Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
...for humanity. | ||
Ultimately, that is the victory. | ||
It's not victory in itself. | ||
It's not, you know, a political achievement. | ||
It's not anything like that tangible. | ||
The victory is in our living, that we're living without limits. | ||
We're living without self-censoring. | ||
We're living unapologetically and being human. | ||
Like, the act of doing that at all times is the victory. | ||
We're not over this oppressive sort of system that wants to control and diminish and intimidate and all of that. | ||
Like, ultimately, that's why, you know, it's living the dream every day. | ||
Total victory every day. | ||
Just by being human. | ||
I also wouldn't have it any other way. | ||
Because, like, I would much rather be suffering and be real and suffer as a human than be comfortable as a slave. | ||
Than be comfortable as somebody that just belongs for the ride. | ||
America First is inevitable. | ||
America First is inevitable. | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not cool to share with Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's bad. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is... | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a mirror. This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
Oh man, this is a free man talking. | ||
Oh man, this is a free man this is a free man talking. | ||
And I believe in America. | ||
And I believe in what I'm doing. | ||
And so they'll never have satisfaction. | ||
Even what I'm doing. | ||
It's all they'll never have a satisfaction. | ||
We are still enjoying White Voice Summer. | ||
Slow on. | ||
I don't care if I have to be quiet. | ||
I don't care if I have to get a link this year. | ||
We can go all the way around the channel up there. | ||
Nothing is going to stop White Voice Summer. | ||
Nothing is going to stop the corner. | ||
There's all the way around. | ||
There's all the way around the channel up there. | ||
They can get off the plane. | ||
You know what that means? | ||
White Voice Summer. | ||
We give us love if we make love. | ||
Take care. | ||
They've only given us bars and a couple of baseballs against the wall. | ||
And now they're playing back. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
The only time that they win is when they triumph over our spirits. | ||
But they never give. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
You can never take that away from us. | ||
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
|
We're standing on the shoulders of great American patriots. | |
you They didn't have a lot of money. | ||
They didn't have a lot of luxury. | ||
But they had grit. | ||
And they had faith. | ||
And they had courage. | ||
unidentified
|
And they had each other. | |
Right? | ||
But they all had one thing in common. | ||
They love their families, they love their country, and they love their God. | ||
Our beautiful ancestors won two world wars, defeated communism, and put a man on the face of the moon. | ||
We are calling for a great reawakening of America, a resurgence of confidence, and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity, and pride. | ||
And we are returning to the wisdom of our founders. | ||
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital, and in every hall of power. | ||
unidentified
|
From this day forward, A new vision will govern our land. | |
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First! | ||
America first. USA! USA! USA! | ||
USA! USA! USA! USA! | ||
Verified. | ||
You are a real human being. | ||
Something like immigration can only be solved if right-wing people are able to tell the world about it. | ||
We can only address an issue like immigration, or an issue like our endless involvement in foreign wars in the Middle East, or any issue for that matter, if we have access to the means of mass communication. | ||
If we have access to mass media through the internet. | ||
Without that, we can't share the facts, we can't share the opinions, we cannot promote candidates, we cannot fundraise money for advocacy on issues like this. | ||
That's why that makes it central. | ||
And I look at Ron DeSantis' bill in Florida on tech censorship, and even Governor Abbott from Texas. | ||
He proposed some legislation in Texas about tech censorship as well. | ||
I look at that, and I think that that is the future. | ||
And whether we're in the minority or in the majority in Congress, and whether we've got the White House or not, that still has to be the number one issue. | ||
Because I'm holding out hope that the day will come, and maybe this is naive, maybe this is nearly impossible, but I am holding out hope that the day will come when America passes legislation or when some Something changes that allows conservatives to re-enter the domain of mass media on the internet. | ||
unidentified
|
And there's no way I could get on this plane? | |
No. | ||
They're not letting you fly with Southwest. | ||
With Southwest. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not sure about other airlines. | |
Delta maybe? | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
Okay. | ||
I know that was a TSA number. | ||
I'm not sure if you're black or not. | ||
Just a note like this. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast. | ||
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. | ||
Cheers everybody. | ||
It's gonna happen. | ||
They kicked me off the plane, you know what that means? | ||
White boy summer road trip. | ||
They give us lemons, we make lemonade. | ||
They throw me behind bars. | ||
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 triumph over 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. | ||
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. | ||
Nothing is going to stop white boys summer. | ||
Nothing is going to stop America first. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
Thank you, guys. | ||
White people founded 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 smile on us right now for what we're doing. | ||
Cheers. | ||
Let's just call it what it is. | ||
The system hates white people. | ||
unidentified
|
That's just what it is. | |
And everybody wants to call it everything other than that. | ||
They want to call it everything other than what it is. | ||
You may hear conservatives talk about cultural Marxism. | ||
Critical race theory. | ||
That's the new one. | ||
Gotta ban critical race theory. | ||
CRT. | ||
And critical race theory has Marxist origins. | ||
It's socialism. | ||
It's communism. | ||
It's anti-western. | ||
It's anti-western civilization. | ||
Anti-western culture. | ||
Conservatives even will call it anything other than what it is. | ||
Because it's not politically correct to say what it is. | ||
unidentified
|
You can't utter it in polite society. | |
But we all know what it is. | ||
unidentified
|
It's racial. | |
It's racial hatred. | ||
They hate white people. | ||
This little boy, Cash Gernon, was murdered, dragged out of his bed in the middle of the night in his home and murdered outside his house in the street by a black man because he was white. | ||
unidentified
|
That black guy killed a white boy because he was white. | |
And this black guy hated white people. | ||
That's why he did it. | ||
It was an act of hatred. | ||
unidentified
|
It wasn't random. | |
It was an act of racial hatred perpetrated by a black male against a white boy. | ||
And why is everybody so afraid to call it that? | ||
unidentified
|
Of course that's what it is. | |
What has been engendered in the population for the past two years? | ||
What's been engendered in the population for the past 30 years? | ||
unidentified
|
Other than anti-white hatred. | |
What are people learning in the schools? | ||
When you go to grade school, and you go to American history class, what do you learn about? | ||
In the new Howard Zinn curriculum, you learn about how white people genocided the indigenous Americans. | ||
White people enslaved black people and brought them over here. | ||
Once freed by whites, whites mistreated blacks by being racist towards them, terrorizing them with the Ku Klux Klan. | ||
Segregating them, making them drink in separate water fountains. | ||
We hear about how white supremacist Nazis try to take over the whole world with their fascist ideology in World War II with Adolf Hitler. | ||
unidentified
|
And it was white. | |
It was because they were Aryan. | ||
It's because they were white supremacists. | ||
Because they believed in racial purity of the Aryan race. | ||
unidentified
|
That made them uniquely evil. | |
They perpetrated the Holocaust against Jews. | ||
And that was, by far and away, the most obscene, worst genocide ever in the history of the world. | ||
And then, when all was said and done, white people were racist to the Muslims that blew up the World Trade Center. | ||
White people are racist to black criminals and the police. | ||
Basically, people are bred from cradle until grave thinking that white people are uniquely evil people. | ||
White people, they're a special guilt for all the problems of this country, all the problems of every other group, and really like all the problems of humanity. | ||
And that's a guilt that is ancestral, it's not individual, everyone has it, and you can never overcome it. | ||
There's no clear way, discernibly, that you can ever overcome it and ever achieve equality with these non-white people. | ||
And it's as a consequence of this that these things are becoming more and more common. | ||
White people are being dehumanized. | ||
And when white people are dehumanized, black people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
And other people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
How much do you want to bet that this, uh, whatever his name is, Darren Brown, whatever, was radicalized by the media into thinking that white people are racist and responsible for his suffering, not just as a black man, but as a gay man too. | ||
And that he committed this crime in retaliation for that perceived prejudice, perceived hatred against him. | ||
That's the consequence of all this anti-white hatred and dehumanization in the media, education system, and it's even enshrined in the law systematically through the government. | ||
I mean, what do you think affirmative action is? | ||
And a lot of white people don't want to talk about it now. | ||
unidentified
|
They don't want to address it. | |
They want to pretend that that's not the case because Honestly, I think a lot of white people think that it's beneath them. | ||
I think that white people think that it's our job to be better, to strive towards a post-racial society, that we ought not to notice race, and we should try not to notice race, that it's a good thing to aspire to, to not notice race. | ||
I think that white people are under the impression that to be cognizant of race, and to mention it and act like it matters, is beneath us, like it's backwards, it's regressive, it's primitive. | ||
And a big part of that, too, is because white people have, I think, internalized a lot of what the media says about us, which is that, well, we're on top of the world, so what do we really have to complain about? | ||
unidentified
|
But here's the problem. | |
This is not going to be a white country forever. | ||
And it's not going to be a white country for very much longer. | ||
unidentified
|
In a lot of places, it already isn't. | |
And in a lot of ways, it already isn't a white country anymore. | ||
And as the percentage and proportion of white people diminishes in America relative to non-white people, it's going to become more and more of a problem for white people that non-white people don't like us. | ||
unidentified
|
It's just that simple. | |
Just think about it in these simple terms. | ||
unidentified
|
The media attacks white people. | |
They say that white people cause the suffering of non-white people. | ||
Increasingly, non-white people don't like white people. | ||
Nobody talks about that, but we know that non-white people largely regard white people with suspicion, distrust, in some cases just don't like them, hate them. | ||
unidentified
|
Nobody wants to say that. | |
People are very comfortable talking about racism against blacks or other non-whites, but nobody talks about the distrust, nobody talks about the resentment that non-white people have for white people in the country. | ||
unidentified
|
And it's not everybody, but it is a lot of people, and everyone knows that. | |
As the population becomes less and less white, and as the people in charge of the country and the people enforcing the laws of the people in the country, in charge of the country, become less and less white, that's going to matter a lot more. | ||
unidentified
|
The End | |
Wall. Wall. | ||
Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Thank | ||
you. | ||
You're so dead. | ||
Give it to me! | ||
If everybody had a vote across the USA, then everybody'd be served, like California, yeah. | ||
You can't scam anyone. | ||
We're in their baggie. | ||
We're off the table. | ||
A bushy, bushy, blonde-haired goose. | ||
Serving USA Serving | ||
USA Serving | ||
USA Serving USA 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. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, practice with that yay button. | ||
The worst. | ||
Bitch. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
Not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them, all right? | ||
I just endorse them. | ||
All right? | ||
Black dog is not. | ||
Last time. | ||
He's a curse. | ||
Everything. | ||
Swarming on everybody who dared to avoid. | ||
Hey, your mama ain't cheap. | ||
And he is cheap. | ||
I've been making waves way before the star chick. | ||
That was a young city when I was just a chick. | ||
With the all-black fiddick kicking with the way the fit. | ||
That was a routine. | ||
Y'all wasn't the shit. | ||
Yeah, I was three six. | ||
Who tight with some caps in? | ||
Yeah, take me to my first shows. | ||
I go only drop jewels way before they drop jungle. | ||
First year, I'm okay. | ||
Now I'm okay. | ||
I'm okay. | ||
I'm okay. | ||
And I'm okay. | ||
I'm okay. | ||
American first, bitch. | ||
I'm okay. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant fan. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
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 L.A. | ||
is causing community concerns and it has families living in fear. | ||
South L.A. | ||
is already suffering from a high number of violent crimes. | ||
Hey! | ||
Yeah! | ||
I just really want one thing that's to keep America great. | ||
Hey! | ||
We're on a golden sea You don't need no memory Just a place to call your own As we're just in two All those lights. | ||
The backed up traffic. | ||
Great narration. | ||
Thanks. | ||
You know, I'm just not gonna do it. | ||
Fuck this. | ||
I'm just gonna 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. | ||
Oh, sirens. | ||
What the fuck is going on, man? | ||
Tow Trucks? | ||
Who's responding Arizona? | ||
Tow Trucks! | ||
Cops! | ||
That's crazy! | ||
And they're coming here! | ||
So we were supposed to be in Phoenix at 10 correct? | ||
Yeah. | ||
We had just left earlier. | ||
But 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, ruining our car park. | ||
We threw rocks in the water. | ||
Yo, is Jordan B Videos here? | ||
Look at this. | ||
Some liquor. | ||
Wait, what's that? | ||
Is that tarantula? | ||
I'm just kidding. | ||
Dude, you're hilarious. | ||
Quit it! | ||
Get that out of my face! | ||
Yeah, back inside we go. | ||
Oh my gosh! | ||
There's another crash. | ||
That's loose gravel and sand. | ||
I'm gonna try going for these guys now. | ||
He's leaving me in the dust. | ||
Oh fuck, this is dangerous. . | ||
the next day. | ||
*music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* She like walked up to us and called us ugly and then ran away and she was like "yes we got him!" *music* *music* *music* And she was like, yes we got him! | ||
Bitch! | ||
It's all so fat. | ||
- What's that saying? - I'm gonna go talk to him. | ||
- Back me up. | ||
- I'm gonna go. | ||
- They're all so fat. | ||
- They're really. | ||
- It's scary. | ||
Let's go, what's up loser? | ||
Hi, hello, hello. | ||
Look we got Antifa! | ||
Hello! | ||
Bye bye! | ||
Hello! | ||
There he goes. | ||
Where's he going? | ||
Wild Antifa in the mall. | ||
Weenie Hut Juniors! | ||
AAAAAH! | ||
Yo, we got ourselves an interaction at the Phoenix mall here. | ||
About to get kicked out of the mall in Phoenix. | ||
- Good point here. - Good point here. | ||
- Okay. - Good thing. | ||
- Celebrities that are here, logging up the area. - Awesome. | ||
- It's a massive. - This is my place, I'm just walking down. | ||
Come on, take him 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 idea. | ||
I'm too old for this shit. | ||
You guys are white? - Yeah. | ||
Is it because we are white? | ||
First! | ||
America First! | ||
- Absolutely. | ||
- Absolutely. | ||
- Yeah, we're still here. | ||
- Yeah. | ||
- Hey, you should be right. - Would you do this first? - I keep more stronger than you. | ||
- Yeah. | ||
- First, America first! America first! America first! America first! America first! America first! America first! America first! America first! America first! | ||
I'm the 20th! | ||
Okay, can you get out of the frame? | ||
Get out of the frame. | ||
White Boy Summer Update. | ||
Okay, you can't just not be in the frame. | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
Alright, well do you guys want to get pictures and then maybe we'll just get out of here? | ||
Can you take a picture of me and Nick? | ||
Say, what's up losers? | ||
What's up losers? | ||
What's up Nick Fuentes? | ||
I got your picture, I'm coming with you. | ||
Dear Maria, come in. | ||
There's a story at the bottom of this bottle and I'm White boy rainstorm. | ||
It never rains in New Mexico. | ||
It never rains in New Mexico. | ||
I don't want to have to go out either. | ||
We literally can't get caught by the weather. | ||
It never ends. | ||
Can we finish this and then go? | ||
- Nick, point that they don't want you on more property, so you're either gonna have to walk in the rain or get your car some land. | ||
It doesn't matter to me. | ||
- A car's in the rain. | ||
- You're gonna have to get wet. | ||
- Can we finish this and then go? | ||
unidentified
|
- No. | |
- I'll want you on the front walk. | ||
- Just asking, now you're gonna be on the road. | ||
- Hang on, I got it. | ||
- So just-- All cops are faggots! | ||
All cops are faggots! | ||
That's a bad boy for Czar and Sigma Ray. | ||
All cops are faggots! | ||
Basically that little faggot security thing. | ||
You are a bitch! | ||
That car's a car. | ||
Faggot! | ||
Faggot! Faggot! Faggot! | ||
Bag it, bag it, bag it, bag it, bag it! | ||
He's on his phone. | ||
I can't get it back to you. | ||
I can't get it back to you. | ||
I think it's parked in front of the Nordstrom, if you see a sign for that. | ||
These guys have nothing better than you. | ||
Man. | ||
We can form a bridge across the water. | ||
Hey, how's it going? | ||
Armino's got an answer. | ||
Alright mate. | ||
Armino's got an answer. | ||
That was kind of fun, right? | ||
I don't want to put that in the morning, leave. | ||
Shut up. | ||
You want to do something? | ||
You want to do something? | ||
Whoa! | ||
I want something to get me through this. | ||
Send me some kind of life. | ||
Baby, baby, I want something. | ||
I'm not listening when you say goodbye. | ||
I want something. | ||
They see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean 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 rushes. | ||
Where's enough enough, eh? | ||
Where's enough enough, eh? | ||
Shit. | ||
Just eat a big bag, you stupid bitch. | ||
Stranger, you can move a country in a piece of gold. | ||
No money has to stop your life. | ||
It's not a last of life. | ||
Feel like angels. | ||
We can move a country in a peaceful world. | ||
You know that's the stuff you love. | ||
And now the last of us. | ||
You're like, 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 not normal. | ||
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 this point. | ||
And I'm addicted to the territory. | ||
And I'm addicted to the territory. | ||
And I'm addicted to the territory. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
unidentified
|
You're an e-girl. | |
You know the rule. | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Who's got the clip? | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of it. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of it. | ||
What's that? | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
and its consequences has been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Because it's not cool to share for big businesses. | ||
It's not cool to share for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's pay. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
It's the 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 stay. | ||
Let it stay in one day. | ||
Street store save us from L.A. | ||
LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. | ||
If you are the power that is not open. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. | ||
Blueprint 5 mic. | ||
Go get a drimelight. | ||
Should've been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated. | ||
Grammy nominated. | ||
Hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader prompted. | ||
Barbershop player hated. | ||
Mom and pop booth laid it. | ||
Felt like it rained till the roof caved in. | ||
Two words. | ||
Shottown raised me crazy. | ||
So I live by two words. | ||
Fuck you, pay me! | ||
Pay me. | ||
Scream me. | ||
Tease me. | ||
Save me. | ||
You know how the game be. | ||
I can't let them change me. | ||
Cause on Judgment Day, you gon' blame me. | ||
Look God, it's the same and I basically know now. | ||
We get racially profiled, cuffed up and hosed down, pimped up and hoed down. | ||
Plus I got a whole city to hold down. | ||
From the bottom to the top, the only place to go now. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Fight this, fight this, fight this, fight this. | ||
You want to know what's critical to all of this? | ||
We look at Christ on the cross and you're going to kick us off Twitter? | ||
unidentified
|
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 that eats them whole. | |
Sin, millionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope that eats them whole. | ||
Sin, millionaires who are still broke. | ||
All still broke, Jesus. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster. | ||
Save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them home. | ||
Sin, illness, all are still broke, Jesus. | ||
Save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them home. | ||
Sin, illness, all are still broke, Jesus. | ||
Save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
Save all my people from this monster. | ||
This is America. | ||
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 forebears 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. | ||
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 Jesus Christ. | ||
Men who stand with courage for their family's 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. | ||
It's not cool to share for big business. | ||
It's not cool to share for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's hell. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
Thank you. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a mirror. This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
Man, it's the free man talking. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast. | ||
To our couple. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Kruipers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, To the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
Let's cheers, everybody. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
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 lemonade. | ||
They throw me behind bars. | ||
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 triumph over 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. | ||
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. | ||
No. | ||
Nothing is going to stop white boys summer. | ||
Nothing is going to stop America first. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
Thank you, Justin. | ||
White people founded 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. | ||
Cheers. Cheers. Cheers. | ||
you you Cheers! | ||
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position 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, idiot. | |
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. . | ||
When's it numbin' up, bae? | ||
When's it numbin' up, bae? | ||
Sick! | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
I'm not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
I'm not allowed to make jokes. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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, bro. | ||
Life like this is what you like. | ||
Life like this is what you like. | ||
Life like this is what you like. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America First! | ||
America First! | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Thursday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into tonight. | ||
Our featured story is about Afghanistan, which I'm actually glad it's back in the news because I like this stuff. | ||
I like foreign policy. | ||
And I like the Middle East. | ||
I've always liked this subject but you guys don't seem to like it very much because I've been doing this show for four and a half years and every time I cover Afghanistan nobody watches the show. | ||
So you tell me. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I guess people just aren't that interested in it but it's back in the news in case you haven't been paying attention. | ||
The Biden administration is following through with Former President Trump's drawdown of American troops in Afghanistan, as we had planned to have all American troops out of the country this month. | ||
The problem, though, is that now that American troops are leaving Afghanistan, the Taliban is taking over everything. | ||
And so today the Taliban took over a city called Kandahar, which is the second biggest city in Afghanistan. | ||
It was used by the American military as a base of operations. | ||
And according to new reports from the Pentagon... | ||
The Taliban will take over the capital of Afghanistan, which is Kabul, within 30 to 60 days. | ||
Which means, and some people have pointed this out, that by the 20th anniversary of 9-11, okay, 20th anniversary of 9-11, which is next month, the Taliban will be in complete control of the country of Afghanistan, and specifically of the capital, Kabul, which has something like 600,000 people. | ||
So, that's in the news. | ||
In response to this, the Taliban is taking province after province, city after city. | ||
The Afghan government is collapsing. | ||
And in response to this, the Biden administration is redeploying 3,000 troops to Kabul to evacuate our embassy personnel and other staff that remains in the country. | ||
So they pulled everybody out, and now they're sending them all back in, in order to evacuate. | ||
So we'll talk about all of this. | ||
It's all very interesting. | ||
That'll be our featured story. | ||
It's good stuff. | ||
I have to say, you know, I'm not Muslim, and I'm not a terrorist or anything, but I'm kind of rooting for the Taliban. | ||
I don't know about you. | ||
But it's sort of like, you know, the same feeling that I got when Donald Trump was winning primaries in the GOP primary back in 2015 or 2016. | ||
I remember, I wasn't a Trump supporter when the race first got started back in 16, but when I saw him winning every single state in the primary, and it was, he didn't win Iowa, but it was New Hampshire and Nevada and South Carolina and Super Tuesday and then the other Super Tuesday, And every time he won a primary I saw the look on Anderson Cooper's face and Brett Baier and people in the media. | ||
Every time he was winning a state, I was like, you know what? | ||
I like a winner. | ||
And I like that he's defeating the establishment. | ||
I like that he's defeating these evil people. | ||
That's the same feeling I have when they're reporting about the Taliban. | ||
Everybody loves a winner. | ||
And every day for the past couple of weeks, they're reporting, another city falls to the Taliban! | ||
Another province falls to the Taliban! | ||
Honestly, they're kind of winning me over. | ||
I'm kind of rooting for them, you know? | ||
The Great Satan. | ||
It's a story, really, it's actually a great story. | ||
The Great Satan, the American Empire pushing gay, trans, BLM, you know, liberal democracy on the world. | ||
And here you've got these blessed, holy freedom fighters from the mountains, you know, fighting for their independence. | ||
And just steamrolling this puppet regime left behind by the US government. | ||
I gotta say, there's something compelling about that story. | ||
So, keep it up, keep it up guys. | ||
unidentified
|
Great work, great work over there. | |
It's really something. | ||
And you know, well, I guess we'll get into this later on in the show, but pay very close attention to what they're reporting about the Taliban because There are a lot of similarities between what's happening right now in Afghanistan and what happened in Iraq 10 years ago. | ||
Because I remember when Barack Obama withdrew or initiated the withdrawal from Iraq back in 2011, it was the same kind of reporting which followed just a couple years later. | ||
Obama initiates a withdrawal from Iraq, which he campaigned on in 2008, and then it's not two years later that this new terror group, ISIS, comes out of nowhere and takes over the whole country, and the Iraqi government falls to ISIS, and the Syrian government falls to ISIS. | ||
And, and, and this is the similarity, you know, the media reports about the brutality of ISIS, they talk about how we wasted resources and time and money, we left behind a power vacuum, and now this far worse Islamist force rose in the wake of America, and that was the pretext for America to remain in Iraq for another decade. | ||
and send troops back, and airstrikes again, and get involved in the Syrian civil war. | ||
And so I'm watching the coverage of the Taliban in Afghanistan, and I'm kind of seeing, at least superficially, something similar. | ||
The same kind of narrative, the same Islamist Taliban on the rise, city after city, falls to the Taliban, the whole country becomes Talibanistan, and this is unacceptable, redeploying troops, bringing back the B-52s, and AC-130s and everything. bringing back the B-52s, and AC-130s and everything. | ||
thing. | ||
It's a little bit similar. | ||
So I wouldn't be surprised if we if we don't leave Afghanistan ever. | ||
It would not surprise me if four years of this administration goes by and we remain in Afghanistan by the end of it. | ||
So anyway, but we'll talk about that. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about the latest numbers from the border. | ||
We have the numbers of illegal border crossings from the month of July. | ||
And it is the highest number in 21 years. | ||
I'm talking about apprehensions of illegal immigrants at the southern border. | ||
The numbers just came out and I believe, I looked at it a little while ago, the number is 216,000. | ||
unidentified
|
216,000! | |
I think it's that. | ||
216,000. 216,000. | ||
I think it's that. | ||
Something around there, right? | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
212,000. 212,000. | ||
212,000 illegal immigrants apprehended at the southern border in the month of July. | ||
In the month of July alone. | ||
So how many days are in July? | ||
31 days? | ||
212,000 immigrants came over and were apprehended. | ||
We don't know how many got through. | ||
They estimate how many got through the border, but these are just, this is just the number of people that were apprehended in one month! | ||
Which is a 20-year high. | ||
And it's the highest, obviously, that it's been this year. | ||
It's only been increasing. | ||
And we've been covering these numbers as the year has gone on and they get worse every month. | ||
I remember back in 2019 under Trump, it was a scandal when I think in May, they had something like 150,000 illegal immigrants cross. | ||
Maybe it was even less than that. | ||
Honestly, I don't remember so well because it was a couple of years ago. | ||
But 2019 was the worst year for immigration under the Trump administration. | ||
And I remember I was very critical. | ||
I was harshly critical of the Trump administration during that time. | ||
We were going over the numbers every week. | ||
And saying, you know, it's 160,000 this month, and it's 170,000 this month, and I thought it couldn't get any worse than that. | ||
And my criticism of the Trump administration was, this is worse than any other president, this is worse than Obama! | ||
And if only, if only we knew how bad it could get. | ||
Trump closed up the border in 2020, built 500 miles of wall, implemented a regime of policies that were keeping illegals out. | ||
The remain in Mexico policy stopped catch and release. | ||
You know, he implemented a lot of things that stopped the swell of immigrants at the border. | ||
And now under Biden, all of that is gone. | ||
They're talking about passing amnesty in Congress. | ||
They stopped doing remain in Mexico. | ||
They resumed catch and release. | ||
They took the refugee cap and increased it by 600%. | ||
And the consequence now is that we have close to a quarter of a million people coming across the border. | ||
And that's just that's being apprehended every single month. | ||
And they said back at the beginning of the year that we were going to get to the point where in September we would be apprehending like 50,000 people every single day. | ||
And I could see we're on track to do that based on where we are in the summer. | ||
It hasn't slowed down even a little bit. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
I'm excited. | ||
Today is a very special day. | ||
In case anybody doesn't know, but today is the fourth anniversary of the Charlottesville Rally in Virginia, August 12, 2017. | ||
Can you believe it? | ||
And I wouldn't even know that it was the case, but I opened up my Snapchat today and you know on Snapchat it will tell you It gives you like a memory, it shows you a snap or a picture or video that you took on that day, you know, a year, two, three years ago. | ||
And so I opened up my Snapchat last night and it said, here's a memory from four years ago and it was a video of me marching around in Charlottesville. | ||
And four years ago today, by the way, was the Saturday. | ||
The Saturday was the Lee Park Demonstration. | ||
I wasn't there for the Tiki Torch March. | ||
Some people say that, but I wasn't there. | ||
I wasn't even in the city. | ||
So four years ago was Charlottesville. | ||
0-7 to all of my Charlottesville veterans! | ||
Thank you for your service, everybody. | ||
And I'm kind of joking about it, but it was kind of like an important day. | ||
You know, looking back, and especially in light of what we talked about last night on the show, last night we talked about the results of the 2020 census, particularly about the racial demographics of America. | ||
And four years ago, I went to Charlottesville. | ||
I was 18 years old, I think. | ||
Yeah, I was just about to turn 19 actually. | ||
I was 18. | ||
Faith Goldie invited me to go. | ||
She was with Rebel Media so I thought it was okay. | ||
And so I went out to Charlottesville. | ||
Last minute decision. | ||
I paid like $800 for a flight or $600. | ||
Something crazy because there's not a lot of direct flights from Chicago to Charlottesville, Virginia. | ||
And especially not last minute like that. | ||
So Faith Goldie invited me. | ||
I wasn't gonna go. | ||
She texted me, you better get over there. | ||
I was like, okay, I mean, if you're gonna go there, it seems normal enough. | ||
And I remember flying out there to protest white replacement, specifically, you know, white genocide through mass migration from non-white countries, protest the removal of the Lee monument, and I thought what was going to happen is that that rally would have reunited the right wing. | ||
Because a year before that, Shortly after the Trump election, the right splintered. | ||
You know, Jeff Giza and Mike Cernovich disinvited Baked Alaska from the deplorable, and Richard Spencer did Hailgate, and the transition was botched by Reince Priebus and Johnny DeStefano in the White House, and so the right was kind of splintered after the Trump election. | ||
And 2017, Charlottesville was, I thought, was supposed to be reuniting the right wing to oppose mass migration and white genocide and the cultural genocide in the South. | ||
Cultural genocide against American heritage when they wanted to take down the Robert E. Lee monument by University of Virginia. | ||
that's why I went and what I thought was supposed to be an innocuous rally about something which was very prescient clearly at the time turned into a white nationalist terrorist rally or whatever universally condemned by everybody everybody in the right wing obviously in the media the left wing and for years that was like a huge stain on my career everybody said oh you know Nick Fuentes he's the Charlottesville marcher he's | ||
He's the, you know, he's the college-aged Nazi Charlottesville Marcher. | ||
And I remember nobody wanted to talk to me. | ||
I was radioactive because I went to Charlottesville. | ||
And that persisted for a long time, for years. | ||
And it's just sort of funny how things work out because four years ago, it was a very different political climate. | ||
It's changed rapidly, I think, largely in part because of me, and because of this show, and because of what America First did. | ||
You know, some people used to say, if only you hadn't gone to Charlottesville! | ||
I think it's the inverse. | ||
I think it was necessary that I went there, because for me, to mainstream a lot of those ideas as somebody that had been there, it was important for that to have happened in the way that it did. | ||
And what I mean to say is, four years ago, nobody wanted to talk about white genocide. | ||
You were blacklisted, you were considered radioactive, untouchable, if you talked about those things, if you talked with people that talked about those things, if you went to a rally like that. | ||
And the people that, frankly, the people that were talking about those things were not great people. | ||
You know, Richard Spencer and Chris Cantwell and Identity Europa and Vanguard America. | ||
I mean, all those groups were, and people, were just toxic. | ||
They were either probably totally infiltrated by feds or they were people that were completely dysfunctional and didn't understand what it was, you know, what was going on in the country. | ||
In any case, You know, looking back on it four years from today, like I said, especially in light of the report we read yesterday, and in light of how the conversation has changed within conservative circles, you could kind of go back and look at that as an inflection point maybe for the right wing. | ||
You know, in a lot of different ways. | ||
In terms of the focus of the right wing, but also in terms of how those issues had to be treated in order to gain mainstream acceptance. | ||
Because clearly, you know, Marching like the KKK with the tiki torch and a polo shirt yelling, Jews will not replace us. | ||
I mean, that was just straight retarded, you know? | ||
But nevertheless, persisting with the very real and factual message about white genocide, but just with a different, you know, kind of a different take on it, I think people are starting to realize there's something to that. | ||
You don't have to be a nutjob. | ||
You don't have to be some psycho, skinhead, lunatic, To just look at the facts, look at the mathematical fact of white replacement in America as a result of immigration. | ||
We went over it yesterday in the census and it was reported in all the mainstream media. | ||
America diversifying at a faster rate than ever. | ||
White population shrinks for the first time in American history. | ||
That's a headline in all mainstream media. | ||
Four years ago people said you'll not replace us and that was supposed to be the worst thing that had ever happened since the Holocaust practically. | ||
So anyway, so happy 40 year anniversary to our Charlottesville veterans! | ||
You know it's um I think it's worthwhile to look back on that and kind of analyze especially now because we're sort of in an inflection point right now for a variety of reasons and so it's important to look at how things changed and you know how things turned around from that point on and what was successful and what wasn't successful and maybe evaluate in a similar way what's going on right now. | ||
Because, you know, we're facing different challenges these days. | ||
But anyway, so that's Seville. | ||
I wasn't planning to talk too much about that but... | ||
I think it's worth it to take a little stroll down memory lane. | ||
That's when I met, of course, Baked Alaska and Millennial Matt for the first time. | ||
I met Bryden, who I don't even know if he's on social media anymore. | ||
I haven't talked to him in a long time. | ||
And I met Brittany Venti, actually, and James Alsup. | ||
And I think I was on the Weekly Sweat for the first time, so it's kind of funny looking back. | ||
Okay, anyway. | ||
Also, a few more things before we get into the show. | ||
I just want to remind you to follow me on Gab and Telegram. | ||
The links are down below. | ||
Telegram is t.me slash NickJFuentes. | ||
Gab is gab.com slash real NickJFuentes. | ||
And be sure to follow me on Gab. | ||
I'm almost at 100,000 followers. | ||
I should break 100,000 either tomorrow or over the weekend. | ||
I'm at like 99,500 on Gab, if you could believe it. | ||
And you know what's amazing about that Gab account? | ||
Is I started that account like earlier this year. | ||
So that's not even... Some people have a Gab account that they've had since the last election. | ||
Some people have a Gab account that has been inactive for like four or five years and they have a lot of followers. | ||
This Gab account that I have now, I think I've had for less than a year. | ||
I think I made it shortly after the Capitol. | ||
And I'm at 100,000 followers. | ||
And somebody pointed this out. | ||
I think this was on Twitter or Instagram or something. | ||
But somebody said, you know, Megan Squire must be tearing her hair out because they worked their fingers to the bone getting me banned from Twitter. | ||
SPLC was writing articles like every week. | ||
Trying to get me banned from Twitter. | ||
And then, they didn't even succeed. | ||
It was the ADL which got me banned. | ||
We have sources that work at Twitter, and they said it was the ADL hit piece. | ||
So how's that for irony? | ||
But, you know, SPLC was writing articles every other week. | ||
You gotta ban him from Twitter! | ||
And they sent up a hit piece even through ABC. | ||
I don't know if you remember that one. | ||
And a few other major networks. | ||
And they tried so hard, they worked their fingers to the bone, and finally the ADL came in with the big guns and got me banned. | ||
And they said, you know, let's go! | ||
We got him banned, finally! | ||
You know, they took their big victory lap. | ||
And how long did it take from me getting banned from Twitter to get 100,000 followers on Gab? | ||
And get the same engagement, if not better, on Gab than I was getting on Twitter? | ||
How funny is that? | ||
I got banned from Twitter I think on July 9th and sometime August 12 13 or 14 so just about a month I'll hit a hundred thousand on Gab and if you look at my most recent posts I get like five six thousand likes per post on Gab so I said that before I got banned on Twitter. | ||
I said, you know, they think that if they get me banned on Twitter that that's gonna be the end. | ||
And I said, they thought that about YouTube, they thought that about PayPal, Discord, Reddit, every other platform that I'm on. | ||
And they thought, surely, if we get him banned from Twitter, well, that'll be it. | ||
We got him banned from everything else, but if the Twitter goes, then this time he's gone for good. | ||
I said that's not going to happen. | ||
I mean it's just not going to happen. | ||
It's not going to work. | ||
And here we are a month later. | ||
How's that going for you? | ||
Do you see? | ||
Take a look on this page right here. | ||
Take a look on the AmericaFirst.live page. | ||
Scroll down a little bit and it'll show you how many people are subscribed. | ||
So let's see, it took me two years to get 74,000 subscribers on YouTube before I got banned. | ||
It took me one year to get to 70,000 followers on DLive before I got banned. | ||
see, it took me two years to get 74,000 subscribers on YouTube before I got banned. | ||
It took me one year to get to 70,000 followers on DLive before I got banned. | ||
It took me eight months to get to 65,000 followers on my own platform, which we made custom built all by ourselves on AmericaFirst.Live. | ||
But I'm sure, hey, but hey, you know, but keep swinging Megan Squire and all those other people. | ||
Keep trying, keep writing articles. | ||
You keep writing at the New York Times and Wall Street Journal and NPR, everybody else, and keep telling everybody about Nick Fuentes. | ||
I'm sure one of these days, one of these days, somebody's going to give a shit. | ||
I'm sure. | ||
Anyway, so we're taking a little bit of a victory lap, gab. | ||
We're about to cross a hundred thousand followers. | ||
So we are very excited for that. | ||
But all right, I think that's everything. | ||
That's Telegram. | ||
That's Gab. | ||
And okay, so with that out of the way, I want to dive into the news here. | ||
I want to talk about our first story, which is about illegal immigration. | ||
And it's just another update. | ||
And we've done a few shows about this metric in particular over the course of the year. | ||
I think I covered this back in spring and I was shocked at how high the numbers had gotten and I remember comparing it to the Trump years specifically. | ||
I remember very well the spring of 2019, the spring and summer of 2019. | ||
That may have been the only time that I would have ever said I was off of the Trump train. | ||
You know people say that I flip-flopped on Trump because of that period because as you know I was very pro-Trump In 2016, 2017, and 2018. | ||
And then in 2019 I started to support Yang. | ||
And I think at one point I said I was off the Trump train. | ||
And then in 2020 I got back on. | ||
And the reason for that was because of immigration, singularly. | ||
And I remember it very, very well. | ||
Because that was, in my opinion, one of the biggest betrayals of the Trump administration. | ||
It was the most inexcusable, unforgivable, In April, May, and June 2019, go back and look at the border crossings that were going on. | ||
Trump had promised to close the border many times, you know, shut down the government a couple of times over that, right? | ||
You remember he shut down the government, I think it was in 2018, January 2018, tried to shut down the government then after the midterms started in December before the new Congress took office in January. | ||
And he didn't make a deal happen. | ||
He said in a State of the Union address that year that he wanted more immigrants than ever. | ||
And then it got to the point in April, May, and June, he was threatening tariffs against Mexico if they didn't stop sending people across the border. | ||
But it got to the point where the border was worse than it had ever been. | ||
It was worse than it had been at any point in the 21st century. | ||
I remember I think in May or June that was the high watermark of the illegal border crossings during the Trump administration. | ||
And he was hitting numbers like 180,000 illegal border crossings in one month. | ||
And there was no end in sight for that, and I remember covering that every night and saying, look, any way that you cut it, the border is the worst it's been ever. | ||
You know, worse than under Obama, worse than under Bush, and this is supposed to be the Trump administration. | ||
You know, not only is it not supposed to be worse than Obama and Bush, it's supposed to be much better. | ||
And, you know, after we wasted two years with the Republican Congress on Obamacare and corporate tax cuts, there was just no excuse for it. | ||
Ultimately Trump turned things around, but the point I'm trying to make is I thought it couldn't get any worse back then. | ||
And I remember people at the time in 2019 were saying things like, it doesn't matter who you elect because if you elect Trump, you get open borders. | ||
If you elect a Democrat, you get open borders. | ||
But of course, things were bad for one year, maybe a couple years, and then in 2020 Trump completely turned it around. | ||
Trump was building more than one mile of border wall per day, wound up building 500 miles of border wall, Put in place to remain in Mexico policy. | ||
Ended catch and release. | ||
He created an immigration enforcement regime which was keeping illegal immigrants out. | ||
And then when the coronavirus pandemic hit, put in place an executive order that kept even legal immigrants out. | ||
Such that you saw a 92% reduction in legal immigration in the second half of 2020 compared to the previous year. | ||
92% reduction in legal immigration. | ||
Cut the refugee cap from 100,000 to like 12,000 and was only admitting about 4,000 refugees per year. | ||
So by the end of the Trump administration, immigration was under control. | ||
This is a very important point to make because the record of Trump on immigration is still contested. | ||
I still see a lot of people saying, oh Trump wasn't so good. | ||
Trump didn't keep his promises. | ||
But let the record show that although it wasn't perfect for the entirety of the Trump administration, by the time he left office, the border was closed. | ||
The border was closed, and even legal immigration was drastically reduced. | ||
It was because of the COVID pandemic, but I mean, nevertheless, it was cut by 90%, which is something to talk about. | ||
It actually does matter who you elect, because now we have Joe Biden, and it's worse than the worst months of the Trump administration, and it's the first year. | ||
Trump was in office for a couple of years, negotiated on an amnesty, was stonewalled by the Democrats, and then it got to this really bad place. | ||
And then he quickly shut it down. | ||
This is year one. | ||
I mean, we're not even one year into the Biden administration, and it is worse than at any point In the 21st century. | ||
Worse than any month, any year in the Trump administration, the Obama administration, or the Bush administration. | ||
And the latest number from July is 212,000 illegal border crossings in one month. | ||
And I'll read you the latest report. | ||
This is from The Hill. | ||
Attempted crossings at the US-Mexico border surpassed 200,000 in one month for the first time in more than two decades, according to July data released by the government on Thursday. | ||
More than 212,000 people attempted to cross the border in July, a 13% increase from June, and the largest single-month figure since 2000, when 223,000 attempted to cross the border. | ||
The swelling figures show migrants have not put off journeys due to the summer heat, as the Biden administration hoped, with many in the administration previously blaming high spring totals on seasonal migration patterns due to more favorable weather conditions. | ||
So, in other words, you should be getting fewer immigrants. | ||
Now because of the weather. | ||
And historically that is true. | ||
Historically that is the pattern. | ||
You do tend to get more illegals in spring and in the fall. | ||
And take a look at the Trump administration. | ||
I remember because I covered it every day. | ||
The caravans were coming in, in the spring and in the fall. | ||
And it only makes sense because where are the caravans coming from? | ||
They're coming from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua. | ||
And where do they go through? | ||
They go through Mexico. | ||
So if you're leaving Central America, if you live at the equator and you go through Mexico for a thousand miles on foot, you're probably going to want to go when it's cooler out. | ||
You know, you're going to want to go when it's spring or fall, not when it's summer, especially not this summer. | ||
It's like 120 degrees in Chicago these days. | ||
I can't imagine how hot it is in Mexico. | ||
So historically the pattern is that you get fewer immigrants in the summer, not more. | ||
And that's what the Biden administration was hoping, but instead we're getting more immigrants than we were when the weather conditions are actually nice. | ||
So what do you think that means? | ||
It means that we're gonna get more immigrants than ever before in the fall. | ||
We'll probably get more illegal immigrants crossing the border in the fall Then ever before in the history of the United States of America based on what we're seeing. | ||
Because it was record highs in the spring. | ||
It's record highs in the summer when it should be going down. | ||
So what do you think it's going to be in the fall when it gets cool again? | ||
That's what that means. | ||
The Department of Homeland Security secretary said, quote, "...it is critical that intending migrants understand clearly that they will be turned back if they enter the United States illegally and do not have a basis for relief under our laws." More than 95,000 people, nearly half of those who crossed the border, were swiftly expelled under Title 42, which is a Trump-era policy that allows the administration to boot immigrants without allowing them to claim asylum. | ||
While the majority are single adults, 12% of those expelled under Title 42 were families. | ||
The U.S. | ||
Customs and Border Protection said quote the vast majority of single adults and many families continue to be expelled under the CDC's title 42 authority and those who cannot be expelled under title 42 and do not have a legal basis to remain are placed in expedited removal proceedings. | ||
In 2021, CBP detained 845,307 unique individuals at the border, compared to 796,000 during the same time period in 2019. | ||
So, nearly a million unique individuals apprehended at the border. | ||
compared to 796,000 during the same time period in 2019. | ||
So nearly a million unique individuals apprehended at the border. | ||
And that's to say nothing about the people that actually get through. | ||
Keep in mind, the numbers that I'm reporting are the number of people that are apprehended at the border, meaning that are being detained, being arrested, being caught by Border Patrol, CBP, you know, or other immigration or police being caught by Border Patrol, CBP, you know, or other immigration That's not even counting the people that just get through, of which there are tens of thousands, potentially hundreds of thousands. | ||
So you've got nearly a quarter of a million people that are apprehended, and that is a percentage of the total, because there are lots of people that are not being apprehended. | ||
But keep in mind, even the people that are being apprehended, a percentage of those people too are also being released into the country. | ||
So being apprehended doesn't necessarily mean that they're not getting in. | ||
You've got people that are getting in, and you've got people that are getting apprehended. | ||
But even the people that are getting apprehended, probably half of them are getting in anyway, because we have catch and release. | ||
And I've explained this many times on the show, but this is actually the strategy of illegal immigrants. | ||
You think that they just walk across the border and get in? | ||
They try and go to a section of the border where there's no enforcement, or there's not a barrier or something, and they walk in and get picked up? | ||
A lot of illegal immigrants will... they intend to go and get caught. | ||
It's part of their plan. | ||
They deliberately seek out the destinations along the border where they know they're going to get caught. | ||
Because they know that there are loopholes in the law and they're trained by lawyers. | ||
You have non-profits and NGOs in Mexico and in Central America that tell them exactly what to say and how to exploit the law. | ||
This is well known. | ||
And illegal immigrants will arrive at checkpoints along the border at ports of entry and they will willingly surrender themselves to border patrol Because they know that Border Patrol doesn't have the facilities and doesn't have the legal regime to take them right out of the country or detain them from long enough to go through a proceeding which will allow Border Patrol to remove them from the country. | ||
So what typically winds up happening is illegal immigrants will arrive at the border, surrender at a port of entry to Border Patrol, they'll be detained in a facility, and then they'll be told, look, we can't house you, we can't keep you here, so we're gonna have to ship you out, you're gonna have to be released into the country, and then we will, you know, we'll process your asylum claim or whatever. | ||
And you'll have to come back to court when we tell you to be told if you can stay or if you have to leave. | ||
And what do you think happens from there? | ||
What do you think happens after that point? | ||
A legal immigrant shows up at the port of entry, surrenders, gets detained, says that they're an asylum seeker. | ||
They're told, well, we process your asylum claim. | ||
You've got to wait here. | ||
You can't wait here because there's not enough room. | ||
Well, go out into the country and we'll see you back here in six months. | ||
Well, they never see the people again. | ||
That's what catch and release is. | ||
So you've got 212,000 people being apprehended. | ||
You've got many more that are not apprehended. | ||
But within this category, many people are getting in anyway. | ||
So make no mistake about it. | ||
We have completely open borders. | ||
Completely open borders, which means that everybody that wants to come to America, All they have to do is just go through Mexico. | ||
And that doesn't mean necessarily walk through Mexico from a Northern Triangle country like Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua. | ||
But what's happening now, too, is a lot of people are flying into Mexico. | ||
They're flying into Central America from Africa, from Eastern Europe, from Asia. | ||
The border's open. | ||
So all they have to do is fly into an airport in Mexico and then just take an Uber or take a taxi and just drive right up to the border and walk across, which is happening. | ||
And I want to get back in the first place. | ||
My first reaction to this is this just goes to show how bad things can get. | ||
You know, and I remember when illegal immigration was really bad under Trump, people said, well, this just proves that it doesn't matter who you vote for. | ||
Because if you vote for a Republican like Trump, you will get an outcome that is worse than immigration under Obama. | ||
But of course, when all was said and done, after four years, Donald Trump had closed the border and was getting fewer border crossings than any president in the 21st century. | ||
And fewer legal immigrants, and fewer refugees, and fewer immigrants of every category than any other president since, like, Herbert Hoover, you know, in like a hundred years. | ||
That's real. | ||
When all was said and done, we're not talking about in the middle of the presidency, but he got John McEntee in the White House, in the Office of Personnel, cleaned house there. | ||
An office of personnel cleaned house everywhere else in the administration, and they started to build the wall. | ||
And the Supreme Court made some key rulings about the emergency funding for the border wall, and the border wall was constructed. | ||
And they put in place Remain in Mexico, a few other policies. | ||
And by the time the work was completed, or they were ready for their second term, the border was closed. | ||
And immigration was closed. | ||
America was totally closed. | ||
Biden gets into office, of course, because of the election fraud. | ||
And now you really understand. | ||
Now you really understand how bad things can get. | ||
When people said, oh, it makes no difference. | ||
Clearly it makes a difference because Trump closed the border and it was good. | ||
It wasn't perfect the whole time, but when all was said and done, it was closed. | ||
Biden gets into office and within eight months, it's worse than ever before in the history of the United States of America. | ||
It snapped back to where it was in 2019. | ||
It snapped back to where it was in 2001, and it's getting worse every day. | ||
And this is within the first year. | ||
So I just wanted to point out in the first place, this just goes to show that actually electing Republicans strategically is a good thing for us. | ||
And, you know, that's not something that's always 100% true. | ||
You know, obviously there are some exceptions to that. | ||
But I know that for a long time, people would always give me a hard time about this. | ||
They would say, oh, you're shilling for Republicans, you're shilling for Trump, they're no different. | ||
And of course, the difference between Trump being in office right now and Biden being in office right now is about a quarter of a million illegal immigrants every single month. | ||
That's the difference. | ||
And that's a pretty substantial difference. | ||
And that's going to have a big difference for the way of life of people that live along the border where these illegal immigrants are going to find themselves when they settle in America. | ||
It's going to make a big difference electorally in the states where these people settle and certainly as this goes on for the next four years. | ||
The difference is going to be very, very dramatic. | ||
So that's number one. | ||
People need to realize that. | ||
Then, by the way, take a look at everything else too. | ||
The economy, censorship, weaponization of the IC, foreign policy, you know, there's no shortage energy. | ||
Take a look at literally anything under this administration. | ||
Inflation, and tell me that it would have been the same or comparable under the Trump administration. | ||
That's number one. | ||
Lesson number one is, We cannot afford to abdicate from politics. | ||
This no political solution stuff is, I mean, demonstrably ridiculous. | ||
That's number one. | ||
But number two is, people have to look at this and realize that, like, if this is allowed to continue, it's over. | ||
You know? | ||
I mean, people have debated for a long time about at what point it would be impossible for Republicans to win a national election. | ||
And some people think it's in the distant future, some people think it's in the near future. | ||
But you look at these numbers, and it's really hard to imagine how we're gonna win states like Arizona, or Nevada, or New Mexico, or Colorado, or Florida, or Texas even, ever again. | ||
How do you bring in, I mean at this rate, we're talking about like 2 million illegal immigrants every year. | ||
Think about that, right? | ||
If we're at 845,000 unique individuals apprehended at the border by August, so not even a full year, that's like a little bit more than half of a year, What is four years of this policy going to look like where it's increasing as time goes on? | ||
You're going to get more immigrants in the fall than we got in the summer. | ||
And you're going to get more immigrants next spring than we had this fall. | ||
And you're going to get more immigrants next fall than we had in the next spring. | ||
And so how many people are going to be crossing the border by 2025? | ||
A million every month? | ||
I mean, like, think about that. | ||
And there's no shortage of people that want to come to America. | ||
How many people live in Africa? | ||
How many people live in Central and South America? | ||
How many people live in Asia? | ||
How many people in these countries can afford a plane ticket to Mexico to take a free trip to the United States of America? | ||
So there's really no upper limit on how many people are going to be crossing into America. | ||
That is entirely established by the federal government and their willingness to enforce the laws. | ||
And do you think that it's going to become easier to enforce the laws as time goes on with this or more difficult? | ||
Because I think that basically once the floodgates open it's pretty tough to close that back down. | ||
I don't think a democratic administration is even capable of doing what's necessary to clamp down on immigration when it gets this bad. | ||
So you're taking a look at everything that's going on in the country right now from the inflation and the destruction of the value of the dollar, the distortion of the market for real estate and the stock market and everything else, commodities, | ||
You look at the weaponization of the intelligence community, and the FBI, and the Department of Justice, and the vaccine passports, and you look at a quarter of a million illegals pouring into America every single month, and you look at the murder rate surging, and carjacking rate surging, and violent crime surging in every major city, And, you know, the writing's basically on the wall. | ||
It's pretty clear here. | ||
You know, there may not be imminently a solution that's going to fix all of America. | ||
So people are going to have to start to figure out how you individually and for your family are going to protect and take care of yourself because it's getting so bad and there's really no end in sight anytime soon. | ||
It's very important to keep that in mind, you know. | ||
It doesn't mean we're out of the fight. | ||
It doesn't mean that we're not going to be fighting every day and we're not going to be trying to come up with new ideas and new solutions. | ||
But we're at the point now where things are accelerating so quickly and it's getting so bad in such a short amount of time that really the best thing that anyone can do right now is just get out of danger. | ||
And if you don't feel like you're in danger right now, you should. | ||
I don't know how you could look around at the country and not feel like you're in imminent danger, because this is a country that's basically in free fall. | ||
This is like, you know, fire in a nightclub, you know what I mean? | ||
And I've used that analogy before on the show. | ||
Somebody made a good thread about this years ago on Twitter. | ||
They talked about how the situation in the country was similar to the station nightclub fire, or any nightclub fire for that matter. | ||
And they talk about how when you have, like in a nightclub, it's an analogy for the country, when you have a lot of people in a nightclub and people start to see smoke and smell smoke, People aren't going to start sprinting for the door, because they look around and they see that nobody else is really too concerned, and they say, well, there must not be anything to be too concerned about. | ||
And there's more smoke, and there's more fire, and more things start to happen, and by the time people realize that there's a problem, it's already too late. | ||
And by the time people realize that the whole place is going up in flames, and everybody makes a mad dash for the door, well, uh, there's no egress. | ||
You know, nobody's getting out, the door's jam-packed, everybody trying to move at once for the exits, means that nobody's getting out of there, and then the whole place burns down and everyone dies inside. | ||
That's what happens in a nightclub fire, and that's basically what's happening in our country. | ||
And so, we have to be the smart people that look at the smoke and ignore the fact that people are not noticing it. | ||
We have to see the smoke, see the signs, which are very obvious. | ||
I mean, it is obvious. | ||
It is there. | ||
You see it. | ||
You know it's a problem. | ||
You gotta trust your gut on this one, and you gotta calmly and quietly make your way towards the exit and leave. | ||
And don't pay attention to anybody else, because everybody else who's ignoring it, I mean, they're going down with the ship, you know what I mean? | ||
Because it doesn't really take a political scientist to look at everything that's going on in America and say, this is not going to last very much longer in its present form. | ||
And that doesn't mean that the country necessarily is going to have some kind of biblical collapse. | ||
It doesn't mean that America's never going to come back. | ||
But something ominous is on the horizon. | ||
We don't have to know how big it is. | ||
We don't have to know what it's going to be, the nature of it. | ||
But everybody can sense it. | ||
Everything is pointing in that direction. | ||
Everything is, any metric that you could look at in the society is just like a big frowny face. | ||
It's a big downward pointing red arrow. | ||
It's a red X. | ||
It is red alert. | ||
It's danger. | ||
You know, it is a flashing siren. | ||
And if you can't see that, I mean, you're not paying attention. | ||
and And if you're not doing something about it, I don't know what to tell you, but I see what's going on with illegal immigration. | ||
And, you know, the question of course is, you know, what's the limiting principle here? | ||
There isn't one. | ||
How is this going to get better? | ||
I don't think that it is. | ||
I mean, ask yourself that. | ||
How is this going to get better? | ||
The number of people getting apprehended at the border every single day and every single month just keeps going up. | ||
And what is going to prevent that trend from continuing? | ||
What's going to arrest that trend? | ||
What's going to reverse that trend? | ||
Who's going to do that? | ||
What's going to do that? | ||
Is the governor of Texas going to do that? | ||
Is the Biden administration going to do that? | ||
Who's going to do that and how? | ||
And when is that going to happen? | ||
I don't think that it will. | ||
And so the question becomes what happens when you've got millions of people pouring into America from the third world every single day and every single month. | ||
And you've got hundreds of thousands or millions of refugees pouring into the country and millions of legal immigrants pouring into the country. | ||
Where are they going to go? | ||
Where are they going to live? | ||
Take a look at the price of homes these days. | ||
Where are they going to live? | ||
Are they building a lot of new housing in Los Angeles? | ||
Are they building a lot of new housing in the major cities? | ||
Where are these people going to go? | ||
What are they going to do? | ||
What jobs are they going to work? | ||
This is a very serious problem. | ||
And with everything else that's going on, I mean, this is just one aspect of it. | ||
And so I look at this and at a certain point it's like, who's even keeping count anymore? | ||
And that's a very scary thing. | ||
It's a downright shocking number. | ||
It's a shocking situation. | ||
It's been this bad before, but when it was this bad 20 years ago, we still had a country. | ||
You know, when it was this bad under Bush or Clinton, there was some consensus still that we could have a border and that we should enforce border laws, you know, because they're comparing this to 20 years ago when it was slightly higher. | ||
But when it was slightly higher, what were the demographics of America? | ||
And what was the political climate? | ||
And who was in office? | ||
And I mean, it was a completely different circumstance. | ||
So I look at it, it's like, you know, you just got to throw your hands up and say, who's even keeping count anymore about any of this stuff? | ||
There's more illegals, more inflation. | ||
It's just time to move to higher ground. - Yeah. | ||
Like Steve Franson has been saying, it's time to just move to higher ground because this whole country is being flooded with shit. | ||
This whole country is sinking. | ||
And listen, I don't mean to black pill you. | ||
I think that actually in some ways, this is necessary. | ||
We're going to have to go through a very difficult time to get on the other side of this. | ||
I just, I think that's just, um, that's a necessary thing at this point. | ||
So it's not to say that there's no light at the end of the tunnel. | ||
It's not to say that things are over because I think this is a necessary part of it. | ||
And I think everyone kind of understands that on some intuitive level. | ||
But the message of the show is to say, look, you just got to take care of yourself. | ||
You got to recognize how bad things are getting, you know, and don't cry about it. | ||
Don't, you know. | ||
Don't get emotional about it. | ||
We don't have to worry so much about the long term and what's the future of civilization. | ||
What you got to worry about now is setting yourself up where, you know, in the event that something catastrophic happens, you're going to be okay. | ||
And, you know, we'll let the chips fall where they will and we'll be there to pick up the pieces. | ||
If we're resilient and if we're able to survive and stick around after a very difficult time, We'll be able to decide the future and create our own destiny in America, which is something that we should all be looking forward to, but for right now, it's pretty scary. | ||
I don't know how you can look at this and say, this is okay. | ||
And I don't know why this is not a bigger story, by the way, because I don't know that I saw this really at all on social media, and I don't see this being covered in the news media at all. | ||
This has been going on every month since the beginning of the year. | ||
The border crisis hasn't stopped, but people have stopped talking about it. | ||
And that's not normal. | ||
So anyway, so that's the border. | ||
Pretty messed up. | ||
And, um... I don't know how people could think that this is okay. | ||
How could people think that this is acceptable? | ||
You know, we're the only ones that have a serious answer to all of this, which is shut down all the immigration. | ||
How could a left-wing person, or even a... I mean, maybe there's not a lot of right-wing people who agree with this, but how could a left-wing person look at this and say that this isn't a problem? | ||
How can anybody look at this and say that this is sustainable? | ||
This is something that is, uh, that we can handle this going on for four years and longer and beyond. | ||
How could you look at this and say, like, this isn't detrimental to a country to not have a border, not have a southern border? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Uh, but it is detrimental. | ||
So anyway, we're going to move on. | ||
I want to talk about Afghanistan. | ||
I know you guys don't really like that so much, but it's important and it's back in the news again, which is exciting to see. | ||
In case you missed it, the Biden administration is continuing the drawdown of American troops in Afghanistan, and this was supposed to be completed later this month, but the problem is that as American troops have left Afghanistan, the Taliban is basically taking over the entire country. | ||
And if you don't know, the American government made a peace deal with the Taliban. | ||
The Taliban didn't make a peace deal with the Afghan government. | ||
And so where America leaves behind this Afghan puppet regime that they established, the Taliban is at war with the Afghan government and basically taking province after province and city after city from them. | ||
And it's gotten so bad today that the Taliban took the second largest city in the country. | ||
And now, according to a new estimate from the U.S. government, they're on track to take over the capital of Afghanistan by next month. | ||
Within two months, they say. | ||
So I'll read this report to you. | ||
It says, quote, quote, | ||
The Taliban could isolate Kabul within 30 days and take it over in 90, according to U.S. | ||
intelligence assessments which were made this week. | ||
Ned Price, a State Department spokesperson said, quote, we've been evaluating the security situation every day to determine how best to keep those serving at the embassy safe. | ||
We expect to draw down to a core diplomatic presence in Afghanistan in the coming weeks, adding that the embassy was not closed. | ||
A person familiar with the matter said there were no guarantees the embassy would remain open even. | ||
A decision to stay in the country might have required the commitment of many more U.S. troops to fight a civil war, according to a source from the State Department, as the U.S. looks to end its 20-year presence prompted by the 9-11 attacks. | ||
Still, the decision casts new doubt on Washington's strategy to influence Afghanistan's peace process by maintaining aid in diplomatic personnel even after the troop withdrawal. | ||
Administration officials did not adjust the timetable even as Biden ordered additional troops to Afghanistan to help to secure the exit of civilian personnel. | ||
The first deployment to the airport in Kabul is expected within 24 to 48 hours. | ||
About 3,500 additional troops would be sent to the region from Fort Bragg in North Carolina to be on standby if the situation worsened, as well as 1,000 personnel to help process Afghans going through a special immigration process. | ||
So, the US government pulls their troops out of Afghanistan, of which there were like 7,000, okay? | ||
So keep that in mind. | ||
Trump gets into office in 2016, there's about 7,000 troops in Afghanistan. | ||
He doubles it to 14,000, he draws it back down to 7,000 before he leaves office. | ||
The Biden administration continues the withdrawal of troops, and we're supposed to pull all the troops out of Afghanistan by this month. | ||
Now because the Taliban is taking over the entire country and taking over every major city and every major province and they're going to take over the whole country imminently, the Biden administration is sending 3,500 troops back and they've got 3,500 additional troops on standby and another 1,000 to aid with the immigration of Afghan interpreters and other diplomatic personnel. | ||
And basically I said this at the beginning of the year. | ||
I said, we're never leaving Afghanistan. | ||
And I remember when the Biden administration came out early on in the first months after the inauguration and they said, we're going to finally end the war in Afghanistan. | ||
I knew it was too good to be true. | ||
I knew that that wasn't going to happen. | ||
And here we are seven months later. | ||
And it's the same narrative that we saw with ISIS and Iraq and Syria, more or less. | ||
The timely withdrawal of American troops, finally after 20 years, interrupted by the rise of an Islamist group taking over the country. | ||
So that means we have to send more troops, 3,000 more troops to, according to the administration, secure the American embassy. | ||
And another 3,000 troops on standby, and another 1,000 troops on standby for those troops. | ||
And probably before Christmas you're going to have 7,000-10,000 troops in Afghanistan. | ||
You're going to have the same amount of personnel in the country that you did at the beginning of the year. | ||
Before Biden was even in office. | ||
Maybe even before Trump even lost the election. | ||
You know what I mean by that. | ||
Before even the election of 2020. | ||
And so this withdrawal initiated by Trump and supposed to be completed by Biden will be totally reversed before the end of the year, is what I'm saying. | ||
And, you know, it's so funny because they say this in the media. | ||
They say, well, they're only sending 3,000 troops back to secure the embassy. | ||
And people uncritically are just like, yep, yeah, that makes sense. | ||
Well, they got to secure the embassy. | ||
Well, why exactly? | ||
Why would they need 3,000 troops there? | ||
Look, the Taliban is going to take over the country. | ||
That's just a given. | ||
They've taken over most of the country. | ||
They may take over the capital. | ||
If not, there'll be a civil war. | ||
Maybe the Taliban will win. | ||
But why would America need an embassy in Kabul? | ||
If Afghanistan is controlled by the Taliban, or Kabul is controlled by a fledgling Afghan government in a civil war with the Taliban, why would we need an embassy there? | ||
Why would we need a diplomatic corps there? | ||
It's in the middle of nowhere. | ||
Nothing is going on there. | ||
It's a strategically important region, but why do you need a diplomat living there? | ||
Why do you need an ambassador living there? | ||
It's important because trade goes through there and there's important highways and it's situated between Pakistan, Iran, and China and Central Asia. | ||
But why would you need an ambassador there? | ||
And why would you need 3,000 up to 8,000 troops there to protect the embassy in Kabul, a city which is either going to be completely surrounded and sieged or controlled by the Taliban? | ||
It doesn't make any sense. | ||
It doesn't make any sense. | ||
And so really, what are we doing there? | ||
Well, the American government just doesn't want to give up Kabul. | ||
They just don't want to give up on Afghanistan. | ||
And so ultimately, what are we doing there? | ||
Are we supposed to just hang on forever? | ||
Because it's like this. | ||
We leave and the Taliban takes over and it just is what it is. | ||
You can't have an embassy and we're not going to control Kabul. | ||
And Afghanistan will be influenced by Pakistan or China or Iran or local tribal forces. | ||
But that's just the way it's going to be. | ||
We can't control what happens in Afghanistan if we're no longer there. | ||
So either we leave and Afghanistan is swallowed up by the Taliban and becomes under the sphere of influence of other regional forces, or we literally just have to be there forever. | ||
And for what reason? | ||
Otherwise, this 3,000 strong force to secure our embassy, to keep our ambassadors there, they will be there until the end of time, constantly holding back the Taliban, constantly holding off Kabul. | ||
And for what purpose? | ||
Why would we do that? | ||
Does that make any sense that we would be there forever? | ||
What is so worthwhile in Afghanistan that we're doing that we need to be there forever? | ||
That we need to have a permanent military force stationed in a hostile country, surrounded by tribal forces who would take over the country if we left for one second? | ||
What's the purpose? | ||
What are we really doing here? | ||
And obviously that's what they're going with, you know? | ||
They said they're pulling out. | ||
The inevitable conclusion was that the Taliban would take over. | ||
This should surprise nobody. | ||
And now as the Taliban is, albeit more quickly than expected, about to take over the entire country, they're like, nah, actually we're not ready to give it up. | ||
We're sending another 7,000 troops, which is what it was five years ago. | ||
We're gonna be there forever. | ||
And I said earlier in the show, this is the same kind of rhetoric that we saw about ISIS back in 2011. | ||
Obama pulled out, largely, the American forces from Iraq, and, you know, not two years later you saw the rise of ISIS. | ||
and ISIS was marauding across the Middle East, and sponsoring lone wolf terrorists in America, and declared a new caliphate, and all this. | ||
And so that demanded that America return, because the Iraqi government fell, and all the American military supply fell to Islamists, and they created their own country, and it was worse than anything else in the Middle East ever, and so we had to go back there and hang out for another decade. | ||
And now they're saying the same thing about Afghanistan. | ||
Taliban forces took over Kandahar. | ||
Who cares? | ||
Why do we care? | ||
That is a country that we used to occupy, and now we shouldn't be occupying anymore. | ||
So why are we getting the play-by-play from the media about Afghani provinces and cities that are falling to the Taliban? | ||
Do we care about what's happening in Kyrgyzstan or Tajikistan or Kazakhstan or Uzbekistan? | ||
Why do we care what's going on in Afghanistan? | ||
It's because they're ceding and they're setting up for another reason to stay in the Middle East, just like they were in Iraq. | ||
And even, I saw there was one report from BBC which was really, really What's the word? | ||
Really similar to what we saw 10 years ago. | ||
They were talking about the brutal Sharia law implemented by the Taliban in the provinces they took over. | ||
Reminiscent. | ||
That's what I was looking for. | ||
Very reminiscent of what they said about ISIS. | ||
In the ISIS cities, they're enslaving people and they're chopping off heads and so on. | ||
And I'm sure they're going to say the same thing about the Taliban. | ||
In Taliban-occupied Afghanistan, they've implemented Sharia law and women can't vote and they're cutting people's hands off. | ||
And who cares? | ||
They're going to do that no matter... I mean, they're going to do that. | ||
If they're in Afghanistan, they're going to do that. | ||
Are we going to be there forever to prevent the Taliban From implementing Sharia law? | ||
Is that a national security interest for our people? | ||
So anyway, I know you understand a lot of this, but the point is to say that we're not leaving this country ever. | ||
The American government, the American military, the American regime, they're not ready to let go. | ||
We're gonna be there forever. | ||
I will say though, and I said this earlier kind of in a joking way, I am rooting for the Taliban. | ||
And there is something to be said about the fact that the American military was in that country for 20 years. | ||
Think about this. | ||
This might be a little bit of a white pill. | ||
The American military was in Afghanistan for 20 years. | ||
Spent a trillion dollars trying to set up a provisional government there. | ||
And how much was invested in not just military personnel, but building gas stations and schools and implementing democracy and all this kind of stuff. | ||
20 years. | ||
1 trillion dollars. | ||
Do you know how much that is? | ||
Do you know how much a trillion dollars is on a country like that? | ||
Do you know how long 20 years is? | ||
And the whole country collapsed in six months. | ||
We stopped holding it in place for like one second and it's like as soon as we leave the Taliban is in. | ||
The second that the last American troop steps foot on the plane to leave Kabul, the Taliban takes over. | ||
And there's definitely a white pill in this that if the American government spent a trillion dollars in 20 years in Afghanistan against An enemy which was far less powerful, far smaller and far fewer in number. | ||
The Taliban has like 60,000 soldiers and they just have like recovered weapons and I'm sure some weapons are trafficked to them. | ||
But you know what I'm saying? | ||
Against a far weaker opponent and the Taliban readily overpowers what the American government set up. | ||
They were basically overpowering the American government while they were still there. | ||
This is in the desert, these are sand people with rags living in caves, with largely provisional weapons, with not a lot of people, going up against the American military, a trillion dollars, twenty years, logistics from the Pentagon and so on. | ||
And so I'm partially rooting for the Taliban because I hate the American Empire, but also because there's a lesson in there. | ||
I don't want to necessarily spell it out for you 100%, but there's kind of a lesson in there. | ||
The American military falling and failing and retreating all over the world. | ||
It's a sign that maybe our adversary isn't as powerful as we thought, our true adversary. | ||
Because as we see all these war on terror institutions and different mechanisms turn inwardly in America against right-wing dissidents, it's kind of nice to know, hey, if they couldn't crush the Taliban, hopefully they if they couldn't crush the Taliban, hopefully they won't be able to crush QAnon. | ||
If the American military can't destroy the Taliban, then they sure as hell are not going to destroy QAnon. | ||
They sure as hell are not going to destroy the Proud Boy Vanguard, the Proud Boy Revolutionary Vanguard Corps. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
I disavow, you know, I'm being a little bit tongue-in-cheek there, but there is kind of a lesson in there. | ||
So, anyway, that's Afghanistan. | ||
We'll see what happens. | ||
We're going to be monitoring it on the show, and I want to see kind of where all of this goes and what happens, but I'm sure we'll see a lot more of this in the coming weeks and months, but, you know, for now, all you need to know is Taliban's taking over Afghanistan. | ||
America's not going to let them. | ||
We are literally never leaving that country. | ||
It's just not going to happen. | ||
And it's a little bit funny. | ||
Our country's totally garbage, but we're over there in Kabul making sure the Taliban doesn't take over. | ||
It's kind of funny because it's like city after city in America is falling to illegal immigrants and invaders on the southern border and we're like, no, but Kabul cannot fall! | ||
Kabul! | ||
Washington D.C. | ||
fell like a hundred years ago and we're worried about Kabul? | ||
We're worried about Baghdad and Damascus? | ||
Anyway, I know that's not groundbreaking. | ||
The anti-war stuff is a little bit boring because it's just so... I don't think anybody is like pro-war. | ||
There are very few true neocon, you know, hawks anymore. | ||
So I guess that's kind of difficult to be contrarian. | ||
The only way to be contrarian is to say edgy things like, you know, we're rooting for the Taliban. | ||
But other than that, it's kind of played out. | ||
unidentified
|
Focus on America, not Kabul! | |
What business do we have there? | ||
Yeah, I mean, we've heard it all before. | ||
But anyway... We're gonna move on. | ||
We're gonna read our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all of this. | ||
I gotta know. | ||
Now it's your turn. | ||
What's your take on the Taliban? | ||
I think they're very interesting. | ||
I think their project is... I think what they're doing there is fascinating and kind of worthwhile to study closely. | ||
Grubbs says, seeing some white people celebrating the census demographics is so frustrating. | ||
They really are like cattle. | ||
The We Can Replace Them article will always be relevant. | ||
Yeah, never forget. | ||
You know, everything that they said about Charlottesville, they talked about how evil it was that the Charlottesville rally goers said, Jews will not replace us. | ||
And then you get a Jewish author in the New York Times writes an article and the headline is, We Will Replace You. | ||
So at what point do you say that as bad as what some people say sounds, it's true? | ||
unidentified
|
You know what I mean by that? | |
Because everybody heard that and they said, oh, you know, that doesn't sound so good. | ||
That sounds prejudiced. | ||
That sounds like an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory or something. | ||
The Charlottesville marchers said, Jews will not replace us. | ||
Okay. | ||
But then, you know, but look, but then, Not a year later, you get a Jewish author in the New York Times writing an article in the headline in direct response to that that says, yes, we will replace you. | ||
And the whole article is talking about how white people are being replaced through immigration by non-white people, and it's being cheered on by the institutions in America. | ||
So, you know, at what point do you say, yeah, I understand how it sounds, I understand, you know, why people might be upset or offended by that, but... I mean, isn't that literally what's going on? | ||
I mean, they come out and admit it. | ||
They're like, yeah, well, we are replacing you. | ||
But don't say that we are, because that's a conspiracy theory. | ||
That's hateful. | ||
Well, is it happening, or is it not? | ||
I mean, are you a liar, or am I imagining that that happened, or what? | ||
So yeah, it is relevant. | ||
I'm going to take a sip here. | ||
unidentified
|
It's really hot in here today. | |
I don't know what's going on. | ||
I'm getting really sick of this heat wave in Chicago. | ||
I don't know if you guys live... Is this a national phenomenon? | ||
Is this local? | ||
But it's been like a hundred degrees every single day in Chicago for the past two weeks. | ||
And it's been brutal. | ||
I don't even leave the house anymore. | ||
It's just too hot. | ||
Today was nicer, actually. | ||
It was overcast. | ||
So I was driving around. | ||
But all week, it's like 100 degrees. | ||
It's humid. | ||
It's 100 degrees in here. | ||
I have my shoes on, though. | ||
Maybe that's why. | ||
But I'm, like, sweating over here. | ||
British Chad, here we go, says, Free my homie, Cod Comedy. | ||
TJ, he didn't do nothing. | ||
All he did was bully a few blacks and fags on Omegle. | ||
Just shut the fuck up. | ||
You do you got to just stop watching the show. | ||
This isn't for you You got to watch the Ralph or tour or TRS or something else. | ||
This show is not for you, man It just isn't I mean, I hate to say this but just well, please Please it's not even funny anymore. | ||
It's just bad Spinefish says I can't wait for tomorrow's episode of Good Morning, Groyper. | ||
It's gonna be so cozy Yeah, well don't count on it Because I don't think I'm going to, I think I'm not going to do a Good Morning Groper anymore. | ||
It's just, it's too much. | ||
It's too much for me. | ||
There's not enough content for America First, let alone for Good Morning Groper. | ||
There's not enough content to do five nights a week, let alone five nights a week plus a weekly morning show. | ||
So I think we'll have to formulate something else. | ||
Charles Darcy says, Hey Nick, love what you're doing, man. | ||
I have a suggestion. | ||
Could you put your streams up on Odyssey in addition to your platforms? | ||
It's censorship-free, unlike as it is built. | ||
It's censorship-free, unlike as it is built on blockchain. | ||
Unlike what? | ||
Plus add Ethereum and mineral options to your store. | ||
God bless. | ||
So, thanks for the advice. | ||
Hidecaps says, if you were going on the Joe Rogan Experience or a similar large platform for a three-on-three bloodsport style debate, who would you choose as your two teammates? | ||
Would love to see Beatty and Anglin get a turn at Vosh. | ||
Yeah, that sounds like a perfect combination. | ||
That makes a lot of sense. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Who would be the 3v3? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know, dude. | |
Yeah, Darren Beatty would be a good debate partner. | ||
Who else? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Maybe Vince James? | ||
And against Vosh, Charlie Kirk, and... Who would be the third one? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'd have to think about that. | ||
Grubb says, What's the deal with these right-wing group chat people? | ||
Don't know what else to call them. | ||
They've been stirring shit about you for a while now. | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
I don't know what a right-wing group chat person is. | ||
Mr. Sneeds says Breonna Taylor's BF thought she could use Breonna's fat diabetic belly to absorb the bullets from the police officers during a drug raid. | ||
She was an expert at driving around dead bodies. | ||
When did Breonna Taylor die? | ||
Like 50 years ago? | ||
Will you get some? | ||
You know, I don't know, man. | ||
The Super Chats are just instantly, like, complete shit tonight. | ||
I'm already mad. | ||
I'm already mad. | ||
I'm not, I'm not even like in a kidding mood. | ||
It's a hundred fucking degrees in here and they're just instantly shit. | ||
They're just instantly horrible garbage. | ||
I'm not even in a, I'm not even in a funny mood. | ||
I'm just pissed off now. | ||
I'm ready to call it. | ||
You know what? | ||
I'm ready to pull the plug right now. | ||
Breonna Taylor joke. | ||
What are you a fucking retard? | ||
That was a year and a half ago, man. | ||
There's nothing I hate more than people that, uh, y'know, they just fall back on the same kind of, like, edgelord content. | ||
Like, make a Trayvon Martin joke while you're at it. | ||
Make a 9-11 joke, y'know? | ||
Cause it's one thing to just throw out things that everybody knows is edgy, y'know, like, ho-ho, where, oh, where do you, how do you fit a hundred Jews in a car? | ||
A hundred in an ounce tray? | ||
Y'know what I mean? | ||
Like, yeah, okay, everyone heard that one in middle school, y'know? | ||
What do you tell a woman with two black eyes? | ||
You already told her twice! | ||
Yeah, we've all, we've all heard that one. | ||
Oh, haha, you know, beating women, you know, 9-11, whatever. | ||
It's one thing to do, fall back on like the tropes that everybody knows, old reliable ones that really aren't even edgy. | ||
The only reason they're edgy is because everyone knows they're edgy. | ||
It's another thing to make kind of like a pointed, something that's really pointed, you know? | ||
Something really timely, something really topical, and something really pointed and kind of fresh. | ||
But just falling back on George Floyd's a gorilla! | ||
Okay, yeah, that's hilarious, dude. | ||
I remember the first 10 million times somebody made a joke like that over the course of the last 18 months. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
Breonna Taylor, really? | ||
unidentified
|
Breonna Taylor's fat and diabetic! | |
No, you can't say that! | ||
Not Breonna! | ||
You're calling her fat? | ||
Shut the fuck up, dude. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
I hate you. | ||
I just do. | ||
I hate you and I hate British Chad and the other guy and I think there was one other one too. | ||
Mr. Pillow Groy versus DocuSeries1 was top-notch! | ||
Wondering if you've considered keeping some of your funds in Monero? | ||
Unlike Bitcoin, Monero is private and fungible. | ||
Oh, I've never heard of that. | ||
Your coins can't be tainted and your wallet can't be blacklisted by exchanges. | ||
Yeah, thanks for the advice. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Manero, I'll have to check that out. | ||
Wooza says, is Boss Baby Incel related to Who's Boss? | ||
I don't know what Boss Baby Incel is, but Who's Boss? | ||
That's your account, right? | ||
I love that. | ||
Boss Baby's one of my favorite movies. | ||
So, I'm a big enjoyer of Who's Boss. | ||
Good to see you on stream, though, earlier. | ||
Mac Man says, Taliban? | ||
More like Taliban-based. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Yeah, we love the Taliban. | ||
Who's your daddy says, how are AF relations with APU? | ||
Are we frenemies now or something? | ||
I'll leave it up to you King. | ||
Oh, you will? | ||
Thanks. | ||
I don't have time to sort this stuff out. | ||
Not that you have much free time either. | ||
Yeah, I know you must be real busy. | ||
No, we're friendly with APU. | ||
But we're kind of doing our own thing. | ||
You know, they're doing their thing. | ||
We're doing our thing. | ||
I'm friendly with all those guys. | ||
I'm friendly with Kai. | ||
I'm friendly with Vince and John Doyle and all of them. | ||
But they're kind of I mean clearly taking a little bit of a different path and it's okay It is what it is. | ||
I think people kind of understand that But there's no animosity. | ||
There's a little bit of a rivalry. | ||
I mean, there's some friendly ribbing that goes on I think but but no, I have nothing against them really Hoboken slob says Oh 70 you and all my fellow Charlottesville vets. | ||
We are indeed very fine people. | ||
That's right. | ||
You know, I remember Back in Charlottesville, I remember So they dispersed the rally at Lee Park. | ||
That was supposed to be the big demonstration. | ||
Everybody was supposed to be at Lee Park where the Robert E. Lee statue was at like 11 a.m. | ||
I think. | ||
And actually by the time I landed in the city and got to my hotel and left the hotel it was like 11 a.m. | ||
I remember I walked outside my hotel with my friend I walked with a few other people down to Lee Park and by the time we got there the whole thing had already been dispersed there was so much violence between Antifa and the Charlottesville people that the thing had been dispersed And so the police had formed like a blockade and wouldn't let us go to Lee Park, and they diverted us to a crowd of people that were marching from Lee Park to somewhere else. | ||
So I never even got to Lee Park. | ||
I was known as a Charlottesville guy for years, and I didn't go to the Tiki Torch thing, and I didn't even go to Lee Park. | ||
I'll tell you my involvement. | ||
Landed in Charlottesville, got to my hotel, walked out of the front door of my hotel, caught up with some other people going towards Lee Park, and by the time we got even close to Lee Park, it was already shut down. | ||
Okay? | ||
So then, we got caught up with this big group of rally goers who were leaving Lee Park, and they said that they were gonna regroup at McIntyre Park, which was nearby. | ||
And so I just kind of got caught up with some other people marching to McIntyre Park, and we eventually got there. | ||
And so we marched over there, we got to McIntyre Park, and people were sitting down in the shade under the trees because it was really hot out. | ||
And everybody was just kind of confused, didn't know what the next move is. | ||
And I linked up at that point with James Alsop, Millennial Matt, Brittany Venti, Bryden, a few other people. | ||
And at that point, we heard a rumor that the National Guard was going to come in and start arresting people. | ||
So, we left the park, got in an Uber, or I think we walked actually, walked back to our hotel, and sat down in the hotel lobby. | ||
That was my experience at Charlottesville. | ||
That, I was known for that experience as the Charlottesville Marcher because, because of that, okay? | ||
And so we got back to the hotel lobby, And, um, I remember we're hanging out in the hotel room. | ||
We were like, oh my gosh, that was crazy. | ||
It was at that point that we heard about Heather Heyer. | ||
I remember my mom called me like five times and she's like, did you, are you okay? | ||
Did you see what happened on TV? | ||
Someone got hit by a car. | ||
And I was like, no, what the fuck are you talking about? | ||
And, um, I wasn't even getting reception cause there was a lot of people. | ||
I got back to the hotel and we saw on the news, you know, Heather Heyer got hit with the car. | ||
And I was like, oh shit! | ||
So we were watching the coverage of it on TV. | ||
We went down to the hotel lobby and we saw the Trump press conference. | ||
And I'll never forget, we were all waiting. | ||
We turned up the lobby TV in the hotel playing the Trump press conference. | ||
We were all eager to see what was Trump going to say because he was addressing it. | ||
He was addressing us! | ||
We were there! | ||
And, uh, he said something initially to the effect of, like, he was disavowing it, kind of. | ||
We were like, boo, you suck! | ||
And then, when he said that very fine people thing, we were there in the lobby. | ||
We were cheering, screaming at the top of our lungs, let's go! | ||
I mean, we were saying let's go at that time. | ||
People weren't saying that back then, but... | ||
We were like, yo, this is fucking bass, this is awesome, when he said, on both sides, there were fine people on both sides. | ||
And we went crazy in the lobby. | ||
We said, dude, we did it, he didn't disavow us. | ||
I'll never forget when he said that, when he said the very fine people thing. | ||
You know, for everybody else, everybody else remembers that as the moment when Trump didn't disavow white nationalism, right, or whatever. | ||
But I remember being in the lobby and it was like, he didn't disavow us. | ||
Because I think there were two statements. | ||
I think there was one press conference in like, after some speech, and then he did one, I think it was in like, maybe it was Trump Tower, I'm not sure. | ||
But I remember there were two press conferences, I believe. | ||
And it was a second one where he came back out and addressed it again and he said there were very fine people on both sides. | ||
Maybe it was the other way around. | ||
I don't exactly remember because it was so long ago, but I remember when he said that we went crazy. | ||
And then, Baked Alaska got dropped off at our hotel to regroup with us. | ||
I had never met him before, but he had been hanging out with James Alsup and that crew as he was meeting them at our hotel. | ||
So he got dropped off and he went through the sliding doors. | ||
And his eyes were totally messed up. | ||
They were all red and covered in shit. | ||
Because he got bear maced. | ||
You remember? | ||
Somebody ran up to him, ripped his glasses off and sprayed some kind of... | ||
They said it wasn't bear maced. | ||
It was worse. | ||
It was some kind of chemical compound. | ||
They sprayed something right in his eyes, point blank. | ||
So he went to the hospital and they said, like, you may never see again. | ||
It was a big deal. | ||
So he... | ||
So he gets dropped off at the hotel and comes kind of like... | ||
Come kind of like wandering inside with his eyes all bandaged up. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I felt so bad for him at the time. | ||
We were like, babe, do you need anything? | ||
We're gonna take care of you. | ||
Hi, I'm Nick Fuentes. | ||
Great to meet you. | ||
But it was a little bit funny because he comes in, he comes in literally like, like with his hands out trying to feel his way around with like bandages on his eyes. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll never forget. | |
And we took him up to the hotel and we were taking care of him, you know. | ||
I think it was putting ice on it or something, I forget, but we're figuring out what's the next move. | ||
And then, they all left and went to an after party and didn't invite me. | ||
Don't you love that move? | ||
then James Alsop and Brittany Venti and Brydon and Matt and all those people, they all left, went to an after party, and didn't invite me. | ||
And so I was just alone in my hotel room, and I got on the weekly sweat with Beardson, Paul Town, Sean, and TV Qua. | ||
I didn't even know Sean's name at that time. | ||
I had seen him before, but I didn't even know who he was. | ||
Anyway, so that was, and then I flew back the next morning. | ||
That was my day. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Baked Alaska. | ||
Gotta love them. | ||
Yeah, you can't. | ||
You're like, what? | ||
Wandering in like this. | ||
That's back when he was still on Twitter. | ||
And then the next time that I saw Baked Alaska, I flew out to LA in November of 2017 and he offered to let me stay at his... he had a condo in Studio City and he let me stay there for a night or something. | ||
And that was the day that he got banned on Twitter. | ||
So I'm kind of like a bad luck charm because the first time I met him, he almost lost his eyesight. | ||
And then the second time I met him, he got banned from Twitter. | ||
Literally that day. | ||
Because I remember I went over to his place and he was showing me around. | ||
Oh, this is my pool in this condo complex. | ||
And these are my cats. | ||
And this is my air diffuser. | ||
And here's my streaming setup. | ||
and he was telling me, it's so fucking funny to think back about this stuff. | ||
He was showing me Ice Poseidon. | ||
He was like, this is Ice Poseidon. | ||
I'm gonna do IRL content, bro, and, you know, Ice Poseidon does like this, and I'm gonna do stuff like that, he's funny, he does stuff like that. | ||
and literally doing this like arm motion I guess and he's like I'm gonna be like Ice Poseidon I'm gonna I'm gonna do this thing that he does and I'm gonna IRL stream bro and I remember looking that and thinking like who's gonna watch that who's gonna watch IRL content I've never even heard of Ice Poseidon but he was showing me a streaming setup and he had a Nintendo switch which was new at the time we were playing Mario Odyssey and | ||
So then we go to bed, you know, and I'm dying because I'm sleeping on the couch and the guy lives with two cats. | ||
So the couch is covered in cat hair and the cats are all over. | ||
And so I thought I was not going to wake up because I remember going to sleep and like wheezing, being like, you know, cause I was so, I was so allergic, but eventually I fell asleep. | ||
I did wake up obviously. | ||
Or maybe it's like a quantum immortality thing. | ||
Maybe I did die, but it just, you know, shifted over. | ||
Anyway, but so I woke up and I went on Twitter and I was on my phone, you know, and I remember going to Baked Alaska's Twitter because I was like, oh, I'm hanging out with him right now. | ||
I wonder, did he post anything? | ||
Is he posting anything? | ||
And his account was suspended. | ||
I was like, Holy... I mean literally at his account the night before, I woke up and I was like one of the first people even to discover. | ||
I think I refreshed it and saw it get suspended in real time. | ||
And I ran into his room and I was like, dude, I didn't even know him that well. | ||
He's like shirtless and bad. | ||
I'm kind of like poking him. | ||
I'm like, dude, wake up. | ||
You got banned on Twitter. | ||
And then we went to In-N-Out Burger and did a live stream from there. | ||
Then we went to In-N-Out Burger and he did a live, a periscope from there about the Twitter ban and somebody stream sniped him and drove up to the In-N-Out was like, hey, are you Baked Alaska? | ||
And Baked was like, yeah. | ||
And the dude's like, you're a fucking idiot. | ||
Twitter can ban you. | ||
They're a private company. | ||
And the dude, the dude drove all the way out there to that specific In-N-Out that he recognized just to tell Baked that Twitter's a private company. | ||
I don't know if that's a coincidence. | ||
So that was kind of a weird year. | ||
2017 was kind of a bizarre year. | ||
unidentified
|
But good times. | |
2021 feels like 2017 in a lot of ways. | ||
It feels very similar to me in a lot of ways. | ||
Very similar. | ||
I don't know if that's a coincidence. | ||
I don't know if that's a cycle or what. | ||
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But yeah, that was funny, man. | |
Good times, good times for the old Yoba. | ||
That was uh, that was the first time we really got to know each other the day before He took me all around town and he knew everybody in town We were walking around from his condo and He's like, look, let's go get some booch. | ||
So we went to this gas station to get kombucha, and there were these Indian people working there, and he knew them, and he was like, yo, Trump, Trump 2020! | ||
You guys like what Trump's doing? | ||
He's like, yo, they're based. | ||
And then we went to this weird, like, health bar, this, like, health place, and he knew the guy there. | ||
The guy was like a doctor and they were like bros. | ||
And he egged me on to do one of these health shots, you know. | ||
You know, a health shot. | ||
They put all these like superfoods in it. | ||
And it's like a shot, you know, like a shot of liquor. | ||
But it has health ingredients instead of alcohol. | ||
It has like, I don't even know what the hell was in it. | ||
I don't even know what the hell was in it. | ||
But people do these things and they're supposed to boost your immunity or give you an energy boost or whatever. | ||
But people do these things and they're supposed to boost your immunity or give you an energy boost or whatever. | ||
And I saw one of these health shots that had like citrus and ginger and something else. | ||
And I saw one of these health shots that had like citrus and ginger and something else. | ||
And it was supposed to give you energy. | ||
And it was supposed to give you energy. | ||
I was like, I'll get that one, I guess. | ||
I was like, I'll get that one, I guess. | ||
He was egging me on. | ||
He was egging me on. | ||
And I took it. | ||
And I took it. | ||
And the guy behind the counter was like, he was like, dude. | ||
Because I was like, oh, that's kind of spicy. | ||
And he was like, yeah, you're going to start to feel your heart beating out of your chest. | ||
You're going to start to feel heart palpitations. | ||
And when I heard that, I was just like, that psyched me out so much. | ||
I was like, yeah, I got to go to the bathroom. | ||
And I was like, turned completely white and was getting like cold and clammy and dizzy. | ||
I was just like on the toilet like this because it freaked me out so much that he said that. | ||
I was so embarrassed because I had never even met this guy before. | ||
He was knocking on the door. | ||
He's like, hey, are you okay in there? | ||
I'm like, yeah, man, I'm okay But I was like passed out When people say that kind of stuff to me, it totally messes with my head. | ||
I don't even have to feel something, but just if somebody tells me that I'm going to feel a certain way, I can't do it. | ||
I can't deal with it. | ||
Anything that's physiological, anything medical like that, I freak out. | ||
Because I'm thinking, because Baked Alaska is telling me that this guy is like a witch doctor, basically. | ||
We go up to this place, and we see this guy, and Baked Alaska's like, oh, that guy is just vegan, he only eats this kind of food, but he's a beast, he's like, he comes up with all these chemical things and whatever, and I'm like, oh, that's cool. | ||
And we go into this place, and they give me this health shot, I take it. | ||
You know, unregulated, it's not like it was like some white-labeled product, it was just some tube. | ||
Which I drank. | ||
I didn't think anything of it. | ||
It was green or whatever, you know? | ||
And they said, oh, it's health stuff. | ||
It's got citrus and ginger. | ||
I was like, okay. | ||
And I think it had jalapeno or something. | ||
Anyway, so I take it, and then the guy says, oh yeah, your heart's gonna beat right out of your chest. | ||
You're gonna feel it. | ||
You're gonna get heart palpitations. | ||
And, you know, once I heard that, it was over. | ||
And that's what happens to me. | ||
So I turned white as a ghost. | ||
I mean, scary. | ||
People say it's like, turn pale white and start shaking. | ||
And I'm like, I'm like getting dizzy. | ||
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I'm like, yeah, I gotta go to the bathroom. | |
Go to the bathroom. | ||
Just like, just go limp. | ||
Just, just waiting for it to, just waiting for it to pass, you know, waiting to feel better. | ||
and uh yeah they're like hey you okay in there i was in there for like a half hour now that was embarrassing but wouldn't be the first time wouldn't be the first time that that's happened to me actually it's happened to me very often very frequently that exact scenario so but yeah that was uh that was funny that was a funny uh | ||
Funny weekend in LA. | ||
Met Party Goy for the first time. | ||
I met Baked Alaska. | ||
Who else did I meet? | ||
Met Folklore Americana for the first time. | ||
And, um, I think I met him down there. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, that was a good time. | |
Anyway. | ||
But who says that? | ||
The guy's like, oh, your heart's gonna go crazy. | ||
I'm like, well, I don't wanna hear that. | ||
I don't want my... I want my heart to be normal. | ||
You're telling me I'm gonna have a heart attack? | ||
I can't deal with that. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm very neurotic like that. | |
This is why I'm just, I just gotta basically stay inside. | ||
I like very particular, I like things done a certain way. | ||
There are things I don't like, I really don't like them, and that's why I just kinda stay in my lane, you know? | ||
Cause some of that stuff I just can't, can't really deal. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Nobody says have you heard about these supposed three Capitol Police that committed suicide since January 6th. | ||
It was trending on YouTube a couple weeks ago. | ||
You don't have to read, but it's my birthday. | ||
Happy early birthday to you! | ||
Well, happy birthday, man. | ||
Hope it's a good one. | ||
I'll read that. | ||
Happy birthday, buddy. | ||
Enjoy. | ||
Hope you have a big cake and lots of presents and lots of friends and everything. | ||
We love that. | ||
Yeah, it's actually four. | ||
It's actually up to four now. | ||
Four, I think it's four, Capitol Police officers committed suicide. | ||
Which, I mean, what the hell is that, right? | ||
I mean, does anybody really believe that four Capitol Police officers that responded on the 6th just happened to commit suicide this year? | ||
Does anybody think that that's just a coincidence? | ||
How ridiculous. | ||
It's a cover-up. | ||
You know that that's what it is. | ||
Sky guy says what was up with that Instagram live you did earlier today? | ||
I don't know what you what do you mean? | ||
What was up with it? | ||
What's up with that? | ||
I you got to be more specific Fortnite burger man says hey Nick. | ||
What do we do about anchor babies since they are born here? | ||
We just got to suspend birthright citizenship. | ||
That's what we have to do Morton Trump says North Carolina and South Carolina to a lesser degree is in severe danger from immigration. | ||
Huge amount of illegals here because Highway 40 and 95 intersection and farming and construction. | ||
Also libtards moving here from New York, Pennsylvania. | ||
Really sad to see when my family's been here since before the Revolutionary War. | ||
Like reliving carbon baggers, yeah? | ||
Yeah, the Mid-Atlantic, the Sun Belt, it's all at risk. | ||
People think it's just the Southwest. | ||
It isn't. | ||
Colorado's being transformed by immigration. | ||
The Carolinas, Virginia, Florida, Georgia. | ||
It's everywhere. | ||
It's everywhere. | ||
Even in the Midwest. | ||
Even in the Midwest, you're getting a lot of immigrants. | ||
You're getting a lot of immigrants in Nebraska. | ||
You're getting a lot of immigrants in | ||
Every every country every state I should say not country every state with few exceptions is getting lots of immigration except for Except for really the the north except for like I think Montana the Dakotas And I haven't looked at the numbers maybe Wyoming and like Maine and New Hampshire and Vermont except for the very far north for the most part of everybody is getting it everybody's getting dumped on and | ||
And it's not to say that those states are getting immigrants. | ||
They are, but just not as much as some of the others. | ||
MidAtlanticGroper says, if you want a massive black pill on the state of the modern woman, scroll through the TikTok live section. | ||
Will you shut up, dude? | ||
I love when people say it's modern women. | ||
It's just women, dude. | ||
It's just women. | ||
People say the state of modern women. | ||
And as if there's any shortage, go through the live section on TikTok. | ||
Walk out the front door, man. | ||
Go on any social media. | ||
Turn on TV. | ||
The state of modern women. | ||
And like it's modern women, it's women, man. | ||
The Black Pill is women. | ||
The state of modern women. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
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Modern women. | |
Please. | ||
Puh-lease. | ||
I have so had it, man. | ||
I've so had it with the female question and people just not getting it. | ||
It's okay. | ||
Ultimately, I'm the only one who has to understand it. | ||
I'm the only one that really has to get it. | ||
So that's okay, I guess, but it's just irritating because nobody else seems to understand. | ||
but uh yeah yeah if you ever need a black belt on this day to the modern woman scroll to the tiktok live section yeah great super chat very insightful uh george gropington's has had an uncle who got the vax last year shortly after he started showing als-like symptoms that progressed faster than als should doc had never seen anything like it by this summer he wasn't able to move or speak and was living in agony he chose euthanasia avoid the vaccine at all costs | ||
Hey, there's a lot of reports about paralysis and degenerative neurological symptoms from that. | ||
It's very real. | ||
So it's true. | ||
Do not get the vax. | ||
Not good. | ||
Sorry to hear that about your uncle, by the way. | ||
That's awful. | ||
Zoomer Nation says, do you think a Taliban-controlled Afghanistan would improve or be the same as it was before? | ||
You know, in all honesty, it probably will be worse, but... | ||
Nevertheless, it's inevitable. | ||
The Taliban is inevitable. | ||
The Taliban is inevitable. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Disavow, I disavow. | ||
Nord Stream 2. | ||
Here's a few things that are inevitable. | ||
America First, Nord Stream 2, the Taliban, the Communist Chinese Party taking over Taiwan. | ||
What else? | ||
Those are just a few things that are inevitable. | ||
Jesus Christ coming back. | ||
Kaylee says, Hi Nick, my boyfriend introduced me to your show a couple months ago and since then I've been seriously blackpilled. | ||
Thanks for being such a good role model for young trad virgin couples like us. | ||
Well, don't be blackpilled, lady. | ||
And hey, thanks, hey, tell your boyfriend thank you for turning you on to the show, Gladiator. | ||
Don't be blackpilled. | ||
Listen, you gotta be white-pilled. | ||
You gotta be white-pilled. | ||
You can't let this stuff affect you. | ||
Life is what it is, you know? | ||
You wake up, you put your shoes on in the morning, eat lunch, you go to bed. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
That's life. | ||
What is life made up of other than that? | ||
People have these great big plans and everything, and life is actually quite simple and short. | ||
And it's really just about attitude honestly. | ||
People think this time is so bad compared to other times or their life is so bad compared to other people or whatever. | ||
Everybody's got to deal with stuff and everybody's waking up and going to bed and going about the monotony of their short lives and you just got to learn to enjoy it. | ||
You just have to learn to appreciate the parts of it that you can and you know try to deal with the things that you have to. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
You know? | ||
It really is that simple. | ||
And ultimately, the only thing that you really can rely on is God. | ||
That's it. | ||
That's the only thing that grounds you. | ||
That's it. | ||
You know? | ||
That there's justice, grace, mercy, you know, goodness. | ||
That we live in a moral universe. | ||
That is what holds it all together. | ||
At a time when everything is falling down, that's what holds it all together. | ||
Reminder, you live in a moral universe. | ||
You live in a created universe. | ||
You were created. | ||
There is justice. | ||
You have access to grace. | ||
You have access to mercy. | ||
All of this is a white pill. | ||
Life is not easy, but fortunately, there's a happy ending. | ||
It's as simple as that. | ||
Try to live a simple life. | ||
Try your best to be a good person. | ||
Try to do things that are going to sit right with your conscience. | ||
Such is life. | ||
This is life. | ||
Don't worry. | ||
Don't have worry. | ||
Don't have fear. | ||
It's as simple as that. | ||
But hey, thanks for watching the show. | ||
Don't be blackmailed. | ||
What are you so blackmailed about? | ||
The country's over. | ||
Nothing lasts forever. | ||
From ashes to ashes, from dust to dust, we are here and we are along for the ride, you know? | ||
And, uh, I always think about Ozymandias. | ||
You know that poem, Ozymandias? | ||
And, uh, you know, King of Kings, he's buried beneath the sand. | ||
I always think about that. | ||
Whenever you get too concerned, whenever you care too much, you always gotta remember that. | ||
And you realize the transient nature of everything. | ||
And you can't get too hung up. | ||
It's not to say that you shouldn't care. | ||
It's not to say that you shouldn't care or be invested, but it's just to give you perspective. | ||
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That's all. | |
So, the end of the world isn't the end of the world. | ||
The world is temporary. | ||
God is forever. | ||
King James says, Do you think Leviticus 19 verse 28 was more of a chill suggestion, making tattoos more acceptable for Christians today? | ||
Well, the Catholics don't believe that you go to hell for having a tattoo. | ||
We don't. | ||
We don't believe that's a mortal sin. | ||
Wolves says, I think the media is going to cry about the Hazara minority in Afghanistan, which will prompt the U.S. | ||
to invade again. | ||
You mean like the Yazidis? | ||
Did I rack? | ||
Yeah, maybe. | ||
It'll say it's right to protect, right? | ||
Just Seeds says a million seconds is 11 days, a billion seconds is 33 years, a trillion seconds is 33,000 years. | ||
Okay, thank you. | ||
George Groypington says the best thing we could do to Afghanistan is bomb the Taliban into oblivion, which we could, and then ban them from having a stable government or any airports and let them become a nation of warlords. | ||
Now that would be cool. | ||
That would be kind of cack. | ||
Dalton Claude Felcher says hey man great stream tonight. | ||
Hope all is well awesome to see boss baby incel on Instagram as well Have a blessed night, man. | ||
Hey, thank you. | ||
You too, buddy and Yeah, everybody's talking about this boss baby incel on Instagram. | ||
I got to check that out Apparently that's all the that's all the talk. | ||
That's all the rage right now is this new boss baby incel account I don't even know what that is. | ||
It sounds like some kind of Boss Baby themed incel account. | ||
Some kind of Boss Baby fan who is an incel. | ||
But it's definitely piqued my curiosity. | ||
Thanks for the super chat. | ||
God bless you too, buddy. | ||
Good to hear from you. | ||
Maybe we'll do an Instagram Live one of these days. | ||
We'll do a Boss Baby incel collab. | ||
Patman says it is exciting to watch the Taliban. | ||
What kind of government will they set up? | ||
Will they reestablish the caliph of Islam? | ||
Maybe a new kingdom of Afghanistan? | ||
Like you said, they're fascinating. | ||
What will they do next? | ||
Yeah, I'm... I'm shearing them on from the sidelines. | ||
Awe Victorious says, did you watch any of the Chad Arien, Bass Tumble, Pillow Merchant, Cyber Symposium? | ||
They showed tons of evidence and were enraging and activating Boomer Waffen. | ||
Peak MAGA, Mean Energy, Major 16 vibes. | ||
No, I didn't. | ||
That whole, you know, look. | ||
I like Mike Lindell. | ||
I think he's a good man, but everything that he does is a shitshow, you know? | ||
I like the guy, really, and I respect him. | ||
And I think he's a good man trying to do the right thing. | ||
I really admire him, but his frank | ||
Frank talk whatever platform is just it's a disaster and the cyber symposium was a disaster the servers were down I hear all kinds of tech problems and he said Trump was going to be president again in August and it didn't happen and a lot of the stuff is just doing a lot more harm than good promising boomers that Trump is going to come back he's not going to be reinstated you know that's just not going to happen could he run for office again certainly but he's not going to be reinstated anytime soon and | ||
As much as I like Mike Lindell, this trust the plan, QAnon stuff, it's creating complacency. | ||
Because no, help is not on the way. | ||
Trump and his team are grossly incompetent. | ||
It's a disaster. | ||
It's worse than the worst thing you could imagine. | ||
Honest to God. | ||
And I know people, I know the people in the trade office were trying to do stop the steal. | ||
Do you understand that? | ||
I mean, do you understand how bad stop the steal was? | ||
The White House effort to overturn the results of the election fell into the hands of the Trade Office. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's how bad it was under Peter Navarro's people. | ||
Not the legal counsel, not the lawyers, not anyone on the campaign. | ||
It fell to some brave people and some very good people in Peter Navarro's office, the trade office, that of their own initiative and volition took it upon themselves to try to organize some legal effort to overturn the election results. | ||
The trade office. | ||
Do you understand what I'm saying? | ||
So the, obviously, the Sidney Powell effort, the Lynwood effort was a joke and an embarrassment and it was a disaster and it went nowhere. | ||
And Rudy Giuliani, the same thing. | ||
And the White House legal counsel gave up after a week. | ||
They were shining Trump on the entire time, but they gave up. | ||
So Giuliani and Sidney Powell and Lynwood tried to save it in their own way, but that was a disaster. | ||
And the only serious, competent people that tried to take a stab at it were people in the Trade Office working long hours in the, you know, in one of the Congressional offices, in one of the Congressional office buildings. | ||
And just doing whatever they could to bring the relevant facts to the right people. | ||
But that's what a disaster the Trump administration was. | ||
Trump is not being reinstated. | ||
And he is not executing people in Guantanamo Bay like they think, you know? | ||
The shadow press stuff. | ||
It's horrifying. | ||
And, you know, I'm not saying that to be mean. | ||
I'm saying that because people need to know that. | ||
People need to know that help is not on the way. | ||
The only thing that's going to save this country is us. | ||
It's not gonna, and you know, maybe someone will rise up, but it's not gonna come from Mike Lindell and Sidney Powell and Lynwood and Donald Trump. | ||
Sorry, sorry, but somebody needs to say that. | ||
Because people need to wake up and start being practical about what's actually gonna work. | ||
So no, I didn't catch any of that. | ||
David Black says, Hey Nick, I'm a professor at the local university. | ||
My inaugural course is etymology of the n-word. | ||
unidentified
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Nice. | |
Salvador says, hey Nick when and why did incel start becoming so cool? | ||
Were you the first to take it back after Elliot Rodger and the cat guy with a van? | ||
No, it's been cool for a while. | ||
And the reason it's cool is because of this female society. | ||
That's really why, because the society has been taken over by women and very feminine forces. | ||
And so incel is, you know, we're reclaiming it and reappropriating it as an expression basically of misogyny. | ||
But as an expression of, you know, eschewing this sort of socio-sexual hierarchy governed by women and governed by this weird, like, gay female alliance. | ||
And, you know, incels really just like the new punk rock. | ||
It's like the new rock and roll. | ||
Really, it is. | ||
Because incel's like saying, no, we're not going to your parties. | ||
We're rejecting society. | ||
We're rejecting what is socially acceptable. | ||
We're rejecting what is a successful mating strategy for these pigs on birth control. | ||
We're rejecting the female-governed society. | ||
We don't care. | ||
We don't need your, we don't need females, we don't need female bodies, we don't need acceptance from women, we don't need to appease liberal women. | ||
You know, when I think about it, I think of people that are like, you can't say that! | ||
How are you gonna get a girlfriend when you talk about women like that? | ||
I'm an incel, don't have to worry about it, you know? | ||
It's, it's that sort of trap card that's like, I can do what I want, I'm free, I'm independent, I don't need the police. | ||
Uh, liberal women. | ||
So that's why. | ||
That's why it's cool. | ||
It's cool because we were not being, uh, you know, we're not being dragged around by our noses by girls. | ||
And, uh, you know, being ruled by them and their PMSing and everything, which is what happens, which is what happens with lots of people. | ||
You know that. | ||
I see it all the time. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
And e-girls are out there and they're like, you need to be nicer to us women. | ||
I mean, there's an e-girl that used to watch this show. | ||
And she's out there on Twitter saying, you know, you guys are so mean to women and you need to be nicer to women. | ||
And this is so true. | ||
unidentified
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Women are being abused and blah, blah, blah. | |
And it's like, and then you got men and they're all up on them. | ||
And pretty soon, You know, maybe these e-girls aren't so bad. | ||
You know, maybe, maybe we need to listen to them. | ||
unidentified
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Maybe... That one guy, Mio? | |
Mio's on the timeline saying, we're alienating the fuck out of right-wing women. | ||
They need... They need to be... What the hell did he say? | ||
He said, we're alienating right-wing women. | ||
You know what you guys get from the internet with your friends? | ||
Women need that too. | ||
Women are incapable of having friends. | ||
They're not even like human beings. | ||
They're not like us, okay? | ||
They're not like us. | ||
They're not. | ||
They're not like us men. | ||
And I'm sorry to say, I'm sorry if that offends women, but they're just not like us. | ||
They look like us, they're similar to us, but they're not like us. | ||
They're not. | ||
I mean, they really aren't. | ||
And I don't think they're really capable of true friendship. | ||
They're really not capable of true rationality. | ||
What they say is not what they mean. | ||
They're really more like beasts than like man. | ||
And so anybody that's saying like, they're just like us. | ||
No, they're not. | ||
No, they're not. | ||
Hell no. | ||
They are not like us. | ||
And certainly I don't care what they have to say about politics, I'll tell you that much. | ||
Yeah, we need girls who are our friends and who we think have really clever political opinions. | ||
No, people want them around because they want to have sex with them. | ||
And I can't imagine anything that would be more harmful for a political movement than having like a giant incestuous co-ed thing. | ||
Yeah, being political dissident radicals in a time of total persecution by the all-seeing eye of the CIA. | ||
Definitely a good time to have that going on. | ||
Definitely a good time to have, you know, females floating around. | ||
And you're kissy kissy, and all this kind of kissy kissy, and we're talking to them, and we love you, I love you so much, and all this kind of stuff. | ||
No, I'm sorry. | ||
It's no good. | ||
No bueno. | ||
Can't have it. | ||
Can't have it. | ||
Imagine if you were in, like, the Soviet Union and you're, like, you're going against the Communist Party and it's gonna be this co-ed thing and it's gonna be... No, I'm sorry. | ||
Sorry! | ||
But it can't work like that. | ||
It's not gonna work. | ||
Not gonna work. | ||
It's gotta be martial. | ||
Don't you understand? | ||
It's gotta be martial discipline. | ||
It's gotta be like Sparta. | ||
It's gotta be like, uh... It's gotta be like monks. | ||
Don't you understand? | ||
It's not to say... Don't get me wrong. | ||
It's not to say, you know... You don't want to get married and stuff, but... This political stuff... Anyway, I don't know how I got on the subject, but... Yeah, no. | ||
I mean, incel thing is a pillar. | ||
It's a pillar of our community here. | ||
So, yeah, just a total disaster. | ||
I don't know how anyone could not understand that. | ||
You know who doesn't understand that? | ||
People that are willfully ignorant to it. | ||
Announces, what did the anteater say to the horse? | ||
Why the long face? | ||
That's great. | ||
Harry Evans says, F in the chat to free Paul Miller. | ||
Yeah, I mean, yeah, I guess. | ||
I mean, we don't want him to be in jail, but that being said, I'm not a fan. | ||
He doesn't like me, and I don't like him. | ||
I don't want him to be in jail. | ||
I don't wish jail on him because he doesn't like me, but... Not a fan. | ||
The guy gets the standard treatment of literally any right-wing dissident, and it's... You would be like me if this happened to you! | ||
Really? | ||
Grow up. | ||
Gets the standard treatment of literally any right-wing dissident. | ||
Literally every right-wing dissident. | ||
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And it's, now I'm becoming the Joker. | |
I'm the Joker now because of what happened to me. | ||
You society did this to me and now I'm in shambles. | ||
What happened to you again? | ||
He got fired from your job? | ||
He got doxxed? | ||
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Wow. | |
That sucks. | ||
Try being on a no-fly list and having half a million dollars taken from you and being banned from all platforms and payment processors and etc, etc. | ||
But I don't get to be the Joker. | ||
I put on a shirt and tie every night and I go to work. | ||
Like a man. | ||
Like a warrior. | ||
I don't cry about it. | ||
Anyway, so yeah, so I don't I don't care for that kind of stuff, you know, don't get me wrong You want to make that kind of content by all means, but don't don't give us this tortured sob story You would be like me too if this happened to you. | ||
I mean really man, I Remember he was hyping up his his origin story and I was like, oh my gosh What happened if they like kill his parents or something? | ||
And then I watched the origin story, and it's a sad story. | ||
It sucks, he gets beat up by Antifa, I think got charged, and he did get doxxed, and they sent death threats to his family, and he got fired from his job and kicked out of his gym, and that's all very tragic. | ||
I mean, that is sad. | ||
But, that happens to everybody in this thing. | ||
That happens to everybody... I mean, that happened to Gavin McInnes, and that happened to Milo, and that happened to... That happens to everybody that gets involved in this, big or small. | ||
That happened to Cami, that happened to me, that happened to... I mean, you name it. | ||
That happened to Kai Klipsch, for crying out loud, they called his job and his school. | ||
That happened to Lance Videos! | ||
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Right? | |
Maybe not on that level, but that's like, that is what everyone has to go through if you're even remotely in this thing. | ||
You've got to go through something like that. | ||
And so, it's one thing to make content, you know, knock yourself out. | ||
You want to make content? | ||
Go for it. | ||
But this sob story about, oh, what happened to me? | ||
Really? | ||
Happens to everybody. | ||
Overman says, do you think the U.S.' 's adherence to war crime rules have prevented them from successfully crushing the Taliban insurgents? | ||
I wish we had someone like Grand Moff Tarkin who can actually fight terrorists. | ||
Well, he's not real, but yeah, probably. | ||
Probably they did. | ||
Missouri Groyper says, hey, just saying you have changed my life and to keep doing what you're doing, man. | ||
I don't have much as a poor teacher, but I want to help out. | ||
Keep up the good fight, King. | ||
Well, thank you, man. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
God bless you, buddy. | ||
Good to hear from you. | ||
Hey Nick, love the show. | ||
America First. | ||
Wow, that is so true. | ||
So anyways, everyone, I want to say, fellow Groypers, it is now time to dox yourselves in public. | ||
Okay, thanks for that disavow. | ||
What's been up with Sean? | ||
Is he ever coming back to Twitter? | ||
I hope his life is going okay. | ||
Yeah, he's doing alright. | ||
Save Western Civs says, Hi Nick! | ||
I don't mean to bring up old cringe things a few months old, but have you ever played the game Cuck Simulator? | ||
It's $2 and made by some groiper. | ||
I've been watching YouTube clips of it for the past week and can't stop laughing. | ||
Almost laughing at inappropriate times. | ||
It's so funny. | ||
No, I haven't heard of that. | ||
Overman says also I can't stand seeing Dan Crenshaw and those other YAF fags use the victims of 9-11 To justify policing that cursed shithole. | ||
I can't wait till these people are completely pushed to irrelevancy Yeah, well another 9-11 didn't happen, right? | ||
Yeah as if Poop fart grope versus that Refresh brand water is really great stuff. | ||
Give it an hour or two and your heart will start beating like crazy and Refresh water, I've never heard of this. | ||
Yeah, very funny. | ||
George Groypington says, just had my birthday the other day. | ||
Blessed to make it another year. | ||
Happy early birthday to you too, fellow August birthday chat. | ||
Happy birthday, George Groypington. | ||
Hope it was a good one, my friend, a fellow veteran. | ||
Good to hear from you, buddy. | ||
Yeah, my birthday's next week. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, Where did you come from? | ||
Where did you go? | ||
Where did you come from, Cotton Eye Joe? | ||
I cannot begin to process how much money has flowed through my hands. | ||
I'll be back tomorrow, Big Chungus Nick! | ||
You are Big Chungus, got the brains of an intelligent meat eater, and have the mane of a bunny rabbit from the woods. | ||
Eat well and remember, I will return tomorrow. | ||
Thank you, Modern Monarchist. | ||
See you tomorrow. | ||
Orthodox Fascist says, Nicker, have you ever attended a strip club? | ||
No, never. | ||
Never been to a strip club. | ||
Never been to a strip club. | ||
Never had any alcohol. | ||
Never had a sip, not a drop, of alcohol. | ||
Never smoked anything. | ||
Never had any drugs. | ||
Illicit drugs, you know. | ||
I'm an abstainer. | ||
I'm straight edge. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
That's true. | ||
Funny how that works, right? | ||
American government goes there and they get gay pedophiles. | ||
the side of our fellow Americans, but I'm glad that the Baca-Bazi gay pedo scene in Afghanistan will finally come to an end now that America is leaving. | ||
Yeah that's true. | ||
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That's true. | |
Funny how that works, right? | ||
American government goes there and they get gay pedophiles. | ||
Go figure. | ||
Tyke goes, "Does ever wonder how the right is so good at politics? | ||
Wait. | ||
No, it's not the right. | ||
It's just him Yeah, that's a classic Poop fart gripers is if we think the fertility crisis is bad now wait a decade until the women who got the vacs And have been on birth control and antidepressants since they were 14 are trying to have kids. | ||
Thanks Fred groip since his eggy and shooter made the Elliot Rodger and Alec Manassi and incel culture cool. | ||
Yep big agree. | ||
I Black Knight says it was Trump who threatened to ban the Chinese TikTok in the US to force them to bow to the FBI and ban the dissident right. | ||
Chinese DLive got the message too. | ||
Trump was the worst right-wing leader ever. | ||
That's just completely stupid. | ||
What a stupid comment. | ||
Okay, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
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. | ||
As always, I'm Nicholas Chaif-Wentges. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatter subscribers, everybody that watches the show. | ||
I love you guys. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
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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. |