion. | ||
I wake up and do it every day but At a certain point you just turn on the, well I guess you pull up the timeline every day rather than watch the news and it's just day after day of just, it's just honestly it's demoralizing to see Joe Biden up there and Jen Psaki and just getting totally, just getting totally raped every day by big tech and giant corporations and all of that. | ||
But we're keeping the hope alive. | ||
You know, I've been saying lately, I don't know if I've said this to find again the sort of intersection, forgive that term, but the intersection of politics and the internet culture again. | ||
That, I think, is going to be the real future. | ||
Because the more that I think about the Trump Revolution, the more that I realize that what we're doing now is not like what we were doing in 2016. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
I've been thinking about this a lot. | ||
Because I feel like the energy and what we were talking about and what we were doing five years ago, it just doesn't feel the same as what we're doing now. | ||
And I don't know if that's necessarily because obviously the times have changed and the players have changed and the game has changed, but I think it really has to do more with style and And really the genre of what was being talked about. | ||
I feel like five years ago, and I think I've said this on the show, was more of an internet cultural phenomenon than it was actually a strictly political phenomenon. | ||
Because if you go back five years ago, it was all, you know, the campus wars, and it was the meme war, and it was on 4chan, and it was kind of this... | ||
Fusion of, like, Gamergate, Gaming Culture, and it was the Chan Culture Forums, it was Vaporwave, and music, and lots of different things coming together, and now it just feels like, I said this the other night, it feels like the Obama years, you know? | ||
It feels like just dry, plain, I feel like we're gotten back into the Matrix politics, gotten back into, you know, watching this nonsense play out in Congress. | ||
The infrastructure bill and who's voting on it and what do they put in it and you know the the puppet show the circus which really isn't legit I mean I've never I've never been that way so maybe it is because Trump is out of office now it's like politics is just kind of return to the way it's always been so I guess it's that but anyway just some thoughts on that I mean I just see the news every day and it's like okay it's more vaxes it's more censorship it's more lies it's more you know | ||
Cancel culture and all that kind of stuff. | ||
What else is new? | ||
But I feel like, I feel like we're about to turn a corner. | ||
I feel like we're on the cusp of really changing everything, you know? | ||
I always, I always get the sense that every time things start to slow down, I feel a little reassurance. | ||
I always feel like, well, you know, you never know what's around the corner. | ||
I always get a little bit of a hunch. | ||
And I remember I was saying this right before Stop the Steal. | ||
I was thinking this right before Groyper War. | ||
I was thinking, man, things are kind of slow lately. | ||
I feel uninspired. | ||
And then it's like BAM! | ||
You know, Griper War. | ||
BAM! | ||
Stop the steal. | ||
I don't know. | ||
We'll see. | ||
But anyway, we're gonna dive into the news. | ||
We'll get into all this. | ||
And our first story, you know, it's just a confirmation of actually what we've talked about. | ||
I think it was actually one week ago on Friday. | ||
unidentified
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And like I said, last week we talked about that big outbreak. | |
...of the Delta variant of the coronavirus in Massachusetts. | ||
And the numbers were incredible. | ||
500, roughly, and I'm being very general here, I think it was like roughly 570 cases or something like that in Massachusetts, Delta variant. | ||
And remember, we covered this last Friday. | ||
This was a CDC report about this outbreak. | ||
It went from zero cases to 500 and some cases. | ||
Then three quarters of them had gotten the vaccine. | ||
And, you know, last week we talked about this. | ||
I'm sitting there scratching my head, thinking to myself, well, what actually is the point of getting a vaccine? | ||
I thought, and I think this is the definition of a vaccine, is that, and this is how we're told it works in grade school, And this is how parents are told it works when they get their babies vaccinated. | ||
And everything. | ||
This is the common... | ||
Knowledge, right? | ||
The conventional wisdom is that you get injected with an inactive or dead version of a disease so that your body creates an immune response and then when you actually are exposed to a disease, your immune system will recognize it, fight it off, and you won't get sick. | ||
The point of an inoculation of a vaccine and injection is to prevent you from getting sick and therefore to stop the transmission. | ||
And then if everybody is immune to a disease, then nobody can get it anymore and then it's effectively eradicated. | ||
I'm telling you, this is what we're told. | ||
I'm not saying I believe this. | ||
I'm saying this is what we're told about vaccines. | ||
I think that the record of all vaccines is actually very dubious. | ||
I'm very skeptical about how efficacious any vaccines are. | ||
I'm not a believer in it. | ||
And I don't think if or when I have kids I'll get them vaccinated. | ||
I'm certainly never getting a vaccine ever again. | ||
And I won't ever get a flu shot. | ||
Nevertheless, this is what we're told. | ||
We're told you get injected with a dead or inactive disease, and then when you are exposed to it in the real world, the immunity will have been created, your body can recognize it, fight it off. | ||
So, they're pushing this vaccine. | ||
And they say that we have to be in a lockdown. | ||
This is what they've said for the past year. | ||
We have to be in a lockdown until we have enough immunity through the vaccines. | ||
Until a vaccine is developed, distributed, everybody gets it and achieves immunity. | ||
And only then can we get out of the lockdown. | ||
Because after that point, the coronavirus can no longer infect people and can't spread. | ||
This, by the way, makes no sense. | ||
And doctors said initially they said we can't lock down until the vaccine is completed but yet that's exactly what they've effectively been doing. | ||
So they've locked us down they said five weeks to slow the spread and then because of the hospitals and then that evolved into well we're going to lock down until the vaccine is developed and just recently As the COVID case numbers and alleged death numbers have gone down, the lockdown has ended as the vaccination rate has increased and as we approach something like 320 million doses of vaccine distributed in America. | ||
And so effectively it's been we've been vaccinated and therefore now the lockdown can end. | ||
But at the same time, they're telling us, according to their own official report last week, that these new outbreaks of the virus, specifically of the Delta variant, they're infecting more vaccinated people than unvaccinated people. | ||
And the vaccinated people are spreading it. | ||
And the vaccinated people are the source of the new variants. | ||
The variants are arising in response to the immunity created by the vaccines. | ||
And so we determined that last week. | ||
And like I said last week, I explained on my show, I said, so what really is the purpose of the vaccine then? | ||
If the stated objective of the inoculation, and then therefore why we can end the lockdown all of a sudden, is because people can no longer then get the virus and spread it, spread it to vulnerable people or anybody, you know, well then what's the point of the vaccine if clearly that's not happening? | ||
If vaccinated people are getting sick at a higher rate than unvaccinated people, if they're being hospitalized at a higher rate like they were last week, then what's the point? | ||
And all the while that this is going on, they've been saying, no, no, it's super effective. | ||
It totally works. | ||
And this is the latest study. | ||
This is the study this week from the CDC. | ||
You know, again, this is the aficionado. | ||
You know, InfoWars is not the Daily Stormer. | ||
This is not Revolver, which, by the way, all of those are far more credible than the government. | ||
But, you know, for people that are skeptical, for people that think that it's a contentious thing, This is typically how this works. | ||
The so-called conspiracy theorists will do their due diligence. | ||
They'll look at the data. | ||
They'll get on the ground and find the facts and report this. | ||
They get called crazy. | ||
They're told they're spreading misinformation. | ||
They get censored. | ||
The government reassures everybody. | ||
And then when it becomes painfully obvious that they were telling the truth, the government finally admits it and says, well, you know, we were right all along. | ||
So that's the stage we're at with this, with the effectiveness of the vaccine. | ||
This is the CDC. | ||
And this is CNN reporting on it. | ||
It says, quote, quote, They continue to work well for Delta with regard to severe illness and death. | ||
They prevent it. | ||
But what they can't do anymore is prevent transmission." Oh, okay. | ||
So the vaccine is preventative and it's super effective at preventing people from dying once they get and then transmit the virus. | ||
What the vaccine doesn't do is prevent people from getting it or spreading it. | ||
Okay? | ||
So what the hell is the point of the vaccine then? | ||
It says, that's why the CDC changed its guidance last week and is now recommending even vaccinated people wear their masks indoors again. | ||
Last week, the agency released a study that showed the Delta variant produced similar amounts of virus in vaccinated and unvaccinated people if they got infected. | ||
Data that suggests vaccinated people who get a breakthrough infection could have a similar tendency to spread the virus as the unvaccinated. | ||
Wellensky said, quote, if you're going home to somebody who has not been vaccinated, to somebody who can't get vaccinated, somebody who might be immunosuppressed or a little bit frail, somebody who has comorbidities that put them at high risk, I would suggest you wear a mask in public indoor settings. | ||
The dangerous Delta variant has fueled the country's latest surge of COVID cases, and if more Americans don't get vaccinated and mask up, the country could soon be seeing several hundred thousand cases per day, similar to the winter surge, said Walensky. | ||
Getting more people vaccinated won't just help crush the surge. | ||
Experts say it will help prevent other, potentially even more aggressive variants from arising in the future. | ||
She said the next variant is just around the corner if we do not all get vaccinated. | ||
I just beg the American people to understand that to defeat this virus, we have to get everybody's level of immunity up, and that's just the way it is, says Brett Giroir, the former coronavirus testing czar under Donald Trump. | ||
Roughly 58.2% of the U.S. | ||
population has received at least one dose of the vaccine, and about 49.9% is fully vaccinated. | ||
I mean, at this point, what else can you say other than it's all fake? | ||
It's all lies. | ||
It's so unbelievable to me that anybody could buy this. | ||
It's unbelievable! | ||
I mean, what's the point of the vaccine? | ||
We're supposed to believe now that vaccine is medicine. | ||
That's what they're telling us. | ||
The vaccine does not create an effective immunity. | ||
The immunity that the vaccine creates in the body is inferior. | ||
It is different and it is inferior to the immunity created after somebody is infected. | ||
They say, too, that the immunity provided by the vaccine destroys the immunity, which is far more effective, that somebody has after they get sick. | ||
So, if it doesn't give you immunity, if the immunity doesn't work, if it doesn't prevent transmission or infection, then what they're telling us is this is a therapeutic. | ||
This is medicine. | ||
You don't get the vaccine to stop spreading the virus, you get it to treat the virus. | ||
That's like saying you get the flu so you get a flu shot to get better. | ||
You get a flu shot so that your flu won't be as bad, or something like that. | ||
That doesn't make any sense. | ||
Because, you know, again, look at the people that are dying from the vaccine. | ||
The people that are dying are old people, fat people, people with pre-existing conditions. | ||
Generally speaking, people with, you know, typically the people that are dying have other things going on. | ||
Comorbidities, right? | ||
Pre-existing conditions. | ||
The spread of the virus And all these elderly, fat people, sick people, if they're getting the virus anyway, then, you know, what are we really doing here? | ||
The rate at which people are dying from coronavirus is already very, very, very low. | ||
Particularly for young people. | ||
So why do they need to get vaccinated? | ||
The children aren't spreading the virus as it is. | ||
They're not even getting sick! | ||
The young people aren't dying or getting severely ill at all. | ||
The only people, again, strictly speaking, it's like 9 out of 10 of the people that are dying from coronavirus, of which it's a very small percentage, they're dying because they're over the age of 70, they are clinically obese, or they have Relying health conditions and this is what you see most of the people that are dying from the disease. | ||
Not only do they fall into risk groups, high-risk groups, but also they die with COVID. | ||
They die from something else and happen to have the coronavirus like a heart attack or you know cancer or something like that. | ||
So we're going to vaccinate everybody on planet Earth so that the same people don't die from the virus? | ||
And anyway, the same people are going to get infected anyway, apparently, and the same people are going to transmit the virus. | ||
None of this adds up. | ||
None of this makes one bit of sense. | ||
And you know, honestly, It would be one thing if we were able to have a free and open conversation about this, but we're not allowed to have a conversation about this. | ||
Keep that in mind too. | ||
All the information that we've gotten from the start, from last March, has been contradicted at some point since the lockdown started. | ||
Every piece of information about the lockdown, the masks, the social distancing, all the CDC guidance about preventing transmission, the information about the virus itself and the vaccine, almost every piece of information about all of it, at some point since the lockdown started, has been almost every piece of information about all of it, at some point since the lockdown started, And find me an example of something that hasn't. | ||
And we've been over it a million times on this show, but everything from the efficacy of masks, to surface transmission, to aerosolization, death rate, everything about this virus has been contradicted at some point. | ||
And not just like, well, our understanding evolved a little bit or something, we're talking about 180. | ||
We're talking about at one point, we were supposed to believe one thing, and then it was contradicted, and now we're supposed to believe the exact opposite. | ||
And not only has that happened, like I said, but it's happened in a climate where you're not allowed to disagree with what the government is saying. | ||
Literally. | ||
You are literally not allowed to disagree with what the government says. | ||
Because in these major cities, if you disagree With their guidance, they send in the police, they send in regulators, and they shut down your business. | ||
And if you put this information out on YouTube or Facebook or Twitter or any social media, they ban you from social media. | ||
And according to new guidance from the Department of Homeland Security, they may even classify you as a terrorist if you don't believe the official government line about coronavirus and vaccines. | ||
So, I would understand If there was an open debate going on, and there were these two different camps, and there were people that were more skeptical, and there were people that were making the case for the vaccines or something, at least that would make a little bit more sense to me. | ||
You know, if we don't know all the answers, if the answers aren't known by anybody, if there is so much uncertainty going on, They could be forgiven for getting it wrong. | ||
Public health officials, you know, we're supposed to believe are trying to do the best that they can. | ||
They're trying to mitigate the spread of a virus and so on. | ||
So if that were true... | ||
You know, they could be forgiven if they were wrong here or there if people like myself and Alex Jones and Tucker and Donald Trump and others weren't being shut down and censored and attacked and ostracized and business owners and employees and everybody else wasn't being forced to live a certain way based on lies, but that's just it. | ||
None of this makes sense. | ||
It's all fake. | ||
It's either criminal incompetence, which I think is less likely, or it's just downright malicious. | ||
It's malicious. | ||
It's a willful deceit. | ||
It is a concealed agenda on their part, which I think is probably what's going on. | ||
And then, of course, that would necessitate, in the latter case, that they would have to censor anybody that's trying to expose the conceits, trying to expose the agenda. | ||
But I think at this point it's indisputable that that's what's going on. | ||
Because I don't know how you watch the evolving narrative on this every day, and every aspect of it, and you can see it's not just like the CDC and the media says, oh come on, you said one thing this day and a different thing the next day. | ||
It's all the institutions in unison, they're all acting together. | ||
They're acting in concert to change the narrative every day. | ||
Because, you know, you would understand if it was one institution that was getting it wrong or something, and other institutions were holding that one accountable, right? | ||
But it's all the private sector that's implementing this. | ||
It's all the government, state, local, federal. | ||
It's all of the mainstream media. | ||
It's all of social media. | ||
It's all the celebrities and the billionaires. | ||
And it's the same dogma. | ||
It's really just about compliance. | ||
It's not about a particular message. | ||
It's just about, just do what the government says. | ||
Trust the doctors, the so-called doctors. | ||
Trust the scientists. | ||
Trust the public health officials. | ||
Trust the state. | ||
Or else, you're endangering the human race or something like that. | ||
I don't know how anybody believes this anymore. | ||
Get the vaccine so you won't die when you inevitably get the virus anyway and spread it to everyone you know. | ||
Okay, because that makes a lot of sense. | ||
I just hope they lock down the country again, honestly. | ||
It's just got to get worse. | ||
They just have to inflict enough pain where people start to ask questions. | ||
Right? | ||
I mean, I thought it would have been sufficient last year, but I mean, this whole experience, honestly, has been a little bit demoralizing. | ||
It's been a little bit blackpilling because it's been so You know, the gaslighting has been on a level that we've never seen before, you know? | ||
It's been so ridiculous. | ||
And it has been a painful experience in every way for most people, in terms of their entire lives have been disrupted by this. | ||
This is something that's affected everybody. | ||
It's something that everybody's talking about. | ||
It's something that's affected everybody in personal and intimate ways. | ||
It's like you can't go to your loved one's funeral. | ||
You can't visit your loved one in the hospital. | ||
Your kids are home from school for a year, and all their sports got canceled. | ||
You were forced home from work, and now you're living paycheck to paycheck. | ||
People can't pay their rent, and now they don't have to. | ||
There's shortages of everything, you know? | ||
So, it's universal. | ||
It's affecting people. | ||
In a big way, and in a way that's, you know, some things affect people in a way that's kind of negligible, but this is deeply affecting people. | ||
It's pervasive, and the effect is significant. | ||
And in spite of that, nobody cares! | ||
And you have to question if, after all of this, if nobody cares, what would make anybody care, you know? | ||
That's where it gets a little demoralizing, because you see what they're saying on TV. | ||
You see... I mean, we see it. | ||
I've been covering it every day for like a year and a half now, since March 2020. | ||
And I've seen the narrative change daily. | ||
I was a believer in the beginning, you remember. | ||
I remember when the virus first broke out in China. | ||
I was saying, oh, this is gonna kill everybody. | ||
We should start wearing masks now. | ||
You gotta stock up on food. | ||
You gotta prepare for the worst. | ||
I was a believer, and I was a believer in the efficacy of the government back in March. | ||
I was saying, you know, they should do a lockdown, yes, this is good, and they should do a stimulus, and everything. | ||
And I remember a lot of people, including myself, were saying, you know, you're putting profits ahead of the people, you gotta shut down the economy, and all this. | ||
I was a believer. | ||
And over time, I just went all the way to the other side, because as somebody that was paying attention every day and cared deeply about it, You know you just see that the goalposts shift literally every day and they shift from one side of the field to the other and it doesn't matter and again the consequence of this I think you know what's what's blackpilling is in spite of what's going on in spite of the significant and pervasive ...go along with it. | ||
And it's not everybody. | ||
There's significant parts of the country that probably are resentful towards the government, and some people are in rebellion against this. | ||
But by and large, it seems like most of the population is just going along with it. | ||
Half the population is fully vaccinated. | ||
Half! | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
And I guess half isn't a huge number. | ||
If the other half of the country is holding out, then that's a really good thing. | ||
But... | ||
I just don't see enough resistance where I'm confident that we're going to be able to resist anything ever. | ||
If people aren't in the streets about this, if people aren't up in arms, if there's not some kind of consensus in the country that crosses a partisan divide about this, When is that going to materialize? | ||
Can that materialize? | ||
What would there be consensus on if not for this? | ||
People think we're going to build a consensus out of what? | ||
Opposition to the rich? | ||
Opposition to what? | ||
What exactly? | ||
You know? | ||
They shut down everything, they ruined everybody's life for a year, totally, they threw everything off track, literally cancelled like birthday parties, and graduation parties, and funerals, and all that kind of stuff, and people are like, well, anything to, anything for the greater good, anything, anything that Joe Biden tells me, you know, if that's how Americans are, true goyim, I don't know man, I don't know, I don't know if there's gonna be | ||
I don't know if there's going to be resistance anytime soon, so... That's the virus. | ||
I know it's kind of like a black pill take or whatever, but... I mean, somebody has to point out that sad fact. | ||
It's gotten so bad, and it seems like it doesn't even matter. | ||
What's going on with my... Is this working? | ||
I feel like my collar's all messed up. | ||
So anyway, but we're gonna move on. | ||
We're gonna talk about our feature story, which is about... Oh, it's this one. | ||
unidentified
|
This one's all jazzed up, I think. | |
Is this one pointing in, like, the wrong direction? | ||
unidentified
|
Huh. | |
Oh, whatever. | ||
This is a real casual Friday. | ||
Casual Friday when my... Collar stay falls apart right in the middle of my show. | ||
Right in the middle of my shirt. | ||
This is why I always like to wear a tie, because when you wear a collared shirt without a tie, then you gotta do collar stays. | ||
It's such a... I know it's a small thing, but I don't know. | ||
To me, it's kind of a pain in the ass. | ||
Is that a little bit better? | ||
I feel like it's not. | ||
unidentified
|
Son of a... | |
I tell you man... | ||
It never ends Okay, I think that's better all right All right. | ||
Okay, so we're gonna move on to our feature story. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
Is that? | ||
Nah, it's still fucked up. | ||
unidentified
|
Whatever. | |
You know what? | ||
Whatever. | ||
I'm letting it go. | ||
If the collar hangs low, you know what? | ||
I don't give a shit anymore. | ||
I'm tweaking out about it. | ||
unidentified
|
I gotta fix it. | |
I can't be satisfied until it's fixed. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay? | |
I can't let it go. | ||
unidentified
|
What the fucking freak? | |
So help me God. | ||
It's like stuck in there. | ||
unidentified
|
Here we go. | |
All right. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay, I think we're good now. | ||
Okay, I think it's a shirt. | ||
I think the shirt's all messed up. | ||
The slot for it's kind of messed up. | ||
All right, anyway. | ||
Okay, brief intermission, but we're back. | ||
Our featured stories about the Nasdaq exchange and this is good stuff. | ||
So, you know, if you're not a stock person, the Nasdaq Stock Exchange is the third biggest stock exchange in America. | ||
And this is A lot of tech companies and things like that. | ||
This rule and now it finally got confirmed by the SEC but the NASDAQ has come out now with a new requirement for every single company listed on their exchange which says that they have to have a diverse board of directors and this is the article it's it's pretty fascinating specifically it requires gay people Black people, or non-white people I should say, and women. | ||
New quotas on the board. | ||
Not in vice presidents, not in employees, on the board. | ||
The board of these companies that are listed on their exchange has to have a certain number of blacks, gays, and women in order to be listed on the exchange. | ||
And if they don't, it's public and they have to publish their demographic composition of their board and have to make a big statement about why they couldn't comply with the requirements. | ||
And this is a story. | ||
It says, quote, the SEC on Friday approved Nasdaq's groundbreaking proposal To boost the number of women, racial minorities, and LGBTQ people on U.S. | ||
corporate boards. | ||
The new policy, the first of its kind for U.S. | ||
securities exchange, requires most of the nearly 3,000 companies listed on NASDAQ to have at least one woman on their board of directors, along with one person from a racial minority, or who identifies as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, or queer. | ||
It also requires It requires companies to publicly disclose statistics on the demographic composition of their boards and the SEC chair Gary Gensler said in a statement quote these rules will allow investors to gain a better understanding of Nasdaq listed companies approach to broad rather to board diversity while ensuring that those companies have the flexibility to make decisions that best serve their shareholders. | ||
NASDAQ listed companies with five or fewer board members, however, will only be required to have one diverse member. | ||
The stock exchange loosened the requirement for smaller boards after considering feedback from investors, asset managers, lawmakers, and advocacy groups about whether its proposal went too far or didn't go far enough. | ||
Companies that don't meet the diversity criteria will not be delisted but must publicly explain why they could not comply. | ||
So if you don't have a gay person on your board, you have to publicly explain why you couldn't do that. | ||
Explain to us, please, why you don't have a gay man or a black woman on your board. | ||
NASDAQ's deadline for companies to include diverse directors differs depending on how the companies are listed on the exchange, but all corporations must have at least one board member within a year. | ||
While the number of women directors has increased significantly in recent years, studies suggest that companies were slower to board than George Floyd. | ||
An overwhelming 82.5% of directors among Fortune 500 company boards were white as of June 2020, according to a study from the Alliance of Board Diversity. | ||
The number of racial minorities on Fortune 500 boards just rose just 1% between 2018 and June 2020. | ||
However, the number of women rose 4 points over two years to 26.5%. | ||
More recently, there has been a surge of appointments of black board directors between July 2020 and May 2021. | ||
Some 32% of newly appointed board members in the S&P 500 were black. | ||
unidentified
|
Up from 11% the previous year. | |
of newly appointed board members in the S&P 500 were black, up from 11% the previous year. | ||
32% of newly appointed board members in the S&P 500 were black in the last year. | ||
Go figure. | ||
And why do you think that is? | ||
They riot. | ||
They blow stuff up. | ||
They set cars and buildings on fire. | ||
They torch the city. | ||
unidentified
|
They topple the statues. | |
They break the windows. | ||
And the Fortune 500 companies, right? | ||
The 500 most prestigious, richest, best companies in the country. | ||
32% of their new board directors are now black all of a sudden. | ||
Up from 11% the previous year. | ||
Go figure. | ||
But this is a new law of the land. | ||
And I've been saying this for a long time. | ||
This is what we have to anticipate as white people. | ||
Where do you think these board director positions are coming from? | ||
You know, ultimately, when they're talking about diversity, I know a lot of us understand this, but when they're talking about diversity, what does that necessarily mean? | ||
When they're talking about the percentage of white people is too high and the percentage of non-white people is not high enough, what are they suggesting should be done to change that? | ||
Well, they're suggesting, obviously, that either white board members will have to Or fewer white board members will have to be appointed in order to make way for newly appointed or replacement black board members. | ||
And so all the white people that are running the companies are really replaceable. | ||
And it's only a matter of time before I'm sure the quotas go up. | ||
How long until they adjust the quotas? | ||
If you have a board member of 12 people and it's required that you have one diverse board member, how long before the Alliance for Diverse Boards or whatever comes to Congress or comes to the SEC or the NASDAQ or the S&P 500 and says, hey, us blacks are 13% of the population. | ||
We want more board members. | ||
What happens when Hispanics or Asians do that? | ||
Non-whites are going to be half the country. | ||
When are they going to come to the SEC or the Alliance for Board Diversity and say, hey, white people are half the country. | ||
Why are they 80% of the board members? | ||
Why are they 70, 60, 50% of the board members? | ||
And what must result as a consequence of this? | ||
What must result as a consequence of this demand to change the proportion? | ||
It means fewer white people on the board. | ||
More white people fired, fewer white people hired, in order to be replaced by non-white people. | ||
And you know, they always say, well, it's not replacement. | ||
It's not a race-based replacement. | ||
What else are we supposed to call this? | ||
And by the way, this is underway in every institution in the country. | ||
Everywhere where they say this, the same principle applies. | ||
When they say we need more diversity, again, I know this is not a groundbreaking take or anything, but think about what necessarily must happen. | ||
Diversity does not mean heterogeneous. | ||
It means non-white. | ||
If you've got an all-black football team, nobody says it's not diverse enough. | ||
If you have an all-white football team, or, you know, I don't think that happens, but if you have an all-white board on a Fortune 500 company, they say, well, that's not diverse. | ||
So it doesn't have to do with the composition. | ||
It doesn't have to do with being a heterogeneous composition. | ||
It has to do with the kind of composition, the type of composition. | ||
If it's uniformly non-white, it's diverse. | ||
If it's uniformly white, it isn't. | ||
If it's lots of different kinds of non-white people, it's diverse. | ||
If it's lots of different kinds of white people, it isn't. | ||
If it's half white people and half non-white people, it's not diverse enough. | ||
So as we know, diversity simply means the inclusion of people that are not straight, white, Christian men. | ||
It means people that are gay, lesbian, queer. | ||
It means people that are Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, Hindu. | ||
It means people that are black, Asian, Hispanic, Indian, Whatever. | ||
And women! | ||
That's what diversity means. | ||
And so if the inclusion of diversity, if the introduction of diversity to every institution means this in colleges, in businesses, in state representation, in movies, in commercials, in TV, it necessarily means reducing the amount of white people And increasing the amount of non-white people, otherwise known as replacement. | ||
Replacing, removing, and then replacing the existing white people with non-white people. | ||
And understand, it's zero-sum. | ||
It's proportional. | ||
So when people say diversity isn't necessarily anti-white, well of course it is. | ||
Of course it is. | ||
If they're saying that the proportion of whites is too high relative to non-whites, what's the only way to correct that? | ||
You can't increase in absolute terms the number of everybody ad infinitum. | ||
Eventually you have to start to get rid of people. | ||
And so when they're talking about proportionality, they're saying we need to increase, relative to the white percentage, the percentage of non-white people. | ||
It's like a tug of war. | ||
So, to go from 82% white of board directors to 50% white, uh, you got a lot of firing to do, or you have to pass over a lot of qualified and eligible white candidates in favor of non-white candidates. | ||
And how are white people not outraged about this? | ||
I mean, this is, this is the dispossession of our people. | ||
These are people that are, and don't get me wrong, I'm not, I'm not trying to go out to be bad for Fortune 500 company board members. | ||
But it doesn't just apply to them, it applies across the board. | ||
In the case of Harvard or an Ivy League university or something, you've got white students who are qualified, eligible, they meet the criteria. | ||
They are not able to get the full academic opportunity that they're qualified for and deserve because they've been passed over for black people. | ||
There's a finite number of seats at a university Universities give preference to non-white people because of diversity and because of you know this racial reckoning and so necessarily they will have to they'll exhaust the number of qualified white candidates and then pass over Other qualified white candidates to give way to non-white people, qualified or not qualified. | ||
How would white people be in favor of this? | ||
Why would white people be in favor of not having the best opportunities? | ||
Not having, because people get caught up in, well, it's about the rich, and well, maybe other people deserve something, or something like that. | ||
We're talking about, in some cases, people that are deserving. | ||
We're talking about some people that deserve a fair shake, that are denied access to, you know, people that might not even be wealthy or well-off or anything, but being are denied access to society because of the color of their skin. | ||
And people are okay with this? | ||
How could white people be okay with this? | ||
How could white people wake up and say, you know what? | ||
I'll give up. | ||
I'll give up living my best life so that we can meet an arbitrary racial quota that is based on the demands of a wealthy interest lobby or something like that. | ||
I just don't understand it. | ||
And understand, as the composition of these institutions change, it's not just a matter of fairness. | ||
It's not just a matter of, this isn't fair to white people and white people should be outraged. | ||
They're taking from white people to give to non-white people. | ||
That's literally what they're doing. | ||
We're taking your jobs. | ||
We're taking your public sector resources. | ||
We're taking your university seats. | ||
We're taking your roles in movies. | ||
We're taking your Oscars and your Grammys and your Emmys. | ||
We're taking all your stuff and giving it to non-white people. | ||
But what's more is this is going to have an institutional effect. | ||
What happens when major companies, what happens when universities, and therefore all the professionals, all the doctors, engineers, lawyers, accountants, you know, representatives, senators, governors, what happens when there's an increased quota of non-white people? | ||
This is going to have an effect on our institutions. | ||
These are the institutions that rule our country. | ||
These are the institutions that make the big decisions. | ||
Do you think that Filling up boards with gay people and women and non-white people? | ||
Do you think that that's going to engender in the system a great deal of sympathy or compassion or empathy for the white man in America? | ||
Is that a positive development for us? | ||
Do you think that these new board members, these militant affirmative action beneficiaries, do you think that these people are going to be looking out for our best interest? | ||
Because that's my concern. | ||
You know, not only are people being passed over because of the color of their skin, which is racist, which is hateful, and which also happens to be significant because I'm white and most of the people watching the show are probably white, but what's more is what is the additional effect? | ||
The additional effect is all the institutions are going to be run by professionals or board members or bureaucrats or politicians That are most likely resentful towards you. | ||
But what's more is the people that do get to wield power will most likely be wielding it in a way that is very unsympathetic to you and your way of life. | ||
Think about the kinds of people that have acceded to power on the back of the Civil Rights Movement and Affirmative Action. | ||
Are these grateful people? | ||
Are these people that really believe in racial harmony? | ||
Are these people that are really compassionate for our country, have a great love for our country? | ||
Or are they militant? | ||
Militant, radical... | ||
Full of resentment, full of grievance against this country and its people. | ||
Because I'm envisioning a whole system, a whole American regime run by people like Stacey Abrams, Lori Lightfoot, Barack Obama, Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg, right? | ||
And maybe not even so much him. | ||
At least he's a white guy. | ||
Gay man, obviously, but he's a white guy. | ||
Really, I think the archetype is going to be somebody like Stacey Abrams. | ||
It's going to be somebody like Cory Booker. | ||
It's going to be some hardcore militant black nationalist or whatever, some kind of militant, you know, in favor of equality. | ||
God forbid we get trans people in there. | ||
God knows there's not enough Jews in power already, right? | ||
And so the whole system is going to be full of people who believe that this is a nation that enslaved their ancestors or genocided them or killed them in the Holocaust or called them a faggot | ||
...in grade school, and that it was the white man that did that, and what do you think the sort of subconscious motivation is going to be of those people waking up every day when they go to work at Facebook, and at Google headquarters, and at the US House of Representatives, and at Harvard, and at the major think tanks, and the people that are making all the Netflix shows and movies that your children are streaming every day? | ||
That's the kind of country that we're going to live in. | ||
And so it's really a question of power. | ||
It's really a question of power at the end of the day. | ||
People want to talk about liberty, they want to talk about opportunity, they want to talk about prosperity. | ||
How about power? | ||
How about the power of our people? | ||
And you know what? | ||
You know, power gets this bad connotation. | ||
In America, people say, well, power corrupts. | ||
And that's not even the real quote. | ||
The real quote is, power tends to corrupt. | ||
That's the Lord Acton quote. | ||
But they say power is something that is evil, it's something that we shouldn't concern ourselves with or something. | ||
But power actually matters because if you are powerless, then you are acted upon, right? | ||
Power means that you have the ability to determine your own destiny. | ||
If you're benevolent and you have power, you don't necessarily have to wield it in an abusive way, but it means that you get to guarantee your safety, security, your prosperity, your freedom, all those things that you like. | ||
If you're powerless, how can you protect any of those things? | ||
So, we're going to live in a country where white people cannot wield power, and white people will be acted upon by power, and the people that are in power will be those that resent white people. | ||
This poses a problem for us, and it's got nothing to do with the Constitution, it's got nothing to do with freedom, it's got nothing to do with anything like that, or the family, any of this political stuff. | ||
It's strictly a question of who runs the institutions. | ||
If benevolent people don't run the institutions, if people that are not like us, if people that are not like us, and therefore sympathetic to us, and therefore benevolent to us, and therefore it's baked in that, you know, they're not going to try and kill us, if people like that aren't in charge, then what's going to happen to all of us in this country? | ||
If we're all going to be governed by Lori Lightfoot's who say, I'm not gonna do any interviews for white journalists. | ||
If we're all governed by people like Barack Obama that says, you people cling into your guns and your Bibles. | ||
If we're governed by people like Louis Farrakhan, who calls us the devil, and you know, Louis Farrakhan says some base things too, but nevertheless, or Al Sharpton, or any one of these people, if it's governed by people in HR departments, governed by resentful minorities, which is what it is, resentful, militant, racial, and I guess sexual minorities, and women, We're gonna get genocided. | ||
It's just that simple. | ||
And they're not even hiding it. | ||
When we say things like that, you know what their rebuttal is? | ||
It's not, well, we're gonna show you how it's done. | ||
We're gonna show you that we're better than that. | ||
unidentified
|
They don't tell us that they're gonna take the high road, do they? | |
When white people talk about their concerns about the displacement of white people in the institutions of power, non-white people taunt us. | ||
They taunt us. | ||
They don't say, you don't have to worry about that because You know, we're not evil like you. | ||
They say it's our turn. | ||
That's what they're telling us. | ||
They mock us. | ||
They call it white anxiety and they mock it. | ||
They say we are going to replace you and anybody that stands in the way is going to be swept aside. | ||
And when we say, you're replacing us, you're ruining our culture, you're destroying our nation, they say, huh, sort of like you did to the other people? | ||
In other words, this is your just desserts. | ||
This is your comeuppance. | ||
This is our revenge. | ||
So that's the mentality of the people that are now going to rule over us in every aspect of our lives. | ||
This is going to be the board members of the companies you work for. | ||
This is going to People that are pursuing vengeance, a blood vengeance, against your race. | ||
This is a problem. | ||
This is a big problem. | ||
And it's got nothing to do with class. | ||
It's got to do with demographics here. | ||
It's got nothing to do with class. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
The so-called depression of these people transcends class. | ||
You know what the black people in Hollywood and the black people on the boards of the companies and the black people in Congress have in common with the black people in the South Side of Chicago? | ||
Almost nothing, but they both hate white people. | ||
Almost nothing, but they both blame white people for their problems. | ||
LeBron James, who's richer than most white people who have ever lived and died on planet Earth, Just like George Floyd, and just like all these other blacks, thinks that he's oppressed by white people. | ||
So good luck convincing all the blacks in the South Side of Chicago that LeBron James or, you know, whoever, are the banks or their enemy. | ||
And the same goes for women? | ||
You know, look at all these women that are running companies and politicians. | ||
Kamala Harris is still talking about sexism. | ||
She's the Vice President of the United States. | ||
And it's her and every other woman in the country who thinks she's oppressed. | ||
And the same goes for gay people, too. | ||
And the same goes for Jews and Muslims and all these other groups. | ||
Just saying it like it is. | ||
That's not to say that there aren't exceptions. | ||
That's not to say that there aren't black, Jewish, female conservatives or something. | ||
But it is to say that if we look at who's being elevated in these institutions of power, it's people that resent us. | ||
And it's a tribal, it's not a class resentment, it's a tribal resentment. | ||
And that tribal identity transcends the class division. | ||
That tribal grievance transcends. | ||
When blacks see Obama getting into power, they don't see a rich guy who lives at Martha's Vineyard. | ||
In a hundred million dollar mansion or, you know, whatever it is. | ||
They see a brother got in and finally a brother's putting his feet up on the desk in the White House. | ||
That's what they see. | ||
That's why 97% of black people voted for Obama. | ||
Hello? | ||
Right? | ||
And when black people see their favorite black celebrity or actor or rapper or whatever, stick it to the man, they don't see a one percenter. | ||
Who lives better than them and gets out of the ghetto and then goes to live in Beverly Hills, they see a brother who made it. | ||
It feels good to see one of my own, one of my tribesmen make it and say, fuck the police and the white man and all of that. | ||
And the same goes for all these different groups. | ||
And again, not every person feels that way. | ||
Not every person feels tribal like that. | ||
But we have to get real about that tribal identity and what that means. | ||
As the composition of the country changes, and therefore as the composition of these institutions changes, it poses a problem for white people. | ||
It really does. | ||
White people are becoming second-class citizens, and the ruling class is becoming full of people that resent white people. | ||
This is not a good recipe for our well-being. | ||
And, you know, if liberals really were humanitarian like they say they were, they would be sympathetic to that. | ||
But they're not. | ||
They say that for saying what I just said, that makes me a Nazi. | ||
And what does that mean? | ||
Nazis should be shot, right? | ||
Isn't that what they believe? | ||
They think that Nazis should be killed, Nazis are subhuman, and if you express what I just expressed, which I think is rational, what are you called? | ||
A Nazi. | ||
You should be killed for thinking this. | ||
They say only white people can be racist, racist is the worst thing you can be, every white person is racist, and racists have to be eliminated. | ||
These are the people running the Fortune 500 companies. | ||
These are the people that Republicans are even going to run in the midterms. | ||
And Democrats too. | ||
These are the people that are going to run the universities and get admitted to the Ivy Leagues. | ||
These are the people that are going to have the power. | ||
And it's not gonna go very well for us. | ||
Not gonna go very well at all. | ||
I don't know how people don't realize that. | ||
The institutions that control the country are not gonna have an effect on us when they're run by people that hate us? | ||
And understand, there's something about tribalism which is very real. | ||
You know, all these people, they say, oh, you think that melanin level and your skin matters, you think that You think that the white race is real? | ||
You think that it matters what people look like? | ||
Well, clearly it does, because, you know, there's such a thing as the black community. | ||
And why do they want a black president? | ||
Why do they say, we want a president that looks like me? | ||
I want a Barbie doll that looks like me. | ||
I want to see a Marvel superhero that looks like me. | ||
If it's all about melanin, if it's all about, if it's just skin deep, if race really doesn't even matter all that much, then why do they talk like that, and why do they organize around it? | ||
Why does it matter to them that they've got a brother on the other side? | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
Oh, you're telling me there's a kinship? | ||
There's a natural and unspoken kinship between people of like ancestry, of people that look similarly? | ||
You're telling me it's an immutable human trait that we're more sympathetic to people that physically look similar to us? | ||
Gee, you know, go figure. | ||
Maybe it would help if in a country like this we had people that looked like us in our neighborhoods and running our institutions. | ||
Maybe that would be better for us. | ||
Just like it's better for them. | ||
We are going over to the immigrants. | ||
Good luck everybody! | ||
I'm sure we can convince all the people working for the companies to turn against these board members. | ||
That's the real future. | ||
The real future of the right wing is getting together a coalition of a black afro woman and a sassy gay dude and some kind of a Mexican guy in a sombrero and a ninja and I don't know, maybe some white guy. | ||
The real future is like Wolfenstein, but the real Nazis are the Democrats, and the coalition of black people and gay people are the Republicans. | ||
That's the real future of the right wing, so says Steve Bannon. | ||
When the Democrats finally take over, they're going to raise a Nazi flag, it's going to be gay black Nazis, and the resistance is going to be the real Gay, black women and transsexuals rising up against them to restore freedom for the real proletariat. | ||
I mean, like, what? | ||
But that's what Steve Bannon believes. | ||
That's what he unironically believes. | ||
When he says economic nationalism is going to run this country for 100 years, he really thinks some black Afro lady And some gay guy and a tranny and a Mexican kid and an Asian and a white guy are all gonna put their hands together and fight the Democrat Nazis. | ||
I mean, how fucking delusional do you have to be to think that that's what's happening in the country? | ||
That's what's... You have the Not Fucking Around Coalition of... | ||
Black people marching out with AR-15s at Stone Mountain, Georgia, saying, you know, we run these streets now, motherfucker, and you think that we're gonna reach across the aisle and say, hello, our brother, respect the Second Amendment, we will attack the rich. | ||
Please. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway. | |
We're gonna move on. | ||
We're gonna read our Super Chats. | ||
I wanna see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
This epic country we live in, this kick-ass country where everyone, where everyone can have opportunity. | ||
Steve Bannon, you fat retard. | ||
Economic National is going to run this country for 100 years. | ||
Okay, dipshit. | ||
Economic nationalism. | ||
The bane of my existence! | ||
And understand, I'm not just some resentful racist or something. | ||
Although some people might say that I am. | ||
I'm really not. | ||
I just don't see how that's going to happen. | ||
I live in the world. | ||
I live in reality. | ||
And the reality that I see is not one where we're all going to shake hands and team up against the rich. | ||
That's not what I see. | ||
You know? | ||
It just doesn't work. | ||
It just doesn't work. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
Because tribalism is there. | ||
It's staying there. | ||
And until black people are not going to be upset about racism, which is never, never, you're never going to convince them to vote Republican as the real Nasr Bowl party. | ||
It's just, it's not going to happen. | ||
And why is that? | ||
It's because blacks and whites don't get along. | ||
You know? | ||
These different groups don't get along. | ||
Sad to say, you know the only way, the only thing that would bring the peoples together is religion. | ||
That's the only thing. | ||
The only thing that would bring the groups together, the only thing that's stronger than a tribal identity, potentially, potentially would be a religious identity. | ||
If Bannon was talking about a Christian nationalism, I would say, I wouldn't dismiss it entirely. | ||
I think that would be worthwhile to debate. | ||
But class is not strong enough. | ||
National identity, not strong enough. | ||
It's not stronger than tribalism. | ||
You know what? | ||
People believe in Jesus Christ more than they believe in their people. | ||
I don't think it's likely. | ||
that Christianity might be the only form of identity that could become more salient than race, to tell you the truth. | ||
I don't think it's likely. | ||
I don't think it's likely, but I don't think it's impossible. | ||
But all that being said, we have to work with what we have, you know? | ||
And, um, it's interesting to think about, you know, could we, could we create a constituency out of, uh, you know, middle class, working class people irrespective of race? | ||
You know, maybe. | ||
But, that's just not, that's just not, um, I think, in line with our experience. | ||
I don't think that's realistic. | ||
I don't think that's practical right now. | ||
So that's why I keep shitting on it. | ||
You know, you look at these BLM people and I don't think that in large numbers they're going to be convinced that it's rich people and not white people that are the problem. | ||
And the same goes for these other groups. | ||
Take a look at the voting demographics. | ||
Break the Democratic Party stranglehold by convincing non-white people that Dems are the real racist? | ||
Doesn't make any sense. | ||
Not gonna work. | ||
Okay, but let's read our Super Chats. | ||
we'll take a look here because we've been over that all week we | ||
We've got Nathaniel says in the CK debate Vosh said something like Academia is to some extent sacred all of the good things in the world today came from academia And I had to rewind because I had literally never heard something I disagreed with so completely damn Well, I mean these people worship Academia, you know, they're obsessed with the studies and the sources and the theory and the philosophers and All of that | ||
So it's actually not all that surprising. | ||
Nathaniel says, people like Vosh are useful because they believe so completely in the ruling ideology and praise it so highly that they end up becoming an embarrassment to it. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
They're technocrats is what they are. | ||
MK Ultra says, did you pet the Yoba cats at the Yoba house? | ||
Who's the most fluffy? | ||
I don't know the difference between them. | ||
I can't tell. | ||
No, I didn't pet them. | ||
I'm allergic to cats. | ||
Actually, I pet the one. | ||
I pet one of them. | ||
Because one of them I, um... After one night, it was a long day. | ||
I was getting ready to go to bed. | ||
I step in the room. | ||
I close the door because the cats weren't supposed to be in there because I'm allergic. | ||
And, uh, I go in the bathroom and everything. | ||
And, uh, I get out of the... Well, I'm done, like, on the toilet or whatever. | ||
And this cat jumps out of the closet. | ||
Jumps out of, like, a linen closet or something. | ||
And, um, it's like blocking the door. | ||
And he's like, he's stanced up. | ||
His tail is straight up. | ||
And he's like, uh, he was in this like aggressive posture and he wasn't moving. | ||
And I'm like, is this thing gonna like attack me? | ||
Is he gonna jump on me? | ||
Is he gonna start scratching me? | ||
So I'm, I'm trying to just like not make any sudden movements. | ||
And, um... | ||
Then he started rolling around I was I was rubbing his belly and he was pretty cute cats are honestly very cute I do like them, but I hate them because I'm very allergic to them But now they are kind of funny I was rubbing his little belly and he was So | ||
But I don't, I don't love cats. | ||
Because they make me sick. | ||
They make me very sick. | ||
21st Reaction says, all viewers should look up the nine first Fridays and do them. | ||
Happy first Friday! | ||
Is that where you, um, like, go to, what is it, go to mass nine Fridays in a row and then you don't go to hell or something? | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
Some of that stuff, it's like, eh. | ||
You know, because I have these friends that are very, very, very, very Catholic. | ||
And they know all the tricks and life hacks and everything. | ||
I don't know how much I'd buy that. | ||
I mean, if that's what the Bible says, if that's what the church says, okay. | ||
But they're like, here's this necklace, and if you do this, wearing this, so many times, then you get a thousand days off in purgatory. | ||
And I'm like, is that really how it works? | ||
I mean, maybe, but I have a hard time believing that sometimes, you know? | ||
They do this stuff with like trading cards and necklaces and special masses and certain days and things. | ||
It's like when Robot Mr. Krabs is trying to steal the Krabby Patty milk on your head and sing the Bikini Bottom National Anthem. | ||
You know? | ||
It's like, uh, is this really gonna get me into heaven? | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
So I don't know if that's, um, if I have to believe that stuff, I don't know if that's part of it, but they're like, here, if you wear this, first you go like this, then you go like this, and then you never have to worry about going to hell. | ||
Really? | ||
unidentified
|
Cause, I don't know. | |
You're telling me that there's some, cause there's some great people out there, but you know, they're not Catholic or whatever, and they go to hell forever. | ||
But if I wear the right necklace on the right day of the week, and I jump up and down on one leg, and sing the Bikini Bottom National Anthem with a glass of chocolate milk on my head, then I'm spared the eternal hellfire? | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
I don't know if I'd buy all that. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, is it fixed finally? | |
I'm really tweaking out tonight. | ||
Okay, I think that's better. | ||
Um, TheotokosRespector with a big super chat, big shout out! | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you very much! | ||
Can we get an 07 in chat for TheotokosRespector for the big super chatter? | ||
Big super chat, big roller in chat! | ||
The big high roller in the chat. | ||
07's in the chat. | ||
Red Regal says, Hey Lil Nikki. | ||
Love the merch, especially the hat. | ||
Waiting for more restock to buy another. | ||
Anyway, what do you see in your political future or AF candidates? | ||
Thanks dude. | ||
Also, Freddy's is GOAT. | ||
Hey, yeah, we're restocking the hats. | ||
What do I see in my political future? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
It's uncertain. | ||
Ask again later. | ||
I'm like a Magic 8 ball. | ||
It's unclear. | ||
Ask again later. | ||
Freddy's is goatee. | ||
I love Freddy's. | ||
I had a great experience there honestly though you know there really is no city better than Chicago I go out the other night and I got a beef sandwich, I got a hot dog, I got a pizza puff, and like midnight. | ||
What's better than that? | ||
You know, Jaden's in the middle, I'm always ragging on him, but Jaden's in the middle of nowhere and he's like, it's nine o'clock and I'm so hungry! | ||
And there's like, no, they don't even have restaurants in that town. | ||
And I'm like, how could you beat a city where it's, oh boy, 3 a.m., and I get to go out and have an Italian beef sandwich, delicious Italian beef sandwich, dipped in gravy, and I get a full Chicago-style dog with a pickle and a tomato and everything, and... This is the greatest city ever. | ||
It's the greatest city. | ||
Honestly, I love this city so much. | ||
There is nowhere better in the world. | ||
Nowhere better in the world than the city of Chicago. | ||
So anyway, how did I get on that subject? | ||
Oh, the Freddy's thing, yeah. - Yeah. | ||
James Farmer says, Congratulations, Sailor, you made it to Friday. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Yeah, I almost didn't. | ||
So thanks. | ||
It's been a long... It's been a rough couple of weeks. | ||
Raging Bigot says, Nig, what is your opinion on the use of the C-word in New Zealand and Australia? | ||
It seems like the word is used almost as often as the F-bomb. | ||
When an American says it, it's like dropping a verbal nuclear bomb. | ||
Is this a cultural thing, or are we all degenerates down here? | ||
I think it's cultural. | ||
In America, we don't say it, and I don't say it on my show. | ||
I know, it's just something that's impolite, you know? | ||
It's just like on another level. | ||
So I don't use that one too much. | ||
I feel like if you use those words too much, they lose their value, you know? | ||
That's why you kind of got to reserve them. | ||
You got to keep them in the back pocket. | ||
Because then when you use them, it's like, damn. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
How do you swear in Australia if everybody says swear words every other sentence? | ||
It's like there's no swear words anymore. | ||
Okay, yeah. | ||
Disavow. | ||
Federal agent. | ||
Cookie, you first, buddy. | ||
I mean, I liked Rush Limbaugh, but I never listened to his show. | ||
I thought it was okay. | ||
Wow, thanks. | ||
buddy. | ||
Cookie Monster says, What's up, Nick? | ||
New listener here. | ||
My wife wants to know if you were a Rush Limbaugh fan. | ||
I mean, I liked Rush Limbaugh, but I never listened to his show. | ||
I thought it was okay. | ||
Kados has got a new job today that pays really well. | ||
So I'll be able to send you more stupid chats. | ||
Here's a big cut of the pie. | ||
Wow, thanks. | ||
Very generous. | ||
...that would buy instantly... | ||
Polo with AF letters on the top left pec. | ||
Imagine a navy blue with red and white small AF on it would be so slick. | ||
Thanks for the recommendation. | ||
I'll look into that for sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see. | |
Nicholas Fuentes says, I'm you from the future warning you not to eat the sandwich for dinner tonight. | ||
Some nigga injected spike proteins in the meat. | ||
Side effects include ligma and time travel. | ||
I'll cease to exist from the timeline after you trash the sandwich, but bye my nigga. | ||
Well, I have no plans to eat a sandwich tonight. | ||
I had a very shitty pizza. | ||
Ordered the pizza, my mom put it in In the oven and left it in the oven for an hour and by the time it comes out of the oven It's way overcooked. | ||
It's dry. | ||
It's so dry. | ||
I feel like Gordon Ramsay, you know, she takes the pizza out of the oven puts on a table Absolutely dreadful. | ||
It's dreadful. | ||
It's dreadful. | ||
I'm done. | ||
Thank you, darling. | ||
Take this away, please Is this frozen You know? | ||
That's what I was like the other day. | ||
It was grilled chicken. | ||
I didn't even eat it. | ||
It's dry. | ||
Overcooked. | ||
Absolutely dreadful. | ||
Spit it out in the napkin. | ||
Come here, darling. | ||
unidentified
|
He always says that. | |
Yeah. | ||
So, not so good. | ||
You can't cook a pizza for an extra hour, it turns out. | ||
Prahra V Gruyper says is good morning Gruyper canceled for good. | ||
That was my favorite show sad to see it gone Honestly, I just keep forgetting to do it I've been very busy lately. | ||
Okay, but I don't know. | ||
I might cancel it. | ||
I might keep it going But since I got back from the trip first, I was sick then I just started forgetting to do it. | ||
So Honestly, I don't like doing a show in the morning and at night because I just my sleep schedule doesn't really allow for that Kuwaiti Groyper says, Nick, you truly are a pioneer. | ||
After you talked about making a White Boy Summer playlist, everyone made one too. | ||
Before Ask Groyper, there were no assistants. | ||
Now everyone either has one or can't afford one. | ||
Whether it be assistants, playlists, or optics, you were the first to introduce them, and yours are the best. | ||
I'm a trendsetter, you know, I'm an innovator. | ||
I'm a childlike creativity, childlike creative genius. | ||
That's just true. | ||
James the Groyper says, My sister had a grad party last night, so I started talking to him. | ||
It turns out he was a Groyper who goes to mass every day. | ||
Who's him? | ||
Who's the guy? | ||
My sister had a grad party last night, so I started talking to him. | ||
Who's he? | ||
Just shows you how inevitable AF is. | ||
Good to know Groypers are everywhere. | ||
Okay, don't really understand, but thanks. | ||
I'm guessing you met a Groyper at a party, it sounds like. | ||
Great to hear it. | ||
Robert Buchanan says just keep kicking AXD. | ||
Hey, thank you man. | ||
Big shout out. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
O7's in chat for Robert Buchanan. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Big shout out, I appreciate it. | ||
I'm, uh... Oh, just keep kicking ass is what he meant. | ||
I'll keep kicking ass all day long. | ||
Big things in the future, in the very near future. | ||
Grandpa Groyper says, What's the best piece of advice you've ever received? | ||
That's a tall order. | ||
Hmm... Best piece of advice I've ever received... | ||
Hmm It's a tough one Honestly so much so much of the wisdom That I have I've just had to figure out a lot of it is just based on experience really But best advice I've been given Hmm now that I would have to think about Best advice I've been given | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
I don't know. | ||
Best advice I've been given. | ||
Well, hmm. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Whoops. | ||
I'm not really sure. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't think about that. | |
My grandma gave me a lot of good advice. | ||
unidentified
|
When I was a kid, she was very wise. | |
hmm my grandma gave me a good one years ago but i can't i can't say it on the show because it's a little bit uh n-rated yeah i don't know man That one's kind of rough. | ||
But it's cack as fuck. | ||
You would really enjoy it. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe I'll tell someone in person. | |
But I can't tell you in person, because you're asking me on the show. | ||
Um, I guess the best advice... You know what she always used to say? | ||
She always used to say that her father told her, in Italian, God provides. | ||
That was always her advice. | ||
God provides. | ||
In other words, you know, don't sweat anything. | ||
God provides. | ||
I believe in that. | ||
I'm a big believer in that. | ||
You know, I don't worry too much. | ||
Oh, I do worry. | ||
I'm a little neurotic, but, you know, I would say in a sense, I don't worry. | ||
I don't fear too much. | ||
I'm worried in the sense that in like a way that it motivates me to action, but I don't have like a great dread. | ||
But yeah, she always used to say that her father used to tell her in Italian, Dio Provide. | ||
Provide or something, which means God will provide. | ||
And, um, So that's a good one. | ||
Shawys used to say, um... Well, just a lot of stuff like that, but I think that's maybe the most profound one. | ||
It's very simple. | ||
Very simple. | ||
Straightforward, right? | ||
But there's a lot of other good ones. | ||
There's a lot of other good ones. | ||
She used to tell me that her father was a shoemaker. | ||
In Chicago, on Taylor Street. | ||
And she told me a story. | ||
I forget all the details. | ||
It's kind of sad. | ||
I forget exactly the details. | ||
You'll get a kick out of this one. | ||
But, you know, she watches my show, or she used to watch my show. | ||
And, you know, I talk about Jewish power on the show, obviously. | ||
And she would say, wow, I never realized how many Jews there are running social media and these kinds of things. | ||
And I'm going to get in so much trouble for saying this, but it's so funny. | ||
So her father was a shoemaker on Taylor Street, and I think he was born in New York in like 1906, moved to Chicago, and was a shoemaker in like the 20s, 30s, 40s, you know. | ||
There was some dispute that he had with like these Jewish people in the city where I think it was something like they wouldn't sell him something and then he was at their store and he saw they had it for sale and for some reason they wouldn't sell it to him. | ||
I forget the whole story but but basically You know, they were being kind of shysty, you know? | ||
And my grandma said that he used to say, Bananama Hitler, which means those people. | ||
And I thought that was the funniest thing. | ||
He would say, he would say, Bananama Hitler. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what she said he used to say. | |
He would go in the stockroom and say that. | ||
And she's like, dearly departed. | ||
Very cack. | ||
That's very cack. | ||
Now that's, uh, now that's just a funny story. | ||
It was different back then, okay? | ||
It was a different time. | ||
It was a different time. | ||
But, uh... Yeah, that's kind of cack. | ||
A lot of, a lot of stories like that. | ||
A lot of stories like that. | ||
Because, you know, I mean, she grew up in the city, and the city of Chicago was always like a jungle, you know? | ||
I mean, race riots and very diverse and American ethnics. | ||
I mean, this city is like, it's not, it's been kind of a rough place for a long time. | ||
She grew up in the projects. | ||
She grew up in the Chicago projects and lived through a very volatile time. | ||
unidentified
|
so my dearly departed - I did. | |
Very funny. | ||
unidentified
|
So yeah. | |
So a lot of like politically incorrect stories like that. | ||
I could go on and on about stuff like that. | ||
Like I said, there's some definitely some n-pilled stories. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, she was the best. | |
But anyway, so yeah, that's probably the best advice. | ||
Not, not, not dearly departed Hitler, but God will provide. | ||
How about that's a little better. | ||
Yeah, no surprise. | ||
Indiana Groypers says, need some early life checks on the NASDAQ board of directors. | ||
Some sussy last names up there. | ||
Yeah, no surprise. | ||
Mac Man says, Nick the Knife went to Scott Tham. | ||
Midichlorians, David Irving, his historian. | ||
Main girl is Catholic. | ||
Side chick, Hyperborian. | ||
That's pretty good. | ||
Arizona Doppel Groypers says, Nick the Knife, a.k.a. | ||
Nigga lovin' Nick. | ||
Nigga lovin' Nick. | ||
I see a lot of Catholics who say that shying away from... from this evil is the way to fix it. | ||
That is wrong. | ||
We must face Satan and his works and fight them with all the strength that God can give us. | ||
unidentified
|
So true. | |
So true. | ||
Yeah, the Catholic, Catholic morality is not about like doing nothing or being passive. | ||
Yeah, I was talking about this yesterday, I think. | ||
unidentified
|
It's real. | |
anti-vax doctors mounting evidence that covid vax recipients will likely develop prions cdj within five to ten years spike proteins cross the blood brain barrier yeah i was talking about this yesterday i think it's real arizona doppelgroy versus nick what are your thoughts on the mandela effect i think it's fake deleted says what is the end game with the vaccine i | ||
I really don't understand why it is being pushed so hard other than to create an unpredictable chaotic environment that creates an excuse for centralizing power I don't know. | ||
I mean, I I tend not to believe that they like design these things like oh They're making a vaccine to kill you. | ||
I tend to think that it's really more like they constantly are doing things that provide them with a short or medium term benefit and And the consequences they don't really care too much about. | ||
I don't really believe that they are like, we're going to kill everyone with this vaccine. | ||
I don't think they got together and agreed on that. | ||
Maybe they did. | ||
But I don't think that's likely. | ||
I tend to find those explanations less plausible. | ||
More so than that it's interest-based. | ||
You know, groups who have an interest in doing things. | ||
You know, like there's a reason why the CDC would want a pandemic. | ||
There's a reason that the billionaires would want a pandemic. | ||
There's a reason Moderna and Pfizer would want to make the miracle vaccine. | ||
I think it all comes down to sort of like, again, these perverse incentives basically. | ||
I'm not saying it's out of the question. | ||
I'm not saying it's impossible that it's all an elaborate design. | ||
But I tend to find those explanations less plausible. | ||
The elaborate design. | ||
Because I just don't think that people are so competent. | ||
The people that are running these institutions are not very competent. | ||
That's why I don't think there's always an answer. | ||
Well, why are they doing it this way? | ||
Why are they doing it that way? | ||
I think that, um, you know, a lot of it is sort of ad hoc. | ||
I think that's a more likely explanation. | ||
So... You know, overlooking the vax deaths, rushing out a vaccine, mandating everyone gets it. | ||
To me, that just seems like more of these institutions kind of doing what they think is best or best for them in the moment. | ||
And the confluence of sort of bad actors pursuing these bad incentives And I think it's sort of always been that way not saying it's outside the realm of possibility that there are that there is some kind of like You know Seal, you know and like Neon Genesis Evangelion like there's not some conference room where the Illuminati is deciding the whole world I mean, that's I think that's possible. | ||
I just don't think it's as plausible Orthodox fascist says you said no ideology would save us in a previous stream Is there any stream you'd recommend to learn what doctrine fits your beliefs best? | ||
Yeah, the show that I do every day So it's not ideology ideology will not save us ideology is insufficient You know dogma is not what's required. | ||
I'm not a believer in ideas. | ||
I'm a believer in logistics and action Grandpa Roy versus on the path that we seem to be on as a nation. | ||
Where do you realistically see the country in 20 to 30 years? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I there's really no telling quite honestly it things are gonna be so unpredictable based on current trends specifically with technology that I Think there's honestly no way to predict what it's gonna be like in 20 to 30 years. | ||
We have no idea, particularly because of like AI and drones and lots of these technologies are going to change everything or they have the potential to change everything. | ||
And this could be very destabilizing. | ||
So I can't tell you. | ||
I don't think anybody can tell you, really. | ||
Eddie Van Grams says, Republican niggas be like, actually the Nasdaq's actions hurt minorities because we'll assume that they're all diversity hires and this will hurt the feelings of the ones who got there with merit. | ||
Literally. | ||
They literally say, you're saying a black person can't be a board member unless the government makes them? | ||
That's offensive to black people. | ||
Meanwhile, white people are getting fired to pave the way for it. | ||
I mean, they literally say that. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
It says, Victor Orban last night on Tucker. | ||
America first is a very positive message here in Central Europe. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
And it makes sense. | ||
You know, Hughes of namesake Howard Hughes is no longer an American company with roots there, roots here. | ||
That's very sad to hear. | ||
That's the whole corporate environment. | ||
there isn't a single white man in the promo materials. | ||
We get emails on pride minority groups, but there isn't a single white European group allowed. | ||
GE ruined this company to top it off. | ||
It's being done by him mad. | ||
That's horrible, dude. | ||
unidentified
|
That's very sad to hear. | |
That's the whole corporate environment. | ||
That's like every business now. | ||
Sad to see the era of white America, I guess the old era, is over. | ||
But a new era could dawn. | ||
Tenriel says, they got me king, they finally got me. | ||
My Twitter account is... Tenriel, I'm sorry to hear that big guy. | ||
unidentified
|
That sucks. | |
That must really suck to get banned from Twitter like that. | ||
I can't imagine. | ||
The loss. | ||
I sympathize. | ||
After it happened to me, it really, it does suck. | ||
But definitely sucked more for me because I had that account for five years and I was verified and I had 140,000 followers. | ||
So it definitely sucked more for me but doesn't mean it doesn't suck. | ||
Well thanks for the super chat, I appreciate it. | ||
says good day mate as a like-minded but australian patriot who's only recently become a true conservative because everything is censored what reading material can you recommend that touches on demographic change what sources can you give me well thanks for the super chat i appreciate it well you know uh pinheads and patriots by bill o'reilly that's that's always my go-to right | ||
Really gets into the demographic realism, kind of like why the races will never get along. | ||
Particularly talks a lot surprisingly about Australia and what's happening there and it's amazing how prescient the book was it totally predicted Australia's current trajectory there's like three chapters on Australia alone and about the future of Australia talks a lot about quantum mechanics and like nuclear power and There's some stuff in there that I don't agree with, you know, like the esoteric Hitlerism. | ||
I don't know if I'm totally on board with that, you know. | ||
There's some weird, like, Hitler cult religious stuff in there, like, about the swastika and it's the ancient lore behind that. | ||
I'm like, okay, I think you kind of lost me with that. | ||
I'm trying to read a book about demographics and all that and they get into, you know, I mean, it's basically like Mein Kampf 2 towards the end, so. | ||
So I would say don't don't take all of it to heart. | ||
I don't want to totally endorse it because I don't want the ADL on my ass I mean that book is just too it's a little too much for some people but Certainly, it's interesting. | ||
It's instrumental in the creation of the modern right-wing Patriots and pinheads by Bill O'Reilly. | ||
That's that's like the I mean aside from the Bible. | ||
It's Like the political Bible of the movement Justin KG says and O'Reilly he's he's this Irish philosopher and He's an Irish-American philosopher from New York. | ||
Brilliant guy. | ||
I think he went to Harvard and William & Mary College. | ||
A real scholar. | ||
He's a prolific author and philosopher. | ||
Sort of reclusive these days, but off the charts. | ||
Brilliant. | ||
And I'm a huge fan of him. | ||
But he's off the charts, like 300 IQ. | ||
Justin KG says, I cannot wait to see you debate again. | ||
Holla! | ||
Holla! | ||
What up, my man? | ||
Yo, what up? | ||
Your boy, Justin KG. | ||
unidentified
|
My man. | |
Nah, what's up, dude? | ||
How's it going? | ||
Yeah, I can't wait to debate again either. | ||
It's been too long. | ||
I miss it. | ||
Robert Barnes. | ||
That was the first debate in a long time, and it's been, I think, a couple of months, even, since that. | ||
Creeker says, Go Nick! | ||
Hey! | ||
Thanks, man. | ||
Kato says, Cool fidget spinner, Nick. | ||
Wanna bring it to the White House? | ||
Yeah, that's not funny, dude. | ||
Negative Flynn Effect says, Hey King, I know that all the vaccines suck, but I was wondering if you have any particular criticisms of AstraZeneca and other viral vector vaccines. | ||
My country is going to mandate Pfizer or AZ soon. | ||
I don't have anything in particular against those. | ||
From my understanding, it's the mRNA that is the really bad one, and it's the Pfizer and the Moderna that are mRNA. | ||
I don't know too much about the J&J and AstraZeneca, but both J&J and AstraZeneca got recalled. | ||
They wouldn't do AstraZeneca in America. | ||
They recalled it in Canada and Europe for a time. | ||
And the Johnson & Johnson, they recalled for a day in America too, so... I don't know if they're much better. | ||
DoomsdayGroper says, I'm white-pilled long-term. | ||
The affirmative action retards will ruin the economy and they will lose their power as quickly as they stole it from us. | ||
See Venezuela. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
Red Regal says you are a civil rights icon. | ||
You are a newfounding father saving the degradation of our nation. | ||
We will always be behind you, brother. | ||
I'm from Charleston, Illinois, and it's been ruined by Chicago blacks. | ||
Charleston? | ||
I don't even know where that is. | ||
unidentified
|
Nigga. | |
I don't even know where that is, my nigga. | ||
Charleston? | ||
Charleston! | ||
unidentified
|
Charleston, nigga! | |
Talking about he's from Charleston? | ||
unidentified
|
Man. | |
I never been there. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know where that is. | ||
I know Chicago, and that's it. | ||
I know Chicago. | ||
I know Champaign, Peoria, Quad Cities, that's it. | ||
Springfield, that's it. | ||
The rest of Illinois, yeah, whatever. | ||
21st Reaction says, but thank you a lot, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Thanks for always having my back, blood. | ||
21st Reaction, Sacred Heart, which has been very important in the tradition over the past few hundred years. | ||
If I subscribe 10 years in advance, can I download your videos? | ||
I'm a paranoid hoarder who fears the tentacles of big tech pulling the plug. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
If you subscribe 10 years in advance, can I download your videos? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
I heard Sam Hyde committed a bunch of mass shootings. | ||
That's so funny. | ||
Who is your favorite animatronic at Freddy's? | ||
unidentified
|
They didn't have one there. | |
Hoffler says hey big guy it's been a while you talking about people not waking up reminded me of something profound you said long ago you mentioned acceleration was a lie and use the a lot of more as an example while saying that people will just let things get worse until they all starve to death I've never taken acceleration as I'm seriously since keep up the good fight well thank you for the big super chat oh sevens and chat yeah That's what's happening now. | ||
People think that accelerating is accelerating. | ||
You know what? | ||
What is sort of implicit in that word is that we're on like this decided trajectory, you know, accelerating towards something or moving at a pace that eventually will have to stop or get us to the other I always thought that that kind of thinking is flawed. | ||
In other words, things can get, you know, things will get very, very bad and they might never get good again. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
There's no guarantee that we're gonna accelerate, like, to the other side of the world like you dig a hole and you get to China. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
We're gonna accelerate past the bad and then land on the other side and it'll be good. | ||
I don't think that's guaranteed. | ||
So I don't believe in that. | ||
Deleted says trying to infiltrate conservative politics as a groiper is like that episode of Drake and Josh when they dress up as Jewish rabbis to spy on Megan's date. | ||
They're always repeating Fox News talking points. | ||
I don't know what the latter half has to do with it, but yeah, that's kind of funny. | ||
unidentified
|
Pip pip. | |
Red Regal says I am not a fed plus the Catholic doctrine you just agreed with is in line with what I said. | ||
Unfortunately, you are a fed dude. | ||
Talking like that is not doing anybody any favors, including yourself. | ||
So we're not about violence. | ||
If you're looking for that, you should go somewhere else. | ||
Modernity says, how many wisdom teeth do you have? | ||
I have all of them. | ||
Diligent says, smiley face. | ||
WD-40 Glocks is looking good, Nick. | ||
Hope you have a good weekend. | ||
Sorry to hear about the dry ass pizza. | ||
Yeah, it's whatever. | ||
I'm used to it now. | ||
But thanks, man. | ||
Likewise. | ||
Kansas Zoomers says, Night, night. | ||
Good night. | ||
Christian says, Hey Nick, I'm stuck out in gay-ass California. | ||
I'm 16 and parents aren't groipers. | ||
Anyways, keep your chin up with this Black Pill Society. | ||
Well, hey, thank you, Youngblood. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
California's nice, man. | ||
I don't know why you don't like it. | ||
I love California. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Enjoy your youth, okay? | ||
Enjoy your youth in California. | ||
That sounds awesome, actually. | ||
Being a teenager in California? | ||
Sounds almost as good as being a teenager in Chicago, but... Thanks, man. | ||
I appreciate the words of encouragement from a young man. | ||
You know, every time one of these youngsters calls in, it's like... It's like Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, you know? | ||
It's like the little kid that brings back the gobstopper or whatever, you know, the candy. | ||
And it's like Wholesome 100, Faith in Humanity Restored, you know? | ||
So thanks, I appreciate it. | ||
Cringetrap says, Nick, are you the man behind the slaughter? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Very funny. | ||
Okay, all right. | ||
That's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Remember to follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday 8 p.m. | ||
Central, 9 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time, only on America First Out Live. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show and our subscribers. | ||
I'll see you on Monday. | ||
Until then, have a great weekend. | ||
Until then, have a great weekend, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. |