Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
We'll have some real rocket fun in the slot of the plan. | |
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 Roadshow. | ||
They give us lemons, we make lemon. | ||
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 try and throw for our spirit. | ||
unidentified
|
But they never can. | |
can never take that away from us. | ||
Because I believe in God. | ||
And I believe in America. | ||
And I believe in what I'm doing. | ||
Bye. | ||
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 boy summer. | ||
Nothing is going to stop America first. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
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! | ||
If everybody had a vote Across the USA Then everybody'd be serving Like California You can't scam me In the world they're begging What the fuck does the world do? | ||
Bushy Bushy Bond Come on, here we go. | ||
Serving USA. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the... | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Not interested. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
Yeah, I've never heard of it. | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Concrete traveling apart, minus one. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Even 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. | ||
White people founded this country. | ||
This country wouldn't exist without white boys. | ||
Would it 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 while we're doing it. | ||
Cheers. | ||
Nicholas Point. | ||
I think Point does not everything. | ||
I don't know why you're so sure enough. | ||
I'm not a mistake. | ||
unidentified
|
What crime did he commit? | |
April 27th, 2021. | ||
Nicholas J. Fuentes became the first political commentator in American history to be placed on the federal no-fly list. | ||
What crime did he commit? | ||
Who is Nicholas J. Fuentes? | ||
Though no charges have been filed and no convictions made, Nick committed the unforgivable sin of questioning the status quo and challenging the legitimacy of the corrupt Washington, D.C. | ||
establishment. | ||
Over the past four years, Nick has pushed back against the anti-Christian sentiment promoted by the mainstream media. | ||
And he has fought to preserve the culture and values of the historical American nation on his nightly show, America First. | ||
Nick, like President Trump, believes America is a Christian nation, a nation of people, people with a distinct culture and shared history, people who deserve to be put first when our government makes decisions. | ||
So in 2020, when Nick saw an election being stolen from the most popular president in American history, he had no choice but to take to the streets and protest the hostile takeover of our government. | ||
Lansing, Michigan. | ||
Phoenix, Arizona. | ||
Atlanta, Georgia. | ||
Washington, D.C. | ||
If there was a protest against the fraudulent election, Nick was leading the charge. | ||
At every event, Nick spoke up for the disenfranchised and silenced American people. | ||
And for this, he had to be punished. | ||
The climax of Nick's Stop the Steal campaign was President Trump's January 6th rally in Washington, D.C., when patriots rose up and attempted to defend themselves against Joe Biden's undemocratic takeover of the United States. | ||
Nick spoke alongside the silent majority outside of our nation's capital. | ||
Since the illegitimate election of Joe Biden, an innocent Trump supporter has been murdered in cold blood. | ||
Peaceful protesters are being held in solitary confinement. | ||
New big tech has banned the American president from speaking, as well as almost all of his supporters. | ||
The Biden administration is waging a vengeful war against the American people. | ||
The latest expression of this political persecution is the placement of Nick Fuentes onto the federal non-fly list. | ||
This escalation and tyranny by the globalist elite is an attempt to stop Nick from speaking for you. | ||
Nick Fuentes and the American people will not be stopped. | ||
Because America First is unstoppable. | ||
We are inevitable. | ||
What matters is that we stuck up 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 over, you know, 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 here, 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. | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
To share big business. | ||
It's not cool to share Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's pain. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a mirror. This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
And I believe in America. | ||
And I believe in what I'm doing. | ||
And so they'll never have satisfaction. | ||
We are still enjoying White Voice Over. | ||
Still on. | ||
Out of here might not be quiet. | ||
Out of here might not be getting late this year. | ||
It's a long way around the panel up there. | ||
Nothing is going to stop White Voice Over. | ||
Nothing is going to stop the barren at first. | ||
There's always a thing. | ||
I'm going to ask me. | ||
Let me get back in. | ||
You're going to be on the wrong road. | ||
Say it. | ||
You're going to be on the wrong road. | ||
What's going to tell me? | ||
You're going to be on the wrong road. | ||
That's all I did. | ||
This is what I know. | ||
I don't want to do too much. | ||
This is what I know. | ||
This is what I know. | ||
I don't want to do too much. | ||
They can be on the play. | ||
You know what that means? | ||
White Voice Over. | ||
Yes. | ||
They give us love. | ||
They never did. | ||
They got away from us. | ||
Baseball against Oklahoma. | ||
Now the playoffs. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
You only find that they win is when they triumphal our spirit. | ||
But they never give. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They never take that away from us. | ||
They didn't have a lot of money. | ||
They didn't have a lot of luxury. | ||
But they had grit. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
America first. | ||
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. | ||
And there's no way I could get on this plane? | ||
unidentified
|
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 the amount like this. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast. | ||
To our complex. | ||
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. | ||
Cheers, everybody. | ||
It's gonna happen. | ||
They kick 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 try and vote for our spirit, but they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
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. | ||
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 smile on us right now while we're doing. | ||
Cheers! | ||
Let's just call it what it is. | ||
The system hates white people. | ||
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. | ||
You can't utter it in polite society. | ||
But we all know what it is. | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
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? | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
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? | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
It's just that simple. | ||
Just think about it in these simple terms. | ||
The media attacks white people. | ||
unidentified
|
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, and 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. | ||
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. | ||
and from it配 in | ||
You can't scare me. | ||
Oh, we're their baggies. | ||
We're our little dude. | ||
A bushy, bushy blonde haired dude. | ||
A bushy, bushy, blonde haired dude Serving USA | ||
Serving USA. | ||
Oh, we're our little we're our little girl. | ||
Yeah. | ||
We're our little girl. | ||
Thank you. | ||
We're our little girl. | ||
We're our little girl. | ||
We're our little girl. | ||
Calling something critical race theory to me means nothing. | ||
And I think to most people, means nothing. | ||
But critical race theory is an inaccurate way to describe what's happening. | ||
Like, so much academic jargon, the phrase critical race theory doesn't mean anything. | ||
What is the overriding message of so-called critical race theory programs? | ||
It is to vilify white Americans. | ||
That's how it expresses itself in education. | ||
That's how it expresses itself in the military, in the private sector, in the federal government. | ||
What's happening in our schools and our military and our government is both simpler and easier to recognize than that. | ||
You could also say that it's just anti-white. | ||
So, anti-white racism is exploding across the country. | ||
Obviously, no one wants to say it, but it's right in your face every single day. | ||
When you say the military is practicing critical race theory, what actually does that mean? | ||
There might be a small handful of experts who could tell you exactly what that means. | ||
Because we've been tied up in some pointless debate about a concept that nobody can actually define. | ||
Maybe on a technical academic level you could say that that curriculum was inspired by critical race theory, which is a Marxist school of thought from certain academic institutions. | ||
The race hate, and that's what it is, has oozed from the universities and it has infected the entire country, including at the very highest levels. | ||
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can kick that yay button. | ||
I can kick that yay button. | ||
I can kick that yay button. | ||
I just enforce them, alright? | ||
Last out is Scott. | ||
He's everything. | ||
Warming on everybody who dare to vote. | ||
Warming on everybody who dare to vote. | ||
Warming on everybody who dare to vote. | ||
Warming on everybody who dare to vote. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
unidentified
|
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | |
So... | ||
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, idiots. | |
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. . | ||
When's enough enough, eh? | ||
When's enough enough, eh? | ||
Shit! | ||
Just eat a big mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
You're not allowed to make jokes. | |
It's not funny. | ||
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some pasta. | ||
Having some pizza. | ||
Oh. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the father. | ||
I'm not normal. | ||
I'm a rich girl. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
but the classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Gordon-Russell. | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | |
Who's that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
It's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to chill for big businesses. | ||
It's not cool to chill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's big. | ||
This is... | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
This is the free man talking. | ||
Everyone saying they won't, but they sleepwalking, dead eyes closed. | ||
L.A. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord, save these people. | ||
They are streets they let in. | ||
Sayin' run their streets. | ||
Lord, save us from L.A. | ||
I am. | ||
I am limelight. | ||
Blueprint five mics. | ||
Go get his rhyme light. | ||
Should've been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated. | ||
Grammy nominated. | ||
Hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader prom dated. | ||
Barbershop player hated. | ||
Mom and Pop booth laded. | ||
Felt like it rained till the roof caved in. | ||
Two words. | ||
Shot down. | ||
Razed me. | ||
Crazed me. | ||
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 him change me. | ||
Cause on Judgment Day, you gon' blame me. | ||
Look, Scott, it's the same thing. | ||
I basically know now. | ||
We get racially profiled, cuffed up and hosed down, pimped up and hoed down. | ||
I got a whole city to hold down from the bottom, so the top's the only place to go now. | ||
You want to know what's critical to all of this? | ||
unidentified
|
We look at Christ on the cross. | |
And you're going to kick us off Twitter? | ||
You can't stop people that are religious zealots. | ||
You cannot stop people that are motivated in the face of the fear of death. | ||
unidentified
|
It gives false hope that eats them whole. | |
Sin, illness, hope. | ||
I'm still broke. | ||
Jesus, save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives us hope that eats them whole. | ||
Sin, fill your nets. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
Who are still broke? | ||
Jesus, save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
This is America. - Yeah. | ||
Some will tell you that America is simply an idea. | ||
But there is a movement emerging among the next generation of conservatives that believes America is a nation of people. | ||
A nation that worships Jesus Christ as God and shares a rich culture and heritage tied to the land that our forebearers settled. | ||
The America First movement rejects the false notion that our nation can be reduced to just a set of ideas. | ||
Instead, America First affirms that the people of America are worth protecting. | ||
America is one people, one nation, on this continent, forged over hundreds of years by shared experiences, descended from an English cultural framework and influenced by European civilization. | ||
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 families, faith, and the country. | ||
A movement that puts the people of America first. | ||
A movement that puts the people of America first. | ||
A movement that puts the people of America first. | ||
is because it's not cool to share the big business. | ||
It's not cool to share the big business. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's bad. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is... | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
man. | ||
This is a free man talking. | ||
I'd like to propose with us. | ||
Thank you. | ||
To our people. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Roypers, 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. | ||
They kicked me off the plane, you know what that means? | ||
White boy summer road trip. | ||
They give us lemons, we make lemon. | ||
They throw me behind bars. | ||
And I start throwing baseball up against the wall. | ||
And now I'm playing catch. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
The only time that they win is when they try and throw for our spirit. | ||
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But they never can. | |
They never take that away from us. | ||
Because I believe in God. | ||
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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. | ||
Make the best. | ||
White people found in this country. | ||
This country wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
Wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
And white people are gone being bullied. | ||
Gone being bullied. | ||
We're the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
And I think our ancestors would smile on us right now for what we're doing. | ||
Cheers. | ||
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position would be America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
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We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiots. | |
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rushes. | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Shit. | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some pasta. | ||
Having some pizza. | ||
Oh. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the father. | ||
I'm not normal. | ||
I'm a rich, though. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
One 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 Dick Nunez, Sarah Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm Dick Nunez. | ||
And I'm Dick Nunez. | ||
And I'm Dick Nunez. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. | ||
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. | ||
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. | ||
Okay. Okay. Okay. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to oppose. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to oppose. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to oppose. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to oppose. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
It's out. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'm out. | ||
wall. | ||
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We'll be right back. | |
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
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. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. | ||
Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Thank | ||
you. Thank you. | ||
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
It's... | ||
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. | ||
The American people will come first. | ||
From this day forward, he's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. America first. America first. America | ||
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first. America | |
first. America first. America first. America first. | ||
America first. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You are watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into tonight. | ||
Very exciting and good story tonight. | ||
Our featured story is, of course, about the Texas abortion ban, which is just great news by every measure. | ||
And we'll be talking about that tonight. | ||
Texas has passed a heartbeat law, which if you're not familiar with this, this is a law which bans abortions after six weeks into a pregnancy, after which you could detect a fetal heartbeat. | ||
And so today this passed in Texas and the Supreme Court did not entertain requests by pro-abortion groups to stop the bill meaning that it has been allowed to become a law and now effectively in the entire state of Texas abortion is banned. | ||
And I saw a statistic and this is what the news media is reporting that 90% over 90% of all abortions happen after six weeks. | ||
So this bill effectively bans nearly all abortions from happening in the state. | ||
Very good news. | ||
Very exciting. | ||
We love to hear that. | ||
And we don't talk about it too much on the show because it's not in the news very often. | ||
But abortion is probably one of the worst things that's happening in the entire world and definitely in America. | ||
There's a lot of bad things happening in the world and we know that. | ||
And sometimes it's hard to forget that. | ||
And we don't talk about it too much on the show, like I said, because it's not so topical. | ||
It's basically been settled law for 40 years. | ||
It doesn't come up unless we talk about the Supreme Court or there have been some recent state laws that have passed. | ||
But abortion is, like I said, probably one of the most evil things that you have going on. | ||
We're talking about hundreds of millions of babies being killed. | ||
Over the course of this country's history, and you could put that up against anything that goes on, things that we talk about far more, whether it be war, poverty, wasteful spending, immigration, pornography, sexual immorality, any of it, drugs, alcohol, gay marriage, And probably the genocide of the unborn ranks number one, I would say, as the most egregious thing going on. | ||
So it's very good news. | ||
And it seems like the white pill here is not just that abortion is effectively banned in the state of Texas. | ||
The real upshot is that this may challenge Roe v. Wade. | ||
And, you know, it's maybe premature to say that. | ||
It's a little bit early to say that. | ||
But the hope is that one of these state laws is going to make its way up through the courts to the Supreme Court, and with a 5-4 or 6-3 conservative majority on the court, however you want to count it, potentially we stand a chance at overturning the constitutional precedent. | ||
Which, since 1972, has said that abortion is a constitutional right of women. | ||
So we'll talk about that tonight. | ||
That'll be our main story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about a rally that's going on in September in Washington, D.C. | ||
And this is the first that I've heard of it. | ||
I saw it in a news report today. | ||
And I almost couldn't even believe it. | ||
This stuff is so ridiculous. | ||
It's like when we talk about the Taliban. | ||
It's so on the nose. | ||
Apparently there is going to be a Proud Boy Oath Keeper rally in Washington DC on September 18th, a week after 9-11. | ||
And I saw that story today on Twitter and I'm thinking, you know, the obvious instant reaction is this is like the honeypot of the decade. | ||
This is the honeypot of the century! | ||
Really? | ||
The Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers? | ||
A week after 9-11 in the U.S. | ||
Capitol? | ||
Yeah, that sounds like a great idea. | ||
I will certainly be in attendance. | ||
You can count on me, Enrique Tarrio! | ||
You can count on me! | ||
Who's the fat guy that runs the Oath Keepers? | ||
What's his name again? | ||
With the eyepatch. | ||
You can count on me a week after 9-11 in the American Capitol with the two right-wing organizations full of federal agents at the center of the largest federal investigation in American history. | ||
Sign me up. | ||
What could go wrong? | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Pretty funny. | ||
Not really huge news, but it's worth talking about only because I'm a right-wing dissident. | ||
I'm a pretty connected guy, and I'm on social media every day, on Telegram, on Gab, with my ear to the ground. | ||
And I know everybody, for the most part, and I pretty much have an idea of what's going on all over the place. | ||
But it's very bizarre how these, like, right-wing rallies, right-wing whatever, It's always the news media that knows about them first. | ||
It's always the news media that knows about them before even the so-called participants do. | ||
I'm a right-wing dissident, but I'm reading about right-wing dissident rallies from The Hill, and from The Washington Post, and the SPLC. | ||
So how do you think that happens? | ||
Well, it's probably less than organic. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Like I said, should be a pretty good show. | ||
Kind of a slow news week still, like I said. | ||
We're just waiting for something to happen any day now. | ||
Maybe I just gotta take another day off and then something will happen. | ||
Right? | ||
We have a dry spell for months on this show. | ||
Nothing cool ever happens anymore. | ||
And then the one time that there's a terrorist attack in Afghanistan, just like I said it would happen, take the night off. | ||
Really? | ||
But you don't care about that. | ||
You don't care about me. | ||
That's my problem. | ||
That's my plight as the showrunner. | ||
But, anyway, we'll talk all about that before we get into it. | ||
Just want to remind you, follow me on Gab. | ||
Follow me on Telegram. | ||
Be sure you're following on both platforms. | ||
Some exciting news about Telegram. | ||
So they announced, I think a few months ago, that they had the radio show, which is like an audio-only stream. | ||
And technically what it is, so Telegram implemented this functionality where a public channel can create a voice chat where, I think it's unlimited, an unlimited number of people can join into the voice call and they can either listen or they can participate too. | ||
And so what they're calling it and how it's being used is as a radio show. | ||
In other words, an audio-only stream. | ||
They're trying to compare it to Clubhouse or Twitter has a similar function or Discord or something like that. | ||
In reality, it is just a big voice call. | ||
It's like just a big, like, phone call. | ||
And it's very buggy, it's very glitchy, the quality's not very good, and recently they announced that they had a video call option, which again, you know, if we're to, you know, follow it in the same way, it's being branded as a streaming functionality, that it's video streaming. | ||
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It's a TV show. | |
They're calling the audio-only stream a radio show and the video stream is a TV show. | ||
They say it's a TV station in your pocket. | ||
But I saw a stream today and the quality sucked. | ||
They just made an announcement today. | ||
The video stream has been around for a little while, but they announced today that it now has an unlimited capacity. | ||
Meaning that an infinite number of people, or I don't know, I guess as many people as there are in the world, can join on to a video call on Telegram and watch a video transmission. | ||
So kind of interesting. | ||
I might do a video stream on Telegram just to try it out. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Maybe I'll do some more casual type streams on Telegram. | ||
We'll see. | ||
I've never tried it before, but it's brand new. | ||
They just announced that there's no limit on it anymore. | ||
The limit used to be a thousand. | ||
So now there's no limit. | ||
So maybe I'll give that a try this weekend or no promises, but maybe I'll give that a try soon. | ||
So do check out the telegram. | ||
They've got a lot of cool features on there. | ||
I'll have to start taking advantage of that. | ||
T dot me slash Nick J Fuentes link is down below. | ||
And then of course, the only place I'm really posting content regularly is Gab. | ||
That's the only place where I'm making posts anymore. | ||
So check that out too. | ||
Okay. | ||
With that out of the way, we're going to dive into the news and our first story is about this Proud Boy Oath Keeper Rally, which, you know, at this point, these groups have just got to go away. | ||
And I've been a proponent of this for a long time. | ||
The groups have just got to stop. | ||
They have just got to, whatever they're doing, just stop doing it and drop it and go home. | ||
Because I don't know how much more evidence people need or what people need to see to understand that that strategy is just not going to work. | ||
And when I say that strategy, I mean this concept of an above ground club organization The Proud Boys call themselves a drinking club, right? | ||
And the Oath Keepers are like a paramilitary group, or a militia, or something. | ||
And we've gotten to the point now, clearly, in the 21st century, with the intelligence agencies and with technological surveillance, that that kind of organization is just outdated. | ||
It's anachronistic. | ||
It's not, it's not really working. | ||
And also, it's creating an enormous amount of liability. | ||
And like I said, particularly now, you've seen exactly why that is over the past year. | ||
I've been saying that since I started the show. | ||
That that kind of approach is just not going to work. | ||
And for years, people said, well you just want to do a show, you just want to sit behind your desk, and you want to be an armchair general, but we're going to take matters into our own hands. | ||
And you can see over the course of the years, and there's many examples, but January 6th being the biggest one, you can see why this approach is so flawed. | ||
Fatally flawed. | ||
It's because what it effectively does is it creates a giant target, a giant honeypot for anybody that would potentially be an effective dissident, anybody that would potentially be part of an organization, use their skills and talents, to advance the American opposition. | ||
What these organizations serve as is a honeypot, a lure, where it's going to bring in any would-be challengers, any would-be effective political operatives, putting them all in one place, sometimes at the same time, Putting them in the same group chats, on the same discord server, putting them on a roster on an excel spreadsheet with their name. | ||
Maybe they show up to a meetup and you have their face. | ||
And conveniently it also kind of meets a definition of like what you might call a Rico related organization, like a racketeering organization. | ||
So the way that these kinds of organizations function, like the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers, the Three Percenters, they're doing nothing other than serving as a place where dissident people are going to be lured, where the Feds know that they can find them in one place, and where these people are given a tremendous amount of legal liability that they may not even be aware of. | ||
If you're a dissident, and you want to go to a rally and fight with Antifa, Hypothetically. | ||
If you go to a rally and punch Antifa, you get in a scrap, maybe you get charged with battery. | ||
Right? | ||
Now, if you're in one of these organizations that winds up going to a rally and engage in violence, and some documentation shows that it was planned, that there was a conspiracy, maybe there's other people in the group that are involved in criminal activity, things you may know nothing about. | ||
Well now, you might do the same thing, go and get in a fight with Antifa, but now you're part of a criminal organization! | ||
You're part of a criminal group! | ||
And you've got liability for lots of things beyond just the scope of what you might normally do, whether it be legal or illegal, as an individual. | ||
So I've said this for a long time. | ||
I've said that the age of uniforms, and flags, and patches, and you know, whatever else, it's over. | ||
Because all it does is creates a big center of mass where the regime can strike. | ||
And it kind of shows you something fundamental about the nature of the conflict we're in. | ||
We're going up against a vastly more powerful adversary. | ||
And an adversary which sees everything and can weaponize the legal system. | ||
So creating an organization like a criminal organization, like has existed in the past, where there is already a legal regime or regimen in place for the government to target you, the same thing that they built up to target terrorist groups or mafia groups or drug cartels, it's probably wise not to emulate those kinds of things. | ||
It's probably wise not to create something so easily infiltrated, spied on, Something so centralized. | ||
And this is the case in point. | ||
January 6th, obviously, we all know what happens. | ||
There's a big rally at the White House, supposed to be a demonstration outside the Capitol, and this is supposed to be very run-of-the-mill, First Amendment protected, and really uncontroversial because things like this had happened all throughout the past, the preceding two months during the Stop the Steal campaign. | ||
In particular, there had been two rallies in Washington D.C. | ||
for Stop the Steal. | ||
Million MAGA March No. | ||
1 and No. | ||
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2. | |
One in November, one in December. | ||
So, this rally in January, which for the first time was sponsored by the White House, was supposed to be, if anything, the most official, the most above board, the most tame, the most conventional. | ||
And if it fit in with the pattern of all the other previous events, at the minimum should have been as peaceful as the other ones. | ||
But of course, the intervention of these specific groups, not any others, but the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, Three Percenters, turned it into, and however real it was, whether it was organic or whether it was totally contrived and designed by the federal government or federal law enforcement, It turned into a giant trap for anybody that was a part of Stop the Steal. | ||
You know, luckily I was smart enough not to enter the Capitol, but some people weren't lucky or smart enough. | ||
People like Joe Biggs, Baked Alaska, Brandon Strzoka even, who I don't even like. | ||
He wound up on the steps of the Capitol and got charged without even going in. | ||
Owen Schreier is another one. | ||
And now, after all of that, when again, when everybody should have learned their lesson and said, gee, you know, maybe these militias and groups aren't such a good idea. | ||
Maybe a militia is not going to defeat the NSA or the CIA or the U.S. | ||
government. | ||
So we should be more discreet. | ||
Now they're talking about doing another rally on September 18th, a week after 9-11 in D.C., according to a report from The Hill. | ||
The Associated Press reported Wednesday that far-right extremist groups including members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers are planning to attend a rally at the Capitol in Washington D.C. | ||
later this month. | ||
Citing three sources who requested anonymity, the AP reported the rally goers intend to demand justice for hundreds of people incarcerated on a variety of charges for breaching the Capitol on January 6th in protest of the 2020 presidential election results. | ||
Police have been discussing whether to again put up a large fence around the Capitol, much like the one that remained months after the January 6th riot. | ||
Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger told the AP in a statement that police were monitoring the September 18th event and planning accordingly. | ||
He said after January 6th, we made department-wide changes to the way we gather and share intelligence internally and externally. | ||
I am confident the work we are doing now will make sure our officers have what they need to keep everyone safe. | ||
And if you don't get it at this point, honestly, you probably just deserve to go to jail. | ||
Criminally stupid. | ||
You, at that point, should be considered criminally dumb. | ||
And maybe belong inside of a shoebox. | ||
Maybe you belong inside of a jail cell. | ||
If that's... If you haven't learned after the past year. | ||
And honestly, like I said, I don't even know what to make of this because I haven't heard anything like this before. | ||
And I know people that are associated with different groups and... | ||
Like I said, I keep my ear to the ground, and I follow every right-wing Telegram channel and every right-wing Gab account, and I haven't heard anything about this. | ||
I haven't heard anything about a rally to support the people that are locked up for January 6th. | ||
I certainly haven't heard anything about these particular specifics, September 18th and the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers being involved. | ||
I haven't heard anything like this. | ||
And what it reminds me of is what happened right after January 6th, which, and now it feels like a long time ago, I guess it is, back in January after the Capitol and the DOJ investigation began, and it was ominous. | ||
I know everybody was freaking out. | ||
Everybody was scared. | ||
They wanted me to cancel AFPAC because of it. | ||
People were going into hiding because nobody knew the extent of the crackdown from the DOJ. | ||
Nobody knew the extent of how many people would be charged and what would be considered unlawful and who would the FBI be arresting and would they raid people? | ||
How far does it go? | ||
And, suffice to say, during that time, nobody was thinking about doing any kind of organizing, or rallying, or anything like that. | ||
Certainly not with militias, certainly not with violent groups, and certainly not anywhere near the Capitol. | ||
Despite this, and this was well known by the way, it was on everyone's telegram channel and social media, and the media was gloating about it. | ||
They were gloating about how people like Ali went into hiding, and Baked Alaska got arrested, and so on. | ||
But, during that time, do you remember that the news media came out every day and said that right-wing Trump supporters were planning a rally at the Capitol on Inauguration Day? | ||
And I remember that distinctly. | ||
Every day they said, well, police are preparing, National Guard will remain deployed, they're keeping the fence up in preparation for a rally on Inauguration Day. | ||
And people like myself and others in Stop the Steal, Michelle, other America Firsters, we were on Telegram and on my show begging people not to do anything on Inauguration Day. | ||
Saying, we don't endorse that. | ||
Whoever is, should not be trusted. | ||
This is a terrible idea. | ||
It's time to lay low. | ||
And the media went on every day and said, big rally at Inauguration Day. | ||
And nobody was talking about that. | ||
And if they were, they were saying, explicitly, do the opposite. | ||
And then when nothing materialized on Inauguration Day, they said, well actually they're planning something in February or March. | ||
They said that maybe the right-wing people are planning something for the old Inauguration Day, which I think was sometime in March. | ||
Then they said they're planning something for Tax Day, which I don't even know why that makes any sense. | ||
Why would anyone rally on Tax Day? | ||
Like, Tax Day doesn't have any relevance to Stop the Steal. | ||
What's even the significance? | ||
But they just said, well, Inauguration Day, old Inauguration Day, Tax Day? | ||
Labor Day? | ||
Fourth of July? | ||
Birthday? | ||
I mean like every day that was happening they said there's a right-wing demonstration in DC and eventually they gave up because literally nothing materialized. | ||
Which is so rare because usually they're able to drag out some retards. | ||
I remember there were like a dozen people that went to Charlottesville 3 in August 2018 I think it was. | ||
Do you remember that? | ||
Jason Kessler brought like a dozen people in front of the White House And they got surrounded by like a crowd of a thousand people. | ||
So you all, in other words, you always are able to turn out a dozen people. | ||
You're always able to turn out or trick a few QAnon, alt-right, you know, whatever, skinhead types, to any right-wing political thing that you do. | ||
And it happened so many times that absolutely nothing materialized. | ||
No protests, no rally, no demonstration, that I guess they just gave it up. | ||
And it reminds me, of course, of this now. | ||
All of a sudden they say, well, the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers are at it again. | ||
And isn't the timing kind of curious? | ||
A week after 9-11 and in the midst of this national security crisis or perceived or manufactured national security crisis over Afghanistan. | ||
And maybe the Afghanistan thing was a big distraction. | ||
I know some have said that. | ||
I tend not to believe that. | ||
I don't think that the government would end a whole war simply to distract. | ||
They could do a lot of things to distract people. | ||
They could kill somebody, they could do a high-profile divorce, some other kind of scandal. | ||
There's a lot of tools that they could use to serve as a distraction without pulling 10,000 troops out of Afghanistan and ending a 20-year war and surrender, right? | ||
Nevertheless, whether that was the intention or not, that has been actually the effect. | ||
Is that as we've been talking about Afghanistan and other things, do people forget just how many false flag Trump supporter attacks there have been over the past few years? | ||
And I'm not just talking about the most recent one, which was the Afghanistan veteran who pulled up in a pickup truck next to the Library of Congress claiming to have a bomb in his truck. | ||
But does anybody remember the big explosion in Nashville during Stop the Steal? | ||
Remember when an RV parked itself outside of some telecom company headquarters, put out a countdown on a loudspeaker, and then exploded and destroyed the whole city block? | ||
And does anybody remember the pipe bombs that were being sent out by that Mexican guy, or I guess he was Cuban, from Florida? | ||
The MAGA bomber? | ||
And there have been lots of things like this that have been memory hold. | ||
Of course, the most recent one was this latest truck bomb. | ||
Apparently there was no bomb in it that pulled up in front of the Library of Congress. | ||
But I said when that happened a couple of weeks ago, this isn't it. | ||
This is probably a sucker. | ||
This is a guy that got tricked by the feds the same way those guys in Michigan did, the same way people at the Capitol did. | ||
Got tricked into doing something stupid, maybe they called it off, maybe he didn't follow through, whatever. | ||
Whatever you think about that incident, whatever your theory is on how to explain that one, I said be very attentive because if that's not the one, there will be something like this. | ||
And all you have to do, in the same way that they've been telegraphing terrorism from ISIS in Afghanistan, and when I say that I mean they've been talking in the media for the past three or four weeks about ISIS is active again, Al-Qaeda now poses a terror threat once again... | ||
They're going to bring down a plane of evacuees. | ||
They might do something on our soil. | ||
They're going to execute 500 American civilians like Greg Gutfeld said. | ||
We covered that the other day. | ||
In the same way that they've been talking about Afghanistan and follows the exact same playbook. | ||
seed the idea, plant the explosives or catalyze the attack, and then manufacture consent for what you wanted all along. | ||
In the case of Afghanistan, a continued occupation, authorization for further military force. | ||
They've been doing the same thing with so-called right-wing domestic violent extremists at least since the Capitol. | ||
It's been going on long before that, but after the Capitol, it's gone into overdrive. | ||
And we've covered it in great detail on the show. | ||
The DHS bulletins and memos, the fusion of the different intel agencies, FBI, NSA, and DHS sharing intelligence, DHS employing contractors to circumvent privacy laws in the Fourth Amendment. | ||
It's endless! | ||
We've covered that like every day. | ||
Not every day, but every time that something like that happens, every update, we've covered it on the show. | ||
And all of it is pointing towards a major false flag attack committed by a right-wing domestic violent extremist. | ||
And that's the legal category. | ||
That's a legal term that they use. | ||
And in the same way that they want ISIS to blow something up so they could keep our troops in Afghanistan, they want a Trump supporter to blow something up so that they will get the pretext for a new Patriot Act surveillance state, war on terror on our own population, checkpoints at interstate borders, war on terror on our own population, checkpoints at interstate borders, checkpoints at airports and train stations and bus stations and National Gun I mean the whole, everything. | ||
It's all leading up to that. | ||
All of this. | ||
What they say about the national security state, the kind of drills that they're doing. | ||
They, for the first time ever last month, they did a test run of landing a fighter jet on an American highway in Michigan. | ||
What do you think that's all about? | ||
And now then you've got these rallies with militia groups that we know are full of federal informants. | ||
In the same way that we know ISIS has been created by the CIA and Israel, To be a little operative, a little puppet spook in the Middle East, so are all these right-wing militia groups. | ||
The Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers, the Three Percenters, everybody knows those groups are full of feds. | ||
What's an Oath Keeper? | ||
What does Oath Keeper mean? | ||
Oath Keeper means people that keep the oath. | ||
What oath? | ||
Oh, right. | ||
It's the oath that military people and police take to swear that they'll defend and serve the Constitution or whatever. | ||
The whole group is full of cops and military veterans. | ||
In other words, people that work for the government. | ||
You don't think? | ||
Certainly, there's a lot of right-wing people and police in the military, so there's a lot of suckers in there. | ||
But you don't think that there's any confidential informants in the group that's full of people that took an oath to protect and serve America or whatever? | ||
It is! | ||
And everyone knows it. | ||
And it was the Oath Keepers and Three Percenters that were the subject of that honeypot in Michigan to kidnap the governor. | ||
Half feds, half legit militiamen. | ||
Same deal. | ||
And the Proud Boys, it's been well known for years. | ||
Enrique Tarrio, Joe Biggs, well known that they are informants. | ||
Well known that there's informants throughout the whole organization. | ||
And just like we're supposed to believe that Assad used chemical weapons, just like we're supposed to believe that the Taliban's gonna start executing hostages, just like we're supposed to believe that ISIS is gonna blow up some target on American soil, we're supposed to believe that the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, and Three Percenters just happen to be doing a big rally in D.C. | ||
a week after 9-11. | ||
And there's nothing funny about that. | ||
No funny business. | ||
Really? | ||
We all know what they are trying to do here. | ||
And it's not a question of if, it's a question of when and how. | ||
That's it. | ||
So the message of the show is these groups run. | ||
Run away from them. | ||
Anybody that asks you to join a group, you just run. | ||
Just end the conversation. | ||
Anybody that wants you to wear a uniform, or go by a name, or put your name on a roster, or a group, or whatever, you gotta run. | ||
Because all that that is, is a big honeypot. | ||
You are supposed to be the useful idiot. | ||
You're supposed to be the patsy. | ||
You're the one that's going to go down with a RICO charge, or criminal conspiracy, or some other legal liability, Special to when you enter into an organization. | ||
That's why these kinds of organizations exist. | ||
It's a magnet. | ||
And the initial purpose of these kinds of groups, because the government creates these all the time, the original purpose, maybe at some point for groups such as this, was to serve as a magnet for people that might do terrorist actions. | ||
Because if there are people that are a danger to society out there, well they need help to carry out their plots. | ||
These people are not typically criminal masterminds. | ||
In rare cases, they are. | ||
But where you have true so-called lone wolves, people that really pose a threat to society, the kind of behavior that they exhibit is, well, they'll be looking to acquire firearms or bombs. | ||
They'll be inquiring about tactics or know-how or things like that. | ||
Maybe networking. | ||
And so the stated purpose of these kinds of front organizations from the intel agencies is, look, we will serve as a front organically and naturally that will serve as a magnet for people that are a danger and then we can catch them before they can do harm. | ||
That's the stated, that's the intended purpose of organizations like this. | ||
It's very real. | ||
The CIA, FBI, NSA, you know, intel agencies, they create these front groups and it's well known. | ||
Everyone knows this. | ||
And again that's the stated intended purpose is to serve as a magnet for people that would do harm so that they could be prevented from doing harm. | ||
So they could be on the radar of law enforcement and so that their activities are known and then can be sabotaged and thwarted. | ||
In effect how they now operate Is that the government seeks to attract people that are not a danger to society. | ||
These organizations are intended to be a magnet, not for people that would do violence, or want to do violence, or are lone wolves, would be a menace to society otherwise, but they're to serve as a magnet for normal people who are dissatisfied with the government. | ||
And the point of these organizations is to create terrorists! | ||
It's to serve as a magnet for dissatisfied, disaffected Americans who are frustrated, and the goal is to prey upon them, and turn them into people who are willing to do, or might do, some kind of radical action, and in this warped, twisted view of the people that run this country, throw them under the bus, | ||
Use them as an example and that is supposed to send a message to everybody as well as create a pretext for far-reaching jurisdiction over everybody's private information. | ||
Far-reaching jurisdiction over the ability to detain people, to jail people, to seize assets, you know, raid people's houses, that kind of thing. | ||
Look at financial records. | ||
All of it. | ||
The kinds of things that have happened to me. | ||
Put people on a no-fly list. | ||
That's their, again, think about how warped that is. | ||
It started out as, well, we're going to try and take these bad people out of circulation into, we're going to trick normal people into being terrorists so that we could give ourselves so much power that we could see everything and stop any potential terrorist attack from ever happening. | ||
Completely different. | ||
But that's what these organizations serve to do now. | ||
Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, Three Percenters, and I'm not making this up. | ||
It's not a theory. | ||
It's not speculation. | ||
This is exactly what happened last year with the alleged plot to kidnap the Michigan Governor, Gretchen Whitmer. | ||
Because here you have the FBI literally paying informants to go to a hotel, book a conference room, buy a bunch of pizzas, put out flyers, social media advertisements, and say, hey, right-wing meetup, Second Amendment meetup, come hang out with like-minded individuals. | ||
And then these federal agents groomed people, groomed a dozen people over the course of months. | ||
Served as a magnet for people in different states and catered food and hotel rooms and logistics, transportation, security. | ||
They made the plans. | ||
They gave the plans to the people, convinced them to carry them out. | ||
And then when the feds drove them to the governor's mansion to carry it out, they said, oh, you're under arrest. | ||
Not so fast. | ||
Not so fast, terrorist traitor. | ||
You're coming with us. | ||
Another Another enemy of America defeated, caught by the patriotic FBI. | ||
They're in the business of creating terrorists. | ||
And in particular, what was amazing about that case, is the people that were involved, the real people that were suckered into doing this, were losers. | ||
They tried to paint the head of this group, who was a civilian, as like a criminal mastermind. | ||
You know, the FBI's case is that all of this was organized by some splinter, three-percenter, or oath-keeper faction, some oath-keeper cell in Michigan. | ||
And it was some guy that hatched this plot, there happened to be CIs, confidential informants in the group, to kidnap the governor, or overthrow the state government. | ||
And we've now found out after all these months have passed in court filings and other disclosures that this criminal mastermind that came up with the plot to kidnap the governor was like living in his relative's basement. | ||
He worked at like some store. | ||
In other words, the guy was like indigent. | ||
The guy was totally incompetent. | ||
Barely a functioning adult, but you know again, once again, we're supposed to believe that this guy was a criminal mastermind who if it wasn't for the intervention of the FBI would be like bombing places and kidnapping people and assassinating politicians. | ||
Of course that's not the case. | ||
That's what they believe about themselves. | ||
That, maybe at one point, was a stated, intended goal was to take people that might do something like that and take them off the street. | ||
Again, now the goal is to attract people that, again, are dysfunctional, broken, prey upon people, groom them into becoming terrorists, and then use them as a patsy to create a pretext for total government control. | ||
You gotta be on high alert, because it is happening. | ||
That is their game plan, 100%. | ||
And it's implicit in everything that they do. | ||
Everything from the Whitmer plot to the January 6th Capitol insurrection. | ||
All these memos and bulletins you're seeing from DHS and the FBI and the NSA. | ||
And all the stories we've covered about the Intel agencies, what you hear from Big Tech, those 14 companies that are a part of that international working group where they put right-wing people on a terror watch list, we covered that earlier this year, the MAGA bomber last month at the Library of Congress, and then now this! | ||
A Proud Boy Oath Keeper Rally a week after 9-11 in DC. | ||
Well that has got to be the dumbest idea I've ever heard. | ||
So stupid, That I think the only people that have anything to gain or would want something like this are the feds. | ||
So you see stuff like this, you gotta run. | ||
You gotta get out of dodge. | ||
And the message is not to run overall. | ||
It's not that you shouldn't be doing anything. | ||
We are the opposition. | ||
We are the resistance to the American regime. | ||
Never forget that. | ||
And we're the only resistance. | ||
People that are like, you know, People that are in the Republican Party are not resisting anything. | ||
America First Groipers are the real resistance. | ||
We're the ones really speaking out. | ||
We're striking at the heart of the beast. | ||
At the heart of their narrative, their propaganda, their mythology, their arguments, their everything. | ||
We're the ones that are uncovering all the layers of control. | ||
Everybody else is a percentage of what we are. | ||
You know, maybe Tucker Carlson's 80% and Donald Trump is 60% and Nikki Haley is 5%, right? | ||
But we are the real, distilled, pure opposition. | ||
So I'm not telling you as the opposition that we don't have work to do, that we shouldn't be out there doing things. | ||
It's just about the approach. | ||
It's about not taking an approach that the FBI loves, where you're going to be sidled up right next to an FBI agent who wants your head on a fucking pike. | ||
It's about doing things in a way that is actually going to slowly undermine the system and build the base of power for ourselves as the opposition over a multi-generational period. | ||
That's the goal. | ||
Because there is no solution where it's going to happen in a year. | ||
There's no solution where spontaneously people are going to rise up and, you know, whatever. | ||
The only thing that is going to win in the end, win the day in this struggle, is careful, prudent, forward-thinking, hard work. | ||
Day in, day out. | ||
It's the boring stuff. | ||
It's not fun stuff. | ||
But it's people that are going to work tirelessly, work very hard, live like monks, basically live like our parents and our grandparents didn't over the course of a full lifetime. | ||
Understanding that we may never in our lifetime see the tide turn. | ||
We may never see Certainly the climax, the new day, the new dawn. | ||
We might not even see the tides turn. | ||
You might die. | ||
You might be on your deathbed thinking that all your struggles were in vain. | ||
And that's what you got to be prepared to do. | ||
And you've got to be prepared, like I said, to approach this problem, which is this entrenched power structure, extremely pragmatically, with care, with patience, and practically, what does that mean? | ||
It means that you've got to get in there, whatever your talents, whatever your faculties, whatever your particular situation, you've got to get in there and start to do your part. | ||
Chipping away. | ||
And, you know, I say this all the time and people ask me for specifics. | ||
It's really not that difficult. | ||
I get people texting me all the time. | ||
People that are getting involved in politics. | ||
What do they do? | ||
They go to their local GOP. | ||
They work for a campaign. | ||
They join some 501c4 or 501c3 non-profit. | ||
They get a job. | ||
They become a field rep. | ||
They get in college Republicans or something like that. | ||
They get involved in politics. | ||
They start on their way to having some kind of influence and it's not hard. | ||
And everywhere I go and I meet people, I'll have some people that tell me that I'm in politics, I'm in, and I'm fully on board, and I'm totally red-pilled, and I watch your show every night. | ||
We had people in the White House saying that. | ||
In the White House, they were talking about my show in their morning meetings every day at very high levels. | ||
And again, that's not to say, like, hey, I'm this connected guy. | ||
It's to say, we need people like that to comprise all the institutions. | ||
It's very possible. | ||
You've got to go out there and do it. | ||
But you could do other things, too. | ||
You could be a lawyer, you could be a doctor, a tech guy, whatever. | ||
Could you imagine if we had a friendly person in Twitter, or Reddit, or Uber, or Bank of America, or, you know, whatever? | ||
So people gotta take the message of this show and they've gotta go and live their life, live your life, but commit yourself to the struggle. | ||
What you're doing is sort of secondary. | ||
The primary overriding objective or mandate is to further the America First Cause in whatever way that you can. | ||
If you're a big money player, if you're a big political person, if you're a big professional, whatever. | ||
And I don't know, because that's your wheelhouse. | ||
You've got to use your position. | ||
You've got to use whatever you have at your disposal. | ||
Figure out a way, locally, regionally, with what we're doing to help push the ball in the right direction. | ||
And the goal is that in 5-10 years time, something like that, there will be a parallel structure in the society. | ||
There will be an independent autonomous society, or at least the makings of one, that is fully America First. | ||
You will have Maybe all the specialties, all the kind of specialized knowledge required to maintain a society, to maintain a sort of autonomous system in the country with America First people in those positions. | ||
Spread out, decentralized, not maybe in touch with one another, but the material will be out there. | ||
And the goal is that at some point in time, because you know we're working with history here, It tends to be the case that it's not so simple as, you know, taking the country and bending it to your will, because things are very random, it's very complex, there's lots of variables and moving parts. | ||
The goal is that we get to a point where there is a moment. | ||
That we can seize upon, that when called upon, a network of people, that sort of autonomous, independent, separate, distinct society that exists can seize upon a moment, whatever the moment calls for. | ||
We don't know. | ||
Whatever the moment calls for. | ||
In the Russian Revolution, you know, there was widespread dissatisfaction, famine, the war was going badly. | ||
The Bolsheviks We're not popular. | ||
You know they call them, you want to know why they call them the Bolsheviks? | ||
Because in the... | ||
It's been a long time, so I'm maybe a little bit rusty on the details, but in the, one of the, I think it was the Russian Marxist Social Democratic Labor Party meetings in like 1903, there was a schism between the different socialist groups. | ||
They had the Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks. | ||
Bolsheviks, I believe, meant majority. | ||
Mensheviks meant minority. | ||
And it was actually ironic. | ||
The Bolsheviks were in the minority. | ||
And in any case, that's just a little, that's just a little anecdote. | ||
I think the details on that are right. | ||
So, when the Russian Revolution happens, there's widespread dissatisfaction for a long time, like two czars get assassinated, there's an uprising in 1905, there's an uprising in the 1910s. | ||
When the Russian Revolution finally happens in 1917, there's lots of different groups. | ||
There's people that are pro-Union, there's Socialists, there's Bolsheviks, there's lots of different factions. | ||
But the Bolsheviks take power. | ||
The Bolsheviks take over the Provisional Government and then fight the Civil War. | ||
And they come out on top, and they are now in charge, at the end of World War I, of one of the biggest, or the biggest, country in the world. | ||
Industrialize it. | ||
By the end of World War II, it is a global superpower with nuclear weapons and everything. | ||
And they started out as a faction of socialists in some meeting. | ||
You know, they started out as some, you know, assembly of intellectuals and some, you know, proletariat type people like Stalin was a bank robber and stuff like that. | ||
That's one example. | ||
I'm not calling for a revolution, but I'm saying look at the trajectory of the country. | ||
It's coming apart. | ||
It's not sustainable. | ||
I don't know how it's going to play out. | ||
I don't know what the opportunity will be. | ||
We don't know. | ||
How things are going to change, the manner in which they'll change, and when they'll change, and how rapidly they'll change. | ||
So we don't know what the direction is. | ||
Will we be able to take over the government through an election, like when Donald Trump came into power? | ||
Will there be some kind of secession crisis? | ||
Will there be a constitutional crisis? | ||
Will there be some kind of a civil war? | ||
Will there be a secession of Republican states? | ||
We don't know exactly Or will America be held together for a long time? | ||
We don't know. | ||
But again, the goal is we want to, at this point, we're creating the bricks. | ||
We're creating the bricks, we're creating the materials, so that when the opportunity strikes, and you know, maybe at some point in the intervening years, the materials are brought together, consolidated, put into a cohesive whole. | ||
At some point that'll have to happen. | ||
But the point is creating the sort of necessary power structure to replace the existing power structure. | ||
I don't know how that's going to happen. | ||
I don't know, once again, exactly the manner in which that'll take place. | ||
If it'll happen globally, if it'll happen locally, you know, we don't know. | ||
Will it be peaceful? | ||
Will it be violent? | ||
Will it be... We don't necessarily know the details, but that's the only way that this is going to play out. | ||
So shrewdness, prudence, patience, pragmatism, practicality, that's the name of the game. | ||
Not this retard stuff where it's like, we gotta go out there and make our voices heard! | ||
You know, it's like, I love the energy and I get it. | ||
But that's not a plan. | ||
That's not gonna save America. | ||
If we had done this, what I just described 20 years ago, Donald Trump gets into office and guess what? | ||
He could have filled up the whole White House with gripers, right? | ||
Think about what I just said. | ||
If everything I just said happened after the Buchanan run for president in 92, excuse me, You know, Patrick Buchanan challenges George Bush for the Republican nomination for President in 92, which is a big deal because Bush is the incumbent. | ||
And Buchanan's winning large percentages of the vote, which is unheard of, against an incumbent president in their own party primary. | ||
If Buchanan had built the kind of political machinery that like a Ron Paul did after his 2008 and 2012 runs, if he had built something like what I just described, parallel, independent, separate, autonomous sort of power structure, and that had been gaining steam for 20 years, and then Donald Trump runs for office, and then there's this transition going on, You would have a whole base of power to support the Trump presidency. | ||
It wouldn't be just Trump isolated with Jared Kushner and Ivanka. | ||
It wouldn't just be Trump tweeting out to people and boomers like sending him tweets like, hey, trust the plan or whatever. | ||
You would have had a real army. | ||
And by army, I don't mean like a lot of brutes. | ||
I don't mean like 10,000 bodies. | ||
I mean an army. | ||
I mean a hierarchy. | ||
I mean specialized skills. | ||
I mean people that can get something done. | ||
I mean like a real, you know, a real sort of fighting force. | ||
Not necessarily for fighting, but for achieving large objectives. | ||
Like, for example, completely reforming the federal government of the United States in the executive branch. | ||
He could have done that, but it didn't exist. | ||
Who were they hiring? | ||
They were hiring people from the Rubio campaign. | ||
They were hiring people that worked in the Obama administration or the Bush administration. | ||
What if they were hiring diehard Trump loyalists, America first, Buchananites from the You know, it'd be Canon Revolution in 92. | ||
It'd be a different story. | ||
The last four years would have been a lot different and probably Trump could have won and ruled for eight years. | ||
A guy like Donald Trump having eight years at the helm with a real revolutionary guard at his disposal would have been transformative. | ||
He would have been on the level of FDR. | ||
He would have been on the level of, you know, any one of the formative leaders in the country's history and maybe not solved all our problems, but it would have been a real decisive turning point. | ||
It's heartbreaking that that didn't happen, but we have got to think towards the future and start making investments, start planting seeds. | ||
That's the mentality we have to have. | ||
This kind of stuff about, we're going to have a standoff in DC with Antifa or whatever, this is like, this is very short term, high time preference kind of thinking. | ||
Moreover, and beyond that, it's everything I just outlined. | ||
Huge liability, huge risk, as has been demonstrated many times over the past five years, but especially since the Capitol. | ||
You've got to steer clear from this stuff, and people have really got to get a mind about what this is going to look like. | ||
It's not going to look like a movie. | ||
It really isn't. | ||
It's not going to be cinematic, right? | ||
It's not going to be climactic. | ||
It's not going to be dramatic. | ||
It's going to be mundane, banal, frustrating. | ||
It's going to feel, at times, hopeless, pointless. | ||
But that's what you've got to strap in and prepare for, for the rest of our lives. | ||
This kind of, go out with a blaze of glory that's emotional. | ||
Okay. | ||
We're almost out of time! | ||
We're out of time! | ||
No, but it's true. | ||
It's very important. | ||
It's very important to go over all that stuff, especially now because people are looking around with the Biden administration and they're saying, what's next? | ||
unidentified
|
DeSantis 24? | |
And it's like, no man, we're not going to vote our way out of this. | ||
People always accuse me of believing this. | ||
They say, listen, Nick, we're not going to vote our way out of this. | ||
I have never been a proponent of that. | ||
Typically when people say, we're not going to vote our way out of this, they mean violence. | ||
They mean, you know, engage in violence, which I've never supported either. | ||
But I've also never said that primarily or exclusively change will be brought about through voting in any one or many elections. | ||
Voting for Ron DeSantis or voting for anyone for that matter is not going to win the day. | ||
It's not going to happen in a 2-4 year election cycle. | ||
We're talking about a lifetime here. | ||
Maybe several lifetimes. | ||
Like I said, a multi-generational struggle and understand what that means. | ||
Anyway so the point being is people are looking around right around right now and they're saying well the Trump thing came and went. | ||
Now it feels more hopeless than ever. | ||
It was hopeless five years ago. | ||
Trump came in and said it doesn't have to be this way and then kind of failed. | ||
So that's a little demoralizing. | ||
Where do we go from here? | ||
It's important to remind people that's just part of the that's just part of the game man. | ||
Ups and downs and Things like this, phenomena like that, come and go, and we gotta be prepared for that, and we've gotta have a mind towards the future. | ||
Not getting too caught up in any one, you know, any one wave. | ||
There's gonna be a lot of waves. | ||
So that's the rally. | ||
We know what that is. | ||
Proud Boys and Three Percenters rallying at the Capitol. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And they're going to bring their badges. | ||
So be mindful about that. | ||
Get the hell away. | ||
Get the hell away from the Capitol. | ||
And honestly, the Afghanistan thing is a little bit instructive, you know. | ||
Because, like, look at the Taliban. | ||
Not that we want to be violent. | ||
Not that we are trying to emulate terrorist activities or anything like that. | ||
But the Taliban is a group that won a war against America over the course of 20 years. | ||
Now I'm not advocating for war against America. | ||
And I'm not advocating for violence or anything like that. | ||
You know, terrorist group and we disavow and all of that. | ||
But it is instructive about patience. | ||
What did all these newscasters say and they thought it was so profound? | ||
America's got the watch as the Taliban has the time. | ||
That's how we have to be. | ||
Not like that! | ||
Not like shooting people or blowing stuff up. | ||
Not like that! | ||
But we've got to have that idea of they've got the watch, we've got the time. | ||
I remember I saw Garry Kasparov do a book talk when I was in high school like seven or eight years ago. | ||
And he said something, he was trying to fearmonger about China and Russia and stuff, and he said something like, you know, the Chinese measure time in centuries, and, you know, we're talking in terms of minutes and hours. | ||
Something ominous like that about how the Chinese are, you know, their sort of span of history, their perspective is thousands of years, because they've been around for thousands of years. | ||
We've been around as a country for a quarter of a millennia, or a millennium. | ||
But we have got to think long-term. | ||
If we're going to win, long-term planning, that's what separates us from everybody else. | ||
Okay, but I want to move on. | ||
I want to talk about this abortion law. | ||
We're almost out of time. | ||
So I guess we'll just talk a little bit about this because I was long-winded about the first topic. | ||
But our featured story is about this abortion bill. | ||
Huge white pill if you were looking for one. | ||
Texas passed a heartbeat law, which says that a woman cannot get an abortion once a fetal heartbeat is detected, which is, I believe, about six weeks after conception, six weeks into the pregnancy. | ||
And that this has been banned effectively bans nearly all abortion in the state of Texas. | ||
What's more, the Supreme Court today did not object to the law, did not grant an injunction on the law to these pro-abortion, pro-choice groups that wanted to stop the law from going into effect. | ||
And so now, in Texas, you have no abortion. | ||
It's official. | ||
It's a big day, and it's very good. | ||
They estimate that 150 babies per day will be saved because of this, and God bless. | ||
Thank God for that. | ||
This is the story from BBC. | ||
It says, quote, a law banning abortion from as early as six weeks into pregnancy has come into effect in the U.S. | ||
state of Texas. | ||
It bans abortions after the detection of what anti-abortion campaigners call a fetal heartbeat, something medical authorities say is misleading. | ||
The law, one of the most restrictive in the country, took effect after the Supreme Court did not respond to an emergency appeal by abortion providers. | ||
Doctors and women's rights groups have heavily criticized the law. | ||
It gives any individual the right to sue doctors who perform an abortion past the six-week point. | ||
The so-called Heartbeat Act was signed into law by Texas Governor Greg Abbott in May, but rights groups including Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union then requested that the Supreme Court block the legislation. | ||
In the early hours of Wednesday, the ACLU confirmed that the court had not responded to their request, adding, quote, access to almost all abortion has just been cut off for millions of people. | ||
Let's go. | ||
The group, which says that up to 90% of abortions in Texas take place after 6 weeks of pregnancy, described the development as, quote, blatantly unconstitutional. | ||
The U.S. | ||
And this is one of these things that's always been amazing to me. | ||
Think about what the left really defends. | ||
And how does the right lose? | ||
Abortion is one of these issues that's been a touchstone issue for decades. | ||
And at the end of the day, what are they supporting? | ||
They might say they support choice. | ||
And they say that very deliberately. | ||
They support choice. | ||
They'll never say they support abortion. | ||
They say they support choice. | ||
They support a woman's right to choose to have an abortion if she wants one. | ||
And why do they have to play word games like that? | ||
Why do they have to say they are in favor of women having the choice to abort? | ||
It's because what they're defending is the mass murder of babies. | ||
Because millions of women do abort their babies. | ||
Millions of women do kill their babies in their own womb. | ||
And so when women have the right, the right to do that, they do that. | ||
So if you're in favor of a woman's right to do that, you're in favor of the consequence of this. | ||
You're in favor of that happening. | ||
You are, in fact, in favor of millions of women getting abortions. | ||
And so what really are you defending if you're a pro-choice liberal? | ||
You are defending the genocide of the unborn. | ||
Nothing short of that. | ||
You are defending baby killing. | ||
You're defending the right of a woman to have a doctor go into her womb with a vacuum or a scalpel or scissors or whatever and chop up a defenseless, helpless baby inside its mother's womb. | ||
You know, the one place where it's supposed to be safe And you have to wonder, and how do they win on an issue like that? | ||
But it's not just that. | ||
It's everything! | ||
What else are they defending? | ||
Like defund the police, for example. | ||
When they go out and say, we're against the mass incarceration of blacks. | ||
What they're really saying is we're in favor of releasing violent criminals from jail, because that's what happened. | ||
The First Step Act was releasing murderers and rapists from jail, and those people went back into society and continued murdering and raping. | ||
They're in favor of that. | ||
So let's see. | ||
They're in favor of killing babies. | ||
They're in favor of letting criminals out of jail. | ||
They're in favor of drugs, which poison the youth. | ||
They're in favor of gay marriage, which, again, really is about gay anal sex. | ||
Sorry to be vulgar, but it's what it is. | ||
Every time you see a gay pride flag, you know, they want you to think about equality. | ||
What that really is about is the right of a guy to put his penis in another man's asshole, which is disgusting. | ||
And I'm sorry, listen, I'm sorry to be gross like that. | ||
I'm sorry to be vulgar. | ||
But it's like this is their lineup. | ||
This is their lineup that they... | ||
We meet on the playing field. | ||
We meet on the battlefield of politics. | ||
We're competing for votes. | ||
We're trying to make persuasive arguments. | ||
We're trying to convince the public to vote for us. | ||
Our way is the best. | ||
And what do liberals come to the table with? | ||
Killing babies, releasing murderers and rapists from jail, poisoning the minds of the youth, and guys putting their penises in a poopy butthole. | ||
That's the campaign! | ||
That's the campaign! | ||
And we want equality! | ||
We want... | ||
That's like this their whole thing is gross and all of this is to say it shows that when the right because there's a there's a there's a reason I'm saying this it shows that when the right fights on these issues when they really fight and not like you know not like well I'm not racist but or well you know whatever | ||
When they're not equivocating, when they're not constantly conceding or compromising, when the right actually fights, and they care about an issue, and they are honest, brutally honest about it, they win. | ||
The pro-life movement is maybe the most effective conservative political activism in the country. | ||
This is maybe the only thing that conservatives have won on in the past three decades. | ||
If you look at opinion polling on abortion, and kind of the slow and steady, like, cresting wave against Roe v. Wade, this is maybe the only thing, the only trend in conservatives' favor, specifically on social issues, maybe all issues, in like a half century. | ||
And this is one of the only issues the conservatives give a shit about, and it's one of the only ones that they'll march for, it's one of the only ones that they'll fight you over, that they're posting on Facebook about, that they're willing to show you just how bad the other side is, and when they do that, they win. | ||
The state governments pass the laws. | ||
The opinions change, particularly among the young. | ||
And you could take that and apply it to everything! | ||
You know, what if conservatives had the same balls on any other issue that they have on pro-life? | ||
What if conservatives went out hard on transgenders in the next election cycle? | ||
And said, look at what these people are doing. | ||
No, not... | ||
Not, we accept and respect alternative lifestyles. | ||
No, what if they showed people what a transgender surgery looks like? | ||
In the same way that they show people the grisly abortion procedure, what if they showed people the grisly gender affirmation procedure where they're cutting a guy's genitals out, right? | ||
Cutting the nuts out and inverting the penis and all that kind of stuff. | ||
What if they show that to everybody? | ||
And what if they were steadfast and had real conviction and marched against that, and there were advertisements about it, and they forced the issue, forced the other side to say, you support the genital mutilation and castration of kids. | ||
Fuck you! | ||
What if conservatives did that? | ||
They would win on that issue. | ||
And we kind of are beginning to. | ||
Christine Noem got pressured. | ||
The Arkansas governor got pressured. | ||
Republican state governments are They're getting some pushback from their constituents. | ||
And this is to say, it's working. | ||
Half the country is conservative. | ||
26 states have Republican governors. | ||
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26 or 27. | |
You have got a strong conservative population belt with real political power from, I would say, eastern Washington. | ||
Yeah, because Washington state is actually conservative, minus Seattle. | ||
All the way down to Florida, right? | ||
It goes from Washington state, Idaho. | ||
If you're talking about a state, I would say Idaho. | ||
It goes from Idaho all the way to Florida. | ||
And it goes from Arizona, really, all the way to Maine. | ||
There's a lot of conservatives in Maine. | ||
They're not exactly the same as conservatives in, like, Mississippi, but, nevertheless, Maine has had a Republican governor. | ||
So does Maryland. | ||
So does Massachusetts. | ||
Charlie Baker doesn't really count, but, I mean, you understand the point. | ||
There's a lot of conservatives in the country with a lot of political power, and there's a lot of people that are fed up with this shit. | ||
And if people just approached these issues with honesty, without shame, with real conviction like they do with pro-life, this kind of stuff is repeatable. | ||
The pro-life thing distinguishes itself from the rest of the conservative movement because we're playing the left's game better than they are. | ||
We say we're pro-life, unapologetically, 100% pro-life. | ||
Pro-life, what a great slogan, right? | ||
And when we talk about the evil of abortion, people mean it. | ||
And they mean that their opponents are evil. | ||
And they can't stand abortion in their conscience. | ||
And that gives them power. | ||
That gives them, number one, it's God. | ||
But also, that gives you power when you really believe and when you hate your enemy because they're evil. | ||
You hate the evil that they're doing. | ||
That's why people go to the marches, and that's why they vote, and they knock on doors, and they raise money, and all of that. | ||
And that's why they're winning on the issue. | ||
And if people hated the evil everywhere else, with the drugs, and with the sexual stuff, and with the crime, and immigration, and all of it, we could really turn the country around. | ||
Conservatives could be a real force. | ||
And I've always said this. | ||
You know, there are not as many conservatives in this country as there are liberals. | ||
There just aren't. | ||
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Right? | |
Because the liberals have the minorities, which are increasing, and they have the young, which are increasing. | ||
In the sense that the old people are dying and the young people are growing up. | ||
So the liberals have the demographic cohorts that are growing absolutely and relatively in the population. | ||
So, there are not as many conservatives. | ||
That's, you know, I believe that that's probably true. | ||
And this will grow worse over time. | ||
White people are becoming a minority and, you know, we know that demographic trends in these states are dooming Republicans in states like Texas, Georgia, etc. | ||
But, but, this is very critical. | ||
One way to look at it is like this. | ||
Whites will be 50% of the population, non-whites 50%. | ||
One way to look at it might be conservatives, strictly defined, are 30% of the population, liberals are 35% of the population. | ||
The way that I look at it is like this. | ||
We have an opportunity to form a homogeneous, coherent, solid base of power. | ||
That's the difference. | ||
The Republican base, Christian, conservative, white, is homogeneous. | ||
It's solid. | ||
It might not be bigger than everything else put together, But it has the capacity to be the biggest and most solid out of maybe an array of groups. | ||
There's no guarantee that the liberal alliance, the multiracial, intergenerational, I mean, full of contradictions, there's no guarantee that that coalition will hold. | ||
There's no guarantee that that coalition will be competent and functioning in the future. | ||
So people look at our situation and they say, well, you know, we're losing our grip on power. | ||
We're losing our grip relatively in the population and so on. | ||
But, but, and maybe this is not a perfect way to say it, but it kind of gets the idea across, it's like quality over quantity. | ||
If you're looking at the kinds of people that are Republicans, you know, I would bet more money on the conservative movement, not like the Examiner and the Washington Times and red alert politics and stuff like that, but | ||
The actual conservative Americans, the Christians, the people that are patriots and voted for Donald Trump and that kind of stuff, the cultural conservatism, I would bet more money that that will exist in a hundred years than that whatever this coalition of everybody else combined will last. | ||
Muslims and Jews and blacks and Hispanics and women and gay people and atheists and every homeless people, rich people, poor people, criminals, That's not going to hold. | ||
So I look at what conservatives have. | ||
This is how we have to think. | ||
Think about in terms of conservative institutional structural power. | ||
What do we got? | ||
Farmers, truckers, state governments, old people that vote reliably, rich people, old people that have accumulated money. | ||
We've got people that are maybe fanatically religious. | ||
We've got people, you know, that are religious and have like a deep conviction about these issues. | ||
That's a lot to work with. | ||
So too often people are looking at, well, our enemy is so powerful. | ||
They got a lot. | ||
And I've said this before. | ||
They've got the intelligence apparatus in Hollywood. | ||
And they've got the billionaires in the banks. | ||
There's no overstating how much power they have. | ||
But look at what we have. | ||
Count the state governorships. | ||
Count the state legislatures. | ||
And it's not necessarily the governors or the legislators. | ||
It's that you have a conservative constituency in those states that elected those people. | ||
What do I mean by that? | ||
Yeah, the Texas Governor Abbott might suck, but it's a Republican constituency that put him into power. | ||
The governor in Arkansas and South Dakota might suck, but it was a conservative constituency which put them in power. | ||
The base of power, therefore, is not the governor in particular. | ||
It's the political base. | ||
It's the electorate that can thrust a conservative into power. | ||
And do what you will with that, then. | ||
That state government is in play. | ||
26 governorships and state legislatures are in play. | ||
And the people that vote reliably for Republicans, the people that go to the churches, the truck drivers, the farmers, the people that are working in blue collar and working class America, the police officers, the machinists, there's a real base of power there. | ||
There really is. | ||
It's just about how you use it. | ||
Hollywood is very effective at using what they have. | ||
You might say, oh, so what? | ||
They make these glitzy movies and you've got some faggot actors or whatever. | ||
But they make it work. | ||
What do we have? | ||
We've got an army of truckers. | ||
You can't have a country if you don't have truckers. | ||
What do you do if the trucks stop bringing the supplies to the cities? | ||
The cities would starve. | ||
There's not enough food in New York to feed 8 million people. | ||
It's got to come in in trucks. | ||
Same with L.A. | ||
I mean, we saw that earlier this year with the Colonial Pipeline shutdown. | ||
What happens if the pipelines and the truck routes shut down? | ||
What happens if the farmers stop making the food? | ||
Checkmate! | ||
Hello? | ||
It's just about using the base of power that we have. | ||
Yeah, the Democrats are increasingly going to have an iron grip on federal government, but we have got the state legislatures. | ||
We can dare the federal government to abrogate the laws that the state governments pass. | ||
We can force a confrontation between state governments and the federal government. | ||
The state government has more constitutional authority than the federal government. | ||
The state government's mandate is unlimited. | ||
The 9th or 10th Amendment says that anything not delegated to the federal government is reserved for the states. | ||
So the states have a lot of authority. | ||
They have a lot of jurisdiction. | ||
Certain lines they can't cross. | ||
Technically, according to the letter of the law, and that hasn't stopped the federal government from breaking similar rules, all this is to say We're kind of now having the same conversation as the previous one, but I look at the pro-life movement and I, you know what I see? | ||
I see a win. | ||
And when I see a win like that, you gotta reverse engineer it and say, well, how do we achieve this? | ||
What's making this work? | ||
Well, you know what? | ||
You see in the pro-life movement everything that political success requires, which is a real desire to win, a real conviction, a hate for the enemy, you know, and a moralization of it too. | ||
They're evil. | ||
We're good. | ||
So it's a crusade. | ||
It's not just like, oh, whatever. | ||
Well, Democrats won this round. | ||
It's like, no, these people, you know, we want to see babies stop being murdered. | ||
And we have no tolerance for the other side at all. | ||
There's no room, you know, for a compromise between killing millions of babies and not killing millions of babies. | ||
There's clarity. | ||
There's clarity. | ||
There's focus. | ||
There's conviction. | ||
And as a consequence, the rest seems to follow. | ||
People then do what is necessary to achieve their goals. | ||
Take that and apply it elsewhere. | ||
Now aside from just that, because that's where my mind goes immediately, it's a huge win. | ||
And the hope with this development in particular, aside from the strategic angle, is that this will serve as the basis for a challenge against Roe v Wade. | ||
The hope is that, and this has always been the case, that a state government will pass a law effectively banning abortion, groups will challenge this, it'll work its way up through the courts, and eventually the Supreme Court will have to establish a new precedent and make a decision. | ||
Whether they'll have to effectively revise the precedent established by Roe vs. Wade that women have a constitutional right to abortion. | ||
And if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, if they uphold a law like this in particular, then abortion can be banned in half of the United States, in the state governments. | ||
And, you know, that's a huge deal because that means you're going to stop babies from being killed in half the country. | ||
That's a lot of lives saved, and that's a really big deal. | ||
So it's a very exciting prospect in and of itself. | ||
Thank God abortion stopped in Texas. | ||
Babies will be saved in Texas just on account of this. | ||
And there's so much potential that if it goes up to the Supreme Court or something similar to this that Roe vs. Wade is overturned and then, you know, we can finally have life. | ||
And I'll say, you know, on abortion, it is downright the most evil thing that's happening in the country, maybe the world. | ||
And I will also say about abortion, and I always say this about abortion, too often conservatives just draw the line here, and to me it's kind of like the bare minimum. | ||
They say, well you can't abort a child. | ||
And I agree. | ||
Under no circumstances should you be able to abort a child. | ||
You know, in this BBC article, they say, well, the fetal heartbeat is misleading because when you talk about a heartbeat, what really you're detecting is fetal tissue that will form the basis of a heart. | ||
And it's like, what difference does it make? | ||
It's going to become a human being. | ||
It is a human being. | ||
If left unmolested and without intervention, the fetal tissue will become a heart that will beat and will be a full human being. | ||
You know, all things being equal. | ||
So you preventing its natural development from happening is killing it! | ||
And every kind of benchmark that a liberal could establish is arbitrary. | ||
Some people say the birth, first breath, the heartbeat, brain activity, whatever. | ||
It's totally arbitrary. | ||
And when you say arbitrary, I mean, why does life begin at that point? | ||
You're just choosing at random, based on your discretion, what you, you know, I don't even know. | ||
According to some standard, according to some, you want a particular outcome. | ||
Maybe it's political expediency. | ||
Because who is to say that a baby can't be killed? | ||
Some of the things that they say about fetuses are true about babies. | ||
Is a baby truly conscious? | ||
Does a baby doesn't have a short-term memory? | ||
A baby's not aware of itself? | ||
Can you kill a baby? | ||
Why or why not? | ||
Because it's outside the womb? | ||
I mean, what difference does it make? | ||
A baby that is just before it's about to be born versus born? | ||
Again, what difference does it make? | ||
What about the baby a week before that, or three weeks before that, or a few months before that? | ||
It's all about development. | ||
The life begins at the conception. | ||
Once a conception happens, you're on your road to becoming a human being. | ||
And the first breath, the birth, the heartbeat, the first steps, walking, turning 25, and brain development is completed. | ||
Those are all steps in the human development. | ||
So, anything basically further than the conception is just drawing an arbitrary line. | ||
So, I believe it's murder. | ||
That being said though, conservatives will draw the line at abortion and say, no, no, you can't do that. | ||
But of course, we as a society have a problem with abortion because we as a society have a problem with promiscuity. | ||
You know, what is... why are people getting abortions? | ||
Well, they may be using it as a form of birth control. | ||
They will terminate a fetus because they don't want the pregnancy. | ||
They don't want to carry a baby through to be born. | ||
And why would a woman be pregnant if she doesn't want to be pregnant? | ||
It's because she is having sex. | ||
Sex outside of marriage without the intention of procreating. | ||
That's why that's happening. | ||
It's happening because their contraceptives failed, or they didn't use contraceptives. | ||
Either way, they were having sex with someone for a purpose other than procreation outside of marriage, outside of a relationship where they would want to raise a child. | ||
That's what leads to that. | ||
So, you know, you can't have it both ways, where at once you want to have a totally promiscuous society, but at the same time, well, no one can get an abortion. | ||
Now, I'm, by the way, I'm not saying, so therefore, I don't know how, you know, we have to have abortion. | ||
I'm not saying that. | ||
I'm saying quite the opposite. | ||
I'm saying we can't have abortion and we can't have promiscuity. | ||
If we have to ban abortion and just force a lot of adulterous women to carry a child through to term, so be it. | ||
So be it. | ||
I mean, obviously, two wrongs don't make a right. | ||
You don't justify killing a baby because a woman had promiscuous sex, but We have to pinpoint why this is happening. | ||
Why are women having unwanted pregnancies and then killing the babies? | ||
It's because women are going out there, and this is completely normal now, totally normalized, and it's shameless. | ||
A lot of people don't even know any better. | ||
People are going out and having sex outside of marriage. | ||
At a very young age, with people that they're not in a relationship with, certainly not married, And then when they get pregnant, they say, well, I can't do this. | ||
I can't have a kid. | ||
The purpose of sex is procreation. | ||
You know, and all this stuff is really intertwined. | ||
You know, when I was younger and I didn't really get this stuff, I thought it was compartmentalized. | ||
You know, you feel a certain way about abortion. | ||
You feel a certain way about sex or marriage or feminism or whatever, but it's all very much intertwined. | ||
You know, because you look at We are temporary. | ||
The society is less temporary than we are. | ||
that is sort of passing over in the sense that, you know, society is not static. | ||
It's dynamic. | ||
It's constantly being handed off from one generation to the next, right? | ||
We are temporary. | ||
The society is less temporary than we are. | ||
And that's because, you know, we are constantly generating the society through reproduction. | ||
So, you know, you are not an individual. | ||
You're the product of your childhood. | ||
You were raised by parents who were born from parents. | ||
You are in a blank slate, you were born with a certain genetic predisposition, you were born with original sin, and you were born to your parents and you had a development. | ||
So there was environmental and genetic factors that created the adult you are today. | ||
The adults are the people that comprise the society, the workers, the leaders, the everything. | ||
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I fucking hate this fucking game! | |
If you want to have a good society, you've got to have good people. | ||
If you want to have good people, they've got to be raised right. | ||
If they're going to be raised right, how are they going to be raised? | ||
Who's going to raise the children to be moral, decent, hardworking, smart, competent, all those things? | ||
Who's going to raise these kids that are going to create a good society? | ||
Who's going to raise the good kids that will become good adults that will create a good society? | ||
It's got to be their mothers. | ||
For biological reasons, maybe beyond our understanding, of course it's been studied, a child needs their mother and they need a father. | ||
A child needs a mother and a father. | ||
We see what happens when they don't have these things. | ||
We don't have a father, look at the black community, look at the blacks. | ||
We don't have a mother, it's somewhat similar. | ||
Not as catastrophic though it seems. | ||
But nevertheless, For a child to be raised properly, they need a father and a mother. | ||
Really, though, they need the mother. | ||
They need the nurturing. | ||
They need, especially in the first three months of development and early on, they need the mother. | ||
They need the parents to stay together. | ||
Look at the most damaged people in the country. | ||
They're the children of divorce. | ||
I hate to say that. | ||
I know a lot of people who watch the show are children of divorce. | ||
That's okay. | ||
But we see that divorce is catastrophic for a child's development. | ||
I'm sure children of divorce can attest this. | ||
So, we need parents to raise their kids, we need the biological mothers and fathers to raise their kids, and we need them to stay together. | ||
Well, how do we get them to stay together? | ||
They have got to be committed to each other. | ||
How are they committed to each other? | ||
They have to pair bond at a young age. | ||
Because studies show that the more premarital sexual partners a man or woman has, the higher the chance is that the two will get divorced. | ||
And then create all these problems, the ripple effect. | ||
So, they've got to stay together. | ||
Well guess what? | ||
When do people start having sexual impulses that are very difficult to control? | ||
At a young age. | ||
So, men and women, in order to avoid being put in a situation where they'll be promiscuous and then have a higher chance of divorce, and then divorcing when they're raising their kids, and then the kids are fucked up, they gotta get married young, when they, you know, basically hit puberty or shortly afterward. | ||
Get married, pair bond, husband and wife, start having kids, raise the kids to be good people. | ||
In order for all that to happen, there cannot be contraceptives, which is so-called consequence-free casual sex. | ||
There cannot be this culture of promiscuity and adultery all the time. | ||
Just can't. | ||
And listen, you can't have that. | ||
I'm telling you this strictly on the grounds of based on what we want. | ||
You can't have a good society and have promiscuity. | ||
Just can't. | ||
I just demonstrated that. | ||
There's no way to make that work. | ||
How are you going to make that work? | ||
How are you going to have promiscuous men going around and having casual sex with women, and then have women be virgins for their husbands to marry so they can stick together and raise their kids? | ||
You can't have it! | ||
You can't have it. | ||
How can you have men and women getting married And the woman, you know, she provides the beauty, and the sexuality, and the fertility, and the purity, and all those things, and the man provides the strength, and the ability to protect, and earn, and all those things. | ||
How is all that gonna work if men and women are just out, you know, doing their thing, and having sex with whoever, whenever, and they don't get married because they don't need to, because they could get the sex now, and then when they do get married, they don't have to stay together, and they don't want to stay together, and on and on. | ||
Abortion is only one consequence. | ||
It's only one externality, one expression of this sexually permissive society. | ||
And it wasn't always like this. | ||
You know, people talk about it like, well this is the way it's been since Kingdom Come. | ||
Certainly, promiscuity has always been around. | ||
There's always been whores and prostitutes and that's always been going on. | ||
And certainly people have been having sex before marriage for a long time. | ||
But the way that it used to be was that to be having promiscuous sex was... | ||
You are buying... | ||
And the expectation was if you were having promiscuous sex, you'd get married, you know? | ||
And the expectations were different. | ||
And people acted differently. | ||
And, you know, this is what gave way to a truly pro-life society. | ||
You weren't having a society with all this casual hookups and abortions and used condoms. | ||
You had a society of big families. | ||
Big families with lots of kids and parents that stayed together and a dad that worked to provide for the family and a mom that nurtured and made up a household and the family unit was the center of the society. | ||
And the family was the engine The family was the furnace. | ||
That was the thing. | ||
The goose that laid the golden egg. | ||
That was a thing that was regenerating and generating a good, healthy, decent society. | ||
The family has been destroyed. | ||
Because the marriage has been destroyed. | ||
Because the men and the women have been destroyed. | ||
The men have been destroyed. | ||
The women have been destroyed. | ||
The chemistry between the two has been ripped apart. | ||
And all of this ultimately goes back to, honestly, it goes back to feminism and it goes to these kinds of, you know, much more fundamental kinds of social issues that conservatives are unwilling to budge on. | ||
And by the way, I'm not saying like, hey, this abortion thing, you know, not all it's cracked up to be. | ||
It's good. | ||
But like I say in every other show, there is still so much more work to be done. | ||
We've addressed one of the symptoms. | ||
We have got to go far further than this. | ||
And conservatives have got to get ready, okay? | ||
Because we have got to go much further than this. | ||
If liberals think this is scary, if liberals think this is an affront to women's rights, they have not seen anything yet. | ||
And conservatives have got to buckle up and prepare for that. | ||
Because you can't be against abortion and be in favor of the feminist promiscuity society. | ||
It's not going to work. | ||
So, abortion is the beginning, it's not the end. | ||
Ending abortion, that's a start. | ||
That's what I call the beginning of the beginning. | ||
But it's gotta go all the way back. | ||
And ultimately then, that is how you create a real pro-life society, not a pro-choice society. | ||
A society where you choose to be promiscuous, choose to use contraceptives, choose to get abortions, choose not to get married, choose to wreck society, choose to destroy your children, you know? | ||
I mean, that's what divorce and single parenthood and those kinds of things do. | ||
Destroy men and women destroy the family and marriage. | ||
You can't choose to do that anymore. | ||
We're gonna have a society that favors life So that's abortion it like I said, it's a start in more ways than one, but it's it's a good thing We're gonna move on we're gonna take a look at the super chats here. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this Like I said, it's it's all just about cause and effect. | ||
You got to take all this stuff. | ||
It's all related even like women working Why can't women work? | ||
Why can't you have co-ed schools? | ||
Why can't you do all these different things? | ||
It's because biology decides when a woman is fertile, and biology decides when a man and woman become ready to reproduce. | ||
Biology decides. | ||
And it's not biology that has to change, it's society that has to change. | ||
You know, biology says women have this window of when they can reproduce. | ||
And men have this window when they've got testosterone and they've got, right, they've got the instincts. | ||
Now, T has been declining for a long time. | ||
They say that in primitive societies, non-technological societies, old men still have high T, right? | ||
But you understand what I'm saying. | ||
You understand my point. | ||
About, you know, how we have got to conform to our nature, not try to force our nature to conform to what we want for ourselves, which is want to have it all. | ||
I think I'd like to have a job and have kids. | ||
I think I'd like to have sex with this one and that one and maybe then get married when I'm like ready for it. | ||
No, you can't force your biology and human nature to change. | ||
You have to change. | ||
You know, society has to change. | ||
Because if we're going up against human nature, we're going to just explode on impact, which is what's happening. | ||
Okay, we're going to move on. | ||
Like I said, we're going to take a look at our Super Chats and we'll see. | ||
What's your reaction? | ||
Singus Biggles says, Hi Nick! | ||
Whenever I'm down about the state of things I watch your show and I'm white-pilled that Someone competent is putting it all on the line for what's right and giving us the whole loaf. | ||
I give you the whole loaf. | ||
I give it to you whole. | ||
Big ol' loaf. | ||
No, yeah. | ||
We're not cutting any corners here. | ||
This is the whole loaf. | ||
We're laying it down. | ||
Yeah, I'm glad. | ||
Thank God for me. | ||
It's so true. | ||
Because if I wasn't doing this, no one else would be. | ||
Literally. | ||
Uh, and there's some, there's some bright spots. | ||
You know, you got your Jared Taylor, you got your Andre Wang Lin, you've got some other characters, right? | ||
But there's nothing else like this show. | ||
And I'm the best at it! | ||
I mean, there are people that don't say half of what I say, and they're not as good at what I do as I am. | ||
So, it's like, not only do you have somebody who's telling it straight up, but it just so happens to be the guy who's the best at it. | ||
You know, kind of fortunate. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
You're lucky. | ||
And you just wait and see. | ||
We've got a lot of big plans for the coming years. | ||
We are really in a transitional state. | ||
And I think this decade belongs to us. | ||
I'm very hopeful about the future. | ||
So... Yeah, be white-pilled! | ||
Be white-pilled! | ||
Because you're in good hands. | ||
You're in my... You're in my... huge hands. | ||
And I won't drop you. | ||
I won't drop you. | ||
I've got you, okay? | ||
I'm a young guy and I'm on my journey, you know, but I got you. | ||
I'm holding you in my careful, firm hands. | ||
And you're along for the ride, I guess. | ||
Ulysses Grant says, Am I still an incel if a black woman wants to have sex with me? | ||
No. | ||
Yeah, huge white pill. | ||
Yeah, it's pretty nice to be around white people. | ||
I guess you don't realize how nice it is to be around white people until you're not. | ||
Because sometimes you forget how bad it is. | ||
And then you go into another neighborhood and it's like, what the f- what happened here? | ||
Like I went to a store the other day in Cicero, which is like a total dump neighborhood in Chicago. | ||
Used to be a beautiful neighborhood. | ||
Used to be Italian. | ||
I used to be Al Capone's headquarters. | ||
And it's like night and day. | ||
Just like garbage everywhere. | ||
Just garbage everywhere. | ||
All over the parking lot. | ||
All over the Parkways just garbage bags of stuff styrofoam cups you know everything and homeless people homeless people sitting on buckets and carrying on and people driving like maniacs people driving drunk and shitty cars and dilapidated buildings and people don't speak English and people aren't helpful in the stores and the stuff isn't in stock and it's not where it needs to be in and it's like holy | ||
And then I went to this black neighborhood, went into a Walmart, and they don't have, like, self-checkout. | ||
They do, but it's, like, heavily fortified, locked down. | ||
They have, like, gates to get in. | ||
Have you ever seen this? | ||
In the Walmart in the white neighborhood, you walk right in, it's all open. | ||
In the black neighborhood, they have these big gates that have to open automatically once you're inside the store. | ||
And the self-checkout is, like, locked down with a magnetic chain. | ||
And all the checkout lines are super tight, so you can't, like, run through. | ||
And, you know, once again, the whole place is a free-for-all, and it's like... I don't know how people don't get it. | ||
It's so obvious. | ||
It's visible. | ||
And it's a gradient, you know? | ||
Like, you'll drive down one street, and literally it'll change gradually as you go. | ||
So... Whiskey says, not sure if he made a decision about drinking or not yet, but... | ||
Here we go. | ||
If not, I think you should. | ||
I was going to quote one of G.K. | ||
Chesterton's essays about how intoxication makes you enjoy God's creation. | ||
With enhanced senses, but with everything you've been through, there's no shame in leaning a bit on liquid courage to let loose. | ||
Just ask Winston Churchill. | ||
Yeah, because of people like you, I've decided against it. | ||
Thanks for the big super chat, but no, I don't need it. | ||
I don't need it. | ||
I don't want it. | ||
I don't need any liquid courage because I have enough. | ||
My balls are huge, literally and figuratively. | ||
I don't need to drink alcohol and feel a little goofy because I go hard in the fucking paint. | ||
Every day, and don't you forget it. | ||
And I don't need that. | ||
So shut up! | ||
Shut up! | ||
Liquid courage. | ||
You want some courage? | ||
I'll unzip my pants and throw some courage on the fucking table. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
No, but that's nasty. | ||
That's vulgar. | ||
Bad language. | ||
Disavow the language, but true, but true. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't need any... Drink up! | |
Okay, now I'm ready. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I don't need it. | |
I'm autistic. | ||
I can't breathe. | ||
You know, but it's just, just raw life force. | ||
I'm high on life. | ||
I don't need alcohol. | ||
Based Romeo, because I, you know, Because I'm the chosen one. | ||
I'm just built different. | ||
Built different than you, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Based Gromio says, America first is the greatest show on earth, 07. | ||
So true. | ||
Dred Robbie says, this past year, tensions resumed in the DPR and LPR. | ||
Many in the U.S., including the Atlantic Council, have suggested Zelensky give up the two backwards republics that largely got Yanukovych elected. | ||
However, Biden gave the Ukraine $60 million in aid four days ago. | ||
Do you see another 2014 full-out war on the horizon? | ||
Well, I heard a lot about this earlier this year. | ||
They were saying there was going to be a big war, I think in, like, May. | ||
Because, um... | ||
What was the development? | ||
There was a recent development which like created tensions. | ||
I forget exactly what was going on. | ||
I think it was like the Russians were preparing to annex the DPR and the LPR. | ||
Um, so I forget exactly what the provocation was, or was it the Ukrainians that were going in? | ||
I think they were talking about the Russians were gonna make a move, and the Ukrainians were gonna retaliate, something like that. | ||
So I forget all the details. | ||
I was gonna do a big show about it a few months ago, I just never got around to it. | ||
Um, full out war, I could see it, and you wanna know why? | ||
It's because, and I don't know, maybe this is like the neocon in me talking, but it seems to me like, you know, Putin did annex Crimea. | ||
It was a very aggressive move back in 2014, held the referendum, and did basically send in Russian operatives into Donbass to create those independent oblasts, or independent republics, whatever you want to call it. | ||
That was because of Obama. | ||
You know, that's because Obama was weak, you know, and then this is what the neocon said at the time, so maybe I sound like a neocon, but the narrative was, well, you know, Obama didn't take the opportunity to bomb Syria, and Obama did the JCPOA with Iran. | ||
I guess that was a year later, but they were negotiating for it. | ||
And so Russia basically got the idea, well, we could take this without consequence. | ||
So... | ||
You know, will Russia do something bold? | ||
Perhaps. | ||
Perhaps, especially now with this Nord Stream 2 pipeline going in. | ||
Gives Putin more leverage. | ||
So we'll see over Western Europe, you know. | ||
So we'll see. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
I haven't read about the situation on the ground there in a long time. | ||
I remember reading UNS Review. | ||
They had some great coverage of it in UNS Review. | ||
Who is it? | ||
This Anatoly something who writes for UNS Review was covering it. | ||
And I guess he was like Ukrainian or Russian or something. | ||
He was providing a lot of good coverage. | ||
So it's been a while since I looked at it. | ||
So I can't really speak to what's going to happen imminently. | ||
I haven't checked up on it. | ||
But yeah, I don't think it's likely that Ukraine is going to give up the Donbass. | ||
I don't think that's going to happen. | ||
unidentified
|
State, whoops, are you kidding me? | |
Snagged my mouse off my tray here. | ||
Love when that happens. | ||
unidentified
|
Where was I? | |
state enforced says put my letter of resignation at work in today because of vaccine mandates going to a state that doesn't require it only way to be able to look at myself in the mirror and not hate what i see from one knicker to another thanks for all you do well i appreciate it but you're supposed to get fired so you get severance pay you're supposed to get fired not quit then you get a little you know bonus on unemployment too But hey, good for you anyway, I guess. | ||
But yeah, we're trying to tell people to get fired, not quit. | ||
You know, push it until you get fired, and then at least you get unemployment and severance pay. | ||
But I mean, I guess quitting, I mean, accomplishes the same thing, just can't take advantage in the same way. | ||
Kenneth Starks says, it's called, we do a little yeehaw for Texas tonight. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Yee-haw! | ||
Yee-haw, everybody! | ||
Get along! | ||
Get along, little doggie! | ||
Gotta love the Southerners. | ||
Gotta love the Texans with their big hats. | ||
They come walking in. | ||
unidentified
|
Howdy! | |
That's all I imagined. | ||
That's what we saw when we were in Texas. | ||
People walking around with the giant, you know, Doug Dimmadome hat. | ||
unidentified
|
Howdy, y'all! | |
This here Texas, with their hands on their belt buckle. | ||
That's how they walk in Texas. | ||
That's how they walk down the street. | ||
And you're like, what are you doing? | ||
And here I am, you know, a real biped. | ||
Here I am like, excuse me, what are you doing? | ||
You look ridiculous. | ||
So. | ||
Nah, just kidding. | ||
unidentified
|
Just kidding. | |
Yeah, yee-haw, yee-haw for Texas. | ||
God bless them. | ||
unidentified
|
God bless Texas! | |
They love them. | ||
They're so full of themselves in Texas. | ||
So ridiculous. | ||
But hey, today, today, good for them, right? | ||
WP says, last night you said you were Anakin. | ||
Does that make us the 501st? | ||
No, no, I don't think so. | ||
It makes you the younglings. | ||
You're the younglings, you're like, imagine a Skywalker, there's too many of them, what are we going to do? | ||
And I'm just like, you know, I'm just cutting everybody up. | ||
That's you guys, you guys are the younglings, you know? | ||
Remember when he draws his lightsaber and the guy was like, that's like when you put out a super chat so earnestly, you're like, I think he's gonna read it. | ||
And I pull out the lightsaber and you're like, And my mom is watching the hologram. | ||
unidentified
|
I saw him killing younglings. | |
Obi-Wan says it so dramatically when he talks to Padme. | ||
unidentified
|
Killing younglings. | |
He says it so, like, I don't know. | ||
You know what I'm talking about? | ||
When he says it to Padme when he flies over to her crib. | ||
That's me. | ||
I'm killing younglings. | ||
unidentified
|
That's you. | |
You guys are the younglings. | ||
I'm just gonna slaughter you so no you're not the you're not the 501st the The 501st is maybe the interns, the Groiber Generals, the super chatters of the younglings. | ||
You guys are just getting cut down. | ||
And the 501st is maybe... | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Groyper Generals, maybe it's Incel Army. | ||
I don't know, I haven't quite figured that one out yet. | ||
Let me think about that some. | ||
The Groyper's telling Patrick Casey, it's time for you to leave, sir! | ||
Er, I guess he would be, I guess that would make Patrick Bail Organa, which would make sense because he's a faggy politician. | ||
And so it is. | ||
unidentified
|
Bail Organa says, it's time for you to leave! | |
And so it is and then that little guy comes in and starts cutting him down and he gets killed and it's like oh, you know and Who would be the little guy? | ||
I guess that would be like I Don't know one of the Patrick Simpson. | ||
I would be like t-based the little kid jumps jumps out out of the out of the platform Saves Bill Organa so we can escape and so it is Oh, yeah Who would Yoda be, then? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's getting a little too complicated now. | ||
Who would be Obi-Wan, then? | ||
Who would be Obi-Wan? | ||
I guess we'll see. | ||
I guess we'll see. | ||
There's been some Obi-Wan types over the past year or so. | ||
I have failed you, Anakin. | ||
unidentified
|
I have failed you. | |
I should have known the Jedi were plotting to take over! | ||
So true, man. | ||
That movie is so good. | ||
It's a perfect movie. | ||
It's THE perfect movie. | ||
It is. | ||
Endlessly quotable, it's dramatic, it makes you laugh, it makes you cry. | ||
Makes you jerk off a little? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
That's gross. | ||
Kidding, of course. | ||
There's nothing even in there like that. | ||
Just a joke. | ||
But it's all there. | ||
It's all there. | ||
It's dramatic. | ||
It's a space opera. | ||
It's got action. | ||
It's got romance. | ||
It's got friendship, betrayal. | ||
It's all there. | ||
The mentor, the husband, the brother, the... It's all there. | ||
Everybody in the chat cringed. | ||
Eww, what the... It's a joke, it's a joke, it's a joke, of course. | ||
Just throwing that in to throw you off a little bit. | ||
But... Don't let that take away from the fact that it's a perfect film. | ||
And I am Anakin. | ||
I am just like Anakin. | ||
Well, I'm similar. | ||
I'm similar in certain respects to Anakin Skywalker. | ||
I guess I'm really... Well, in a way, I'm kind of more like Obi-Wan. | ||
Because Obi-Wan defeats Darth Vader, right? | ||
When Anakin is in his prime, Obi-Wan defeats him. | ||
And could have killed him, but didn't. | ||
And Obi-Wan is a real incel. | ||
You know, or I guess he's a fake cell, according to the Clone Wars show. | ||
But Obi-Wan, in other words, he's chaste, a real, like, warrior monk, really in tune with the Force, and ultimately wins. | ||
So, I don't... I don't know, I don't really know. | ||
I feel like I'm every character on the screen. | ||
I'm like, he's just like me He's just like that. | ||
I mean there are the whole movie is about me is what I mean to say. | ||
The whole movie is about me It's all about me No kidding, of course But I am like Anakin. | ||
SchizoFriend says I listened to your incel freakout this morning. | ||
And I have to ask, how exactly are you going to find a woman to marry and raise your kids if you don't see her as a companion? | ||
Big boob contest? | ||
Incelfreakout? | ||
What incelfreakout? | ||
I don't even know what you're talking about. | ||
Incelfreakout? | ||
More like incel breakthrough. | ||
No, there's no freak out. | ||
You know, maybe you're disturbed by that because you have your head up a woman's ass, which is probably the case. | ||
But God will provide me with a wife, you know. | ||
My grandma always used to say in Italian, God will provide. | ||
And I'm a big believer in that, you know. | ||
I didn't seek out how to be a millionaire. | ||
I just became one, you know. | ||
And I didn't seek out how to become a successful e-celebrity with a popular show. | ||
It's just, you know, It just happened. | ||
You do the right thing and God provides. | ||
He paves a way. | ||
And if it's meant to happen, it will happen. | ||
So I'm really not that concerned about it. | ||
Everybody's so concerned about this for me. | ||
Nick, you're gonna get fat. | ||
Nick, you're never gonna find a wife. | ||
Nick, what are you gonna do? | ||
I'm not too worried about it, honestly. | ||
And neither should you. | ||
Neither should you. | ||
So, this is what you're doing. | ||
This is what you should be doing, okay? | ||
Shut up. | ||
Shut up. | ||
Let me worry about that, okay? | ||
Anybody remember that from Master of Disguise? | ||
I was watching that on YouTube the other day. | ||
That's another classic. | ||
Another perfect film, if I might add. | ||
Another perfect movie. | ||
No, that movie sucks, but it's funny. | ||
So yeah, so shut up! | ||
Not concerned about it, okay? | ||
A wife will literally... I'm a big believer in this. | ||
I believe like a wife will literally just like emerge from the lake for me. | ||
You know, I feel like I put in enough where God is gonna be like, you know what? | ||
You earned it. | ||
And the perfect woman will emerge from like the lake naked and be like, who am I? | ||
Where am I? | ||
I think I'm your wife. | ||
I think I'm supposed to be your wife, Nick. | ||
unidentified
|
I'd be like... My man. | |
No, when I say that, I mean that like allegorically. | ||
I mean that in a way that is metaphorical. | ||
I don't mean that in a real way. | ||
I don't mean a real naked woman is gonna come out of a lake. | ||
I mean like, it'll be as if this is the case. | ||
The right woman will show up at the right time, and I'll be like, yo! | ||
What's up? | ||
You're not like the other girls? | ||
No, I don't know. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Not a big concern of mine, frankly. | ||
I'm not concerned. | ||
I could get married when I'm 80 years old. | ||
Doesn't matter to me. | ||
I'm not like a woman where I won't stop being fertile. | ||
I'm, you know, I'm far more worried about what's going on in the world, man! | ||
I'm far more worried about the movement than people talking about, when are you gonna get married? | ||
When are you gonna get married? | ||
Shut up! | ||
Shut up! | ||
I'll worry about that, okay? | ||
That's all. | ||
Everyone else. | ||
People are so worried about girls and getting married. | ||
There's enough to go around. | ||
There's plenty of that. | ||
There is a surplus of worrying about that. | ||
Such that there is enough for me to sort of extract. | ||
Like a bank. | ||
Like a bank of giving a shit about something like that. | ||
That I can draw on. | ||
Anytime. | ||
Where are the people that give a shit about the white race? | ||
Where's the people that are really caring about the future of our race? | ||
Our people? | ||
Our civilization? | ||
Not seeing a lot of that. | ||
I'm not actually seeing a lot of that lately, actually. | ||
So somebody's gotta marry the race. | ||
Somebody's gotta take the white race as a bride. | ||
Who will be the husband to our race? | ||
unidentified
|
Me! | |
It will be me. | ||
And I'll be a father and a husband to all the race. | ||
And I'll have the right of the first night. | ||
Okay? | ||
Let's just make that clear. | ||
Let's establish this. | ||
Because I know it's going to become a big controversy when that officially becomes a policy. | ||
But I do have right of the first night. | ||
I reserve that right. | ||
I've given up a lot. | ||
I've created so much. | ||
I have right of the first night for every white person that is born. | ||
Or rather, for every white marriage, I should say. | ||
Not for born. | ||
For every white marriage that goes on, I reserve it. | ||
It's reserved. | ||
I haven't invoked it yet, but it's always there. | ||
It's always there. | ||
And it will always be there. | ||
Just so you know. | ||
Just letting you know. | ||
And if you're not okay with that, the Groyper Praetorian Guard is going to drag you out of the room. | ||
It's not really up to you. | ||
Kidding, of course. | ||
Just kidding. | ||
unidentified
|
These are jokes. | |
I love all these, like, pathetic losers that go, how exactly are you... | ||
People have been telling me this my whole life for being me. | ||
Let a nigga free think over here. | ||
People are like, well, what are the women going to think? | ||
Who cares? | ||
You know what I say to that? | ||
I don't care. | ||
My whole life. | ||
Well, you can't have a girlfriend like that. | ||
How are you going to get married when girls aren't going to... You know, what are you really saying? | ||
You're saying you can't talk like that and have a girl like you because, you know, when you're free thinking over there, girls aren't going to like it and then they won't marry you. | ||
So, what are you going to do now? | ||
Listen, I am not a slave like you. | ||
So, I actually am gonna do what I want, and I'm gonna say what I want, and everyone's just gonna have to deal with it. | ||
And, you know, if being a free thinker precludes me from having a wife, then having a wife? | ||
Don't need it in my life, you know that? | ||
I'm a free man! | ||
I will not give up my freedom for what? | ||
For that? | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Don't think so. | ||
Free nigga talking over here. | ||
I love, I love, but you know, that's the kind of mental trap that people try to place on me. | ||
They say, you can't say that. | ||
What will the women think? | ||
How are you going to get your, how are you going to get your rocks off if you, if you're free thinking over there? | ||
I'm not like you. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
So people are slaves. | ||
And I'm a free man. | ||
And these people they see though, they're like, how could you be like me? | ||
It's like when people say, you're never going to get a real job. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like, no, that's the one thing I want. | |
That's exactly what, when I go to Walgreens, I'm like, I'll never be on the other side of this register ever again. | ||
unidentified
|
Never. | |
I was never there, but you know what I'm saying. | ||
Cause that's, you know, when I go to Walgreens and I'm like, hey, could you point me to the, uh, could you point me to the flash drives? | ||
You know, I, whatever. | ||
I had to reinstall Windows the other day with a flash drive. | ||
I bought a flash drive at Walgreens. | ||
All blacks, by the way, totally ignorant, rude. | ||
But you know I was asking the lady to get the flash drive out of the glass container I was I was looking at her and I had to turn and like I shed a tear I was like Oh, it'll be at the counter when I'm ready. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Thanks. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
No, I'm okay. | ||
I'm okay just uh, I don't know I'm Love one just died or something I guess Because I saw the black lady opening up the glass container with the key, and I was just like, I've messed it all up! | ||
Damn it! | ||
I look at my neighbors, and my neighbors are in their sandals and their cargo shorts, and they're like, so Nick, what are you up to now? | ||
And they're like, that's a lot of excitement, you know? | ||
And I look at them and I'm like, why couldn't that be me? | ||
unidentified
|
Why couldn't it be me? | |
I want to wake up at the crack of dawn and get in my car and get my little coffee cup and drive to work and drive home and watch TV. | ||
I wanted it to be me doing that! | ||
And instead I'm here. | ||
And instead I'm here. | ||
Live streaming and gaming and skateboarding and Shifting the paradigm and it's just sometimes it just gets to you, you know? | ||
It should have been me! | ||
I should have been bringing the the brats to the block party and be in a Tupperware container and be like, hey Bob, how's it going? | ||
unidentified
|
It should have been me! | |
Now I'll never know what it's like I'm gonna kill myself as soon as possible. | ||
Maybe in another life I could have that idyllic existence. | ||
Go bald and wear like a polo shirt and my man boobs are hanging out in it and I'm just sort of standing there with Keens on and the checkout line at the Jewel Osco with like a pack of hot dog buns. | ||
Well this is just ridiculous. | ||
They really ought to get another cashier over here. | ||
I'm gonna be late to the block party before I get in my Kia Sorento or whatever and drive home. | ||
In another life. | ||
Another life. | ||
unidentified
|
But for now, just a rockstar. | |
Just a rich, famous rockstar, incel gamer, far-right political extremist, you know. | ||
It's gotta settle. | ||
I just gotta settle. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
You're right. | ||
I'm I'm so it's so over It's so over I'm just giving you hearts. | ||
I'm nothing. | ||
There's nothing wrong with that. | ||
By the way. | ||
I am there's nothing wrong with that I am not contrary to everything. | ||
I just said there's there's not ironically nothing wrong with that, but You know People Give me a hard time and it's like I Don't know I'm supposed to not be what I want to be because I'm worried about, like, what a woman is gonna say about that? | ||
I mean, what do you suggest I do? | ||
Like, constantly filter what I say? | ||
Like, well, how would my future wife think about this? | ||
unidentified
|
Excuse me. | |
What a bitch you are, if you think like that. | ||
I think about these men that are like, oh, my wife would kill me, and it's like, what's going on? | ||
I couldn't live like that. | ||
I seriously- I don't even do- I don't do that for world Jewry, but I'm gonna do that for women. | ||
I don't even filter what I say for, like, the Jewish elites. | ||
You know, I'm still paying for the cookie joke thing, but I'm gonna do that for, like, women. | ||
Better filter so that, uh, so the latest e-girl doesn't dislike what I say. | ||
If anything, it's the opposite. | ||
said i put stuff out there that's deliberately provocative because it's like you know i'm uh i'm a free man free nigga talking Anyway, you get the point. | ||
unidentified
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How exactly are you gonna find a woman to marry and raise your kids if you don't see her as a companion? | |
Well, why don't you let me worry about that, cuck boy? | ||
Okay, cuck boy! | ||
Why don't you let me worry about that, okay? | ||
I'll be clapping your wife's cheeks. | ||
No, kidding! | ||
Gross! | ||
Disavow! | ||
Disavow! | ||
But, uh, shut up! | ||
Just shut up, okay? | ||
You worry about your wife, okay? | ||
You worry about, I don't know, holding up your wife's boobs or whatever, and I'll worry about skating on the paradigm, shifting it when I feel like. | ||
Uh, GigaGroiper says, isn't banning abortion detrimental to America's white demographic core when minorities are getting the majority of the abortions? | ||
In Texas, white 27%, black 27%, Hispanic 39%. | ||
Is there something I'm not seeing? | ||
Yeah, what you're talking about is murder and genocide, which we are not in favor of. | ||
unidentified
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So, that's what you're missing. | |
Wyatt Herbs is wondering how AFPAC meetup is any different than a Patriot Front or National Justice Party meetup in terms of OPSEC or even the chat with a phone number link telegram or super chats from our banks? | ||
Well, it's a little difference that's called RICO, conspiracy. | ||
You know, when you're talking about a super chat, a conference, something like that, we're talking about something that's not a criminal organization. | ||
It's a little different, you know, because you very well might have a confidential informant go to any conference for that matter. | ||
But what are they informing on? | ||
What's the intelligence gathered? | ||
A person bought a ticket to listen to a speech? | ||
There's no criminal conduct there, you know? | ||
And so the difference is that Patriot Front goes out there with shields. | ||
Why do you go out someplace with a shield? | ||
Intend to get in a physical confrontation? | ||
Intend to engage in assault, battery, intimidation, something like that. | ||
In other words, violence. | ||
You know, violence, correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think violence is like a legally safe activity to engage in. | ||
Especially not when you're in an organization. | ||
You know, it kind of increases your liability. | ||
So, you're wondering, maybe that's because you're a dumb idiot. | ||
Proud Boys, for example, will go out and, in tactical gear, fight Antifa. | ||
They will throw the first punch, or sometimes defensively. | ||
And this is why, over the past five years, Proud Boys have been locked up. | ||
I don't, I don't support that. | ||
I don't think it's justified or okay, but that's what happens. | ||
Because when you do an event in New York City, and you're a proud boy, you know, whatever, and you get in a fight with Antifa, guess what? | ||
They're gonna throw the book at you. | ||
And they do. | ||
And they don't care if it's in self-defense, and they don't care about any of that. | ||
They make an example out of you. | ||
You get put in jail. | ||
And when it comes to the Capitol, clearly, 50 people got charged with conspiracy. | ||
Every one of them was in one of those militia groups. | ||
Now there were other people that breached the Capitol, trespassed, whatever, but everyone that got charged with conspiracy was part of a group. | ||
Now why do you think that is? | ||
It's because they were part of a criminal conspiracy with the group. | ||
The group gave them liability. | ||
Where maybe individually they wouldn't have the same liability. | ||
Conspiracy is a huge deal. | ||
That's a big charge. | ||
So, you know, people said that about AFPAC. | ||
They're like, well, famously everybody said, oh AFPAC is going to be a fed honeypot. | ||
I talked to my lawyers about this. | ||
I talked to several lawyers about this. | ||
I talked to lawyers that specialize in stuff like this. | ||
And they completely dismissed it. | ||
They said it's legal, it's above board, it's a conference with speeches, it's run by a non-profit, a non-profit given non-profit status by the IRS. | ||
Totally above board. | ||
Whereas what you're talking about with Patriot Front and all these other things is being part of the legal category of potentially a criminal organization, certainly a part of a group, potentially part of a criminal conspiracy if there's criminal activity. | ||
So it's big legal liability, and it's also information. | ||
And this especially matters when a group like that gets put on a terror watch list. | ||
And by group identification, they ban people from a bank, YouTube, you know, whatever. | ||
In Canada, they classified the Proud Boys as a terror group, and they put all kinds of special things against them. | ||
And so on. | ||
When you're talking about, you know, visiting a webpage, I mean, that's just ridiculous. | ||
It's just not the same thing. | ||
So, joining a telegram channel, you know, again, at that point, it's like, don't even say anything. | ||
Because by the same token, you could say, well, what if I say the word Nick Fuentes out loud? | ||
Well, guess what? | ||
Your phone is going to hear it. | ||
So what, you're never going to say Nick Fuentes? | ||
You're never going to say right-wing this or right-wing that? | ||
You can't look at a Telegram channel? | ||
You can't pay $2 to send a Super Chat message? | ||
You can't attend a conference with speeches? | ||
What you're talking about is completely different. | ||
We're talking about organizations, and that's a distinction, and I said that. | ||
I said that above ground, real official organizations, uniforms, that stuff is not going to work for the reason of criminal liability and for the reason of infiltration, putting a target on your back and so on. | ||
Whereas with a conference, it's buy a ticket, come, go, plausible deniability. | ||
You could say, I was just checking it out. | ||
I didn't know what it was about or don't go. | ||
And I said that before AFPAC. | ||
I said if you don't want to go, don't go. | ||
If it makes you uncomfortable, if it's too much risk, don't attend. | ||
understand the concern whereas groups aggressively want to expand their membership and and you know are holding these kinds of free open-air public rallies where they anticipate prepare for and expect confrontation once again you could say that's a criminal conspiracy and if you're in the group if you can be placed in the group you have liability so so that's the difference the | ||
The difference is that nobody from America First has ever been arrested at an America First event for being America First. | ||
Patriot Front? | ||
Can't say the same. | ||
And National Justice Party? | ||
Can't say the same. | ||
So... Doesn't National Justice Party talk to, like, Chris Cantwell and those types? | ||
And, you know, look, if you want to go to that freak show, you know, once again, I think you probably belong in a cage. | ||
If you're dumb enough to think that's a good idea, Then I don't think it's a great loss if you go behind bars forever. | ||
I'm just being honest with you. | ||
If you look at either of those freak shows and go, yeah, I wanna, um, I wanna get out with the shield and the flare and get my shit pushed in by blacks in Philadelphia, pushed back into my Penske truck and then arrested, huh, yeah, then you might just be a brainiac. | ||
And, uh, same goes for if you wanna go to that, you know, sweaty shit show, NJP, then you can knock yourself out. | ||
Dalton says, hey King, great show as always. | ||
Have a blessed evening. | ||
Hey, thank you King. | ||
You too, buddy. | ||
Do we love Dalton? | ||
Dalton's one of my favorites. | ||
He's one of my favorite new guys on the scene. | ||
Dalton the coin is surging. | ||
We've got a lot of coins. | ||
A lot of coins are in play and I'm putting money on these coins. | ||
unidentified
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I'm betting on them. | |
I'm betting big. | ||
So, we like the coins. | ||
Proliferation of coins. | ||
Tyler Russell coin. | ||
Dalton coin. | ||
Kai Klipsch coin. | ||
The coins are going crazy. | ||
Macman says, some fun AF trivia for you guys. | ||
How many AF mugs did James Alsup send to Nick and how many were destroyed? | ||
500th episode has the answer. | ||
I don't even remember. | ||
I'll give you guys a chance to think about it. | ||
I think he sent me ten, and nine were destroyed. | ||
I know one of them survived. | ||
All of them were destroyed except for one. | ||
I think it was ten. | ||
But yeah, I mean, a lot of you guys probably haven't heard this story, but back when I was doing Nationalist Review with James Alsup, he was handling the fulfillment of our merch, which we sold mugs at the time. | ||
We sold these America First mugs. | ||
And, um... He was doing the fulfillment out of his place in Washington. | ||
And so I was like, hey, can you send me like 10 mugs? | ||
You know, I want to give some to my family, some to friends, whatever. | ||
And he was like, sure thing. | ||
So he sends me over these mugs and I waited for him, you know, for a long time. | ||
I was going to give him as a Christmas present. | ||
Yeah, I think it was Christmas because that would have been right around that time. | ||
We started up and I think September ended in January. | ||
So I wanted the mugs for Christmas to give as a Christmas gift. | ||
Well, I get the mugs and I'm all excited. | ||
I open the door, pick up the box, And I'm like, oh shit, I pick up the box and you could hear a lot of motion, a lot of glass moving around, and I'm like, oh jeez. | ||
So I take the box, put it on the table, open it up, and literally every single mug except for one was totally shattered, totally destroyed. | ||
Somehow, one of them survived, just one out of 10. | ||
And you wanna know what this retard did? | ||
He took 10 mugs, okay? | ||
And put them in a big box. | ||
Such that it was like... It's like this blue M&M. | ||
You know, this blue M&M. | ||
Goes in the mug. | ||
And of course there's a lot of air in the mug, right? | ||
It's not dense. | ||
So he puts the mugs in the box, and the box is way too big. | ||
You know what he does, genius? | ||
He wraps the mugs in bubble wrap. | ||
And then puts them in the box. | ||
But guess what? | ||
The mugs are individually wrapped in bubble wrap, but the box is still full of air. | ||
He didn't put any packing material in. | ||
He didn't put any paper, packing peanuts, styrofoam, nothing! | ||
He thought wrapping the mugs in bubble wrap would be enough. | ||
Then putting them loose inside the box. | ||
Now what do you think happens when mugs, wrapped or not wrapped, loose in the box, get shipped across the country? | ||
Yeah, they shift. | ||
They shift in transport. | ||
They move around. | ||
You got blacks kicking the boxes around at the distribution facilities. | ||
And whether they're covered in bubble wrap or not, they are still smashing against each other and smashing against the box. | ||
Consequently, they break. | ||
I open the box. | ||
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I'm like, what the fuck? | |
How do you not understand that? | ||
How are you an adult male older than me, college educated, and you do something that stupid? | ||
I mean, that's like what a retard would do or a kid. | ||
unidentified
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Who doesn't? | |
How stupid can you be? | ||
And what's funny is he wrapped them in bubble wrap. | ||
So it's like he really thought he was doing something with the bubble wrap. | ||
It's not even like he just low-effort threw them in there. | ||
No, he took the time like, I'll bubble wrap these. | ||
Looks good to me. | ||
That checks out. | ||
And then he had to bring a box full of mugs, shifting around, and give them to the guy at the post office. | ||
What the hell? | ||
Who does that? | ||
How stupid do you have to be? | ||
It's not that hard. | ||
It's pretty common sense. | ||
Especially if you're a man. | ||
You can't anticipate that that's going to happen? | ||
unidentified
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I don't know, man. | |
That was just, like, too stupid for me. | ||
I'm like, okay, this guy's just got it. | ||
He has a hard time. | ||
For James, also, things are a little bit harder. | ||
unidentified
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Things are a little bit more difficult. | |
And that's what I knew. | ||
That's what I knew, you know? | ||
This guy's a little... He's got a little difficulty. | ||
unidentified
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Very funny. | |
Very funny. | ||
Oh, yeah, the old nationalist review. | ||
It's so funny when I partner up with people they think they're smarter than me. | ||
And they're not. | ||
Like, I've been in that dynamic so many times, like with Cassie Dillon, James Allsup, Patrick Casey, you know, you get in like a partnership, or in like a working relationship with people, and they think that like, because they've been in it longer than you, because they have more subscribers than you, you know, or whatever, they're more connected, they think that like, oh, I'm in control here, I've got the real edge in this relationship. | ||
And it's always so funny when that dynamic flips, you know? | ||
Because Cassie Dillon, she was like... I mean, she was always nice to me, but she totally thought that she was like the shit. | ||
She was very patronizing, very condescending. | ||
She would tell me, like, we need to work on your media skills. | ||
I'm like, work on my media skills? | ||
Like, you don't even know how to enunciate your words, and I'm pretty sure you have a speech impediment. | ||
I need to work on my media skills? | ||
You kidding me? | ||
My show has twice as many viewers as you! | ||
on rsbn but you know she would say patronizing stuff we need to work on your eyebrows we need to work on your media schools we need to do blah blah blah blah blah and she was like this type a you know the type type a sort of uh what's the word um busy body kind of a person kind of like bossing me around and stuff like that and real like taking me under her wing and i'm like you have no idea man like i would i would literally bite your face off | ||
you know i would literally i would if it was necessary Sorry. | ||
And these people, you know, they lured that over. | ||
James Alsop too, he had a bigger YouTube channel than me and he was like, you know, thought he was a big man on campus. | ||
And where is he now? | ||
unidentified
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You know? | |
It's really, it's just about, it's just about humility, that's all. | ||
You know? | ||
I humble myself before these people. | ||
And I'm like, mm-hmm, yep, totally. | ||
But they are sort of arrogant, you know? | ||
And they're like, oh, we don't, that guy, yeah, he's, whatever. | ||
So it's always funny to me when that dynamic inverts itself, especially with James, because he was always so smug around me. | ||
He thought he had it all figured out. | ||
Yeah, but I guess I was just a little bit smarter than you, huh? | ||
unidentified
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Guess I was just a lot smarter than you. | |
I don't I'm not trying to gloat I'm not trying to be smug but it like when you're coming up in this thing I'm sure a lot of people maybe some people can relate to this you know when you're a nobody when you don't have anything people are kind of you know how that goes And I guess it makes sense, because you haven't proved yourself or anything, but they're patronizing. | ||
And it's sort of satisfying when it's like, when you finally kind of get the acclaim that you think is sort of appropriate. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
When you kind of get the level of success or whatever that, you know, you feel is commensurate to your ability. | ||
It's like, yeah, I don't do that anymore. | ||
I don't guest star on Raised Right with Cassie Dillon anymore. | ||
I don't play second fiddle to James Alsop on Nationalist Review anymore. | ||
I don't do that anymore. | ||
So, it's kind of, uh, it's just one of those satisfying moments. | ||
So, yeah, very funny. | ||
The Old Mug Story! | ||
Memory Unlocked! | ||
unidentified
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Good times. | |
Big Globe says, I'm starting to believe Jill Biden is Q. Yeah? | ||
Black Knights says, America needs new elites. | ||
Even CIA sucks these days. | ||
Nothing but Jews, sodomites, and alcoholics. | ||
unidentified
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Is that true? | |
I don't know. | ||
I'm not in the CIA. | ||
CIA defector says, T for Texas Taliban. | ||
God is too good to me. | ||
Satan outsourced my job and God provided a legal avenue for me to report abortionists. | ||
For 10k, an open carry my AK-47. | ||
Christ is king and he hates whores. | ||
Let's go! | ||
So true. | ||
So true. | ||
It's biblical. | ||
It really is. | ||
You know, a lot of people, a lot of women say, like, your views on women aren't biblical. | ||
It's like, yes, they are. | ||
What Bible are you reading? | ||
Because I'm pretty sure, and I know I've said this like last week, but it's so true. | ||
The whole Bible is about women being the downfall of man. | ||
The Wisdom Books, Genesis, it's all over, man. | ||
It's all over the whole thing. | ||
How could you not walk away from the Bible with like a deep skepticism of women? | ||
Why are we in this position in the first place? | ||
What time is it? | ||
Why do we have time? | ||
Why is the clock ticking? | ||
Why do we die? | ||
Oh yeah, oh yeah, now I remember. | ||
This was God's punishment because a woman convinced the first man to take a bite out of the... to take a bite out of the apple, the fruit of knowledge. |