Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position. | ||
You, America, in such a way is merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiot. | ||
Thank you. | ||
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Just eat. | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some pasta. | ||
Having some pizza. | ||
Oh. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm not normal. | ||
I'm a poor kid. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
One, two, three, four. | ||
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 Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
Give me a little. | ||
I love you. | ||
Give me your love. | ||
Give me your love. | ||
You were out of my league. | ||
All the things I believed. | ||
You were just the right kind. | ||
Yeah, you are more than just a dream. | ||
You are out of my league. | ||
God, my heart keeps racing. | ||
If I die, don't wake me. | ||
Because you are more than just a dream. | ||
Every day and every week and every year that we live in this country, Do they care about our health? | ||
No! | ||
They prescribe poison to us from the pharmaceutical companies. | ||
They're poisoning us with the seed oils that we're eating, the high fructose corn syrup. | ||
They're poisoning the water with heavy metals, which is in the tap water. | ||
They're poisoning us with what's on television and out of Hollywood and pornography. | ||
They're poisoning us in every way that you can imagine. | ||
But we're supposed to believe now, suddenly, they care so much about our public health. | ||
That's why they're doing this? | ||
Does anybody believe that? | ||
No! | ||
They don't care about our health. | ||
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 regret. | ||
I'm not born. | ||
I'm not born. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I just hit that yay button. | ||
I said trust your man, but you're on the side. | ||
I'll need your day, cause I'm a dollar. | ||
I'm a dead tree, but girls like a party. | ||
My mama said trust don't hold you, so I'm a man. | ||
I'm at you, want to stop the track. | ||
I'm a good person, H. | ||
See what he said, buddy, don't want to pull you. | ||
If they want to pull you, get a world. | ||
Okay, dude, we're here. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. not my rules. | ||
I just enjoy stuff, all right? | ||
My mama said trust no hold you, so I'm a man. | ||
But they say trust don't hold you, but you're on the side. | ||
I just enjoy stuff, all right? | ||
I just enjoy stuff, all right? | ||
Last up, Scott. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
It's everything. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
And your mama ain't cheap, I'm petty, it's cheap. | ||
I've been making waves, wait before the star kick. | ||
Y'all did it when I was just a chick. | ||
With the all black fetties, thinking with the weight of fit. | ||
Y'all was it, it's cheap. | ||
Big six, boot tight, listen, damn, set. | ||
Take it to my first show, I go, only drop jewels way before they drop shuttle. | ||
I'm still talking, now I'm going to walk away, cause it's a deep dive. | ||
They take those buttons, they still fucking, yes, need to say. | ||
They're in the first, bitch. | ||
And they say trust, no man, should focus on it. | ||
I believe your pain was incredible. | ||
I said dream, girls in the bubble. | ||
My mama said trust, no hope, you should never. | ||
And they say trust, no man, should focus on it. | ||
I believe your pain was in the bubble. | ||
I said dream, girls in the bubble. | ||
My mama said trust, no hope, you should never. | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant fan. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
That black guy killed a white boy because he was white. | |
And this black guy hated white people. | ||
That's why he did it. | ||
It was an act of hatred. | ||
unidentified
|
It wasn't random. | |
It was an act of racial hatred perpetrated by a black male against a white boy. | ||
And why is everybody so afraid to call it that? | ||
unidentified
|
Of course that's what it is. | |
What has been engendered in the population for the past two years? | ||
What's been engendered in the population for the past 30 years? | ||
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 white It was because they were Aryan. | ||
It's because they were white supremacists. | ||
Because they believed in racial purity of the Aryan race. | ||
unidentified
|
That made them uniquely evil. | |
They perpetrated the Holocaust against Jews. | ||
And that was, by far and away, the most obscene, worst genocide ever in the history of the world. | ||
And then, when all was said and done, white people were racist to the Muslims that blew up the World Trade Center. | ||
White people are racist to black criminals and the police. | ||
Basically, people are bred from cradle until grave thinking that white people are uniquely evil people. | ||
White people 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. | ||
unidentified
|
White people are being dehumanized. | |
And when white people are dehumanized, black people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
And other people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
How much do you want to bet that this, uh, whatever his name is, Darren Brown, whatever, was radicalized by the media into thinking that white people are racist and responsible for his suffering, not just as a black man, but as a gay man too. | ||
And that he committed this crime in retaliation for that perceived prejudice, perceived hatred against him. | ||
That's the consequence of all this anti-white hatred and dehumanization in the media, education system, and it's even enshrined in the law systematically through the government. | ||
I mean, what do you think affirmative action is? | ||
unidentified
|
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? | ||
unidentified
|
But here's the problem. | |
This is not going to be a white country forever. | ||
And it's not going to be a white country for very much longer. | ||
unidentified
|
In a lot of places, it already isn't. | |
And in a lot of ways, it already isn't a white country anymore. | ||
And as the percentage and proportion of white people diminishes in America relative to non-white people, it's going to become more and more of a problem for white people that non-white people don't like us. | ||
unidentified
|
It's just that simple. | |
Just think about it in these simple terms. | ||
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 End | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's cheers, everybody. | |
It's going to happen. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
They kick me off the plane, you know what that means? | ||
White boy summer road trip. | ||
They give us lemons, we make lemon. | ||
They throw me behind bars. | ||
unidentified
|
And I start throwing baseball up against the wall. | |
And now I'm playing catch. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
The only time that they win is when they triumph over our spirit. | ||
But they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
Even what I'm doing. | ||
We are still enjoying. | ||
White Boy Summer is still on. | ||
I don't care if I have to drive there. | ||
I don't care if I have to get in Lake Michigan and go all the way around the Panama Canal. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing is going to stop white boy summer. | |
Nothing is going to stop America first. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
There's always a way. | ||
Maybe that's it. | ||
White people found in this country. | ||
This country wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
Wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
And white people are done being bullied. | ||
Done being bullied. | ||
We're the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
And I think our ancestors can smile on us right now for what we're doing. | ||
Cheers. | ||
Bye. | ||
Bye. . The. | ||
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. | ||
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. | ||
Mary and I, we're out. | ||
Okay. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
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. | ||
Don't argue with me. | ||
It's real simple. | ||
Put your hands right here. | ||
I don't need the tape. | ||
Yes you are. | ||
I will tase you right now. | ||
You are in violation, and I gave you a long word. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
You're not going back to normal. | |
This is the beginning. | ||
unidentified
|
That was phase one. | |
I believe that they probably had to let people out of the lockdown. | ||
Give people a taste of what things used to be like. | ||
unidentified
|
To 1. | |
Let out pressure. | ||
It's a pressure release valve. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Look how bad it has gotten. | |
Take a look back a year, five years. | ||
I mean, at everything, but specifically with the pandemic. | ||
unidentified
|
Take a look back at one year ago, you know. | |
People say, well, if it got so bad, you know, then I might say something, then I might do something. | ||
I might not like that. | ||
Okay, well, the only way we're gonna stop it from getting over there is if we stop it over here. | ||
If we start saying no over here. | ||
unidentified
|
We gotta start thinking how we're gonna stop it here. | |
If people just stop doing it, There's a chance we could have earned that outcome. | ||
We are continuing to wage our war against the mask mandate. | ||
I'm a big believer in just making everybody's life harder. | ||
You don't have to get fired over this stuff, but just make everybody's life difficult. | ||
Don't let the CDC guidelines be an imposition on you. | ||
Let it be an imposition on the people that have to enforce it. | ||
You know, let the people that work at these places of business remind you five times when you're in a store or wherever to put your mask back on and put it on over your nose and do this and that, right? | ||
Here's my challenge to you. | ||
Go into one of these stores when they reimpose the mask mandate and get in a confrontation with the worker and get in a shouting match and get kicked out. | ||
unidentified
|
And you're going to feel adrenaline. | |
You're going to go into Target. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
That's a good feeling. | |
We want to start to feel that. | ||
Fuck these people. | ||
Ruin their day. | ||
Make these people that work at Target go home and cry because they have to enforce this bullshit. | ||
Make them lose their minds. | ||
Make them go to their therapist and get on antidepressants and cry. | ||
Because you walked into Target and ruined their whole day. | ||
Because gas is $4, and they don't know how they're gonna pay their rent, and their relationship with their parents is bad, and they're getting used, and Tinder hookups, and then they gotta go to Target, and they gotta deal with some smug right-wing asshole not wearing their mask. | ||
unidentified
|
And let those people go off the rails, and let the whole fucking system go off the rails. | |
That's what we have to do. | ||
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only, only a class of people so rootless If you view America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
We're gonna smash your brain in with the Bible, idiots. | ||
We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiot. | ||
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Just eat a Big Mac and eat a big vegetable. | ||
Stranger, you can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
The money has to stop your life. | ||
It's not a last line. | ||
Stranger, you can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
You know things have to stop your life. | ||
Not a last line. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not money. | ||
I'm sipping wine, having some pasta, having some pizza. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the father. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm a poor man. | ||
I'm original. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
that the classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved this point. | ||
Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the money for the casino So I'm stunning when you're growing on a place What you think, me and a girl, she's growing on a place Put the game, dirty game for the Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the signing for the casino And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor Rush | ||
Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the signing for the casino Feel like De Niro or Casino Where they got the signing for the casino | ||
And I'm so glad to see you guys in the end of the day! | ||
Thank you. | ||
L.A. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord save these people. | ||
Let us sleep. | ||
They let in Satan. | ||
One day streets gon' save us from L.A. | ||
LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. | ||
Here's your free power that is not open. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. LA Monster. | ||
I am limelight. Blue. | ||
Blueprint 5 mic. | ||
Go get his rhyme light. | ||
Should've been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated. | ||
Grammy nominated. | ||
Hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader prom dated. | ||
Barbershop player hated. | ||
Mom and pop booth lazy. | ||
Felt like it rained till the roof caved in. | ||
Two words. | ||
Shot down. | ||
Lazy. | ||
Crazy. | ||
So I live by two words. | ||
Fuck you, pay me! | ||
Screamin'. | ||
Teasin'. | ||
Stagin'. | ||
You know how the game be. | ||
I can't let him change me. | ||
Cause on Judgment Day, you gon' blame me. | ||
Look, Scott, it's the same thing. | ||
I basically know now. | ||
We get racially profiled. | ||
Cuffed up and hosed down. | ||
Pimped up and hoed down. | ||
Plus, I got a whole city to hold down. | ||
From the bottom, so the top's the only place to go now. | ||
Go now. | ||
You want to know what's critical to all of this? | ||
We look at Christ on the cross. | ||
And you're going to kick us off Twitter? | ||
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, then eats them whole. | |
Sin billionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them home. | ||
Sin billionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them home. | ||
Sin billionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
It gives false hope and eats them home. | ||
Sin billionaires who are still broke. | ||
Jesus saved all my people from this monster. | ||
For it takes their souls. | ||
Sin billionaires who are still broke. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Verification commencing. | ||
Verified. | ||
You are a real human being. | ||
The mayor also just announced the city will start requiring proof of COVID vaccination for a range of indoor activities, including going to a restaurant or to the gym. | ||
New York is the first major U.S. | ||
city to introduce a mandate like this. | ||
It requires people to show proof of at least one vaccine dose and will be phased in starting later this month. | ||
You have to abide by the rules and you have to have a mask on. | ||
It's not. | ||
Visitors have the right to refuse service, even if you're not one of them. | ||
That's their choice. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Take a seat. | ||
Mary and I, 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 order. | ||
Leave the property or you get a citation. | ||
Period. | ||
Don't argue with me. | ||
It's real simple. | ||
Put your hands right here. | ||
Do I need to take? | ||
Yes, you are. | ||
I will take you right now. | ||
You are in violation, and I gave you a lawful order. | ||
I'm not going to Walgreens to get an mRNA, non-FDA approved, and even if it wasn't, experimental vaccine that goes inside your cells and manipulates your DNA to start producing spiked proteins, experimental vaccine that goes inside your cells and manipulates your DNA to start producing spiked proteins, which are killing *Rainful music* 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. | ||
unidentified
|
You're not going back to normal. | |
This is the beginning. | ||
unidentified
|
That was phase one. | |
I believe that they probably had to let people out of the lockdown. | ||
Give people a taste of what things used to be like. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Everything in my life, talking with my dad, and I said it ain't Christ's life. | |
America first is inevitable, and unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill a big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory. | ||
Bro. | ||
Life like this is what you like. | ||
Like trying to live life right. | ||
Who really know you're telling your butt. | ||
Like, right, right. | ||
This is like a movie for the shitty day. | ||
Like, like, every single night. | ||
Like, every single fight. | ||
Right. | ||
I was looking at the camera. | ||
I don't need to fight. | ||
Like, 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. | ||
Like, you're legal with your life. | ||
Like, riding on a white fight. | ||
Feeling like a fight fight. | ||
Pressing on the gas. | ||
Living over for the night. | ||
Like, dreaming at my dad. | ||
And he told me it ain't Christ. | ||
Like, but nobody never tell you. | ||
You need me in Christ. | ||
Only if I see it. | ||
Only when they see me. | ||
If I could find a parenting. | ||
Who would be? | ||
You're just searching for a teacher. | ||
Now you want to be a freak. | ||
Now you want to see it. | ||
When you like to see it. | ||
Tell me what you like. | ||
Like, turn it down to Christ. | ||
Like, driving with my dad. | ||
And he told me it ain't Christ. | ||
Like, I'm just trying to find. | ||
I've been looking for a new way. | ||
Just really trying not to reach through the pool with. | ||
I don't have a pool with. | ||
Getting on my best though. | ||
Lock up on a text though. | ||
Doesn't tell text though. | ||
Not another word. | ||
Not a picture or a test mode. | ||
Wrestling with God. | ||
I don't really want to wrestle. | ||
Spanish with my life. | ||
Like, everything in my life. | ||
Parking with my dad. | ||
And he said it ain't Christ's life. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
This is America. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
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! America First! America First! America First! America First! America First! America First! America First! | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You are watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Friday. | ||
It's a casual Friday. | ||
So we're gonna have a low-key, chill, relaxed show. | ||
That's why I'm not wearing a suit or a tie. | ||
So happy Friday everybody. | ||
We've got a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Our featured story, we are talking about the Ukraine crisis yet again. | ||
But we're changing it up a little bit. | ||
Tonight we're talking about the economy. | ||
And the white pills are inbound. | ||
I'm feeling the white pills really strongly tonight. | ||
If you take a look at the Russian economy, it is surging back thanks to the leadership of our brilliant president and our czar, Vladimir Putin. | ||
And so tonight I want to talk about the Russian stock market, the ruble, and the degenerate West, its sanctions which are backfiring completely. | ||
Pretty incredible stuff. | ||
The Russian stock market reopened this week and is actually up You know they closed it at the end of February when the war started because I know they probably anticipated that. | ||
There would be a major sell-off, but they've now reopened the stock market a month later and the companies are up! | ||
The stock market's up! | ||
The Russian ruble, which everybody said earlier this month was collapsing and totally destroyed, is now only 13% lower than it was at the start of the war. | ||
So the currency has almost made a complete recovery. | ||
Fuel prices are stable. | ||
Food prices are stable. | ||
Russia is doing just fine. | ||
And it's really, it's an awesome thing to see. | ||
Meanwhile, in the West, gas prices are up. | ||
Energy costs are up. | ||
Some American states are talking about suspending the gas tax to ease the pain. | ||
Food prices are up. | ||
Everything's up. | ||
So it's safe to say that Russia has punched through the evil empire, the sick and the wicked West, and its system of usury and financial control. | ||
It's no match for the Russian bear. | ||
No match for the power of Russia. | ||
We salute the Tsar. | ||
And his leadership. | ||
So, that'll be our featured story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about the South Korean election. | ||
We were supposed to cover that yesterday, but we ran out of time. | ||
And frankly, you didn't deserve a longer show yesterday. | ||
Everyone was being very naughty. | ||
And the live chat was, frankly, it was upsetting to me. | ||
So, I said, you know what? | ||
You don't deserve... Well, we had a two and a half hour show yesterday anyway. | ||
And to do another story? | ||
It would have been a three-hour show. | ||
And you know what? | ||
It just wasn't appropriate based on the way the live chat was behaving, so... How's my hair tonight? | ||
How's the hair? | ||
Let me move my window to my other monitor so I can... Okay. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
We're doing okay. | |
I don't know how I feel about this shirt. | ||
I don't really like how this shirt fits me. | ||
The sleeves are a little too short. | ||
I don't really like this fit, but you know what? | ||
I got out of the shower. | ||
And I combed my hair and everything. | ||
I got my hair looking good. | ||
And then I said, damn it, I didn't put on a sweatshirt. | ||
So I had to put something on like this. | ||
I had to put something on that doesn't, you know, something that wraps around. | ||
And this is all I got. | ||
Okay, this is all I had. | ||
I didn't want to spend time messing with collar stiffs. | ||
So I said, you know what, I'll just throw on this. | ||
This guy. | ||
And yeah, so this is what we got. | ||
This is the attire. | ||
So anyway, I don't have a window open for my own show. | ||
Where's my window here? | ||
Okay. | ||
So anyway, so that's gonna be our show tonight. | ||
Laid back. | ||
You know, it's a real casual show. | ||
Casual Friday show tonight. | ||
But like I said, there's much to discuss. | ||
Before we get into the show, reminder, follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
Follow me on Gabin Telegram if you haven't already. | ||
We have all the buttons. | ||
Also make sure to follow me on my channel if you haven't already. | ||
If you're not already following me on Cozy, make sure you follow me, make a Telegram account, download it on desktop and mobile, and then follow me here on my channel on Cozy. | ||
And when you follow my channel on Cozy, you'll get a push notification whenever I begin the show. | ||
So whenever I go live, whenever I stream, you'll be notified. | ||
So make sure you follow me. | ||
You know, sometimes people complain, they're like, oh this show's late, this show's early. | ||
unidentified
|
It's about 50-50. | |
But you can't complain, because if you follow, you know exactly when the show starts every night. | ||
unidentified
|
So, So there's that. | |
Yeah, I don't really have much else to say. | ||
You know, yesterday I launched into this big long rant before the show and I wound up just talking for about 40 minutes before I even got into the show. | ||
But I don't really have much to say tonight. | ||
But I am really excited to get into the news because I've been hearing all this demoralization propaganda about the Russian war effort and it's just non-stop. | ||
It's just non-stop lies every day and it's a new lie every day. | ||
They say the Ghost of Kiev, remember that was the first lie. | ||
They said the Ukrainians were inflicting heavy casualties on the Russians and they were shooting. | ||
They were saying that the Ukrainians controlled the airspace. | ||
The Ukrainians never controlled the airspace. | ||
Russia destroyed their entire air force the first day of the war and their anti-air capability. | ||
But it was lies from the beginning. | ||
First they said there's this Ukrainian fighter pilot that's shooting down all the Russian jets, and the Ukrainians are inflicting these casualties, the Russians are having a hard time. | ||
This week, they're saying the war is ground to a halt, and the Ukrainians are killing all the Russian generals, and Putin is facing stiff opposition domestically from his political opponents. | ||
And they're saying that Russia has lost 40,000 people. | ||
40,000 people. | ||
I mean, this is insane. | ||
Then, Vladimir Putin held a big rally at a stadium in Russia, and they said, oh, that rally, where there were tens of thousands of patriotic Russians waving flags and cheering for the president, they said, oh, that was fake. | ||
Putin paid everyone to be there. | ||
I mean, they're literally Who believes this stuff? | ||
They said, oh, that giant rally where tens of thousands of people came out and showed their support for the war? | ||
Oh, that's all fake, they said. | ||
Russia just paid everyone to be there. | ||
Really? | ||
Now, Russia's laying siege to Mariupol in the south. | ||
And is surrounding Kiev and encircling the Ukrainian forces. | ||
And they say, oh, they're committing war crimes! | ||
They're blowing up hospitals! | ||
They're blowing up maternity wards! | ||
They're killing pregnant women! | ||
Seriously? | ||
There's been an effective ceasefire in some of these cities for over a week because they're opening up humanitarian corridors. | ||
The Russians are supervising evacuations of civilians. | ||
And if you've been following the situation on the ground, the first week of the war The Azov Battalion, which is stationed in Mariupol, and they are there because it's on the coast of the Sea of Azov, the Azov Battalion went into all of these residential buildings and they evicted all the people in them and took up residence in those places the first week of the war. | ||
So, you know, they're talking about, oh, the Russians are bombing these buildings, the Russians are bombing The Azov battalion moved in, cleared the buildings, and now they're using the remaining civilians basically as human shields, and they're using the residential spaces as the headquarters because they know that they're soft targets. | ||
They know, or rather, they're targets that the Russians are painstakingly avoiding. | ||
The Russians could have flattened Ukraine. | ||
With artillery, with bombers, the Russians could have absolutely devastated Ukraine. | ||
The reason that the war isn't proceeding as quickly as it could is because the Russians are not trying to inflict a high civilian casualty count and they're not trying to destroy the country. | ||
But, so in any case, it's so frustrating to hear lie after lie about everything, every day. | ||
Oh, Putin paid his supporters to be there. | ||
Oh, they're killing pregnant women. | ||
They're laying siege to the city, but they're having a really hard time. | ||
40,000 dead. | ||
The Ghost of Kiev. | ||
It's all lies. | ||
And so, I'm excited to talk tonight about the economic picture because, you know, on the West, I even saw this when I was reviewing Destiny's content on the war, he was laughing about the ruble. | ||
And he said, oh, it's so funny, the ruble, the Russian currency. | ||
He said, well, what, is the Russian ruble worth less than in-game currency in Toontown or something like that, World of Warcraft currency? | ||
And it's like, no. | ||
The ruble has nearly recovered. | ||
Before the war, you could get 80 rubles for $1. | ||
At the worst, you know, a couple weeks into the war, you could get 150 rubles for $1. | ||
So if you do the quick math on that, the ruble fell in value about 50%. | ||
Now, the ruble is trading about 100 rubles for a dollar at its peak today. | ||
So it means it's only really down 20-25%, some say 13% in certain markets. | ||
So, the currency is all but recovered, the stock market reopened, and anyway, we'll get into all this later, but I'm excited to talk about it because that's now the latest thing is to say, oh, our sanctions are really crushing the Russian economy. | ||
I think people are going to be in for a rude awakening. | ||
I don't know what the regime is thinking on this, but we'll get into all that later tonight. | ||
Anyway, but besides the news, yeah, there's not really too much else going on. | ||
I had a nice dinner tonight. | ||
Had a cup of coffee, so I'm feeling energized. | ||
The bean. | ||
You know, we've tapped into the power of the bean tonight. | ||
The coffee bean, that is. | ||
Drank a couple of cups of coffee. | ||
Feeling good. | ||
Feeling energized. | ||
Feeling, you know, I'm just feeling white-pilled on Friday. | ||
Happy Friday. | ||
The other big thing that happened today, and you know, I would cover this, but I'm not really I don't feel like I have the knowledge to talk on this, but today also Pope Francis consecrated Russia and Ukraine to Mary, I believe, or to the Sacred Heart. | ||
Again, I'm not really equipped to talk about this. | ||
I'm not the Catholic expert. | ||
I don't actually really know what it means. | ||
It's part of this prophecy where they say that The Virgin Mary appeared in this apparition a hundred years ago and Mary said that if the Pope, with all the bishops of the world, consecrates specifically Russia, that there will be a great conversion and there will be a time of peace. | ||
And so this is actually part of a Catholic prophecy. | ||
And so it's very significant actually in the Catholic faith that this happened today in the way that it happened. | ||
And there have been, you know, arguably some Catholics argue that this consecration occurred, that there have been a couple of these consecrations over the past hundred years, and some say that they produced the effects that were promised in the prophecy, some say that they did not. | ||
There's a lot of Controversy about this. | ||
There's a lot of arguing. | ||
I'm not a theologian, so I'm not really equipped to weigh in on that. | ||
You know, and people are always attacking me. | ||
They say, Nick, that's not quite right. | ||
Listen, I'm doing my best, but that's not my area of expertise. | ||
But it was a very nice ceremony today. | ||
It was streamed by the show Cancel Proof. | ||
If you're not following already, make sure you follow that channel. | ||
Cozy.tv slash Cancel Proof. | ||
It's my friends Paul and Jason. | ||
They streamed it. | ||
Really great stream. | ||
Really good stream. | ||
Really well done. | ||
I was actually really glad that they covered it. | ||
Nobody else was covering it on Cozy today, but they did. | ||
And it was a beautiful service. | ||
Really nice. | ||
And it's an important day, too. | ||
It's the Solemnity of the Annunciation today, so it's... And again, I'm not 100% on the details, so it's technically a feast day, but there are no feast days during Lent. | ||
Technically, but it is I don't know. | ||
It's a feast day, but it's also not because it's lent. | ||
So it's actually an important day And then you have the consecration as well. | ||
Listen, I'm trying I'm struggling here, but I'm trying I'm struggling a little bit, but I'm trying to get through it. | ||
So it's a nice ceremony. | ||
I'm feeling you know, I'm feeling I'm feeling pious today because of the ceremony. | ||
I'm feeling, you know, I feel like, you know, maybe this is, maybe this was the prophetic consecration. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Maybe it will deliver the conversion of Russia. | ||
Maybe it will deliver a period of peace. | ||
I mean, we'll see. | ||
Some say it already happened. | ||
Some say it's yet to happen, but we'll see. | ||
So that was very nice. | ||
And I have to say, and Classical Theist pointed this out also, it's pleasantly surprising that Pope Francis has not condemned Putin. | ||
You know, if you notice this, Pope Francis, I mean, he's talked about the suffering and the fact that this is clearly a tragic conflict and called for an end to the violence, but he hasn't actually condemned Russia and condemned Putin himself, which is interesting. | ||
Because Pope Francis, a lot of people are very critical of him, but The globalist, liberal position, of course, would be to take the side of Ukraine and be very polemical about this, but he hasn't done that. | ||
And the consecration of Russia and Ukraine is, you know, I think that's the right move. | ||
What do I know? | ||
But, you know, that seems appropriate to me. | ||
Yeah, that seems right to me. | ||
I'm not the expert, but... Yeah, so it's very nice to see that today. | ||
And yeah, very good, very good. | ||
But like I said, I would cover that, but that's not, you know, clearly I don't have the background knowledge on that. | ||
You know, I'm a smart guy, but I recognize, I've got my areas, and I'm very, I have done a lot of deep reading on some subjects, and some subjects I'm not, you know, not as well read, so. | ||
But maybe I'll cover that eventually. | ||
I'm learning more. | ||
I'm learning all the time. | ||
And maybe eventually I'll be able to do a show like that. | ||
But for now, I'm talking about geopolitics. | ||
I'm talking about the economy. | ||
But it was nice to see. | ||
And I have to tell you, I want to say this tonight. | ||
Because I really am, lately I'm feeling I'm feeling the Holy Spirit, I have to say. | ||
I don't know if that sounds cheesy. | ||
I'm not trying to sound corny here, but I really do feel it. | ||
I really do feel God working on me, and I do feel God working on this movement. | ||
I've really felt it, I want to say since New York. | ||
I felt it in New York, you know, when I raised up the crucifix in Staten Island, and then again in Manhattan. | ||
I really felt it then, and I felt like You know, this has always been a religious movement, this has always been a Christian movement, but when I was there in Staten Island and I was there in Manhattan, I said at the rally, I said, I kind of took it a step further than I really have before. | ||
It was really some very heavy-handed religious language. | ||
I said, there are things that are bigger than your job and your life and politics. | ||
We're talking about Jesus on the cross. | ||
I feel like since then there's been a real religious fervor, this kind of religious awakening in the movement. | ||
And I also felt it particularly at AFPAC 3. | ||
And everybody talked about this, and everybody felt it. | ||
Throughout the entire event at AFPAC 3, there was this consistent theme, and it was Christ. | ||
You know, Christ was the most present theme. | ||
That was the most present sort of concept throughout the entire conference. | ||
We had all different speakers, lots of different kinds of people, and certainly different kinds of messages. | ||
But throughout all of them, there was one underlying message. | ||
There was one consistent message, and that is, we want our King back. | ||
We want our Lord back. | ||
We want to revere God. | ||
We want God to be back at the center. | ||
You know, and so you had Marjorie Taylor Greene was the first speech. | ||
And she's the, obviously, the sitting congresswoman from Georgia. | ||
And I don't know that anyone would call her a groyper by any stretch. | ||
But that was in her speech. | ||
That was a big part of her speech. | ||
That's how she opened. | ||
That's how she closed. | ||
That's what her speech was about. | ||
And all the way through. | ||
You know, Vince, he gave a very polemical speech, but it was in his speech. | ||
And it was in Stu's speech. | ||
I didn't like Stu's speech, obviously, but it was there. | ||
And in Andrew Torba's speech, and Jessilee Peterson, and McGeehan, and Wendy Rogers, and Paul Gosar. | ||
Well, Paul Gosar's was very short, so his was like 30 seconds. | ||
So I don't know if he got around to it, but Joe Arpaio, me, I don't know if I'm leaving anybody out there. | ||
There were a lot of speakers, but Like, again, no matter, it was a pundit, it was a congressperson, it was me, it was a groiper, it was somebody who's maybe not totally there, that was the, maybe the only consistent theme. | ||
It was almost like America First ironically came second. | ||
It was like Christ was first, Christ was the most prominent, and it almost seemed like the, you know, the America part, the America First part was, I mean, certainly it was there for everybody, but it almost seemed like secondary. | ||
And I was very proud of that. | ||
I was very proud of that. | ||
And I was proud of the fact that it certainly wasn't canned. | ||
It wasn't being done for any kind of political effect. | ||
It was from the heart. | ||
It was sincere. | ||
It was in the audience. | ||
It was with the speakers. | ||
It was with the special guests. | ||
And I've been really feeling it lately, and I think that I feel it now more than ever. | ||
I've always said this. | ||
I've said this for five years. | ||
And actually, this was part of the initial friction with me and the alt-right, was I said, I think summer 2017, I said, there's no future for the right-wing if it's not a Christian movement. | ||
Any right-wing movement in America, it's gonna be a Christian revival. | ||
And I remember all the alt-right people took issue with that. | ||
Richard Spencer, James Alsup, even Patrick Casey. | ||
And we actually had a big feud over that tweet five years ago. | ||
Because he came in and said, oh, we need to be respectful of pagans. | ||
He went out of his way to embarrass me at the first American Renaissance conference I went to in 2018. | ||
Because my speech was very religious at American Renaissance and he went up during Jared Taylor's Q&A and it was like a teacher's pet moment. | ||
He went up to the microphone and said, Mr. Taylor, Mr. Taylor, are we gonna... and he might as well have like looked right at me and said, are we gonna focus on one religion or should we be respectful of all religions like pagans and so on? | ||
Looking at me like as if to say, you know, it's not Christian. | ||
And since then he apparently converted. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not going to doubt the man's faith, but that's where he was years ago. | ||
And that was always my position, and I feel like that more strongly than ever. | ||
Whenever I, when I looked at the consecration happening today, and when I'm in church, and when I pray the rosary, and I've been trying to pray the rosary more, it's very tedious, and I don't do it as much as I should, but I have been doing it. | ||
I've been trying. | ||
Whenever I pray, and whenever I go to church, and whenever I, when I saw the consecration today, I see the vision. | ||
You know, it's like I, there's clarity, and I see the vision, and it becomes very clear and very apparent where this is going, where it needs to go, and the kind of path that we have an opportunity to walk towards, you know, that God is opening up, and that we'll have the opportunity to, to go through To set the country straight again. | ||
I don't know for how long, you know, we know the ultimate fate of the world is to be destroyed and, you know, and lots of things are going to happen in the end times, but some say we're in the end times. | ||
But when I see these things, I see a vision, I see very clearly the path that we need to take and what's going to happen, you know, what the good ending will be, so to speak, for this century in America. | ||
And it's a very white-pilling, it's a very empowering feeling. | ||
It's like, I feel hope, I feel faithful, and I think we're definitely hitting the right note here. | ||
But we really gotta hone in on that. | ||
And I have to tell you also, the reason I'm saying a lot of this too is, there is this phenomenon now, which I've noticed, and maybe you've noticed it too, That the old alt-right is reconstituting itself, and a lot of these movements are reconstituting themselves. | ||
The establishment on the right wing that Donald Trump destroyed, the sort of Never Trumpers, some of these populist ink types, Joe Kent comes to mind, some of these other Jewish schemers, and then even the old alt-right is reforming. | ||
A lot of the same names, a lot of the same people from Identity Europa, people from the old guard, from the so-called 1.0, And I see a lot of these right-wing factions reconstituting, and as time goes on, I am repulsed by them for no other reason than they're not about God. | ||
They're not about conscience. | ||
They're not about doing the right thing. | ||
And more fundamentally, they're not about Jesus. | ||
And that's all that matters. | ||
You know, I mean, of course, I am very pragmatic. | ||
I am very practical. | ||
And I recognize that we have to be good, but we also have to be smart. | ||
And Jesus said that. | ||
We have to be cunning. | ||
We have to be witty. | ||
And we have to be innocent. | ||
So I recognize it's not just about being totally morally righteous, but we also have to be smart. | ||
We also have to be tactful. | ||
But when I look at these other movements, I am repulsed by the amorality of them and the sort of passive rejection of Jesus. | ||
And I do see that very clearly, specifically with this reconstituted alt-right. | ||
You know, I look at Patriot Front and I look at some of these other new things that are coming around. | ||
I hear, you know, they talk about, like, racial idolatry and even this... Now they've come on to this national idolatry. | ||
And now they're like, hmm, you know, this Identity Europa thing didn't work out. | ||
Now we're gonna be Patriot Front, and it's Hail Columbia, and Hail America, and all, and like, you know, thinly-veiled, like, National Socialism, Third Positionism, Fascist aesthetics, and it's... and it's... underlying it is a soft paganism and a passive rejection of Jesus. | ||
And I look at that stuff and I'm like, that's just so not it. | ||
And I look at populist ink and I look at Joe Kent and he says, you know, playing into religion, that's too divisive. | ||
It's just so not it. | ||
That is not it. | ||
This cleverness, this sort of Marxism on the one side, class, Idolatry, this class cleverness, and then the race idolatry, and this LARP-y stuff on the other side. | ||
It's so not it. | ||
When I look at the consecration today, and I pray the rosary, I see the vision. | ||
There is one path. | ||
There's one road. | ||
It's only through Jesus. | ||
There's one door that you can walk through. | ||
That's it! | ||
You're not going to get a good movement. | ||
We are not going to get a good country. | ||
We are not going to get a good outcome. | ||
If we work with bad means. | ||
You know, a good fruit does not come from a bad tree. | ||
We are not going to get the outcome that we want. | ||
We are not going to get the restoration that we seek and the fruits of virtue without virtue and without the author of those things, which is Jesus. | ||
And he's got a name. | ||
It's not the abstract. | ||
It's not like, you know, some God. | ||
No, no. | ||
The Lord. | ||
Just Jesus. | ||
That's it. | ||
You know, and if that's not at the center, if that's not in the middle of it, if that's not the nucleus, I'm not interested. | ||
I'm just not interested. | ||
Because it's not gonna work. | ||
And ultimately, it's not right. | ||
But, you know, and I care a lot about winning. | ||
That's a funny thing. | ||
You know, I'm talking in a certain way, and, you know, I'm not the most pious Christian, I'll admit. | ||
But my whole life I've sought the truth and I want to win. | ||
And when I seek the truth, I find God. | ||
And when I want to win, I find God. | ||
You know, that's where it is. | ||
So I didn't like start out like, hey, I want to be a religious Christian zealot today. | ||
It's like, no, I want to win. | ||
And I want the truth and I want to do the right thing. | ||
And where do you wind up in each successive question? | ||
You wind up in the church. | ||
So... | ||
So I was just feeling it today. | ||
It was a very powerful thing. | ||
It was a very powerful, the consecration today. | ||
And whenever I look at that, and when I hear this sort of thundering call, it's coming from God. | ||
It's not coming from the working class consciousness. | ||
It's not even so much coming from a white racial consciousness, although I do think we should have that. | ||
But it's not even coming from that. | ||
I don't hear it from an ancestor cult. | ||
I don't hear it from a pagan deity. | ||
I don't hear it from my, you know, class alienation. | ||
I hear it in my soul. | ||
I hear it in my conscience. | ||
When I feel my righteous indignation, I feel it from a place of... I feel it from my soul, really. | ||
And I think that's... that's where the victory is going to come from. | ||
I really believe that. | ||
And I always see it. | ||
Whenever I... | ||
Whenever I see the religious imagery, I see there's one path. | ||
And the more that I see that, the more everything else repulses me. | ||
The more that everything else just doesn't do it for me. | ||
You know? | ||
Particularly, I see some of these other things that people are coming up with, and it's like, that's just not gonna work. | ||
You know, when people say that, like, you know, LIFE! | ||
LIBERTY! | ||
VICTORY! | ||
But there's no God. | ||
There's no Christ in it. | ||
You know? | ||
There's the fascists, and there's order, and there's all the right-wing, the tradition, and the ancestor cults, but there's no Christ. | ||
Christ's heart isn't there. | ||
And without that, it's hollow. | ||
And it's empty. | ||
And I hate it. | ||
It turns me off. | ||
It doesn't work for me. | ||
You know? | ||
The one thing, there's only one thing, and that's the thing that will, that resonates in your soul. | ||
That's the thing that rings in your soul because your soul was made. | ||
It was created. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Anyway, so just just some thoughts just some thoughts Today, I didn't think I'd go off on this tangent But you know I was I was driving around today heard this really good song by Kanye West actually Well something he never released from a couple of years ago, and I was like you know what this this is This is where it's going. | ||
This is This is the source of our power. | ||
This is the source of our inevitable victory. | ||
That's the white pill. | ||
Forget all the other stuff. | ||
There is a white pill. | ||
And it's not like we're going to trick working class blacks into voting for somebody. | ||
It's not like we're all going to put on Roman legionary costumes and LARP like it's the olden days, ye olden times. | ||
It's like, no! | ||
There's one path, okay? | ||
There is one white pill, and it puts everything else to shame. | ||
It's blinding, you know? | ||
The light from it is blinding. | ||
unidentified
|
So, anyway. | |
Because I especially, I've been seeing some of this stuff pop up lately, and I'm like, you know what? | ||
Fuck that, you know? | ||
Like, that's just so... | ||
And that but that was always what it was because I was kind of reflecting on it and you know I've been doing this for five years and people have called me alt-right and these other things and And that was always the thing is there's just no heart on the other side. | ||
There's no heart. | ||
There's no soul and you know I've always had this kind of I've always felt sort of a coldness and From that side. | ||
I'm not an ideologue. | ||
I wouldn't... I'm not right-wing and that's all that there is. | ||
I'm a Christian, you know? | ||
I'm Catholic. | ||
And I always felt a sort of intangible, like a coldness. | ||
Like there's something missing and there's something sort of abrasive and there's something that just sort of in my gut didn't sit right and that's always what it was. | ||
There's no Christ in it. | ||
And if Christ isn't in it, It's not going to work. | ||
If Christ isn't in it, I'm not in it. | ||
Thankfully, I feel like Christ is with this movement. | ||
It's a lot of people that aren't perfect. | ||
It's a lot of people that are rough around the edges. | ||
I certainly am the same way. | ||
But it's a people, but we are You know, we are ultimately serving God. | ||
I think there's no question that that's the master of this movement. | ||
It's not money, it's not race, it's not power, it's not anything else. | ||
We want to do the right thing. | ||
We want the true, the good, and the beautiful. | ||
And that's what sets us apart, truly. | ||
That's why we're willing to do and say things that other people aren't. | ||
And I think that's why we've had so much success. | ||
That's because, I mean, we're saying something that's resonating more deeply than these material things. | ||
So, but anyway. | ||
So that's my, so that's my Friday rant. | ||
It's a good, it's a, it's an important day. | ||
Consecration, very important day. | ||
Hopefully it was a valid consecration, right? | ||
Hopefully it will produce the effects that were prophesied. | ||
But I just feel white-pilled. | ||
I see, and I said this earlier, when I hear this sort of, this thundering call around the world, It's for meaning. | ||
It's for a moral world. | ||
It's for goodness. | ||
It's not for a right-wing government. | ||
It's not for, like, Peter Thiel to be the president of the Bank of America. | ||
It's for righteousness. | ||
It's for goodness. | ||
It's for God. | ||
You know, don't mistake it. | ||
Everything is lining up. | ||
You know, when you see, like, Kanye convert to Christianity, and you see this conflict going on between NATO and Russia, and you see the rise of the Groipers, and, you know, Even the Britney Spears thing. | ||
Milo. | ||
All of it. | ||
You know, you really see it's coming together. | ||
And it's not the plan of some billionaire. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not Hitler's plan. | |
It's God's plan, you know? | ||
And it's always unfolding. | ||
And if we open ourselves up to it, if we allow God to use us as instruments for His will, We'll be elevated. | ||
The world will be changed for the better. | ||
I really believe that. | ||
I really feel like it's possible. | ||
Because when you think about prayer and you think about the intercession of God, then it doesn't seem so daunting. | ||
When it seems like, oh, we just have to outsmart the system, Yeah, good luck with that. | ||
But when it seems like, hmm, you know, if we just sort of open ourselves up and just do the right thing, it feels like we have the kind of power at our fingertips like the apostles had when they spread the word and Rome became a Christian empire, you know? | ||
It feels like we're opening up possibilities that we couldn't unlock with our own faculties, with our own limited human faculties, so... Anyway! | ||
So anyway! | ||
That's your Friday White Pill. | ||
That's your Friday White Pill. | ||
Big things happening for us. | ||
But we're gonna move on. | ||
We're gonna get into the news here about the South Korean incel president. | ||
So on that note, we're gonna get into the South Korean incel president. | ||
Very awesome. | ||
Very awesome. | ||
And like I said, I was going to cover this last night, and I was actually going to cover it earlier this month, but then things just got so out of hand. | ||
Things just got out of pocket with Ukraine. | ||
Putin's just out of pocket with this invasion. | ||
And we did an AFPAC recap, and we did some other things. | ||
So we never got a chance to talk about this, but at the beginning of the month, South Korea's presidential election happened and they elected an incel as their leader. | ||
And this is huge news in the America First universe, but yet we never had a chance to talk about it. | ||
So I'm going to read this article because I don't really know what's going on in South Korea. | ||
But it's very interesting because, you know, everybody always tells me, they say, hey, you know, and not just me, they say this about Trump and they say this about everybody in our circle. | ||
They say, hey, if we're going to win America, we need the suburban moms. | ||
Hey, you're never going to have a movement by alienating half the population. | ||
You're never going to become president. | ||
You're never going to, you're never going to lead the right wing movement if you're If you're not bending over backwards to appease women, well, I got news for you. | ||
South Korean president won on an incel platform. | ||
So I think that kind of debunks your theory a little bit. | ||
So this is the article. | ||
I think this is from... I don't know. | ||
I wrote it down yesterday. | ||
But it says, no candidate capitalized on the anti-feminist movement like Yoon Suk-yool Sound familiar? | ||
Hey, does that sound familiar? | ||
election and will become South Korea's next leader. | ||
The populist from the conservative People Power Party worked to appeal to men who are anxious about losing ground to women and helped turn a fringe online community into a major political force. | ||
Sound familiar? | ||
Hey, does that sound familiar? | ||
A guy that worked to appeal to men who are anxious about losing ground to women and turned a fringe online community, hey, sound familiar? | ||
It's Into a major political force and he became president. | ||
Now everybody said, oh, that never happens. | ||
Oh, you can't just turn a fringe online community into a major political force. | ||
You just can't run on an in-cell platform and only appeal to men. | ||
Well, tell that to Yoon Seok-yeol, the new president of South Korea. | ||
You know, apparently that can happen. | ||
It says, Yoon called for the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family to be abolished and accused its officials of treating men like potential sex criminals. | ||
So true! | ||
He has blamed the country's low birth rate on feminism. | ||
True. | ||
saying that feminism prevents healthy relationships between men and women. | ||
He also said that he doesn't think systemic structural discrimination based on gender exists in South Korea. | ||
Despite Korean women, yeah, yeah, yeah, shut up, article. | ||
I love when these articles interject their editorial opinions. | ||
Excuse me, shut up, article. | ||
I didn't ask you. | ||
Hey, excuse me, written word. | ||
I'm trying to find out information. | ||
I didn't ask for your opinion. | ||
Excuse me, news article. | ||
Shut the hell up. | ||
I didn't ask. | ||
They always interject these little fact checks. | ||
He said he doesn't think discrimination exists despite Korean women. | ||
It's like, uh, I don't remember asking. | ||
I think I'm just interested in what the new president says. | ||
Excuse me? | ||
I think you're committing a presidential crime by fact-checking the president. | ||
I mean, who are you to say? | ||
The president says feminism is causing all the problems. | ||
What are you, some article? | ||
What do you know? | ||
What are you, some journalist? | ||
You should be in jail! | ||
If the President says that there is no discrimination, I trust the President. | ||
I don't trust some online article. | ||
I don't trust some copywriter, some staff writer at Time Magazine. | ||
You can keep your opinion to yourself, you Western imperialist. | ||
Anyway, before I was interrupted, It says, according to an exit poll conducted by three South Korean broadcasters, some 59% of men in their 20s and 53% of men in their 30s voted for him. | ||
Just 34% of women in their 20s supported him. | ||
He only won 34% of women. | ||
How hilarious is that? | ||
24% of women in their 20s supported him. | ||
He only won 34% of women. | ||
How hilarious is that? | ||
Or I should say, 34% of women in their 20s. | ||
To me, this is big picture thinking. | ||
Because we're constantly being told by Joe Kent and that guy, that Italian race trader, what's even his name, Luca Cacciatore, and that Jewish guy, Nate Hockman from National Review, more like Gay Cockman, We're constantly being told by these Washington D.C. | ||
perverts, they're always telling us, you know, you're not enough. | ||
The white man isn't good enough. | ||
Men aren't good enough. | ||
Whites aren't good enough. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
We need to appeal to women. | ||
We need to go soft. | ||
We need to go baby. | ||
And we need to appeal to girls. | ||
You'll never win an election without women. | ||
And we need to appeal to Hispanics. | ||
And we need to appeal to blacks. | ||
And we need to... | ||
We need to move the embassy to appeal to Jews and we need to let all the blacks out of jail and then they'll vote for us. | ||
But this, this is big picture thinking. | ||
It's like, hey, I've got a radical notion. | ||
What if we're willing to get, okay, I'm fine with 7% of the black vote. | ||
I'm fine with 30% of Hispanics. | ||
I'm fine with 30% of women. | ||
Give me 60% of the whites. | ||
Give me 60% of the men. | ||
And I will give you a reactionary government like the world has never seen before. | ||
And that's the kind of big picture thinking that these effeminate babies just don't understand. | ||
They think we need to get on our knees and bow before people that resent us and people that are the beneficiaries of the system that we're trying to replace. | ||
We don't need to. | ||
We need boy power, okay? | ||
Forget girl power. | ||
It's boy power. | ||
We need the boys club. | ||
We need the men. | ||
Come on, men. | ||
And the whites. | ||
And largely whites. | ||
And we need to appeal, and also Christians, as I said earlier, and we need to appeal to the kinds of things that are our strong suit. | ||
Guess what? | ||
You're never going to have a reactionary government that wins a majority of the suburban mobs. | ||
Reactionary politics scares them. | ||
It just, that's how it's always going to be. | ||
So we need the reactionary politics that wins over and empowers the men. | ||
And we need a politics that's gonna... In other words, we need to create a coalition based on our real values. | ||
Not a coalition based on compromise. | ||
A coalition based on Christians, disaffected young men, disaffected whites, middle American radicals, yes, working class people, yes, Christian Hispanics, and yes, you know, some of these 10% of blacks that vote Republican for some reason. | ||
And certainly some women. | ||
But let's build a coalition that's going to play into what we're trying to achieve. | ||
He gets it. | ||
It says, anti-feminist sentiment was widely used to gain voters in the election, says Lee Yi-yoon of the feminist group Hayil. | ||
I can't read these Asian names. | ||
It was even the main strategy, she says. | ||
Women say they worry that the anti-feminist language used by such high-profile figures will normalize the movement and further marginalize women in South Korea. | ||
A combination of rampant economic inequality, slowing growth, and some of the most patriarchal social dynamics in the developed world managed to turn gender equality into a polarizing election issue. | ||
The 2016 murder of a 23-year-old woman in the Gognum neighborhood in a random attack by a man who said he hated women for ignoring him sparked an outpouring of rage and the so-called feminism reboot. | ||
The surge of interest in gender equality for women set the stage in 2018 for South Korea's Me Too movement, which brought a wave of women speaking out against film directors, politicians, and actors. | ||
Under banners that read, My Life Is Not Your Porn, women also took to the streets to protest the use of spy camps, prompting a crackdown on the use of illegal cameras in public places. | ||
But the increasing visibility of feminism and the fight for gender equality has been met with a growing backlash from some men who think the movement has caused reverse discrimination and that Me Too is a witch hunt. | ||
In a June 2021 poll, 84% of Korean men in their 20s and 83% in their 30s said they had experienced serious gender-based discrimination. | ||
And you know, you see something like this And you begin to understand politics. | ||
The feminists go too far, right? | ||
They do the Me Too movement in South Korea. | ||
And they do something very dramatic. | ||
It's very loud and it has excesses. | ||
And everybody begins to chafe at this, right? | ||
And so then a president rides that wave of discontent in the opposite direction to the presidency. | ||
And we have to look for these kinds of things and do something similar. | ||
Forget about a corporate tax plan that doesn't offend anybody. | ||
Forget about a Republican coalition that is inclusive. | ||
No, no. | ||
The future is to lean in. | ||
Lean in to these primordial cleavages. | ||
Men versus women, okay? | ||
The race stuff. | ||
We have to take things like BLM and the trans ideology and the Me Too movement and all of it. | ||
We need to lean in on our side and say the left represents tranny insanity, BLM, black narcissism. | ||
It represents satanism and it represents all that. | ||
It represents radical feminists, Me Too hysteria, and we represent the disaffected male. | ||
We represent the antithesis of BLM. | ||
We represent the antithesis of all that. | ||
The message here with South Korea is not just about, in my opinion, the very big upside potential of speaking to men in these terms, which is often ignored. | ||
And I'll get into that specifically. | ||
But there's a bigger picture here, too. | ||
unidentified
|
Which is, let's lean into the controversy. | |
Let's lean into the debate. | ||
Too often the right wing is just gun-shy. | ||
And the right wing doesn't want to do something that's really an answer to the left, really an antithesis of the left. | ||
They kind of want to ameliorate the excesses of the left and be like a weaker alternative. | ||
And things like this, things like Trump, Brexit, this, the Taliban, Russia, It's like, guess what? | ||
When somebody steps forward boldly and plays to win, rather than sort of compromising to the left and kowtowing to the status quo, there's huge upside potential for victory that people didn't think was possible. | ||
You know, this defies all the conventional wisdom of politics, which says you need to be as Sterile and made for mass consumption as possible. | ||
You need to appeal to everybody, alienate nobody. | ||
You need to come up with an inoffensive product that doesn't rock the boat too much. | ||
And you get these kinds of things where it's like, you know, what if we just gave people something really compelling on our side? | ||
What if we played into the opposite side of the country rather than, again, sort of ameliorating the status quo? | ||
What if we really leaned into The negativity, the anger, the counter, the disaffection. | ||
Well you see what's possible then, and you actually can do it. | ||
To me, that's the big picture. | ||
And this is a big strategic blunder that's being made in the right wing actually in America, there's a lesson here. | ||
And you see it very prevalent in a guy like Joe Kent, or Ron DeSantis, where people take a guy like Trump, who won! | ||
John McCain did not win. | ||
Mitt Romney did not win. | ||
Nobody else out of the 16 field could have won. | ||
But Trump did. | ||
Trump won. | ||
It's a victory. | ||
He gave us a blueprint. | ||
And what was it? | ||
It was not inclusivity. | ||
It was not the usual Republican stuff. | ||
We know what the platform was. | ||
It was unprecedented, outrageous, controversial, provocative. | ||
It was nothing that anybody had ever seen before. | ||
And Republicans drew exactly the wrong lesson. | ||
And in 2020, we got this defanged, de-cified Donald Trump, and now what they're proposing for us for the future is inclusive populism and Ron DeSantis. | ||
And why? | ||
Well, they say that, you know, the Trump thing Well, that was just not sustainable, because whites are dying out, and his brand of politics is too offensive, and so we need a cleaner face, someone that doesn't upset people on Twitter, again, who's not gonna scare the moms, like Ron DeSantis. | ||
And we need a guy like Joe Kent, who's, even though he's running in a 90% white district, but we need a guy who's gonna bring people from all walks of life, Hispanics and blacks and all this, and, again, Alienate nobody. | ||
Offend nobody. | ||
And in a calculating way, say safe things about hot button issues, but nothing really too deep. | ||
And that's a huge tactical blunder. | ||
We're not gonna win by just, again, ameliorating the left, throwing red meat when there's a hot news cycle, but compromising when it gets too risky. | ||
Where do you see the big victories and the upsets being made? | ||
It's when somebody says, I'm gonna break up. | ||
What if we just broke all the rules? | ||
What if we just said the thing that we're feeling? | ||
And maybe other people are feeling it too. | ||
Now specifically, this is relevant with the kind of thing that he's saying. | ||
He's speaking to the disaffected males. | ||
And in South Korea, there's a very specific situation going on because they have a very particular dynamic and a very particular culture. | ||
unidentified
|
And it's not quite the same in America. | |
But it goes to show. | ||
Here's a presidential candidate who appealed to young men, and he won! | ||
He talked to young men, and guess what? | ||
They voted for him! | ||
He talked to the men in their 20s and 30s, actually at the expense of the women, and the men voted for him and the women didn't, and he won! | ||
And it's like, hey! | ||
Maybe we should do something like that in America. | ||
People said something similar was happening with Trump and people have remarked on the maleness of the Trump campaign. | ||
That it was masculine. | ||
And of course people have talked about Gamergate and the sexism and all that kind of stuff. | ||
And anti-feminism has certainly been a very prominent strain of the sort of Trump wave and Trumpism. | ||
And Trump wasn't just speaking to disaffected women. | ||
I mean, predominantly he was speaking to disaffected men. | ||
And it's like, what if we had a president who cobbled together a coalition of your conventional right-wingers, Christians, social conservatives, the usual Republican base, whites, rural voters, people in the hinterlands, people that want a pro-business tax policy, people that like capitalism, And so on. | ||
And then what if you added on to that and what if the way to counter the Generation Z liberal brainwashing was to talk to the Zoomers? | ||
I think Trump kind of gets that. | ||
He's talking to the Nelk Boys and he's talking to Barstool, Dave Portnoy, I guess he's going on Joe Rogan. | ||
There's definitely a strain of that going on. | ||
And the point is to talk to our natural constituency. | ||
The thing about this politics is it just totally bewilders me. | ||
You get these supposedly 2,000 IQ political strategists and their strategy is something like ignore people that are likely to vote for you and try to win over people that are not likely to vote for you. | ||
It just makes no sense to me. | ||
Yeah, don't talk to the incels. | ||
Don't talk to the gamers. | ||
Don't talk to the, you know, the Saturdays are for the boys, barstool, frat, whatever. | ||
No, instead, talk to little girls, and talk to, like, suburban moms, and talk to Hispanics and blacks. | ||
Like, it just makes no sense to me. | ||
And specifically on the women's issue, like, hey, anti-feminism is a big part of it. | ||
You can't be a traditionalist and be a feminist. | ||
And all women are feminists. | ||
And women would say, not me, but it's like, yeah. | ||
Most women are feminists. | ||
And most women are going to chafe at the idea that we are going to eradicate feminism. | ||
And so it makes no sense to try to soften that to appeal to them, because guess what? | ||
In order to win women, you're either going to have to defang your platform, in which case, why even bother? | ||
Or, you're not going to win them anyway. | ||
If you have a strong enough platform, you're just not going to win them. | ||
So why don't we market it to the men, then? | ||
If what we know about gender is true, well, men are the rational ones. | ||
So let's take, and by the way, men are losing in the feminist system and women are the beneficiaries. | ||
So wouldn't it make sense then, instead of telling women like, hey, main beneficiary of feminism, we're going to blow up feminism, and by the way our foundational belief is women are irrational, let's make rational arguments to women, why don't we take the message to the men and say, hey men, Hey men, vote for me. | ||
I'll destroy feminism. | ||
Hey men, vote for me. | ||
I'll make it easier for you to start a family. | ||
I'll make it easier for you to marry a girl and make it easier for you to keep your family together and make it easier for you to have kids. | ||
I'm gonna make it harder for women to be whores. | ||
I'm gonna make it harder for women to take your kids and divorce. | ||
I'm going to incentivize women to be in monogamous marriages for the long term and to have and raise kids. | ||
I'm going to make it easier for you to get hired. | ||
I'm going to go after all this feminism nonsense. | ||
I'm going to break the back of the HR departments that are prioritizing women over men. | ||
Men would vote for that. | ||
Men who are not ideologically right-wing would vote for that. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Men who are independent, men who are in the middle, the people that you need to win, the people that you would need to turn out and convert and can convert, they would vote for something like that. | ||
They would vote for an interest-based politics that meets their interest. | ||
Hey, vote. | ||
If you're a candidate, go out and find the voters who are not being served. | ||
Go out and find the voters whose interests are not being Served. | ||
Go out and talk to the people who are not being talked to. | ||
That's a case in South Korea. | ||
That's a case in America. | ||
Break the shackles of the liberal thinking. | ||
Break out of that way of thinking and say, hey, you know, these liberals are insane. | ||
I'm not a feminist. | ||
I don't have any special love for democracy or liberalism or any of it. | ||
You know what I want? | ||
I want a Christian, right-wing, patriarchal country. | ||
And who's with me? | ||
The Christians, The conservatives, the traditionalists, the men. | ||
And whoever's not with me, well they wouldn't vote for me anyway. | ||
unidentified
|
So they could go vote for Hillary Clinton. | |
I want the disaffected guys. | ||
I want the disaffected middle class. | ||
I want the disaffected traditionalists, conservatives, the whites, the Christians. | ||
I mean, yeah, it's not all gonna be whites. | ||
But yeah, let's go out and talk to our natural constituency. | ||
So, I mean, I see this South Korean thing. | ||
It's a reminder of what the blueprint should be. | ||
Yeah, you can win on an anti... Imagine if we had an anti-feminist president. | ||
I mean, like, think of the prospect. | ||
It sounds awesome. | ||
And it totally would work. | ||
Imagine if there was somebody on the debate stage, a presidential debate stage saying, I'm not a feminist. | ||
It's, like, unthinkable. | ||
The prospect of that is, like, mind-blowing. | ||
But it's never been done. | ||
It's sort of been implied, but nobody's outright said, like, yeah, you know, this feminism has gone too far, and feminism's getting in the way of men forming families and all the rest. | ||
And there's discrimination against men. | ||
If a president said that, he would win. | ||
Or a candidate, I should say. | ||
If a presidential candidate on the right wing said that, he would win. | ||
Instantly. | ||
And that goes for any candidate. | ||
If they went up there and said, you know what? | ||
I'm not a feminist. | ||
And I'm sick of feminism, frankly. | ||
I think feminism's destroying the relationship between men and women. | ||
I think there's discrimination against men. | ||
Me Too has gone too far. | ||
That person would sail the victory. | ||
And if they trashed LGBT, and if they trashed BLM, and if they leaned into these issues, they would win. | ||
And not using these issues, not using like some liberal issues And playing them off of other liberal issues. | ||
Example, not saying, like, I oppose trans because I support girl sports. | ||
No, what if somebody went up there and said, this trans stuff is crazy. | ||
Remember when guys were guys and girls were girls? | ||
This is a freak show. | ||
Not saying, I'm a passionate defender of competition among America's young girls. | ||
Like, fuck that. | ||
And not somebody going up there and saying like, you know, actually feminism is really bad for the women the most. | ||
No, getting up there and saying feminism sucks. | ||
It's gone too far. | ||
And hey, what about men? | ||
I would go out, I would vote for that person a hundred times. | ||
That person would have my allegiance until the day I died. | ||
unidentified
|
So, there's a blueprint there. | |
But it's all these, these people just don't have, they just don't have the vision and they don't have the balls either. | ||
You know? | ||
Their thinking is shackled. | ||
Their thinking is too conventional. | ||
Their thinking within the parameters that were set by our enemies. | ||
Well, I don't think like that. | ||
So, break the conditioning, run an incel candidate for president. | ||
Break the conditioning. | ||
Run an anti-feminist. | ||
Run a hardcore Christian. | ||
Say the name. | ||
You know? | ||
But I see this South Korean thing, it just proves that all these Joe Kentards are just idiots. | ||
Straight up, like, listen man, people like that can disavow me, but you're just wrong. | ||
Like, at the end of the day, yeah, maybe Joe Kent will get to Congress and he'll be very smarmy and smug about it, but you're just wrong. | ||
Like, you don't understand how we're gonna get to the next level. | ||
I do. | ||
You don't. | ||
It's obvious. | ||
It's all there. | ||
But these people, I mean, they're just not that bright, honestly. | ||
Guy's just not that smart. | ||
And most of these people, they confuse credentials with intelligence, but they don't have it. | ||
So, I mean, all they know is trickery and cleverness and, you know, scheming. | ||
But they don't have the vision, you know? | ||
But anyway, we're gonna move on. | ||
I want to move on into our big featured story. | ||
I've already been live for an hour. | ||
But I'm just gonna keep going and I'm gonna get into the reason why I'm here tonight. | ||
Let me just take a sip here. | ||
I'm getting a little mouth is getting a little dry. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Bye. | ||
Let me just stretch a little bit. | ||
You know, these shows are difficult because there's no break. | ||
Every other show, it's like 10 minutes on, 10 minutes off, 5 minutes on, 3 minutes off. | ||
This show, it's like 100 min- 200 minutes. | ||
Straight. | ||
No breaks. | ||
No one else talks. | ||
I don't even get to- Like most shows, it's like, okay, now a guest is gonna talk for a little while. | ||
Oh, now we're gonna run a commercial. | ||
Now we're gonna play a clip. | ||
This is the only show where it's like 200 minutes, talking for 200 minutes, talking non-stop for 200 minutes. | ||
Not 200, more like 150, 180. | ||
But yeah, it's hard. | ||
for 200 minutes not 200 more like 150 180 but yeah it's it's hard yeah I start to lose my voice my nose itches I need a sip that's why I'm so irritable on it Because by the time I get to the Super Chats, I'm like, oh my gosh. | ||
I'm like, jeez, give me a break here. | ||
I just want to, I want to get off the air and catch my breath, you know? | ||
But all these other guys are like, five minutes on, five minutes off, ten minutes on. | ||
And then this show is like, no. | ||
300 minute increments. | ||
Hi, welcome to the show. | ||
I'm about to talk for 150 minutes without stopping every night for five years. | ||
Hi, I'm about to talk for 150 minutes with no break, no pauses. | ||
I'm just gonna sit here and just talk. | ||
Yeah, it's pretty... When you think about it, it's kind of... it just doesn't even make any sense. | ||
Yeah, on the one hand, it's a pretty incredible feat. | ||
It's a pretty incredible display of my natural talent. | ||
On the other hand, it just makes no sense. | ||
It's just sort of a pointless effort. | ||
It's sort of like, you know, what if I just stood on one leg for five days? | ||
Like, yeah, it's pretty impressive, but... Is that really necessary? | ||
Is that really necessary? | ||
Does that really make a lot of sense, though? | ||
So, I'm probably gonna change the show up. | ||
Once I get down to Florida and we build the studio, we'll do commercial breaks. | ||
It'll be more of a conventional format. | ||
It's just ridiculous, you know? | ||
Because no other show does that for good reason. | ||
No other show is like that. | ||
But yeah, that's a big part of why I get into the Super Chats and I'm just miserable because I'm like, I don't want to talk anymore. | ||
I'm tired of talking and I want to just like sit down. | ||
unidentified
|
Everyone says no! | |
I'm not saying crazy, I mean... | ||
You know, I'll start the show, I'll introduce the topics, I'll do a quick break, quick 2-minute break, I'll do an A-block, 3-minute break, B-block, 5-minute break, super chats. | ||
You know, I mean, we're talking about like 10 minutes of commercials. | ||
Okay? | ||
And it'll be all our commercials. | ||
I'm not gonna advertise for other stuff. | ||
It'll just be, you know, the kind of stuff you see in the lobby. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
So let's get into our featured story. | ||
So this is about the Ukraine crisis, but a little bit of a different angle tonight. | ||
We've talked a lot about the war itself and the strategy behind it and the history and all of that, but tonight I want to get into the economic perspective because, of course, Russia has invaded Ukraine and there's really nothing that NATO can do. | ||
The NATO alliance The overt goal of the NATO alliance is to contain Russia, and yet they can't do it. | ||
There are so many countries in NATO. | ||
They spend so much money on defense. | ||
It's actually very funny when you think about it. | ||
The United States spends $800 billion on its military per year so that they could fight wars against Russia and China at the same time, effectively. | ||
I mean, that is essentially what the purpose of that is. | ||
Why must we have a defense budget that's bigger than all the other countries put together? | ||
Well, it's this American doctrine to maintain global hegemony of being able to fight, if necessary, two wars, you know, two theaters of conflict at the same time, most likely with our two chief peer competitors, China and Russia. | ||
And so, America spends all this money, the Western European countries spend all this money, we've got, we do summits, we're expanding the membership, and yet they are not able to stop this Russian invasion. | ||
And so they have to resort to the sanctions. | ||
They call this soft power. | ||
And nation can use power in two ways. | ||
Hard power, which is bombs, guns, killing people, pure force. | ||
You're going to do something? | ||
Well, we will kill the people that are trying to do that, you know? | ||
You want to do this in Iraq? | ||
You want to do this in Syria? | ||
Well, what if we just drop bombs on your people? | ||
You know, what if we just killed You're soldiers, and we send in our soldiers, and now we control the country. | ||
That's hard power. | ||
And then soft power is using other means to influence. | ||
So, we're going to make you poor, we're going to, you know, we're going to prevent you from traveling, we're going to remove companies, you know, we're going to do...you're familiar with sanctions. | ||
And this is really all we can do. | ||
Because Ukraine's not part of the alliance, so there's no hard power deterrent factor. | ||
And we can't go to war with Russia, for obvious reasons. | ||
So, and we don't even really have a legitimate pretext, even if we wanted to. | ||
So we have to use this lame soft power stuff. | ||
We're gonna sanction Russia, we're gonna... And we've done pretty unprecedented things. | ||
We have tried to cripple their economy. | ||
And the goal here, I understand the thinking here, You know, we can't kill the Russians. | ||
We can't go in there and fight the Russians directly. | ||
But what Biden essentially said at the NATO Summit today, because some reporters said, was the goal of the sanctions to deter Russian aggression? | ||
You know, that clearly didn't work. | ||
And Biden said, well, the goal of the sanctions is not to deter Russia. | ||
He said the goal of the sanctions and the idea that the sanctions might never end will deter Russia. | ||
And what did he mean by that? | ||
A lot of people are sort of confused by what he meant. | ||
And what the reporter was basically saying is, hey, you threatened to destroy the Russian economy if they invaded, and they invaded. | ||
You did everything you could to cripple the Russian economy, and they're still going. | ||
So, clearly, The threat of sanctions did not deter Russia from invading. | ||
It didn't work. | ||
And what Biden said is, well, you're thinking about it wrong. | ||
Biden effectively said, well, it's not the sanctions and their application. | ||
He said it's the sustaining of the sanctions. | ||
He said it's not that we are going to kick them out of the SWIFT system and we're going to apply it and this sort of, the curtain drops. | ||
He says it's the prospect that the sanctions are not lifted. | ||
And he said basically this will influence Russia's behavior because if Russia is made a pariah and if Russia is completely isolated financially indefinitely, that is going to cause problems which may cause Russia to seek an off-ramp out of the conflict or, you know, may have prevented him from engaging in the first place. | ||
And that's really NATO's strategy here, and that's really all they've got, is we're going to put these sanctions on Russia, and we're going to hope that it's just painful enough within the Russian regime, and also among the Russian population, that this will pressure Putin to change course. | ||
Because, you know, what exactly are those pressures? | ||
Well, if we put on these dramatic sanctions and it hurts the Russian economy, the Russian people will suffer materially as a result. | ||
Their purchasing power will be diminished. | ||
They'll be materially more poor. | ||
There may be shortages. | ||
And they'll be upset about that. | ||
And they'll blame Putin for that. | ||
And then there might be protests. | ||
There might be in the next election some kind of big, maybe a popular opposition candidate. | ||
And then there'll be pressure from within the regime. | ||
If the sanctions are targeted against powerful people in the Russian regime, if their yachts are being seized, if their assets are being seized, they'll be materially worse off and they'll blame it on Putin and they'll try to do a palace coup. | ||
And so that's what the soft power means. | ||
It's all about influencing decision makers. | ||
Putin may change course if it's like, hey, his people are turning on him, the Russian people, and the court is turning against him. | ||
The court of the president, the oligarchs, the people closest to him, the influential people in the administration, are they going to turn on him? | ||
And will that make Putin change course? | ||
But that's not happening. | ||
And the story tonight is about the Russian economy and how actually, not only is that approach not working, it's actually backfiring. | ||
And we've talked about this on the show before, and even Biden said this at the NATO Summit yesterday. | ||
He said that everyone is going to experience pain because of the sanctions. | ||
We have banned the import of Russian oil. | ||
And now energy prices are going up in America. | ||
I mean you've seen that the gas pump and that's just on the consumer side. | ||
It costs way more for somebody to fill up their tank with gas but also when energy prices rise all prices rise. | ||
And we're already in the middle of unprecedented inflation. | ||
Highest inflation in 40 years and that was before the war started. | ||
And now energy prices are going up. | ||
So that affects people directly in the winter when people are trying to heat their homes. | ||
It affects people when they try to fill up their car with gas. | ||
But it also affects everything else because it costs more money for a plane to fuel up and so air travel becomes more expensive and it costs trucks more money to fill up their tank and so Any good that arrives by truck or a ship or a plane that runs on fuel, all that is more expensive. | ||
It's transportation costs go up. | ||
But then additionally you've got other effects. | ||
Russia's the number one exporter of fertilizer. | ||
They have, you know, almost all the fertilizer in the world comes from Russia. | ||
And now if that's no longer being exported to the United States, now food prices are going up. | ||
Also, most of the world's food comes from Russia and Ukraine. | ||
That's the breadbasket of Europe, and it's actually like the breadbasket of the world. | ||
We have a lot of food here, there's a lot of food in China, but a lot of the world's food comes from Russia and Ukraine, and so if there's less food in the world, prices go up. | ||
So, the price for grain goes up, the price for livestock goes up, The price of the food itself goes up. | ||
The price for the fertilizer that goes on the food goes up. | ||
It all goes up. | ||
And so the United States is actually going to suffer a lot of economic pain as a result of this. | ||
We are going to suffer real economic hardship as a result of the sanctions. | ||
Russia is the world's 11th largest economy. | ||
And a lot of the things that are produced in Russia, a lot of the raw materials, the world needs. | ||
It needs Russian titanium. | ||
It needs Russian nickel. | ||
It needs fertilizer. | ||
It needs grain. | ||
It needs wheat. | ||
It needs oil. | ||
And if Russia is disconnected from the world economy, the world economy is going to suffer, not Russia. | ||
And if the world economy, if we're not importing Russian products, hey, more for Russia! | ||
And what is an economy other than the raw materials and the completed goods? | ||
Russia has industry. | ||
Russia has raw materials. | ||
They can be a fully independent economy. | ||
We will suffer because we are not. | ||
And so, we're going to experience pain, and also Europe will too. | ||
And this was an article in BBC Europe is entirely dependent on Russian natural gas, and it's very funny. | ||
Biden goes over to the NATO summit, and he tells the Europeans, he says, you're going to experience pain, but I have to do this. | ||
And there's something really funny about that. | ||
And what he's saying is, the Europeans have to wane themselves off of natural gas that comes from Russia, because that's the only place they can get natural gas. | ||
They get it from the Baltic states, but the Baltic states just don't, they simply don't have enough natural gas. | ||
They're already giving the maximum capacity that they can to Western Europe. | ||
And the Western European countries, they get liquefied natural gas from America and from the Gulf states. | ||
But it's very expensive, and lots of countries are bidding for that. | ||
So really, the only place they could get their gas is from Russia. | ||
And they need the gas because it's winter, so they need cheap gas to heat their homes. | ||
And so Biden goes over there and says, listen, you can't buy the Russian gas anymore. | ||
He goes, you'll have to buy this very expensive liquefied natural gas from us. | ||
And he also says, we can't even replace all the Russian gas. | ||
Ours cost more and we don't have enough of it to give to you. | ||
And he says, so it's going to be very painful for you, but I have to do it. | ||
And there's something so funny about this because, you know, in my debate with Destiny, Destiny said, well, what about the Ukrainians? | ||
Do they have to cut themselves to Russian influence forever? | ||
Shouldn't they be independent and join NATO? | ||
But these are the kinds of conversations happening in the NATO countries. | ||
The American president flies to Europe and tells all the countries in Europe, hey, Hate to break it to you, but I've decided your energy bill just went up. | ||
And all the Western European nations go, yes dear, okay. | ||
You know, talk about being cucked. | ||
Could you imagine if, like, Angela Merkel came to America and said, I've made the decision that your gas prices are going up. | ||
And we were like, yeah, well, whatever it takes. | ||
I'm going to talk about being cucked. | ||
So this is the article from BBC. | ||
It says, quote, The US and the European Union have announced a major deal on liquefied natural gas in an attempt to reduce Europe's reliance on Russian energy. | ||
The agreement will see the United States provide the EU with extra gas equivalent to around 10% of the gas it currently gets from Russia by the end of the year. | ||
The bloc has already said it will cut Russian gas use in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. | ||
Russia currently supplies about 40% of the European Union's gas needs. | ||
The new deal will involve the U.S. | ||
and other countries supplying an extra 15 billion cubic meters of gas, on top of last year's 22 billion cubic meters. | ||
The new total will represent around 24% of the gas currently imported from Russia. | ||
Mr. Biden and the European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen discussed Russia's invasion of Ukraine. | ||
Biden said Putin is using Russia's energy resources to coerce and manipulate its neighbors. | ||
He's used the profits to drive his war machine. | ||
He said that the long-term benefits of the deal would outweigh the short-term pain the reducing Russian gas supplies would cause. | ||
He said, quote, And that's just not true. | ||
It's just not true. | ||
They're not getting enough gas. | ||
cost for europe but it's not only the right thing to do from a moral standpoint it's going to put us on a much stronger strategic footing and that's just not true it's just not true they're not getting enough gas and you read even even the bbc admits this is not sufficient the The most they could do, they're doing everything they can. | ||
It's wartime. | ||
And they're taking these drastic, extraordinary measures to hurt Russia and weaken Russia's influence over Europe. | ||
And what can they do? | ||
Well, they replace a quarter, a quarter of the Russian gas that the European Union is getting. | ||
They can't even get to 25%. | ||
And so the point is, and I said this yesterday, we need Russia more than Russia needs us. | ||
The world economy needs Russia more than Russia needs the world economy. | ||
And as a result of the sanctions regime and everything that's going on, we are going to have way more pain than Russia. | ||
We're going to have higher fuel prices. | ||
Europe is going to have higher energy prices. | ||
We're going to have higher food prices. | ||
Europe will have higher food prices. | ||
We will experience overall inflation across the board and so will Europe. | ||
The fertilizer gets more expensive, the grain gets more expensive, the food gets more expensive, the energy gets more expensive, the transportation gets more expensive, everything gets more expensive, and it already was because of quantitative easing, the doubling of the money supply, and low interest rates from the Federal Reserve. | ||
So, I mean, we're in a really bad spot economically. | ||
We're in a, this is a very bad situation. | ||
Conversely, the Russian economy is totally rebounding. | ||
The ruble is way up, and everybody was making fun of Russia and talking about how the ruble, the Russian currency, was destroyed by the sanctions, and it's true. | ||
The ruble collapsed, went down 50% against the dollar about one week after the conflict began, and now it's back up to something like 80% of what it was before the war broke out. | ||
And this is an article from Reuters. | ||
It says the Russian ruble briefly leapt to a three-week high. | ||
Three-week high. | ||
Passed 95 against the dollar on Wednesday in Moscow before settling close to 100 after President Vladimir Putin said Russia would start selling its gas to unfriendly countries in rubles. | ||
The potential ramifications of that move, which Putin ordered his government to sort out in one week, could boost the Russian currency, with a host of European countries still dependent on Moscow for much of their energy supplies. | ||
The ruble has stabilized near 105 to the dollar in recent sessions after falling to a record low of 120 in Moscow this month and even further on the interbank market to 150. | ||
Russia has taken a hit from unprecedented Western sanctions over events in Ukraine, what it terms a special operation that started on February 24th. | ||
Before that, the ruble traded at about 80 to the dollar. | ||
So think about it. | ||
Before the invasion, you could get 80 rubles for $1. | ||
The exchange rate is 80 to 1. | ||
Russia invades Ukraine and unprecedented financial sanctions are imposed. | ||
Harsher sanctions have been imposed on Russia than have been imposed on Iran or North Korea or any other country. | ||
A record number of Western companies pull out. | ||
Tech companies, restaurants, sports companies, apparel companies, you name it. | ||
They're banned from the international SWIFT system of monetary transfers. | ||
Their foreign currency reserves are seized. | ||
Their banks are disconnected from the global banking system. | ||
This is unprecedented. | ||
It's never happened. | ||
The oligarchs' assets have been seized. | ||
They've sanctioned all the people close to Putin. | ||
And so before the war, you could get 80 rubles for $1. | ||
And at the worst, it was about 50% of the value. | ||
You could get 150 rubles for $1. | ||
So you could say the value of the ruble was cut in half. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
You could get half as many dollars as you could before. | ||
Now, it's back up to 95. | ||
Four weeks later, it's back up to 95. | ||
So it went from 80 to 150, now to 95. | ||
So the ruble is stabilized, and you do the math on that, You know, what is 15 over 80? | ||
That's 15%? | ||
So the ruble, again keep in mind, these are the worst sanctions in history, the most powerful financial power in the history of the world. | ||
The United States and its allies have completely sanctioned Russia in a way that has never happened before. | ||
In modern history, since World War II you could say, but really it's not comparable to anything before that either. | ||
And the Russian currency fell 15%. | ||
15% in four weeks, right? | ||
It went down 50, and now it's stabilized at 15% lower than when we started. | ||
That's it? | ||
That's all you got? | ||
And it's only gonna go higher. | ||
I mean, understand that. | ||
I mean, it will probably stabilize even closer to where it was before the war started because of this new rule. | ||
A couple of days ago, Russia announced that it will only sell its oil in rubles to unfriendly countries. | ||
So, NATO and its allies, they will have to exchange their currencies for rubles and then buy Russian energy in rubles. | ||
And this is going to bolster the Russian currency. | ||
Because before, nobody was getting the rubles. | ||
Nobody was trading in rubles because, you know, the United States said, you know, we're not buying rubles anymore and we can't do any currency exchanges. | ||
And Russia said, OK, well, if you want our oil and natural gas, you're just going to have to buy the rubles instead of dollars. | ||
And so now that's giving some buoyancy to the ruble. | ||
And so, in other words, this trend will continue. | ||
This policy was announced a couple of days ago, and the ruble goes from 120 to 95 in a couple of days. | ||
It will continue to go up as time goes on. | ||
You know, 50% was the high watermark. | ||
It's stabilizing at around 15-20% below what it was when it started. | ||
When all is said and done, it will be negligible. | ||
The hit to the ruble will be negligible. | ||
And this is particularly impressive because when you look at some of these other currencies, like the Turkish Lira for example, the Turkish Lira is in free fall. | ||
I mean, they're having like hyperinflation. | ||
And their currency has not recovered over the past few years. | ||
And that's due to unrelated factors. | ||
They don't have the full weight of the American government crushing them. | ||
And other currencies have fallen in the same way. | ||
The Iranian currency, the North Korean currency. | ||
So the Russian currency has done something no other country has. | ||
It survived the full weight of the American system. | ||
So, you know, again, think of the contrast. | ||
Biden is over here in America, and then he goes to Europe and says, hey, everything's gonna suck for a while, but trust me, it's worth it. | ||
In Russia, their currency barely took a hit. | ||
Then, they reopen the stock market today, and this is the report on the Russian stock market from Russia Today. | ||
It says, quote, Russia's stocks continued to rise sharply on Thursday as the Moscow exchange reopened for limited trading this week after suspending most of its transactions on February 28th. | ||
The ruble-based Moex benchmark went up more than 11% to 2,743 points. | ||
The dollar-denominated RTS index of leading Russian stocks was down slightly to 888 points. | ||
The Moscow exchange resumed trading in 33 Russian equities including shares of Gazprom, Sberbank, Aerofloat and other domestic firms. | ||
Oil majors Rosneft and Lukoil were up by 20% and 16% respectively. | ||
Aluminum company Ruzel rose more than 14% while Norilsk Nickel jumped more than 22%. | ||
So the Russian stock market overall is rising and one of the indices fell slightly and then all the Russian commodity companies are up 16, 20, 22 percent. | ||
The nickel, aluminum, and oil companies, as well as some of these other commodities companies, they're all up double digits. | ||
So, go figure. | ||
Like I said, America and NATO, they impose the most crushing sanctions that have ever been applied to any country, much less a major country, and we all suffer. | ||
You know, our food prices are going up, energy prices going up. | ||
They're going up in Europe. | ||
Overall, prices are going up. | ||
This is in the middle of 4, 5, 7% inflation. | ||
And in Russia, they're actually doing better. | ||
The currency is barely taking a hit. | ||
The stock market's up. | ||
Food prices are stable. | ||
Energy prices are stable. | ||
I mean, they're doing just fine. | ||
They're developing alternatives to the technology. | ||
They're developing alternatives to McDonald's. | ||
I mean, what is the worst outcome for the Russians? | ||
Well, they don't have Facebook, McDonald's, and Nike. | ||
Honestly, that doesn't sound like the worst thing in the world. | ||
And the reason that they're going to have stable commodity prices is because they produce the commodities. | ||
Their gas prices, their energy prices won't go up because Russia produces the energy. | ||
Simple as. | ||
Their food prices aren't going up because they produce the food. | ||
It's as self-sufficient as you can be in the 21st century. | ||
Their economy is relatively self-sufficient. | ||
So when the world isn't buying its food and when the world isn't buying its oil, the Russians are using it. | ||
So energy went up a little bit when the war started. | ||
Now energy prices are the same. | ||
Same can't be said for America. | ||
Food prices went up a little bit when the war started. | ||
Now they stabilized. | ||
Same cannot be said about America. | ||
Western Europe is totally dependent on Russian gas. | ||
Their energy prices will go up. | ||
We cannot replace all their gas with liquefied natural gas. | ||
Cheap energy? | ||
It's over for Europe. | ||
Indefinitely. | ||
I mean, that's a permanent legacy of the conflict now, or at least in the short and medium term. | ||
Same for America. | ||
Joe Biden called up Saudi Arabia and said, hey, could you increase production to offset rising prices in America? | ||
Saudi Arabia doesn't even pick up the call. | ||
And then the real irony, the real funny thing, is not only are these sanctions not hurting Russia, they're just hurting us. | ||
But then of course this is also hurting us strategically in the long term too because now that Russia is doing deals with India and Saudi Arabia in rubles or in the Chinese Yuan, now on the political level These alternative currencies are on track to replace the U.S. | ||
dollar. | ||
I mean, this was like... So, in other words, not only did it backfire the short term, and we're gonna have to pay more for gas and energy and food and everything else, but also, by the political consequences, by kicking Russia out of the dollar system, now other countries and other firms are considering alternatives to the dollar system. | ||
Now banks and major companies are forced to consider that the dollar is not as stable as they thought. | ||
Same with foreign nations. | ||
And so now foreign nations will maybe diversify their foreign currency reserves. | ||
And banks will do the same and companies will think about doing business in other currencies. | ||
And now that they're talking about India and Russia doing business in the Yuan as a reference currency, And now that Saudi Arabia is doing the same thing, now it's on the table that there's a new game in town. | ||
The U.S. | ||
dollar isn't the only reserve currency. | ||
It's not the only reference currency. | ||
And if the United States is no longer the reserve currency, that's going to be a big problem for our economy. | ||
Because our economy is propped up by the fact that there is always a market for American debt. | ||
And the American dollar We can inflate the dollar and we can borrow against the dollar all day long. | ||
We can run huge deficits and we can have a huge debt and we can have a welfare state and a war state because we could just keep printing money and we could keep borrowing debt because countries will always buy our debt and because countries will always be trading in our currency because our currency is the reference currency of the world. | ||
Once that's no longer the case, now we've got a big problem. | ||
Because now, you know, countries don't have 80% of their foreign currency reserves in dollars. | ||
And now, the market for American debt, there's not as much demand as there used to be. | ||
So, you know, in the long run, when we look at the legacy of this conflict in Ukraine, Who's really winning here? | ||
From my perspective, Russia has taken Ukraine, the war is over, they will dictate the terms, and then as far as the economy goes, who's hurting more? | ||
Well, we're definitely hurting more, and in the long run, the political consequences will be worse for us. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
Nice job. | ||
Nice job, NATO. | ||
Nice job. | ||
Really thought that one through. | ||
You know, but these are This is the problem with NATO, and this is like a big part of my philosophy in politics, is if you reach too far, you will have less than what you could have had if you accepted your limitations. | ||
This is my philosophy in life. | ||
This is my philosophy in politics. | ||
And it's really, it's ultimately about humility. | ||
If you approach a situation with humility and with respect, And if you're strategic and if you're careful, you can have an optimal outcome. | ||
You can't have everything you want, but you can have an optimal outcome. | ||
You can have the best possible outcome. | ||
If you're reaching for something that's impossible, you'll fall short of even the most that was plausible, the most that you could have achieved reasonably. | ||
And this is the story of the West. | ||
I mean, we could have had a really strong security posture in the 21st century. | ||
But that wasn't enough. | ||
We wanted to control everything. | ||
And our hubris, our greed, because we held on to Ukraine, and the Middle East, and Taiwan, and because we tried to hold on to everything, now we'll have less than what we could have otherwise had. | ||
If we were just smart, if we were humble, and if we respected the world, and if we had common sense. | ||
Because we were the uncontested power for 20 years, but that was always a tenuous and transient status. | ||
And a transitional status, I should say. | ||
And instead of using that to invest in a long-term posture where we could dominate a century, we thought we could dominate everything forever, and now we'll have less as a consequence. | ||
So it's a classic story of hubris. | ||
Classic story of hubris with the United States. | ||
And that's why I'm sort of cheering it on because this is just, it just doesn't make any sense. | ||
We're doing all of this and for what? | ||
Think about what we have inflicted upon ourselves and what we still may inflict on the world and for what? | ||
How many Ukrainians will die? | ||
How many Russians will die? | ||
We're coming to the brink of a nuclear war. | ||
We have inflicted untold economic damage on the United States and on NATO, and in the long term we may have totally screwed ourselves if this causes us to lose our status as the reserve currency. | ||
And for what? | ||
Because NATO just had to be, or Ukraine just had to be a part of NATO? | ||
Was it worth it? | ||
I mean, think about what we're talking about here. | ||
All of that because we could not relinquish Ukraine. | ||
And was that worth it? | ||
Strategically, was that worth it? | ||
Losing the dollar as the world's reserve currency, if there's even a 1% chance that that could happen as a consequence of this, was it worth it? | ||
Was Ukraine worth it? | ||
And we were never going to keep Ukraine. | ||
That was never in the cards. | ||
Russia was never going to allow that. | ||
And guess what? | ||
Russia gets a vote, as was evidenced by their invasion, and there was nothing we could do to stop it. | ||
There never was. | ||
And instead of saying, you know what? | ||
Even if we didn't like it, even if we weren't thrilled with the fact that we were conceding Ukraine to Russia as though it's ours, But even if you said reluctantly, well, there's nothing we could do, I mean, that would be a sound strategy, because, like, that's consistent with reality. | ||
You may not like it, but Russia won't allow Ukraine to leave. | ||
Yeah, I mean, maybe you don't like that, maybe that sucks, maybe you're reluctant about this, but that's the way it is. | ||
Instead, we said, no, no, we never back down! | ||
We double down! | ||
We don't back down, we just double down every time, no matter the circumstance. | ||
No matter what the argument is, no matter what the strategic posture is, no matter what our options are, we never back down, we just double down. | ||
The answer is always more. | ||
More toughness, more spending, more brashness, more bombast, and doubling down. | ||
And like, don't you see a problem with this thinking? | ||
Always doubling down. | ||
Doubling down on Russia. | ||
Doubling down on China. | ||
Doubling down on ISIS. | ||
Doubling down on Iran. | ||
Doubling down on Assad and Gaddafi and everybody. | ||
And it's like, who do we think we are? | ||
Who do we think we are with that kind of attitude? | ||
I mean, what do we think the outcome is be? | ||
Do you think that we really can just control everything? | ||
Because we can't. | ||
You know, always more toughness. | ||
Or we need to understand that we are in the world and we have a role to play in the world, but it's limited. | ||
It may be more expansive than any other country, but it's still limited. | ||
And it is through the acceptance of limitations that we can pursue a real strategy. | ||
It's within the bounds of our real strategic limitations that then we can begin to make strategic decisions. | ||
We can make real choices about where resources are going to go and, you know, what kind of long-term strategy we're going to pursue, as opposed to everything, everywhere, all the time, forever. | ||
Then you're not forced to make decisions. | ||
Because there's only one option. | ||
Our way or the highway. | ||
It's gonna be our way, and if you don't like it, well... F you! | ||
We're America, bitch! | ||
It's like, okay, well Russia's just gonna invade Ukraine. | ||
They can't do that! | ||
We're America! | ||
We stand up to people, so how do you like this? | ||
We're gonna sanction you. | ||
Well, it turns out the sanctions have no effect. | ||
What are you gonna do now? | ||
The Emperor has no clothes. | ||
There's nothing we can do. | ||
And now we look like a paper tiger. | ||
Now we look like a bitch! | ||
Because we talked this big game and we said, you know, Putin's this low-rent criminal. | ||
He's just a thug. | ||
He's nothing more than a, like DeSantis said, he's a gas station attendant. | ||
Ron DeSantis, Vladimir Putin would kick the ever-loving shit out of you. | ||
In real life and on the world stage. | ||
Okay? | ||
I just want Ron DeSantis to know that. | ||
That if Vladimir Putin and Ron DeSantis ever got in a fist fight, Vladimir Putin would rape and destroy Ron DeSantis. | ||
Just saying. | ||
And, you know, I think Ron DeSantis is a good governor, but you can't write a check that you can't cash. | ||
And that kind of tough talk from these pussy Republicans, it's enough already. | ||
Who do you think you are? | ||
You know, when I hear Ted Cruz, this fat schlub, talk about Vladimir Putin, I want to say, who do you think you are? | ||
He's in dad jeans at the airport. | ||
He's got a gut. | ||
He's sitting around drinking Dr. Peppers. | ||
He's a nerd. | ||
He's a policy wonk. | ||
Vladimir Putin is a judo black belt. | ||
He's been practicing judo since he was 14 years old. | ||
He has controlled Russia for 20 years. | ||
He is a killer! | ||
He was a KGB agent! | ||
And you get this fat, schlub Ted Cruz, you get this faggot Lindsey Graham, and you get policy wonk Ron DeSantis, and they're gonna, you know, pull up their dad jeans and say, Vladimir Putin, he's a gas stationer, he's a thug, we should kill him! | ||
Vladimir Putin would kick the shit out of you! | ||
And Vladimir Putin's got a military, what do you have? | ||
I mean, you don't even control your own office. | ||
You don't even control your own staff. | ||
You know, Ron DeSantis, Vladimir Putin, he's a glorified gas station attendant. | ||
Vladimir Putin would punch you so hard he'd break your nose. | ||
You little bitch! | ||
Don't you need to go sign some bills in Israel? | ||
Don't you need to put your head on the wheeling wall? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, I hate it. | |
And that's really what it is. | ||
Who do you think you are? | ||
Who do you think you are, the people running this country? | ||
I mean honestly but that's just it You know, we've doubled down and tripled down and there's nothing backing it up in this particular case. | ||
Now, if Putin invaded Poland, yeah, it would be over for Russia. | ||
But I mean, we're talking about Ukraine here. | ||
Ukraine's not part of NATO. | ||
We know we can't defend them. | ||
And then we've got the sanctions thing. | ||
The sanctions aren't as powerful as we think they are. | ||
We're not going to go to war with Russia. | ||
So what's backing up all the tough talk? | ||
The doubling down, the threats, talking about regime change. | ||
He's untouchable. | ||
And so now we look like an idiot. | ||
And China's gonna take Taiwan, and guess what? | ||
We can't defend Taiwan either. | ||
So, you know, all this talk, and that's all it is. | ||
It's cheap. | ||
It's cheap. | ||
And I hope that we don't get ourselves into this trap, because you know what's gonna happen next, is China's gonna invade Taiwan, and then we're gonna go to nuclear war over it. | ||
To say, nobody's taking away our power! | ||
No, see, we're not a paper tiger. | ||
We're not a bitch. | ||
We're gonna nuke you. | ||
We're gonna go to war with China. | ||
And that's my fear. | ||
Because this doubling down, this insanity, this irrational, insane, there's only one way and it's always just escalation, that's where it's going to lead. | ||
Unless cooler heads prevail and people say, you know what? | ||
Yeah, it's gone. | ||
Ukraine's gone. | ||
Taiwan's gone. | ||
Afghanistan's gone. | ||
The unipolar moment is over. | ||
We gotta rethink it. | ||
But who's gonna do that? | ||
Who in the National Security Council? | ||
Who in the Pentagon? | ||
Who in the DOD is gonna do that? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know who is gonna do that. | ||
I don't know where that common sense is gonna come from. | ||
Because they only know one language, and that is self-righteousness. | ||
You know, we're a democracy! | ||
We're the only good guys. | ||
You're the bad guys, we're the good guys, and we're the biggest and we're the best, and you're a bitch, and we could do whatever we want, and oh, just try and stop us. | ||
Okay, well, Putin did. | ||
Now what are you gonna do? | ||
Sanctions? | ||
Yeah, that's cute. | ||
They totally backfired. | ||
So, I mean, these people in D.C. | ||
are dangerous. | ||
I mean, you're not a patriot if you support them. | ||
People say, oh, Nick sounds like Russia first. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
I mean, if you support these nutjobs in the military-industrial complex, you are not a patriot. | ||
You are not a patriot for supporting the bloodthirsty warmongers in the State Department and the Pentagon and the National Security Council. | ||
You're not a patriot. | ||
That's not America First, that's not patriotic, it's not humanitarian, it's not even right, okay? | ||
You are complicit in this agenda to destroy the whole world, basically, if you support that. | ||
So, I mean, they're gonna get us all killed with the never-ending escalation, never-ending doubling down. | ||
It's just nuts, man. | ||
It's just absolutely nuts. | ||
So, good. | ||
I'm glad the sanctions are backfiring. | ||
You know? | ||
Hate to burst your bubble, but it's all BS, okay? | ||
The liberalism, the democracy, even the strength of the United States. | ||
It's a big bubble. | ||
It's all a bubble, okay? | ||
It's all fake. | ||
We have been living a lie for a long time, and now there's gonna be real pain. | ||
You know? | ||
Our economy is not what we think it is. | ||
There is no value backing up the kinds of prices that we're seeing, these valuations for these businesses, the sort of economy as it exists on a spreadsheet does not reflect the real value of the economy. | ||
Hate to burst your bubble. | ||
This military thing, again, not what you think. | ||
This country is far weaker than people think it is. | ||
And I wish it wasn't the case, but if we really want to be a great country, we have to burst that bubble. | ||
And we have to start building some real strength. | ||
And real strength comes from a place of self-knowledge. | ||
And Russia understands this. | ||
Russia has become a strong country because over 20 years, they have invested in the industries of the future. | ||
They've invested in their people. | ||
They've weaned themselves off of reliance on the international system. | ||
And they have slowly and gradually and surely made themselves a world power again. | ||
Real strength. | ||
They're not as strong as America, but their strength is real. | ||
So anyway, I'm rambling at this point, but... | ||
Yeah, it's definitely good to see. | ||
So, congratulations to the Tsar. | ||
Putin is a mastermind. | ||
He's brilliant. | ||
He brilliantly handled the situation, forcing NATO to trade in rubles. | ||
It's brilliant. | ||
The currency is saved, the stock market is up, and Russia is marching towards victory. | ||
Very awesome. | ||
Okay, but let's get into our Super Chats. | ||
My nose is itching like crazy. | ||
This always happens when I do this show. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
unidentified
|
But, um... I don't know what it is. | |
If it's psychological or if it's just because, uh... Maybe it's because I'm talking? | ||
I don't know why. | ||
Alright. | ||
Well, let's get into our Super Chats. | ||
Let's see. | ||
What do you have to say? | ||
unidentified
|
Let me refresh here. | |
And we've got a lot of them. | ||
unidentified
|
Awesome. | |
It's already a two-hour show. | ||
Already 100 minutes. | ||
Wow, and we haven't even started the Super Chats yet. | ||
You love to see it, you know? | ||
Okay, all right, let's take a look. | ||
We've got Kyle Clifton. | ||
I'm sorry, no. | ||
We've got to go even further back. | ||
Foy says, it's amusing to me how some streamers dedicate all their content trashing you and America First, literal bottom feeders, cack. | ||
All the haters over the years are totally in your shadow. | ||
You deserve an estate with a master bathroom bigger than a wage cuck's apartment. | ||
That's so true. | ||
That is so true. | ||
All in due time, right? | ||
All in due time. | ||
But yeah, no, it is funny. | ||
I just don't know how people could do that. | ||
I don't know how you could be so obsessed with somebody else, you know? | ||
Like, I am way more obsessed with me than I am with anybody else. | ||
So the thought of like being obsessed with some other person, I just don't get it. | ||
You know? | ||
I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm a very vengeful person and if people cross me, oh man, I mean, I'll have it out for them. | ||
But I'm like, I care way more about what's happening with me than even the person I hate the most, you know? | ||
So, I just don't get it. | ||
But I guess if you're a loser, that's what you do. | ||
If you're a magnetic person, you're a magnet for hate and love. | ||
And people that are boring and losers, You know, they're still attracted to it. | ||
It's still more interesting and it's more than what they have going on, right? | ||
I guess it's something like that. | ||
But yeah, it is kind of amusing. | ||
I just wish people would go out and do their own thing. | ||
You know, these people, they just... It's honestly, it's just pathetic. | ||
People complain and complain and complain like that Ryan Sanchez. | ||
It's really, it's pronounced Ryan Sanchez, because there's an accent over the A, so it's really Ryan Sanchez. | ||
Ryan Sanchez, right? | ||
Very, very ethnic, Ryan Sanchez. | ||
And I watched him recently, he was on Kino Casino, and he's doing a stream of his, and then he went on that other loser show, Big Poppa Fascist, that loser, and he goes on all these loser shows to just say, like, Oh, you know Nick wouldn't give me a channel on cozy Nick never gave me any money Nick didn't listen to me Nick didn't do that. | ||
It's like Hey, you little bitch little bitch, man. | ||
Why don't you go out and do something for yourself? | ||
You know instead of Getting on my back, like, like welfare, you know? | ||
And I'm just listening to this guy with the self-pity and the victimization. | ||
Oh, poor me. | ||
Nick didn't, like, Nick didn't give me a career. | ||
Yeah, nobody gave me a career, man. | ||
I had to work for everything I had. | ||
Nobody was doing any favors for me, believe me, my entire life. | ||
Nobody was ever looking out for me. | ||
Nobody was ever giving me a lift up. | ||
I mean, I had to fight for everything for the first three, four years. | ||
It wasn't until Groyper War when Michelle Malkin came in that I really started to get some reinforcements. | ||
But until then, man, it was hard. | ||
And nobody was going out of their way. | ||
No one was going out on a limb. | ||
Nobody was doing anything. | ||
Don't get me wrong, I mean I always had great supporters, but I built a show, I built something, I built a following, and I had supporters, but it's not like I never had this expectation that somebody was gonna like You know, put me on and put me on their show and lift me up. | ||
Like, I never had that. | ||
I was a nobody and I had to fight for everything. | ||
I had to fight for every scrap. | ||
I mean, I really had to fight everybody. | ||
It feels like I've been fighting everybody my whole life. | ||
Or at least my whole career. | ||
And to see this guy go on there and say, oh, woe is me, woe is me. | ||
If only, you know, what? | ||
If only I were to go out of my way to make your career? | ||
I'm sorry, pal. | ||
That's not how the world works. | ||
And, you know, you're a man. | ||
You should know better. | ||
Aren't you a grown man? | ||
For crying out loud, I was 18 when I took this on. | ||
I was 18. | ||
And I went up against the whole world. | ||
And I created. | ||
You know, I created something new. | ||
I had a vision, and I fought for it. | ||
I didn't go and complain that, oh, so-and-so didn't listen to me, so-and-so didn't give me money, so-and-so didn't do this. | ||
So I just have so much contempt for that mentality. | ||
And he's like the worst offender. | ||
Because you got these other haters and, um, you know, these other haters, they're mad because, uh, they're mad for whatever reason. | ||
They're jealous. | ||
They shit-talked me and they couldn't get away with it. | ||
You know, like, it goes on that other big pop of fascist guys show, and the guy is so clearly just seething. | ||
Just absolutely seething. | ||
I watched the Beardson stream where Beardson reviewed the content, and the guy's like, huh, this movement seems like it's built on, oh, if you don't kiss Nick Fuentes' ass enough. | ||
And it's like, listen, dude, you got caught. | ||
He got caught talking trash about me, and then he gets all bent out of shape that he wasn't able to become an entryist. | ||
And enter my movement, right? | ||
And steal my thunder. | ||
It's like, okay, so... So what, are you gonna go and cry now? | ||
Are you gonna go and pretend like, oh, this thing never had any merit? | ||
Why? | ||
Because you couldn't come in and take advantage, and you got caught trash-talking me? | ||
Like, what even is that? | ||
And that's like half of them. | ||
You know, they get caught trash-talking me, and then I'm like, hey, screw you. | ||
Like, why would... Why would you be welcome in this community when you hate us? | ||
And then they get all bent out of shape and go, oh, they were always no good. | ||
They were always lousy and no good, and I always hated them. | ||
It's like, no, you bitch. | ||
You just got caught red-handed. | ||
You got caught with your hand in the cookie jar, and now you're gonna pretend like you're some martyr? | ||
Like there's some self-righteous thing going on? | ||
Give me a break. | ||
Oh, it's so pathetic. | ||
And he sucks! | ||
And he sucks! | ||
He's sucking down a cigarette the whole stream. | ||
Get the cigarette out of your mouth, Jagoff. | ||
You're on a stream, you little faggot. | ||
You know, all these people, they think they're so tough. | ||
You know, I'm not some macho guy. | ||
I don't need a prop, okay? | ||
I don't need a prop. | ||
I don't need a scowl. | ||
I don't need a black and red background. | ||
I don't need to suck down a cigarette to show you what a man I am. | ||
I'm a man because of my conviction and my courage. | ||
I'm a man because of the virtues that I live. | ||
Not because I'm sucking down a cigarette. | ||
I mean, all these people are just hollow. | ||
They're so thin. | ||
I see right through them. | ||
It's all an act. | ||
You know? | ||
He's chain-smoking cigarettes on the show. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, wow. | |
Everyone's really impressed. | ||
All the 17-year-olds are really impressed. | ||
Big Papa Fascist. | ||
Give me a break. | ||
I just look down on people like that. | ||
And honestly, I respect everybody. | ||
I love everybody. | ||
I don't care what walk of life you come from. | ||
And I think people that... When people meet me in person, they see that I don't have a pretense. | ||
I'm not aloof. | ||
But the people that I look down on are these men that... Because I hate it because... | ||
You know, what I do is so hard, I work so hard to create and I really torture myself to bring something out of myself and create. | ||
And then I look at these other men and they want what I have, they want... | ||
They perceive my life to be a certain way and they want my life and they want sort of the fruits of what I do and that's all they're in it for. | ||
And they just sort of want to steal that. | ||
They don't want to work for it. | ||
They don't want to create. | ||
They don't have creativity. | ||
They don't have drive. | ||
They don't have the ruthlessness. | ||
They just see the sort of trappings they have this perception of my life and they want that and they just sort of want to they just want to usurp it and I just that's so low it's so pathetic and honestly just shame on those people it's just so low just no honor those are the only people I really look down on are these I guess the people I look down on the most Because that's, I mean, that's only just a consequence. | ||
That's only just some of my life is, yeah, you know, I have some notoriety and yeah, you know, I have influence. | ||
But these things are tools. | ||
These are tools in my arsenal. | ||
To fulfill a mission. | ||
To fulfill an obligation and a duty. | ||
And I'm, I think you can see, I'm a man on a mission. | ||
I'm not a guy who's in it for a quick grift. | ||
I'm not a guy that's in it for, you know, womanizing or fame or whatever. | ||
Clearly I am a man on a mission. | ||
I'm trying to send a message here, you know. | ||
I'm living my life to send a message. | ||
And you see these guys and they're like, I want people to look at me, look at me instead. | ||
And, you know, for me, the content is king. | ||
I love content. | ||
I love making content. | ||
I like telling the truth. | ||
I like finding the obscure and esoteric truth and saying the things people won't say. | ||
I like being funny. | ||
I like things that are genuinely interesting and creative and funny. | ||
And I love creative people. | ||
And then you get these people where they're just losers. | ||
And they just want the fame. | ||
And people like that I just want to pulverize. | ||
I just absolutely, not in a physical way, but people like that just need to be utterly humiliated and just exposed for what they are. | ||
Like, because that's why I even talk about it. | ||
Why would I even talk about somebody with a fraction of a fraction of my following who just ankle bites me in the hopes that I would mention their name? | ||
It's because that whole M.O. | ||
It needs to be shamed. | ||
It is shameful, it's unbecoming, it's pathetic, and I hate it. | ||
So not to get too hot there, not to fly off the handle, but I just hate that. | ||
Because it's just wrong, you know? | ||
Like, I look at this cozy platform, and what I love about it is you have real creators on here. | ||
Like PaulTown? | ||
PaulTown is a real gem. | ||
And he is casually, passively brilliant, and he's funny, and he's creative, and he's smart. | ||
And the platform is for people like that. | ||
Those are the kinds of people that I want to be surrounded by. | ||
Those are the people that I want to be in high esteem. | ||
And I don't want that guy's fame. | ||
I don't want people to think of me like they think of him. | ||
I just want to admire it. | ||
I just want to enjoy his creativity, and I just want to admire it, and I just want to give him the praise that he deserves. | ||
I just want to say, you're amazing, you know? | ||
Because I really admire those characteristics. | ||
And similarly for many people on this platform, many other people on this platform, same thing. | ||
You know, same thing with Beardson. | ||
Beardson's been around for five or six years, you know, and he's still, he's one of the biggest streamers on this platform. | ||
You don't just stick around for five years and remain relevant, you know, and he's another creator. | ||
He's got a graphical talent, he's got a musical talent, he's funny, and I just want to watch his content and just appreciate it and say, you know what, thank you for being Beardson. | ||
Thank God that we have a world where there's Beardson content and Paul Town, excuse me, Paul Town content. | ||
Thank God that we're in a world where we get to enjoy these things. | ||
And then you get these like, hateful, you know, trollish people. | ||
These soul-sucking, parasite, leech people that just like, I want people to look at me. | ||
I want people to pay attention to me. | ||
I want, I want to be the guy. | ||
I want to be the guy that is the boss. | ||
unidentified
|
And it's like... Oh, I hate that. | |
I have so much contempt for that. | ||
It's just so wrong. | ||
It's like in Gladiator, you know. | ||
It's like Joaquin Phoenix. | ||
It's like what he does to... | ||
What's the Russell Crowe? | ||
It's like what Joaquin Phoenix does to Russell Crowe in Gladiator. | ||
It's like same energy, you know, same energy. | ||
So, yeah, so I see the one, you know, the one guy is mad because his wife is super chatting me all the time and the guy sucks. | ||
And, and he's honestly, he's upset that he has to, like, respect me. | ||
He's like, I want to be able to shit talk him because, you know, He doesn't want to show me any respect, but he wants to take advantage of me. | ||
And then he gets mad that he gets caught, and now he's seething because now he's been sidelined as a consequence. | ||
And then the other guy, you know, Ryan Sanchez, he's trying to bandwagon and glom on, and the guy's a total narcissist. | ||
You know, the guy's mad because he wants to be in my position. | ||
unidentified
|
And, um, you know. | |
And I called it, I said he was a Patrick Casey figure who knew that he needed the Groypers, but was reluctant because he didn't like us. | ||
And he got called out for what he was, and now that he's sidelined, now he's going to be the martyr and say, Oh, oh, I'm just so, oh, no one gave me any money. | ||
unidentified
|
No good there, no good. | |
So yeah, I don't get it either. | ||
I hate that whole, that whole scene. | ||
I hate that whole scene. | ||
Go out and create and appreciate your fellow man and just be creative. | ||
Be creative. | ||
Here's a little piece of advice for all the failures out there. | ||
For all the failures that hate me, here's a little piece of advice from somebody that's successful. | ||
Just try and create. | ||
Put the creativity first. | ||
Make the content. | ||
Make the message. | ||
Make something that works. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's what matters. | ||
Why don't you deliver something? | ||
Why don't you do something? | ||
You know? | ||
But these people aren't interested in that. | ||
They're not interested in the process. | ||
They're not interested in the product. | ||
They're interested in, you know, again... They want a certain kind of a life. | ||
They have a certain self-concept. | ||
And that's what politics attracts, is people that, well, I want to tell other people what to do. | ||
I don't really want to tell other people what to do. | ||
I wish I could just go and be alone and I honestly don't really like telling people what to do, to tell you the truth. | ||
I just want to be unbothered, really. | ||
But some people, like, get off on that. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Anyway. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Jay Roxer says, hope you're well. | ||
Hey, thanks, you too. | ||
Ukrainian Groyper says, Ukraine will win. | ||
No, you won't. | ||
You've already lost. | ||
It's already over for you. | ||
Friendly Frog says, thoughts on Taco Bell? | ||
It's okay. | ||
I haven't eaten there in a long time. | ||
PrettyFlyWhiteGuy says, hello Nick, it's day 5 of my recurring super chat. | ||
What's your ultimate director and actor combination? | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
Well, I really like Christopher Nolan. | ||
And Christopher, because I really like Dark Knight, I love Inception, I like Interstellar. | ||
What else did he make? | ||
What's a World War II movie? | ||
unidentified
|
It's, uh, come on, what is it? | |
It's on the tip of my tongue. | ||
It was not his most recent one. | ||
What was it? | ||
Come on, help me out here. | ||
unidentified
|
It's totally slipping my mind. | |
I can't think of it. | ||
What is it? | ||
unidentified
|
It's... | |
Dunkirk, that's right Dunkirk. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah So Christopher Nolan really awesome And as far as actors, who's my what would be my actor combo? | ||
I really like Leonardo DiCaprio. | ||
I just I love him He's great He's great and everything. | ||
I really he's probably my favorite actor Leonardo DiCaprio. | ||
I really like him. | ||
I like Russell Crowe a lot really love Russell Crowe I like Hmm. | ||
Honestly, I like Timothée Chalamet. | ||
Chalamet, I know it's like a controversial, you know, because... It's not a gay thing, okay? | ||
It's not, it's not like that. | ||
But he's good. | ||
And... who else? | ||
Trying to think of some of my favorite movies recently. | ||
Robert De Niro I love. | ||
That's not recent, but I love him. | ||
unidentified
|
Who else? | |
Oh, Ryan Gosling. | ||
Of course, Ryan Gosling. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
Yeah, Ryan Gosling. | ||
Yeah, Ryan Gosling's one of my favorites. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Yeah, Ryan Gosling, Leonardo DiCaprio. | ||
Timothy Chalamet. | ||
See, I just like the... I like that there seems to be this sort of revanchist white male. | ||
You know, I see Ryan Gosling, when I see Timothy Chalamet, when I see Leonardo DiCaprio, I see this revanchist white male. | ||
You know? | ||
There's this sort of excellent, there's a sort of like... | ||
You can't contest the excellence of the white male. | ||
Jake Gyllenhaal, yeah, love Jake Gyllenhaal. | ||
You just can't take it away. | ||
And so you could do... Who's Killmonger in Black Panther? | ||
Michael B. Jordan and the Black Panther himself. | ||
And you could do the Black Stormtrooper and the Mexican guy in Dune. | ||
And you could throw in all these other characters, but it's like... | ||
Okay, but then the white male comes on the scene and everybody respects. | ||
You know, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ryan Gosling, and it's like everybody knows. | ||
Everybody knows what's up. | ||
It's a little thing called white excellence, okay? | ||
It's a little thing called white excellence. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Like, Timothee Chalamet playing, like, a god prince in Dune playing, like, it's like, but this is so right, and it's so right, you know, and it's so right. | ||
And Ryan Gosling, like in every movie, it's like, it's just so right. | ||
unidentified
|
It just fits, it just works. | |
Robert Downey Jr., hate to say it, because it's, you know, the Marvel movies are kind of cringe, but even Robert Downey Jr. | ||
is Iron Man. | ||
He's the boyish, mischievous, but innovative Faustian white male. | ||
He's Iron Man. | ||
He built the Avengers. | ||
He built the Iron Man. | ||
He's the leader. | ||
He's the one that everyone looks to and is like, that's the guy. | ||
That's the builder. | ||
That's the leader. | ||
You know? | ||
So it's just... | ||
Iron Man walks in the room and he's just, he's excellent. | ||
He's just, Robert Downey Jr. | ||
in that role, it's just excellence. | ||
And Will Smith doesn't have shit on Iron Man, okay? | ||
Will Smith doesn't have shit on Leonardo DiCaprio. | ||
And neither does Michael B. Jordan or any of them. | ||
The black guy in Interstellar? | ||
The black guy in Interstellar? | ||
Robert Pattinson stole the movie! | ||
Or not Interstellar, I'm talking about Tenet. | ||
Robert Pattinson and Tenet? | ||
He stole the picture, compared to the black guy. | ||
Robert Pattinson stole the show, Intendant. | ||
The black guy was forgettable, completely. | ||
We don't even know who he is. | ||
And he was flat. | ||
Robert Pattinson stole that film. | ||
Tom Hardy? | ||
Tom Hardy's great. | ||
Tom Hardy's awesome. | ||
He's great in Inception. | ||
He's great in Dark Knight Rises. | ||
Yeah, so those are some of my favorites. | ||
unidentified
|
Those are my... Those are my favorites. | |
Chris Evans, not a fan. | ||
Not a fan. | ||
Daniel Day-Lewis, yeah, he's pretty good. | ||
unidentified
|
Christian Bale, yeah, he's good. | |
I don't know, though. | ||
I mean, I like Christian Bale, I like Daniel Day-Lewis, but I feel like they don't have any personality. | ||
You know? | ||
I feel like Leonardo DiCaprio has a real personality. | ||
Same with Ryan Gosling. | ||
They've got that white boy swag. | ||
They have white boy swag. | ||
I don't know that Christian Bale has white boy swag. | ||
I don't think that Daniel Day-Lewis has white boy swag. | ||
Thomas Hardy has it. | ||
Leo DiCaprio has it. | ||
Ryan Gosling has it. | ||
Timothee Chalamet has it. | ||
They have it. | ||
Robert Downey Jr. | ||
has white boy swag. | ||
The cup overfloweth with white boy swag. | ||
Jack Nicholson, yeah, he's another one. | ||
absolutely Brad Pitt I'm not a big Brad Pitt fan, actually. | ||
Not a huge fan. | ||
He's okay. | ||
Jamie Foxx. | ||
I mean, honestly, Jamie Foxx is okay. | ||
He's pretty good. | ||
I like Jamie Foxx. | ||
He hates white people, but he's a pretty good actor, I have to admit. | ||
He's pretty talented. | ||
Total narcissist. | ||
But he's okay. | ||
Jake Paul. | ||
Yep. | ||
Jake Gyllenhaal. | ||
Yep. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Denzel? | ||
I don't... Denzel is overrated. | ||
They're all... I think a lot of those black actors are overrated, if I'm being honest. | ||
I think Denzel's overrated. | ||
I think Will Smith is overrated. | ||
I can't think of one good Will Smith movie I've ever seen. | ||
I can't think of one good Denzel Washington movie I've ever seen. | ||
I like Will Smith in iRobot, but it's campy. | ||
What's he known for? | ||
Fresh Prince? | ||
unidentified
|
Come on. | |
That's not even that funny. | ||
What's he... and his rapping is corny, okay? | ||
And everyone knows his rapping is corny. | ||
Big Willie style? | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
So... I Am Legend. | |
Yeah, okay. | ||
I Am Legend was pretty good. | ||
So yeah, I like these actors with the white boy swag. | ||
Kurt Russell? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Yep. | ||
Amen. | ||
Kurt Russell? | ||
Totally. | ||
We're about the white boy swag. | ||
unidentified
|
Jim Carrey. | |
Yeah, I like Jim Carrey. | ||
I know he's a total libtard now, but yeah, he's okay. | ||
Gary Oldman? | ||
Yeah, Gary Oldman's good. | ||
Okay, alright, alright, alright. | ||
Let's move on here, but... Yeah, so I like the actors with the white boy swag. | ||
Hidecaps says, I'm Waters and this is my world. | ||
Yeah, thank you. | ||
Andrew says, Nick, what gives? | ||
The beginning of yesterday's monologue about trannies and women's sports was taken almost verbatim from the second latest Groyper Sports video. | ||
You're just rubbing it in at this point. | ||
I wouldn't know. | ||
I don't watch your show. | ||
For the Ghosts says, talk about the upcoming Joe Kent rally, please. | ||
Sorry for being a tard. | ||
No. | ||
For the ghosts is Nick. | ||
I stopped a carjacking yesterday. | ||
Could you believe the police said the soonest response time was one hour? | ||
When do we make bacon out of the pigs and tortillas out of the criminals? | ||
L.A. | ||
by the way. | ||
Sorry for the glowing super chat earlier. | ||
California just sucks and it's clear they incentivize crime at every level. | ||
Putin, you have my permission. | ||
Nuke this state. | ||
07 Russia. | ||
Okay, thank you. | ||
Because I don't think that isolationism is in America's interest. | ||
your debate with destiny everyone compares you to a tanky and believes your take on russia ukraine is not america first i remember on the i'm doing great podcast you said that some people want to bring american soldiers home but it wouldn't be in our interest can you explain why you're not an isolationist because i don't think that isolationism is in america's interest i think that it's in our interest to control as much as we can | ||
um but we should just deploy our troops where it You know, I don't know that we should have a strong presence in Western Europe or in South Korea or Japan. | ||
Well, there's a difference between... because here's the thing. | ||
You have some people that say things like, you know, we have military bays in every country and this and that and we need to bring everybody home and I don't think that we really should bring everybody home. | ||
I think that we should have our soldiers in some places. | ||
I don't think it's a bad idea that we should exert influence over the world. | ||
But here's the thing about foreign policy. | ||
It's a question of what are we doing? | ||
You know, like the war in Iraq was a mistake. | ||
It's a big difference between saying we shouldn't have gone to war in Iraq. | ||
It's another thing to say we shouldn't have any foreign military bases at all. | ||
Any great country is going to do that. | ||
Russia does it. | ||
China does it. | ||
You know, Russia has a military base in Syria. | ||
Russia has a naval base in Syria. | ||
China is set up all across Africa, and China would like to build military bases outside of its country. | ||
They're building artificial islands. | ||
We as a country should project power. | ||
I absolutely believe that. | ||
I am not an isolationist. | ||
I believe in empire. | ||
But, Again, it's just a question of who is running the empire and what are we trying to do with it? | ||
Are we an empire that's spreading Christianity? | ||
If so, then I'm all for it. | ||
If we have a forward military presence to spread Christianity and all the good stuff, then yeah, I think that's terrific. | ||
And if it's Donald Trump running it, then that's awesome. | ||
I want a Donald Trump empire. | ||
I want a Donald Trump imperium. | ||
But if it's an empire that's spreading, like, gay marriage, then yeah, it's horrible. | ||
So, we should completely get rid of the State Department. | ||
We should fire everybody in the State Department, fire everybody in every embassy, and then replace them with the right people. | ||
Replace them with Christians. | ||
But I don't think that... I think isolationism is naive. | ||
Let's not get caught up in this kind of petty nationalism. | ||
Don't get me wrong, I'm a nationalist, but I believe that our nation should exert itself on other countries. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
You know, there's this lame idea where people are like, every nation should be respected, every nation should... and America should just, you know, get in line around these other countries. | ||
It's like, no. | ||
You know, power exists, and power is sort of... it's sort of... what's the word? | ||
Power is expanding and it will expand until it meets other power. | ||
And so it's sort of pulsating sort of thing. | ||
And the idea that you're just going to like, oh, let's just, you know, dismantle it. | ||
Well, you know, let's just get rid of all that. | ||
It's like, hey, well, someone's going to fill the vacuum and then we're going to have less control over our destiny as a nation. | ||
So I think that America should have total autarky, total independence. | ||
We should have industry. | ||
But I mean, yeah, we should have no qualms about influencing other countries and Making our country wealthy and influencing the affairs of other countries. | ||
Yeah, I think that's as long as we're doing it in the right way For the right reasons. | ||
I see nothing wrong with that So the isolationism thing is kind of like lame and naive and I'm not an isolationist at all But I'm not a neocon. | ||
I'm not a democratic globalist. | ||
I am, um... You know, I believe that we should have, like, a Christian empire, basically. | ||
So... See, I think it's comparable to being a tankie. | ||
But yeah, this, like... We're gonna get rid of our military! | ||
That's so gay! | ||
I will never, like, you know... It's a very naive view about power. | ||
I am not a liberal by any stretch. | ||
And the sort of nationalism thing is almost kind of liberal. | ||
There's one kind of nationalism... There's one idea of nationalism which is like patriotism. | ||
It's like, you know... | ||
You love your nation, and you have a national identity, and you want to express your national identity. | ||
And there's this other, like, frame for nationalism which says, like, every country should have their own nationalism, and we should be respectful of that, and every country's gonna hold hands. | ||
And to me, that's like liberalism. | ||
That's like, that's like another form of globalism. | ||
That's internationalism, in a sense. | ||
And I don't, I just don't think that's... | ||
I don't think that's consistent with how the world works. | ||
I think that, you know, large nations are powerful and powerful nations will exert their power. | ||
Power must be exerted. | ||
Power must be exercised. | ||
It's emanating. | ||
It's pulsing. | ||
It's there. | ||
You can't get rid of it. | ||
And so if America were to reduce its power, other countries will increase their power. | ||
So you're not getting rid of power. | ||
Power is not destroyed. | ||
It's only transferred. | ||
And why would we give more power to non-Christians, non-Americans? | ||
It doesn't make any sense to dictate control of world markets and world affairs. | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
So it's a very naive view. | ||
The problem with our empire is that it's a gay liberal empire, not that it's an empire. | ||
The problem is that it's not a Christian empire. | ||
But that it is an empire? | ||
I don't really see anything wrong with that. | ||
It's an empire that serves its elites, you know, it's not bringing wealth home for us. | ||
But if we're sort of like a mercantile empire, if we're independent and we have industry and manufacturing, and if we have a reactionary government, I mean, look at the Roman Empire. | ||
That's kind of like what we want to be, in a sense. | ||
You know, look at the Soviet Union, look at the Russian Empire. | ||
That's what great powers are. | ||
They're not just these petty nation-states among other little baby countries. | ||
Hey! | ||
unidentified
|
You're violating my sovereignty! | |
It's like, we will send our legions all around the world. | ||
And niggas be like, hey, you're violating their sovereignty! | ||
That violates international law! | ||
International law? | ||
INTERNATIONAL LAW?! ! | ||
That's a joke. | ||
unidentified
|
So... Yeah, so that's just totally gay. | |
Justin says, thank you and have a good weekend. | ||
Holla! | ||
Hey, holla, man. | ||
Holla back. | ||
What up, nigga? | ||
You have a good weekend too. | ||
Yeah I did. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Could you show us? | ||
See, why do you have to talk like a baby idiot? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
nice thank you travis says hey nick whatever happened to that little guy i used to look forward to seeing him on your desk looking cozy but haven't seen him for a couple months could you show us see why do you have to talk like a baby idiot i don't understand like do you think that's funny when you say that like why are you talking like that is It's not funny. | ||
That was a Christmas decoration, okay? | ||
I don't know why that irritates me. | ||
It's like people are just trying so hard to sound like silly or funny. | ||
It's like, ha ha ha, funny, so funny. | ||
It's not funny, dude. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
Oh, hey, I didn't even notice. | ||
Whoa, hey! | ||
By the way, hey, thank you. | ||
Oh, I just... Those were three huge superchats. | ||
I didn't even notice. | ||
Hey, thank you, Justin, Class White Guy, and Jordan. | ||
I didn't even notice this plug in... I'm not even... | ||
...noticing the donation amounts. | ||
Hey, thank you guys for the big superchats. | ||
Can we get some 07s? | ||
Justin with a huge superchat, middle-class white guy with a huge superchat, and Jordan with a huge superchat. | ||
Thank you guys so much! | ||
I didn't even notice that. | ||
I'm sorry, but thank you very much. | ||
It's very generous. | ||
Thank you guys for the big superchats. | ||
unidentified
|
I didn't even realize, but... | |
We love you Justin, my nigga! | ||
That middle class white guy, he's like the backbone of the movement. | ||
He's really stepping up this past week. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Jordan2, thank you so much. | ||
And with the short messages. | ||
You know, it's always the people with the biggest superchats that just have the sweetest, shortest messages. | ||
And it's these niggas trying to be funny. | ||
Not that it's about the money. | ||
It's not about the money. | ||
It's about sending the Super Chat, right? | ||
It's about sending the message, but... Hey, thanks a lot. | ||
Edward Alquist with a big Super Chat. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
He says, First time Super Chatter, long time viewer. | ||
You deserve this. | ||
God bless you and the movement. | ||
Well, hey, thank you very much. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
God bless you too, man. | ||
Helps a lot these days. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
Stinky Blinky says your understanding of geopolitics and history is truly unbelievable. | ||
I can never imagine anyone, let alone a 23-year-old, could be so knowledgeable. | ||
Keep up the great work, Nicky! | ||
Well, thank you. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
It's my passion, you know? | ||
The IR stuff, it just comes naturally to me. | ||
I'm sort of a dark empath, you know? | ||
So I just kind of understand how people operate. | ||
I don't know what it is, but I just kind of can intuit strategy, and it's my interest, so I have a lot of deep background knowledge on this, but thank you. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
It's my wheelhouse, so I love talking about it. | ||
Zorn Krieger says, Nick, I said last week to watch the Cauldron from Izyum something this week. | ||
The Eastern Ukrainian army is cut off. | ||
Yeah, it's over for them. | ||
The Ukrainian army cannot leave the eastern pocket. | ||
The troops from Mariupol will go north and form the southern approach. | ||
Yeah, it's over for them. | ||
They're all being encircled and they'll be destroyed. | ||
LDS says, Hi from AU. | ||
It's time I start to support you. | ||
I love the Holy Ghost. | ||
I believe Revelation is with us. | ||
I feel it. | ||
I love you and all the guys on Cozy. | ||
I love Christ. | ||
I want God to reign again in Australia and around the world. | ||
Christ is truly King. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot, man. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
Love you too, buddy. | ||
So true. | ||
For the ghosts, it says, 23 years in this country, I wanted a reactionary government that serves and helps me, but I compromised. | ||
I got a satanic cabal of pedophiles instead. | ||
Yeah, pretty shitty deal. | ||
Justin says, people, should people be able to use opiates for chronic pain? | ||
Is the culture of restricting patients' access to opiates and punishing doctors for prescribing them anti-American? | ||
Doctors go to jail if patients overdose. | ||
There's nothing un-American about it. | ||
Here's the thing. | ||
We have an opioid epidemic. | ||
You've got 70, 80, 90,000 people dying every year from opioid addiction and overdose. | ||
And the story is, it's always similar. | ||
You get a high school athlete, gets injured in football, and they get prescribed a painkiller, and they get addicted. | ||
And then that's it. | ||
And they're addicted, and then they're dead. | ||
And you get a teenager, a 20-something, feeling a horrible addiction, it's a horrible spiral, and then they die. | ||
And then their parents find them. | ||
You know, it's uh... And this happens to anybody. | ||
This happens to a mom, it happens to a dad, it happens to... You know, it's happened to friends of mine. | ||
They sustain an injury, get addicted, Mix it with something else. | ||
They overdose accidentally, right? | ||
And then that's it. | ||
And in a lot of cases you have an overprescription of opiates. | ||
And it can be fatal. | ||
It can be lethal. | ||
Now how much liability does a doctor have? | ||
That's a legal question. | ||
I don't have enough expertise in the medical and the legal field. | ||
But there is a problem. | ||
And you know, the problem is that there's an incentive for doctors to prescribe them. | ||
They're pharmaceutical salesmen. | ||
When they sell the pills, I mean, they get money. | ||
And so, the problem is this perverse system of incentives where it's like a drug dealer. | ||
It's just like a pot dealer. | ||
You know, someone that deals in marijuana, guess what? | ||
The more people that are smoking pot, the richer the dealer gets. | ||
So there's an incentive to enslave young minds to drugs. | ||
That's, I mean, how is that really much different than the incentive structure for the pharmaceutical industry? | ||
It's not that different. | ||
It is different, but on some level it's not very different. | ||
So ultimately there's this pharmaceutical problem that's happening. | ||
Now there's root causes and there's You know, there's a reason that people are getting hooked on these things, but certainly they're being over-prescribed. | ||
So... So it's very sad. | ||
It's very sad to see this happen. | ||
Very sad. | ||
And I don't think there's anything un-American about holding them accountable. | ||
But again, I mean, it only goes so far because on some level though, you know, people do have to own personal responsibility. | ||
I mean, I don't think gun manufacturers should be held accountable for people being shot. | ||
But I think the incentive structure has to change and I, you know, I think the pharmaceutical industry is definitely playing a role. | ||
Now, should they be jailed? | ||
You know where the culpability lies that's a legal question that's beyond my expertise but I don't I don't know what culture of restricting access to opiates you're talking about I've never heard of that what called restricting opiates there's I think it's if anything it's the opposite and You know, I don't know that a doctor should be held accountable in every case, but certainly I think there's some culpability. | ||
The doctor has responsibility. | ||
James says, it's time to lean in. | ||
Hashtag lean gang. | ||
Yeah, big time. | ||
Benjamins is drummer for Foo Fighters, dead at 50. | ||
Vaxxecuted probably as why are the young dying? | ||
Okay, that doesn't make sense. | ||
People are dropping like flies, having heart attacks, strokes. | ||
Next people say, why weren't we warned? | ||
Yep. | ||
That's a lot of them. | ||
Even that kid from High School Musical had a heart attack. | ||
Did you see that? | ||
The boy from High School Musical, the TV show, had a heart attack. | ||
And they said, oh, well, he had a heart attack because his girlfriend, Olivia Rodrigo, made a song about him. | ||
It's like, no, dude, he had a heart attack because he was vaccinated. | ||
And this was just in BuzzFeed the other day. | ||
They said like, oh, he he felt like he was so tired for a week and then he was rushed to the hospital and he was treated for a heart attack. | ||
Now, the kid is like 20 or 19 or something. | ||
And they're like, oh, well, The pressure from his girlfriend making a song about him was so bad he had a heart attack. | ||
That doesn't give you a heart attack. | ||
Vaccines give you a heart attack. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
Yeah, and you see a lot of these high profile people dying young and they they just can't explain it away. | ||
You know, it's happening noticeably. | ||
A lot of famous people dying very young, and like, that's kind of like what you would see if a large, you know, cross-section of the population were dying at a young age from some intervention that was happening. | ||
You would see, you would see visible famous people dying in greater numbers at a young age, and that's exactly what's happening. | ||
Soccer players, young celebrities, you know, people in their 40s and 50s, Hello? | ||
I mean, it's very consistent with what we're saying, which is younger people dying more often due to heart attack and stroke induced by the vaccine. | ||
So, yeah, and you're right. | ||
Then they're going to say, well, why weren't we warned? | ||
Well, you called us all conspiracy theorists and banned us from eating at Gordon Ramsay's restaurant. | ||
So, we tried. | ||
Kill Animals says a Clinton strategist was once asked why women weren't showing up to her rallies and she replied that it was because all the boys were busy at the Bernie rally. | ||
Women don't care about feminism. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't get it. | |
Because the girls were chasing the boys? | ||
I don't get what you're trying to say. | ||
Eddie Van Gramps is R.I.P. | ||
to Taylor Hawkins of the Foo Fighters, one of the realest drummer niggas of all time. | ||
I'm not really familiar, but I mean, I do like the Foo Fighters. | ||
Hidecaps says, kind of sussy that in May 2021, the State Department conducted training exercises with partners in Kiev to identify, respond to, and investigate assassinations involving weapons of mass destruction and chemical weapons. | ||
I mean, it's all, everything that they do is sussy. | ||
You know, that's not really a surprise. | ||
Well, and that's just it. | ||
I mean, I didn't get these arguments from John Mearsheimer. | ||
This is the truth. | ||
I mean, this is just the truth. | ||
him for a debate with john meersheimer because you mirror all of his talking points yeah and he's literally right well and that's just it i mean i didn't get these arguments from john meersheimer this is the truth i mean this is just the truth and i would go even further than john meersheimer but i mean certainly that's not uh it doesn't track a hundred percent because | ||
John Mearsheimer isn't talking about how Putin's like a rational actor and this is, well maybe he would say that in particular, but certainly he wouldn't say he's pro-Putin and you know and I don't think Mearsheimer even talks so much about missile defense. | ||
I mean he does a little bit but you know I don't think he's talked about the ABM Treaty. | ||
I don't think you talked about the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty and, you know, some of these other things. | ||
So, but I mean, to say the two correct people are saying the same thing, I mean, you know, like you said, yeah, and that's the realist take. | ||
I mean, that's honestly the obvious take. | ||
I mean, that's that's simply that's not just Mearsheimer's take. | ||
That's Putin's take. | ||
That's every sensible person's take. | ||
You know, Putin has said the same thing since 2008. | ||
So it's like, yeah, I mean, we're looking... Putin is the principal actor involved here and we're literally reading what he said. | ||
Mearsheimer and I and any rational person is like, I mean, well, here's the situation. | ||
Here's the history. | ||
Here's what the... | ||
Primary people are saying, I mean, it's not like it's rocket science, so... But yeah, I didn't read the Mearsheimer stuff until after I formed my opinion. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
I've never heard this before. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
I've never heard this before. | ||
Please consider seeking out the Latin Mass. | ||
Oh, wow, I've never heard this before. | ||
Bear in mind that the Novus Ordo is a product of the 60s developed by liberals within the Vatican to neuter and Protestantize the Mass. | ||
The Latin Mass is the Mass of all time. | ||
Wow, I've never heard this before. | ||
Thanks for the groundbreaking take. | ||
Kenny says, sucks when chutzpah ruins your country. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Line Rider says, this show is truly the only white pill out here. | ||
Speaking the truth, no offense to Alex Jones, but you watch this show and feel blackpilled. | ||
AF never gives me anxiety. | ||
Thanks to our great leader. | ||
Hey, don't diss Alex Jones. | ||
We love the AJ Show. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
the compliment. | ||
Josh the Remover says Vladimir Putin would punch Ronda Sandsa so hard he'd have to roll down his socks to shit. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know what that means. | |
Modern Monarchist says great men of action never mind on occasion being ridiculous. | ||
In a sense it's part of their job. | ||
A prophet or an achiever must never mind an occasional absurdity. | ||
It's an occupational risk. | ||
I wouldn't call it a risk but yeah it's part of it. | ||
Hannah says the church is never appealed the women, AF shouldn't either. | ||
Do women not support the church? | ||
Is the church unsuccessful? | ||
Complacent lies are the death of the church and great movements. | ||
Very true. | ||
Yeah, well said. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, before and after Groyper War, I turned two CDs of your finest clips. | ||
Dude, it's awesome. | ||
Or I burned two CDs. | ||
One day I will sell them for thousands of dollars. | ||
Those clips are so old, I don't think they exist anymore. | ||
Well, they all exist. | ||
Kyle Cliftons is off topic from tonight's show, but when are we going to have an AF Valorant tournament? | ||
Maybe for a charity stream or something? | ||
Well, why's it gotta be for charity all the time? | ||
I've been enjoying the late night streams you guys have been doing together. | ||
Veda, I think, is trying to set that up, but he was gonna set it up and then everybody got banned on Discord, but I think he's still gonna set that up eventually. | ||
As I'd like to do it. | ||
Why has it always got to be for charity, though? | ||
Let's do it as a fundraising drive for the America First Foundation. | ||
Or Russia! | ||
Esoteric Bro says, Hi Nick, good evening to you. | ||
Did you know that the guys over on Kino Casino were discussing your sexuality tonight? | ||
Wow, no, that comes as a complete surprise to me. | ||
I've never heard that before. | ||
They were interviewing some friends at Baked Alaska who had some info. | ||
Oh, I absolutely believe that. | ||
Yeah, it's very real. | ||
Oh yeah, I'll do that. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
Oh, yeah, I'll do that. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, We are a beautiful people. | ||
Even the way we face and overcome challenges is beautiful. | ||
Our beauty deserves to be elevated and celebrated. | ||
True. | ||
True. | ||
Yeah, don't be ashamed of white excellence. - Right. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
Yeah, that's how it's been for the past five years. | ||
Big graveyard. | ||
Stay in their internet ghettos, seething forever, and AF will proceed to change the world. | ||
True. | ||
That's how it's been for the past five years. | ||
Big graveyard. | ||
It's a big internet graveyard. | ||
McCoy says, your comment about rather being alone and not ordering people around is a great example of the humble man gaining the power he never wanted because he deserved it. | ||
George Washington moment. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
The reluctant leader. | ||
Mac Man says, have you heard MGK's new album? | ||
I like it. | ||
My favorite song on it is Sid and Nancy. | ||
His last album was better though. | ||
He is totally formulaic, but he's still good. | ||
Okay, thanks a lot. | ||
No, I haven't heard that. | ||
Stinky says, Nick, thank you for adding Paul Town to Cozy. | ||
I wasn't tapped in when 2016 Twitter popped off, so I don't know much of his origin story, but this guy is hilarious and super interesting, has some good takes. | ||
Yeah, well of course. | ||
We love him. | ||
Always have. | ||
For the Ghosts says, Tenryo Gang here. | ||
Our sound is on full blast and we're ready to dance. | ||
Glad to hear it. | ||
Love the frienrios. | ||
Okay, alright. | ||
Three hour show. | ||
Okay, that's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
Jeez, I'm tired, man. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Remember to follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Follow me here on Cozy. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock Central, 9 o'clock Eastern Standard Time. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters in particular. | ||
Big thank you to our top three, Justin, Middle Class White Guy, and Jordan. | ||
Huge shout out, 07s. | ||
Thank you guys so much. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Special thanks to our top three. | ||
Thanks to all our Super Chatters. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you, and I will see you on Monday. | ||
Until then, have a great weekend. | ||
Have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
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! |