Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's cheers, everybody. | |
It's going to happen. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
They kick me off the plane. | ||
unidentified
|
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 triumph over our spirit. | ||
But they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
unidentified
|
And I believe in America. | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing is going to stop White Boy Summer. | |
Nothing is going to stop America First. | ||
America First, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
White people found in this country. | ||
This country wouldn't exist without White people. | ||
Wouldn't exist without White people. | ||
And White people are done being bullied. | ||
Done being bullied. | ||
We're the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
And I think our ancestors can smile on us right now for what we're doing. | ||
Cheers. | ||
Cheers. | ||
. | ||
The man. | ||
The mayor also just announced the city will start requiring proof of COVID vaccination for a range of indoor activities, including going to a restaurant or to the gym. | ||
New York is the first major U.S. | ||
city to introduce a mandate like this. | ||
It requires people to show proof of at least one vaccine dose and will be phased in starting later this month. | ||
You have to abide by the rules and you have to have a mask on. | ||
It's not. | ||
Businesses have the right to refuse service, even if you're not one of them. | ||
That's their choice. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
49, we're out. | ||
Okay. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Where's your mask? | ||
Where's your mask? | ||
Get this thing away from me. | ||
It's still a city order. | ||
Leave the property or you get a citation. | ||
Period. | ||
Don't argue with me. | ||
It's real simple. | ||
Put your hands right here. | ||
I'm not going to be detained. | ||
Yes, you are. | ||
I am going to take you right now. | ||
You were in violation, and I gave you an awful lot. | ||
I'm not going to Walgreens to get an mRNA, non-FDA approved, and even if it was, experimental vaccine that goes inside your cells and manipulates your DNA to start producing spiked proteins, experimental vaccine that goes inside your cells and manipulates your DNA to start producing spiked proteins, which are killing babies Because I'm afraid of the flu, which kills like .00013%. | ||
unidentified
|
I think it's even less than that. | |
This is paving the way for a lockdown. | ||
And if you thought this was over, if you thought that we were getting out of this, you're not. | ||
We're not. | ||
It's not going back to normal. | ||
You're not going back to normal. | ||
This is the beginning. | ||
unidentified
|
That was phase one. | |
I believe that they probably had to let people out of the lockdown. | ||
Give people a taste of what things used to be like. | ||
To 1. | ||
Let out pressure. | ||
It's a pressure release valve. | ||
And 2. | ||
It's a mental trick. | ||
People get a small taste of what they used to have, the hard lockdown comes back, and then people are more desperate to do what they're told in order to get full normalcy. | ||
But I think that's the agenda. | ||
And they're already talking about that in Iceland. | ||
They say in Iceland it's a 15-year, 15-year lockdown plan. | ||
And they're talking about that with the vaccines. | ||
unidentified
|
Regular, every six months, booster shots. | |
Booster shots, vaccinations for COVID. | ||
So you're gonna get your two shots, and then get sick, and then you gotta get a third shot, and then you know you just get a shot every six months or something. | ||
mRNA poison. | ||
And that's with the 15-year lockdown plan, and that's with the masks, and the plexiglass, and the lockdown, and the vaccine passport. | ||
I think the endgame is the vaccine passport. | ||
When all of this is said and done, there will be no independent businesses left. | ||
There will be no public institution, public or private institution that is open to the public that will not be controlled by the state, that will not be controlled by bureaucrats. | ||
There's not going to be one place that you could go to outside Where other people gather that will not be restricted based on vaccination status or some other arbitrary thing. | ||
And if they announced it tomorrow that that's what they were doing, people would resist it. | ||
And the only way to stop this, by the way, is to stop it where it is. | ||
You can't stop where it's going. | ||
You've got to stop it where it is. | ||
You've got to stop it in its track. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
I mean, do people not understand how that works? | ||
I think people have it in their minds. | ||
They're like, well, if it gets really bad, you know, I don't know if I'd go that far. | ||
Well, it's not really up to you. | ||
These things have momentum. | ||
And they're contingent. | ||
They're building one thing on top of the previous thing. | ||
So people have it in their heads, like, well, if it got that bad, you know, then I'd have a problem with it. | ||
Well, look how bad it is now. | ||
Look how bad it has gotten. | ||
Take a look back a year, five years. | ||
I mean, at everything, but specifically with the pandemic. | ||
unidentified
|
Take a look back at one year ago, you know. | |
People say, well, if it got so bad, you know, then I might say something, then I might do something. | ||
I might not like that. | ||
Okay, well, the only way we're gonna stop it from getting over there is if we stop it over here. | ||
If we start saying no over here. | ||
We gotta start thinking how we're gonna stop it here. | ||
If people just stop doing it, There's a chance we could have earned that outcome. | ||
We are continuing to wage our war against the mask mandate. | ||
I'm a big believer in just making everybody's life harder. | ||
You don't have to get fired over this stuff, but just make everybody's life difficult. | ||
Don't let the CDC guidelines be an imposition on you. | ||
Let it be an imposition on the people that have to enforce it. | ||
You know, let the people that work at these places of business remind you five times when you're in a store or wherever to put your mask back on and put it on over your nose and do this and that, right? | ||
Here's my challenge to you. | ||
Go into one of these stores when they reimpose the mask mandate and get in a confrontation with a worker and get in a shouting match and get kicked out. | ||
And you're going to feel adrenaline. | ||
You're going to go into Target. | ||
You're going to go into Walmart or wherever. | ||
And you're going to get in a big fight. | ||
And your mouth is going to twitch. | ||
And you're going to feel shaky. | ||
And you're going to get adrenaline. | ||
Some of you, yes, some of you maybe are used to this. | ||
And that's a good thing. | ||
It feels good. | ||
It reminds you you're alive. | ||
You're human. | ||
And the more that you do it, the more you'll be able to maintain your grip. | ||
But start getting used to that feeling. | ||
That's a good feeling. | ||
We want to start to feel that. | ||
Fuck these people. | ||
Ruin their day. | ||
Make these people that work at Target go home and cry because they have to enforce this bullshit. | ||
Make them lose their minds. | ||
Make them go to their therapist and get on antidepressants and cry because you walked into Target and ruined their whole day because gas is $4 and they don't know how they're gonna pay their rent and their relationship with their parents is bad and they're getting used and Tinder hookups and then they gotta go to Target and they gotta deal with some smug right-wing asshole not wearing their mask. | ||
unidentified
|
And let those people go off the rails, and let the whole fucking system go off the rails. | |
That's what we have to do. | ||
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only, only a class of people so rootless If you view America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
We're gonna smash your brain in with the Bible, idiots. | |
We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiot. | ||
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
When's enough enough, baby? | ||
When's enough enough, baby? | ||
Sick. | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
Stranger, you can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
The money has to stop the line. | ||
It's not a lack of life. | ||
Stranger, you can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
You're nothing that's to stop the line. | ||
Not a lack of life. | ||
You're like, we're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not money. | ||
I'm sipping wine, having some pasta, having some pizza. | ||
Oh, I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm, well, I'm not normal. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
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. | ||
Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the sun and for the you know Don't sun it when you're growing on a place What you think, me and a girl, she's growing on a place And put the game, dirty game, what a fool Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the sun and for the you know And I've addicted to Sarah Tulley-Russell | ||
Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the sun and for the you know Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the sun and for the you know | ||
And I'll see you next time on the show | ||
It's the ugliest nightmare, boy From the prettiest dreams It's the ugliest nightmare, boy From the prettiest dreams It's the ugliest nightmare, boy From the prettiest dreams It's the ugliest nightmare, boy From the prettiest dreams It's the ugliest nightmare, boy | ||
Millions of people trying to get on the scene. | ||
And everyone's selling their souls. | ||
Everyone's selling their... Everyone's saying they want fuzzy sleepwalking dead eyes closed. | ||
L.A. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord save these people. | ||
Let us sleep. | ||
They let in safe and one day streets. | ||
Lord save us from L.A. | ||
I am my life. | ||
Blueprint 5 mic. | ||
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 hated. | ||
Okay, then. | ||
Two words. | ||
Shot down. | ||
Crazy. | ||
Crazy. | ||
So I live by two words. | ||
Fuck you, pay me! | ||
Screamin'. | ||
Teasing. | ||
Savin'. | ||
You know how the game be. | ||
I can't let them change me. | ||
Cause on Judgment Day, you gon' blame me. | ||
Look God, it's the same. | ||
And I basically know now. | ||
We get racially profiled. | ||
Cuffed up and hosed down. | ||
Pimped up and hosed down. | ||
Plus I got a whole city to hold down. | ||
'Cause the bottom to the top is the only place to go now. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Oh! | ||
I can't wait! | ||
You wanna know what's critical to all of this? | ||
We look at Christ on the cross. | ||
And you're gonna kick us off Twitter? | ||
You can't stop people that are religious zealots. | ||
You cannot stop people that are motivated in the face of the fear of death. | ||
unidentified
|
It gives false hope that eats them whole. | |
Sin, millionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus, save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope that eats them whole. | ||
Sin, millionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus, save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope that eats them whole. | ||
Sin, millionaires who are still broke. | ||
I'm still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster before it takes their souls. | ||
It gives us hope that each damn home sin They'll let us who are still broke Jesus saved all my people From this long stuff, oh, | ||
it takes them so He appears for the power that it takes them so He appears for the power that is not of this world | ||
Verification commencing *sad music* Verified. | ||
You are a real human being. | ||
The mayor also just announced the city will start requiring proof of COVID vaccination for a range of indoor activities, including going to a restaurant or to the gym. | ||
New York is the first major U.S. | ||
city to introduce a mandate like this. | ||
It requires people to show proof of at least one vaccine dose and will be phased in starting later this month. | ||
You have to abide by the rules and you have to have a mask on. | ||
It's not. | ||
Residents have the right to refuse service, even if you're not one of them. | ||
That's their choice. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Good. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
You and I, we're out. | ||
Okay. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Where's your mask? | ||
Where's your mask? | ||
I'm just staying away from you. | ||
It's still a city order. | ||
Leave the property or you get a citation. | ||
Period. | ||
Don't argue with me. | ||
It's real simple. | ||
Put your hands right here. | ||
unidentified
|
You're not going to need to take. | |
Yes, you are. | ||
I will take you right now. | ||
You are in violation, and I gave you a lawful order. | ||
I'm not going to Walgreens to get an mRNA, non-FDA approved, and even if it wasn't, experimental vaccine that goes inside your cells and manipulates your DNA to start producing spiked proteins, experimental vaccine that goes inside your cells and manipulates your DNA to start producing spiked proteins, which are killing babies Because I'm afraid of the flu, which kills like .00013%. | ||
unidentified
|
I think it's even less than that. | |
This is paving the way for a lockdown. | ||
And if you thought this was over, if you thought that we were getting out of this, you're not. | ||
We're not. | ||
It's not going back to normal. | ||
You're not going back to normal. | ||
This is the beginning. | ||
That was phase one. | ||
I believe that they probably had to let people out of the lockdown. | ||
Give people a taste of what things used to be like. | ||
To 1. | ||
Let out pressure. | ||
It's a pressure release valve. | ||
And 2. | ||
It's a mental trick. | ||
People get a small taste of what they used to have, the hard lockdown comes back, and then people are more desperate to do what they're told in order to get full normalcy. | ||
But I think that's the agenda. | ||
And they're already talking about that in Iceland. | ||
They say in Iceland it's a 15-year lockdown plan. | ||
And they're talking about that with the vaccines. | ||
unidentified
|
Regular, every six months, booster shots. | |
Booster shots, vaccinations for COVID. | ||
So you're gonna get your two shots, and then get sick, and then you gotta get a third shot, and then, you know, you just get a shot every six months or something. | ||
mRNA poison. | ||
And that's with the 15-year lockdown plan, and that's with the masks, and the plexiglass, and the lockdown, and the vaccine passport. | ||
I think the endgame is the vaccine passport. | ||
When all of this is said and done, there will be no independent businesses left. | ||
There will be no public institution, public or private institution that is open to the public that will not be controlled by the state, that will not be controlled by bureaucrats. | ||
There's not going to be one place that you could go to outside Where other people gather that will not be restricted based on vaccination status or some other arbitrary thing. | ||
And if they announced it tomorrow that that's what they were doing, people would resist it. | ||
And the only way to stop this, by the way, is to stop it where it is. | ||
You can't stop where it's going. | ||
You gotta stop it where it is. | ||
You gotta stop it in its track, right? | ||
I mean, do people not understand how that works? | ||
I think people have it in their minds. | ||
They're like, well, if it gets really bad, you know, I don't know if I go that far. | ||
Well, it's not really up to you. | ||
These things have momentum. | ||
And they're contingent. | ||
They're building one thing on top of the previous thing. | ||
So people have it in their heads, like, well, if it got that bad, you know, then I'd have a problem with it. | ||
Well, look how bad it is now. | ||
Look how bad it has gotten. | ||
Take a look back a year, five years. | ||
I mean, in everything, but specifically with the pandemic. | ||
unidentified
|
Take a look back at one year ago, you know. | |
People say, well, if it got so bad, you know, then I might say something, then I might do something. | ||
I might not like that. | ||
Okay, well, the only way we're gonna stop it from getting over there is if we stop it over here. | ||
If we start saying no over here. | ||
We gotta start thinking how we're gonna stop it here. | ||
If people just stop doing it, There's a chance we could have heard that outcome. | ||
We are continuing to wage our war against the mask mandate. | ||
I'm a big believer in just making everybody's life harder. | ||
You don't have to get fired over this stuff, but just make everybody's life difficult. | ||
Don't let the CDC guidelines be an imposition on you. | ||
Let it be an imposition on the people that have to enforce it. | ||
You know, let the people that work at these places of business remind you five times when you're in a store or wherever to put your mask back on and put it on over your nose and do this and that, right? | ||
Here's my challenge to you. | ||
Go into one of these stores when they reimpose the mask mandate and get in a confrontation with the worker and get in a shouting match and get kicked out. | ||
And you're going to feel adrenaline. | ||
You're going to go into Target. | ||
You're going to go into Walmart or wherever. | ||
And you're going to get in a big fight. | ||
And your mouth is going to twitch. | ||
And you're going to feel shaky. | ||
And you're going to get adrenaline. | ||
Some of you, yes, some of you maybe are used to this. | ||
And that's a good thing. | ||
It feels good. | ||
It reminds you you're alive. | ||
You're human. | ||
And the more that you do it, the more you'll be able to, you know, maintain your grip. | ||
But start getting used to that feeling. | ||
That's a good feeling. | ||
We want to start to feel that. | ||
Fuck these people. | ||
Ruin their day. | ||
Make these people that work at Target go home and cry because they have to enforce this bullshit. | ||
Make them lose their minds. | ||
Make them go to their therapist and get on antidepressants and cry because you walked into Target and ruined their whole day because gas is $4 and they don't know how they're going to pay their rent and their relationship with their parents is bad and they're getting used and Tinder hookups and then they got to go to Target and they got to deal with some smug right-wing asshole not wearing their mask. | ||
And let those people go off the rails. | ||
And let the whole fucking system go off the rails. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what we have to do. | |
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
He's not interested. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
unidentified
|
You know the rule. | |
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of him. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not capitalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick. | ||
What? | ||
Who's that? | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The End It's the kingdom. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever. | ||
Forever. | ||
It's the kingdom. | ||
unidentified
|
It's the kingdom. | |
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever, forever, forever Forever. Forever. | ||
Forever. Forever. Forever. | ||
Thank you. | ||
America! | ||
The first is inevitable. | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
to share for big business. | ||
It's not true to share for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's gay. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
- Oh, okay. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
Man, this is a free man talking. | ||
I'd like to propose it to us. | ||
Bye. | ||
To our combo. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Voipers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, To the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's cheers, everybody. | |
It's going to happen. | ||
They kicked me off the plane, you know what that means? | ||
White boy summer road trip. | ||
They give us lemons, we make lemons. | ||
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 spirits. | ||
But they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
And I believe in America. | ||
And I believe in what I'm doing. | ||
unidentified
|
We are still enjoying. | |
White Boy Summer is still on. | ||
I don't care if I have to drive there. | ||
I don't care if I have to get in Lake Michigan and go all the way around the Panama Canal. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing is going to stop White Boy Summer. | |
Nothing is going to stop America first. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
White Boy Summer. | ||
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 I'll Every day and every week and every year that we live in this country, do they care about our health? | ||
Every day and every week and every year that we live in this country, do they care about our health? | ||
No! | ||
They prescribe poison to us from the pharmaceutical companies. | ||
They're poisoning us with the seed oils that we're eating, the high fructose corn syrup. | ||
They're poisoning the water with heavy metals, which is in the tap water. | ||
They're poisoning us with what's on television and out of Hollywood and pornography. | ||
They're poisoning us in every way that you can imagine, but we're supposed to believe. | ||
Now, suddenly, they care so much about our public health. | ||
That's why they're doing this? | ||
Does anybody believe that? | ||
No! | ||
They don't care about our health. | ||
unidentified
|
They don't care about the public. | |
They don't care about any of us. | ||
What they care about, ultimately, is profit. | ||
You're looking for the tyranny coming to America? | ||
It's here, right now. | ||
Now is the time to take a stand. | ||
We are faced with the question about whether or not we will get the vaccine and surrender and capitulate to the system. | ||
A devil-worshipping system that hates us and hates our country. | ||
The answer has to be always no. | ||
I will not complain. | ||
*Dramatic Music* But as soon as people start playing games, I stopped. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can just play a play. | ||
I think we're going to first. | ||
Catch you. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words. | ||
Not my rules. | ||
I can just do it. | ||
All right. | ||
They said, trust me. | ||
I'm going to leave your day wars in the car. | ||
I'm going to try to put girls in the car. | ||
I'm going to say, trust me. | ||
No hope. | ||
Use a weapon. | ||
They said, trust me. | ||
I'm going to leave your day wars in the car. | ||
Last time, Scott. | ||
Oh, everything. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to avoid. | ||
unidentified
|
Warming on everybody who dared to avoid. | |
Warming on everybody who dared to avoid. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to avoid. | ||
They didn't have a lot of money. | ||
unidentified
|
They didn't have a lot of luck. | |
But they had grit. | ||
And they had faith. | ||
And they had courage. | ||
unidentified
|
And they had each other. | |
Right? | ||
unidentified
|
But they all had one thing in common. | |
They love their families. | ||
They love their country. | ||
And they love their God. | ||
unidentified
|
Our beautiful ancestors won two world wars, defeated communism, and put a man on the face of the moon. | |
We are calling for a great reawakening of America. | ||
A resurgence of confidence and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity, and pride. | ||
And we are returning to the wisdom of our founders. | ||
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital, and in every hall of power. | ||
unidentified
|
From this day forward, A new vision will govern our land. | |
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First! | ||
America first. USA! USA! | ||
USA! USA! It's the kingdom It's the kingdom. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever. | ||
Forever. | ||
It's the kingdom. | ||
unidentified
|
It's the kingdom. | |
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever. | ||
We're standing on the shoulders of great American patriots. | ||
I They didn't have a lot of money. | ||
They didn't have a lot of luck. | ||
But they had grit. | ||
And they had faith. | ||
And they had courage. | ||
And they had each other. | ||
Right? | ||
unidentified
|
But they all had one thing in time. | |
They love their families, they love their country, and they love their God. | ||
Our beautiful ancestors won two world wars, defeated communism, and put a man on the face of the moon. | ||
We are calling for a great reawakening of America, a resurgence of confidence, and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity, and pride. | ||
And we are returning to the wisdom of our founders. | ||
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital, and in every hall of power. | ||
From this day forward, a new vision will govern our land. | ||
unidentified
|
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First! | |
America first! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! | ||
USA! USA! | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory. | ||
Bro. Bro. | ||
I'm a daddy. | ||
Don't be in Christ like I was screaming at you. | ||
We just like my people. | ||
What's your life like? | ||
Why is it on a white? | ||
Why? | ||
Because I'm like a tight fight. | ||
Press is on the gas. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm a fool. | ||
I like screaming at my dad. | ||
Don't be in Christ like. | ||
But nobody never tell you. | ||
You need me. | ||
Like Christ. | ||
Only if I see it. | ||
Only when the team needs. | ||
I could find the Perry. | ||
I don't know. | ||
You need me. | ||
Searching for a deal. | ||
Now you want to be a freak. | ||
Now you want to see it. | ||
Like to see it. | ||
Be a piece. | ||
Tell me what you like. | ||
I turn it down to the right light. | ||
Driving with my dad and he told me it ain't Christ like. | ||
I'm just trying to find a couple of people for a new way. | ||
I'm just really trying not to rip through the pool way. | ||
I don't have a clue. | ||
I'm beating on my Pesto. | ||
Lock up on the Tex-O. | ||
Nothing else. | ||
Texto. | ||
Another word. | ||
Better picture or a test mode. | ||
Rest in the bag. | ||
I don't really want to rest. | ||
So Spanish and life fights. | ||
Everything in my life. | ||
Arguing with my dad and he said it ain't Christ like. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Oh, no. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
I fear and love God. - Cheers. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
I'm out. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's got the clip? | |
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | |
It's just that. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
You were out of my league, all the things I believe. | ||
You were just the right kind, and you were more than just a dream. | ||
You were out of my league, got my heartbeat racing. | ||
If I die, don't wake me, cause you are more than just a dream. | ||
I like to propose to tell us. | ||
Thank you. | ||
To our people. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Voipers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, to the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
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 I'm playing | ||
I'm playing | ||
I'm playing It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God, and Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
Life like, this is what you like, like. | ||
Try to live life right, or really know you, and you fight like, fight right. | ||
This is like a movie, but it's really very tight, like. | ||
Every single night, right. | ||
Every single fight, right? | ||
I was looking at the commandment, I don't need to fight, like. | ||
I was screaming at my daddy, told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
I was screaming at the referee, just like my. | ||
Pick up for a fight, like. | ||
Single with your life, like. | ||
Ride it on a white price, but I'm like a tight fight. | ||
Press it on the gas, it was an overpulled night, like. | ||
Creaming at my daddy, told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
But nobody never tell you when you be in Christ. | ||
Only if I see it, and you're the only one to eat with me. | ||
Psychicize a peritainer, food, food, food, food, food. | ||
Searching for a deal. | ||
Now you want to be a freak, now you want to see it free. | ||
Like to see it be a piece, tell me what you like, like. | ||
Turn it down to the right, like. | ||
Traveling with my dad, and he told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
I'm just trying to find out the people for a new way. | ||
Just really trying not to reach through the pool, way. | ||
I don't have a feeling. | ||
Speaking on my best, though. | ||
Bacca-Cola text, though. | ||
Nothing to tell, text, though. | ||
I don't know the word, that a picture or a death smoke. | ||
Wrestling with God, I don't really want to wrestle. | ||
So that is true, life-like. | ||
Everything in my life. | ||
Talking with my dad, and he said it ain't Christ-like. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is 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. | ||
Life like this is what you like. | ||
Like trying to live the life right. | ||
Don't really know you. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
Like right. | ||
This is like a movie. | ||
But it's really very like life. | ||
Every single night. | ||
Every single fight. | ||
Right. | ||
I was looking at the camera. | ||
I don't even like life. | ||
I was screaming at my daddy. | ||
Don't be in Christ. | ||
Like I was screaming at the memory. | ||
Just like Mike. | ||
Looking for a fight. | ||
Like you go with your life. | ||
Like riding on a white fight. | ||
Feeling like a fight fight. | ||
Pressing on the gas. | ||
Don't be in Christ. | ||
Like screaming at my daddy. | ||
Don't be in Christ. | ||
Like what nobody never tell you. | ||
You need me. | ||
Like Christ. | ||
Only if I see it. | ||
Only when they eat me. | ||
Like a fella. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America First! America First! America First! America First! America First! | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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 Thursday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight, a lot to get into. | ||
Our feature story is about inflation. | ||
Big report came out today with the Consumer Price Index, which puts us at 7.5% annual inflation. | ||
With no sign of slowing down. | ||
So big report today. | ||
It turns out that's actually a 40-year high for inflation. | ||
We haven't had inflation this high since Ronald Reagan was president. | ||
And you know, I know everybody says this on Fox and everything, but the Federal Reserve and the Biden administration and the media They all said the inflation would be transitory, right? | ||
Was that not the word that they used famously? | ||
Inflation is purely transitory. | ||
Don't worry about it. | ||
Everything will go back to normal. | ||
It's just this supply chain business. | ||
And, you know, I would probably believe that supply chain issues are causing the inflation if all else was equal. | ||
Sure. | ||
Close down the economy for a year and it disrupts the computer chips and the cars and you know all these different industries and different levels of industry you know you've got something like the computer chips and the chip shortage that affects lots of things you know that's upstream in the supply chain but you know they also doubled the money supply last year too so you know I think actually that may have something to do with it as well. | ||
I don't think you get to double the supply of money in existence and then not feel the effects of that through inflation and not have the currency be devalued. | ||
So, you know, they said, oh well, it's these supply chains. | ||
Once that gets squared away, it'll go right back to normal. | ||
Yeah, I don't know how you're going to assimilate more money. | ||
I don't know how you're going to assimilate 50% of the money supply or 100% of the old money supply into the system without devaluing the currency. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
That'll be our main story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about a new press release from the Department of Homeland Security. | ||
It's official now. | ||
They're saying that so-called COVID misinformation and other forms of misinformation now constitute a terrorist threat against the American homeland. | ||
So, new bulletin from DHS. | ||
It specifically says that the government is going to create a terrorism task force. | ||
I should say an anti-terrorism task force. | ||
And they're going to monitor COVID disinformation as well as other emergent political narratives that may pose a threat to Americans and that may lead to violence. | ||
So, I'm sure now they consider... Well, they already did. | ||
But especially now they consider this show an act of terrorism and they consider this platform an act of terrorism and they consider all of us terrorists because we're not on board with the COVID agenda. | ||
So, we'll talk about that bulletin too and that'll be our show. | ||
You know, it's kind of a slow news week. | ||
Like I said the other day, you know, they're talking about war with Ukraine being imminent I'm just sitting here waiting. | ||
I'm waiting! | ||
They've been talking about war in Ukraine for nine years now. | ||
And I've been waiting this whole time! | ||
Watching and waiting, but it never seems to happen. | ||
So, we'll see. | ||
You know, we were gonna cover a poll about that yesterday. | ||
Ran out of time. | ||
But really that was just like a filler story because there's nothing else going on. | ||
I want there to be a war between Russia. | ||
No, I don't really, but it would make my job a lot easier. | ||
I'll just say that. | ||
So we're still waiting we're still waiting on the war with Russia or China for that matter but in the meantime you know we have this inflation business so but it's gonna be it's always a good show. | ||
Before we get into our news here I want to remind you we have our tickets for AFPAC are on sale again in case you missed the initial round of sales we've got some more tickets on the market And I told you on Monday we sold out. | ||
We sold all our tickets. | ||
Biggest event we've ever done. | ||
More than twice as big as last year's AfPak. | ||
Biggest event that's ever been done in the dissident right. | ||
And we're bringing people together in the same room. | ||
It's never been done before. | ||
And we're gonna put out a list of our speakers and special guests tomorrow and you're gonna see it's never been done before putting these people in the same room heads are going to explode it's just gonna be awesome and we're making it even bigger I went to the hotel at the beginning of this week or I should say end of last week And I said, listen, you know, we have a lot of people that didn't get a chance to buy tickets. | ||
We sold out more quickly than we anticipated. | ||
Is there any way we could make the event bigger? | ||
And they said that they could very easily accommodate us in a larger space. | ||
So that's what we're going to do. | ||
We've got tickets on sale at afpac.events. | ||
So get them while you can. | ||
There's not a ton of new tickets, but we did get some new tickets on sale. | ||
So get them while you can. | ||
Because we're not, I can promise you, we're not going to sell anymore. | ||
Okay? | ||
100% we're not going to sell anymore. | ||
Once these are gone, they're gone. | ||
And there will be no more. | ||
We were already oversold to begin with. | ||
And now we have more tickets for sale, so this is really your last chance. | ||
So if you want to go, you got to get your tickets now, okay? | ||
Tomorrow we are announcing our speakers list, although it's only going to wind up being like three-quarters of our speakers. | ||
Because like I said yesterday, we've got some mystery speakers, which we're gonna wait until the conference to announce and you know We all we all know why we all know why that is we all know how that goes It tends to be the case that when you pre announce these things Sometimes it doesn't always happen. | ||
So So we're gonna wait until the the day of the conference to announce some of our More high-profile speakers. | ||
Don't get me wrong, we're all high-profile. | ||
It's a great lineup, but some are in a more delicate situation. | ||
So we've got some mystery speakers, which you'll see at AFPAC 3. | ||
It'll be a surprise if you're there. | ||
And we'll be announcing our lineup on Friday, which is very exciting. | ||
I think we'll have seven or eight or maybe even nine speakers this year. | ||
We're still adding more to the list because as always it seems like right as we're closing in on the day of the conference it all sort of comes together, it all coalesces in just the right way. | ||
unidentified
|
That's just how it works sometimes. | |
So we have some very, like I said, some very exciting speakers to announce for you tomorrow and then we'll have some mystery speakers and we're actually still working on adding some people to the lineup but I think everybody is going to be really impressed. | ||
I know that our enemies are going to be very terrified and very panicked and maybe disappointed. | ||
But this conference and this year, this is the year that we reach a critical mass, if we haven't already. | ||
You know, I said after the Groyper War, I said, look, the fire has been started, you know? | ||
It's like in Dark Knight Rises when he goes, have we started the fire? | ||
And he goes, yeah, the fire rises. | ||
Yeah, that was like two years ago. | ||
We started the fire. | ||
Yeah, the fire rises. | ||
This year we're reaching a point where it just can't be stopped. | ||
You know, we're reaching a critical mass here. | ||
And I'm very excited about what the future holds. | ||
It's sort of going to be a transformative year. | ||
I think you'll all know what I'm talking about as time goes on. | ||
So, really excited about AFPAC 3. | ||
We hope you'll join us there in Orlando. | ||
If you don't know the details, it's February 25th. | ||
So it's rapidly approaching, just two weeks away. | ||
And it is in Orlando, Florida. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Check that out, afpac.events. | ||
Also, I hope you noticed this morning, InfoWars began their stream here on CozyTV. | ||
Very, very exciting. | ||
We are grateful and honored and blessed to have Alex Jones and the InfoWars stream join us here on Cozy.TV. | ||
The link is Cozy.TV slash Alex Jones. | ||
And I guess what they're doing is a 24-hour, a 24-7 stream. | ||
So we're working out the details on that, but they will be streaming now 24-7 here on CozyTV. | ||
You'll be able to catch all the shows there. | ||
Harrison Smith, Alex Jones, Owen Schroer, right there on the Alex Jones Cozy Channel, which I'm really excited about. | ||
I think he's probably our biggest streamer here. | ||
And so we're putting together just this all-star line up here. | ||
It's really, really great to see. | ||
A lot of old favorites, a lot of old legends, new streamers, people you love, some people you hate, big people, smaller streamers, gamers, political commentary, but really we're building this amazing cast. | ||
I don't think there's ever been so many people that I like in one place. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Because there are these other platforms, and nothing against the other platforms, but I mean, I like to think of myself as sort of a connoisseur here. | ||
unidentified
|
We have all the best people, you know? | |
I mean, we're building a platform here that, like, I would want to watch. | ||
It's by us, it's for us, and I think that's reflected in the functionality, the features, the content that's being put on here. | ||
Like, I watch Alex Jones. | ||
I would want to go on CozyTV and watch Alex Jones, and then I'd want to watch Vince James, and then I'd want to watch America First, or Beards and Beardly, or Any of the new streamers we brought on here. | ||
I mean these are all people that just like quite simply I like And I hope you guys feel the same way and we're adding people just like all the time throwing new people on there We're just joined this week for example by Party Goy again an old legend Party Goy who he actually used to be in the Milo click for a long time and he was a very funny content creator back during the election and He had a Twitter account until recently. | ||
I think he just got banned. | ||
But he used to do all kinds of guitar streams, gaming streams. | ||
So he's joining us. | ||
He's an old favorite. | ||
And then we've also got Michael Alberto, who's a new content creator, a newer. | ||
He just did this big video about me, which I reviewed. | ||
The Nick Fuentes Iceberg video. | ||
And so he now has a channel. | ||
He did his first stream today. | ||
Very good. | ||
Had some good viewership. | ||
And we'll also be bringing on a couple of new streamers, too. | ||
We've got some friends from National File, which will be joining us very soon, as well as another member of the Weekly Sweat crew, an old head, an old favorite of mine, certainly. | ||
And then we've got one other, I think, real rock star from the old days of the, you know, the quote-unquote alt-right, or, you know, the beginnings of the Trump movement, an old legend who is very prominent in bringing race realism to the fore. | ||
is coming to the platform so um you know it's a great list and the list just keeps growing and uh you know it's it's all happening right here on cozy it's surpassed my expectations honestly i didn't know how it was going to go i don't know if you remember but initially the plan was back in october we debuted our beta test of the platform We're still in beta technically, and we were only supposed to have three streamers for like months. | ||
You know, the plan, and I said this on the show, was to have me, Vince, and Jaden, and it was going to be that way for a few months, and then we would finish the features, and then we'd bring everybody on in a very slow pace. | ||
And it just exploded I mean we just started bringing people on left and right and every week the roster grows and it we've only been around now for four and a half months yeah just about four and a half months and look at the lineup it's really really impressive so anyway so that's cozy again hope you're excited to see Alex Jones of InfoWars on our platform and you could catch him like I said 24 hours a day but I think that's all of our | ||
That's all of the business to take care of. | ||
Remember, as always, to follow my channel here on Cozy and follow me on Gab and Telegram as well. | ||
The links are down below. | ||
So, be sure to check that out. | ||
We're going to dive into the news here. | ||
We're gonna jump in. | ||
And I'll try to finish tonight. | ||
I feel like every show I've done for the past two weeks, like, I just don't even finish, because I just go... I go off for 40, 50 minutes on one thing, and then I'm like, oh man, we're out of time. | ||
So, I'll try to get through it all tonight. | ||
So our first story tonight is about this new bulletin from the Department of Homeland Security about terrorism. | ||
And this comes to us through a report by the Daily Veracity. | ||
If you haven't heard of that, check it out. | ||
That's Vince James' publication, Daily Veracity. | ||
So big report. | ||
I haven't seen this covered anywhere, but basically what the government is saying is that we're all terrorists. | ||
They're saying that if you're spreading misinformation, you're a terrorist, and they're actually going to create anti-terrorism groups, an anti-terrorism unit within DHS, specifically to look at these emerging political narratives. | ||
So this is the report. | ||
I'll go through this and, you know, I'll react to it. | ||
It says, quote, the Biden administration has labeled freedom of speech a terror threat in a press release issued February 7th by the Department of Homeland Security, stating that so-called, quote, misinformation regarding widespread election fraud and COVID-19 has or will inspire violent terrorist attacks within the United States. | ||
The letter goes on to state that, quote, COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates have been used by, quote, domestic extremists to incite violence within the United States and around the world. | ||
The letter goes on to state that the DHS established a new domestic terrorism unit focusing on collection and countering related threats online, citing social media users as the focus of the agency while promising protection of privacy, civil rights and civil liberties. | ||
Which, you know, I don't really know how you do that. | ||
I don't know how you can basically create a secret police, like a ministry of propaganda, that is supposed to monitor political narratives that challenge what the government says about these things, and then also be respecting civil liberties and civil rights. | ||
I don't know how you can square those things. | ||
But this is from the bulletin itself. | ||
It says, quote, The DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis established a new dedicated domestic terrorism branch to produce the sound, timely intelligence needed to counter related threats. | ||
The department expanded its evaluation of online activity as part of its efforts to assess and prevent acts of violence while ensuring the protection of privacy, civil rights, and civil liberties. | ||
The article from Daily Veracity goes on and says, if you disagree with the mainstream narrative surrounding COVID-19, the 2020 election, or even 5G cell towers, the U.S. | ||
government will consider you a terrorist threat. | ||
This means that sitting congressmen, senators, governors, and mayors across the country are now all considered to be or aiding Domestic terrorists, a label that would allow the federal government to legally detain anyone who is posted about such topics online. | ||
And that's really the important part there, which I'll get into in a moment. | ||
Finally, it says, by the standards of the DHS, Laura Ingram, as an example, would now be considered to be aiding domestic terrorists with calls to resist COVID-19 mandates. | ||
And so this is something that we've talked about a lot on the show, especially over the last year since January 6th, and it's not even a new conversation. | ||
If you read anything as an example from the Atlantic Council, If you don't know what the Atlantic Council is, the Atlantic Council is one of the most important, most prestigious think tanks in the world. | ||
And if you haven't already, I've done this on the show before, but if you haven't already, check out their website and go to their list of honor roll contributors, meaning their biggest and most important contributors. | ||
Under the section where it says, you know, who's given them a million dollars plus per year, who's given them $500,000 plus per year, you'll find that the kinds of organizations and governments and companies that back the Atlantic Council, these are the most powerful institutions in the world. you'll find that the kinds of organizations and governments and | ||
And among them are the government of the United Arab Emirates, the Foreign Office of the United Kingdom, the government of Lebanon, Bank of America, J.P. Morgan, Pfizer, the U.S. State Department, the U.S. Navy, the U.S. Army, NATO. | ||
I mean, it's like, it's world governments, oil-rich golf states, it's the second shadow British Empire, it's all the world's power gives money to this think tank industry. | ||
It's very important. | ||
And this think tank, the Atlantic Council, it speaks for these institutions. | ||
It speaks for the big money of the world. | ||
It speaks for the most influential governments of the world. | ||
It speaks for power and it speaks for money. | ||
And if you follow the Atlantic Council, they've been writing about this for years. | ||
You can go on their website and they publish reports specifically about this. | ||
And when I say this, I mean about this kind of information warfare and this idea of political narratives as an emergent terror threat. | ||
And again, the reason I bring this up, because this isn't introduced in this article, but the reason I bring up the Atlantic Council is because when you look at the spokesman, when you look at the sort of political mouthpiece for power, for global American Atlantic power, They're writing about this stuff. | ||
They've been writing about this stuff openly and explicitly for years, and they put it to paper. | ||
And so the Atlantic Council, funded by the banks, the drug companies, big pharma, the military, America's allies, the State Department, like the American empire in a word, they've been writing for years about how they have to monitor Narratives about undermining NATO, monitor anti-war narratives, election disinformation, COVID disinformation, these kinds of things. | ||
And they've said that this is what global warfare looks like in the 21st century. | ||
And it talks about how the American institutions like the media and the government, they've got to work specifically to counter the narratives that are coming from reactionaries, from anti-government sources, from the right wing, This is like textbook. | ||
They've been doing it for years. | ||
And now you're just seeing the implementation. | ||
This is only the furthest manifestation of a plan that's been laid a long time ago. | ||
And so what DHS is saying here And they put out a similar bulletin about a year ago. | ||
They're saying that when a person talks about election disinformation, when they talk about COVID, they consider that a latent terrorist threat. | ||
These are ideas and these are narratives that are so contrary to the government narrative, and the government narrative concerns issues that are very important, they consider this such an explosive idea, basically, in the population that it constitutes a latent threat of violence. | ||
That if, in other words, you get a group of people together saying the election was illegitimate, there's actually some very serious consequences for a narrative like that. | ||
You know, when you say that there was widespread fraud in the election, well, then, therefore, the election was fraudulent. | ||
If the election was fraudulent, then that means the results are fraudulent. | ||
If the results are fraudulent, then that means that all of the people, all the victors, the people that have been sworn in, are really illegitimate. | ||
And if the people running the country that won the elections, if they're illegitimate, then their executive orders and their laws are illegitimate. | ||
If their laws are illegitimate, then the people are under no obligation to follow the laws. | ||
And if the people are not under any obligation to follow the laws, then this opens up Pandora's box. | ||
I mean, this is what the government is saying. | ||
They're saying, we have got to stop this. | ||
We've got to cut it off at the head. | ||
If enough people start to think, and that's just one example, if enough people start to think that the election didn't count, this could spell big problems for us. | ||
So they call it terrorism. | ||
And the same goes for COVID. | ||
If people start to say, hey, COVID is fake. | ||
All the media and the public health experts and the government are engaged in this deceptive conspiracy. | ||
You know, again, what are the consequences of an idea like that if enough people believe it? | ||
So, the antidote to this, says the Atlantic Council, says the State Department, says the military and DHS and the bureaucrats, is, well, there can be no freedom of speech. | ||
Insofar as there is freedom of speech, there is enough room, especially on the internet, there is enough room for people to challenge and undermine the authority of the government. | ||
And with the transmissibility of information on the internet, that means that there's this, like, contagion effect. | ||
Not only can people share and come up with and promulgate ideas that undermine the government's authority, but they could spread those ideas rapidly. | ||
And in a short amount of time, lots of people may start to believe that the government doesn't have authority, which presents a big problem for them. | ||
So again, their solution is to say that we have to engage in information warfare. | ||
We have to actively go out and crush dissenting narratives. | ||
We have to engage in narrative, total narrative control. | ||
And they do that through the media, they do that through the government, They do that through censorship, and where they can't control the narrative, where they can't control the information, they call it a latent terror threat. | ||
And what this does, and the language here is very specific, the reason that they say terrorism, you know a lot of people hear that and they go, that's crazy! | ||
Information is terrorism? | ||
Now that's Orwellian. | ||
You could call it whatever you want, but it's not crazy. | ||
And you might look at somebody like me. | ||
I'm on a no-fly list. | ||
A no-fly list is really a terrorist watch list, is what it is. | ||
People look at me and say, terrorist? | ||
But you just do a show. | ||
You've never committed an act of terrorism, like a bombing or a shooting or anything. | ||
You have no plans to. | ||
You're against violence. | ||
How could they call you that? | ||
That's just crazy. | ||
It's really not so crazy because the reason that they use that language is because when somebody is a terrorist or considered a terrorist, it opens up tons of new powers from the federal government. | ||
Thanks to the Patriot Act and thanks to other laws and precedent that's been set by the courts, People or institutions that are labeled terroristic in nature, they don't have the same civil liberties and rights that everybody else has. | ||
And this article gets at that a little bit. | ||
You know, if somebody's considered a terrorist, you can detain them indefinitely, without a trial. | ||
You can kill them on American soil, without a trial. | ||
You can surveil them. | ||
There's a host. | ||
of menu options that are opened up to federal law enforcement when something or someone is considered a terrorist threat. | ||
And this is a perfect example. | ||
DHS is putting together this bulletin, and they're announcing that they've created a new task force. | ||
And the job of the task force is now to monitor people like me. | ||
And so now for the rest of my life I'm sure I will have one of these DHS spooks, you know, one of these agents looking over me and all of my activities in perpetuity. | ||
Because of what I say, because of my viewpoints, which are considered latent terrorist threats, They're gonna watch me forever. | ||
And they're going to consider me a potential terrorist. | ||
Just like they might look at Al-Qaeda, just like they might look at a particular mosque, or ISIS, or a gang, you know, the Latin Kings, or MS-13. | ||
They're gonna look at me. | ||
And they're gonna look at anybody else that doesn't want to get a vaccine, anybody else that thinks there was cheating in the election. | ||
And they can do that. | ||
They have opened that up. | ||
That is within their jurisdiction so long as they consider it a terrorist threat. | ||
And now this is our country. | ||
And understand how quickly we're sliding now into a position where the government has totalitarian control. | ||
Think about the slippery slope here. | ||
It means that anybody who challenges the government, anybody who disagrees with the government, is now a terrorist. | ||
Anybody that's really exercising their free speech, you know, like agreeing with the government isn't free speech. | ||
Anyone that's really exercising their free speech is now, by definition, a target. | ||
Anyone who dissents against the most important topics of the day is by definition according to this a target for surveillance, for law enforcement, and considered like an enemy combatant on U.S. | ||
soil. | ||
And that means that at any given time, they could pull the plug. | ||
They could black bag you, bring you to a CIA black site, interrogate you, torture you, send you to Guantanamo, put you on no-fly list, ban you from buying guns, ban you from renting a car, shut down your bank accounts. | ||
And this is what they've opened up now. | ||
And it's up to the discretion of the people that are running the system. | ||
I mean, that's the scary thing. | ||
You know, people talk about, oh well there must be due process, there must be some law prohibiting this. | ||
Well, how is the law going to protect you? | ||
Laws aren't people. | ||
Laws don't make decisions. | ||
Laws don't have will. | ||
Laws must be enforced. | ||
Laws must have legitimacy. | ||
You know, there must be somebody in the system that is using the law to hold the government accountable, or something like that. | ||
But we know that that doesn't happen anymore. | ||
The intelligence community lies with impunity about the extent of its activities and its powers. | ||
We know that they secretly run the government. | ||
Their spying powers are virtually unlimited. | ||
I mean effectively they're unlimited. | ||
Who is going to hold them accountable according to the law? | ||
There is no institution that can do this. | ||
Who is going to hold this unholy alliance between MIT, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, plus Facebook, Google, Lockheed Martin, Bank of America, all the big companies plus all the bureaucracy, DHS, NSA, CIA, FBI. | ||
Who is going to hold all of these institutions accountable? | ||
What institution is powerful enough to make them answer and ultimately make arrests? | ||
Doesn't exist. | ||
Doesn't exist. | ||
And that's what's scary, is we now have this law enforcement attention in perpetuity, and any freedom fighter, any dissenter now is going to be looked at, and they can pull the plug on anybody at any time, and it is all up to their sole discretion. | ||
And these people are, like, insane! | ||
These are people that, like, want to go to war with Russia. | ||
These are people that want world domination. | ||
These are people that think we could go to war against Russia and China at the same time. | ||
You know? | ||
I mean, these are people that wanted to do shock and awe against the 1-6 protesters so that nobody would protest the inauguration. | ||
Like, we're getting into totalitarian control very quickly. | ||
We're googling the wrong thing, tweeting the wrong thing, saying the wrong thing. | ||
We'll literally land you on a government watch list. | ||
I mean, we've talked about that for a long time, but this is the reality now. | ||
And we've cataloged this on this show over the course of a year. | ||
Where now, This was one development last year. | ||
I believe it's a DOJ or it's one of the entities in the federal government. | ||
They can subpoena one of the big tech companies for a keyword search, meaning they could go to Google and they can say, give us the identity of every man, woman, or child who Googled a particular word or phrase. | ||
And so, like, if you Google Nick Fuentes as an example, the DOJ can go to Google and say, Google, give me the identity and social security number of every person who Googled the name Nick Fuentes. | ||
And they can have that on a spreadsheet. | ||
And at the FBI, at federal law enforcement, they have a terminal, and they can log in, and they can just shut down your bank account. | ||
It's like, just like you log into your checking account and you could check your money, they could log into your bank, whatever, freeze your bank account. | ||
They could log in, put your name on a no-fly list, you're not allowed to fly. | ||
Put your name on a list, you can't have access to banking. | ||
I mean, these are the kinds of powers that they're going to have. | ||
And this has been a long time coming, but in particular, over the past one year, they have been gradually and aggressively expanding their jurisdiction to do these kinds of things. | ||
You are probably talking to feds online. | ||
If you're in a big enough group chat, if you have a big enough following, you probably have talked to somebody who is a confidential informant or a government agent that is actively checking out the scene. | ||
Again, if you've googled a certain thing, they could theoretically get your name, just by googling the wrong thing. | ||
If you say the wrong thing, you know, your phone, and this cannot be turned off unless you take the battery out of your phone, your phone is recording all the things that you say. | ||
Your camera can be used to monitor you without you even knowing about it, even if your phone's off. | ||
Happening all the time, you know if you if you have your phone on you and you talk about like McDonald's enough You'll get an advertisement for McDonald's the next time you go to YouTube And you can't turn that off. | ||
This is the level of spying, this is the level of surveillance that we're under. | ||
And with this increased jurisdiction of federal law enforcement, with these bulletins about free speech as terrorism, it's really, it doesn't take a great imagination, it doesn't take a big leap either to know where this all is going. | ||
We're going to get to the point where it's like you can't open your refrigerator if you googled the wrong thing. | ||
You think that's a joke, but that's where we're going. | ||
We're going to have these 5G towers erected, and things are going to go very differently. | ||
They're going to turn the 5G network on, and this is going to open up the whole economy. | ||
They call it the, what is it, the Internet of Things? | ||
And the Internet of Things means that there's going to be computers in everything. | ||
There's going to be computers in your fridge, your AC, your car, your clothes, your computer, your mobile device, everything. | ||
Everything's going to be connected to the Internet. | ||
All the things you use are going to have computers in them, and they're all going to be connected to the Internet. | ||
And 5G is going to allow this, because 5G ensures this uninterrupted, high-bandwidth connection with all these different devices. | ||
And so everything is going to be connected to these giant companies. | ||
Everything is going to be connected to everything else. | ||
Everything is going to be a microphone, a camera, everything is going to be logging date, time, name, all of that. | ||
It's all going to the government, it's all going to MIT, it's all going to these companies, and all that information with these law enforcement powers is going to yield something like A technological slavery, you know, for lack of a better word, Ted Kaczynski coined that one, that we could not have possibly imagined. | ||
That we maybe can't even imagine yet. | ||
But the pieces are being put into place for something like that. | ||
And it sounds crazy now. | ||
People might hear that and go, what? | ||
You're crazy! | ||
But the technology is being built. | ||
The AI is being built. | ||
The legal framework for this and the associated law enforcement, you know, these different units and everything, the powers, that's coming together. | ||
The 5G towers are going up. | ||
And if the capability is there, they will use it. | ||
Right? | ||
If the direction things are going in is to have that as a possibility, that's where it's going to go. | ||
If law enforcement is able to use that kind of power, they will. | ||
It's not hard to see how that happens. | ||
You know, I'm sure 20 years ago, if you told people, hey, the government is going to know you better than you know yourself, they're going to have metadata, and they'll know everyone's whereabouts at all times, they'll track you, they'll listen to your microphone. | ||
People say that's crazy. | ||
You know, I remember when the biggest red pill on surveillance was a thing called Operation Echelon, where they had giant satellites and they were intercepting phone calls and things, and that sounded outlandish. | ||
That was 15-20 years ago. | ||
Here we are today, would have been unexplainable to somebody in 2005, and in 2035, when everything's on this 5G network, high bandwidth, constant connectivity, Internet of Things, we're going to see the doorway open for surveillance and censorship and control like nobody could have ever thought of before. | ||
And that's a very terrifying thing. | ||
It's a very terrifying prospect. | ||
Especially when they're saying it's terrorism! | ||
Because when it's terrorism, that means like they're gonna kill you with a drone. | ||
If they're saying like, hey, if you don't take this vaccine, you're a terrorist, that means we have permission to blow up your house with a drone. | ||
That means we have permission to assassinate you. | ||
We have permission to pull the plug on your whole life, you know, black bag you in the middle of the night. | ||
So it is a very dangerous proposition here, a very scary prospect. | ||
Privacy, civil liberties, rights, it's all gone, man. | ||
It's all gone. | ||
And, even worse, you want to talk about outlandish, when they talk about things like Neuralink, and they talk about devices that will be able to read your brain signals, the electro signals in your brain, we're talking about a level of of invasive surveillance techniques that people wouldn't even consider these days. | ||
They're talking about devices that will be able to read your emotions and read your facial expressions and store information about your mood and maybe know your thoughts as you think them. | ||
Some say that technology already exists. | ||
So it is a war on for your mind. | ||
It's why you got to protect yourself. | ||
But this is scary stuff. | ||
It would be scary enough to begin with, but now they're telling us if you exercise free speech, you're a terrorist. | ||
And they control this stuff! | ||
Exercise free speech, you're a terrorist, and they're gonna go and subpoena Google for all your search queries, and all your metadata, and all these, you know, your Alexa home device, and your Amazon dot device, and everything, listening in all the time. | ||
You shouldn't. | ||
I don't have one of those. | ||
You shouldn't have one. | ||
It's not good. | ||
I mean, this is their job. | ||
Their job. | ||
They put a team together to monitor the social media posts of people that don't get vaccinated. | ||
Like, it doesn't get worse than that. | ||
They've got the network mapped out. | ||
They know the score. | ||
They know your name. | ||
They know your whole deal. | ||
But that's why we gotta hang together as real human beings. | ||
We have to hang together And have faith, okay? | ||
Because that's the only thing. | ||
There is no power on earth greater than them that is material, that is natural. | ||
But there is a power that's greater than them, and that is what is supernatural. | ||
So that's why very, very important to lean on God in these times. | ||
Because if there was no God, if we didn't have God on our side, we wouldn't have a chance The power that they have, we wouldn't stand a chance if it was just our cleverness and our creativity. | ||
I mean, I'm a pretty clever guy. | ||
I'm pretty creative. | ||
But we're talking about the hive mind here. | ||
We're talking about You know, supercomputer like you've never seen. | ||
So we have to rely on the divine intellect and the divine will. | ||
It's the only thing. | ||
It's the only thing that is going to beat this satanic system. | ||
Satan's getting very powerful here. | ||
He's getting very powerful on Earth. | ||
Because, you know, all these things really do... You know, Satan uses people as a proxy. | ||
People do Satan's work. | ||
And so, the satanic system is being created, but the good thing is that God dwarfs Satan by an infinite ratio. | ||
So, there's no reason to be concerned about that unless you don't have God on your side. | ||
I mean, if you're just some guy out there, you don't have a chance in hell at surviving. | ||
But if you have God, you have literally nothing to worry about. | ||
I mean, worry shouldn't even be in your vocabulary if you believe in God. | ||
It's game, set, and match from the beginning of... before the beginning of time. | ||
You know, forget about it. | ||
So, that's where we have to... if that scares you, if that freaks you out, hey, don't worry. | ||
This is Jesus Christ we're talking about. | ||
He rose from the dead, okay? | ||
So... | ||
If God could become incarnate and conquer death and save humanity, we have nothing to worry about here. | ||
Nothing to worry about at all. | ||
They put him up on a cross, and then they put him in a cave with a giant boulder in front of it, and it was like nothing. | ||
So, I wouldn't worry too much about that. | ||
You know, the might that was... What is it? | ||
The glory... What is it? | ||
The glory of Greece and the might of Rome, you know? | ||
So it may seem terrifying, but then you remember the game was rigged from the start and we win in the end. | ||
So don't forget. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So that's the FBI. | ||
Pretty freaky stuff. | ||
Pretty scary stuff. | ||
And you know what? | ||
I mean, you could do some things to mitigate your risk, but honestly, this is why you really, at this point in time, I'm not saying we should be reckless. | ||
I'm not saying we should be careless but you know there are a lot of people out there that are just very afraid and they're ruled by fear and they're ruled by worry and paranoia and anxiety and we just can't have that. | ||
To some extent now this does not mean that we are not prudent and thoughtful and that we should not you know try to have wisdom and foresight and everything but to an extent We just have to realize that, you know, we're out there now, okay? | ||
We're out there. | ||
We're vulnerable. | ||
There is only so much that you can do. | ||
To take care of yourself. | ||
And some people get really caught up and they go, well I'm not gonna use a phone, well I'm gonna go, you know, just go and live in the middle of nowhere, and I'm gonna live like an Amish person, I'm gonna do this, and I'm gonna install this thing, and this software, and this and that, and do a VPN, and it's like, look, there's nothing wrong with doing as much as you can to protect yourself, and you should be sensible, and you should create a shield. | ||
Because a lot of these people are just bureaucrats, you know, there is another white pill in here which is this. | ||
The people that are running the FBI are DMV employees, okay? | ||
So their capability is great, but their competence is nothing, okay? | ||
The entire government is run by affirmative action hires, mediocrities, women. | ||
It's run by the equivalent of DMV workers. | ||
It is not, you know, a buddy of mine told me this the other day. | ||
He said it's not the deep state, it's the dweeb state. | ||
The people that are running the government are not, they're not masterminds, they're not geniuses. | ||
These are very average, maybe sub-average people. | ||
So if you even just create some layer of protection, the odds are that they will just not even have the follow-through or the competence to break through all the layers, unless they really want to. | ||
And that's sort of the game that we play. | ||
Like with anything, you're never going to achieve a perfect protection. | ||
But if you have enough protection, and they don't care that much, they're not going to go through every layer. | ||
They're going to go through one layer, go, oh, what was I supposed to do again? | ||
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Well, excuse me, what's the code for that thing again? | |
And, oh shit, I don't know. | ||
And then they're just going to give up, you know? | ||
It's that simple. | ||
In many, many, many cases, and more times than not, if you put in just a minimal level, more than just like the average person who knows nothing, if you put together just a minimum effort in protecting your data, your privacy, etc., I mean, they're just not going to care enough to go through. | ||
Somebody like me, they're going to be with the battering ram and they're going to, you know, punch through. | ||
But for most people you should be good enough with the minimum. | ||
That being said though, and I guess that sort of undermines my point, but my broader point is this. | ||
If they want you, they can get you. | ||
That's the point I'm trying to make. | ||
If they want to get you between the spying and the human intelligence and the deepfakes, I mean at the end of the day they could just do a deepfake. | ||
They could just kill you. | ||
I mean like They can really get anybody that they want, if they want it bad enough. | ||
And so on some level there has to be this resignation about the fact that, look, this is a last stand. | ||
Everybody's got to do what they can to contribute. | ||
Everybody's got to do whatever they can to participate in the human struggle against this satanic system. | ||
unidentified
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That's it. | |
That's it. | ||
And nobody has to make a, you don't necessarily have to go and die in hand-to-hand combat and get your head cut off, literally, but You know, like, as an example, last year everybody was freaked out about AFPAC and saying, yo, you can't go to a conference! | ||
And I told people, like, look, if you're really that afraid, don't go. | ||
We're talking about buying a ticket, going to watch speeches. | ||
This is a very, very low-risk activity. | ||
And some people said, well, there's a tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny chance that, I don't know, something completely unprecedented and abnormal could happen and somehow everybody could wind up in trouble. | ||
And, you know, maybe that's true. | ||
Maybe there's a .00001% chance that, I don't know, you know, some kind of insane thing happens. | ||
But, you know, you understand that we could never make any progress and we're out of time in this struggle, if that were the approach. | ||
There has got to be, on some level, some risk tolerance, some resignation of the fact that, look, Things are getting really bad out there. | ||
If there were any, if there were ever a time to step up, it would be right now. | ||
And to the extent that you can, without, you know, and without even going so out of your way, to the extent that you can participate in a way that makes sense, people gotta, people gotta do something, and get bold, and do something, you know? | ||
And I look at somebody like Representative Gosar, who went to AFPAC 2 last year and spoke. | ||
You know, maybe five years ago he wouldn't have done that. | ||
And same with Michelle Malkin. | ||
Maybe 5-10 years ago she wouldn't have endorsed the Groypers or gone to American Renaissance. | ||
But I think there is a recognition across the board on some level that we're all being pushed against a wall here. | ||
And I said that last week with the Canadian Trucker thing. | ||
We're being pushed against a wall. | ||
We're running out of time. | ||
We're running out of options. | ||
Now that doesn't mean that we need desperation. | ||
That doesn't mean that we need to act hastily or without forethought. | ||
But it does mean that people have got to have a sober assessment of the reality of the situation and the urgency of the moment and understanding that there's going to be boldness. | ||
We cannot just be clever and maneuver and never have a battle and never take a risk and never face the music. | ||
We've got to be smart. | ||
We've got to be economical and resourceful with what we have and we can't take unnecessary risks. | ||
And, you know, we have to be very smart because we can't make a lot of mistakes. | ||
But we got to play to win. | ||
And that's a very important thing, and a big part of playing to win is we have to inspire, we have to be bold, we've gotta be courageous, and understand that that true belief component is what's gonna get us across the finish line. | ||
If it was their resources against our resources, we would lose a hundred out of a hundred times. | ||
If it was their money, and their people, and their army against ours, we would probably lose. | ||
But, If we have faith, and if we have courage, and if we're inspired, and if we want it more than they do, and if we have the will, and praying for wisdom and guidance and all of that, we can't overcome. | ||
But we're not going to do it by being afraid, playing not to lose, being so completely risk-averse that we are paralyzed into inaction. | ||
And that's been my philosophy from day one. | ||
It's like, look, I'm ready to give it all. | ||
Maybe that was, you know, youthful zeal and naivete, but I said, you know what, I'm going in. | ||
I don't know about you, but I'm going in. | ||
And I didn't do anything crazy, but I just said, look, let's just start telling the truth. | ||
You know, let's take a chance on telling the truth in a way that's compelling and everything, and let's, through a superior and compelling presentation and rhetoric, let's just start winning some hearts and minds. | ||
And we have, and now we're on this trajectory that people didn't think was possible five years ago. | ||
So, and if everybody was doing that and it was contagious, I mean, we have a real shot here. | ||
So, you know, when I look at these odds, when I look at the... we're staring down the barrel of a gun here, it's terrifying. | ||
But we can't care. | ||
On some level, we have to be aware of it, but we can't care. | ||
We gotta grab the barrel of the gun and say, hey, hey, listen, I'm willing to die, are you? | ||
Hopefully they don't pull the trigger, but that's what we gotta do. | ||
We gotta grab the barrel of that gun and say, hey, I'm a Christ believer and an anti-vaxxer. | ||
I'm willing to die. | ||
Are you willing to die for this, pal? | ||
Are you willing to die for this, Shiniqua? | ||
Hey, FBI, are you willing to die? | ||
I am. | ||
Now, metaphorically speaking... Metaphorically! | ||
Metaphorically speaking, we have to do that. | ||
Hopefully not literally, but metaphorically, that's the kind of attitude that we have to bring to the table. | ||
Otherwise, it's just not going to happen, you know? | ||
When you look at any scenario where a smaller A smaller, less equipped army beats a bigger army. | ||
It's always because they have God on their side and because they've got the fighting spirit. | ||
They've got a secret ingredient. | ||
They've got the chemical X. You've seen it many times. | ||
Wars are not won by numbers or weapons. | ||
You know, as Sun Tzu said, you know, the war is won by the planning. | ||
The war is won before it begins. | ||
unidentified
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So... | |
We gotta play to win! | ||
My father always used to tell me that. | ||
Whenever I'd play a sport or whatever, he'd always say, you're playing not to lose, you gotta play to win. | ||
I guess Tiger Woods said that or something. | ||
It's true. | ||
In other words, we have to think about a scenario where we have the full victory. | ||
We've got to think about winning as a real, tangible possibility. | ||
What is that going to look like? | ||
What are our victory conditions? | ||
How are we going to achieve that? | ||
What's possible? | ||
Plausible? | ||
What's impossible? | ||
Instead of this, like, well, we just can't be defeated. | ||
We just have to survive. | ||
If we just move here, then we won't get taken out here. | ||
Like, no, I'm interested in running the table and winning. | ||
I want to beat the boss. | ||
That's like Sam Hyde said. | ||
I'm like a level 2 slime, and I want to beat the level 100 boss. | ||
I want to go to the final castle. | ||
I want to beat the boss. | ||
I want to get the power-ups. | ||
I want to level up. | ||
How are we gonna do that? | ||
We gotta play to win. | ||
I don't wanna be a level 2 slime my whole life and just make it, just survive. | ||
That's gay. | ||
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So... So that's that. | |
Okay, we're gonna move on to our featured story here. | ||
We're running out of time very quickly here. | ||
So let me just jump on to our other story, because I could go on and on like that. | ||
Now there's just sort of a general... we've entered the general rant. | ||
You know, it starts off with a story, and then it just kind of like... then it just quickly transitions to just a very general rant. | ||
There's a very general angry yelling about the state of things. | ||
You know, like the other day, what did we start talking about? | ||
Like this Michelle Malkin article and it turned into, like, hey, get out of America! | ||
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So... Okay, so let's move on. | |
So our featured story is about inflation. | ||
Very exciting. | ||
I guess what I don't like is the abrupt transition. | ||
I don't like this, because I get into one thing and then it's hard to, like, just switch gears very quickly and pivot. | ||
It's very just awkward to me just like as an autist. | ||
It's just sort of jarring to just, you know, cut it off and then fire it back up. | ||
Okay. | ||
So this is our featured story. | ||
I probably won't spend too much time on this. | ||
But this is about inflation, which we know this story. | ||
Ever since Biden got in office, inflation has been out of control. | ||
And this has been attributed to the supply chain issues, Which is to say that in March 2020, in response to the COVID outbreak in America, this national economy was shut down and the global economy was shut down. | ||
So interstate trade was reduced dramatically, production was reduced dramatically, and over the course of the past two years, production has been returning, manufacturing and industry has resumed, international trade has resumed. | ||
But it turns out that the way that the international economy is set up, it really cannot be shut down like this. | ||
It's not a light switch. | ||
It is finely tuned and carefully calibrated. | ||
You know, some factories, they're receiving the materials they need to do their work the same day. | ||
And some of these facilities take years to set up or to fire back up. | ||
I mean it's, the global economy is very complex and again it's very delicate. | ||
The calibration is very precise and very delicate because everything is contingent. | ||
You know, creating one iPhone or one car is contingent on so many other things, so many other industries that are upstream. | ||
From the raw materials through to, you know, the smallest parts to the bigger parts to the production of these, you know, these goods that then go on the market. | ||
It's not so simple as, well, we sent everyone home and then we brought it back and okay, pick up where you left off. | ||
And so people said that there's going to be some inflation because we're turning the economy back on. | ||
There's also then this problem of the money. | ||
When the economy was shut down, everything crashed. | ||
The stock market was cut in half. | ||
Everything was cut in half. | ||
And in order to prevent a total economic meltdown, the Federal Reserve injected liquidity. | ||
And it was actually a very unique thing. | ||
For the first time in history, Congress got involved in monetary policy. | ||
And it was through a congressional bill that there was a fiscal and a monetary stimulus. | ||
Fiscal meaning it came from the budget of the government and monetary meaning it's relating to the minting of money from the Federal Reserve, from the banks. | ||
So you had this injection of money from fiscal policy from the government. | ||
They had, you know, this trillions, trillions and trillions of dollars in spending, financed by borrowing. | ||
So the government was giving money to the airlines, and the government was giving people cash payments, and they were giving money to, you know, all these important industries. | ||
And then on the monetary side of things, the Federal Reserve was injecting liquidity. | ||
They were upping their quantitative easing. | ||
You know, they're buying government bonds, they're buying assets, increasing their balance sheet, and so they print money, they buy things, and they're injecting money. | ||
And they're increasing the total amount of money that's in circulation. | ||
And so you have this giant stimulus coming from two sides of big spending in the economy, financed by borrowing, and then an injection of liquidity from the Federal Reserve. | ||
And all in all it amounted to something like 10 or 15 trillion dollars injected in the economy in the span of a year. | ||
And it's like there's never been spending on that scale. | ||
Maybe not... I think it even exceeds like the spending during World War II and the Great Depression. | ||
Just insane. | ||
And so that is a big part of the inflation. | ||
We're now, you know, after a year of just pumping money and pumping money from Congress and from the Federal Reserve, the money is now beginning to be devalued. | ||
Because, you know, and ultimately, without getting too technical here, the economy is not the money. | ||
The economy is... the definition of economy is the allocation of scarce resources with alternative uses. | ||
And what that means is this. | ||
You know, the word economy Which I just said, to break that definition down, to economize means to take the resources that you have, which are finite, and figure out where you're going to put those things. | ||
So in America, we've got an economy of people and of things, of labor, of producing all kinds of raw materials and other finished products. | ||
And so the question of the economy is, well, how do you allocate the labor? | ||
How do you know how many people should be working in this sector and for how long? | ||
How do you know how much wood should go into pencils, or how much plastic should go into water bottles, or how much meat should go to McDonald's? | ||
How do you allocate a finite amount of things? | ||
That's what the economy is supposed to do. | ||
That's what money, and prices, and the stock market, and all these institutions and media are supposed to facilitate, is the allocation of resources. | ||
And so when the Federal Reserve prints lots and lots of lots of money, it does not create value. | ||
Value derives from the productive activities of people. | ||
You know, value derives from the things and the goods and the services that are produced by people and by people using capital, which is machines and investment and institutions and all of that. | ||
So, the Federal Reserve can print more money, but the economic potential, the resources of the nation remain the same. | ||
The productivity, all of that remains the same, but there's just more money. | ||
So what happens is, is initially the money will buy certain things and you'll be able to move you'll be able to move people and products and things for a certain amount of time but eventually what happens is, is that more money which is a media of exchange for the same amount of goods and services you know eventually that will catch up. | ||
In the sense that, you know, the money one year ago, which was an expression of the value in the economy, one year later there's twice as much money which is an expression of the value of the same economy. | ||
So what happens? | ||
The whole money supply over again and doubling the money supply does not double the amount of metal and the amount of workers and the amount of capital and the amount of productivity. | ||
Over the course of a year, there has to be this correction. | ||
And this is a reductive way to put it, but basically the money, the value of it, has to be cut in half. | ||
A dollar has to buy half of what it did the year before. | ||
And again, this is very sloppy. | ||
It doesn't work like that one-to-one. | ||
I'm simplifying here. | ||
But that's the problem with inflation. | ||
That's why you can't just print more money and just, you know, hey, let's print more money and give people more money. | ||
Well, there's still the same amount of food and there's still the same amount of everything. | ||
But there's more money. | ||
So if the money is an expression of the value of the underlying economy, then what has to happen? | ||
Well, the money, the value of it has to go down. | ||
So this is why inflation is so high. | ||
Because there's more money in the system, but the same, or actually less, things. | ||
Because the productivity suffered as a result of the COVID lockdown and that that's another factor is not only is it you know it would be bad enough if you doubled the money supply and all things being equal then there was just twice as much money as there was before but all things are not equal. | ||
The economy is in way worse shape. | ||
The workforce is smaller. | ||
It's less productive. | ||
International trade has not picked up to where it once was and you doubled the money supply. | ||
So inflation was never going to be transitory. | ||
Inflation was never going to be a temporary deal, which is what they always said. | ||
For the past year, inflation has been steadily rising in everything. | ||
Not just the used car market, which is what they blamed it on, and they said, oh, well we can't just make cars again because there's all these shortages. | ||
Okay, well, you know, now shelter costs more money, and now the CPI basket of goods costs more, and everything costs more. | ||
It's cereal, McDonald's, everything, fuel, everything costs more. | ||
It's not just some things. | ||
And so this is the article from the New York Times. | ||
It talks about where the numbers are now. | ||
It says, quote, a key inflation measure released on Thursday showed that prices are climbing at the fastest pace in 40 years and broadening to touch nearly every corner of the American economy, heightening the risk that they will stay elevated for longer and that policymakers may have to react more aggressively. | ||
Markets tumbled after the government released Consumer Price Index data for January, which showed prices jumping 7.5% over the year and 0.6% over the past month, exceeding forecasts. | ||
More worrying were the report's details, which showed inflation moving beyond pandemic-affected goods and services, a sign that rapid gains could prove longer-lasting and harder to shake off. | ||
Investors speculated that the hot inflation would spur a decisive reaction from the Federal Reserve, possibly a big interest rate increase at the central bank's next gathering in March, though new Fed officials have signaled comfort with such a large move, making money more expensive to borrow and spend could weigh on demand, slowing the economy and tamping down prices. | ||
Wall Street is now anticipating that interest rates could rise to more than 1.75% by the end of the year, up from nearly zero now, and the possibility of a more forceful Fed reaction sent a key bond yield above 2% for the first time since July 2019 and deflated stock prices. | ||
Most economists still believe that inflation will cool by the end of the year as automobile prices climb at a more moderate pace and as supply chain problems hopefully ease, but high and widespread price increases portend trouble for a White House that is struggling to convince voters that the economy is strong. | ||
Economists thought that price gains would fade quickly in 2021, making the now infamous predictions that inflation would be transitory, only to have those projections proved wrong time and again as booming consumer demand for goods collided with royal global supply chains that could not ramp up production fast enough. | ||
So this is where the economy is and here's the scary thing. | ||
So Prices are rising. | ||
There's more demand than there is supply, which is ultimately what it is. | ||
You inject all this liquidity. | ||
People have all this money. | ||
Money is cheap to borrow. | ||
People have lots of money to spend. | ||
They're all buying, again, the same amount of goods. | ||
And if the same... if there's only so many goods, but more people have money to buy them, prices go up. | ||
Hence, you know, upward pressure on prices and then therefore inflation. | ||
The problem is this. | ||
In order to reel in inflation, in order to reel in the rising prices and the rising demand, you have to make the money more expensive. | ||
You've got to raise the interest rates. | ||
Higher interest rates means it's more expensive to borrow money. | ||
If it's more expensive to borrow and invest money, then people are spending less money. | ||
And then therefore, demand goes down, supplies allow to catch up, and prices begin to stabilize. | ||
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But... | |
The problem is interest rates have been nearly zero for 18 years. | ||
17-18 years. | ||
Ever since the housing bust of 2006, interest rates have been nearly zero. | ||
It's been nearly free to borrow money and there's been virtually no incentive to save money. | ||
Since right around that time, 06, 07, 08. | ||
So you've had free money for all this time. | ||
And as a consequence, now the entire economy is propped up by borrowing. | ||
Almost the entire economy has been financed, including the government, by debt. | ||
And so everybody's borrowing from each other. | ||
Where's the money to back it up? | ||
Where's the value? | ||
You know, people are buying houses, and people are, you know, making huge, huge investments. | ||
Companies, institutionally, and consumers are spending lots and lots of money that they don't have. | ||
And they're all borrowing it, they're all financing it. | ||
So what happens is, when the Federal Reserve turns up the interest rate, they're not going to have the money to pay back their lender. | ||
And when one person doesn't have money to pay back their lender, then their lender is not going to have money to pay back their lender. | ||
And then you've got this sort of domino effect, which is exactly how it happened in 2006 and 2008. | ||
The housing bust in 2006 created the meltdown in 2008. | ||
And so once you crank up the interest rates and people begin to default on their loans and on their debt, you find out that the whole economy was built on a house of cards. | ||
And all these all these stocks and everything begin to just go you know crater in value and then so if the stock market crashes that everybody's retirement crashes on everybody and and again people financing things with their assets then there then that deal crashes and you know to go in 2006 a little bit to give you an idea | ||
In 2006, to give you a simplified explanation, back in the 1990s, the Clinton administration, they went to one of these big government, sort of like a bank, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which gives out loans for housing, and they said, you know, let's lower the requirements for a person to be able to borrow money to buy a house. | ||
We want to encourage home ownership, we want to make home ownership more accessible, So we're going to lower the requirements for a person to become eligible to borrow money to buy a house. | ||
And so Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were giving out all these, it was called subprime mortgage loans, and they were giving money to people to buy houses that they couldn't pay back. | ||
And so you had all these people who were borrowing tons of money that they could never pay off, buying houses, And then you had what was called a collateralized debt obligation where they took these loans, they took the loans where people are borrowing huge sums of money and then that was cash flow, you know, then they're paying the money back. | ||
They took these obligations called the collateralized debt obligation, a mortgage-backed security, And they took all these things, they packaged them up, and they were selling them to investors, and saying, hey, this is gold. | ||
You can buy all these mortgages, you can buy all these debts, all these loans, and this is a really great asset. | ||
And so then all these big financial institutions were buying these things, which were rated like AAA by credit agencies, and saying, this is a great deal, this is a great asset, this is a very safe, conservative investment, and these mortgage-backed securities, these CDOs, were becoming a huge part of pension funds and, again, part of financial institutions. | ||
And by 2006, what happened was, was after all these big loans were made, people were borrowing all this money, people couldn't pay back the loans, and they started defaulting. | ||
And so these, and I'm oversimplifying a great deal, I don't know if this is 100% on a technical level correct, I'm sure some economists would correct me here, people start defaulting on their loans, and then these, again, these, it's sort of like an asset which was created out of the loans, it's sort of like an asset which was created out of the loans, the loans defaulted, the asset that was created out of them became garbage, became junk overnight, and then all these big firms that had these on their balance sheets | ||
And then this housing bust in 2006, all these defaults led to a total meltdown in 2008, and that's because all these debts were given out that could not be paid back. | ||
And an economy that was built on bad debt, the whole thing collapsed. | ||
And then you get into a death spiral here. | ||
And this is what we're talking about with COVID and with inflation, and that's why this portends such a huge risk for the economy, for the global economy, because across the board, you look at the debt-to-GDP ratio of any major country, any OECD country, and it's you look at the debt-to-GDP ratio of any major country, any You know, America's debt-to-GDP ratio is, I think, over 100% at this point. | ||
We surpassed $30 trillion in debt recently, I think just about a week ago. | ||
And what's the GDP of America? | ||
I think it's at, you know, $20-25 trillion. | ||
So we have more debt than we have economic productivity in one year. | ||
More debt than we have in economic output in one year. | ||
The whole nation. | ||
And the debt-to-GDP ratio in China and Japan is similarly catastrophic, and all across Western Europe. | ||
And so what happens when the American debt bubble explodes? | ||
Well then the European debt bubble explodes. | ||
And then the Asian debt bubble explodes. | ||
And then you're talking about a global financial meltdown. | ||
A global debt bomb. | ||
You know, a hundred trillion dollars in debt exploding. | ||
And then, you know, and then nobody knows what happens. | ||
You know, then what happens? | ||
What happens when, you know, like the money collapses, and when stock market collapses, and people can't get the retirement, and people lose their jobs, and major firms go down? | ||
What happens? | ||
No one knows. | ||
Then you're talking about political instability. | ||
Then you're talking about a global reset. | ||
I think that's what they're referring to. | ||
You're talking about a global reset. | ||
Then the government's got to go in and create a managed economy. | ||
Then the government just has to go in with guns and say, look, we're taking control of the food. | ||
We're going to control the food supply. | ||
We're going to send the soldiers to the cities to control the cities. | ||
We're going to ration all the goods until we can fix the money and fix the debt and fix everything. | ||
We're talking about then like a transition into a totally new world order. | ||
Like setting the clock back to zero and resetting the global economy. | ||
Like that's... That's the scenario here. | ||
unidentified
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So... | |
Pretty freaky stuff. | ||
Pretty, pretty freaky stuff. | ||
And the trouble is, there is only so much that these economic policy makers can do. | ||
There is only so much that... Who's the new Fed chairman? | ||
I don't even know his name. | ||
But there's only so much that these policy makers can do. | ||
Playing with interest rates and playing with the supply of the money. | ||
You can't control production. | ||
You can't control the economy. | ||
You can control the money, you can control the rules, but you cannot control, fundamentally, the finite resources of the productive capacity of the economy. | ||
So it's going to take a very competent regime to thread the needle on this crisis. | ||
You're going to need like a 10-year dictatorship to fix this. | ||
And where's that expertise going to come from? | ||
It's not going to come from this administration. | ||
It is not going to come from the greedy transnational interests and the people that run this administration. | ||
It just won't happen. | ||
I mean, you need to get, like, Hitler in charge. | ||
Literally. | ||
You need to get some kind of dictator to totally control the government. | ||
With a life term to fix this. | ||
And the trouble is, you elect a leader, they have four years, and nobody wants to preside over the correction. | ||
Nobody wants to preside over the weaning. | ||
Weaning the economy off of debt. | ||
Weaning the economy off of the free money. | ||
Nobody wants to preside over economic pain, because I don't think it could be done in four years. | ||
Because what happens is, and this is why democracy is not going to work here. | ||
You know, a regime gets in charge. | ||
They start to do an economic correction. | ||
They bring about the pain so that they can control it and mitigate the damage. | ||
But then guess what? | ||
They lose the freaking midterms. | ||
And then everyone's freaking out. | ||
And then they lose the next election. | ||
And then someone comes back and says, I promise free money for everybody. | ||
So it can't be fixed by a four-year term. | ||
It can't be fixed by a politician in Congress. | ||
You need to get someone in charge for like 10 years who's not concerned about the two-year, you know, the two-year timetable and is willing to do five years of pain and control the media and control the message and get the people through economic hardship that must occur. | ||
I mean, this is what happened to Reagan in his first term. | ||
Reagan gets in, and he almost wasn't going to win re-election. | ||
Because Reagan gets in, he appoints Volcker. | ||
Is that his name right? | ||
Paul Volcker? | ||
As his Fed Chairman. | ||
And Volcker cranks up the interest rates, and there's a recession! | ||
You know, there's stagflation throughout the 60s and 70s. | ||
Reagan gets in, puts in place Volcker at the Federal Reserve, Volcker cranks up the interest rates, and it's pain. | ||
And there's a recession. | ||
And people are saying, Reagan, there's no way he's going to win re-election because of all these economic indicators. | ||
But, by 1984, things start to turn around and he wins in a landslide. | ||
And then you get this Reagan boom. | ||
And a lot of it was illusory. | ||
And a lot of it, you had like these savings and loans firms, which were just a joke. | ||
And I mean, there were problems there too. | ||
But, you know, then you've got this big boom of economic productivity that goes all the way through, really, to the housing bust in 06. | ||
unidentified
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So, this is not good. | |
This is not good! | ||
And we're not going to fix it in four years. | ||
And we're not going to get a Volcker. | ||
We're not going to get a Reagan anytime soon here. | ||
So yeah, they say he got creamed in the midterms. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So it's bad news, man. | ||
Bad news ahead! | ||
At some point, we're gonna have to get an Alexander Hamilton. | ||
We're gonna have to get somebody in who's gonna fix this economy because it's not good. | ||
Everyone's saying, Reagan sucks! | ||
I know Reagan sucks. | ||
I don't like Reagan, okay? | ||
I hate Reagan too. | ||
I'm just saying that's what happened with interest rates. | ||
You people are like, So Reagan appointed this Fed chairman who tightened interest rates. | ||
Oh, Reagan? | ||
I hate Reagan! | ||
Okay, well, whatever. | ||
I do not love Reagan, okay? | ||
I know Reagan gained amnesty, I know Reagan did gun control and abortion, and I know Reagan sucked. | ||
I'm not a fan of Reagan. | ||
Reagan was a criminal, absolutely. | ||
Reagan was a big part of the supermob, okay? | ||
But he did tighten the interest rates, okay? | ||
Anyway... So that's our, that's our quote-unquote transitory inflation. | ||
It's just this giant debt bubble and one of these days it's gonna burst and it's gonna bring the whole planet down with it. | ||
So... Anyway, so that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
We'll take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
That's all I have to say about that. | ||
Let me get my water here. | ||
I want to get into these super chats. | ||
I hope, by the way, I hope that explanation of the economy was right. | ||
It's been a long time since I read anything about the economy. | ||
So I hope I'm remembering enough there. | ||
I hope I'm remembering well. | ||
Correct me if I'm wrong on some of those. | ||
But I think I did a good job. | ||
I hope I did a good job here. | ||
Because I don't even remember the last time I talked about the economy. | ||
I certainly haven't read about it in probably, you know, five or six years. | ||
Because I'm a big international relations guy and I've been involved in politics. | ||
So I've gotten away from the economics stuff, which was really my passion in high school. | ||
I hope I made a good explanation there. | ||
Simple, entry-level understanding. | ||
It was very good, Nick. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Nickernomics, exactly. | ||
Economics is a retarded topic to discuss, but you did fine. | ||
Oh, thanks a lot. | ||
No, you need... economics is very important actually. | ||
When you were a Lilbert? | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
I like economics because I love logistics, you know. | ||
Economics is very fascinating. | ||
It's a very male-brained sort of thing. | ||
There's almost no female economists because economy is such a male thing. | ||
You know, when you talk about supply chains and money and like, this is good stuff. | ||
This is autism stuff. | ||
I love it. | ||
It's fascinating. | ||
So, no, I'm a fan. | ||
But it's just, it's very complex. | ||
It's very... I don't know if I have the IQ to be an economist. | ||
Because it's a very... It's sort of mathematical and, you know, there's a lot that goes into it. | ||
Okay, let's take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
Let's see what you guys have to say. | ||
Andrew says, I think that women are cringe, but simps, probably most men, are at least 10 times as cringe because they incentivize bad female behavior. | ||
No, dude, you're so wrong. | ||
You're so wrong on this. | ||
Why is it you're a simp? | ||
You are a simp. | ||
Every man is just looking for an excuse to blame men for women's behavior, and that is because they are too involved with women, and they can't see outside of their infatuation with women. | ||
I get it. | ||
I've been infatuated before, but look, you have got to recognize that infatuation is a chemical thing that happens in your brain. | ||
I'm not trying to be a cringe lab coat here, but it's real. | ||
Infatuation is an illusion. | ||
You talk about love, you talk about you love God, you talk about you love your wife, you love your kids, you love your country. | ||
But what we would call the honeymoon phase, the so-called puppy love, the infatuation, is illusory. | ||
It is. | ||
It is something that happens to us. | ||
It is a biological process. | ||
Just like, you know, I get angry when I get hungry. | ||
Just like, you know, you have to take a shit. | ||
You fall in love, and you think it's the most important thing ever, and blah, you think it's the end all be all. | ||
And part of being mature and being an adult is recognizing infatuation. | ||
And saying, you know, I feel one way, I feel like this is the end all be all, but I know it's really not. | ||
I know it's really just a feeling. | ||
The laws of attraction, you know? | ||
It's just so many people get caught up in infatuation and they lose themselves in it. | ||
They lose sight of everything. | ||
This is what happens to a lot of men is they're infatuated with women. | ||
I love women. | ||
I've been infatuated with women before but I've never lost sight of the role of that in my life and I've never lost sight of the role of women in society. | ||
And so a lot of men but a lot of men on the other hand are not like that because then and so this is where you get this they say oh well it's the present state of women or women are the way they are because men make them that way and they can never blame their princess she's perfect she couldn't possibly be yes even her yes even her they are all the same women have a nature and yes even your princess yes they are all the same Yes, they are. | ||
And no, men didn't make them that way. | ||
Men did not incentivize them to be that way. | ||
No, men did not. | ||
It's not men today made them that way. | ||
No, women have always been that way, ever since the fall. | ||
Ever since the fall of man, women have been this way. | ||
Women were deceived by the serpent, and they've been the same way since the Garden of Eden. | ||
And man didn't make women that way. | ||
Women were always that way. | ||
People are calling me a fake cell. | ||
One way! | ||
One way infatuation. | ||
One way. | ||
I don't mean it like I was ever infatuated and it was ever reciprocated. | ||
It wasn't. | ||
But, um... | ||
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So don't call me a fake cell. | |
My live chat just sucks. | ||
I just can't. - I, I, I, Opening up the live chat is just a big mistake. | ||
It always has been. | ||
I'm just gonna tune that. | ||
Turning that one off. | ||
I'm just opening a different tab. | ||
I choose to ignore it. | ||
Talking about missing the point. | ||
So women are the way that they are. | ||
Men did not make them that way. | ||
Society did not make them that way now. | ||
Women have always been this way. | ||
Yeah, women are cringe, but men are so much more cringe. | ||
Yeah, women are cringe, but men made them that way. | ||
And what? | ||
If men didn't make them that way, what? | ||
They'd be the pretty princess of the land? | ||
They'd be the pretty princess of the realm? | ||
No, I don't think so. | ||
No, I don't think so. | ||
So, you're a fucking simp, dude. | ||
Men are at least ten times as cringe because... I mean, look, everyone's cringe. | ||
That's the real red pill is everyone, is men, women. | ||
But that doesn't diminish the fact that women have their role in society. | ||
Ultimately, what you're trying to do is make an excuse for women. | ||
So yeah, men are cringe. | ||
Women are cringe too. | ||
And women are cringe because of their nature. | ||
Men are definitely less cringe than women. | ||
You want to know why? | ||
Because men are philosophers, and men are geniuses, and men are composers and artists and generals and leaders and mathematicians. | ||
And they're engineers, and they are construction workers, and they clean up the sewage, and so... And what are women? | ||
You know, they make babies. | ||
Okay, so yeah. | ||
Men are infinitely less cringe than women. | ||
God became a man. | ||
God did not become a woman. | ||
God became a man. | ||
Yeah, a woman... | ||
A woman bore the God-man, but he was a God-man, not a God-woman. | ||
So that in itself makes men infinitely more based than women. | ||
When God became one with man and became flesh, did he become a girl? | ||
Nope! | ||
He became a man. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Let's go! | ||
So, no. | ||
No, women are way... So shut your... Shut your simp mouth. | ||
I'm not a simp, but... Women are definitely cringed, but they're not as cringed as men. | ||
You put sweetheart... Oh, you're so much less cringed than guys, sweetheart. | ||
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Oh, sweetie. | |
I mean, yeah, you're totally cringed, babe. | ||
But you're so much less cringed than all those simps. | ||
You fag. | ||
You fucking simp. | ||
You beta, you freaking orbiter. | ||
Gosh, I hate that so much. | ||
Man, I hate that men try to do this thing where they're like, yeah, Nick. | ||
Yeah, Nick, you tell them. | ||
But I will say that, you know, men are more cringey women. | ||
No, get the fuck out of here, actually. | ||
All right, Nick, yeah, and if I could just add one thing, you know, the men, way more cringey than the women. | ||
I agree with you, not a simp, we hate simps, but, no, no, no, no, no, but. | ||
The way women are now. | ||
The state of modern women. | ||
The women that were made this way by men. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
No! | ||
Men must be the masters of women. | ||
It's like Spengler said. | ||
You know, women are like the universe, and man is the master of the universe. | ||
Women are being and man... What did he say? | ||
It's very complex, you know, European philosophy. | ||
What would he say? | ||
Women are becoming and men are being or something like that? | ||
Women are phonic and Dionysian and men are Apollonian and Faustian and solar. | ||
And women are lunar. | ||
So shut up! | ||
So shut up! | ||
I don't want to hear this stuff anymore. | ||
It's like I am the only like old head on women. | ||
I am the only one with like a 18th century view of women. | ||
And the rest of you are just pretenders. | ||
The rest of you are just fake. | ||
The rest of you are just a bunch of lover boys. | ||
I'm the only like 18th century man here where I'm like Like, truly sexist. | ||
Like, truly and thoroughly and deeply sexist and Faustian and Spenglerian and the rest of you are a bunch of loverboys. | ||
The rest of you are a bunch of googly-eyed, heart-eyes, simp beta-orbiters and it's a lonely world, you know. | ||
You know, it's a lonely world being the only one that gets it. | ||
unidentified
|
And Andrew Anglin. | |
And Andrew Anglin, of course, also. | ||
See, don't even get me started. | ||
Well, say what you will about women, but men? | ||
Way more cringe. | ||
You're saying that women are better than men? | ||
Where's the evidence of this? | ||
Men are awesome! | ||
Men are awesome. | ||
Go us. | ||
You know, people call me gay for saying that. | ||
I'm not gay for saying that. | ||
It's the reality. | ||
Men are geniuses. | ||
Men are philosophers. | ||
They're kings. | ||
And what do women do? | ||
Women comb their hair? | ||
She's beautiful! | ||
Yeah, okay, they're beautiful, but... So what? | ||
What else do they really have going for them? | ||
Yeah, bear me a son! | ||
Bear me a son. | ||
And then get out of my face! | ||
And then get out of my face and let me be great! | ||
So... Men are more cringe than women. | ||
Listen to yourself, sports head. | ||
This is the sports guy, by the way. | ||
And by the way, this is the same guy that wants to do a sports show. | ||
This is the same pussy-whipped guy that wants to do a sports show. | ||
Honey, I just hit a thousand subs on my Cozy Channel. | ||
Are you proud of me? | ||
Good job! | ||
Good job, buddy! | ||
If you're good, I'll let you buy yourself a $200 sports jersey! | ||
Yippee! | ||
Thanks, honey! | ||
Thanks, wifey! | ||
Oh, you're my best friend! | ||
You're the best! | ||
You're such a cool wife! | ||
I'm so lucky I have you! | ||
Hey, babe, is it alright if I get a sports poster for my man cave? | ||
I don't know, honey. | ||
Maybe if you take out the garbage. | ||
Oh, okay, mom. | ||
I'm not gonna kick your ass, but somebody needs to kick your ass. | ||
Maybe your wife needs to kick your ass. | ||
Somebody needs to knock some sense into these pussy boys for crying out loud, man. | ||
It's embarrassing. | ||
It's embarrassing! | ||
We're trying to talk about rebuilding America. | ||
We need to literally take America and make it great again. | ||
We need to literally take our country and make it great again. | ||
unidentified
|
And you niggas are like, With the yellow shorts. | |
With the yellow shorts, though. | ||
unidentified
|
Honey. | |
Hi, honey. | ||
Can I go save America? | ||
Can I super chat America first? | ||
With the yellow shorts on that my wife laid out for me. | ||
With my yellow shorts that my wife laid out for me this morning. | ||
Can I lay out your suits with your yellow shorts this morning, Nick? | ||
Maybe if you bear me a son. | ||
Yellow? | ||
Whipped a yellow? | ||
Yellow check? | ||
unidentified
|
So, um... So, anyway. | |
So that's... Yeah, we... Okay. | ||
So we did that tonight. | ||
Like we do every night. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway. | |
I don't know how, and I say it every night and people still don't get it. | ||
I say it every night and people still don't get it. | ||
Every night I have to do this rant. | ||
And every night I still get a super chat saying, men are at least 10 times more cringed than women. | ||
And you people are like, Nick, we've heard this before. | ||
Nick, stop yelling about women again. | ||
It's like, but every night I get a super chat that says, men are 10 times more cringed than women because we made them that way. | ||
Really? | ||
I made women this way? | ||
What did I have to do with making women this way? | ||
If I were God, I wouldn't have even have MADE women. | ||
I wouldn't have even MADE women, let alone make them that way. | ||
I wouldn't have even MADE them! | ||
I would just make men asexually reproduce like a single cell organism like plankton or something. | ||
So how did I make women that way? | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
I don't even know any women! | ||
So... Niggas be talking about, you made women this way. | ||
You're ten times more cringe than women. | ||
Really? | ||
I'm ten times more cringe than women? | ||
Don't think so. | ||
Have you ever talked to a woman before? | ||
unidentified
|
Geez. | |
Why? | ||
Why was I chosen for this? | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
It would be easier to just be some Lover boy. | ||
And have my fairy tale wedding and then just be some Bears fan. | ||
Have my fairy tale wedding with my best friend. | ||
Hi honey. | ||
Ever since I met you. | ||
And have some elaborate proposal. | ||
I went to a wedding a couple years ago. | ||
unidentified
|
Geez oh man. | |
I went to this wedding a couple years ago. | ||
And this just makes me like want to vomit. | ||
They're like a big elaborate production. | ||
And they're telling the story of their engagement. | ||
And, you know, I think it was the wife talking. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
But she's like, so he took me to the books first. | ||
He took me to the bookstore where we first met. | ||
Then he took me to this thing where we used to go to. | ||
And it was like this big, like, engagement, like, scavenger hunt. | ||
And, like, this trip down memory lane. | ||
And then he proposed. | ||
It would be way easier. | ||
But, uh... I was like, oh my gosh. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my gosh. | |
Like, I'm gonna do that? | ||
then what? | ||
Then you're going to be like some guy watching TV 30 years from now? | ||
unidentified
|
Like, but it would be easier. | |
It would be way easier. | ||
unidentified
|
But, uh, I was like, oh my gosh. | |
Oh my gosh. | ||
Like, I'm going to do that? | ||
No freaking way am I going to do that. | ||
No way. | ||
I I want an arranged marriage in a church. | ||
I don't want to, you know, put fucking cake in her face. | ||
I don't want a first dance. | ||
I don't want a best man speech and all this, you know, fanfare. | ||
I don't want to drive away with the freaking cans behind the car. | ||
I want an arranged marriage. | ||
I want to be introduced to my wife on my wedding day. | ||
Get married in a church, and then go home and have sex with her, and then have a kid, okay? | ||
That's what I want. | ||
And then have a son, and that's it, okay? | ||
Separate rooms, separate beds, and let's just have a baby on the way, and you can make dinner, and I'll have sex with you every so many days, because women get stir-crazy, and that's it, okay? | ||
And all the rest of it is just a big, you know, it's a big joke. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
So I want to be introduced to her on the wedding day. | ||
Hi, nice to meet you. | ||
I'm Nick Fuentes. | ||
I'm gonna be your husband for the rest of your life. | ||
Okay, we get married, throw over my shoulder, drag her back to my cave, and then put a baby in her. | ||
And then that's it. | ||
And then we just settle into our lives. | ||
And this is honestly how it should be. | ||
I don't need the rest. | ||
Take her hand, look at her in the eye. | ||
unidentified
|
Ever since I met you, I love you! | |
Will you marry me? | ||
How about she kneels for me? | ||
How about she's introduced to me and she's like, hello my lord. | ||
unidentified
|
I've heard so much about you. | |
You're such a king. | ||
Alright, you could be my wife. | ||
You may rise. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Kidding, of course. | ||
And it seems like a modern phenomenon. | ||
All this stuff seems so new. | ||
I don't think they were doing all that gay stuff 100 years ago. | ||
years ago, 200 years ago. | ||
The way women walk around today, like they really need to be humbled. | ||
They're walking around and they're like, you know, I'm gonna wear pants, and I'm gonna have a career, and I'm gonna have a degree, and you're gonna propose to me, buy me a ring, buy me a wedding, do what I want, dance on strings, you know, and it's like, uh-uh-uh, nuh-uh, no, this is a patriarchy. | ||
I'm the boss, okay? | ||
So many men aren't willing to be the boss. | ||
They want to be the subject. | ||
Nah, girl. | ||
I'm the boss. | ||
I'm the diva in this relationship. | ||
You want a diva? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm the diva. | |
You want a prima donna? | ||
I'm going to be the one throwing a fit. | ||
People say, happy wife, happy life. | ||
Nuh-uh. | ||
Happy man, happy life. | ||
You want a happy life? | ||
You better make me happy. | ||
Or else I'm going to ruin everyone's day! | ||
You want a happy life? | ||
I'm going to be in absolute terror to be around. | ||
I'm going to be putting holes in the wall, putting holes in the cabinets. | ||
I'm going to be breaking glass. | ||
I'm going to be yelling. | ||
I'm going to be kicking stuff. | ||
You want a happy life? | ||
You better not burn the chicken. | ||
Talk about happy wife, happy life. | ||
Nuh-uh! | ||
I got too much going on, I'm under too much stress, and I gotta make you happy? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Gotta do this with a wife or she's gonna go crazy. | ||
No, my wife is gonna say that about me. | ||
I gotta do this for Nick or else he's gonna, you know, throw me out the window. | ||
So, it's a very appealing offer. | ||
Kai Clips be like, don't say that! | ||
It's gonna be so hard for you to find a wife! | ||
Yeah, well, if a wife isn't down for that, then I'm not down for a wife. | ||
If my wife isn't down for that, well, then you know what? | ||
I'll just hire an assistant or something. | ||
unidentified
|
So... So that's my daily rage. | |
That's my daily rage against the matriarchal system. | ||
UGH! | ||
Angry incel shakes his fist at a female-dominated world. | ||
unidentified
|
So true. | |
It's unreal. | ||
It's unreal the extent to which men are led around by the nose. | ||
Men are ten times worse than women. | ||
You should be enslaved. | ||
I was going to say enjailed. | ||
You should be jailed. | ||
You should be jailed and enslaved for that comment. | ||
Men are ten times worse than women. | ||
Donald Trump is a man. | ||
He should throw you in jail for saying that. | ||
God is a man. | ||
You should be sent to hell for saying that. | ||
What happens when you get up to heaven and the gates are run by men? | ||
You know, when you stand before St. | ||
Peter and Jesus and all the disciples, are you going to keep that same energy, pal? | ||
Keep that same energy when you get to the gates of heaven, pal. | ||
Keep that same energy. | ||
Men are ten times worse than women. | ||
I hope you keep that same energy when you go before the Tribune or the... what is it? | ||
When you go before... | ||
The judge and all the disciples, right? | ||
Explain that one to Jesus Christ. | ||
Hey, hey, you're ten times worse than your mom. | ||
And you, Peter, you're ten times worse than you, and you suck, and you made women this way. | ||
Yeah, keep that same energy, pal. | ||
ass sent straight to hell. | ||
unidentified
|
So, 10 times worse than women. | |
Boys rule. | ||
Girls drool. | ||
It's first grade, pal. | ||
Everyone knows this. | ||
Boys rule. | ||
Girls drool. | ||
And, you know, if you don't understand that by now, I don't know what you're doing, pal. | ||
I don't know what plan a year on Give me all the work time Give me all worked up. | ||
I got a stomachache. | ||
You're getting me all worked up. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm tired. | |
I'm tired. | ||
Can you see how tired I am? | ||
Look at me. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at how tired I am. | |
Ugh. | ||
I'm tired of you niggas. | ||
I'm tired of you niggas. | ||
I'm exhausted. | ||
You niggas got me exhausted. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
I'm ten times worse than women. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
And this is from the sports guy. | ||
The Bears fan or whatever. | ||
This is the guy that wants to have a sports channel. | ||
unidentified
|
Figures. | |
Bears, sex, and sports. | ||
What could be better than this? | ||
unidentified
|
Bears, I got my Bud Light. | |
I got my best sports girl. | ||
And my team. | ||
unidentified
|
Geez. | |
Guys are worse than girls. | ||
Give me a break. | ||
unidentified
|
Ten times more cringe. | |
Sam Hyde, Andrew Anglin, Elliot Rodger, Nick Flintus, Donald Trump, Hitler. | ||
Do these names mean nothing to you? | ||
Name the women that are ten times more based than men. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm crying out loud. | |
Who do you got, huh? | ||
Lauren Southern? | ||
Lauren Southern is ten times more based than any man. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, absolutely. | |
For sure. | ||
Let me digest that one. | ||
Don't ever say that to me again. | ||
Don't ever say that to me again. | ||
FuentesRespector says, are you a smart fella or a fart smella? | ||
I'm a smart fella. | ||
Groibmasterflex, as you see that logo, went on a weird Twitter rant about you. | ||
Yet another resentful intellectual that must resort to ad hominem lies against groipers. | ||
Terminally online and friend of ConBot, yet he acts oblivious to incel discourse and internet humor. | ||
That guy just is a loser. | ||
There's no other way to say it. | ||
He's just like an ugly loser who's never done anything. | ||
That's always the case. | ||
It's all these like burnout, burnout geniuses who've never done anything, never built anything, and they resent the geniuses that build things. | ||
It's just quite that simple. | ||
People that think they're smarter than they are. | ||
Oh, why am I not successful? | ||
Why do people not like me? | ||
Why am I just some ugly loser? | ||
Oh, it's because... Well, I'm just too good for that. | ||
I'm just so far above that. | ||
Oh yeah, I'm sure that's why, pal. | ||
I'm sure that's the reason. | ||
It's not because you have a recessed jawline and are an idiot. | ||
It's not just because your teacher, your fucking English teacher gassed you up because you're a faggot. | ||
No, no, it's just because you're just way, you're just off the charts. | ||
You're just freaking breaking the test. | ||
You're off the scale! | ||
And that's why you're a loser, right? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
There's always that running thread of resentment between, you know, talented or intellectual people between those that make it and those that don't make it. | ||
It's always some excuse. | ||
I have to be mediocre as a rationalization because how could I be successful and he not be if he's smarter? | ||
Oh, well, that's just because, you know, when you're really smart, you're a loser. | ||
You know, that's what it is. | ||
Okay, for sure. | ||
unidentified
|
So yeah, I saw that. | |
I'd love to see it, but you know, it speaks for itself. | ||
I mean, like, I could stand next to the guy and it speaks for itself. | ||
Andrew says, Hi Nick, Hitler was in sports news yesterday. | ||
So, Gruyper Sports had some Hitler content today. | ||
Like I said yesterday, work in progress, but if you had any feedback, good or bad, would be appreciated. | ||
Listen, why don't you come to me when you have something, okay? | ||
I don't need the daily updates. | ||
Just make content, make good content, and if it's successful, then let me know. | ||
But, you know, you don't need to give me the daily updates on, hey, it's going great! | ||
Yeah, okay, well, I mean, we'll see, man. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Mac Man says Eminem once said, you find me offensive? | ||
I find you offensive for finding me offensive. | ||
I feel like you can relate to this when boomers and normies counter-signal your righteous anger. | ||
Yeah, I am offended by normies. | ||
I'm disgusted. | ||
I'm disgusted by normies. | ||
And I am offended. | ||
They're like, oh, you know, what you say is really like kind of inappropriate. | ||
It's like, okay, and you're like a devil worshipper or kid rapist, so. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, likewise. | |
Hell yeah, man. | ||
William says, I'm expecting one of the most reactionary right-wing state governments to be elected in Arizona this year. | ||
Imagine doubling the amount of Paul Gosars and Wendy Rogers. | ||
Going to be cozy in Arizona. | ||
Hell yeah, man. | ||
Yeah, very white-pilling. | ||
William says, I always catch the replay of your show at 5 a.m. | ||
on my way to the job site. | ||
The monologues have been excellent these past couple weeks. | ||
Really entertaining and inspiring. | ||
You're kicking ass, dude. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
I'm glad you like the show. | ||
Monday again, on my way to the job site. | ||
Yep, it's America first time. | ||
Well, glad you like the show, man. | ||
Big shout out. | ||
James the Groyper says, Great Five Nights at Freddy, Lore, Colin show earlier. | ||
Toy Chica is pretty based. | ||
Hamburger, Cheeseburger, Big Mac, Wooper. | ||
Glow Gloyper, Gloyper, Glicktery is inevitable. | ||
Toy Chica is the most based character in Five Nights at Freddy. | ||
Okay, I don't know what that is. | ||
Yeah, Kai Klipsch sent that to me. | ||
He's like, hey, great Toy Chica stream. | ||
I'm like, what are you talking about? | ||
Hey Nick, I have a question for you. | ||
If you had a girlfriend and she got tragically raped, would you break up with her? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes, I would. | ||
Sorry, don't get raped. | ||
I mean, what? | ||
It's tragic. | ||
It's a very unfortunate situation. | ||
But, yeah, I mean, what? | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, like, yeah, I just... | |
I know it would be hard for her to live with that, but I definitely couldn't live with that either. | ||
So, just be safe out there, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Maybe don't leave the house or something. | ||
Because, yeah, I mean, listen, I know everybody would like to say, no, I would definitely, but it's like, you're gonna be dealing with that your whole life. | ||
And what if she falls in love with a rapist? | ||
Like, how could you live with yourself? | ||
How could you live with yourself if your wife is in love with, like, her former rapist? | ||
Because that happens, you know, that does happen all the time. | ||
It's like, I'm not gonna compete with some rapist. | ||
I'm not gonna compete in my house for some rapist. | ||
Like, that's just not gonna work. | ||
You know? | ||
I think it'd be more difficult for me to live with it than with her. | ||
unidentified
|
So... No way. | |
No freaking way. | ||
No way! | ||
No way. | ||
Sorry, ladies. | ||
Stay indoors. | ||
Stay indoors. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I don't know, man. | |
Wear a burka, stay indoors, do what you gotta do. | ||
unidentified
|
But, uh... I know that's very controversial, but yeah, no way, no way. | |
It would be very sad. | ||
It would be very tough. | ||
But like, yeah, I don't know, man. | ||
unidentified
|
I wouldn't break up with her right away. | |
Okay? | ||
I would, like, find an excuse down the road. | ||
No, I'm gonna stay with you. | ||
I don't even care. | ||
And then, like, three months later, just, like, have some big episode and be like, okay, we have to break up. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not you, it's me. | |
It just isn't working. | ||
unidentified
|
Honey, this isn't working. | |
That is unironically what I would do. | ||
I would unironically pretend that it wasn't about that and then, like, four months later, Bring up with her why would you propose to me? | ||
Oh, you know, I'm just waiting for the right time and then like three three four months later Listen, I just I'm just not at that point in my life. | ||
I just can't handle it I couldn't be the husband that I need to be that you deserve So I think we just have to go our separate ways you deserve a man who's gonna be all-in and that's just not me right now So I'm sorry George Costanza moment. | ||
Yeah, exactly Is that wrong? | ||
Somebody tell me why that's wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
Because you love her! | |
And that should be enough. | ||
It's like, listen, like, no. | ||
I want a mother to my children and all that. | ||
And it's just, it's going to really complicate matters. | ||
And if you're not married, it's like, why do I have to take that on? | ||
If I was married, that would be one thing. | ||
But if we weren't married yet, why would I, how would I marry someone that has that going on? | ||
I don't, I'm not under any obligation to do that. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
Oh, because my girlfriend got raped, now I gotta just deal with that? | ||
Like, you're not even my wife yet. | ||
You know? | ||
If it's, if you're my wife, then that's my problem. | ||
If you're not my wife, it's not my, it's really not my problem, actually. | ||
If you were my wife, I would go and kill the rapist, and, uh, if she ever thought about him, I'd beat the shit out of her. | ||
No, kidding, kidding, kidding. | ||
But, um, no, but yeah, if I, if I were the husband, I would kill the rapist, And then that would probably solve the problem. | ||
Yeah, yeah, that's probably what I would do. | ||
If I were married, I would kill a rapist, stay together, because there is no divorce in the Catholic Church, and she'd still be my wife, and I'd be there for her and everything. | ||
But if she were my girlfriend, yeah, why would that be... I mean, it's very unfortunate, it's very sad. | ||
I don't mean to be glib about it, but yeah, that wouldn't be my problem. | ||
It's just not... that's not what I got into. | ||
You know, when I start dating A girl, it's gonna be like, yeah, like I, you know, this is the program, and then it's like, oh, the program has been altered? | ||
You know, she comes up to me and she goes, I got raped. | ||
I'm changing the deal. | ||
Pray I don't alter it any further. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, like Darth Vader? | |
I'm altering the deal. | ||
unidentified
|
Pray I don't alter it any further. | |
When she tells me she got raped, I'm like, oh man, I'm stuck with her now. | ||
It would be a bad look, because what am I going to do if I break up with her? | ||
Then people are going to say, oh, you broke up with her because she got raped. | ||
It's like, well, maybe, but also maybe I just didn't like her, you know? | ||
So there's, uh, it really puts me in a bad situation, honestly. | ||
You know, you getting, listen, honey, you getting raped has really put me in a bad situation, okay? | ||
I just want you to know, I know you're crying and everything, but you getting raped, yeah, it's really put me in a tough spot. | ||
unidentified
|
So I hope you're happy with yourself. | |
It's all jokes. | ||
It's all jokes. | ||
unidentified
|
It's all jokes, of course. | |
Just kidding! | ||
It is all just tongue-in-cheek. | ||
It's just a bit. | ||
It is just comedy. | ||
I am just saying this for entertainment and shock value on a funny, entertaining show. | ||
I love and cherish and I take care of women and I am a lover of all women, even the raped ones. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm just loving them. | |
I've got a bosom of love. | ||
Um, for all of these raped, raped victims and, uh, rapies. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, absolutely. | |
And everything I just said was a joke. | ||
No, no killing, no beating, no breaking up. | ||
I'm just... Rape, not raped. | ||
They're all, they're all darling angels to me. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'll take them all. | |
Totally. | ||
So, put that in the record, alright? | ||
Write that down, write that down. | ||
You have to write that down. | ||
I said I was joking. | ||
Write that down. | ||
unidentified
|
It was a joke. | |
He later clarified it was a joke. | ||
Well, you know, I'm not the only one. | ||
unidentified
|
What man is enthusiastic about a girlfriend that got raped? | |
I mean, like, who's gonna tell me, like, am I wrong on that? | ||
If it was my wife, that'd be one thing, but... Anyway... Stop! | ||
You're gonna get me in trouble with these questions. | ||
James the Groyper just read that. | ||
Maxi Bros says, I just received my Halloween merch from last October and I'm very thankful the merch team worked so long to resolve this issue, Big07. | ||
Yeah, sorry about the delay. | ||
Complicated business. | ||
OG Jenning says, I just saw your debate with Lady Faga. | ||
You won, he lost. | ||
Keep making them cry! | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
Claros says, I'm hoping and praying, JK, I'd never pray, that Paul Towne is one of those new streamers. | ||
If you make my dreams come true, I'll vow to stop kissing girls and be a pretty girl for the Groipers, XOXO. | ||
Why would you say you'd never pray, Claro? | ||
It's pretty messed up. | ||
Well, you know what? | ||
I'm not bringing Paul Towne on this Platform so you can cuck me, okay? | ||
So that Clairo and Paul Town can cuck me. | ||
You bitch! | ||
You'll be mine, Clairo! | ||
You'll be... Is she a lesbian? | ||
Is that real? | ||
Is Clairo a lesbian? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, Clairo. | |
So close, but yet so far apart. | ||
We have the same birthday. | ||
Oh, Clairo. | ||
No, she's not in love with Paul Town. | ||
She's in love with me! | ||
You can't have her, Paul. | ||
She's mine. | ||
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She's mine. | |
Back away from her, Paul Town. | ||
I love you, but don't make me hurt you. | ||
Clairo's mine. | ||
I love Paul Town slightly less than I love Clairo. | ||
Get away from her, Paul Towne! | ||
Get away! | ||
Don't make me choose. | ||
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Don't make me choose between the two of you. | |
Nah, kidding. | ||
But we do love Clairo. | ||
She's got tats. | ||
Does she really? | ||
Does Clairo have tattoos? | ||
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I didn't know that. | |
Yeah, it's a deal breaker. | ||
Tatted up dyke. | ||
Yeah, hard pass for me. | ||
But she is a good singer. | ||
She is a good singer. | ||
I do like her music. | ||
She could sing forever to me. | ||
She could sing Pretty Girl. | ||
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No kidding. | |
Can't do it. | ||
Can't do it, you're a tatted up lesbian. | ||
You're gonna get an elbow from me sooner than you're gonna get a... a date. | ||
You're gonna catch an elbow! | ||
You're gonna... what? | ||
This casual violence against women? | ||
Yeah, no, kidding, of course. | ||
Someone says, we found out who Nick simps for. | ||
Who, Paul Towne? | ||
Oh, no, no, Guillermo Claro! | ||
Yeah, right, right, exactly. | ||
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Yeah. | |
Yeah, will Claro stream on here? | ||
What is Claro gonna get on Cozy, huh? | ||
Cozy.tv slash Claro? | ||
I think I would give her a channel. | ||
There could be nothing between us, though. | ||
There would have to be a clause in our contract. | ||
There could never be a relationship, but... Yeah, I would, uh... I think I'd let her on the platform, for sure. | ||
But we'll see. | ||
We'll see if Claro comes on. | ||
But thanks for the Super Chat, Claro. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
I know you're one of our biggest supporters. | ||
Me and Claro, we have this, like, bond. | ||
You know, we have the same birthday, so... I know she supports my show. | ||
She's a big, big fan here. | ||
So thanks for the Super Chat, Claro. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Big shout-out. | ||
O7's in chat for the Super Chat. | ||
We appreciate ya. | ||
Penisman says, Nick, I tried to send a Super Chat yesterday, but I kept getting a message saying it didn't go through. | ||
I kept trying to make it work and ended up sending seven duplicate superchats. | ||
Your devs jewed me out of my money! | ||
I'll refund your superchats, alright? | ||
I'll give you your freaking $37 back, you frickin'... You know, I don't know how you click the button like a hundred times and then you get mad at me. | ||
You made the mistake, but we jewed you out of the money? | ||
Yeah, I'll give you a refund, don't worry. | ||
Guy doesn't know how to work the system and then goes, you screwed me! | ||
Why don't you learn how buttons work? | ||
You press the button once. | ||
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I broke it! | |
Now it doesn't work! | ||
Oh, this is your fault now! | ||
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Okay. | |
Okay, there. | ||
Are you happy? | ||
I refunded you. | ||
You're all set. | ||
Okay? | ||
Happy? | ||
Oh, thanks for telling me. | ||
I didn't know. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
Because anyone is offended. | ||
They hate you because you speak freely. | ||
In Christ's name and have real influence. | ||
That's the real threat to the system. | ||
Oh thanks for telling me. | ||
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I didn't know. | |
Cozy Biker says there will never be a zero risk victory. | ||
You are speaking the truth. | ||
And I feel the conviction of the Holy Spirit hearing it. | ||
Follow Christ. | ||
Consequences be damned. | ||
Lord willing we will win. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
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So true. | |
Chad Champion says did you see anime rightist. | ||
Counter signal you personally. | ||
America first and incels. | ||
He said that if you hate women or are anti-woman, you hate God because they're made in his image. | ||
Did he really say that? | ||
What a betrayal. | ||
That bastard anime writist. | ||
He's been sucking on that anime body pillow too long. | ||
It's corrupted his brain. | ||
Sucking on those microbead microplastics in his body pillow. | ||
It's poisoned his mind. | ||
That's the microplastics talking. | ||
It's a shame. | ||
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Shame. | |
I like the guy. | ||
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But with a remark like that? | |
Just doesn't get it. | ||
Tragic. | ||
Very tragic. | ||
I thought he was so cool. | ||
I thought he was such a cool guy. | ||
People were saying, oh, Nick dislikes him because that's his type. | ||
He looks like Jaden and that's like his type. | ||
No, I liked him because he was cool, and I thought he got it, but that's pretty sad. | ||
Pretty sad, if true. | ||
If that's true, maybe not, but if it's true, very disappointing. | ||
Eddie Van Gram says, a follow-up to my separating the art from the artist comment from a day ago. | ||
The song I mentioned is the song that Joker leaps and dances from the stairs to. | ||
Classic song. | ||
Okay. | ||
What the Canadian government did to give Sen Go is one of the most authoritarian moves I've seen in my life. | ||
Do you think things are going to get ugly in the West soon? | ||
Dude, I don't know. | ||
Maybe. | ||
I love when people say that. | ||
Do you think things are going to get ugly? | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Spinefish's thoughts on Nyan Cat. | ||
It's pretty awesome. | ||
Forrester says now is the perfect time to ask how you feel about Augusto Pinochet. | ||
People forget we're reactionaries, not populists or right-wing Leninists. | ||
He was like a CIA plant, is what he was. | ||
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It's time. | |
It's time! | ||
Pope Fuentes is declaring another crusade. | ||
of history are full of the skeletons of simps who have fallen to women. | ||
Allow me to spout because e-girls are slithering under the door of our movement. | ||
Please, Nick, we need a crusade. | ||
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It's time. | |
It's time. | ||
Pope Fuentes is declaring another crusade. | ||
It's time for another crusade against the e-girls. | ||
Modern Monarchus says Justinian the Great was a simp for his wife who ruined the relationship between him and his best friend and best general, Belisarius. | ||
She was a heretic and wove deceit behind his back. | ||
He simped. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Interesting story. | ||
Modern Monarchist says a Byzantine bitch named Theophana had two of her husbands successively killed By the men who simped for her, the second husband was killed while he slept. | ||
This was a problem even for so-called great men. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, Basil II, after defeating an enemy whom he respected, allowed this enemy named Sclerus to give him wise advice on ruling and dealing with those evil bitches who had ruined the empire. | ||
It's very real. | ||
It's very real. | ||
People think it's a joke. | ||
It's not a joke. | ||
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It's not a joke. | |
The whole Bible. | ||
Have you read the Bible? | ||
It's full. | ||
It is just full. | ||
It's not about hating women. | ||
It's not about being anti-woman. | ||
It's about being aware of the danger of women. | ||
They're dangerous. | ||
And the Bible says as much. | ||
It's all over Proverbs. | ||
It's all over the wisdom books. | ||
Beware! | ||
Beware! | ||
It's all over the Bible. | ||
So I'm not the first person to say this. | ||
I mean, and they will cause trouble. | ||
That is so real. | ||
And they're causing big trouble in the world today. | ||
And if you don't get that, you're a danger. | ||
So... Yeah, so you're very right, modern monarchist. | ||
You're very right. | ||
Men greater than me have been destroyed by women or women's men. | ||
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So we have to always be on guard. | |
I don't know if you're a Lord of the Rings fan, but what Amazon Prime is about to do to that new Lord of the Rings show is going to be criminal. | ||
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I know. | |
Yellow shorts, Groyper versus purple polo, Groyper. | ||
Oh, yellow shorts all day. | ||
Eddie Van Graham says, "I don't know if you're a Lord of the Rings fan, but what Amazon Prime is about to do to that new Lord of the Rings show is going to be criminal." Ugh, I know. | ||
I don't like Lord of the Rings. | ||
Modern Monarchus Esclaris said, "Admit no woman to the Imperial Council. | ||
Be accessible to none. | ||
Share with few your most intimate plans." The woman who had killed those men was Theophano, his mom. | ||
He witnessed it all. | ||
Well, and here's the thing. | ||
Not only can you not trust women, but you can't trust men that trust women. | ||
That's the other thing. | ||
Because a lot of people say, okay, there's no women in the circle, but what about the men that trust their women? | ||
It's like they're in it. | ||
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So... | |
Yeah. | ||
Very real. | ||
Very real throughout history. | ||
There's a lesson in this. | ||
Eddie Van Gram says, Republican niggas be like, they're handing out crack pipes. | ||
But that's harmful and insulting to black people. | ||
Yeah, gotta love it. | ||
Oh yeah, never heard that one before. | ||
It's true though. | ||
That's the right one. | ||
There is a little verse of encouragement for the boys. | ||
1 Timothy 2.12 I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man. | ||
She is to remain quiet. | ||
Oh yeah, never heard that one before. | ||
It's true though, that's the right one. | ||
That's the winner. | ||
Modern Monarchus says Basil II never loved a woman, never married, and he ruled like the incel emperor he was. | ||
Killed and slaughtered with utmost victory, the enemies of the empire, and brought his people a renaissance. | ||
Forgive me for this rant in history, but it is solid concrete proof that simps die by women, even men, who could have been great. | ||
Only incels can achieve true glory in history. | ||
Basil was one of them. | ||
Yeah, well said. | ||
Very well said. | ||
B Sharp says, I thought it was funny that when you explained why men are better than women, you started listing Civ V great people. | ||
Men are generals, artists, engineers. | ||
I don't think that's the only context in which they exist. | ||
Generals and engineers? | ||
Just like that video game. | ||
Like, you know, or real life actually. | ||
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Or it also references like real life as well. | |
Great scientists, great engineers, great musicians, great writers, great generals. | ||
Just like that game! | ||
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Uh, yeah. | |
Kill Animals says, I loved The Fountainhead. | ||
It was Ayn Rand's masterpiece. | ||
I found her other works to be embarrassing to read. | ||
I'd like to know if you read it and what your thoughts were. | ||
Both good and bad, thanks. | ||
I never read Ayn Rand. | ||
I read some of her essays, but never her fiction. | ||
I saw the book, The Fountainhead, which was made in like, what, 49 or something right around there? | ||
I've watched that movie many times. | ||
I really like that movie, The Fountainhead, but I never read the book. | ||
Pepe the Frog says, Goofy Goober. | ||
Joe Burrows says, that's a duplicate. | ||
Stewie says, keep it up Nick, thanks. | ||
Spinefish says, big chungus. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Okay, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
I am exhausted. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
Thank you so much for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters here. | ||
Remember to get your AFPAC tickets at afpac.events. | ||
Follow me on this channel. | ||
Follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock Central, 9 o'clock Eastern Standard Time. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Everybody that watches the show, we love you, and I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | ||
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It's going to be only America first! | |
America first! | ||
The American people will come first once again! |