Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
See, Ricky said, I'm a little bit, but I don't want to phone you, but they want to phone you in a world. | |
Okay. | ||
This is my team to call the sack, your brothers gon' have me back with the potless. | ||
This team was a big one, always, always, still before the start. | ||
You know, can't put them in above your head. | ||
Pray before you go to be everything my brothers is. | ||
Not my words, not my rules, I can endorse them, alright? | ||
Not my girls, not my mama said, trust, no hope, use a rocker. | ||
But they said, trust, don't ban it, she's like a slipper. | ||
I'm a lead, you're a great boss, let's go. | ||
Last up, Scott, I'm a nurse, everything. | ||
I Warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to roll. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Well, hey, thanks, love you too, but sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense, so... | ||
Let's just call it what it is. | ||
The system hates white people. | ||
It's just what it is. | ||
And everybody wants to call it everything other than that. | ||
They want to call it everything other than what it is. | ||
You may hear conservatives talk about cultural Marxism. | ||
Critical race theory. | ||
That's the new one. | ||
Gotta ban critical race theory. | ||
CRT. | ||
And critical race theory has Marxist origins. | ||
It's socialism, it's communism, it's anti-western. | ||
It's anti-western civilization, anti-western culture. | ||
Conservatives even will call it anything other than what it is, because it's not politically correct to say what it is. | ||
You can't utter it in polite society, but we all know what it is. | ||
It's racial. | ||
It's racial hatred. | ||
They hate white people. | ||
This little boy, Cash Gernon, was murdered, dragged out of his bed, in the middle of the night, in his home, and murdered outside his house in the street by a black man because he was white. | ||
That black guy killed a white boy because he was white. | ||
And this black guy hated white people. | ||
That's why he did it. | ||
It was an act of hatred. | ||
It wasn't random. | ||
It was an act of racial hatred perpetrated by a black male against a white boy. | ||
And why is everybody so afraid to call it that? | ||
Of course that's what it is. | ||
What has been engendered in the population for the past two years? | ||
What's been engendered in the population for the past 30 years? | ||
Other than anti-white hatred. | ||
What are people learning in the schools? | ||
When you go to grade school, and you go to American History class, what do you learn about? | ||
In the new Howard Zinn curriculum, you learn about how white people genocided the indigenous Americans. | ||
White people enslaved black people and brought them over here. | ||
Once freed by whites, whites mistreated blacks by being racist towards them, terrorizing them with the Ku Klux Klan. | ||
Segregating them, making them drink in separate water fountains. | ||
We hear about how white supremacist Nazis try to take over the whole world with their fascist ideology in World War II with Adolf Hitler. | ||
And it was white. | ||
It was because they were Aryan. | ||
It's because they were white supremacists. | ||
Because they believed in racial purity of the Aryan race. | ||
That made them uniquely evil. | ||
They perpetrated the Holocaust against Jews. | ||
And that was, by far and away, the most obscene, worst genocide ever in the history of the world. | ||
And then, when all was said and done, white people were racist to the Muslims that blew up the World Trade Center. | ||
White people are racist to black criminals and the police. | ||
Basically, people are bred from cradle until grave thinking that white people are uniquely evil people. | ||
White people bear a special guilt for all the problems of this country, all the problems of every other group, and really, like, all the problems of humanity. | ||
And that's a guilt that is ancestral, it's not individual, everyone has it, and you can never overcome it. | ||
There's no clear way, discernibly, that you can ever overcome it and ever achieve equality with these non-white people. | ||
And it's as a consequence of this that these things are becoming more and more common. | ||
White people are being dehumanized. | ||
And when white people are dehumanized, black people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
And other people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
How much do you want to bet that this, uh, whatever his name is, Darren Brown, whatever, was radicalized by the media into thinking that white people are racist and responsible for his suffering, not just as a black man, but as a gay man too. | ||
And that he committed this crime in retaliation for that perceived prejudice, perceived hatred against him. | ||
That's the consequence of all this anti-white hatred and dehumanization in the media, education system, and it's even enshrined in the law systematically through the government. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, what do you think affirmative action is? | |
And a lot of white people don't want to talk about it now. | ||
They don't want to address it. | ||
They want to pretend that that's not the case because Honestly, I think a lot of white people think that it's beneath them. | ||
I think that white people think that it's our job to be better, to strive towards a post-racial society, that we ought not to notice race, and we should try not to notice race, that it's a good thing to aspire to, to not notice race. | ||
I think that white people are under the impression that to be cognizant of race, and to mention it and act like it matters, is beneath us, like it's backwards, it's regressive, it's primitive. | ||
And a big part of that, too, is because white people have, I think, internalized a lot of what the media says about us, which is that, well, we're on top of the world, so what do we really have to complain about? | ||
But here's the problem. | ||
This is not going to be a white country forever. | ||
And it's not going to be a white country for very much longer. | ||
In a lot of places, it already isn't. | ||
And in a lot of ways, it already isn't a white country anymore. | ||
And as the percentage and proportion of white people diminishes in America relative to non-white people, it's going to become more and more of a problem for white people that non-white people don't like us. | ||
It's just that simple. | ||
Just think about it in these simple terms. | ||
The media attacks white people. | ||
unidentified
|
They say that white people cause the suffering of non-white people. | |
Increasingly, non-white people don't like white people. | ||
Nobody talks about that. | ||
But we know that non-white people largely regard white people with suspicion, distrust, and in some cases just don't like them, hate them. | ||
unidentified
|
Nobody wants to say that. | |
People are very comfortable talking about racism against blacks or other non-whites, but nobody talks about the distrust, nobody talks about the resentment that non-white people have for white people in the country. | ||
And it's not everybody, but it is a lot of people, and everyone knows that. | ||
As the population becomes less and less white, and as the people in charge of the country and the people enforcing the laws of the people in the country become less and less white, that's going to matter a lot more. | ||
unidentified
|
The American Pronunciation Guide Presents "How to Pronounce The New York Times" | |
The American Pronunciation Guide Presents "How to Pronounce The New York Times" | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Voipers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, to the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
Cheers everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
It's gonna happen. | |
They kick me off the plane, you know what that means? | ||
White Boy Summer Road Trip. | ||
unidentified
|
They give us lemons, we make lemonade. | |
They throw me behind bars. | ||
And I start throwing baseball up against the wall. | ||
unidentified
|
And now I'm playing catch. | |
Because you know what? | ||
The only time that they win is when they try and vote for our spirit. | ||
But they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
And I believe in what I'm doing. | ||
We are still enjoying. | ||
unidentified
|
White Boy Summer is still on. | |
I don't care if I have to drive there. | ||
I don't care if I have to get in Lake Michigan and go all the way around the Panama Canal. | ||
Nothing is going to stop white boy summer. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing is going to stop America first. | |
America first, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
Thank you, Boston. | ||
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 smile on us right now while we're doing. | ||
Cheers. | ||
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 still a city order. | ||
Leave the property or you get a citation. | ||
Period. | ||
Don't argue with me. | ||
It's real simple. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Where's your name? | ||
Where's your name? | ||
I'm going to speed away from you. | ||
It's still a city ordinance. | ||
Leave the property or you get a citation. | ||
Period. | ||
Don't argue with me. | ||
It's real simple. | ||
Put your hands right here. | ||
No. | ||
What do I need to take? | ||
Yes, you are. | ||
I am going to 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 was experimental vaccine that goes inside your cells and manipulates your DNA to start producing spiked proteins, which are killing babies and giving people heart attacks. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Because I'm afraid of the flu, which kills like .00013%. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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, 15-year lockdown plan. | ||
And they're talking about that with the vaccines. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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 got to stop it where it is. | ||
You got to 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, at everything, but specifically with the pandemic. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
I might not like that. | |
Okay, well, the only way we're going to stop it from getting over there is if we stop it over here. | ||
If we start saying no over here, we got to start thinking how we're going to stop it here. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Let it be an imposition on the people that have to enforce them. | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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 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 Your transition to America in such a way is merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
We're gonna smash your brain into the Bible, idiot. | |
We're going to smash your brain and live the Bible, idiot. | ||
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
Where's enough enough, baby? | ||
Where's enough enough, baby? | ||
Just eat it. | ||
Just eat a big mac and stupid bitch. | ||
Blame the earth We'll be right | ||
back. | ||
Having some pasta, having some pizza. | ||
Oh, I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm, well, I'm not normal. | ||
I'm a virgin. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
but the classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved this point. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Coulter. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Coulter. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Coulter. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Coulter. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Let's go! | ||
born from the prettiest dreams Thank you. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord, save these people. | ||
They are sleep. | ||
They lay in sleep in the mundane streets. | ||
Lord, save us from L.A. | ||
Let's go! | ||
We appeal to the power that is not of this world. | ||
I am limelight, blueprint by Mike. | ||
Go get his rhyme light, should have been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated, Grammy nominated, hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader, prom dated, barbershop player hated. | ||
Mom and Pop, who plays it? | ||
Feel like it rained till the roof came down. | ||
Two words, shot down, crazy, crazy. | ||
So I live by two words. | ||
Fuck you, pay me. | ||
Squeeze, tease, save me. | ||
You know how the game be. | ||
I can't let them change me. | ||
Cause on judgment day, you gon' blame me. | ||
Look, God, it's the same. | ||
And I basically know now, we get racially low-fabbed. | ||
Cuffed up and hoes down. | ||
Pimped up and hoes down. | ||
Cause I got a whole city to hoes down. | ||
Cause I got a whole city to go down. | ||
Cause I got a whole city to go down. | ||
I got a whole city to go down. | ||
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, millions, all 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, millions, all 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, millions, all are still broke. | ||
Jesus, save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope. | ||
Hope that keeps them home. | ||
Sin, build your dance. | ||
Who are still broke? | ||
Jesus, save all my people. | ||
I'm this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
Verification commencing. | ||
*pain* 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. | ||
This is a mistake. | ||
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? | ||
I'm just being away from you. | ||
It's still a city ordinance. | ||
Leave the property or you get a citation. | ||
Period. | ||
Period. | ||
Don't argue with me. | ||
It's real simple. | ||
Put your hands right here. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, you are. | |
I will tase you right now. | ||
Yes, you are. | ||
I will take you right now. | ||
You are in violation, and I gave you an awful order. | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Two. | |
One. | ||
Let out pressure. | ||
It's a pressure release valve. | ||
unidentified
|
And two, 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. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Well, the only way we're going to stop it from getting over there is if we stop it over here. | ||
If we start saying no over here, we got to start thinking how we're going to stop it here. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
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. | ||
...generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
unidentified
|
You're an e-girl. | |
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
He's just that. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
Will beat our freedom. | ||
An older generation. | ||
And its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Kingdom. | ||
It's the kingdom. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever. | ||
Forever. | ||
It's the kingdom. | ||
It's the kingdom. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. | ||
Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
And why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's big. | ||
How you put so much paper on your side? | ||
Except for me, just for your savior, I replied. | ||
Like the bad neighbor, not the flag. | ||
I'm the flag. | ||
That's all I die. | ||
It's like shining right into the dark. | ||
Little brothers know they got my heart. | ||
And all my brothers locked up on the yard. | ||
You can still be anything you want to be. | ||
Went from one to four to one to three. | ||
Thirteen for limit gotta end it, that's all me. | ||
Be the new commander and the chief. | ||
That's all me. | ||
I cheer and love. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God. | ||
You create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
If you're talking to somebody right now that only fears God. | ||
Jesus has won victory. | ||
Bro. Bro. Bro. | ||
This, this is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a mirror, | ||
a mirror. This is a mirror. a mirror. This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
This is a mirror. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
I'd like to propose it to us. | ||
*music* 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 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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
We are still enjoying. | ||
unidentified
|
White Boy Summer is still on. | |
I don't care if I have to drive there. | ||
I don't care if I have to get in Lake Michigan and go all the way around the Panama Canal. | ||
Nothing is going to stop white boys summer. | ||
unidentified
|
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 are the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
And I think our ancestors can smile on us right now while we're doing it. | ||
Cheers. | ||
Every day, and every week, and every year that we live in this country, do they care about our health? | ||
No! | ||
They prescribed 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. | ||
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 hate our country. | ||
the answer has to be always no. | ||
I will not come back. | ||
I will not come back. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can just play a play. | ||
I said, trust no man. | ||
I'm a son of a fool in your day. | ||
I said, I'm a son of a fool. | ||
I said, treat with girls and the mother. | ||
My mama said, trust no hoes. | ||
Use a rubber. | ||
I act, one, two. | ||
Stop the track. | ||
See, Ricky said, buddy, don't want to fool you. | ||
If they want to fool you, get a little monkey. | ||
It's not. | ||
Leave the code to sack you, but you don't have your back with the punters. | ||
It's still with your day when always, always get me full of stuff. | ||
You don't care, but the man above your head. | ||
Pray before you go to bed. | ||
Everything I'm going to do. | ||
I said, trust no man. | ||
Now they're hot. | ||
I want the bread. | ||
Does it seem to me? | ||
I think they're going to start it. | ||
They start it. | ||
Not my words. | ||
Not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them, all right? | ||
They say, trust no man. | ||
I'm a son of a son. | ||
Believe your day was out of town. | ||
I'm a son of a son. | ||
No hope. | ||
Use a brother. | ||
But they say, trust no man. | ||
I'm a son of a son. | ||
I'm a lead your day was out of town. | ||
Last out for God. | ||
I'm a son of a son. | ||
Everything. | ||
Warming up. | ||
Everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
care to a woman. | |
I'm here at the first pitch. | ||
I'm here at the first pitch. | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant family. | ||
One day, see the light. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, hey, thanks. | |
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
We're standing on the shoulders of great American patriots. | ||
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? | ||
But they all had one thing in town. | ||
They loved their families. | ||
They loved their country. | ||
and they love their God. | ||
Our beautiful ancestors won two world wars, defeated communism, and put a man on the face of the moon. | ||
We are calling for a great reawakening of America, a resurgence of confidence, and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity, and pride. | ||
And we are returning to the wisdom of our founders. | ||
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital, and in every hall of power. | ||
unidentified
|
From this day forward, A new vision will govern our land. | |
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First! | ||
America first. USA! USA! | ||
USA! USA! 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. | ||
They didn't have a lot of money. | ||
They didn't have a lot of luxury. | ||
But they had grit. | ||
And they had faith. | ||
And they had courage. | ||
unidentified
|
And they had each other. | |
Right? | ||
But they all had one thing in common. | ||
They love their families, they love their country, and they love their God. | ||
Our beautiful ancestors won two world wars, defeated communism, and put a man on the face of the moon. | ||
We are calling for a great reawakening of America. | ||
A resurgence of confidence and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity, and pride. | ||
And we are returning to the wisdom of our founders. | ||
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital, and in every hall of power. | ||
unidentified
|
From this day forward, A new vision will govern our land. | |
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First! | ||
America first. | ||
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. | ||
Oh, let me tell you, life ain't right. | ||
This is like the movie, but it's really very tight. | ||
Like, every single night. | ||
Like, every single type. | ||
Tell me what your life like. | ||
Tell me it sounds great like. | ||
I was driving with my dad and he told me it ain't price like. | ||
I'm just trying to find another way or a new way. | ||
Just really trying not to risk do the fool way. | ||
But I don't have a clue because I'm sitting on my F-Stock. | ||
Lock up all the text though. | ||
Doesn't tell text though. | ||
Another word, another picture, or a death smoke. | ||
Rest of them will die. | ||
I don't really want to rest. | ||
So finish what you like like. | ||
Everything in my life. | ||
I ain't talking with my dad and he said it ain't Christ life. | ||
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 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. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
Try to live a life right. | ||
This is like a movie. | ||
Every single night. | ||
Every single fight. | ||
I was looking at the camera. | ||
I don't need a fight. | ||
I was screaming at my daddy. | ||
He told me it's Christ. | ||
I was screaming at the camera. | ||
We just like my. | ||
Looking for a bright place. | ||
I was screaming at my dad. | ||
He told me it's Christ. | ||
But nobody never tell you. | ||
You being like Christ. | ||
Only if I see it. | ||
Only when it's eating me. | ||
Psychotized a parent. | ||
Searching for a teacher. | ||
Now you want to be a freak. | ||
Now you want to see it. | ||
Tell me what you like. | ||
Tell me it's Christ. | ||
I was driving with my dad. | ||
And he told me it ain't Christ. | ||
I was trying to find out. | ||
For a new way. | ||
Just really trying. | ||
Not to reach through the pool. | ||
I don't have a clue. | ||
I don't have a clue. | ||
So if I come on a text. | ||
So let's tell text. | ||
So. | ||
Another word. | ||
That a picture or a test. | ||
Smoke. | ||
That's the number. | ||
God. | ||
I don't really want to rest. | ||
So Spanish. | ||
Life. | ||
Like everything in my life. | ||
Bargain with my dad. | ||
And he said it ain't Christ. | ||
Life. | ||
America first. | ||
Inevitable. | ||
Never. | ||
Never. | ||
Unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why. | ||
Is because. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's a big business. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's a big business. | ||
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. | ||
Like every single night, every single bite, right? | ||
I was looking at the camera, I don't need a bite. | ||
Like I was screaming at my daddy, don't be any Christ. | ||
Like I was screaming at the referee, just like Mike. | ||
Looking for a bite, like a single witcher, like. | ||
Ride it on the right, right? | ||
Because I'm like a fight fight. | ||
I feel on the gas, don't run over food. | ||
Like I'm screaming at my daddy, don't be any Christ. | ||
Like, but nobody never tell you you need me. | ||
Like Christ, only if I see it. | ||
I don't know when they see me. | ||
I could have a peri-tane. | ||
I could have a peri-tane, searching for a G. | ||
Now you want to be a freak. | ||
Now you want to see it free. | ||
Like to see it be a piece. | ||
Tell me what your life like. | ||
Turn it down to the right lights. | ||
Driving with my dad, and he told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
I'm just trying to find out who's looking for a new way. | ||
I'm just really trying to break through the pool, where I don't have a clue. | ||
I'm eating on my vest, though. | ||
I'm like a motor tech, though. | ||
Nothing to tell the text, though. | ||
I'm another word, better picture or test smoke. | ||
Rest in my mind, God, I don't really want to wrestle. | ||
Spanish with my life, like everything in my life. | ||
Talking with my dad, and he said it ain't Christ-like. | ||
The Boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
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. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
I've never heard of it. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot's. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
You were out of my league. | ||
All the things I believe. | ||
You were just the right kind. | ||
Yeah, 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'd like to propose a toast. | ||
To our people. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Voipers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, to the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
Cheers, everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to happen. | |
That's what I am. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
And now I'm playing catch. | |
Because you know what? | ||
The only time that they win is when they try and vote for our spirit. | ||
But they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what I'm doing. | |
We are still enjoying. | ||
unidentified
|
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 are the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
unidentified
|
And I think our ancestors can smile on us right now while we're doing it. | |
Cheers. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Bye. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
wall. | ||
unidentified
|
Outro Music. | |
You're not interested? | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
unidentified
|
You're an e-girl, you know the rule. | |
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 think what is that. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
We'll meet our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of him think what is that. | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can kick that yay button. | ||
They said trust no man, but you're trying to sell it. | ||
No need your day was in the dollar. | ||
I said treat with girls in the dollar. | ||
My mama said trust no hoes, use a rubber. | ||
I'm at one, two, stop the track. | ||
Americanism, hit it. | ||
I see Ricky said, but I don't want to call you. | ||
But they want to call you, hit it well. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm working. | ||
It's not. | ||
Give the code to sack you, but this don't happen back with others. | ||
It's still as a day one, always, always. | ||
You know what I'm talking about? | ||
I'm in the middle of your head. | ||
Pray before you go to be everything. | ||
My mama's in. | ||
I'm in. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just enjoy them, all right? | ||
They said trust no man, but you're trying to sell it. | ||
I'm going to leave your day was in the dollar. | ||
I'm in. | ||
Trust the girls in the dollar. | ||
My mama said trust no hoes, use a rubber. | ||
They said trust no man, but you're trying to sell it. | ||
I'm going to leave your day was in the dollar. | ||
Last up, Scott. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Everybody. | ||
Warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
unidentified
|
And your mama ain't cheap. | |
I'm ready to cheat. | ||
I've been making waves. | ||
Wait before the slow kick. | ||
No. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
I was just a chick. | ||
With the all-back fitted. | ||
Pick it with the weight of fitness. | ||
No. | ||
It's routine. | ||
Now I wasn't a shit. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's three-six. | ||
Who tight? | ||
What's the damn set? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Take it. | ||
My first shoes tackle. | ||
Only drop jewels. | ||
Way before they drop shuttle. | ||
First step. | ||
Now we look out. | ||
The way does it say. | ||
The back leg. | ||
Take those buttons. | ||
They're so hot. | ||
Yes. | ||
They're the same. | ||
They're at the first. | ||
Bitch. | ||
Girls like an open top. | ||
My mama said trust. | ||
No hope. | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant fan. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
Well hey, thanks, love you too, but I'm sorry, I believe in a religion that makes sense, so... | ||
generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human rights. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl, you know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
We'll meet our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
Who is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
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 willing. | ||
That's their choice. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Mary and I, we're at work. | ||
Okay. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Where's your list? | ||
I'm just being 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. | ||
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 an awful 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 are 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. | ||
One, let out pressure. | ||
It's a pressure release valve. | ||
unidentified
|
And two, 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. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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'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. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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, 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. | ||
unidentified
|
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 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. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what we have to do. | |
That's what we have to do. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
L.A. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord save these people. | ||
Let us sleep. | ||
They let in safe and abundant streets. | ||
Lord save us from L.A. | ||
LA Monster I am my lightning Blueprint 5 mic. | ||
Go get his Rhyme-Lite. | ||
Should've been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated. | ||
Grammy nominated. | ||
Hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader prom dated. | ||
Barbershop player hated. | ||
Mom and Pop booth lazed it. | ||
Felt like it rained till the roof caved in. | ||
Two words. | ||
Goddamn crazy. | ||
Crazy. | ||
So I live by two words. | ||
Fuck you, pay me! | ||
Screaming. | ||
Teasing. | ||
Staging. | ||
You know how the game be. | ||
I can't let him 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, cocked up and hosed down, pimped up and hoed down. | ||
Plus I got a whole city to hold down. | ||
From the bottom to the top's the only place to go now. | ||
Go! | ||
Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! | ||
Go! | ||
You want to know what's critical to all of this? | ||
We look at Christ on the cross. | ||
unidentified
|
And you're going to kick us off Twitter? | |
You can't stop people that are religious zealots. | ||
You cannot stop people that are motivated in the face of the fear of death. | ||
unidentified
|
It gives false hope and eats them whole. | |
Sin, millionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus, save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives us hope and eats them whole. | ||
Sin, millionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus, save all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives us hope and eats them whole. | ||
Billionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster before it takes their souls. | ||
It gives fools hope and eats them whole. | ||
Billionaires who are still broke. | ||
Yes, who's holding each damn home? | ||
Sin, still, yeah, there's who are still broke. | ||
Jesus, save all my people. | ||
I'm this monster, for it takes their soul. | ||
I'm this monster, for it takes for it takes their soul. | ||
I'm this monster, for it takes their soul. | ||
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position. | ||
Who would view America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
We're going to smash your brain in the Bible, idiot. | |
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. . | ||
When's enough enough, eh? | ||
When's enough enough, eh? | ||
Shit! | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some pasta. | ||
Having some pizza. | ||
Oh. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the... | ||
Well, I'm not normal. | ||
I'm the... | ||
I'm 14. | ||
I'm original. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
but the classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Gordon-Russ. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Gordon-Russ. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Gordon-Russ. | ||
Calling something critical race theory, to me, means nothing. | ||
And I think to most people, means nothing. | ||
But critical race theory is an inaccurate way to describe what's happening. | ||
Like, so much academic jargon, the phrase critical race theory doesn't mean anything. | ||
What is the overriding message of so-called critical race theory programs? | ||
It is to vilify white Americans. | ||
That's how it expresses itself in education. | ||
That's how it expresses itself in the military, in the private sector, in the federal government. | ||
What's happening in our schools and our military and our government is both simpler and easier to recognize than that. | ||
You could also say that it's just anti-white. | ||
So, anti-white racism is exploding across the country. | ||
Obviously, no one wants to say it, but it's right in your face every single day. | ||
When you say the military is practicing critical race theory, what actually does that mean? | ||
There might be a small handful of experts who could tell you exactly what that means. | ||
Because we've been tied up in some pointless debate about a concept that nobody can actually define. | ||
Maybe on a technical academic level you could say that that curriculum was inspired by critical race theory, which is a Marxist school of thought from certain academic institutions. | ||
The race hate, and that's what it is, has oozed from the universities and it has infected the entire country, including at the very highest levels. | ||
unidentified
|
*outro music* It's the kingdom. | |
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever. | ||
Forever. | ||
It's the kingdom. | ||
It's the kingdom. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the power. | ||
And the glory. | ||
And the glory. | ||
Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. | ||
Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I love you. | ||
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. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
Like, try to lift the light, right? | ||
This fool really knows you. | ||
That's your buddy's like, right, right? | ||
This is like a movie, buddy. | ||
Really very tight, right? | ||
Every single night, right? | ||
Every single fight, right? | ||
I was looking at the camera. | ||
I don't need to fight, right? | ||
I was screaming at my daddy. | ||
Don't be in Christ-like. | ||
I was screaming at the camera. | ||
We just like, Mike. | ||
Looking for a fight, right? | ||
Take a look at what you like, like. | ||
I didn't know why. | ||
I was feeling like a tight fight. | ||
Pressing on the gas. | ||
I don't know who's at night. | ||
Like, screaming at my daddy. | ||
Don't be in Christ-like. | ||
But nobody ever tell you me being like Christ. | ||
Only if I see it in me. | ||
Only when they see me. | ||
Like a Tyler Perry. | ||
Take a look at me. | ||
I'm searching for a deal. | ||
Now you want to be a freak. | ||
Now you want to see it free. | ||
Like, you see it be a piece. | ||
Tell me what you like. | ||
Like, turn it down to the right. | ||
Like, driving with my dad. | ||
And he told me it ain't price-like. | ||
I'm just trying to find a place for a new way. | ||
Just really trying not to really do the cool way. | ||
I don't have a cool thing. | ||
I'm sitting on my test, though. | ||
Lock up on the text, though. | ||
Doesn't tell text, though. | ||
Another word, better picture or a death smoke. | ||
Wrestling with God. | ||
I don't really want to rest. | ||
So Spanish with my life. | ||
Like, everything in my life. | ||
Talking 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 the 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're talking to somebody right now that only- Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The End The End | ||
The End | ||
The End Good evening everybody! | ||
You are watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Our featured story is once again about the war in Ukraine. | ||
And specifically tonight, I want to talk about some of these claims which are being made lately. | ||
That Ukraine is going to win? | ||
I don't know about you, but that is the headline which is dominating the news coverage of the conflict all week. | ||
And they're saying that the Russians are getting stalled, and they're not making any significant advances. | ||
They're saying that there are 40,000 Russian casualties. | ||
40,000. | ||
And they're saying that Ukraine may actually win the war. | ||
So, tonight we'll talk a little bit about that. | ||
We're going to go over an article from the Wall Street Journal which talks about the casualties and some of the supposed problems the Russians are having. | ||
And I want to say a couple of things on this. | ||
The first thing I want to say is, would Zelensky be begging for a no-fly zone from every country on Earth if they killed 40,000 Russians? | ||
You know, would they be pleading? | ||
Would the world be the way that it is now? | ||
And... | ||
Would public opinion be what it is now if anybody actually believed this? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
So there's a lot of problems with this narrative. | ||
They're certainly not behaving as though victory is at hand. | ||
That's one. | ||
The other thing, and this is a little bit more frightening, is they are pushing this narrative for a very deliberate reason and just a theory, just speculation from me. | ||
But what I'm reading in a lot of the forums and what I've been seeing in the headlines Is this discussion about Putin resorting to weapons of mass destruction to win the conflict? | ||
And I think that there's almost no scenario where that would happen. | ||
Where Putin would use a nuclear weapon in Ukraine or chemical weapons in Ukraine. | ||
But you're hearing this. | ||
I'm hearing this a lot in the national news media. | ||
They're saying that out of desperation Putin is going to use these WMDs as a last resort because he's just losing the war so badly. | ||
And like I said, I don't think that makes any sense, but that's something that's plausible enough where it seems like we're building up to a pretext for a NATO intervention. | ||
That's what it sounds like to me. | ||
Now again, a little bit of speculation, it is a theory, but it seems like it's very easy to go from Putin is a war criminal, Putin is losing the war, he's losing the war so he resorted to chemical weapons, He used chemical weapons and now we're going to intervene. | ||
That's what it sounds like to me. | ||
It sounds like they're building the argument. | ||
And you always got to watch out for this stuff. | ||
I said this a lot last year when we withdrew from Afghanistan because you heard for weeks about the Taliban and you heard about how they were taking away women's rights and all this and then all of a sudden The Taliban took control of Afghanistan. | ||
And then the same thing happened. | ||
You heard for weeks and weeks this steady drumbeat about Al-Qaeda, or what is it, ISIS-K, the Khorasan group from ISIS, which was going to fill the vacuum left by the Americans. | ||
And any day now there was going to be a terrorist attack, and then boom, there was at the Kabul airport. | ||
But they had seeded the idea for weeks. | ||
And so you've got to pay attention to these narratives, because these narratives Somebody is designing them. | ||
All the media is not just spontaneously coming up with the same thing. | ||
No, this is information that's heavily regulated and controlled. | ||
And when they say things like Putin is losing the war, and then they talk about chemical weapons, I don't think it's a stretch to say they're building towards a case for NATO to intervene. | ||
And the pretext is this. | ||
He's committing war crimes, he's using banned chemical weapons, it's a violation of Ukraine's sovereignty to begin with, so then now the United States is going to intervene. | ||
It's what it sounds like. | ||
Could be wrong, but that's what it sounds like. | ||
We'll talk about that, and I'll go into detail about, you know, how exactly I've arrived there. | ||
We'll also be talking about Austria, Where they are re-imposing, actually, the mask and vaccine mandates. | ||
Again, we'll see if this is a sign of things to come, but two weeks ago Austria, the country in Europe, They cancelled their vaccine mandate. | ||
They have a vaccine mandate. | ||
Not just a passport, but a mandate. | ||
Two weeks ago, they suspended the vaccine and the mask mandate. | ||
And now, because of surging coronavirus cases, they're re-implementing both of those measures. | ||
Both the mask and the vaccine mandate. | ||
And I told you, and I still believe this, I don't think we're totally finished with COVID yet. | ||
I hope we are. | ||
I mean, I would really, if we never heard about COVID again, I would be relieved and I am happy to be wrong. | ||
I would be very happy and very relieved if I was wrong. | ||
I would not feel bad about it at all. | ||
But I have a sneaking suspicion that just like last year at this time and just like last fall, I feel like you only get a lull. | ||
I feel like you get a temporary reprieve just when people are starting to get fed up. | ||
Then for whatever reason if it's an election if it's something else then I think it comes back in full force Once people are you know, they're sort of ready again for another round. | ||
So Again, I don't know if that's gonna happen. | ||
I hope it doesn't but it already happened in Austria so who knows if it'll if it'll spread if the same thing will happen here, but we'll talk about that and it should be a pretty good show and Kind of a slow news day. | ||
The war in Ukraine is slowing down, so there's not a whole lot happening there. | ||
And there's not a whole lot happening anywhere else. | ||
Madeleine Albright died today, that was kind of funny. | ||
But besides that, not a whole lot else to report. | ||
Pretty slow day. | ||
Pretty boring day, but... | ||
But we'll cover the news. | ||
Before we get into it, I want to remind you to follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
Make sure to follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Follow me here on Cozy. | ||
Follow my channel here. | ||
Smash the follow button. | ||
Invade the follow button, please. | ||
Because remember, if you follow me on this channel, you'll get a push notification whenever my show begins. | ||
So the show is sort of all over the place these days, so you need to get the notification. | ||
Follow the channel, you'll get a push notification when I go live. | ||
I'm gonna try and get the show under control. | ||
Maybe next week I'm gonna try and stabilize the start time for the show. | ||
I've just been busy. | ||
I've just had a lot going on lately. | ||
You know, we had AFPAC 3 and then I came back and now we're right into the midterms and Everything else, you know, it's right back to the grind. | ||
So, gonna try and stabilize the show next week. | ||
I'm back on a consistent sleep schedule, so that feels good. | ||
So, you know, maybe Monday we're gonna start to get a little closer to nine o'clock start time. | ||
That's what I'd like to do. | ||
But we'll see. | ||
No promises. | ||
But that's, yeah, that's all I got. | ||
Those are all my announcements for you tonight. | ||
Yeah, pretty, pretty boring day. | ||
Not a whole lot going on. | ||
Kind of mundane, you know. | ||
And like I said, nothing happening in the news. | ||
I, you know, I mean, I don't know. | ||
I guess we got a whole month of news out of the war in Ukraine, but it just seems like for the past few days there's been no major new developments, but there has been this consistent story about Russia is being stalled by the fierce resistance of the Ukrainian people. | ||
And, you know, we'll talk about it later tonight, but I just don't believe anything from the media. | ||
And what you have to consider about the media, because that's the new thing that they're going with, that's the story they're going with, is the Russians are not making any progress. | ||
And that's a claim in itself, that they're pushing, but they're not advancing. | ||
And then they're also saying that the reason they're not advancing is because, well, they are just so surprised at the steadfastness and the fortitude of the Ukrainians. | ||
You know, Putin, he thought he had it all. | ||
He thought it was going to be an easy job. | ||
But he didn't count on one thing, and that was the bravery and the courage of the Ukrainians, and I just don't believe any of it. | ||
And the reason why is, I mean, obviously because it's being reported by Western media, and Western media always lies. | ||
We're in a war, and that's war propaganda, you know? | ||
Anytime you're engaged in a conflict, You're not going to get the real story on either side because, you know, there's an incentive for both sides to lie. | ||
Because how people perceive the state of the war, that obviously affects the outcome of the war sometimes. | ||
That affects the morale. | ||
So you can't really trust any of it, but I particularly don't trust the Western media. | ||
Consider the fact that all of the opposing side is banned. | ||
You're not hearing anything from Russia. | ||
We're not hearing anything from Russian media. | ||
So they censored everything. | ||
Now they have a total monopoly on information, and so all the news that we're getting about the conflict is literally coming from the State Department, the Pentagon, and NATO, which are hardly reliable sources in a war where the stakes are very high for all three of those institutions. | ||
So, you know, we can't trust any of it. | ||
But people just blindly accept this. | ||
People just blindly Oh yeah, you know, Russia's really getting ground down because the Ukrainians are just so tough. | ||
Are they tough, or is this just something that we're being told by NATO? | ||
So who really knows? | ||
But like I said, we'll get into that later. | ||
I'm just so sick of hearing about it. | ||
And honestly, I'm really disappointed in Revolver because I use Revolver every day. | ||
I read Revolver every day to write my notes for my show. | ||
I read all the stories on Revolver every day. | ||
And their coverage of this war, especially lately, they're just plugging NATO propaganda. | ||
And I don't know what the endgame is there. | ||
Are they trying to avoid scrutiny, maybe, from the security state? | ||
Because, of course, I'm not doing myself any favors by waving the Russian flag every night. | ||
I know that's inviting more scrutiny from the government. | ||
And when you're in a war, there's always enhanced scrutiny on the domestic opposition. | ||
And then when you go and support the other side, even more so. | ||
So is it something like that? | ||
Are they trying to avoid getting bad attention from the IC and from the national security apparatus? | ||
Maybe. | ||
That would seem like a big compromise. | ||
Or is there some other reason? | ||
I'm not sure, but I checked Revolver today and all the headlines about the Ukraine conflict are about how badly Russia is doing. | ||
And it's been like that for the past week. | ||
And again, do they just feel that way? | ||
Do they concur with the Wall Street Journal and NATO? | ||
Or, again, is there some other play? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know, but it's been a little... I don't know. | |
I'm not a fan. | ||
I'm not a fan of the coverage, honestly. | ||
But, um... | ||
I mean, don't get me wrong. | ||
I still read Revolver. | ||
I like Darren. | ||
But I just don't know what's the story with that. | ||
I'm not sure what's going on there. | ||
And that's not the coverage I want. | ||
I don't need to hear what the Wall Street Journal says. | ||
I know what the Wall Street Journal is going to say. | ||
They're saying what everybody else is saying. | ||
And everybody else is repeating what NATO is saying. | ||
And NATO lies. | ||
So, why do I need to read that? | ||
I don't need to read that. | ||
So anyway, that's just a little bit about the news itself, the reporting of it, but I guess we'll just dive in because, like I said, I don't really have anything else interesting to say. | ||
I'm trying to think. | ||
Anything else happen today? | ||
Not really. | ||
So I guess we'll dive into it. | ||
We'll talk about Austria. | ||
And this is a little troubling. | ||
So this was an article in National Review, or I'm sorry, National File. | ||
National File, guess that's a Freudian slip. | ||
But this is a piece in National File about how Austria in Europe is now reversing their policy on masks and vaccines. | ||
And so if you've been following the coronavirus pandemic, it's totally evaporated from the news media, which is pretty amazing. | ||
And I don't know how people don't understand what's going on just because of something like that. | ||
In other words, don't you think it's a little bit weird that two months ago everybody was talking about coronavirus? | ||
It was everywhere. | ||
And now it's nowhere. | ||
Now it almost feels like we're back to normal completely. | ||
Except for if you're flying on an airplane. | ||
And unless you go to the post office and unless you do, you know, there's a few activities where the mask mandate is still in effect. | ||
But all major cities have pulled back their mask and their vaccine mandates. | ||
Most businesses are not enforcing them. | ||
Even the airlines, the airline CEOs are now demanding that the Biden administration rescind the federal mask mandate on airplanes. | ||
And it feels like the Men in Black amnesia device. | ||
It's like everybody just forgot that two or three months ago they were pushing this total vaccine acceptance. | ||
There was a vaccine mandate. | ||
People were having to show vaccine cards. | ||
Everyone was getting a booster shot. | ||
The booster shot was becoming part of the mandate. | ||
And now it's all gone. | ||
And it was here today and then gone tomorrow. | ||
And like, so if you don't even realize that that happened, if you don't even have the short-term memory and the awareness and the wherewithal to even understand that that happened, to even be cognizant of the fact that that happened, like, you're lost. | ||
And then, if you are aware of that, do you not understand the significance that they flip a switch? | ||
It's literally they flip a switch and what you're supposed to care about today they decide in their morning meeting and what you're supposed to care about the next week they flip a switch and then they decide and all the coverage says the next thing and so one day it's the masks and the next day it's the vaccines and the day after that it's standing with Ukraine. | ||
Pretty freaky. | ||
But anyway, you've noticed it's all gone. | ||
Suddenly coronavirus isn't here. | ||
And nobody's talking about it and certainly nobody's talking about masks and vaccines and all the mandates have been pulled back in Europe and in the United States and elsewhere. | ||
But what's been happening curiously is that in the countries with the highest rates of vaccination, they're getting another wave of infections. | ||
And if you look at case numbers, and if you look at infections, there is like, I don't know what wave we're on, I think a fifth wave that is going on right now. | ||
Not the Omicron wave from several months ago, but there's now a new wave happening right now. | ||
And it's in Austria, and it's in Israel, and it's happening in China, and it's happening in a few other countries, and nobody's reporting on it. | ||
But there's a strong correlation between countries that are highly vaccinated and now countries which are seeing high rates of infection. | ||
And so in response to this, Austria's re-upping, they're reapplying the mandates, and this is like I said from National File. | ||
It says, quote, less than two weeks after lifting mask mandates on March 5th, the Austrian government announced they will be reinstituting mask and vaccine requirements as well as additional COVID restrictions starting on March 23rd. | ||
The government cited rising case rates in making the decision. | ||
On March 5th, Austria had an average of around 29,000 new reported COVID cases per day over the previous seven days. | ||
By March 18th, that number ballooned to over 45,000 according to Forbes. | ||
45,000 cases per day in Austria, which is a small country. | ||
Pointing to the case rates, Austrian Health Minister Johannes Rauch announced that the Alpine nation would be reinstituting its indoor mask mandate. | ||
Austrians will be required to wear masks in order to gain entry to enter hotels, sporting events, and dozens of other venues. | ||
Affected venues will have the choice between instituting a mask mandate or the reintroduction of a vaccine passport system. | ||
Restaurants and bars will be subjected to more stringent guidelines and will only have the option to check for proof of vaccination. | ||
The mask mandate will apply to indoor gatherings of 25 people or more. | ||
As for schools, the government plans to provide an update on their plans after consulting with the Education Ministry. | ||
Earlier this month, Austria scrapped legislation that would have mandated COVID vaccination among its adult population. | ||
Starting in mid-March, Austrian police officers would have checked for vaccination during traffic stops and other interactions with citizens. | ||
Austrians would have been required to show proof of vaccination or be subjected to hefty fines. | ||
It is unclear whether Austria, which was one of the only nations to mandate vaccination, plans on reintroducing the policy. | ||
The nation's decision to reintroduce its COVID restrictions is not unexpected. | ||
The government warned of this possibility when the mandates were suspended two weeks ago. | ||
And so again, here we are. | ||
This isn't happening here, yet. | ||
But in Austria, they snapped it back on. | ||
And, you know, a big part of the problem, I feel, is that a lot of people think that can't happen. | ||
But what would stop them from doing this? | ||
They've already done that many times! | ||
You know, it's a very familiar pattern. | ||
We all know how this played out. | ||
In March 2020, they said five weeks, and then it was another five, and then they said Easter, and then they said August, and then they said, well, we just have to live with it. | ||
And then, in 2021, when they developed the vaccine, then things liberalized and everything opened up, remember? | ||
And it was almost as if it was back to normal. | ||
People need to think. | ||
You know, a big part of the problem is so many people, I believe, are on their phones. | ||
I actually think people's short-term memory has been destroyed. | ||
I don't know if that's a new thing. | ||
Maybe it's always been that way. | ||
But it feels like now more than ever people just don't remember what happens one week ago or a month ago or a year ago. | ||
But do you not remember that a year ago the same thing happened? | ||
We were on lockdown from March until roughly December, January. | ||
March 2020 until roughly December 2020, January 2021. | ||
And right around winter and springtime 2021, it felt as though everything had returned to normal. | ||
And the mask mandates were loosened, and the vaccine was being administered across the country, and there was a temporary reprieve. | ||
And everybody thought it was over. | ||
Everybody assumed it was over and they thought we're not going back even though all along they said yeah we're gonna have to put the lockdown measures on and off as the case numbers vary. | ||
And then of course the vaccine The vaccine adoption stalled around the summer and the rate at which people are getting vaccinated began to slow down and they said okay this is a big problem. | ||
Well we're going to offer incentives. | ||
We're going to offer people lottery and raffle prizes and we're going to give people cash and we're going to do all this and we'll try to convince people to get the mandate or the vaccine rather and then by September Biden announced a mandate and then what happened? | ||
Omicron wave after the Delta wave that summer and lockdown came back partially. | ||
Omicron comes and it's literally a new lockdown all over again but this time with the vaccine passport and so everything is shut down and they say hey remember how good things were before the lockdown? | ||
Remember how good they were during this temporary reprieve? | ||
Well if you want to keep enjoying restaurants and bars and travel and everything you're going to have to get vaccinated. | ||
And that's how they got to, you know, 70, 80, 90 percent vaccine adoption. | ||
And it really was a reintroduction of a lockdown. | ||
They reintroduced the mask mandates. | ||
They implemented the vaccine mandates. | ||
And I said all throughout 2021, I said, don't kid yourself, the lockdown never ended. | ||
It's just that now they're giving people permission on a temporary and conditional basis to resume their lives. | ||
But that's what it is. | ||
You know, before 2020, Obviously, everything was open to everybody. | ||
Restaurants were open. | ||
Stores were open. | ||
Travel was open. | ||
And the idea that government could restrict those things on a whim was absurd. | ||
And then in 2020, everything was shut down. | ||
In 2021, the lockdown didn't end. | ||
They just temporarily suspended it. | ||
And then, later on in the year, it became conditional. | ||
And they said, well, if you're not vaccinated, the lockdown is still very much in effect in certain jurisdictions. | ||
And the mask mandates are still in effect and so on. | ||
And once again, you know, here we are in 2022 and people are making the same mistake. | ||
And at the beginning of the year, people said, wow, see, I think it's all over. | ||
The mask mandates are over. | ||
The vax mandate is over. | ||
It's all over. | ||
COVID is over. | ||
But the scientists have been very clear about this. | ||
They've been saying, you know, the so-called medical experts, they've been saying, don't get too comfortable. | ||
This is still far from over. | ||
I mean, they keep saying that. | ||
And again, I said this earlier, I hope I'm wrong about this. | ||
I really do. | ||
I really hope I'm wrong. | ||
But I am tempted to believe that we're on the precipice of another lockdown. | ||
I don't think it's very likely. | ||
You know, I wouldn't bet my life on it. | ||
I wouldn't bet a lot of money on it. | ||
But I just have the sneaking suspicion, and not just based on what's happening in Austria, but again, based on the pattern, based on what we hear from the medical experts, they never quite give you an out. | ||
They never quite say definitively, mission accomplished, it's over. | ||
They always leave in enough room that they could really just do whatever they want whenever they want to. | ||
They always leave in just enough uncertainty or ambiguity that they say, well, you know, it's good now, but there's still so much... it's still far from over. | ||
And that gives them just enough room if they need to in a few months to say, oh, never mind, it's all coming back. | ||
And Austria is not the only country that's talking about this. | ||
So Austria, it's a perfect example. | ||
Two weeks ago, they ended the mask mandate, they ended the vaccine mandate, like all the other countries. | ||
Two weeks later, they're back. | ||
And now you're going to have to show proof of vaccination in Austria. | ||
And ultimately, why is that? | ||
Because there's allegedly another big spike in cases. | ||
And it's not just contained to Austria. | ||
It's happening in China. | ||
It's happening in Israel. | ||
It's happening in other countries in Europe. | ||
And like I said, there seems to be a strong correlation between countries with high rates of vaccination and strict COVID protocols and countries now that are experiencing a fifth wave, a post Omicron wave of the virus. | ||
Because they're seeing higher numbers than ever, or higher numbers comparable to the Omicron variant. | ||
What does this tell us? | ||
It tells us obviously that not only does the vaccine not work, but if anything it's doing the opposite of what it's intended to do. | ||
It seems to be the case that If Austria is an example, Austria is one of the most vaccinated countries in the world. | ||
Now they're having another wave, whereas countries with low rates of vaccination are not. | ||
It seems to be the case that what people said about the vaccine, that it actually suppresses your immune system and creates immune fatigue, it seems that that is true. | ||
And it seems that not only does the vaccine efficacy wear off and it's inferior to the natural immunity, but also it may even suppress the baseline, a person, you know, the control group that has not gotten the vaccine at all or gotten COVID. | ||
If we're seeing high rates of infection in countries where they have full vaccination and booster shots and even a second round of boosters. | ||
So, you know, I don't really care what happens in Austria, but it is a little bit disturbing because I can absolutely see that happening here. | ||
I can, clear as day, I can see another wave happening in the spring or in the fall. | ||
You know, it could take until the end of the year, but I think it's especially likely before the election. | ||
Because it only gives them a further justification for the mail-in ballots. | ||
But it seems likely that before the end of the year, at least, we're going to see another spike, another wave, and what's going to come with that is all the COVID restrictions. | ||
The masks, the vax, the mail-in ballots. | ||
I mean, I could see it happening here, snapping right back on. | ||
And again, it brings me back to my original point. | ||
Does anybody think that they can't do it? | ||
Does anybody really believe That they would be unable to, tomorrow, change the rules on us again. | ||
Of course they could do it. | ||
And honestly, that's really the problem. | ||
Is that, you know, once they play that card, they have it now. | ||
After 2020, nothing is the same. | ||
If they lock down all the businesses and people just went with it, and then they made everybody get the vaccine and people just went with it, there's nothing they can't do. | ||
They can just keep pushing and they could play this game. | ||
They put it on, they take it off, they put it on, they take it off. | ||
But we've demonstrated almost no threshold after which we'll begin to resist these things. | ||
So we'll have to watch this closely, but don't think the COVID thing is out just yet. | ||
I don't think it is. | ||
I wish it was. | ||
If we never had to talk about COVID again, I would be happy, but when I see this happening in Austria and they talk about it in other countries, you know it can't be far off. | ||
And it always works this way. | ||
This is how the the de-masking began. | ||
You know, at the beginning of the year, first it was a few countries in Europe that ended the vax mandate and ended the mask mandate, and then it spreads. | ||
You know, then this country does it, and then America does it, and similarly it works in the other direction. | ||
And one country puts it back on, and then the next country does, and then our country does, and You know, we're back to where we were. | ||
So, don't count yourself out just yet. | ||
I think this vaccine and the COVID thing, it may come back. | ||
Again, I don't know how likely it is, but if they're doing it in Austria, other countries are not far behind. | ||
So that's that, but we'll keep an eye on it. | ||
I'll be watching. | ||
I'll be monitoring the situation. | ||
I really hope it doesn't, though, because I just hate it. | ||
And it's just like a joke. | ||
Like, you know, I went to see my lawyer the other day, and he's a nice guy, but he's a liberal. | ||
He's very good. | ||
He's very expensive. | ||
I'll just say that. | ||
I had to write a very big check yesterday, which I was not happy about. | ||
I'd write a very big check and but it's worth it because he's a very I mean this guy's a big deal but he is a liberal and I go to meet with him downtown and he's got the full KN95 whatever mask on and I'm like You could take the mask off, you know? | ||
Like, I don't even think Lori Lightfoot is imposing this anymore. | ||
You could take the mask off, man. | ||
But I mean, I see this guy wearing the mask and I'm like, you know, what's the deal here? | ||
I mean, do you think you're gonna get sick? | ||
I mean, isn't it apparent now that this thing is bullshit? | ||
I mean this COVID thing washed over the population and I haven't seen people dropping like flies. | ||
People are saying Norm Pattis. | ||
No, it's my other expensive lawyer. | ||
I have several expensive lawyers, okay? | ||
I have several very expensive, very big deal lawyers, all right? | ||
It was my other very expensive big deal lawyer, not Norm. | ||
I did retain Norm for the no-fly list. | ||
I retained this lawyer for something else. | ||
But yeah, he's wearing the mask. | ||
I'm like, come on, man. | ||
What are you doing? | ||
So... Anyway. | ||
I don't know how... I don't know how people are still buying in. | ||
I gotta get a haircut. | ||
My hair is just way too long. | ||
I hate the way it looks right now. | ||
I spent a long time before the show trying to get it right, but... It's just too thick. | ||
There's just too much of it. | ||
I just... | ||
It just gets poofy, you know? | ||
It just... I hate the way that it just grows out. | ||
Like an afro. | ||
So I'm going to get a haircut next week. - Okay. | ||
Next week, I'm scheduled. | ||
I gotta get in. | ||
But, um... Yeah, so I don't know how people Just accept the way things are. | ||
It's obviously a bunch of nonsense. | ||
And if they can turn it off and on, like, you know, clearly we're not in the middle of a deadly pandemic. | ||
Give me a break. | ||
Who honestly believes it anymore? | ||
I don't know how people believe this shit. | ||
And we're gonna have to go back to the Vax Passport. | ||
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Can I see your Vax Passport and your ID, please? | |
I mean, I can't believe... It, like, it's honestly, it's unbelievable. | ||
And I predicted the Vax Mandate a year ago. | ||
You know, before it even started. | ||
I predicted the vax mandate when they were saying, oh that'll never happen. | ||
And I cannot believe, still, that I would go to restaurants in downtown Chicago and they would ask me to show me for a proof of vaccination and my ID to eat in a restaurant. | ||
It's unbelievable! | ||
Like I can't, I still can't believe it. | ||
And again, I predicted it before it was happening. | ||
I predicted it a year before it was happening, and still when I saw it with my own eyes, I couldn't believe it. | ||
I tried the new Gordon Ramsay burger a few months ago, when it first opened up, during the VAX mandate, and I walk in and they literally go, before I seat you, I need to see your VAX card and your ID. | ||
And if you don't have it, they don't let you in. | ||
How insane is that? | ||
Like it's an airport or something. | ||
I mean, it's ridiculous enough that there's so much security at the airport, but to sit down and have a burger, I have to show you my license? | ||
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I mean, what world are we living in? | |
What timeline is this? | ||
It's just insane. | ||
And it was like that in every place I went in downtown Chicago and New York. | ||
When we were in New York for the Vax Watch Rally, same thing. | ||
We couldn't eat anywhere. | ||
We went all across the city trying to get in and we couldn't get into one restaurant because we had to show proof of vaccination. | ||
And they wouldn't let us in. | ||
And we fought with them. | ||
We said, please, we won't tell anybody. | ||
Like, late at night, too, we went to this one restaurant. | ||
It was 1 a.m. | ||
It was on a Thursday. | ||
And we're like, come on, will you just let us in? | ||
Oh, we forgot our passports at home. | ||
Could you let us in? | ||
And they go, no, I'm sorry. | ||
We can't. | ||
Like it's, and we have like a party of eight people. | ||
So it's like, that's good business during a pandemic. | ||
A party of eight people, like, you know, that's a lot of money for a business and for, for the waiter. | ||
And we had that conversation at like five restaurants. | ||
It's just nuts. | ||
In Chicago, for Gordon Ramsay, we were able to sneak in, okay? | ||
I don't want to get into the particulars, but, you know, for the Gordon Ramsay restaurant, I tell people, you know, don't make a fake and all that. | ||
Don't try to evade the system. | ||
Just accept it in the sense that, you know, if you try to skirt the system, you're, like, basically embracing the system. | ||
But for the Gordon Ramsay burger, we found a little bit of a loophole, okay? | ||
For the Ramsay burger, you know, for Chef Ramsay, I mean, come on, you know. | ||
So we found a little bit of a loophole. | ||
We did a little Jedi mind trick at the door. | ||
It's called, we do a little, you know, we are completely vaccinated, okay? | ||
We're totally, we're totally vaccinated. | ||
Let us have the burger. | ||
And they said, we'll let you have the burger, you know? | ||
So we did a little Jedi mind trick for the, for Ramsay, for Chef Ramsay. | ||
But otherwise, I say you should never, you should never try this. | ||
But for the Gordon Ramsay burger, we just did a little... It's called, we do a little Jedi mind trick. | ||
So we could have... For Chef Ramsay? | ||
But anyway... So... I think it's coming back, though. | ||
I think we may have to deal with it again. | ||
I hope we don't. | ||
I really hope I'm wrong about that, though. | ||
Because if I never had to deal with that again, I would be a happy person, but... I'm not confident that that's true, though, you know? | ||
Well, let's see. | ||
We're going to move on. | ||
I want to get into our featured story about Ukraine. | ||
Like I said, not a whole lot of news here, but I want to talk about this persistent narrative I keep hearing. | ||
They're saying that Russia's losing the war. | ||
And they've been saying this now for the, I mean they've been saying it really since it began, but in the past week everybody's saying that Russia, their advance has stalled, they're getting bogged down, fierce opposition from the Ukrainians that they didn't anticipate, crazy high casualty numbers, and this is just one such article. | ||
This is from Wall Street Journal. | ||
I'll read this to you. | ||
That says, quote, NATO estimates that Russia may have lost as much as one-fifth of its combat forces in about a month of fighting in Ukraine as President Biden and alliance leaders gather in Brussels for a summit to discuss providing further support to Kiev to repel the Russian invasion. | ||
Up to 40,000 Russian troops have been killed, wounded, taken prisoner, or are missing in Ukraine, according to a senior military official from NATO. | ||
Russia may have also lost 10% of its equipment, impairing Moscow's ability to maintain its pace of operations. | ||
So, NATO, totally reliable source, says that 40,000 Russians have been killed or lost in the fighting so far. | ||
40,000 people. | ||
Really? | ||
They've lost a fifth of their fighting force. | ||
Yeah, super believable. | ||
It says the casualty count would underscore how much Russia's attack on Ukraine that began on February 24th has become bogged down after what defense analysts have said have been a series of operational missteps. | ||
Ukrainian defensive operations have emerged as far tougher and enduring than was expected. | ||
NATO officials on Thursday are expected to further ratchet up the pressure on Russia when alliance leaders meet in Brussels. | ||
The NATO Secretary General Jen Stoltenberg said, we are determined to do all we can to support Ukraine. | ||
I expect allies will agree to provide additional support, including cyber security assistance, as well as equipment to help Ukraine protect against chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear threats. | ||
Important. | ||
Note, note, Russia is not talking about using chemical weapons, but yet the NATO Secretary General is. | ||
Mr. Biden is set to arrive in Brussels on Wednesday. | ||
As he left Washington, he warned that the potential for chemical warfare in the conflict in Ukraine represented a real threat, while the State Department formally accused Russia of committing war crimes in Ukraine. | ||
Russian bombardment has destroyed between 80 and 90 percent of Mariupol, say local officials. | ||
Biden arrives in... this is another headline. | ||
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is betting that the NATO summit, to be followed by a meeting of the Group of Seven, the European Union leaders, will yield help for his country and sanctions on Russia. | ||
Three important summits this week, the G7, NATO, and the EU. | ||
New sanctions packages, new aid, said Mr. Zelensky. | ||
He is scheduled to join each of the meetings virtually. | ||
So, here's a few things about this and about the coverage. | ||
So, what we're being told about the war, you cannot take at face value. | ||
Because what is being produced is, in the strictest possible terms, propaganda. | ||
It's a war. | ||
It's a proxy war. | ||
It's a proxy war, initially, between Kiev and Donbass, between the West and Russia, and now you've got this war between Kiev and Russia itself, not its proxies, and of course NATO and the United States are backing Kiev. | ||
And so, of course, when NATO gives figures and analysis, they know that public opinion is actually part of the war. | ||
Shaping public opinion is part of the war effort. | ||
And controlling the narrative about the war and controlling perception of the war and information about the war is almost just as important as any other aspect of the war. | ||
The bullets, the logistics, the air superiority, and so on. | ||
So, what we get from NATO is not information. | ||
What we get from NATO are narratives. | ||
And the narratives are meant to shape public opinion, and public opinion is a tool in the arsenal of the alliance against Russia. | ||
So, we cannot take anything they say at face value. | ||
And, of course, all the information we're getting about the war is coming from the United States government and from the NATO alliance. | ||
This Wall Street Journal article cites only NATO and government sources. | ||
And the same is true of all the other major publications and news stations. | ||
CNN, NBC, CBS, New York Times, Washington Post, they're all regime media, and so they're all pushing the regime narrative, the regime propaganda about the regime's war in Ukraine. | ||
So when we see this narrative that Russia's being bogged down, just like the narrative on Afghanistan, just like the narrative on actually Iraq 19 years ago, you can never, when it comes to war in particular, generally speaking this is true, but with war in particular, you can never take generally speaking this is true, but with war in particular, you can never take what the media says in You cannot take it at face value. | ||
But that doesn't mean that it doesn't have value, because of course, what the regime is putting out, and we can identify, of course, what's in the mainstream media, is the regime narrative. | ||
Based on the narrative we get from the media, we can sort of work backwards and discern. | ||
Based on what is being said, we can know what they want the public to think. | ||
Based on what they want the public to think, and how therefore they want the public to act, we can know what they want. | ||
And based on discerning what they want, we can kind of Come to an understanding about what's really going on. | ||
But you understand that it's we really have to engage in more of an analysis of why are they saying this rather than what are they saying. | ||
So I'm much less interested in what this article says as much as why they would be saying this. | ||
Why is the Wall Street Journal reporting this? | ||
Why is Biden talking about chemical weapons? | ||
Why is NATO talking about chemical weapons? | ||
Well it's not because they're conveying real intel So that's just a general remark about the media. | ||
propensity of Moscow to use chemical weapons in the conflict, but because for whatever reason, they want us to think this is the case. | ||
The Biden regime and the NATO alliance and the Wall Street Journal want us to know this. | ||
They want us to think this. | ||
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Why? | |
So that's just a general remark about the media. | ||
The first thing I'll say is this, on its face. | ||
The The idea that Russia has lost 40,000 troops is ridiculous. | ||
There has not been any engagement between the Ukrainians and Russians where the Ukrainians have won. | ||
When you compare any Ukrainian unit to a comparable Russian unit in any engagement in the war, the Ukrainians have not won. | ||
They have not won land, they have not defended land, they are not winning their engagements, they have no control of the airspace, they have no artillery, no heavy machinery. | ||
It seems to be the case that the most that you could say is that The fighting is proving to be protracted and you could say that that is because Russia is taking care to not have high civilian casualties and not destroy large parts of Ukraine. | ||
You could say that it is a logistically complicated operation. | ||
You could say that they require reinforcements. | ||
But the idea that 40,000 Russians have been killed is ridiculous. | ||
The idea that the tide of the war Is in any way contested is ridiculous. | ||
And just take a look at the actions of the parties involved. | ||
Would Zelensky be begging the Canadian Parliament, the US Congress, the Israeli Knesset, the British Parliament? | ||
Would he be begging these foreign bodies for a no-fly zone and for military aid and to do more if he was surely winning this war on his own? | ||
Of course not. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
Would all of this intervention be required if Ukraine was going to win this war? | ||
Of course not. | ||
If Ukraine was winning this war, why haven't they gained any territory? | ||
In 30 days, Russia has taken over a portion of Ukraine that is as big as the United Kingdom. | ||
And the rate at which they have taken over is unprecedented and dramatic. | ||
In a sense, they have taken more territory than the Americans took in Iraq in a similar amount of time, and the American military was stronger than the Russian military, and the Iraqi military was weaker than the Ukrainian military. | ||
And despite the fact that there's a smaller differential, and in absolute terms, Russia is weaker, they still have managed to gain more territory in a shorter amount of time. | ||
So, the war is not going badly for Russia. | ||
You could say that there's something like a stalemate happening right now, but it is not because 40,000 Russians have been killed. | ||
That's just ridiculous. | ||
But that's on the claim on its face. | ||
The second thing I'll say about it is this, and this is what's worrisome. | ||
I think they are saying that Well, there's a few reasons for saying this. | ||
The first reason is, of course, you're always trying to demoralize your opponent. | ||
And if you say you're winning, then that attracts more resources to your side. | ||
Nobody wants to join up with a losing army. | ||
Nobody wants to go down with a sinking ship. | ||
Or climb aboard a sinking ship, I should say. | ||
If Ukraine is doomed, and if the media is saying that Ukraine is doomed, who is going to want to jump on the side of Ukraine just so that it could be defeated? | ||
Nobody wants to jump on a sinking ship. | ||
So that basic psychology is why they always have to say Ukraine may win and Russia's losing, and they always have to spin it like Russia hasn't flattened Ukraine and destroyed their military. | ||
So that's partially why they're saying it. | ||
It's to rally the troops and there's an agenda there too about the West. | ||
They don't want the West to know that Russia is just pushing Ukraine's shit in and there's nothing we can do about it. | ||
But I think there's also something far more sinister going on here, which is, I think there's a real reason they're saying that Russia is losing, and it's not just for all the basic reasons, it's for a more complex reason. | ||
And I think it goes hand-in-hand with what they're saying about weapons of mass destruction. | ||
Because both the NATO Secretary General and the U.S. | ||
President and the State Department are all saying something similar. | ||
First they said it was war crimes. | ||
Last week, they began the narrative about war crimes, and I predicted this. | ||
I said last week, you're going to see that this is the new thing. | ||
They're going to talk about atrocities and cruelty, and they'll talk about war crimes in Ukraine. | ||
I said that last week when I think a spokesperson said it from the State Department and, you know, some other low-level official said it, and I said, watch, that's what they're going to go with. | ||
The United States will officially say war crimes, and that's what they did. | ||
I think it was today or yesterday. | ||
They said war crimes. | ||
This is the new thing now, and I've been hearing this for a few days. | ||
They're saying that Putin will use chemical weapons. | ||
And I think the chemical weapons and the stalemate narrative go hand-in-hand, because the stalemate makes it plausible that Putin would use chemical weapons. | ||
So it has to follow this procession here. | ||
So, Russia invaded and, you know, they steamrolled Ukraine, but then they ran into tough resistance. | ||
Now it's a stalemate. | ||
Now it's a war of attrition. | ||
Putin wants to end this war quickly. | ||
Putin can't sustain a prolonged campaign like this. | ||
Ukraine will bleed Russia because this will be very costly in terms of blood and treasure. | ||
He's running through officers. | ||
He's running through generals. | ||
He's running through troops and Putin wants out, basically. | ||
So they say, what is Putin's way out? | ||
An increasingly desperate Putin, desperate to break the stalemate and bring a hasty end to the conflict, will deploy chemical weapons. | ||
And this is where you get Biden and Stoltenberg and the others are saying now it's chemical weapons. | ||
And what you see happening in real time is they're building the case for an intervention. | ||
They're building the case for an escalation and again i don't know what that looks like does that mean that nato is going to invade does that mean that the united states will declare war i mean i think that would be dramatic but are they going to use that to bully china are they going to use that to bully other other countries into sanctioning russia you know but they're they're going to use that to escalate the containment of russia They're going to use that to say, hey, look, I know we went balls to the wall before, but now it's even worse. | ||
It was bad when Russia invaded Ukraine and the world stood together to fight Russia. | ||
But now they went too far because they use chemical weapons and they're committing war crimes. | ||
And now we need to. | ||
And so it's about creating a pretext for an escalation. | ||
And that's my ear. | ||
You know, listen, a big part of my, one of my strong suits, a big strength of mine is I have an intuition. | ||
I hear these things. | ||
I hear these things. | ||
I see how they can be pieced together. | ||
I didn't read this anywhere, okay? | ||
I didn't read this theory anywhere, but I hear these things. | ||
And I hear certain things and, you know, again, maybe I'm totally off base on this. | ||
This is all speculation. | ||
But what I hear happening again, when Biden says this, he's not communicating information, he is seeding an idea. | ||
He wants people to know, and he wants people to speculate, will Putin use chemical weapons? | ||
That's what they're counting on. | ||
They're putting that out there in the national news media and that is one of those things that's being said and people are thinking, will Putin use chemical weapons? | ||
And then that gives them an opportunity to fulfill that question and say, yeah, Putin used chemical weapons. | ||
And Putin may deny it. | ||
He may say, no, that didn't happen. | ||
But who's to say? | ||
Putin's evil. | ||
He's a liar. | ||
It's all propaganda from them. | ||
We know what happened. | ||
We have the footage. | ||
We have the proof. | ||
And remember we said a week ago, hey, you know, and he committed war crimes. | ||
And once you have the introduction of chemical weapons, now you have a legitimate pretext to declare war on Russia. | ||
Because that's one of the big stipulations. | ||
You know, when we, when Destiny and I debated on Friday about, you know, what are the What are considered the exceptions to national sovereignty? | ||
It is the proliferation or use of WMDs, it's genocide, it's the invasion of another sovereign nation, and then I think there's a fourth one. | ||
But those are typically considered some of the permitted exceptions by the United Nations and the Atlantic Charter and all of that. | ||
Why can a nation invade? | ||
Why did we have the right to invade Saddam Hussein? | ||
Well, because Saddam Hussein was building a nuclear arsenal, allegedly, and had a chemical and biological weapons arsenal. | ||
He had invaded Kuwait. | ||
He was conducting an ethnic cleansing in the country. | ||
And so that was enough for the Senate to vote that Saddam Hussein had to be removed and the Security Council and the General Assembly. | ||
So when you hear these things, again, when the State Department talks, you have to hear these things. | ||
They're not just saying, like, oh yeah, you're a terrorist or whatever. | ||
No, like, these words have meaning. | ||
When they say, oh, he's a war criminal, that's a lot different than saying he's a killer. | ||
You know, Biden said, oh yeah, he's a killer, he's a murderer. | ||
When you say you're a war criminal, that actually has a legal definition, and that actually has real ramifications. | ||
And the same goes for chemical weapons. | ||
You might think, oh, it's just more. | ||
No, no. | ||
The use of chemical weapons is a very, I mean that would be a very big deal here, and Biden knows that, and that's why they're saying that, and they use the same tactic in Syria. | ||
You know, nine years ago, during the Syrian Civil War, remember Barack Obama said, my red line where America will intervene in the conflict is if the Assad regime uses chemical weapons. | ||
And then in 2013, there was all this reporting that Assad used chemical weapons. | ||
It was disputed. | ||
You know, the Assad regime denied it, and people on the ground denied it, and it turned out that there was never any proof that that happened. | ||
That was a lie. | ||
But at the time, people said, oh look, oh look, they crossed the red line, they used chemical weapons, now you have to intervene. | ||
Because that's like a war crime. | ||
That's, again, you have forfeited your sovereignty when you do that. | ||
And then Obama gave it to Congress and said, well, Congress has the right to vote if we can intervene. | ||
And, you know, the Republican Congress shut it down. | ||
And Obama said, well, you know, I can't do anything about it. | ||
But remember, that's what they did in Syria. | ||
They said it was the use of chemical weapons. | ||
That is the red line. | ||
That is what would draw the United States into a conflict. | ||
It's the proliferation of these WMDs, proliferation and use of biological, chemical, nuclear weapons. | ||
And so if that's introduced in the war, That dramatically changes what happens, and I think that's what they're gearing up for. | ||
I think they're building the case for an American intervention, and how they're going to do it is say that, well, Putin's committing war crimes, and they use chemical weapons, and it'll be a lie, it'll be a farce, it'll be a false flag, the footage will be doctored, but I think that's going to be the message, and then that's going to change the menu options that the US and NATO have at their disposal to retaliate against Russia. | ||
I think that's what's going on here. | ||
And the stalemate narrative is part of it. | ||
It's a stalemate, so he's using siege tactics on Maripol and Kiev, and he's using chemical weapons to break the stalemate. | ||
That's going to be the story. | ||
Putin rushed in, the Russian army made rapid advances, and then they got bogged down because the resistance was just too tough, and then the Russian army was being bled. | ||
The generals were dying, Putin was losing domestic political support, The Russian forces are being depleted. | ||
Their equipment is being destroyed. | ||
Their economy is being crippled. | ||
And so Putin realized he had to bring a hasty end to the war. | ||
But he couldn't because the Ukraine army was too strong. | ||
So what did he do? | ||
He cheated. | ||
He used chemical weapons. | ||
He used banned chemical weapons. | ||
This is all very plausible. | ||
But now the United States has to intervene because he's just gone too far this time. | ||
It seems to me that that's the story they're creating. | ||
Mark my words, I think you'll hear that in a few weeks time. | ||
I think that is going to be what they're going with. | ||
And that's going to force Russia in a very tight spot. | ||
Because Putin knows what happens when the United States finds chemical weapons. | ||
And so, he knows that's going to increase the pressure on him. | ||
And it may even increase domestic pressure from the so-called oligarchs or others. | ||
So when I hear the stalemate stuff, not only is it not true, but I think it's very sinister. | ||
And when I hear Stoltenberg and Biden, when I hear them both saying they're very concerned about chemical weapons, where have we heard this before? | ||
You know, stop! | ||
I think we've heard this one before. | ||
We heard this in Syria. | ||
We heard this in Iraq. | ||
We heard this in Libya. | ||
We heard this in Iran. | ||
This is what they go with. | ||
It's always with the chemical weapons. | ||
And if they're hinting at it, you know, they've already found them. | ||
It's just a matter of time here. | ||
So, that's the current state of the conflict. | ||
I'm a little bit worried about that. | ||
Because, you know, it would be really catastrophic if Russia were to lose Ukraine here. | ||
And I don't think they're just going to let it go. | ||
I don't think that the United States is going to allow itself to just be humiliated like this on the world stage. | ||
I think they know the consequences would be dire. | ||
So if you think that they're going to let Russia just take Ukraine without a major fight, I think you're wrong. | ||
And so that's why they're bolstering their aid to Ukraine, and that's why they're spinning this narrative and planting these seeds. | ||
I think they're getting ready for an escalation. | ||
That's what it looks like to me. | ||
Because these people are not messing around with this. | ||
They're not messing around. | ||
That's all speculation. | ||
That's all my theory. | ||
And I'm typically right about this stuff. | ||
I really have a good sense for this because, you know, it was the Syria strikes in 17 that I called. | ||
Nobody else knew it, but I did. | ||
When we did the first Syria strikes under the Trump admin in April 17, and everybody said, oh, he's going to invade Syria. | ||
And I said, he's not going to invade Syria. | ||
I said, he's doing that to spook the Chinese, because Xi Jinping was in Mar-a-Lago when those strikes were launched, and Trump was in the middle of brinksmanship with North Korea, which he began in February of that year. | ||
So I thought that was the equivalent of Trump putting his balls on the table and saying, yeah, we follow through on red lines. | ||
We make red lines and then we follow through. | ||
We drew a red line, we created the pretext, then we bombed Syria, and that was to demonstrate this isn't the Obama administration, and I'm not messing around with North Korea. | ||
And if I'm not messing around with North Korea, I'm not messing around with China. | ||
And you know, Jack Posobiec at the time said, and Mike Cernovich said, and everybody else said, 100,000 US troops in Syria on June 1st, and it never materialized, because The airstrikes were for show. | ||
It was 52 Minutemen missiles and they hardly did any damage. | ||
They blew up an airfield in Homs. | ||
The airfield was operational 24 hours later. | ||
There was no material damage done. | ||
It was just to prove a point. | ||
That was the first foreign visit that Trump had hosted from the Chinese president at Mar-a-Lago. | ||
And while they were eating dessert, Trump bombed Syria. | ||
And that was in the middle of the brinksmanship with North Korea, which was similar. | ||
And so Trump was trying to basically intimidate China and prove to China, hey, I've got balls, so that China would intercede and put pressure on North Korea. | ||
And then he did the same thing the following April. | ||
You know, in January 2018, ten months later, after ten months of carrier strike groups in the Sea of Japan and those missile tests and warhead tests, North Korea walked with South Korea in the Winter Olympics and then in February 2018 | ||
During a press conference, Kim Jong Un, or I think an American spokesperson, said that there was going to be a meeting, historic meeting, between Kim Jong Un and the President. | ||
And then there was a period for a few months where the North Koreans were playing games. | ||
And they said, there's not going to be a conference, there will be a conference, there's not going to be a conference, there will be a conference. | ||
Then, Trump did a series of actions, which I think were intended to demonstrate seriousness, He brought John Bolton onto the National Security Team, made him the National Security Advisor. | ||
He bombed Syria for a second time, and this time was a coalition airstrike, 150 missiles, which the United Kingdom collaborated on. | ||
And then in June, and then in June of that year, two months later, you got the summit in Singapore. | ||
And you got the détente. | ||
And I think that was the trick, was to play Syria off of North Korea, or vice versa. | ||
And that was the approach. | ||
That was the strategy at work. | ||
And similarly, Trump did the same thing in Venezuela, I think, trying to signal to Iran. | ||
And I think that's what's happening here in Venezuela. | ||
Well, not quite, but you know, this is how the American foreign policy apparatus is thinking. | ||
This is how the State Department and the Pentagon and all the rest are thinking. | ||
They know that, you know, and it's like Putin. | ||
Putin used a hypersonic missile on an arms depot in Ukraine. | ||
He knows the significance of that. | ||
They could use lots of missiles. | ||
He used a hypersonic missile against an arms depot in western Ukraine and that was to demonstrate, we have this capability and you don't. | ||
We have this superiority and you don't. | ||
We have hypersonic missiles that can pierce your ABM shield, that can take out NATO. | ||
We can do it. | ||
That's why he's bombing these targets in western Ukraine as well. | ||
So this is how the leaders communicate with each other. | ||
There's a subtext. | ||
And when Biden and Stoltenberg are talking about chemical weapons... | ||
Don't, don't misunderstand what's going on there. | ||
They're not saying, we just, whoa, we just got this report from totally honest people and this is... No, no, no. | ||
That's a message. | ||
That's a message to Putin. | ||
That's a message to the people. | ||
Putin knows the game. | ||
Biden knows the game. | ||
They know the story. | ||
They know the score. | ||
What chemical weapons means. | ||
It means right to protect. | ||
It means that will give a pretext to NATO to intervene. | ||
Everyone knows that. | ||
Everyone knows that. | ||
Biden knows that when he says it. | ||
Putin knows it when he hears it. | ||
It's all of us that don't know. | ||
It's an ignorant public that goes, oh, chemical weapons, that sounds terrible. | ||
But everybody who's a player knows full well what that means. | ||
And the stalemate narrative is part of that. | ||
War crimes, chemical weapons. | ||
They're building the legal case from an international standpoint for dramatic escalation. | ||
Mark my words. | ||
That's what's going on here. | ||
And the stalemate serves that narrative because it creates a plausible story for why that would happen. | ||
Otherwise, why would Putin need to use chemical weapons? | ||
He needs to use chemical weapons because it's a war, it's turned into a brutal war of attrition which he cannot sustain and he needs to break the stalemate. | ||
How does he do it? | ||
Take a risk. | ||
Use chemical weapons. | ||
It just so happens that that'll invite more intense scrutiny that has so far been applied. | ||
So that's what's going on. | ||
I think that's it, 100%. | ||
I'm speculating, but I think that's it. | ||
But anyway, we're going to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at the Super Chats. | ||
That's just a thought. | ||
But I'm going to take a look here, and we'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
I I just have to know. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. - Okay. | |
Let's see. | ||
We've got... Reactionary Retards says, Hey Nick! | ||
Apologies for being niggardly with the superchats last night. | ||
Here's some money. | ||
I hate driving around my neighborhood with the Ukrainian flags everywhere. | ||
I can't wait till, excuse me, until Putin definitively wins this war and they all just shut the fuck up. | ||
Just want to show some solidarity for those real niggas in Russia. | ||
Hey, well, no worries, man. | ||
Thanks for the big Super Chat. | ||
I was really just busting your balls. | ||
You know, I'm just waging a war against the Super Chatters. | ||
So I'm just bullying you to stop sending multiple $3 Super Chats. | ||
But hey, no worries, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
And I know, man, the Ukrainian stuff is so tiresome. | ||
I see it everywhere, too. | ||
The lawn signs, the ribbons on the trees, it's on the marquees. | ||
Everywhere I go, I just flip it off. | ||
You know, there's this flower shop near me, and they've got on their marquee, it says, Pray for Ukraine. | ||
I just flip it off every time I drive by. | ||
I, you know, I can't help it. | ||
I'm just like, you know what? | ||
Fuck this flower shop. | ||
Why don't you just sell flowers? | ||
I don't need a geopolitical position with the fucking flowers. | ||
And there's another billboard near me and it's got a big Ukrainian flag and... I told you there's a street corner and it's got all these posters that say, Stop the war! | ||
Stop Putin! | ||
Why don't you shut the hell up, you know? | ||
So I just can't wait for it to be over for that reason alone and get these people... These people just need to be defeated. | ||
More than Zelensky needs to be defeated, these people need to lose. | ||
You know, these libtards. | ||
They need to know that, like, guess what? | ||
F you. | ||
Hey, you know what you need to understand? | ||
F you. | ||
Because these libtards, it's like they live in Candyland and they just need to be made to cry. | ||
Every time that happens, we're winning. | ||
Trump needs to win. | ||
Brexit needs to happen. | ||
Putin needs to win. | ||
Like, we just need these liberals to just have their whole life destroyed, you know? | ||
Because that's what it's about. | ||
I mean, they think that, like, they control the world, they think they're God, and so we just need to give them losses. | ||
We just, they need to lose everything. | ||
We need to take everything from them. | ||
We need to honk our horns, and stop the steal, and unite the right, and we need Trump in office, and we need Putin in Ukraine, and we need COVID vaccines to kill, and that's what we need. | ||
We need total libtard destruction. | ||
Um, Marnix has heard you have a bad sleep schedule. | ||
Have you tried sticking a gun in your mouth and pulling the trigger? | ||
You will feel immediate effects. | ||
Uh, no, I haven't tried that yet, but you know, I've heard a lot about that one and it seems like, you know, if I just can't get it together, I think the, you know, there's always that option. | ||
That is always on the table. | ||
You know, it's always there. | ||
It's always a backup. | ||
You know, if I ever just can't get the sleep schedule together, you know, it's always there. | ||
It's always there. | ||
It's always there as an option, but no, no, I would never consider that. | ||
I would never, I would never consider that because I love this too much, you know. | ||
Destiny won't kill me out of some misplaced sense of self-righteousness. | ||
And I won't kill Destiny because he's just too much fun. | ||
And I won't kill myself because I'm just having so much fun. | ||
I was watching The Dark Knight the other day and I thought that just totally applies. | ||
Although, I guess in that situation Destiny's more like Joker. | ||
You won't kill me out of some kind of misplaced sense of self-righteousness. | ||
And I won't kill you because you're just too much fun. | ||
That's so... and that's so us. | ||
That's so us. | ||
You know? | ||
And I'm gonna be hanging off the building and I'm gonna be like, you wouldn't think... You don't think I would risk the battle for the soul of America In a debate with you, I had to have an ace in the hole. | ||
Who's gonna be my convert? | ||
Is it gonna be maybe Hasan Piker? | ||
Maybe ultimately I'll convert Hasan, you know? | ||
You truly are incorruptible, you know? | ||
But maybe Hasan Piker is my ace in the hole. | ||
I took your white knight and I brought him down to our level. | ||
So Yeah I could see that happening You know, that's very real. | ||
I very much do relate to the Joker in that sense. | ||
You know, I'm hanging off the building. | ||
You know, Destiny is just, he's talking so fast, he's just, he's calling me Slippery Nick. | ||
You don't think I would risk losing the battle for the heart and soul of America in a debate with you? | ||
In a debate with you? | ||
No, I, uh... I've got Hasan Piker. | ||
Or Has, or Infrared. | ||
I've got the Sultan Has. | ||
unidentified
|
Is it Haas? | |
Has? | ||
The Sultan Haas. | ||
Maybe he'll be my ace in the hole, I don't know. | ||
Or maybe Vosh is Batman and Destiny is Harvey Dent, I don't know. | ||
Does that mean I have to kill Stephen Bonnell's girlfriend? | ||
I don't want to have to do that. | ||
Maybe that's how destiny becomes a groper. | ||
I would never kill. | ||
I'm like Batman. | ||
I don't kill. | ||
It's against my moral code. | ||
Hypothetically, what if you could only save one? | ||
Then he can't be Batman and Harvey Dent at the same time. | ||
That doesn't really work. | ||
But I guess Destiny would be Harvey Dent, because he's the one that's converted. | ||
If I'm Joker, then Harvey Dent would be Destiny. | ||
Because he's the one that's gonna come over to our side, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
IT'S ABOUT WHAT'S FAIR! | |
Maybe we frame some black guy. | ||
Maybe we frame some trans person. | ||
we mass report Destiny's Twitch channel and we blame it on some tranny and then Destiny goes around killing trannies yeah tell your community that your Twitch channel isn't gonna be suspended Lie to them like I had to lie! | ||
So maybe he's the Harvey Dent character and yeah, I guess that's what it's gonna be. | ||
So yeah, he already was banned. | ||
I know, I know, I know, I know he's already banned. | ||
I know. | ||
People are saying, he doesn't know. | ||
I know, dude. | ||
Dude, I saw it this morning. | ||
But we don't know if he's permabanned or not. | ||
Allegedly, they said it was a temporary ban, but it's not confirmed. | ||
I love people. | ||
He doesn't know, Kak. | ||
Yeah, I know you retard. | ||
But... | ||
Yeah, but we're just trying to make it fit for the story, okay, you morons? | ||
But, um... Yeah, so truly, he's like this Harvey Dent figure. | ||
He's coming to our side, man. | ||
It's so inevitable. | ||
And you know what's cute, is their community thinks that, like, he's converting us. | ||
How naive, you know? | ||
His whole community is like, I think it's a good thing, because Destiny's gonna start converting Groypers. | ||
Nigga, Groypers don't get converted. | ||
We don't get converted. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Being a reactionary is like gravity. | ||
All it takes is a little push. | ||
Okay? | ||
So I find that a little bit adorable. | ||
unidentified
|
They're like, Destiny's gonna convert the Gripers! | |
Oh, you think? | ||
No, no, no. | ||
It is YOU that will be converted! | ||
YOU will be converted! | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
You're going to become a griper, actually. | ||
Destiny's halfway there. | ||
Pray. | ||
Seriously, pray for destiny's conversion to Christianity. | ||
Pray for destiny's conversion. | ||
God wills it, and God wills it that destiny will become a Christian. | ||
And he will be converted to our cause and he will bring thousands. | ||
He will bring thousands through the gates with him. | ||
Through the gates of heaven and through the gates of the Groyper movement. | ||
It's real. | ||
And this will be a dramatic thing. | ||
And when it happens, people are going to freak out. | ||
And people are going to say it's inevitable. | ||
It's just too late. | ||
So, all will be converted. | ||
It's irresistible. | ||
Nothing can stop it. | ||
Someone says Molotov-Ribbentrop Act. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Molotov. | ||
Hey, Destiny. | ||
Destiny, let's become best friends. | ||
Hey, Destiny. | ||
Yeah, Molotov-Ribbentrop is right. | ||
No, no, but I do like him. | ||
I do like him. | ||
And I would like to do a friendly stream with him. | ||
And I'd like for him to, you know, maybe see things from our point of view, you know? | ||
You're gonna break your one rule. | ||
You're gonna break your one rule! | ||
you're gonna become a griper but yeah Harvey Dent I I took BreadTube's White Knight and I brought him down to our level. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah, it's gonna be good to see. | ||
It's gonna be enjoyable when that happens, but anyway. | ||
PrettyFlyWhiteGuys says, Hello Nick, it's Day 3 of the streak. | ||
I hope you know you're appreciated, friend. | ||
Oh, thanks a lot, man. | ||
I feel appreciated. | ||
Cornelius says, hey Nick, love the show! | ||
Just one question, will you ever bring back the 07 button? | ||
Thanks and have a great night and God bless! | ||
I don't have any plans to, but thanks. | ||
Hidecaps says, the people chose Barabbas over Jesus and people still believe in democracy. | ||
What the? | ||
I've never heard this take. | ||
This is groundbreaking. | ||
Never heard...what? | ||
unidentified
|
I've never heard that one before. | |
Excuse me, true though. | ||
It's true. | ||
unidentified
|
I have the hiccups right now. | |
Antichrist disrespecters says Madeleine Albright is finally dead. | ||
The murderous Jewish witch sanctioned half a million kids to death in Iraq and said it was worth it. | ||
Hope she feels like burning in hell right now is worth it. | ||
Hell is forever you turkey neck goblin looking bitch. | ||
Press P to poo and pee on this wicked woman's grave. | ||
Yeah, press P. True. | ||
True, she's a murderer. | ||
Talk about a war criminal. | ||
Melon Buster says it's my birthday today. | ||
23 years old. | ||
Been trusting the plan for four years. | ||
You're awesome! | ||
God bless you brother. | ||
Hey, thank you man. | ||
God bless you too. | ||
Happy birthday. | ||
Can we get an H in chat for happy birthday? | ||
Can we get some H's in chat for happy birthday? | ||
Happy birthday friend. | ||
Hope it's a good one. | ||
I hope you're enjoying that. | ||
Four years. | ||
Has it really been four years? | ||
Time flies when you're having fun. | ||
So, big shout out. | ||
Thanks a lot, man. | ||
Thanks for supporting the show for so long. | ||
Happy birthday! | ||
23. | ||
I'm gonna be 24 this year. | ||
Can you believe it? | ||
24. | ||
And then I'll be 25. | ||
When I turn 25, I'm gonna really lose my mind, man. | ||
unidentified
|
25? | |
Are you kidding me? | ||
I'm gonna be 30 soon! | ||
I'm gonna be 30 years old! | ||
I might as well be dead. | ||
I mean, God willing, I make it to 30, but jeez, I'm gonna be 30 years old. | ||
I wanna be 17, man. | ||
I wanna be 17 again. | ||
I don't wanna grow up. | ||
I wanna be a baby. | ||
unidentified
|
Man, I wanna be like Goo Goo Gaga, nigga. | |
I'm gonna be 30 years old. | ||
I'm a kid! | ||
I feel like a kid. | ||
I'm childlike. | ||
Childlike creativity. | ||
And I'm... | ||
Boyish. | ||
My boyish mischief and charm and charisma and good looks and my poofy thick head of hair and... I can't turn 30! | ||
I'm young! | ||
I'm so young! | ||
I have so much time! | ||
But I'm just... Every day I get closer and one of these days I'm gonna have to marry some woman and get kids and all that. | ||
And then I'm gonna be dead. | ||
And then you know what? | ||
I'm gonna be dead. | ||
And then this soul will leave this body, and I'll just be this lifeless pile of bones. | ||
And then, you know, hopefully I'll be in heaven, and that'll be great, I guess. | ||
But, you know, I kind of like what I got going on here. | ||
I mean, I got pretty lucky. | ||
I mean, I'm like a genius. | ||
I mean, I wish I could just be a genius all the time here, but, you know, I don't know. | ||
Hopefully I'm still me in heaven. | ||
I'm a little bit afraid. | ||
I hope that when we go to heaven, we don't just become a one. | ||
You know, I don't want to be one with you niggas. | ||
I want to be me. | ||
I want to be individuated. | ||
I want to be Nicholas in heaven, too. | ||
You know? | ||
And with my perfected body and, uh, you know. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I mean, I trust God's plan. | ||
I have faith that it's going to be alright. | ||
But I worry. | ||
I'm a human being, you know? | ||
And I want to retain myself. | ||
That's my biggest fear is that we die and then we just get, you know, crammed together like a ball of Play-Doh and then you don't know where I begin and where... why I begin and end. | ||
So... So it's scary. | ||
It's a scary prospect. | ||
People are saying I'm drunk. | ||
I'm not. | ||
You know what? | ||
I absolutely hate the live chat. | ||
I am not drunk. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay? | |
I've never had a sip of alcohol in my life. | ||
Drunk-ass Nick. | ||
Nick is drunk. | ||
Why don't you shut up? | ||
Sneak roiper, huh? | ||
Live chat is shackled thinking. | ||
I'm a free thinker and live chat is always with this... That's why I need to move away from all human beings. | ||
Because, honestly, you're just corrupting my genius. | ||
My light shines too bright and it blinds you, is really what's happening. | ||
And I get all these human flies, like mosquitoes, pestering me. | ||
That hot dog looks like shit. | ||
That slinger that you ate? | ||
That looks like poo. | ||
You're drunk. | ||
This and that. | ||
You know, it's like... This is why. | ||
This is why God flooded the world. | ||
Because of people like you, okay? | ||
The other day I was thinking the end of the world is going to be terrible. | ||
No, it's going to be awesome. | ||
Because at least you'll all be killed. | ||
Okay, at least all of you will be murdered by God, okay? | ||
At the minimum, we have that to look forward to. | ||
So, I hope this is the last century. | ||
But anyway, so... What was I saying about the Human Instrumentality Project or Democracy or something? | ||
Oh, no, was it... Oh, the birthday thing. | ||
Yeah, I'm gonna be 24. | ||
I'm gonna be 24. I'm gonna be 24. | ||
I don't wanna be 24, man. | ||
I want to be young. | ||
But, you know, we all grow old and then we all die. | ||
And that's, uh, and then that's that. | ||
But, uh, anyway. | ||
So happy, so on that note, happy birthday. | ||
Hope it's a good one. | ||
Cameron says, hey Nick, have you read The Rational Mail? | ||
You and him would agree a lot, mainly on simping. | ||
No, I've never read that. | ||
Spence says, is there an unwritten rule about other guys streaming while AF is on? | ||
Is it cool to watch Jaden play GeoGuessr and then watch the AF replay in the afternoon? | ||
I mean, I've never made that a rule or anything. | ||
You know, normally people don't do that, but I don't know. | ||
I guess people are doing that now. | ||
It is what it is. | ||
KillAnimal says, I stuck up for the Super Chatters and paid the price. | ||
I was just another useful idiot for the revolution. | ||
A proletarian now declared enemy of the show and sentenced to shadow ban by the man I fear, Nicholas Stalin. | ||
Please show mercy to this old fool. | ||
I'll be merciful. | ||
Kill animals. | ||
I mean, one of our favorites, of course. | ||
But you're, you know, you're attacking me the other day. | ||
You way out of line. | ||
Attacking me yesterday for crying out loud. | ||
But the Stalin comparison is favorable. | ||
Majorian says the Russians control an area of the Ukraine the size of the UK. | ||
They took that territory in 25 days. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
It's impressive. | ||
Esoteric Bro says, Hi Nick. | ||
European civilization is dying. | ||
Birth rates and free fall. | ||
Rampant immigration. | ||
Shouldn't you encourage your followers... Here we go. | ||
Concern trolling faggot. | ||
Shouldn't you encourage your followers to procreate rather than this asexual stuff? | ||
I'd say that... Point me to where I've ever encouraged people to not have kids. | ||
It just isn't there. | ||
Listen, thankfully, by the grace of God, I'm not like you people. | ||
And so I encourage you to do one thing, and I say that for me, it's just a little bit different, okay? | ||
Because when you're a special genius given gifts by God, it's just a little bit more complicated. | ||
So, I've always said to my audience, you should absolutely get married young and have lots of kids. | ||
And you know what? | ||
I mean, I'd like to get married and have kids, but | ||
I just don't really know if that's in the cards for me because I'm just kind of like so misunderstood and just basically Too high frequency for anyone to understand or deal with I'm basically just on another plane and so you have to understand that I am advocating for people to have kids and I want kids myself, but You know as a one of God's chosen people in a certain sense and That's good enough for all of you, I guess. | ||
just these gifts beyond your comprehension by the Lord. | ||
You know, maybe God has elected me to do something better than to just simp for girls. | ||
That's good enough for all of you, I guess. | ||
I mean, God created all of you guys to like, I don't know, dig tunnels or something and simp for girls. | ||
But for me, you know, maybe God had something else in mind. | ||
He said, you know what, my son, go forward, win the war, win the battle, do it for me, okay? | ||
Do it for me. | ||
And I'm like, you know what? | ||
I'm God. | ||
And if God gives me a wife, if God, and you know what? | ||
If God gives me a wife, then I will put a baby in my wife. | ||
If God puts a wife in front of me, I will marry her, I will put babies in her, and I'll be the best husband ever. | ||
And maybe that will happen. | ||
And maybe it won't. | ||
But all of you should try your hardest, you know, you should make it happen. | ||
I've always said that. | ||
So you're a little lying snake, alright? | ||
You're a little synagogue of Satan lying rat, okay? | ||
You lie! | ||
I always encourage my Aryan supporters to have lots of white kids all the time. | ||
I say that they should be fruitful and multiplying our ranks of white racial soldiers. | ||
Every night I say that! | ||
How dare you suggest otherwise! | ||
I've only said that, you know, me, I was in a real sense by the gifts given to me, appointed for maybe something greater than, you know, having some surrogate mom girlfriend pat my head and give me sweet kisses. | ||
You know, I'm destined for a life of hardship and struggle and misery and pain and torture. | ||
And martyrdom, and I've accepted that. | ||
I'm, you know, maybe I'm just better than you, but you lie. | ||
You lie! | ||
You lie. | ||
I always encourage my followers to have heterosexual vaginal sex with women for the purpose of insemination so that we can be fruitful and multiply. | ||
I have always advocated that. | ||
How dare you? | ||
I have always advocated this. | ||
unidentified
|
Once again I am being attacked for presenting new ideas. | |
I just said, hey, oh, I just said it's not the most important thing. | ||
unidentified
|
That's all. | |
I just said there's another way to think about it. | ||
Once again, I am being attacked for presenting new ideas. | ||
I'm always being attacked. | ||
And that's just because I think differently. | ||
I'm like Apple. | ||
I think differently. | ||
You faggot. | ||
I'm like Apple. | ||
I think differently. | ||
You are a shackled thinking Microsoft Jewish freak, okay? | ||
And you lie about my position. | ||
I have always advocated for hardcore husband and wife, heterosexual, penile intercourse for the purpose of insemination. | ||
I've always said that that's my position. | ||
And, you know, I've just said that, you know, I'm higher frequency than that. | ||
I'm maybe closer to the angels than I am to the people. | ||
And, you know, I have more intellect, more of an intellect-based organism than a sort of testicle-based organism. | ||
It's not to say I don't have big testicles, which I do, but it is to say that, you know, I may be of a higher, you know, like I said, I'm sort of on this higher frequency. | ||
You're sort of low frequency, you know, you're like basically eating slop in a trough, and you're, you know, humping whatever, and me, I'm like the farmer, you know. | ||
You're a little piggy eating, you know, apple cores and banana peels in the trough, rolling around in the mud, and, you know, doing all of that. | ||
Me, on the other hand, I'm sitting at the dinner table, Eating bacon. | ||
So what do you think about that? | ||
Anyway. | ||
So anyway, I mean anyway. | ||
You lie. | ||
You lie still. | ||
So you're wrong. | ||
You're wrong, Esoteric Bro. | ||
Hi Nick! | ||
I like the preamble. | ||
European civilization is dying. | ||
Really? | ||
Shouldn't you encourage... Shouldn't you... Shouldn't you... Shouldn't you shut up? | ||
Shouldn't I fucking punch you? | ||
Huh? | ||
Shouldn't I throw an elbow into your nose? | ||
Giant target by the way. | ||
Shouldn't I throw an elbow into your nose? | ||
Shouldn't I beat your ass for lying? | ||
I hate the concern trolls. | ||
Shouldn't you be doing? | ||
Shouldn't you do this? | ||
Shouldn't you? | ||
Why don't you shut up, huh? | ||
Why don't you shut up? | ||
Shut up! | ||
unidentified
|
$3 super chat. | |
I'll freaking hit you with a sledgehammer $3 super chat. | ||
Anyway, Piano Punk says Trump withdrew his endorsement of Mo Brooks today. | ||
He wouldn't be, he would be by far and away the best senator if he got in. | ||
Why is Trump being a fat orange George Bush? | ||
Mo Brooks stopped talking about election fraud and said that it was fake, is my understanding of it. | ||
So I think it's legitimate. | ||
But the endorsements are terrible. | ||
That notwithstanding. | ||
Donald Trump says, I think social media is the reason for short-term memory, but the rise of TikTok is a massive accelerator. | ||
15 second clips with useless info is for sure reducing retention for understanding larger concepts. | ||
Yeah, I absolutely agree with that. | ||
Absolutely agree. | ||
TikTok is like I mean, talk about poison. | ||
People used to complain that TV rots your brain. | ||
Compare, like, an episode of Drake and Josh to TikTok. | ||
And people said, like, Nickelodeon was rotting people's brains. | ||
And look at how bad TikTok is. | ||
It's like a weapon of mass destruction. | ||
Eddie Van Gramps' favorite Scorsese movie? | ||
Ooh, that's a good question. | ||
Um... Probably, um... | ||
Hmm, probably either Goodfellas or Casino. | ||
I mean Goodfellas is just like a perfect movie. | ||
Casino's like maybe a little bit more stylish. | ||
Um, but I love them both. | ||
You can't lose. | ||
You get Joe Pesci, Robert De Niro, Martin Scorsese in both. | ||
You can't lose. | ||
And of course, Goodfellas is just a perfect movie. | ||
Perfect mob film. | ||
Um, I like Goodfellas better than The Godfather. | ||
Some people say that's controversial, but... I mean, I like Goodfellas more. | ||
I probably, I would say Godfather 2 is like the better movie, but... | ||
I mean I would prefer to watch Goodfellas and Casino is just a little too long I guess and it's a little bit the narration I think is a little bit weak I think that's a weak way to move the story along all the narration I think it's kind of cheap and it's also not really a mob movie you know Casino is it has the same kind of like pace as Goodfellas and is some I mean it's technically about the mob but it's it's really more about | ||
Ace Rothstein and his wife you know it's really it's kind of like a it's kind of like a dramatic movie within a mob setting you know but it's really about the relationship between who is that Sharon Stone and Robert De Niro then it is about I mean it is obviously it's about Vegas but it's also but I think the real focus is on the relationship but I think they're both fine movies those would be my two favorites probably | ||
Oh yeah, Taxi Driver, of course. | ||
I totally forgot about Taxi Driver. | ||
Yeah, that would be up there for sure. | ||
I'd probably say Taxi Driver. | ||
I think that would be my favorite actually. | ||
I totally forgot because that's much earlier. | ||
unidentified
|
But yeah, I agree. | |
Yeah, Taxi Driver's probably the best. | ||
And that was before Robert De Niro. | ||
That was, if I recall, it's like his first big picture, right? | ||
But, I mean, Scorsese and De Niro, great pairing. | ||
They're in, what? | ||
Raging Bull, Taxi Driver. | ||
unidentified
|
Irishman. | |
Was King of Comedy, was that? | ||
unidentified
|
Was that Scorsese? | |
I don't remember, but yeah, yeah, Taxi Driver, that's a good one. | ||
Raging Bull, also good, but I don't like the black and white and it's like more boxing deal. | ||
unidentified
|
Mean Streets, yeah. | |
Anyway, Humongous Blungus is what's your take on rural life? | ||
City slickers are looking mad goofy right now and I'm not willing to be held up by VACs, mask mandates, or minority criminals just so I can have lay city experience. | ||
Well, I mean, you say lay. | ||
I mean, it's like, how old does that mean? | ||
I hate rural life. | ||
I would never want to live in a rural area. | ||
You just, I mean, you just don't get it. | ||
I mean, these rural people, we all have to Sort of suffer their, you know, old city slicker, oh we were hit in the hell by a negro and all this kind of stuff. | ||
It's like, you just have to roll your eyes at this kind of stuff. | ||
This sort of Philistinism, you know. | ||
Listen to each their own But I'm not from the farms. | ||
I will never live on a farm. | ||
It's just not that's just not my way of life Okay, I have a lot of respect for farmers. | ||
We need farmers But I am NOT a farmer. | ||
I was born in the suburbs of Chicago And I wouldn't have it any other way, you know on these farmers they get to the city and they're totally disoriented, you know, I They don't know how to drive. | ||
They don't know how to do anything, you know? | ||
They don't know... because, like, in a city, you have to actually develop... and there's different skill sets, of course. | ||
You know, farmers develop strength because they do manual labor and, you know, they're punctual and they wake up on time and, you know, there's a lot that goes with being a farmer, but it's a different skill set in the city. | ||
In the city, gotta be a little quicker, a little bit of a quicker tempo. | ||
Okay, we talk faster, we think faster, we work faster. | ||
We're alert. | ||
We're aware. | ||
We're aware of our surroundings. | ||
We know everybody. | ||
We know how things work. | ||
We know how to drive. | ||
We know how to drive fast. | ||
Five-lane highway. | ||
How to drive in a congested city. | ||
Okay? | ||
Um, and, you know, we're cultured. | ||
And it just so happens also that we are cultured, too. | ||
You know, there's real cultural output happening in the city as well. | ||
And, you know, people, all the anti-city stuff is just a giant cope. | ||
And we all tolerate it for the same reason we tolerate, like, black people complaining. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like, because it's just not even fair. | |
It's sort of like punching down when you really get into an argument with the rural people. | ||
You know, the rural people are at it again. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah. | |
Okay, Farmer Brown. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, all right. | |
All right, Cletus. | ||
All right. | ||
All right, Mary Sue and, you know, Joe Bob and all that. | ||
Here we go. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, blacks robbing! | |
Oh, fag flags! | ||
Duh! | ||
Oh yeah, cope, cope, cope, cope. | ||
unidentified
|
Major cope. | |
Major cope. | ||
I mean, it is what it is. | ||
The cities have always been the center of civilization. | ||
You know, when we think about Rome, we think about the Roman countryside or do we think of Rome? | ||
You know, we think of the Roman Empire. | ||
Are we thinking about, oh, remember all those farmers? | ||
Or do you remember Rome? | ||
Do you remember the Colosseum? | ||
And you remember, you remember what happened in Rome, in the city? | ||
And the same goes for all of it, you know. | ||
Same goes for any great empire, any great civilization. | ||
The cities are the beating heart. | ||
That's the seat of the government, that's the seat of the power, of the merchants, the finance, the art, all of it. | ||
I'm thinking about, like, where did our greatest president come from? | ||
New York! | ||
Donald Trump! | ||
You know, Donald Trump was a city guy. | ||
He was in the biggest city. | ||
unidentified
|
He's from New York. | |
And you look at like FDR, you look at any of them, they're all big city guys. | ||
And then you look at our cringiest presidents like Harry Truman. | ||
Harry Truman or Ronald Reagan. | ||
Ronald Reagan from the middle of nowhere in Illinois. | ||
Harry Truman from Missouri. | ||
And Harry Truman gave us Israel and NATO expansion. | ||
And Reagan, you know, we all know what that was all about. | ||
Bill Clinton from Arkansas. | ||
And the city gave us FDR and Trump and JFK. | ||
and yeah so when you look at these old videos of the cities like that when we think about like what America used to be I don't think anybody looks at like a farm from the 19th century people look at like 1940s New York people look at like 1920s LA they look at 1920s Detroit Chicago they're not like wow gee look at this farm look at this 19th century farm You know, they're like, wow, look at the Empire State Building. | ||
Look, you know, that's what they talk about. | ||
They're like, wow, look at the Chrysler Building. | ||
Look at this kind of stuff. | ||
You know? | ||
So, the farmer thing, the farmer thing is such a cope. | ||
I'm sick and tired of these rural people. | ||
It's like, it's enough already. | ||
It's enough already, okay? | ||
You know, these rural people, they have such a chip on their shoulder. | ||
Supposedly it's the best place ever, but you know, they always have to talk about it, right? | ||
I never talk about, hey rural people, what's your feelings on city slickers? | ||
You wanna know why? | ||
We don't care. | ||
You know, all these rural people, hey Nick, what do y'all think of us rural folk, huh? | ||
I mean, we're way better than y'all and it's like... We don't care. | ||
Nigga, we don't care. | ||
unidentified
|
We don't care. | |
So. | ||
It's all these rural people. | ||
You go to these rural places and they don't have anything going on. | ||
You know, we were in Michigan. | ||
There's not one good restaurant at all. | ||
Not one. | ||
They didn't have one good restaurant in all of Lansing. | ||
And I've been all over. | ||
I've been to the country in Georgia, in Alabama, In Kentucky, and Illinois, and Iowa, and Missouri, and Indiana, and Michigan, and Wisconsin, and Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nebraska, you name it. | ||
I mean I've been around. | ||
And there's like no good restaurants, and everything looks like a strip mall. | ||
You know all these rural cities are just the same. | ||
They have like a they have a one major drag with like a Walmart and like a car dealership and a freaking Cracker Barrel, and they have a you know gas stations and And even in these Midwestern cities, they'll have like one little like downtown and then the downtown is totally gay so You know, it's almost like you get the worst of both worlds. | ||
All these farmers, they have, like, uptown, and in every one of these uptowns, it's still liberal. | ||
Like, Birmingham, Alabama, you still have, like, faggots. | ||
You still have black crime, you know? | ||
And you go to even these smaller towns, and guess what? | ||
You still have trendy faggots. | ||
You go to the campus college town, still have trendy faggots. | ||
It's like, so... | ||
You just get the trendy faggots in uptown without, like, anything good at all. | ||
Without architecture, art, music, resources, good food, you know? | ||
So... I mean, I hate to say it, but, I mean, that's just the reality, so... | ||
I mean, I went to Beardson's little town, and Beardson, he lives in like, he doesn't live in any, he doesn't live near a major city, but he's got a little town, and the town is totally liberal. | ||
And the people in it are totally goofy. | ||
So... | ||
And I went to Auburn, you know, because I was thinking about going to school there and same thing. | ||
It was a little liberal campus town or college town. | ||
And I went to Birmingham, liberal. | ||
And I went to Atlanta, liberal and very black. | ||
And I've been, you know, I've been all over and it's the same story. | ||
Even in these small, small towns you still have like the yuppie You know, LGBT crowd opens up a coffee shop, we all know it, in one of those old industrial buildings where they used to make fucking missiles for the war or whatever, and they set up a faggy little coffee shop, and they hold their gay club meetings there. | ||
And we all know it, so these rural people, it's like, yeah, you have a gun store, and yeah, you got the tractor store and all that, but then you also have a trendy little hipster downtown. | ||
So, yes, I don't really want to hear it. | ||
And And the cities have great people. | ||
The cities have these old neighborhoods. | ||
They have these old neighborhood people, and this is where you get, like, this is where you get real neighborhood guys, you know? | ||
And they all grew up together, and they're in the trades, and this is where you get these real, you know, so it's not like you don't find conservatives in big cities. | ||
You'll find, you'll find very conservative people in the big cities, and very good people, and real, real salt-of-the-earth, working-class city people. | ||
And it's great and it's like it's this whole ecosystem and there's so much going on and I love it. | ||
I can't imagine living anywhere but the city. | ||
I love the city. | ||
So, anti-city people are just coping, you know. | ||
but uh you know to each their own you can live in the you can live in the farm and we'll live in the city you know more for us more for us now it's always these complaints where it's like it really is just a big cope it's like you know oh you live in the city oh well the most real it's like i've lived around here my entire life and i've never been in danger i've never been threatened by criminals | ||
And, uh, you know, some of those conservative people I've met, I've met in the city. | ||
Then you meet these people from the South, and they're more liberal than the people in the city. | ||
All the reactionaries live in the city. | ||
Then you get these people from, like, southern Illinois, and they're, like, the Zionist neocon. | ||
They support, like, fucking Paul Ryan and stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
But... | ||
Yeah, you know people want to be in the country. | ||
Hey, that's your prerogative. | ||
That's your prerogative. | ||
Somebody's got to live there. | ||
Somebody's got to live out there in Missouri. | ||
I don't know how they do it. | ||
I don't know how they do it. | ||
It's too boring. | ||
You know, it's too it's too like boring, you know, there's like nothing going on. | ||
You go out to these rural areas and it's like yawn, you know, you can't get a decent meal and you know, I like to go out at midnight and get a burger, and I like to drive around, I like to see the streetlights, and I like to drive by the lake, and I like to look at the tall buildings and marvel at the white achievement. | ||
I love to look at giant skyscrapers and say, wow! | ||
What a symbol of our great civilization! | ||
You know, I love to marvel at, and they're just there, you know, they're just there to look at. | ||
And I just love to marvel at white achievement, you know, American achievement, And I love to drive around, and the city's alive, and I like to blast the music, and go by the riverfront, and go by the lakefront. | ||
And, you know, it's just, it's a magical thing. | ||
I mean, the farm stuff, it's just like, it's too boring, and not much going on. | ||
So, you know, what do they even do there? | ||
Tip cows over and stuff, and they don't have good internet, and I don't even know what I would do. | ||
But we love our farmers. | ||
We love our farmers, we love our rural people, and they're very quaint. | ||
They're very quaint, seething over the city. | ||
You know, that's a thing city people don't think about. | ||
They don't think about the rural. | ||
You know, the rural people, they hate the city people, and they're, oh, you're a city slicker, huh? | ||
That's like city people, we're like, oh, is something going on over there? | ||
It's too busy being awesome over here. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Anyway. | ||
City slickers are looking mad goofy right now. | ||
Oh really? | ||
You sound pretty goofy. | ||
Humongous blungus as Russia announced a year ago that they would clone Scythian soldiers. | ||
Meanwhile STEM in this country is slowly becoming a meme. | ||
Colleges are starting to turn science into a social justice struggle. | ||
Is this the rural take? | ||
I guess the memes get to the country like 10 years late because he's saying he says lay city experience so I guess the memes are getting there like three or four years late and I guess the information is too. | ||
Colleges are social justice? | ||
Groundbreaking take you know here in the city we heard about that back in 2014 but maybe it's just getting there. | ||
So yeah, you're going to start hearing about this Milo and Ben Shapiro thing. | ||
You're going to love it. | ||
And then you're going to hear about Donald Trump. | ||
Now you're really going to get excited about that. | ||
I can't wait for you guys to find out about Donald Trump. | ||
It's going to blow you away, really. | ||
But I guess it just takes a little bit longer to get over there. | ||
But trust me, you're gonna like it. | ||
BlackRoyper says, there were always vax mandates. | ||
Okay, retard. | ||
I don't remember a wagee scanning people's phones to go into McDonald's. | ||
I hope Vades is real. | ||
I'm not gonna feel sorry for these people. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
They always say that, like, we always had vax mandates. | ||
It's like, no, we didn't. | ||
Like, we absolutely did not. | ||
I lived my entire life without that happening. | ||
And now they try to make it out like this is the most normal thing ever. | ||
It definitely isn't. | ||
Tyler says, Nick your hair looks epic tonight. | ||
It actually sort of reminds me of Trump's hair in his younger years. | ||
Remember the early days of AF when you used to lather in product and slick it back? | ||
I definitely never lathered it in and slicked it back, okay? | ||
I don't think that ever happened. | ||
That sounds like something my mom would say. | ||
I definitely never lathered in product and slicked it back. | ||
That was never happening. | ||
I used to put a little bit of pomade in my hair and I used to comb it a little bit more neatly. | ||
But there was... I was never lathering in the product and slicking it back. | ||
I don't know what, you know, you're talking about there. | ||
But I am gonna get a haircut. | ||
I gotta clean it up a little bit. | ||
Fucking people, man. | ||
I swear. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see. | |
Birdie with a big super chat. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Says, thank you for being a man of integrity and honor, giving courage and strength to Kings all over the USA. | ||
I want to give your mom and dad a shout out. | ||
We love them and thank them for what they have done for this great nation. | ||
If there are Groypers in Ohio, gubernatorial candidate Joe Blystone could use a hand in his primary. | ||
Versus the establishment xoxo Birdie Bird. | ||
Well hey, thank you so much for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
07s. | |
And thanks for the shout-out to my parents. | ||
I don't think they're awake right now, but I'm sure they appreciate that. | ||
Majorians, as the BBC's Russian office can only confirm, 557 Russian deaths in the war. | ||
You can't hide 10,000 deaths. | ||
Well, yeah, as of March 2nd, I believe, they said there were that many. | ||
But... And that's from the Russian Foreign Ministry, but we don't have any new numbers. | ||
Krustin says, hi Nick, I'm a first-time viewer coming from TikTok. | ||
It's been a very good time. | ||
Enjoyed the stream. | ||
By the way, have you played Elden Ring yet? | ||
Hey, welcome aboard! | ||
No, I've never played those games. | ||
I'm not good at video games. | ||
Okay, I'm just not good at them. | ||
So, that just seems like it would be horrible. | ||
A horrible experience. | ||
I'm not good at easy video games, let alone hard video games. | ||
So... | ||
No, I mean, maybe I'll try it just for fun, but I don't think I'll have fun. | ||
Kevin Brough with the big super chats as the State Department learned their lesson since the 113th Congress. | ||
If you recall, they demonized Syria after the chemical attacks to pressure a floor vote for an authorization of force. | ||
We didn't bite the red line bait and the tragedy propaganda was laid on real thick. | ||
But not enough to pass committee consideration. | ||
Yeah, I brought that up earlier. | ||
It's the same story as 2013. | ||
All over again. | ||
Same deal. | ||
They wanted the war in Syria, they drew the red line, Assad used the chemical weapons, and yeah, you're right, then they didn't take the bait. | ||
But they learned their lesson. | ||
But thanks for the big super chat, man. | ||
Love you, Kevin, bro. | ||
Yeah, he's funny. | ||
You know, he's saying the N-word. | ||
He says he hates women. | ||
You know, he's starting to sound more and more like me. | ||
I mean, I hate to say that, but some of the things he says, I'm like, whoa. | ||
I would have said that on my show, America First. | ||
Pietro says, if you're Sheev Fuentes when you're talking to General Jaden about your new, stronger, more powerful apprentice, will you tell him that Count Casey's death was a necessary loss? | ||
Yeah, thank you for that. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
Kai says, debated drug-addicted leftists on stream with Haas yesterday. | ||
Such unlikely friendships being struck over the Ukraine-Russia issue. | ||
Yeah, I heard about that. | ||
Yeah, nice work. | ||
Victor says, Nick, I'm not gonna lie that in my heart I still root for Ukraine in the war. | ||
I can't help it. | ||
I still have that Slavic pride in me. | ||
But you gave a really good and mature take on the situation that I can't argue with because it's the truth. | ||
It hurts to watch my favorite streamer saying, go Russia, down with Ukraine. | ||
But I resign myself to the fact that it must be this way. | ||
Nevertheless, this is still the best show on the internet and I'll still be loyal to AF. | ||
I love you and I love this movement. | ||
Well, hey, thanks a lot, man. | ||
Listen, I don't mean to offend you as a Ukrainian. | ||
I appreciate the superchats. | ||
I appreciate the support. | ||
But it's about global security and you have to ask yourself, you know, have the policies pursued by the Ukrainian government made Ukraine safe? | ||
It's a failure. | ||
And for all these people saying, what about Ukraine's security? | ||
Yeah, great question. | ||
What about Ukraine's security? | ||
Is Ukraine secure? | ||
Has the policy of pursuing NATO membership, has that made them more safe? | ||
Obviously not. | ||
Obviously not, you know? | ||
And so you can look at it through a few different lenses and still come up with the same answer. | ||
It's not good for us, America. | ||
It's not good for Ukraine, and it's not good for Russia. | ||
So why is it happening? | ||
It's happening because it's good for the State Department, or so they think. | ||
So, the rest of the stuff, you know I say that to get a rise out of the left, because it's contrarian and it's fun and all of that, and I legitimately do support Russia for other reasons, but you have to ask yourself again, Uh, how did we arrive here? | ||
And we arrived here because State Department is unwilling to cooperate with Russia and they embolden this radical regime in Ukraine which they helped to install. | ||
So, um... | ||
I'm rooting against, you know, people say I'm rooting against America, right? | ||
People say, you say America first and you're rooting for Russia. | ||
When I say I want America to be humiliated, I'm not talking about my homeland and my nation. | ||
I'm talking about this regime. | ||
And so similarly, when I say down with Ukraine, I don't really, I'm not, I don't want people in Ukraine to be killed. | ||
But the regime in Ukraine is a pawn of the globalist apparatus. | ||
So, you know, I don't think I'm really saying anything here out of line. | ||
I hope it's not too offensive, but you gotta understand where it's coming from. | ||
We're all at war with the regime in a certain light, you know. | ||
I mean, the regime is against all of us. | ||
Ukrainians, Americans, Russians. | ||
But hey, I appreciate it, man. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Kai says, Nick, I need some advice, man. | ||
I'm only 19. | ||
What do I do before I'm 23? | ||
You talking about it so negatively makes me terrified. | ||
Well, you should just keep in mind that your time is running out. | ||
You know, people, people... It's really, it's the saddest thing in life is people waste time. | ||
And they waste time because they don't realize that they're losing it always. | ||
and you're not getting it back and it's irreversible. | ||
And, you know, so life is actually very short. | ||
And we're all going to die, and we don't know when we're going to die, and we only have so much time. | ||
And it's always running out. | ||
And like I said, you're never getting more of it, and you only have one life. | ||
And so there's something scary about the irreversibility of it, the finality of it, the fact that it's ceaselessly marching forward. | ||
You know, it gives you anxiety. | ||
I mean that I think that's like the definition of anxiety. | ||
And so the best thing you could do is just use your time. | ||
Use your time. | ||
Stop wasting time. | ||
Do things that are fulfilling to you and don't waste your time. | ||
Now, don't get me wrong. | ||
You know, you're not going to live your life of your dreams. | ||
Okay? | ||
We don't live dreams. | ||
We live in reality, sadly. | ||
But, you know, what that means is there's this duality where at once you want to make your time count, but you also want to enjoy your time. | ||
And what matters in the end is did you enjoy your life? | ||
What did you do with your life? | ||
And you have to be asking yourself these questions all the time. | ||
There's this tension there where you want to make it count, but you also want to enjoy. | ||
So, you know, that doesn't mean, hey, YOLO, live your whole life traveling, you know, follow your dreams. | ||
But it does mean, you know, do something worthwhile. | ||
And while you're living your life, make sure you're enjoying it. | ||
Make sure you're never taking it extremely seriously. | ||
In the sense that like, you know, sometimes I'll take the scenic route, you know, sometimes I'll stay up all night, sometimes I'll do something reckless, I'll throw caution to the wind, in a sense. | ||
And, um, you know, I'll eat at McDonald's. | ||
You know, I'll cheat on, you know, the so-called diet or whatever. | ||
Not like I have a real diet, but I'll order a pizza and I'll eat a whole pizza. | ||
And I'm disciplined and everything, but I also want to enjoy my life. | ||
And if eating a pizza on Friday and drinking Pepsi, if that's not part of my life, I'm not really enjoying it, you know? | ||
Can I do it every day? | ||
No, because then I wouldn't be fit and I can't do things that matter, but you understand there's this constant duality and so you have to live the life that you want within reason, within a reasonable set of expectations. | ||
So, but that is the scary thing about life at any age. | ||
It's always pressing on and it's accelerating, you know, it feels as though it's accelerating as time goes on and you have to realize it'll be over before you know it. | ||
So, and a lot of people don't do that, and that is when they're given to wasting their time, and then they waste their whole life. | ||
And how that happens is you waste a lot of time, and then you can't catch up. | ||
It's very sad. | ||
People waste a lot of time and you know it's sort of like this from the moment you're born you have all of these possible trajectories. | ||
You've got all these permutations how your life will unfold. | ||
And with each passing day, more of these options are closing. | ||
And, you know, the range of options is narrowing. | ||
And you could say that it's always relatively broad, but it's never as broad as it was the day before. | ||
And, you know, what'll happen to people is they'll waste lots of time and they will close off large branches of possibility in their life And then that's it. | ||
And people will sort of work themselves into a trap. | ||
And you see this where people make life-altering decisions without much care and without thinking. | ||
They'll create habits that are bad, and you'll find that you're 30 or 40 and you're trapped. | ||
And you have no control over your life. | ||
And in some sense, we don't really have control over our life. | ||
But if we make habitual good decisions, we can influence the direction of our life. | ||
And we can influence it in a direction which is more favorable to us. | ||
And if you're not doing that, you're just sort of giving away your life. | ||
And you're just sort of throwing it away. | ||
And you're giving it to chance. | ||
And you wind up in a situation where your life is not of your making. | ||
And you're not in control anymore. | ||
And for some people, they get trapped in a good thing. | ||
And what I mean by that is, you're not in control of your life, but you've steered your life in a direction that you're okay with. | ||
You know, like if you have a wife and kids, like you are in a sense trapped, but if you find the right one and you have kids, you're in a good place. | ||
You don't have as much control of your life as you did when you were single, but you steered it to a place where, you know, you created a life for yourself that you like. | ||
I see in a lot of people they create a dynamic where they have a job they don't like, they're in a relationship they don't like, they're in a dynamic that doesn't work. | ||
It's very sad. | ||
And then you spend time digging yourself out and changing direction and... So... It's a scary prospect. | ||
It's a very scary prospect. | ||
And that's why you've got to take control, you know? | ||
And you've just got to start thinking and Kai, you know, you're very on top of it, but You just gotta you gotta stay alive, you know, like you could be my grandma's used to saying that she said, you know, there's like there's a difference between like Being alive and living. | ||
I don't know if that's exactly what she said But you know, she said there's if you have no quality of life. | ||
You're like a vegetable. | ||
You're not alive, you know, and you're not you're not really living and you got to make sure that always you're you're just | ||
You have that spark you have that zeal you know that love for life and you're you know you got a plan you got a scheme you got something going on you know and and life throws you for a loop you got to be flexible but I think you also have to have an idea you got to have a vision you got to have a plan you know you got to come up with an idea of a life for yourself And work toward that end. | ||
And yeah, it'll be upset and thwarted and you may die. | ||
But you gotta be working towards it. | ||
So... That's my take on that. | ||
But yeah, I mean, I'm... You know, I'm getting older. | ||
I'm gonna die. | ||
And the world will go on. | ||
Life will go on without me. | ||
And you know, it's scary. | ||
And you know, when you get older, it's like you're just inching closer. | ||
And you know what? | ||
I mean, yeah, if I live the normal life expectancy, death is far off for me, but you know what? | ||
It's gonna happen one day. | ||
What's the difference between the day I die and like tomorrow? | ||
Well, it's really just like a matter of time. | ||
It's just like more waiting. | ||
You know, just like when you were eight years old, you couldn't wait for your birthday or Christmas, and you couldn't possibly think you'd be 23. | ||
Right? | ||
But yet, here I am. | ||
And surely, just as the day that I turn 23 arrived, the day that I turn 25 will arrive, and the day that I turn 45 will arrive. | ||
You know, if I, like I said, if I, assuming I live a normal life expectancy, and, you know, every calendar year, I pass the date that I will die unknowingly, and one day I'll wake up, and that'll be it. | ||
You know, one day I'll wake up, or go to bed, that'll be the last day. | ||
And that'll be the last time I get out of bed and brush my teeth and do my thing and I'll talk to at some point I'll talk to you or that person for the last time and I'll been here went to that restaurant for the last time and then that'll be it and then it's over and then it's all over you know at least for this part and what happens next well you know we believe that we'll have an afterlife but we have faith because we can't know you know we can't know for sure | ||
And that you know it's the it's the unknowing that's really the problem for me because like I like to know I like to have certainty I like to I like something to be a done deal but but that's just it I mean we can't know I believe we'll go to heaven I believe we'll have eternal life but you just can't really be sure can you you know and that's a little troubling because you know this is our ultimate destiny this is our ultimate destination | ||
And this is all we've ever known, you know? | ||
So it's like, what's outside of this? | ||
We don't know! | ||
What's outside this experience? | ||
It's pretty freaky when you really get down to it. | ||
You know, where are we, really? | ||
I mean, when you think about it, like, where are we? | ||
What are we doing here? | ||
You know, when you zoom out, it's pretty, uh... It's pretty freaky. | ||
unidentified
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But, um... | |
So, yeah. | ||
So, you know, just enjoy. | ||
Enjoy your young. | ||
Just get on top of it, man. | ||
I mean, I've done that. | ||
I'm very happy with my life. | ||
I'm very pleased. | ||
I just hung out with a couple of friends of mine from high school. | ||
That's why I was a little late. | ||
A couple of friends of mine from high school were over. | ||
I haven't seen in a long time. | ||
And they were telling me they're like every... because I'm asking about everybody. | ||
I'm like, how's this one? | ||
How's that person? | ||
And they're like, well, everybody's pretty much an alcoholic and they all have jobs they hate and everyone's miserable. | ||
And so I feel pretty good about my life because I always did what I wanted to do. | ||
And I built a life for myself where I feel very fulfilled. | ||
I feel very satisfied. | ||
I feel like I've done a lot for my age. | ||
I feel very accomplished. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
I feel like it's the the nostalgia is more pronounced in people that that are not fulfilled you know they didn't do everything they could in there you know the previous chapter but I feel good I feel good about you know the work that I've done but it's just like you know it's almost in a sense already over because | ||
You know you there's something to be said about the fact that the anticipation for something is better than the thing itself and you know it's almost as though once something commences it's almost already over. | ||
Have you ever thought about that? | ||
Like you make a plan and you can't wait for a vacation, a trip, a date, whatever. | ||
And it's out there, it's in the distance, and there's this excitement, there's this anticipation, and then it begins, but it's almost like as soon as it begins, it's over. | ||
You know? | ||
And it's really over at like the halfway point. | ||
You know what? | ||
At a certain point, you're halfway there. | ||
And you're sort of at the peak, and you're looking down at the other side. | ||
You're rising rising rising and then at a certain point there's a peak and you look down and then it's falling falling falling and then it's over and You know, so you really have to savor that before part. | ||
You really have to savor the anticipation, the build-up, and then when you're in it, you better enjoy it. | ||
You better savor it, because it's... and that's how I feel about adulthood. | ||
You know, I feel like that anticipation is like you're a child, then you're an adult, and then you're in. | ||
And I'm in it right now, and I'm in my 20s, and my 20s are almost halfway over, and then I'll be in my 30s, and then I'll turn 40, and then my life is half over, you know? | ||
And then, you know, then you're in the latter half of the game, and then you turn 60 or 70, and then it's like, well, hey. | ||
And then you're looking back. | ||
You're like, wow, that was pretty good, right? | ||
And then it's over! | ||
And then it's all over! | ||
And then it's all over! | ||
And guess what? | ||
As time goes on, people you know start to die, and things change, and it's just not the same. | ||
And, uh, you know. | ||
Yeah, your youth, you blossom in your youth, and then like everything else, you grow old. | ||
And your looks, and your faculties, and your physicality, and all of it just begins to sort of wane. | ||
That's just it. | ||
It's not even like you live to be 80 and you feel like you're 17. | ||
It's like, no, sort of like you get to 30 and then it's like, okay. | ||
unidentified
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But... And then, and then it's over. | |
And then you're just dust, okay? | ||
Then you're just dusted. | ||
Then you're gone. | ||
Then you're just gone. | ||
Then you blow away in the wind. | ||
Like everybody else that's ever lived. | ||
That's what's always scared me. | ||
How many countless people that have ever lived that were here, gone, and we don't even know who they are. | ||
And there's no record of them. | ||
There's no record that they ever existed. | ||
People just like you and me. | ||
With, you know, passions and fears and... | ||
And everything, and they were here just as surely as we were with their ancestors and their empire and so on, and now they're gone without a trace. | ||
They're gone. | ||
No trace of them. | ||
No one remembers. | ||
It's just over. | ||
Even the greats, even kings, kings and princes and famous people and philosophers who no one will ever know, lost to history. | ||
And, you know, eventually the world will end and, you know, all this whole thing will just be gone. | ||
And then, you know, what do they say? | ||
The age of man will come to an end or something like that? | ||
Everything will have passed. | ||
It's over. | ||
Then it's all over. | ||
Then it's all over. | ||
So, it's pretty, pretty, uh... But, and this is where, but hey! | ||
This is the kind of mindset that you have to have. | ||
Because once you have that mindset, you look at life a lot differently. | ||
And you also think about the eternal a lot differently. | ||
Because this, I think, allows people to give themselves more to religion. | ||
You know, because when you realize the transience and the temporality of everything, that is when it really, that's when you really feel You know what what God is telling you? | ||
You know it's a lot harder to hear God when you're like going to work and you're like oh my gosh like this person said this and I'm hungry and everything but then when you think about the fact that this whole the whole history on this planet is here today and gone tomorrow then you're like whoa okay now it's a lot easier to think with a moral frame and with the divine frame and so on and | ||
And you know that with all the malaise and confusion, all the torment that comes with being a human will all be washed away when we die. | ||
You know, that's the flip side. | ||
Because, you know, the good thing is that life, there are mysteries and there are things that we don't know. | ||
And that's actually a good thing. | ||
There's actually a great refuge in that. | ||
Because could you imagine if this is all that there was to creation? | ||
That would really suck. | ||
I mean, if all that there was was, you know, like romance and like... | ||
Thrill and excitement. | ||
I mean that would be pretty lame because I, you know, we've seen all of that for the most part, right? | ||
I mean by the time you're like 20, 25, you've really seen a lot of what life has to offer and if that's all that there was, really wouldn't be a whole lot. | ||
If you had all the answers, that would be a pretty small world. | ||
You know so good news is the bad news is this doesn't last forever the good news is none of this lasts forever the bad news is we don't know the good news is we don't know you know so it's really you know that that process I think you kind of bring you out of a materialistic frame of mind you know when once you undergo this you know you think through it You kind of arrive at a final destination where you're like, you know what? | ||
There is a creator. | ||
I am confident that we'll be saved. | ||
I am confident. | ||
I'm hopeful that we'll be saved. | ||
I'm hopeful that there's a world to come and we'll be a part of it and so on, you know. | ||
But you do have to kind of go through this process of anxiety and despair and fear and all of that. | ||
And then you arrive at realizing, you know, none of this really matters on some level. | ||
It doesn't matter as much as we sometimes think it does. | ||
And, uh, the death is actually the white pill. | ||
unidentified
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Actually. | |
You know? | ||
And then, you know, you're sort of liberated to really just enjoy your life. | ||
You're not clinging to it. | ||
You're using it. | ||
You're living it, you know? | ||
So... But that's why I don't... That's why I don't like the birthdays, because it's slipping away! | ||
Your one life! | ||
But, you know, hopefully then we get eternal life. | ||
unidentified
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If we're good, if we're good. | |
But it is the death that gives meaning to life, you know. | ||
I mean, I know I'm not the first person to say that. | ||
Yeah, groundbreaking take, I know. | ||
But without the death, the life means nothing, you know. | ||
So we are really born to die in more ways than one. | ||
You know, it's sort of like backwards. | ||
Your death gives meaning to the life that you lived, really. | ||
So it has to happen this way. | ||
And so it has to happen. | ||
This is the way that things are. | ||
Resign yourself to this. | ||
Don't be afraid. | ||
Don't be afraid. | ||
Do not be anxious. | ||
Accept. | ||
Resign yourself to it. | ||
You know, enjoy. | ||
Try to let go. | ||
I mean, that's really what it is. | ||
It's foundational. | ||
Let go. | ||
Gotta let go. | ||
Let go of the world. | ||
Let go of your wants. | ||
You know, you have to learn to just let go of it all and then you realize that was really the source of all the negativity. | ||
But it's easier said than done. | ||
So, Chad Guy says, once you inevitably rise to power and become king of America, echoing monarchs, would you be willing to make the sacrifice of entering a political marriage to ease tensions with China? | ||
You might have to consider marrying Cathy Xu to avoid war between the two great nations. | ||
You know, I will always do whatever it takes. | ||
I think you know that by now. | ||
If that is what is required of me, To end the war between America and China. | ||
If I have to form a political marriage with the beautiful daughter of the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, I will do what I must. | ||
I think you know that I will do whatever it takes to make America great again, even if it entails marrying some, you know, when I'm an elder statesman, marrying some 18 year old Daughter of a Chinese Communist official. | ||
I will do what I must. | ||
So, and you know that. | ||
Bob Jones says, SelectiveService tweeted about a draft today and how they will work with FEMA on conscientious objectors. | ||
Are they insane? | ||
Who would fight for this gay country? | ||
Love you, buddy. | ||
I wouldn't fight for America, let alone Ukraine. | ||
unidentified
|
So yeah, I don't know what the hell they're thinking. | |
Hedy Van Gram says, I pray that if God wills it, he'll provide you with a wife. | ||
You deserve to be familiar with the joy of sex with your wife. | ||
It's one of God's truly perfect creations. | ||
Can you just stop? | ||
You could have just stopped at, I pray that God will give you a wife. | ||
Not, I pray that you can enjoy perfect sex. | ||
Like, what the f... What is wrong with you people? | ||
You know when you say stuff like that it makes me never want to have sex. | ||
It makes me never want to have sex when people say shit like that. | ||
Like people, like just the thought of you people imagining me having sex grosses me out. | ||
And like wanting me to be like, wow that was great! | ||
Like that just makes me want to fucking throw up. | ||
Okay, don't think about that. | ||
Don't don't think about me at all. | ||
Stop thinking about me. | ||
Stop forming opinions about me. | ||
Stop thinking about me. | ||
Just stop conceptualizing me. | ||
Okay, just leave me alone. | ||
Stop coming up with ideas about me. | ||
You're bastardizing my identity. | ||
Freak. | ||
Thinking about me having sex, you freak. | ||
Stop thinking about me having sex. | ||
Get the fuck away from me. | ||
I don't even, you know, you're a stranger on the internet talking about you wanting me to enjoy sex. | ||
sex no weird that is I don't want you know I don't when you talk like that I don't want to have sex I don't want to have sex. | ||
I don't want to drink. | ||
I don't want to do anything. | ||
I just want to be miserable and work when you say stuff like that. | ||
Horrible. | ||
Horrible, horrible. | ||
Guy says, Nick, it will be great. | ||
Don't worry. | ||
It's just despicable. | ||
Jason says, you'll find your Ava Braun, King. | ||
Yeah. | ||
No, I won't. | ||
Never mind. | ||
No, I definitely don't want that anymore. | ||
Not even interested anymore. | ||
Makes me want to kill myself when you people talk like that. | ||
Anna Doe says, was the Halo series anti-christian propaganda? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I never played Halo until like a year ago. | ||
The Covenant are religious zealots whose main goal is eternal salvation while the humans are under a godless global government with no real culture and women in leadership. | ||
Seems kind of on the... Who cares dude? | ||
I don't know. | ||
LeCroyper, whoa! | ||
LeCroyper with a huge super chat. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Whoa! | ||
O7's in chat for LeCroyper. | ||
He says, yeah man, turning 30? | ||
I can't even imagine. | ||
Sounds horrible. | ||
Good thing it's so far away for both of us. | ||
Anyway, I randomly caught the opening scene of that movie Watchmen the other day. | ||
It takes place during the Cold War and the opening montage features some talk shows of that period. | ||
The first guest they introduced, to my surprise, was Pat Buchanan. | ||
They even got an actor who looked like him. | ||
Kind of cool. | ||
Anyway, yeah man, 30. | ||
So far off. | ||
Hey, well, thanks a lot for the big super chat, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Can we get an 07 for LeCroyper? | ||
The based Chad. | ||
Hey, don't take it too hard, man. | ||
We have a lot of over 30. | ||
Hey, look at Baked Alaska. | ||
That man will be forever young. | ||
He's just got to watch his weight a little bit, but he's still young at heart, and Kanye, he's in his 40s, and you know, he's so young in a certain way, and Beardson is over 30, and lots of people are over 30, so, you know, I'm reassuring you, I'm reassuring myself, you know, we're all gonna be okay. | ||
But yeah, no, I saw Watchmen, and I soy-faced when I saw that. | ||
Yeah, it's kind of a trip to see, because you know, he's so central in our universe and to see him in like a mainstream movie is like, what? | ||
unidentified
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No way! | |
Yeah, pretty cool. | ||
But hey, thank you very much man. | ||
I very much appreciate it. | ||
We love you LeCroyper. | ||
Very generous from the, from the under 30, from the under 30 year old LeCroy fanatic. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Yeah, yeah, it's not, it's not all bad, you know. | ||
It's not so bad after all. | ||
Eddie Van Grams is good fellas over Godfather every time. | ||
Perfect story, soundtrack, camera work, and dialogue. | ||
And it has a sobering message that we can relate to. | ||
Sometimes really be your own niggas. | ||
Yeah, I know that. | ||
I know that. | ||
Yeah, I agree. | ||
But, you know, Godfather has a similar message and good dialogue, good story. | ||
Good soundtrack, you know, so that's a... Godfather's good too. | ||
Esoteric Bro says, I don't lie. | ||
You pay lip service to demographics but your followers are sheep and try to emulate your macho incel posture. | ||
Men are required to buy a lot, blah blah blah. | ||
Dude, just shut up. | ||
You don't even watch my show. | ||
And, uh, I'm gonna throw you in jail for lying. | ||
When I, when I get in power, I'm gonna throw you in jail for lying. | ||
I'm gonna shut your lying mouth for you. | ||
Pat Mance says the Senators and Emperors preferred the countryside and their villas were as far from the city center as they could possibly be. | ||
Yeah, but they ruled from the Capitol, okay? | ||
So, yeah, I mean they go on vacation in the countryside, but they rule in the city. | ||
The city is the center of power. | ||
They didn't go out in the middle of nowhere, they went out in a villa outside of the Capitol. | ||
So, you're coping and you're lying, farmer. | ||
You're coping and lying, Farmer. | ||
Kevin Brose's Goodfellas is the perfect movie. | ||
It doesn't matter how far along into the film I catch it. | ||
I'll watch until the end. | ||
As for Farmers, don't forget LBJ and Jimmy Carter were country boys. | ||
They gave us the Civil Rights Act of 64 and Carter Doctrine. | ||
You're on to something. | ||
I know I am! | ||
I know! | ||
Yeah, yeah, they were. | ||
They were good old boys. | ||
Yeah, Peanut Farmer and Mr. Texas. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
I know what they're up to, man. | ||
We had Trump. | ||
Trump is a city boy. | ||
unidentified
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And so is Obama. | |
And Obama hated Israel. | ||
So... And he was a Muslim socialist, which is actually kind of based. | ||
So, you know, what did... And, you know, George W. Bush, I mean, he pretended he was from Texas, but really he kind of wasn't. | ||
unidentified
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So... You're right. | |
When you're right, you're right. | ||
I know. | ||
I've driven through the country. | ||
I'm on a no-fly list. | ||
I've seen the country. | ||
I know what's up. | ||
I've seen it with my own eyes. | ||
I'm not out of touch. | ||
through a town of 200 people yesterday passing through ukraine flags and gay flags on houses you're right i know i've driven through the country i'm on a no-fly list i've seen the country i know what's up okay i've seen it with my own eyes i'm not out of touch i've been there um and uh yeah it's it's not what people you know they're obviously coping that's why i try not to go too hard on them because i mean it's it's punching down really uh kevin bros is god God bless and good night, y'all. | ||
Hey, good night. | ||
Good night y'all. | ||
Good night, my brother God bless you Cameron says Homewood, Alabama is far more faggoty than Birmingham. | ||
I've never been to Homewood, but I know in Birmingham was pretty faggoty. | ||
I Pretty black. | ||
So that's the other thing in the South is he got that as well, Missouri Francis. | ||
I love Missouri Yeah, it's okay. | ||
I Don't think I've been to Missouri in a long time though I'm trying to think did I I don't think I've been in Missouri I don't for the white boy summer trip. | ||
We drove through Iowa and we came back through I Kentucky so yeah, I don't think I've been in Missouri since I was in like high school But yeah, it's nice. | ||
It's nice enough Max says love you Nick great show my based brother. | ||
I've got a congressional debate this weekend to qualify for nationals And I have a great shot of winning wish me luck night buddy much love from Kansas. | ||
Hey, God bless man. | ||
Good luck Good luck King you got it. | ||
I know you're you're gonna kill it buddy. | ||
Love you, too pal D.H. | ||
says, all these people, all those lives, where are they now? | ||
With loves and hates, passions just like mine. | ||
They were born and they lived and they died. | ||
It seems so unfair. | ||
I want to cry. | ||
And that's a quote from Morrissey. | ||
Very true. | ||
Very true. | ||
And it is saddening. | ||
Okay, alright! | ||
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That's our last Super Chat! | |
Sheesh, what a long show. | ||
Feels like such a long show tonight. | ||
But that's gonna do it for me. | ||
That's all I got for ya. | ||
Remember to follow me on Gab and Telegram. | ||
Follow me right here on Cozy to get a notification whenever my show begins. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock Central, 9 o'clock Eastern Standard Time. | ||
As always, I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters in particular. | ||
Big, huge shout-out to our top three tonight, LeCroyper, Birdie, and Victor. | ||
Thank you guys so much. | ||
Can we get an 07 in chat for our top three? | ||
LeCroyper, Birdie, and Victor. | ||
Thank you guys so much. | ||
God bless. | ||
Thanks to all 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. | ||
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! |