Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
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Not my words, not my rules. | |
I just enjoy stuff, alright? | ||
Black dogs have gone. | ||
Black dogs have gone. | ||
Everything. | ||
Warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
This is from your biggest Protestant family. | ||
One day see the light. | ||
Well hey thanks, love you too, but sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense, so... | ||
Let's just call it what it is. | ||
The system hates white people. | ||
It's just what it is. | ||
And everybody wants to call it everything other than that. | ||
They want to call it everything other than what it is. | ||
You may hear conservatives talk about cultural Marxism. | ||
Critical race theory, that's the new one. | ||
Gotta ban critical race theory, CRT. | ||
And critical race theory has Marxist origins. | ||
It's socialism, it's communism, it's anti-western. | ||
It's anti-western civilization, anti-western culture. | ||
Conservatives even will call it anything other than what it is, because it's not politically correct to say what it is. | ||
You can't utter it in polite society, but we all know what it is. | ||
It's racial. | ||
It's racial hatred. | ||
They hate white people. | ||
This little boy, Cash Gernon, was murdered, dragged out of his bed, in the middle of the night, in his home, and murdered outside his house in the street by a black man because he was white. | ||
That black guy killed a white boy because he was white. | ||
And this black guy hated white people. | ||
That's why he did it. | ||
It was an act of hatred. | ||
It wasn't random. | ||
It was an act of racial hatred perpetrated by a black male against a white boy. | ||
And why is everybody so afraid to call it that? | ||
Of course that's what it is. | ||
What has been engendered in the population for the past two years? | ||
What's been engendered in the population for the past 30 years? | ||
Other than anti-white hatred. | ||
What are people learning in the schools? | ||
When you go to grade school and you go to American history class, what do you learn about? | ||
In the new Howard Zinn curriculum, you learn about how white people genocided the indigenous Americans. | ||
White people enslaved black people and brought them over here. | ||
Once freed by whites, whites mistreated blacks by being racist towards them, terrorizing them with the Ku Klux Klan. | ||
segregating them, making them drink in separate water fountains. | ||
We hear about how white supremacist Nazis try to take over the whole world with their fascist ideology in World War II with Adolf Hitler. | ||
And it was white. | ||
It was because they were Aryan. | ||
It's because they were white supremacists, because they believed in racial purity of the Aryan race. | ||
That made them uniquely evil. | ||
They perpetrated the Holocaust again. | ||
unidentified
|
I fear and love God. | |
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
Life, like, this is what you like, like, try to live the life, right? | ||
Oh, really? | ||
So you push your buttons, like, type, right? | ||
This is like a movie, but it's really very tight, like, every single night, right? | ||
Every single type, right? | ||
I was screaming at my daddy, told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
I was screaming at the referee, just like Mike. | ||
Looking for a bright light, see what your life like. | ||
Riding on the white, right? | ||
Feeling like a tight fight. | ||
Pressing on the gas, never know for full night. | ||
Like screaming at my daddy, told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
But nobody never tell you, you need me in Christ-like. | ||
Only if I see it, only when they see me. | ||
Like a time of everything, I'm going to be in deep. | ||
Searching for it, now you want to be a freak. | ||
Now you want to see it, wait. | ||
Let you see it, be a piece. | ||
Tell me what you like, like. | ||
Turn it down to the bright light. | ||
Travel with my dad, and he told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
I'm just trying to find out if I can afford new weight. | ||
Just really trying not to reach through the pool, and I don't have a pool. | ||
I'm eating on my best, though. | ||
Lock up on a text, though. | ||
Nothing to tell text, though. | ||
Pass it to the world, not a picture, or a test, smoke. | ||
Wrestling with God, I don't really want to wrestle. | ||
Then it's going to be life-like. | ||
Everything in my life. | ||
Parking with my dad, and he said it ain't Christ-like. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo in will be our credo in the world. | ||
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 today forward, it's going to be only 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 Tuesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into tonight. | ||
Our featured story, once again, we're covering the Elon Musk Twitter saga. | ||
Big development out of Europe. | ||
European Union this week was actually kind of a coincidence. | ||
I don't know if it is a coincidence but it does coincide. | ||
This weekend the European Union passed new laws which basically force big tech companies to censor so-called misinformation and hate speech. | ||
And I know that Germany has already had laws that are similar to this and there are hate speech laws in Europe But now at the continental level, at the level of the European Union, they're going to force all the big tech companies to take care of the hate speech and the so-called misinformation. | ||
Same week that Elon Musk buys Twitter. | ||
And now people in the United States are calling for the U.S. | ||
Congress to do the same thing. | ||
And for the regulatory apparatus, even at the executive level, to go after companies like Facebook, Google, as well as obviously Twitter, for having those things on their platform. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
It's obvious warfare against Twitter. | ||
It's warfare against Elon Musk. | ||
And really, they just don't want the goy to be red-pilled. | ||
I mean, that's honestly what it comes down to. | ||
They're trying to prevent the white man and the Aryan race from becoming totally red-pilled. | ||
So, we'll talk about that. | ||
That'll be our featured story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about the U.S. | ||
Airlines. | ||
Big story today in the New York Times, and I got this actually off of Revolver, I have a big story today in the New York Times about how all the major airlines are setting quotas for hiring women and non-white people to be pilots on airplanes. | ||
And I think I've been on this for years. | ||
I've been saying this longer, I think, than anybody else. | ||
I said, watch what happens. | ||
They have affirmative action at Harvard. | ||
They have affirmative action at MTV or whatever. | ||
And I said, just you wait. | ||
They're going to have affirmative action for the pilots and then everyone's going to start falling out of the sky and dying. | ||
And now here we are. | ||
So they're setting benchmarks and saying that they want so many blacks, women, Hispanics to fly the planes. | ||
Now, how do you think they're going to go about doing that? | ||
If there's no women pilots, they blame it on everything. | ||
They say, oh, they don't have enough money. | ||
They say they don't have a support system to guide them through the long process to be a pilot. | ||
You want to know why I think there's no women pilots? | ||
unidentified
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Because they can't drive cars. | |
They can't even drive cars. | ||
And if you get into a car, it's actually really easy. | ||
You know, it's not hard at all. | ||
I remember the first time I drove, you get in, you put it in drive, and then you fucking drive it. | ||
How do you steer it? | ||
Like this. | ||
Turn left, turn right, I mean it's really... And then a woman goes into an airplane and there's bells and there's blinking lights and there's buttons and switches and levers and they're like, I don't know how to do any of this. | ||
I can't fly this. | ||
That's why there's no women pilots. | ||
But they say, oh well, it's just so expensive, and oh, you know, it's just a male-dominated space. | ||
So you know what they're going to do? | ||
They're going to make it easier for people to become pilots, and then we're going to get all these black and women pilots who don't know what the hell is going on, and then everyone's going to die, basically. | ||
Not just the people in the planes. | ||
You might think, well, I just won't fly out of plane anymore. | ||
Well guess where the planes are going to land? | ||
They're going to land on people that aren't in the plane. | ||
So really there's two problems. | ||
The problem is the people inside the planes are going to die and then also we're going to have this problem of missiles piloted by blacks and women crash landing into cities and fields all across the country. | ||
So you might think you're You might think you're safe if you don't get on the plane. | ||
Well, I mean the planes are gonna crash somewhere. | ||
So really, it's all of our problem. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
It should be a pretty good show. | ||
Very excited for tonight. | ||
Another big night. | ||
In case you missed it, I just got done on Russia Today, which is my third appearance there in like two weeks. | ||
So they must really like me. | ||
I think they must really like me at Russia Today. | ||
Because I was on there for the first time a couple weeks ago and I was on there for like 10 seconds and then I had a second appearance. | ||
I think that aired on Saturday morning. | ||
I think it was a Saturday morning like 4 a.m. | ||
in Russia or was it 4 a.m. | ||
in America? | ||
I don't know. | ||
But that was another shorter appearance. | ||
It was a little longer than the first one. | ||
And then I was on Russia Today Live today, tonight, in a panel. | ||
And we talked about Twitter and censorship and if you were watching the Dalton stream earlier today, he reacted to it live. | ||
Everybody loved it. | ||
I'll probably be posting the clip of that tomorrow, I think, at the latest. | ||
So if you missed it, just stay tuned to my Telegram and watch out for it there. | ||
But yeah, it was a lot of fun. | ||
I went on there at, I think, like 8.30. | ||
I was on there for 15-20 minutes in a panel discussion about the Elon Musk Twitter takeover. | ||
A lot of fun! | ||
And I have to say, I like Russia Today. | ||
I like going on there because, ironically, that's the only place where you're going to find real news. | ||
Because all the American media is pushing the American government agenda. | ||
And it's so funny how people don't understand that. | ||
People think that in Russia, the media pushes Russian propaganda, obviously. | ||
The Russian media is all controlled. | ||
It's an authoritarian state. | ||
The media just tells lies. | ||
And then they say the same thing about China. | ||
You know, China's another totalitarian state and their media just tells lies. | ||
They can't talk about Tiananmen Square because of the firewall and so on. | ||
And they say that about North Korea and Iran. | ||
But in America, it's totally different. | ||
Yeah, in America, it's not like that. | ||
In America, anyone can say anything. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
So ironically, Russia today is the only news source, the only quote-unquote network, where you're going to be able to find the truth. | ||
And yeah, I mean it is Russian, it's backed by the Russian state, so you have to keep that in mind, but Yeah, they're probably going to be the ones telling the truth about the situation, or at least telling an alternative story than what the State Department's putting out. | ||
So, it's fun and it's mutual. | ||
They like me, I like them, so it's been fun. | ||
Yeah, so that was earlier tonight. | ||
Before we get into the news, I just want to remind you, follow me right here on my Cozy Channel to get a push notification whenever my show begins. | ||
So smash the follow button right here, right under the Russian flag and the Georgian ribbon which says Z. Smash the follow button. | ||
Make sure to follow me on Gavin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
What else is new? | ||
Big announcement coming this weekend. | ||
I told you yesterday. | ||
I gave you a big hint yesterday. | ||
Big announcement still coming this weekend. | ||
We got it. | ||
We just got to get it right. | ||
We have to announce it in a cool way. | ||
No one else knows because people watch the show but they're not going to make the headline like Nick Fuentes announces this. | ||
So the official formal announcement will be this weekend. | ||
But yeah, I had a big announcement yesterday. | ||
I will be doing a debate on May 6th. | ||
I think that's in two weeks. | ||
Another Russia debate against counterpoints. | ||
But what really even is the debate at this point? | ||
You know, I was watching... I'm not going to talk about this on the show tonight, like this is not one of the... I'm not going to spend too much time on this. | ||
But if you look at the Russian ruble, which is a pretty good measure of the success of the sanctions against Russia, The Russian ruble today traded at a higher value, highest value in two years. | ||
Okay? | ||
So, if you've been following the whole war in Russia, we're not really talking about that tonight, we may cover it later this week. | ||
But if you've been following it, we're now in, I think it's been two months, two months of Russia's war in Ukraine. | ||
And what the West did, the first thing they did, the first week of the conflict, was to put in place these unprecedented sanctions on Russia. | ||
And they were trying to destroy the Russian currency, the Russian ruble. | ||
So they blocked all of Russia's foreign currency reserves, and they blocked all the Russian banks from the international monetary system, and all the major Western brands pulled out of Russia. | ||
And they sanctioned a lot of Russia's exports and so on. | ||
And the goal was to destroy the Russian economy. | ||
And if you remember, in the first week, the ruble halved in value. | ||
You could get, I think, before the war, it was 75 or 80 rubles for a dollar. | ||
And after a week of sanctions, it was 150, 160 rubles for a dollar. | ||
So the value of the currency went in half. | ||
Then, and we covered this on the show, Vladimir Putin said that, okay, well then the European Union will have to buy all of its natural gas and oil and petroleum products in rubles. | ||
And that pushed the ruble up. | ||
And then they tied the ruble to the gold standard. | ||
They said that they were going to tether the ruble, the Russian currency, to gold. | ||
And since then, not only has the ruble erased all the losses since the war started, but it's actually made gains. | ||
And actually now, And this is just so perfect. | ||
Now the Russian ruble is more valuable than it was before the war. | ||
So they've done every... I mean, do you know what a bitch slap that is? | ||
That the West did everything they could. | ||
They did everything, and they are doing everything, short of going to war with Russia. | ||
They're sending in tanks, they're sending in anti-aircraft tanks, planes, guns, officers, sanctions, seizing their foreign currency reserves. | ||
That's a big deal. | ||
Banning them from YouTube, banning them from everything, sanctioning the so-called oligarchs. | ||
And not only is Russia not defeated, they're not weakened, the Russian currency emerges even stronger. | ||
You know, God bless Russia. | ||
Can we get an 07 in chat for Russia? | ||
Can we get an 07 in chat for Vladimir Putin? | ||
It must be nice. | ||
You know, it must be nice to live in a country where you actually have a great, competent leader. | ||
What I would give to live in a country where we had a truly great leader, a truly great and competent governor of the state. | ||
We don't have that. | ||
We have dysfunction. | ||
You talk about oligarchy. | ||
We have oligarchic Jewish control. | ||
It's completely opaque. | ||
It's bureaucratic. | ||
It's managerial. | ||
And you know what we get? | ||
We get potholes. | ||
We get speeding tickets. | ||
We get slime and dirt everywhere. | ||
We get people with attitude at the DMV. | ||
People are chewing gum at the DMV and they're filing their nails. | ||
That's what we get. | ||
And in Russia, they get a guy who's just like, he's got no chill. | ||
In Russia, you have a leader. | ||
If you're Russian, if you're in Russia watching this right now, first of all, God bless you. | ||
We pray for you. | ||
But also, you should really be grateful that you have a truly great leader who is trying to bring glory to your country. | ||
I wish we had a dictator. | ||
I wish we had a king in America. | ||
in their head, like, democracy is so great. | ||
I don't know about you. | ||
I wish we had a dictator. | ||
I wish we had a king in America. | ||
I wish we had a Putin, you know? | ||
And whenever people think about, like, a king, they think of cruelty, and they think of tyranny. | ||
When I think about it, I think about competence, and I think about accountability, and strength, and decisiveness, and the ability to act. | ||
And I don't really see anything wrong with that, if you want to know the truth. | ||
I mean, I don't know if I... well, I don't want to live in a dictatorship per se, but I definitely want a country where we have A strong executive and not an oligarchy. | ||
I'd rather have a king. | ||
I'd rather have an imperial president than, you know, the billionaires calling the shots. | ||
Anyway, so that's really besides the point, but I just wanted to throw that out there. | ||
I'm not gonna spend too much time on it tonight, but you should just know that the Russian ruble in trading today officially hit a two-year high in the market, which is just hilarious. | ||
Because you see all these people and they're flying their Ukrainian flags outside their houses and they have Ukrainian signs in their lawn and all this. | ||
And we're just getting absolutely raped. | ||
We're just getting absolutely... and not us, but like the government, which is funny. | ||
So that's that, but I think that's all of our announcements. | ||
That's everything I have to say before we move on. | ||
Let me think. | ||
What else? | ||
What else we got? | ||
Let me think. | ||
Russia, then there's... I think that's it. | ||
Oh, also, I think I said this last night too, I will be on a radio show on Sunday. | ||
I'll give you all the details this weekend, but I'll also be on an interview on Talk Radio on Sunday, and then there'll be an advertisement for the show playing on Monday morning for like a million people during Sean Hannity. | ||
So, very exciting stuff ahead. | ||
But anyway, we're gonna move on, we're gonna dive into our news here. | ||
And our first story tonight is about the airline Affirmative Action. | ||
Like I said, I saw this in Revolver and I think it's really important for people to understand about Affirmative Action. | ||
I talk a lot about Affirmative Action on my show from the perspective of white people and how what Affirmative Action does effectively is it makes white people second-class citizens. | ||
There's really no other way to describe it. | ||
It is, in its practical effects, discrimination against white people. | ||
When they say that they're going to lower standards for people that are not white and they have quotas to admit a certain amount of non-white people in a job, at school, wherever, by definition they're setting aside white applicants, more or equally qualified white applicants, Which is discrimination in favor of other people based on their race. | ||
It's what it is. | ||
So normally that's the lens that I talk about it, because that's... it just isn't right. | ||
But, it's also not right because of the other effects it will have on the society, which is not just that white people will be discriminated against, but everything's gonna get a lot worse. | ||
And I don't know if I've heard anybody else talk about this, but I've harped on this on my show for a long time. | ||
The more that we get these people running things, the worse our country is going to get. | ||
And it's not just because they're black or Hispanic or women. | ||
It's because of this selection process. | ||
If you're having to lower the qualifications for, like, let's say a woman wants to be a firefighter, and they say, well, you don't have to do as many pull-ups, and you don't have to run as fast, and whatever, like, okay, good luck when you're dying in a fire, because that woman's not going to be able to, you know, break through the door, climb the ladder, whatever. | ||
And same goes for everything. | ||
Same goes for the grocery stores, and for the major companies, and for all this stuff. | ||
If black people can't show up to stuff on time, how are the black truck drivers going to deliver all the goods to places on time? | ||
I guess I shouldn't talk because I have trouble with punctuality, but I'm not a truck driver, okay? | ||
If they can't show up on time to their office job, if they can't show up on time to some things, that's gonna be a big problem when they're bringing, like, life-saving medical equipment to a hospital. | ||
What happens when you're, like, laying dead on the street and an ambulance comes by and it's, like, some black guy and they're, like, picking their teeth in the driver's seat? | ||
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And you're like, can you please get me to the hospital? | |
I'm dying! | ||
unidentified
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And they're like, I'm on my phone! | |
I'm on my phone! | ||
unidentified
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Shut up! | |
That's not gonna be... It's gonna be a bad situation. | ||
So... Anyway, this is one such example. | ||
There was a big article in the New York Times today about how they're now going to implement affirmative action for airplane pilots. | ||
Which is like... Honestly, it's just like asking for trouble. | ||
Like, it doesn't even sound good. | ||
Affirmative action for pilots sounds like a joke. | ||
Like, that sounds like a joke somebody would have made five years ago. | ||
Like, you're supposed to be flying an airplane, you have like a thousand people flying through the air 20,000 feet up, and we're not gonna have qualified people doing that? | ||
Like, that just seems like a recipe for disaster. | ||
So this is the article. | ||
It's from the New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, quote, Piloting is stubbornly monolithic. | ||
About 95% of airline pilots in the U.S. | ||
today are male. | ||
Nearly as many are white. | ||
Which, by the way, why exactly is that a problem? | ||
I don't get it. | ||
Like, why is that a problem? | ||
All the pilots are white men? | ||
Good! | ||
It just so happens that the first pilots were white men. | ||
You know, it just so happens that, like, the people that invented flying for human beings were white men. | ||
So, shouldn't that, like, tell you something? | ||
Doesn't that play a role in that at all? | ||
That human beings have been on the planet for, what, I don't know, a few thousand years or something? | ||
Human beings have been on Earth for, what, 5,000 years? | ||
And 100 years ago, the people that actually invented human beings flying through the air were both white men. | ||
So I think there's a reason for that. | ||
It's because white men are really good at those kinds of things. | ||
We just are. | ||
In China, I'm not making this up by the way, Because I honestly think this would be lame even if it were a joke. | ||
But in China, the Chinese people literally are not good pilots because they can't see. | ||
Because their eyes are slanted. | ||
I'm not making that up. | ||
I'm not making that up. | ||
That's not a joke. | ||
If that was a joke, I would think that's a lame joke because it's so easy. | ||
It's just like, oh, they have slanty eyes. | ||
Okay. | ||
But that's literally true. | ||
You can Google it. | ||
You can look that up. | ||
The Chinese Air Force has difficulty finding competent pilots because they can't see through their own eyes. | ||
And then try seeing through a cockpit or something. | ||
So, it's literally just us. | ||
I mean, it's just... There's one other advanced civilization in the world, and they can't see through their own eyes, and then there's us. | ||
So, when it's like white men are the ones flying the planes, I actually don't really... I don't really see a big problem with that. | ||
But, like everything, we've got to include. | ||
We've got to be inclusive to women and, you know, if everything's going perfectly well, I know, Let's introduce blacks and women into the equation. | ||
Things are going too well. | ||
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Things are going perfectly fine. | |
There's nothing wrong. | ||
I feel comfortable and safe. | ||
I got an idea. | ||
Let's introduce black people and women into this equation. | ||
unidentified
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That will improve this. | |
That will improve the situation. | ||
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Great. | |
Not that I have anything against them, but like, you know, we all know what I mean by that. | ||
We all live in the world. | ||
I'm not telling you anything that you don't really understand. | ||
So anyway, so the article says this is a problem. | ||
Piloting is stubbornly monolithic. | ||
It's stubbornly white and male. | ||
That's why it works. | ||
That's why it's so safe. | ||
That's why everyone's safe flying through the air, because it's a white guy and a mustache. | ||
It's a white guy with a mustache who's old and capable and has, you know, strong forearms and strong grip. | ||
Like, these are the people to make the world go around. | ||
But people are tired of that. | ||
People want excitement. | ||
They want danger. | ||
They want thrill. | ||
So they are introducing these other demographics. | ||
So the article goes on. | ||
It says airlines have started to do more to diversify. | ||
United recently launched a flight school with the aim of hiring thousands Of pilots in the years ahead, at least half of them women or people of color. | ||
So it's going to go from 95% white to 50% white and male. | ||
I want it to be half non-white or female. | ||
I know that that won't change anything at all. | ||
Everything will be fine. | ||
If we go from all white guys to half as many, everything will stay the same. | ||
Everything will stay perfectly fine. | ||
No reason to be concerned. | ||
It says other carriers have launched similar initiatives too. | ||
The goal is to staff up to meet the industry's aspirations. | ||
The reason for racial inequality among pilots that is most commonly cited by experts and instructors is perhaps the most apparent. | ||
A lack of role models and exposure has played a central role in keeping many women and people of color out of the field. | ||
Why are there no black pilots? | ||
Why are there no female pilots? | ||
Uh, well, they just don't have role models, you know? | ||
They just don't have the proper role models. | ||
They need good role models like, um... They need good role models like George Floyd and, uh... and DaBaby and, uh... and Hillary Clinton in order to fly planes. | ||
I mean, this is... It's the... I like how even in the article it says, well, it's the most obvious. | ||
Because I will come up with some pretty obvious reasons, like, why do women not fly planes? | ||
They say, well, the reason is the one that's the most apparent. | ||
I don't think you have the same reason in mind that I do. | ||
I don't think that what we agree is the most apparent reason why women aren't flying planes. | ||
I don't think we agree on that at all. | ||
So it says, well, there's no black in women pilots because they don't have the role models. | ||
And then it talks about this new school. | ||
This United Flight School. | ||
It says the Aviate Academy covers 28 acres and has two pools, two aircraft maintenance hangars, five dorms and 27 planes with dozens more on order. | ||
It is owned by United which bought the first training school in 2020 and is part of the airline's goal of hiring 5,000 pilots by 2030. | ||
Airline-owned schools are common abroad but United's is a first for a large US airline. | ||
The carrier said it wants at least half of the new pilots to be women or people of color. | ||
Of the 121 students enrolled so far, 78% are women or non-white. | ||
enrolled so far, 78% are women or non-white. | ||
Great. | ||
So they want at least half, but it'll probably be more. | ||
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All right. | |
So it's going from all white men to almost no white men. | ||
A positive development to be sure. | ||
United School joins other efforts from major and regional carriers. | ||
In 2018, American launched a partnership with FITE schools in Arizona, Florida, and Texas, offering prospective pilots training, financing, and mentoring with an eye toward diversity. | ||
Alaskan Airlines and its regional partner Horizon Air unveiled a similar program in March. | ||
Universities with flight training programs are working harder to recruit women and people of color, and many have launched scholarships for students from underrepresented communities. | ||
I love that word, underrepresented communities. | ||
That's great. | ||
Major U.S. | ||
airlines say they're confident that they will be able to hire the pilots they need in the years ahead, but regional carriers are I'm being a little bit jokey about this because it's ridiculous, but on a serious note, I do not trust women to fly airplanes. | ||
I just don't. | ||
And I know that's sexist, and I know some even might say that's misogynistic, but I just don't trust women to fly airplanes. | ||
I don't trust women to drive cars. | ||
And that's not a joke, that's not a meme. | ||
I know women. | ||
And they're terrible drivers. | ||
I don't know one woman who is a better driver than me. | ||
And I don't know one woman who is a better driver than any man that I know. | ||
And that is because women are different than men. | ||
Women are biologically and mentally and different in every way and that's why they shouldn't be president and they shouldn't be CEO and they shouldn't be flying planes through the air. | ||
I just don't trust it. | ||
And as far as the other races go, the blacks and Hispanics, I think honestly that they just don't really have the aptitude. | ||
I mean, it's not to say that a black person could never be a pilot. | ||
There have been black pilots before. | ||
Denzel Washington played one in that movie, which is based on a true story. | ||
But in that movie, wasn't he drunk? | ||
So the one black pilot that I could think of Denzel Washington in that movie. | ||
What's that movie? | ||
Flight or Sully or something? | ||
One of them's Tom Hanks and one of them's Denzel. | ||
Hey, wait a second. | ||
Wasn't he drunk in that movie? | ||
Didn't he, like, have to go to court because the only way he was able to fly is because he was totally drunk? | ||
So think about it. | ||
You're gonna get women. | ||
Women can't drive the cars. | ||
Now they're gonna fly the airplanes. | ||
And the only black pilots are gonna be drinking Hennessy on the plane. | ||
So, if it's not broke, why would we fix it? | ||
There's a reason, by the way, that certain demographics are in certain jobs. | ||
The reason why white men are in these jobs is because they have the aptitude and they have the interest And they have merit and that is why they're pilots. | ||
And the same goes for everything. | ||
It's not to say that there isn't nepotism in the society. | ||
It's not to say that there isn't bias. | ||
But by and large, and even where that is the case, we want a society that is meritocratic. | ||
You know, if we've got three systems, we've got sort of like an anti-white affirmative action system, a nepotistic system, and a meritocratic system, we want to be moving towards a meritocratic system. | ||
I'll admit, our system isn't perfectly that way right now. | ||
There is a lot of nepotism. | ||
There's a lot of Jewish nepotism. | ||
There's a lot of nepotism of all stripes. | ||
Indian, as well as, you know, just your classic family-based, you know, the kids and friends of friends get hired. | ||
But by and large, the society does reward merit. | ||
And the people that are pilots are people that went to school and paid the money and did their flight hours and then became pilots. | ||
And then we have the best pilots with high standards and accountability and air travel is safe. | ||
And the reason why we want to have a meritocracy, the reason why we want to have people rewarded and being elevated and propelled through society based on merit, is because then we get a... is because then we get a... | ||
Functioning society. | ||
If we have people that are good at their jobs, if we have people that are placed in jobs where they are best suited with their skills and their level of responsibility and so on, that is the kind of system that creates material prosperity. | ||
When you look at the United States of America 60 years ago, it's like a world wonder. | ||
It works in an incredible way. | ||
The transportation is on time, everything is clean, everything works. | ||
There's inventions, there's very delicate supply chains, robust but delicate supply chains, and even though the society was lower tech 60 years ago, you could say that it was more functional. | ||
The society has gotten higher tech, but competence has gone down. | ||
The technology has gotten more sophisticated, but the ability of people to use it in an optimal way has actually gone down. | ||
I truly believe that. | ||
And so our goal for a society should be we want the planes to fly safely. | ||
We want the planes to work, which means we want competent engineers designing them, we want competent factory workers building them, and we want competent pilots flying them. | ||
We want competent air traffic controllers directing them. | ||
That's what we want. | ||
And that way, something that we don't think about, your average person that isn't in the industry doesn't think about, can get on a plane and feel confident that they're going to get where they need to go safely and cheaply and in a reasonable amount of time. | ||
Instead, what we're doing here is wrong in two ways. | ||
We're now getting a system where we're not rewarding merit, so we're going to get people that are not the best and maybe people that are not That are not even good enough. | ||
Not even not the best, but people that aren't even good in a perfunctory way. | ||
And so what we're going to get, and it's what you already see, is mass large-scale incompetence. | ||
And it will get worse and worse as this affirmative action system matures. | ||
Because what we have now is total affirmative action in the schools, and in the certifications, and in the jobs. | ||
And as that system grows older, you're going to see that the senior people, the higher level people, and an increasingly large portion of the people in the workforce are going to be people that were admitted or employed or promoted based on their race rather than their contribution. | ||
And so as a consequence, what you're going to get is a society that just stops working. | ||
You're going to get shortages. | ||
You're going to get disruptions in the supply chain. | ||
Things are going to be dirty, disorganized, not efficient, not functional. | ||
And this just makes everybody's life worse. | ||
We've been enjoying a very comfortable way of life, which is really sort of an anomaly in the history of the world. | ||
Because in the history of the world, most things are not what they are now, which is clean and reliable and predictable and carefully calibrated with very, very advanced logistics. | ||
The history of the world is kind of, well, you get what you get, you roll with the punches, you've got to be patient. | ||
And it's only in a very select amount of countries and in a very short amount of time that you really were able to have Complex organization of a large-scale society and you can look at sort of Europe Over the last three four hundred years. | ||
You can look at the Roman Empire You can look at China But there's really not many places where you're getting a high degree of efficiency and a high level of complexity in a large-scale civilization throughout all of human history and we're basically throwing that away and For no reason. | ||
We're basically throwing that away even though we don't have to to pander to black people. | ||
To pander to like the one black kid that wants to be a pilot and not a rapper or a ball player. | ||
I mean, it's what it is, right? | ||
They don't have role models! | ||
That's because all the black kids want to be a basketball player or a rapper or they want to be a gangbanger. | ||
Is what it is. | ||
And we're going out and saying, hey, why don't you go and be a pilot? | ||
We'll accept a lower test score and whatever and we're going to get Lil Wayne Airlines. | ||
We're going to get Flavor Flav Airlines and it's not going to be as good. | ||
And the same goes obviously for women and everybody else. | ||
Why do we have to mess up a bad thing? | ||
And really this is just sort of, this is just emblematic of what's happening at the societal level. | ||
If like our civilization is an airplane, White people, specifically white men, have been the pilots of the airplane for 500 years. | ||
If Western civilization is an airplane, 95% of the pilots have been white men. | ||
And now everybody's getting these ideas in their head where they're like, well let's give women a turn. | ||
And it's like, why? | ||
Why would we do that? | ||
It's working fine. | ||
It's been working fine. | ||
Everyone's happy. | ||
Everyone's rich. | ||
Everyone's feeling good. | ||
And now everyone wants to mess with it. | ||
And they say, well, how about we give the black people a chance to pilot the plane? | ||
Let's give the women a chance. | ||
Let's give the women a turn at the wheel. | ||
Certainly, nothing is going to get better as a consequence of this. | ||
If these people were much better pilots, they would be pilots. | ||
If women and black people made really, really good pilots, better than whites, they would already be all the pilots. | ||
Black people are really, really good at football. | ||
That's why they're all of the NFL players. | ||
Black people are really, really good at rapping. | ||
That's why they're all the rappers. | ||
Women are... | ||
Well, whatever. | ||
Black people are really, really good at basketball. | ||
That's why they're all the basketball players. | ||
Women are good at changing diapers. | ||
That's why they're all the teachers and whatever. | ||
If they were exceptional at being pilots, they already would be the pilots, but they're not. | ||
So we can definitely know that it's not going to get better. | ||
So at the minimum, we can say that we know it's not going to get better. | ||
The planes aren't going to go faster. | ||
They're not going to go more quickly. | ||
They're not going to fly better. | ||
And they probably are not going to fly as good as they are. | ||
So where does that leave us? | ||
If they're not going to be better, because we would know what that would look like if it was going to be better, and if it's not going to be the same, because if it was, they'd maybe be a more equal share of the pilots, where does that leave us? | ||
What is it going to be? | ||
unidentified
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Well, it's going to be worse. | |
It's going to be worse, probably much worse. | ||
And that's happening at every level in the society. | ||
That's happening in government. | ||
That's happening in all the private sector. | ||
It's happening in schools. | ||
And that's really the most tragic thing is there's no reason for Western civilization to fall. | ||
There really is no good reason that it should fall. | ||
Yet, we're doing it to ourselves. | ||
We're inflicting it on ourselves because why? | ||
We're possessed by this egalitarian ideology. | ||
We're possessed by this liberal ideology. | ||
You know, I don't hate women or anything. | ||
I just don't think they should be pilots. | ||
unidentified
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I don't hate black people, but if you wanted to be a pilot, you'd be a pilot. | |
I wouldn't be a good pilot. | ||
I mean, I actually might be a good pilot because I'm a really good driver. | ||
But you know what? | ||
I didn't go to flight school and I didn't, you know, maybe I didn't have a role model or whatever. | ||
So I've accepted I'm not going to be a pilot probably in my lifetime. | ||
And that's okay. | ||
And that's just okay. | ||
But they want to turn everything in the society into like this... I don't even know. | ||
They want to turn it into Africa. | ||
And why? | ||
Africa doesn't even work. | ||
Africa doesn't work, Latin America doesn't work, and we want to turn it into that. | ||
Just doesn't make any sense. | ||
And above all else, not only does it not work, it's not right. | ||
And that's where it's wrong on two levels. | ||
It's wrong because we want a meritocracy and we want competent people to be running the show so that we can continue to enjoy efficiency and prosperity. | ||
We also want to have a fair society where the way that you're rewarded is you work the hardest or have the most talent. | ||
And not everybody's going to be born with the same talents. | ||
It is what it is. | ||
But if everybody wants to enjoy the positive externalities of inequality, guess what? | ||
You don't have to be the best pilot. | ||
The good thing is somebody else is and they're going to fly your plane for you. | ||
And you may not be the smartest guy in the world, but the smartest guy in the world is going to be the CEO of something and he's going to create value and create some business that everyone's going to benefit from. | ||
That is why we have a meritocratic society. | ||
Not only is it good for everybody, not only in a utilitarian sense, does it sort of maximize the productive capability of the society, but also it's fair, it's right, it's equal. | ||
And even if you think it's unfair, you still get to enjoy and participate in it. | ||
Why do we need to reach out? | ||
Why do we need to make the black people pilots? | ||
They're perfectly happy doing the wrapping. | ||
They're perfectly happy doing their thing. | ||
And now we're going to reach out and put them in airplanes and they're not going to know what to do. | ||
We're going to put them in airplanes and they're not going to know the first thing about any of that. | ||
And you almost got to feel bad for these poor bastards. | ||
You almost got to feel bad. | ||
You almost got to feel bad. | ||
Could you imagine some woman getting overwhelmed in the cockpit? | ||
I can perfectly imagine that situation. | ||
It's just, it's just not even right. | ||
And it's certainly not right for the rest of us. | ||
And the reason why the airplane example is so prescient, this is the last thing I'll say, is because this is one of those things where you absolutely need competence. | ||
This is one of those areas where it's absolutely essential that you have somebody that's good at their job. | ||
Because it's life or death. | ||
So, if you have somebody that can't fly a plane flying it, well, there's hundreds of lives in that person's hands. | ||
And like I said, it's not going to be long before you see planes falling out of the sky and killing everybody on board, and then killing everybody that they hit on the ground, on Earth. | ||
And this is what we can expect. | ||
We had, like, basically no commercial aviation deaths for a hundred years, and my right hand to God Watch how quickly that will begin to change within our lifetimes. | ||
Because this is what we're doing. | ||
We had a first class country, we had a first class everything, because we had first class white guys running the show, and now we're going to have the second class. | ||
We're going to have the second class with their subsidized everything, and their lower test scores, and their lower standards, and we're going to get a second class society. | ||
Planes falling out of the sky, trains don't run on time, the store doesn't have the thing that you wanted, and the people there are rude. | ||
If we don't already have that. | ||
If that's not already what it is, hey, well, we're gonna get a whole lot more of it in the future. | ||
So that's the airlines, that's the affirmative action. | ||
It's kind of a black pill when you think about it, because there's just like nothing we could do. | ||
78% of their flight school is non-whites and women, I don't know about you, but I just don't have as much confidence in that as I did before. | ||
Because the society is only as good as the people in it. | ||
The planes don't fly themselves. | ||
The trains don't run themselves. | ||
People have to do it. | ||
Everything that we take for granted, when you go to the store and the store has the product that you want, that had to come from somewhere. | ||
It had to come from somewhere on a truck, and it had to be made somewhere, and it had to be designed somewhere, and for it to even be in the store it had to be ordered by somebody at the store who's making these decisions based on math. | ||
And so all these things that are going on in the country that we don't see directly all require a high level of competence and accountability. | ||
And to the extent that we're replacing all the managers and all the bureaucrats and all these people with incompetence, we're going to get an inferior society. | ||
And the people are not going to care, and they're not going to be accountable, and they're not even going to be good at what they do. | ||
And so the society is just going to slowly get worse in every measurable way. | ||
Slowly in ways that you, you know, like maybe you're not going to get shot. | ||
You might, but maybe you're not going to get shot by like a gang member. | ||
But when you go to the store, they're not going to have the stuff you want. | ||
And it's, there's, the aisles are going to be messy. | ||
And there's going to be little kids running around screaming. | ||
And there's going to be, and we already see this. | ||
You go to any major city and you already see this happening. | ||
It's dirtier and there's vagabonds in the streets and everything is just slowly sucking harder and harder. | ||
Everything is. | ||
The movies, the TV, the stores, the restaurants, the streets, the government, the bureaus. | ||
It didn't used to be like that. | ||
It didn't, it did not used to be like that. | ||
It used to be that people were really, really good and really efficient and when people had to like write things down, everybody had a good memory and high energy and people had to use tools And everybody's smoking cigarettes and they were skinny and they are high energy and now everybody's fat and lazy and ignorant and rude and nobody gives a shit and nobody cleans up after themselves and everybody's inconsiderate. | ||
And so we're going to get an ignoramus society. | ||
We're going to get a society of people that leave their shopping carts in the parking lot, people that throw their litter in the streets. | ||
We're going to get a society of people that take their lunch break and check their phone on the job In effect, that's what we already have, and it's just going to keep getting worse. | ||
So that's the airlines, that's... I know, that's a bit of a black pill, but that's that. | ||
But I want to move on, I want to move on, I want to talk about this European Union hate speech law. | ||
This is very relevant. | ||
Because I talked yesterday... I talked yesterday at great length about what we can expect now that Elon Musk has blocked Twitter. | ||
And I talked about What the reason for optimism is, as well as some of the concerns. | ||
And one of the biggest concerns is that even if Elon Musk is willing and able to make free speech happen on Twitter, and when I say willing and able I mean even if his priority, his goal, is to have Twitter adjudicate their censorship, adjudicate their, I should say moderate is a better word, | ||
Even if Elon Musk's goal is to make Twitter moderation conform to the First Amendment, and even if he's able to get everybody on Twitter on the same page as him about that, There may be resistance that comes from other places. | ||
There may be resistance that comes from outside the company. | ||
And that may come from the back-end tech services. | ||
It may come from the government. | ||
And we're starting to see this. | ||
In the European Union this weekend, they passed another anti-hate speech, anti-fake news bill, which specifically goes after the big tech companies and which will apply to Twitter. | ||
And so this is the story. | ||
This is from The New Yorker. | ||
Over the weekend a story came out of Brussels that may have been missed. | ||
The 27 member states of the European Union reached an agreement on a new law requiring big online platforms including social media companies to police hate speech and disinformation more effectively. | ||
Under the EU's Digital Services Act, European governments now have the power to ask web platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube to remove any content that promotes terrorism, hate speech, child sexual abuse, or commercial scams. | ||
The platforms will also be obliged to prevent the, quote, manipulation of services having an impact on democratic processes and public security. | ||
Which, and the devil is in the details on something like that, of course. | ||
Theory Breton, the European Union Commissioner for the Internal Market, said, quote, the time of big online platforms behaving like they are too big to care is coming to an end. | ||
If the European Union authorities see a surge of online disinformation during a crisis, such as the ongoing war in Ukraine, they will be able to order social media companies to take, quote, proportionate and effective measures to counter the threat. | ||
Although the new European Union agreement stops short of treating online platforms the same as traditional publishers, which may be legally liable for intentionally false content about specific individuals and companies, it will force them to provide users with an easy and effective way to flag harmful content so that it can be removed. | ||
The platforms will also be subject to annual audits by European regulators on their efforts to counter disinformation and other abuses. | ||
Platforms that violate the new law can be fined billions of dollars and repeat offenders may even be banned from doing business in the European Union. | ||
Regulating content in a manner consistent with protecting free speech may be a trickier proposition, but the European Union has just provided a roadmap for how it could be done by putting the onus on social media companies to monitor and remove harmful content and hit them with big fines if they don't. | ||
The Digital Services Act is nothing short of a paradigm shift in tech regulation, said Ben Scott, the executive director of an advocacy group called Reset. | ||
He said it's the first major attempt to set rules and standards for algorithmic systems in digital media markets. | ||
Elon Musk surely would object to the US adopting a regulatory system like the one that the Europeans are drawing up but that's too bad. | ||
The health of the internet and democracy is too significant to leave to one man no matter how rich he is. | ||
This is in the New Yorker. | ||
So they're writing an article about how in the European Union they passed a law which This is basically impossible to comply with. | ||
How is Twitter going to adjudicate what is hate speech and what is not? | ||
What this in effect does is it allows Germany and France and the United Kingdom and all the major European Union countries to dictate what is allowed on these so-called private companies. | ||
And isn't that so rich? | ||
You know, for years, for years, When we complained about tech censorship, the rebuttal was always, well, Twitter's a private company. | ||
They could do whatever they want. | ||
The First Amendment doesn't apply to the social media companies because those are private institutions. | ||
The First Amendment only applies to the government. | ||
And it's like, okay, private problem, private solution. | ||
What if the richest man in the world buys Twitter and then just lets free speech happen? | ||
And now, now they're all gonna rush to the government and say, oh well, the government has to step in to protect democracy. | ||
And now they want the government to decide what goes on Twitter. | ||
Well, what happened? | ||
I thought that what happens on Twitter is a private affair and nobody could do anything about it. | ||
Now that it's a private affair and no one can do anything about it but it's against their interest, the liberal globalist New World Order interest, oh now they want the government involved. | ||
Now they want the European Union to dictate what the terms of service are and the European Union can dictate what information is allowed on Twitter. | ||
And so can you imagine a scenario where People on Twitter are talking about the war in Ukraine, and they're saying, for example, the things that I say on this show. | ||
And they're saying that Russia is winning, and they're saying that Russia has legitimate security interest in defending Ukraine against NATO, and so on. | ||
Can you imagine that Twitter would be forced to take that down? | ||
And if they weren't, then Twitter would be banned from Europe? | ||
Now keep in mind this is what we accuse totalitarian countries of doing. | ||
We say that China is a For this very reason, because the government will not allow information and conversation to take place that is not in compliance or does not conform to the state's propaganda. | ||
We're now effectively doing the same thing in Europe and America. | ||
And you've got Americans, this is the New Yorker article, beaming and celebrating the law in Europe. | ||
The Europeans are already there. | ||
They're passing a law saying, well if Twitter doesn't abide by our narrative, well then there will be no Twitter in Europe. | ||
And so just like Iran, just like fucking Iran, Germany and France may one day ban American social media. | ||
Just like Iran and China and North Korea and Russia, now France too, the home of the French Revolution and the French Republic, will now ban Twitter. | ||
And they want the same thing in America. | ||
So you've got all these hypocrisies here. | ||
You've got this hypocrisy specifically on what they've said about the social media companies. | ||
You get banned? | ||
Too bad. | ||
It's a private affair. | ||
You get brought back on? | ||
unidentified
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Oh no! | |
Call the government! | ||
Pass a new law! | ||
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And I fear that they will do that. | |
I fear that they may do that in the United States. | ||
I don't really care about Europe. | ||
I don't care about Europeans reading Twitter. | ||
I care about my American followers reading Twitter. | ||
Because I care about influencing the American political conversation in the American state. | ||
But we may see something like that come to pass in the United States. | ||
Fortunately, we have a Constitution and we have a Supreme Court. | ||
So it's not as simple as one of the governments in the European Union adopting a bill like this. | ||
But still, I fear that the regulatory apparatus may intervene and I said this yesterday. | ||
We talked about Section 230 being used. | ||
Section 230 protects platforms from the liability that a publisher accepts for the content that is on their website. | ||
We talked about using Section 230 as leverage to force the tech companies to bring us back on. | ||
And I said the other night, I fear that now a liberal regime, because Section 230, I mean, this is really, it's an interpretation of the law by the FCC, which is why Twitter and Facebook are shielded from this publisher liability. | ||
Could a liberal bureaucratic state, could the liberal bureaucracy reinterpret those protections in light of what's gone on and strip Twitter of its platform status and then subject Twitter to liability if it doesn't conform to the kind of moderation that the government wants to see? | ||
And so, It's very possible. | ||
So that may be the biggest concern is as always the social media companies may be too big for any private actor to mess with them But as always the state, and that's why I said on Russia Today earlier tonight, I said that ultimately we need to have the First Amendment apply on Twitter directly. | ||
Because insofar as Twitter remains private, the government can always push it around. | ||
And the government can push it around based on whoever is in charge at the time. | ||
But if Twitter were like a telecom company, if it was regulated as a utility, Then it would be subject to the same kinds of restrictions that they are. | ||
And just like AT&T or NICOR or ComEd can't turn off your utilities, Twitter can't ban your account. | ||
And no partisan regime, no FCC regulator, certainly none of the back-end services can pull the plug. | ||
That's how it should be. | ||
So that's one of the vulnerabilities that remains, and they're just absolutely begging for it. | ||
So that's what they said in the European Union. | ||
That's their new bill. | ||
They're going after them for hate speech and for fake news, which again is completely arbitrary and we know what that means. | ||
At the end of the day, this is about protecting their power. | ||
And whenever you hear them say things like, this is about the health of our democracy, What they're talking about doing is essentially taking anti-democratic, illiberal actions to save their rule. | ||
And this is something that Carl Schmitt wrote about. | ||
He wrote about how the state sometimes has to change itself to protect its enemies. | ||
He said that the state should not exercise its sort of founding principles if that means undermining the existence of the state. | ||
So he talked about how, for example, in Weimar Germany, That government should not permit extremist factions that want to do away with the government. | ||
The government is so open that it will invite people that are against the government to participate, and if those people succeed, they will undo the government. | ||
And so there's this idea, which is persistent in conservative thought over the years, that of course the state has to protect itself, the society has to protect itself from these hostile revolutionary elements. | ||
And so when you hear them say, our democracy, our democracy, it's actually very interesting because they're taking anti-democratic actions. | ||
All the people that promote tolerance are promoting intolerance. | ||
All the people promoting liberalism are promoting illiberalism. | ||
All the people promoting democracy are promoting anti-democracy in order to save their democracy. | ||
And, you know, that kind of tells you something about those principles in itself. | ||
Liberalism has in it the germ of its own demise. | ||
Inside of democracy is this fundamental contradiction, which is to say that eventually you're going to get the sort of factional warfare, eventually the open society is going to permit people that are not very open And so what do you do then? | ||
I mean, do you believe in these things in principle or then is it just about protecting a certain class of people? | ||
That's ultimately what this is all about. | ||
It's not about democracy. | ||
It's not about liberalism. | ||
Not that I'm one of those things in particular. | ||
But what all these things are about is protecting the group interest of the people that are in power. | ||
Everything that threatens the people in power is called A threat to our democracy. | ||
It's really not. | ||
The people in power do not really believe in democracy. | ||
The people in power do not really believe in liberalism or all these things. | ||
They're willing to ban Twitter. | ||
They're against free speech. | ||
They're against the right to own guns. | ||
They're against all these things, obviously. | ||
We know that. | ||
But they continue to trot out this mythology of a democracy that we all have a stake in because it's about the top and the bottom screwing over the middle. | ||
We have our democracy. | ||
Our democracy is so important to whom? | ||
The democracy makers, which are the people in charge, and the voters, the constituents, the people that have nothing other than their vote. | ||
And so the people that are getting screwed are all these people in the middle, the taxpayers, the business owners, and so on, getting screwed over by the people in charge of the government and their bob and mass of slavish voters that watch TV and buy their products and so on. | ||
And so at the end of the day, the so-called cry about free speech, it really isn't about democracy. | ||
It really isn't. | ||
You know, Elon Musk said that it's about free speech and free speech being vital to democracy. | ||
It's really about neither of those things. | ||
It's really not about free speech and it's really not about democracy. | ||
It's about the ability of dissidents to dissent against the current regime. | ||
That's what it's about. | ||
It's not about freedom. | ||
It's about freedom to freedom of a particular political dissenting group to say particularly dissenting things about this particular government. | ||
Because I think that basically the government is fine with free speech until you criticize the government. | ||
They're fine with free speech until you begin to undermine their propaganda. | ||
They don't care, you know, if you talk about the football teams. | ||
They don't care if you talk about different political ideologies or something. | ||
What they don't want to hear is anything that's against the current anti-white progressive dogma. | ||
What they do not want is people questioning the vaccine and questioning their proxy war in Ukraine. | ||
They don't want you questioning the narrative about George Floyd's death. | ||
They don't want you questioning the integrity of their elections. | ||
That's all. | ||
That's what this is about. | ||
So when they're talking about, oh, we need to defend our democracy by shutting down Twitter, what they're really saying is we need to shut down our critics and protect our power. | ||
And make no mistake about it, what Elon Musk is doing, he is playing their game. | ||
He's playing the same game. | ||
He's wrapping himself up in this language. | ||
That's what people do. | ||
They exert interest and then they wrap themselves up in moral language. | ||
The government is going to crush its critics and say that's protecting democracy. | ||
We're shutting down hate speech for the health of the internet and democracy by crushing our enemies and doing whatever we want to do. | ||
And Elon Musk is saying, I'm going to open up Twitter for people that are going to mess with you because I hate you. | ||
Because Elon Musk is basically at war with the regulatory state and the billionaires and so on. | ||
The short sellers, the Wall Street vultures, the SEC, all the people that are against Elon Musk He's going to open up Twitter for the critics of the current regime, which he is fighting against. | ||
And maybe he's not doing it self-consciously, but he is doing it effectively. | ||
And he's wrapping himself up in the language of, it's about freedom, it's about free speech. | ||
And that's the real threat to our democracy, is not enough free speech. | ||
But what he's doing is allowing the critics of the regime onto Twitter. | ||
And again, make no mistake about it, that is a challenge to the rule, to the ruling. | ||
That's a challenge to the people that are in charge. | ||
And, you know, it's dressed up in all this language, and it's this sort of public battle over which idea maybe makes the most sense. | ||
And you have Republicans saying, we want freedom! | ||
And, you know, Democrats saying, that's against democracy! | ||
But it's really a turf war. | ||
And Elon Musk and Donald Trump are class traitors against the regime. | ||
And the regime is at war with them. | ||
The regime went after Twitter because Twitter propelled Trump into the White House. | ||
And building a border wall and ending free trade and ending the wars threatened their money and it threatened their interest. | ||
All this stuff, all this moral language is just window dressing on political warfare. | ||
Political warfare is about interest and influence and money and power. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
So Musk is opening up Twitter, and that is a big threat to the system. | ||
So now the system is going to sort of reorganize itself, and it's going to regroup, and it's going to launch a counter-offensive like they did in Europe. | ||
And they're going to call it HP, and they're going to call it this, but what they're doing is ensuring their monopoly of information, which is more valuable than Twitter itself. | ||
Ensuring total information control and total opinion control, the TV, radio, print, and a controlled social media, that is going to control the minds of most of the people. | ||
And it's going to control what they see, and then therefore what they think, and then therefore what they buy, and how they vote. | ||
And that's invaluable. | ||
And that's why There's such a vested interest in the social media companies. | ||
That's why they don't want people, regular average ordinary people, no interest and no real so-called skin in the game, to gain a following anonymously and compete in terms of impressions and viewership and influence with the major networks that are funded and owned by the billionaires. | ||
It's what it is. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
But a lot of these liberals don't even understand that. | ||
A lot of these liberals really do believe it's about the health of our democracy. | ||
Like this faggot for the New Yorker says, this is about the health of the internet. | ||
What does that even mean, the health of the internet? | ||
The internet isn't a fucking person. | ||
The health of the internet? | ||
What is the internet, sick? | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
None of this language means anything. | ||
The health of the internet. | ||
Who's taking the temperature? | ||
Who's the doctor? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
What is a healthy internet? | ||
I don't think it's very healthy at all. | ||
There's pornography on Twitter. | ||
That's healthy? | ||
Most of the internet is porn. | ||
That's healthy? | ||
Well as long as they're not saying the n-word, that's not healthy. | ||
Is it healthy when the internet is totally controlled? | ||
Is it healthy when you're not allowed to hear Russia's position on the war? | ||
There's a global conflict happening right now in Ukraine and we can only hear one side of the story. | ||
That's healthy. | ||
unidentified
|
That's not healthy. | |
It's got nothing to do with health. | ||
But these idiots go out there and they've convinced themselves that fake news In other words, unapproved opinion, unapproved information is the real problem. | ||
I remember I talked to Louis Theroux about this when Louis Theroux was in Chicago and he was interviewing me. | ||
I'm surprised this didn't make the documentary. | ||
He was asking me all about fake news and don't you think it's a problem that the people can just think whatever they want? | ||
And I'm like, dude, you basically think you know better than everybody. | ||
You as a fucking liberal think that, because we're all people and none of us know, none of us know perfect information, but you think that this power should be monopolized by the interest. | ||
You think that the power to discern should belong not to the people, not to anybody, but to the billionaires. | ||
And it's like, who thinks that? | ||
I don't know, well, I mean, obviously the billionaires think that, but who as a liberal could convince themselves of something so ridiculous? | ||
When George Bush says there's weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, oh, that was an oopsie. | ||
You know, and when the Biden administration said that Russia's going to use chemical weapons in Ukraine, and that was a lie! | ||
Oh, well, oops, we got it wrong, but anything for the... So... And it's lie after lie from the government. | ||
They do nothing but lie. | ||
And they think that the government should discern the information for the health of the society because they need to protect the people from fake information. | ||
That's all the government puts out is fake information. | ||
Some of it's true, some of it's fake, and the same goes for the information put out by the people. | ||
But who are these liberals to say that it should be only the billionaires that get to decide? | ||
Well, what if people think the earth is flat? | ||
Yeah, well, people thought that COVID was lethal. | ||
People thought that the vaccine was safe and effective. | ||
People thought that we needed to go to war in Iraq. | ||
People think a lot of stupid things. | ||
There will always be a veil of ignorance. | ||
We'll always be ignorant to some extent. | ||
We're never going to know perfectly. | ||
And probably what is going to lead to the most ignorance is having one institution, particularly the institution that has the most to lose, That has a monopoly on being able to discern what's real and what's fake. | ||
That's how you're going to make the most ignorance. | ||
So... If you're really concerned about fake news, you know what you would do? | ||
You would put the Catholic Church in charge of everything and you would ban people from reading. | ||
If you're really concerned about the promulgation of fake news, stop people from voting. | ||
Fake news isn't a problem if dumb and poor people can't vote. | ||
Not a problem at all. | ||
Take away their right to vote and then let the Catholic Church run the universities and then let only scholars From the Catholic Church talk on TV. | ||
Sounds like a perfect solution to me. | ||
It worked fine for hundreds of years. | ||
Now we get these universities that teach like science and anal sex and Judaism. | ||
And then we get all these liars and idiots on TV. | ||
And we get all these liars and idiots and sociopaths in the think tanks and they promulgate lies. | ||
And there's no moral culpability for that. | ||
There's no moral compunction to do anything other than that. | ||
And stupid people can't discern. | ||
So, I mean, really, there's a systemic problem in the fact that people have no moral qualms about lying because they're not Christian. | ||
And then dumb people are vulnerable to that because they're being taught to read and they're being brought into the conversation. | ||
They shouldn't be brought into the conversation. | ||
If people are too dumb to discern, then they shouldn't vote. | ||
If people are so stupid that everything has to be censored, lest they start to think the earth is flat and the boogeyman's under their bed, Uh, Then why are they voting? | ||
Why do you have the right to choose the president if you don't know your ass from a hole in the ground is really like what you're saying? | ||
Then they shouldn't vote. | ||
How is like, we need to protect our democracy. | ||
Democracy is what? | ||
Everybody's like unalienable right to vote in the election? | ||
Oh, but they're not smart enough to vote. | ||
Well, that makes perfect sense. | ||
So you can't have it all ways. | ||
Either don't let them vote, or if they are gonna vote, Then let everybody discern. | ||
And what's more, if you're so concerned about lying, appoint people who can't lie. | ||
Appoint people who think you're going to go to hell for lying. | ||
And then you'll have a lot less lying. | ||
But that we've accepted that as the norm. | ||
We've accepted lying, and ignorance, and stupidity, and egalitarianism as the norm. | ||
None of these things should be the norm. | ||
We should accept hierarchy, and we should strive for truth, and we should strive for having a virtuous society so that there won't be lies. | ||
I mean, we're always gonna have liars, but we'll have less of them. | ||
But, when people aren't Christian, then they, uh... | ||
They can lie with impunity. | ||
At least Christians know there's a consequence for lying. | ||
People that are not Christian, in media, you know, the people in media that are not Christian, there's really nothing morally wrong with lying. | ||
Think about it that way. | ||
I'm Catholic, so lying is a mortal sin. | ||
If I lie to you in like a severe way, that's the antithesis of our religion. | ||
Christ is the way, the truth, and the light. | ||
He's the truth. | ||
The beginning was the Word. | ||
The Word is the truth. | ||
The truth is God. | ||
Right? | ||
And so, it's the antithesis of our religion to lie. | ||
But the media is not run by Christians, is it? | ||
No, it isn't. | ||
The media is not run by Catholics. | ||
It's not run by Christians, is it? | ||
No, it's run by other people. | ||
Other people that I don't really think have any kind of moral prohibition from lying, and certainly they have no compunction about lying either. | ||
So, that's a problem. | ||
That's a big problem. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So there's an arm on a tangent, but you read these articles, they're coming for Elon Musk. | ||
The main thrust of it is this. | ||
The free speech on Twitter is going to be easier said than done. | ||
That's all I'm saying because the state is more powerful than the social media companies and where that was a good thing last week it's a bad thing now. | ||
So we have to wait and see. | ||
Fortunately in the United States there's a constitutional protection against this kind of censorship but in the European Union you see what they're already trying to do and there's going to be a global pressure against free speech. | ||
So this is not going to go down without a fight but We're gonna pay close attention to it, but we're gonna move on and take a look at our Super Chats for now. | ||
So let me pull up our text-to-speech Super Chats. | ||
Let me get my headset on. | ||
Let me get my gamer headset on. | ||
I did that interview on Russia Today and everybody else had these little like earbuds in and I had these giant... I had the gamer headset on. | ||
I had the giant cans on, which was very funny. | ||
Let me get my KFC. | ||
Let me get my Pepsi. | ||
unidentified
|
Yummy. | |
I mean, I've really been enjoying the KFC lately, I'm not gonna lie. | ||
I'm eating it like every day now. | ||
unidentified
|
So uh... | |
Yeah, so anyway. | ||
So let's move on. | ||
Let's take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what we got. | ||
I didn't even get to finish. | ||
I was... I had to scarf down this five tender meal while I was doing the interview with Russia Today. | ||
So I'm still kind of hungry. | ||
Alright, but let's move on. | ||
Let's take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
Let's see what we got. | ||
America First sponsored by Kentucky Fried Chicken. | ||
unidentified
|
Alright. | |
Let's see, what do we got? | ||
What do we got tonight? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Okay. | ||
*ding* Hey, thank you man! | ||
Hey, thank you, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Deliberate sentence. | ||
Teenage Heartthrob Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
America's Sweetheart Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
I am, I am a teenage heartthrob. | ||
I am, I am America's sweetheart. | ||
That's what people don't realize about me is I'm a perfect sweetheart. | ||
Everybody thinks of me as like this insincere like troll shithead or something but everybody who knows me knows I'm a total sweetheart. | ||
I'm really a sweetie pie I'm just a kid, just a kid from Chicago with a big heart and big dreams and that's all. | ||
You know, everybody thinks of me, everybody's got this perception of me that I'm this terrible. | ||
I can be terrible. | ||
I can be horrible. | ||
I can be terrible in the true definition of the word terrible. | ||
But I'm really just a big sweetie pie. | ||
I'm just a guy with a big heart and lots of love to give. | ||
And sometimes people don't want to accept my love, so I give them my hatred, so I give them my terror. | ||
But I'm really just a big lovey. | ||
I'm just a big sweetheart with a big heart and really just a guy with a lot of love to give. | ||
And I just want to love. | ||
I just want to give everyone my love. | ||
And then everyone just attacks me. | ||
I'm really like a supervillain. | ||
Like, I was just such a sweetheart, and I just wanted to extend my heart to everybody. | ||
And then everybody was like... And then everyone laughed at me! | ||
Then everyone was laughing at me, and then everyone was mean to me, and I was like... And then, you know... And then I found it funny. | ||
And I got a different sense of humor. | ||
So I was a love monger and now they didn't accept my love so I'm giving them everything else. | ||
I'll give them the rest. | ||
No, but it's true. | ||
But it's true. | ||
I really am just a big sweetie pie. | ||
I am America's sweetheart and I am a teenage heartthrob. | ||
The teenage heartthrobs are all sporting mustaches, you know. | ||
We had enough Justin Bieber and Jonas Brothers, and now the teenage heartthrobs are, you know, racist ethnics with a mustache, and they're sort of like, have like a big, ridiculous, poofy head of hair. | ||
So yeah, I am kind of a heartthrob. | ||
Just look at me. | ||
unidentified
|
I am a total heartthrob. | |
Throngs of screaming teenage girls. | ||
Can't get enough. | ||
unidentified
|
They're like, ah, oh my gosh! | |
They're going to the Vax Watch, they're going to AFPAC, and the girls are like crying, and they're like tearing their hair out. | ||
unidentified
|
It's him! | |
And it's like me coming, and it's me coming out with my mustache, hey ladies. | ||
Hey, good evening everybody, you're watching America First! | ||
My name's Nicholas J. Woods. | ||
We got a great show for you tonight. | ||
And all the girls... I'm like the Beatles. | ||
It's like Beatlemania. | ||
unidentified
|
I am a heartthrob. | |
I am America's... Everybody knows I'm America's sweetheart. | ||
Everybody thinks of me that way. | ||
They think of me as a sweetie pie. | ||
America's angel. | ||
That's me. | ||
America's angel. | ||
I'm America's Angel. | ||
Hey! | ||
unidentified
|
Quit talking shit, bitch! | |
I'm America's Sweetheart, alright? | ||
Hey! | ||
unidentified
|
Fuck you! | |
I'm America's Sweetheart! | ||
How dare you? | ||
unidentified
|
How dare you talk trash about me? | |
How could you say that to me, you bitch? | ||
Don't you know I'm America's Sweetheart? | ||
unidentified
|
Now get out of my neighborhood! | |
Anyway... | ||
So yeah, thank you for that. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Very true. | ||
Midnight Sun sent $3. | ||
Hey King, we pray that you get your Twitter reinstated. | ||
But if it doesn't happen, at least you will still have Telegram. | ||
Telegram you all. | ||
unidentified
|
Telegram! | |
Telegram! | ||
Yeah, we'll always have Telegram. | ||
Thank God. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, and Gap, of course. | |
Gap too. | ||
And True Social. | ||
But yeah, I really, I better get my Twitter account back or I'll die. | ||
Spence sent $3. | ||
How long until America First is simulcast on RT? | ||
Let's go. | ||
unidentified
|
Soon. | |
Soon, yeah. | ||
Maybe they'll bring me on for a full-time show. | ||
I would do it. | ||
I would do it in a second. | ||
Spence sent $3. | ||
That antagonistic boomer on RT had crazy eyes, very feminine body language, and constant twitching and head bobbing. | ||
I couldn't really see him because I'm on the Zoom meeting, so I only see the producer's blank screen, so I didn't even see what the guy looked like. | ||
Spence sent $3. | ||
How long until America First is simulcast on RT? | ||
He wants to nationalize Twitter. | ||
That is just outrageous. | ||
unidentified
|
The founding father said. | |
Yeah, the founding father said BlackRock owns Twitter, right? | ||
That's what the founding fathers would love. | ||
BlackRock and the Saudi royal family, right? | ||
Spence sent $3. | ||
How long until America First is simulcast on RT? | ||
Let's go. | ||
Wonder Pets Patriots sent $10. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa! | |
WonderPetsPatriot sent $10. | ||
Loved your appearance on RT. | ||
Will this be a regular thing from now on? | ||
I actually liked that it was a panel with a small debate because you were able to show your logic succinctly. | ||
Boomers don't get it. | ||
Yeah, boomers live in a different world. | ||
They literally did grow up in a different world than we did. | ||
Hopefully. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
I don't want to be presumptuous, but yeah, I mean I've been on there a few times already. | ||
I hope they like me. | ||
unidentified
|
I hope they keep bringing me back because I'm a big fan of Russia today. | |
I'll have to get a better setup because I've been using my webcam and I've been using the green screen. | ||
If I become a regular, I'll probably just build a practical background in another room or something just for interviews on my other computer. | ||
So yeah, hopefully. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I love that. | ||
Nick Rakita accusing me of swatting him while I'm live on the air. | ||
unidentified
|
Nick, why didn't you just swat at me? | |
I'm literally alive while it's happening, you idiot. | ||
I'm literally live doing something else, you dummy. | ||
And yeah, of all people, I'm under investigation by the FBI. | ||
I'm being subpoenaed by the US Congress. | ||
Yeah, but the guy's just coping, obviously. | ||
The guy's just a faggot. | ||
Whoever's doing it is... I think they're doing it intentionally to frame America first. | ||
Because, believe me, I mean, we understand that the swatting is a severe crime and if we were doing that, like, they would find that out immediately and I would be screwed. | ||
Like, we're obviously not doing that. | ||
I mean, the FBI is literally involved in the swatting against Cozy. | ||
You know, whoever did the swatting against Cozy is going to be unmasked soon because, and I said this throughout the whole thing, you swat like one person repeatedly, you know, law enforcement may not even really care. | ||
If you swat multiple people across state lines, the police departments start communicating with each other and then it becomes a massive interstate crime with a federal jurisdiction. | ||
And I knew that was going to happen. | ||
So in some sense, the more that it happened, I was like, okay, well, we will get closer. | ||
Because the more that this happens, the more attention it will bring from the police and from the feds. | ||
So that would just be ridiculous. | ||
It would make no sense for us to retaliate in that way. | ||
And honestly, I just don't care enough about Nick Rikita to take that kind of a risk. | ||
The guy's an idiot. | ||
And the guy, I heard the guy got cucked by his wife Apparently his wife had sex with her masseuse or something, so... And that's really not surprising. | ||
It's a typical lawyer archetype. | ||
But anyway... So yeah, that's honestly libelous for him to claim that. | ||
If I were a private person, that would be libel. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Justin sent $10. | ||
Told that cringe libertarian it's ridiculous and the height of folly. | ||
You gave that blonde retard an electrifying smackdown in the most major way. | ||
Kudos. | ||
Yeah, that was cac. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The height of folly. | ||
I'm such a, I'm such a troll. | ||
I'm such a shit poster. | ||
I go on there and I didn't even mean for that to like stir the pot. | ||
I was just like, cause you're like, do you think it's a good idea for the richest man in the world to own Twitter? | ||
And I was like, well, I mean, it's not ideal. | ||
Ideally, the government would control it. | ||
And I was just kind of throwing that out there. | ||
I didn't even really think about it. | ||
I didn't think it would be that big of a deal. | ||
And then they both were like, no, I'm not for that. | ||
And yeah, the guy got all libtard mode on me. | ||
unidentified
|
And he was like, duh, the phonic father said. | |
So I had to give him a clap back. | ||
Yeah, once he said that, I was like, okay, all right, all right, let me at him, let me at him. | ||
And I had to smoke him, smoke that chump. | ||
unidentified
|
Nah, it was fun. | |
Yeah, literally, literally just a based offhand remark. | ||
Connecticut Grow I percent $10. | ||
Accidentally redirects entire conversation to the idea of nationalizing Twitter. | ||
Flusters other guests with two based offhand remark. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, literally, literally just a based offhand remark. | |
I literally just like the whole panel just got completely derailed. | ||
Great spot on RT. | ||
The gamer headset was a nice touch. | ||
I mean, we should just nationalize it anyway. | ||
unidentified
|
And they're like, wait, what? | |
Oh, that's cack. - Computer Zoomer sent $3. | ||
Great spot on RT. | ||
The gamer headset was a nice touch. | ||
unidentified
|
For your next appearance, I think you should fix the gamer posture. - Yeah, well, I had to like maneuver myself because my green screen only covers like so much. | |
So I had to kind of like block out part of the wall where the green screen doesn't extend to. | ||
And also, like, my webcam's in, like, a weird spot, so... The posture is because I don't... my setup is not really made for this. | ||
So I had to kind of just work with what I had, but, yeah, like I said, if this becomes a regular thing, I'll just... I'll put something together. | ||
That's a little more conducive to that. | ||
But yeah, I had the gamer posture. | ||
Gamer headset, gamer posture, gamer comebacks. | ||
unidentified
|
But yeah, good note. | |
Thanks for the note. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Always making me better. | ||
I then sent $3. | ||
Somehow lost my 109-day streak of watching cozy TV. | ||
Do I have your permission to kilometers? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I like the streak because it's like this, we're hacking your brain. | ||
I like the streak because it's like this, we're hacking your brain. | ||
Like Snapchat does that. | ||
Snapchat does streaks. | ||
And it's such an insidious thing because that forces kids to keep coming back every day. | ||
Even though you don't like talk to somebody every day necessarily. | ||
It's like, oh, I got to send a streak every day. | ||
So, yeah, we're kind of just, we're in your head basically. | ||
So, no, why don't you just get back on and start another streak, okay? | ||
Just start another streak. | ||
You'll get back up in 100 more days. | ||
You'll be right back there. | ||
All of them? | ||
Trump, Elon Musk, PewDiePie, Vladimir Putin, Bashar al-Assad, the Taliban. | ||
It's all white boy swag. | ||
That's all it is. | ||
Me, Nick Fuentes, it's white boy swag. | ||
It's called being the best. | ||
It's called being excellent. | ||
It's called white excellence and just not caring. | ||
That's what it's called. | ||
So yeah, absolutely. | ||
White boy swag. | ||
We all have it. | ||
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump. | ||
We're all cut from the same cloth. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
You're right. | ||
James the Groyper sent $3. | ||
It was awesome covering you on RT tonight. | ||
It was even better having you come on the show. | ||
Thanks for the support, my man. | ||
You did great. | ||
Hey, thank you very much, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
We love James the Groyper. | ||
Can we get an 07 for James the Groyper and Dalton Claude? | ||
Great show, great show. | ||
Big shout out. | ||
unidentified
|
Love the show. | |
And we love James the Groyper. | ||
unidentified
|
And we love the Daltoid. | |
Dalton Clod. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a big Clod head. | |
You know, he's really blowing up. | ||
His channel is one of the biggest on the site right now. | ||
I don't know if you guys pay attention to this stuff, but yeah, he's like literally... Let's see. | ||
He's at 34-79. | ||
So he's just after Bakes. | ||
So I think it goes me, Vince, The Foundation, which isn't really real because we only stream AfPak on there. | ||
So it's not like that's streaming every day. | ||
So that one doesn't really count. | ||
So it's like me, Vince, B.A.K.E. | ||
unidentified
|
and then Dalton. | |
He's top five on the platform. | ||
I think Beardson's five, I think, if I'm not mistaken. | ||
So yeah, big shout out to him. | ||
Nice work. | ||
Thanks for covering my appearance, by the way. | ||
I do appreciate that. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoops! | |
Just read that. | ||
Yeah, that was a dream. | ||
But, you're welcome. | ||
Just read that. | ||
Zoomer will send $5. | ||
Hey, Nick, I actually had a dream that you sent me the wrong merch, but I super chatted about the issue and you were very accommodating. | ||
So thank you. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, that was a dream. | ||
But you're welcome. | ||
You're welcome out of the dream. | ||
That is hilarious. | ||
Could you imagine you're all watching like a woman like, okay, ready for my first flight! | ||
Everyone's like, yeah, here you go! | ||
and died all of us looked at each other and it was just a telepathic connection among all of us very sad but simon that is hilarious could you imagine you're all watching like a woman like okay ready for my first flight everyone's like yeah here you go | ||
and she takes off and just and everybody looks around like there is something so funny about women trying to do something and then like obviously failing Um, There's something especially funny about when they die doing that. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Yeah, you go girl. | ||
unidentified
|
You go girl. | |
Jump on in that plane. | ||
You can do it. | ||
And then she just like flies into a cliff or something. | ||
Flies into a mountain. | ||
unidentified
|
Explodes. | |
Fiery explosion and then she's just gone. | ||
Oh well. | ||
Guess that didn't work. | ||
Guess it's not. | ||
Guess the future is not female after all. | ||
unidentified
|
UX says girl bossing. | |
Yeah girl boss. | ||
That's cack. | ||
It's funny because female competence is a myth. | ||
Andrea Anglin has a really good article about this. | ||
It's called The Myth of Female Competence and it's so true. | ||
The idea that women are good at things comes from movies and TV. | ||
That is the only place you'll see it. | ||
Think about it. | ||
Everybody, well normies, have this idea in their head of like a badass bitch who takes no prisoners. | ||
She doesn't take shit from anybody. | ||
Where do you see that? | ||
Hollywood. | ||
Television. | ||
It does not exist in the real world. | ||
Those are TV characters and that is a script written by a Jewish guy, okay? | ||
A Jewish guy wrote your lines. | ||
There's no such thing as a Captain Marvel. | ||
Her lines were written by some writer, and then she read them, and she posed around, and then she went right back to being a woman. | ||
Otherwise, if you ever know women in, like, a high-pressure situation, they just cry. | ||
They just cry, they break down, they're irrational, they freak out, they're emotional. | ||
We all know that, and, like, don't get me wrong, I love women and all that, but that's just how they are. | ||
I don't love women because they're competent. | ||
I think men like women because they want to have sex with them, not because they're actually really good at stuff. | ||
I don't know that an engineer or a doctor or a lawyer would be like, let's call in her. | ||
She'll know what to do. | ||
I don't think a guy has ever had a problem and been like, I just am overwhelmed. | ||
We gotta bring in her. | ||
We gotta bring her in. | ||
She would know exactly what to do. | ||
If anything, it's literally the exact opposite. | ||
unidentified
|
Women just weren't designed that way. | |
So, uh, men like women because they are sexy, not because they're competent. | ||
And this, and just really, really do some introspection. | ||
Where did you get the idea that, like, a woman was so epic? | ||
You saw it on TV somewhere. | ||
It's just true. | ||
I know, it's hard to, I know it's hard to come to terms with that, but it's a myth. | ||
It's not to say that there aren't women that can do some things well, but the idea that women are, like, extraordinarily capable or, like, badass or anything... I don't think there is anything that a woman could do better than a man other than, like, have kids or, like, maybe raise kids or something. | ||
And even still, children do better motherless than they do fatherless, I'm pretty sure. | ||
So it's like, can you literally name one thing that a woman can do better than a man? | ||
Even with this tranny thing, the tranny thing is proving this because you enter trannies into the equation and they literally do things better than women. | ||
Like when they're swimming, or they're weightlifting, or they're playing sports, or they're in the military. | ||
Or that's like Bruce Jenner. | ||
Bruce Jenner is the best female athlete in the world. | ||
Instantly. | ||
When he became a woman... I don't know... I don't recognize that but you know what I'm saying. | ||
When Bruce Jenner decided to become a woman, he instantly became the best female athlete on planet Earth. | ||
So it's like, you know, and that's not to attack women, but it is to say like, just have babies. | ||
That's the one thing you could do that men can do. | ||
So just maybe focus on that. | ||
It's called comparative advantage. | ||
So, and it's not to say that there's nothing that any woman could do better than any man. | ||
Yeah, some women can do some things better than some men, but there's nothing that the best woman could do better than the best man. | ||
And generally if you go 1 to 1, 2 to 2, 3 to 3, this is always true. | ||
three to three, this is always true. | ||
So, that's why women should sort of do like care based work They should be in the nursing homes, they should be maybe in the schools, maybe just nurses, moms, teachers, nannies, maybe secretaries, something like that, like a low-level sort of like, yes, Mr. Fuentes, something like that. | ||
Yes, Mr. Fuentes. | ||
Mr. Fuentes's office, yes, I can hold, you know, like that kind of thing. | ||
But other than that, I would never go to a woman to solve my problems. | ||
I would never pick up the phone and be like, I just don't know what to do. | ||
So, just saying. | ||
Just saying. | ||
And I think all men know that's true. | ||
So anyway. | ||
Yeah, that's cack. | ||
Very sad, he says, but come on. | ||
Yeah, that is sad. | ||
FedEnlaw sent $3. | ||
Would you have RSBN on Cozy streaming Trump speeches? | ||
Also need Cozy.tv slash RT247 stream. | ||
Sure, sure, I'd have RSBN on Cozy. | ||
Litho sent $5. | ||
Women can't even switch lanes without nearly killing themselves because they all have tunnel vision and 33% less bandwidth in their brains. | ||
It's science. | ||
It is science. | ||
That's so funny. | ||
Yeah, they can't switch lanes. | ||
They can't drive on the highway. | ||
That's so funny. | ||
unidentified
|
It is science though. | |
It is scientific. | ||
Yeah, I think I saw that. | ||
Yeah, it's so typical. | ||
And if the races were reversed, you know, international incident. | ||
Remember Cash Gurnan, the little white boy that was kidnapped from his bed and killed by a black man? | ||
The black guy was recently found not competent to stand trial. | ||
Sick. | ||
Pray for Cash. | ||
Yeah, I think I saw that. | ||
Yeah, it's so typical. | ||
And if the races were averse, you know, international incident. | ||
But of course, when it's black on white, nobody cares. | ||
Mangachev Zucente. | ||
When they say democratizing travel, they mean they're gonna make it a lot worse. | ||
When they say something is being democratized, the connotation should be it's going to be made much worse. | ||
So yeah, in that sense, it's true. | ||
They have democratized it. | ||
- Niguana sent $5. | ||
Can't wait to get on a plane in 10 years and half the windows are taped grocery bags. | ||
- Yeah, literally, dude. | ||
Yeah, that's exactly how it's going. | ||
it's going to be. | ||
Matthew Royce sent $10. | ||
Remember Richard Russell, the Sky King literally learned to fly like a pro from watching YouTube. | ||
The skies belong to the white man. | ||
That's right. | ||
The skies, the stars, the seas, a hundred percent. | ||
Brandon sent $5. | ||
Alt-Hype recently talked about the black pilots thing, particularly those in World War II. | ||
Despite the movies, they weren't exactly the high performers that our best friends in Hollywood depict. | ||
I didn't see that stream, but yeah, I can imagine what it really was like. | ||
Bowtie Tiger sent $3. | ||
This is your pilot white hulo. | ||
Please put the tradables in upright position. | ||
We can land fast, real hard landing in Daris, Texas. | ||
The radar is really rain. | ||
Thank you for choosing Uga Booga Airlines. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you think the radar is really rain? | |
That's hilarious. | ||
The Chinese broke in English. | ||
Should have done it in the Chinese TTS. | ||
Yeah, you gotta resend that one with the Chinese voice with the text-to-speech. | ||
We're gonna land fast. | ||
Real hot landing in Dallas, Texas. | ||
unidentified
|
The weather is really rain. | |
That's funny. | ||
Drew, that's your future. | ||
Welcome to America. | ||
We had to be there on January 6th. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Not sure if you're the person to ask, but do you know of any way to volunteer for the no-fly list? | ||
I figure it's better to be safe than sorry. | ||
Oh, we had to be there on January 6th. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Maybe next time we do a stop this deal, just show up and say some crazy stuff. | ||
These were I'm not making that up. | ||
$5. | ||
Most Asians are stereo blind. | ||
They basically don't see the world in 3D in their minds. | ||
They suck at comprehending depth. | ||
It's like a budget E-machines versus an alienware in visual processing. | ||
Yeah, that's real. | ||
I'm not making that up. | ||
Like, it's biological. | ||
John sent $10. | ||
Remember airline affirmative action was part of the motivation for the Sky King, Bebo Russell and his frustration with life. | ||
He said, yeah, right. | ||
No, I'm a white guy when talking about being a real pilot. | ||
Probably had his dreams trampled. | ||
It's true. | ||
Very true. | ||
Yeah, that was the, yeah, he said that because they were, he made some call the air traffic controller or something and they were like, come on, you could be a pilot. | ||
And I'll never forget that. | ||
He said, nah, I'm a white guy. | ||
Which is just heartbreaking when you think about it. | ||
We get told all day long it feels so bad for these poor blacks who have been given everything. | ||
And then you hear something like that. | ||
Here's a white guy, like you said, learned to fly a plane from YouTube videos and gave up on his dreams because he knows there's no love for the white man and it's not even fair. | ||
Not even like there's no love. | ||
It's not even fair anymore for white guys. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
But that's what's beautiful about our people. | ||
That's what's beautiful about our people is the guy... It was a horrible suicide. | ||
It was a very sad situation, but he hijacked a plane and just flew. | ||
No hate, no grievance, no animosity. | ||
All he wanted to do was fly. | ||
And that's... We're so... I love us. | ||
unidentified
|
We're so beautiful, you know? | |
So yeah, that's true. | ||
Yeah, that is really embarrassing. | ||
You should, yeah, you gotta talk to your dad about that. | ||
dad and everything. | ||
But one time he yelled at me in front of everybody in Target because I wanted to put the shopping cart back. | ||
It was very embarrassing. | ||
This is like not parking your car. | ||
Yeah, that is really embarrassing. | ||
You're you should. | ||
Yeah, you got to talk to your dad about that. | ||
That's very cringe. | ||
Why did he yell at you? | ||
Why would you yell that for doing that? | ||
It's honestly just like, if you can't do that, you're an animal. | ||
If you can't put your cart back when you're done shopping, you're basically an animal. | ||
Because it's just, it takes two seconds, and people have said, I'm not the guy to come up with this, but they call that the shopping cart test. | ||
If you can't put the shopping cart back, like, you can't be a part of civilized society. | ||
Because it's such a basic, it's just the most basic pro-social behavior. | ||
You put the cart back, And not only then can the cart wranglers get them, but also people can access all the parking spots. | ||
It's just the most, it's just a minimum, the bare minimum, courteous, considerate behavior. | ||
But we've got a ignorant society. | ||
So yeah, your dad's one of them. | ||
I mean, dad's part of the problem. | ||
Benjamin Bingham sent $3. | ||
Many Pacific Islanders have immigrated to Australia. | ||
Young men immediately join gangs and kill over zip codes and fill prisons. | ||
It's all they know. | ||
One of their leaders said, stop killing our own own. | ||
Stop killing our own. | ||
Yeah, well then that's just indicative of the mindset. | ||
It's always that with these other people. | ||
unidentified
|
It's your own, your own people, your own this, your own that. | |
And it's like, well whites aren't allowed to have that, but everybody else is. | ||
Everybody else can have their own people, their own kin. | ||
We can't. | ||
If we do, we're evil. | ||
But yeah, sorry to hear about that in Australia. | ||
Very typical, that's what all the immigrants do. | ||
what all the immigrants do. - Bob Novati sent $20. - Excuse me. - King, I'm browsing the 3DSC shop for some gaming content to go with America first. | ||
I loved Luigi's Mansion most, which I played during your election stream. | ||
Now maybe Captain Doge will fit the vibe during the stream. | ||
Pretty soon I'll run out of games, but I'll never run out of AF. | ||
unidentified
|
Love the EP, peace. - Wow, thank you so much for sharing that. | |
It's really interesting. | ||
Wow, that's really, so you're playing a game while you're watching this? | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
Tell us what game you're playing. | ||
That's so interesting! | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
Thank you so much for telling me. | ||
Good job! | ||
Good job, you! | ||
Niggas be like, Hi, I'm doing this right now. | ||
Oh, thanks for the update. | ||
McMahon sent $3. | ||
Have you seen the latest James Bond movie? | ||
I fear they might try the DNA disease stuff with us. | ||
They have everyone's DNA from 23andMe. | ||
Do you think that stuff is possible? | ||
I'm not sure if it is. | ||
Yeah, it's probably possible. | ||
I did see that movie. | ||
I liked it. | ||
A lot of people didn't like it. | ||
I thought it was good. | ||
I enjoyed it. | ||
I like Daniel Craig as James Bond. | ||
I liked him. | ||
Marnix sent $3. | ||
You know, I know the old heads don't like him because they're like, he's a new James Bond. | ||
He's not like James Bond. | ||
I like him. | ||
I think he's good. | ||
But yeah, that stuff is all possible. | ||
The genetic stuff. | ||
Yeah, I totally believe in biological weapons like that. | ||
Marnique sent $3. | ||
Pilot Kanye West be like, I'm not landing this plane until the court orders Skeet to stay away from my kids. | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
Wow, really funny joke, dude. | ||
Good job! | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, stop. | |
We don't need any of the drama. | ||
I'm not addressing that. | ||
Let's just... I said it last night. | ||
I have no interest in infighting or drama or anything like that. | ||
cozying up to kume glazer and turning his back on af oh stop we don't need any of the drama i'm not i'm not addressing that let's just i said it last night i have no interest in infighting or drama or anything like that so boogly woogly sent three dollars i hear about carl schmidt more often now can you talk about him more i have one of his books but him too smooth brain to read such surgical legal theory | ||
i'm not the biggest carl schmidt fan and i haven't read carl schmidt extensively but uh He's known for his, what is the book called? | ||
It's called the essay. | ||
It's the concept of the political or something like that. | ||
And he has this definition of what politics is. | ||
And he says that how you define politics is by this sort of dialectic of the us versus the them. | ||
And he says that that is what characterizes something that is political by nature, by definition, is that it's a sort of one group of people versus another group of people. | ||
That's what defines something that is political. | ||
And he also has definitions for politics and for the sovereign and all these things. | ||
And he's got a very particular theory about these things. | ||
I'm not the biggest fan. | ||
I don't really love his writing, actually. | ||
But it is interesting. | ||
And I think some of it is relevant. | ||
And the big idea, basically, is that politics is all about, you know, defining the in group and the out group. | ||
And his definition of the sovereign is that the sovereign is the institution which can order people to kill and to be killed for itself. | ||
So it says the state is a sovereign because the sovereign is able to tell its people, okay, go out and kill other people and potentially be killed. | ||
And so it's just like a theory of what politics is and And he says, and there's something sort of prescient in it, he says, I don't know the exact quotation, but he says something like, you know, it's very important for the sovereign and for the society to know who is the us and the them. | ||
If you don't know who is them and who is us, like, you're in for a lot of trouble. | ||
And I'm paraphrasing, of course, and I'm not saying it succinctly because it's been a little while since I read it, but some of that is a little bit relevant today. | ||
What'd he say? | ||
He said something to the effect of like if you think that the some people in the them is part of the us then there's lots of problems with that and a lot of that rings true when you talk in essence about like diversity and when you talk about the subversion fifth column type stuff that's going on. | ||
But anyway, I don't find it all that interesting honestly. | ||
I think he's okay. | ||
Bus underscore and underscore boots sent $5. | ||
My nipples are pink greater than. | ||
Alright, thank you. | ||
Thank you for telling me. | ||
Brandon sent $5. | ||
The 50s test pilots were being killed at rate of about one a week. | ||
Some programs were pushing the very edges of aeronautics. | ||
These guys strapped themselves to missiles knowing their time was limited. | ||
Yeah, and now that it's made safe, now it's the girl's turn. | ||
Okay, now it's your turn. | ||
After all the men fucking died in airplanes. | ||
After all the men, you know, shot themselves to missiles and blew up and everything and invented everything and now it's like, okay, here, now it's your turn. | ||
Go get him. | ||
Okay, first you do this. | ||
unidentified
|
And they're like, I got it from here, asshole. | |
Men are trash. | ||
Ugh, a white man? | ||
Ew. | ||
Men are trash. | ||
And then, you know, like that's what we get. | ||
We built all this, they inherit it, and they don't even respect us. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
That's great. | ||
Ascent 20美元. | ||
Nick, you say you couldn't be a pilot, but you look exactly like one tonight. | ||
Stash, suit, lapel pin, even headset. | ||
This is your captain speaking. | ||
We are ascending quickly. | ||
Kathy Zhu will be through the aisle momentarily for food and beverage options. | ||
Get comfortable. | ||
This flight is unstoppable. | ||
That's great. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
unidentified
|
This flight is inevitable. | |
Duh! | ||
I said the thing! | ||
He said the... Oh, I get it because you, like, oblited to our thing. | ||
That's good. | ||
That's good. | ||
Really good stuff. | ||
If only Kathy Zhu was a flight attendant, if only. | ||
unidentified
|
Instead we get gay men as flight attendants. | |
I got kicked off of a plane by a gay man flight attendant, and I told him, fuck you! | ||
He was like, what did he say? | ||
He's like, enjoy your time in Chicago, because he was kicking me off the plane or something, and I was like, yeah, go fuck yourself. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so, I wish Kathy Zhu would have kicked me off the plane. | |
Kathy Zhu would be like, Do you want peanuts or do you want pretzels? | ||
And I'll be like, I want you! | ||
No, I'm kidding, kidding, kidding. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
How about something else? | ||
I grab her flight attendant necktie. | ||
No, kidding of course, kidding of course! | ||
Ew, gross! | ||
unidentified
|
That's disgusting. | |
But, uh... | ||
We'll be better than all these white, white bitches and these gay men flight attendants. | ||
I'll tell you that. | ||
unidentified
|
But yeah, that's pretty cacmary. | |
Maybe I could be a pilot. | ||
You know, maybe I could be a pilot. | ||
I'd be, you know, walking down the hall of the airport. | ||
I look kind of like a pilot, I guess. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not very punctual though. | ||
That would be a problem. | ||
Yeah, if I can't start the show on time, there's no way the plane's gonna leave on time. | ||
I can't get to the airport on time to fly in the plane, let alone, like, pilot the plane. | ||
So that would... I think you gotta keep me away from transportation because I'm not very punctual, so... | ||
unidentified
|
That's good. | |
That's pretty funny. | ||
Oh, I see. | ||
It's like Joker from three years ago. | ||
That's funny. | ||
It didn't warm up. | ||
It got colder. | ||
unidentified
|
It was warm last week. | |
It got colder. | ||
from three years ago. | ||
Donald D. Rump sent $5. | ||
Hope you enjoyed the weather warming up a little this afternoon. | ||
Smile. | ||
It didn't warm up. | ||
It got colder. | ||
It was warm last week. | ||
It got colder. | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
Tyler Ventura sent $3. | ||
Your mind will be blown when you realize the colonel on the KFC cup isn't wearing a bowtie. | ||
It's his arms and legs. | ||
Is it? | ||
It's his arms and legs. | ||
unidentified
|
That's funny. | |
*sigh* *ding* Nathan Tsai sent $3 What's your favorite WWE theme song? | ||
Probably Chris Jericho's. | ||
Chris Jericho or... | ||
Randy Orton's, his original one, Burnin' My Light by, uh, what the hell's the band called? | ||
Burnin' My Light by something. | ||
And I like, uh, CM Punk's This Fire Burns by Killswitch Engage. | ||
And I like, uh, Triple H, The Game, Motorhead. | ||
And I like, yeah, those are probably my favorites. | ||
Those are the best ones. | ||
Yeah, I'm really pleased with what they're putting out there. | ||
Yeah, I'm really pleased with what they're putting out there. | ||
It's good stuff. | ||
There it is! | ||
There it is! | ||
So he's an anchor baby from Mexico. | ||
Got it. | ||
Sorry for spurging lover show, man. | ||
I've just been stuck on this question with you because I'm anchor baby Hispanic. | ||
And the first debate I saw you do was with destiny on immigration and national identity. | ||
There it is. | ||
There it is. | ||
So he's an anchor baby from Mexico. | ||
Got it. | ||
And he's trying to convince us he's white. | ||
You know, you say, sorry, I'm stuck on it, but I'm just stuck on it. | ||
Like, okay, it's fine. | ||
We have a lot of Mexicans in this thing. | ||
It really, it doesn't bother me. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not a big deal. | ||
Midnight Sun sent $3. | ||
Your RT News contributions are excellent. | ||
To increase the production value during the broadcasts, may I suggest switching to a Kremlin green screen backdrop and an FSB Secret Service style headset? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure, good idea! | |
That's hilarious, yeah. | ||
Good idea. | ||
- Good idea. - Since her destiny debate, I was always curious as to how you define Castillo because you said destiny wasn't white, but I bet he has more Southern European DNA than you. | ||
Phenotypes aren't conclusive emo. - Oh, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, sounds like you're not white and you're coping, so. - Bad news sent $3. | |
Let me think. | ||
What's our email? | ||
Let me pull it up. | ||
What's the email? | ||
I don't even know the email we use. | ||
and is a great admirer of your work. | ||
He would like you to be a guest on his show. | ||
What would be a good way to reach out? | ||
That would be huge. | ||
Let me think. | ||
What's our email? | ||
unidentified
|
Let me pull it up. | |
What's the email? | ||
I don't even know the email we use. | ||
Let me head on my guy here. | ||
I think there's a cozy email. | ||
I know that he's been watching the show. | ||
I talked about it a few times. | ||
It's just like nuts. | ||
It's crazy to think that, because that's like... The guy's a legend, obviously. | ||
It makes me nervous to do the show, if you want to know the truth. | ||
It just makes me nervous, because every time I go live, there's... part of me in the back of my head is like, okay, don't fuck it up. | ||
Anthony Comey is maybe watching this. | ||
Okay, so the email is contactatcozy.tv. | ||
Contactatcozy.tv. | ||
But yeah, I would love to! | ||
That would be really exciting. | ||
That'd be a dream come true honestly so so that's the email I'm told that's the one but yeah it's it's a great honor and so it's a great honor because it like I said the guys like radio comedy legend and I've been watching them since I was you know in high school But it does make me a little nervous. | ||
Because when all these other people are watching the show, like, whatever, you know, what the fuck ever. | ||
These people watch the show, it could be good, it could be bad, you know. | ||
But when Anthony Cumia and other people are watching, it's like, oh geez, okay. | ||
Alright, try to be good, try to be funny, you know. | ||
But yeah, no, definitely want to reach out. | ||
And I'd love to do that, that'd be a great honor. | ||
John Andrews sent $3. | ||
First female carrier-based fighter pilot in the U.S. | ||
Navy died in her first landing attempt. | ||
Many such cases- Honestly, it's cruel. | ||
They're just killing these women. | ||
Uh, nevermind. | ||
I think I su- Actually, now that I say that, I think I support this. | ||
I think I'm in favor of this now. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
unidentified
|
What the heck? | |
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm in favor of this. | |
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
unidentified
|
What the heck? | |
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the heck? | ||
I'm in favor of this. | ||
What the No, I seriously doubt that. | ||
It never came close. | ||
I don't know what planet you're living on and that the Boogaloo was ever metastasizing. | ||
It just wasn't. | ||
I don't believe that at all, no. | ||
I think that it was probably a bioweapon that we were trying to use against the Chinese. | ||
I don't think... because that's something that shut down the entire planet. | ||
I don't think that they... | ||
I think that it was probably had to do with the United States and China, if you want to know the truth. | ||
It was probably manufactured by the United States to take down China and Iran, because those are the two countries that had the biggest breakout initially. | ||
But no, I don't think it was to shut down the Boogaloo. | ||
unidentified
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I don't think they fear the Boogaloo, whatever. | |
Those guys are faggots, in my opinion. | ||
They're libertarians. | ||
They're fucking libertarians. | ||
So no, not at all. | ||
unidentified
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Uh, no income tax. | |
Also, nice weather. | ||
Also, that's where all the Republicans are moving. | ||
Everyone in the industry is moving down there. | ||
They are Texas. | ||
unidentified
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So that's why. | |
And I like it. | ||
It's a nice place. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Yeah, it is cringe because you don't know what you're talking about. | ||
We're not blaming women for the problems. | ||
I agree that women are childish and incompetent, but wouldn't it make more sense to blame the weakness of men for how messed up everything is? | ||
Including women, since they just adapt to the sick world around them. | ||
Thoughts? | ||
Yeah, it is cringe because you don't know what you're talking about. | ||
We're not blaming women for the problems. | ||
Do you understand that? | ||
I've said this before on... | ||
I've covered this exact because I hear this all the time. | ||
We shouldn't blame women. | ||
We should blame us because we're the ones in charge. | ||
No one's blaming women. | ||
I'm not getting on the show and saying all the problems in the world are caused by women. | ||
I'm saying that women in charge has been a disaster. | ||
I'm not talking about causation. | ||
I'm talking about the effect. | ||
The effect of women's suffrage, the effect of feminism, the effect of equal rights, the effect of all this has been a disaster because of the nature of women, which is not in dispute. | ||
That's the point. | ||
As to whose fault it is? | ||
Well, that's a more complicated question. | ||
It's obviously not the fault of women in themselves. | ||
It's the fault of pernicious forces that have coalesced around these revolutionary movements That's whose fault it is. | ||
But people go, we should blame men. | ||
I'm not for blaming all men. | ||
I'm not for blaming all women. | ||
Both of those things are ridiculous. | ||
And people always bring this up because they want to defend women. | ||
This is just another way to defend women. | ||
Don't blame it on women. | ||
Blame it on us. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
I'm not blaming it on men. | ||
I'm not blaming it on women. | ||
It's neither here nor there. | ||
Women are childlike and incompetent and they should not be in leadership positions. | ||
They should not be in the workforce. | ||
They should not be voting. | ||
They should be raising kids. | ||
They should be at home raising the kids. | ||
And if they're not, they should be taking care of the elderly or the sick or somebody else's kids. | ||
That's what I think. | ||
Or they should be doing some other jobs. | ||
I think that would be better for everybody. | ||
And I say stuff like that and people go, you're blaming it on women. | ||
Blame yourself! | ||
It's like, blame? | ||
That's a very stupid, in my opinion, stupid way of looking at the world. | ||
Who do we assign the blame to? | ||
It's not about assigning blame. | ||
It's just talking about problems. | ||
Usually it's women that say things like that. | ||
They say, don't blame us. | ||
We're idiots. | ||
And it's like, okay, then stop bossing me around. | ||
Okay, then why are you talking to me like that, huh? | ||
If it's our fault, then hey, I'm about to fix it. | ||
We got a problem? | ||
Let's solve it. | ||
Who's gonna solve it? | ||
unidentified
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You know? | |
So, no. | ||
You just don't know what you're talking about. | ||
I know it's cringe. | ||
You call me a faggot. | ||
No, you're just dumb. | ||
I'm not gonna call you cringe or a fag. | ||
You just don't get it. | ||
You just don't understand what I'm saying. | ||
unidentified
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So... | |
I don't think I look good. | ||
I didn't even shower. | ||
My hair was all messed up. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
cute and on that arty interview might go VTU mode on you. | ||
Real no JK this time. | ||
I don't think I look good. | ||
I didn't even shower. | ||
My hair was all messed up. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Unreturned Groy percent $5. | ||
The timing of the article with you getting off the list is too perfect. | ||
Can't catch a break. | ||
They let you back on the plane, but the trade off is the pilot is black and trans. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, that's true. | |
I'm not off what list? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
I mean, what kind of list are you talking about? | ||
I wouldn't call it that, but yeah, it is funny. | ||
He's kind of playing the straight guy. | ||
Piss and $10. | ||
Straight man. | ||
Do you think the average American citizen knows about the rights of black on white violence versus white on black? | ||
I often see stop killing black people, et cetera, on social media. | ||
Do they just not know or are they aware but too gay and retarded to say it? | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
They probably don't even think about it. | ||
I think if pressed, your average person would say it was higher blacks on whites, but I think they just don't even think in those terms. | ||
I don't think they think in terms of whites as a victim. | ||
They think in terms of whites as an oppressor. | ||
So I just don't even think that's in their mind at all, actually. | ||
On return, Groy percent $3. | ||
Nick, I put the cards back after I get done shopping. | ||
Am I white? | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
John Andrews sent $3. | ||
For a great example of female leadership check out Gordon Ramsay Immediately Spits Out Vegetarian Dish, it's on YouTube. | ||
She claims Gordon is abusing her by asking her simple questions. | ||
I'll take a look at that. | ||
Thank you for the recommendation. | ||
Brandon sent $3. | ||
Women have a bias toward shadow and perceiving depth. | ||
Men's perception of depth come more so from parallax. | ||
I remember when lefty rags made complaints about VR sexism over this. | ||
Skies become dangerous. | ||
I don't know what that means, but yeah, makes sense to me. | ||
The modern monarchist sent $3. | ||
I bet you that ignoramus boomer in the middle of the forum pooped his pants a little when you mentioned nationalize. | ||
What a shit maester. | ||
He had that Sons of the Revolution look, too. | ||
Very snobbish. | ||
Oh yeah, when he said, my ancestors came over on the Mayflower. | ||
Yeah, and your ancestors, again, would support BlackRock owning the public square, for sure. | ||
The Modern Monarchist sent $3. | ||
The hair looked really good on the Arty Showman. | ||
Is your barber still that Middle Eastern guy? | ||
They make really good barber. | ||
Greasy palms and skin make for natural shine when they touch the hair. | ||
I don't want some greasy Middle Easterner touching my hair. | ||
No, I went back to my old barber. | ||
I had that barber for a little while and I'd really been seeing the same barber since I was in like middle school or something. | ||
Or high school at least. | ||
Uh, so no, not... and that guy didn't have greasy hands, dude. | ||
He didn't have greasy hands. | ||
Uh, and he was okay. | ||
He was just cheap and close. | ||
But, uh... No, I have a white barber. | ||
He's a good guy. | ||
He's funny. | ||
But he's not political at all, so it's kind of hard to talk to him, because it's like, what do we talk about sports? | ||
Like, I don't even watch sports. | ||
So we talk about crypto, we talk about, uh, Chicago, we talk about Lori Lightfoot. | ||
unidentified
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But, uh, yeah. | |
I'm glad you like the hair. | ||
- The driver sent $3. | ||
It would be safer for women and non-whites to fly F-35s since they can only kill themselves in the case of a crash. | ||
Women also can't handle excessive G-forces since they can't handle too much stress. - That's true. - The Modern Monarchist sent $3. | ||
You remember when that movie came out about those big black mamas who were behind the aerospace program? | ||
Hidden figures? | ||
Like bitches your figures are anything but hidden. | ||
Space my ass. | ||
Zing! | ||
That's very funny. | ||
Good one, Modern Monarchist. | ||
I do remember that movie. | ||
unidentified
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That's true. | |
That's true. | ||
Yeah, they were the first. | ||
Cassie Dillon was really the first one ever to realize this. | ||
And she couldn't handle it. | ||
It destroyed her little mind. | ||
Yeah. | ||
- That's true, that's true. | ||
Yeah, they were the first. | ||
unidentified
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Katzi Dillon was really the first one ever to realize this. | |
And she couldn't handle it. - GLC sent $3. | ||
There's gonna be a Challenger explosion every couple of months, forever. - Yeah, that's true. | ||
Whoops. | ||
That's true. | ||
who did whoops benster sent 5 he said i was waste my great uncle was one of those pilots who died testing planes everyone talks about how great amelia airheart was but she crashed into the ocean lol that's true gloiper for life sent 3 dollars nick is an incel until the doc martens come up then he get in bricked up on a tuesday yep | ||
The modern monarch is sent $3. | ||
Flight attendants these days are gay guys and fat broads. | ||
Like really broad, I'm a frequent flyer and having an aisle seat is so annoying. | ||
They're so fat they always bump into my shoulders and blame me. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Very true! | ||
The Modern Monarchist sent $3. | ||
Boogaloo? | ||
I don't believe in that boogaloos are fake and gay, but Jigaboos on the other hand, they, the Jigaboos are real. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't really know. | ||
I don't know anything about women or their preferences or anything. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't really know. | ||
I don't know anything about women or their preferences or anything. | ||
I don't think I've ever seen a movie with a woman or anything like that. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I don't talk to women and I don't talk to them about movies. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
I don't know what they like. | ||
Some people, that's all they do. | ||
Some people, all they do is watch TV with their girlfriends or watch movies with women or something. | ||
I'm not, I don't really do that. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
I don't know what the deal is with that. | ||
Do they watch horror movies? | ||
The only women I really talk to are my mom and my sister and they don't like horror movies. | ||
My mom likes Law & Order SVU. | ||
That's her favorite thing ever. | ||
She watches... My mom's like... | ||
Her TV habits are really problematic. | ||
She watches, like, the worst sitcoms in the world every night. | ||
She watches, like... Years ago, her favorite was Everybody Loves Jim, the Jim Belushi show. | ||
Like, the worst fucking show on TV. | ||
Jim... Not John Belushi, the Jim Belushi show. | ||
She would watch that, according... No, I'm sorry, it was called According to Jim. | ||
It was called According to Jim. | ||
And I'd be like, Mom, why are you watching the Jim Belushi show? | ||
This sucks! | ||
And then she would watch King of Queens. | ||
She would watch King of Queens for years. | ||
Another horrible show. | ||
Now she watches Everybody Loves Raymond. | ||
That's her new favorite is Everybody Loves Raymond. | ||
So she likes these horrible sitcoms and she likes Law & Order SVU as her favorite show. | ||
She's always telling me, she's like, Nicholas, there was an episode of Law & Order SVU and I swear every show is about you now. | ||
She goes, there's just a show about incels. | ||
She said there's a show where a guy was saying, are you gonna take the red pill or the blue pill? | ||
unidentified
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She's like, I swear all these shows are about your whole scene. | |
And she's right. | ||
She's right about that, unironically, but yeah. | ||
But they don't watch the horror movies. | ||
She likes the crime. | ||
She likes the true crime shows. | ||
So I don't know what you're getting at. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Niggas always be like, hey Nick, why do women always do this? | ||
And I'm like, what are you talking about? | ||
I'm like, well, what are you talking about? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
What do you mean by that? | ||
unidentified
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Oh my. | |
Yeah, so, no, I don't know why they like that. | ||
I don't know what they like, really, at all, actually. | ||
Piss sent $3. | ||
Okay, I get it now. | ||
Yeah, thank you. | ||
Yeah, now you get it, he says. | ||
Poo Vibe sent $3. | ||
Buss in Boots is brown, just like poo. | ||
Hey, alright, rude. | ||
Anatus sent $10. | ||
In a tweet a while back you said Catholicism is the only true counter-cultural force in the world, irk. | ||
Can you go into more detail on that? | ||
Can we like expand on that? | ||
Yeah, the Catholic Church is the only counter-revolutionary force in the world because what other forces are there in the world? | ||
There is liberalism, there is Marxism, and then there is Catholicism. | ||
Conservatism is liberalism. | ||
Conservatism is a spook. | ||
Conservatism is not real, okay? | ||
When you look at the conservative institutions What are they trying to preserve? | ||
What are they trying to keep, at least in America? | ||
They're trying to keep, in essence, an older form of liberalism. | ||
And then, even when you get so-called National Socialism, also, actually, something that is secular and progressive and scientific, and therefore not really counter-revolutionary. | ||
When I'm talking about counter-revolutionary, I mean I mean something that stands against the French Revolution, the Enlightenment, against liberalism, against Marxism, against philosophical materialism. | ||
And Catholicism is really the only force in the world that is resisting that. | ||
Because all those other things are rooted in humanism. | ||
And ultimately rooted in a rejection of Jesus. | ||
So it's really, it's not like right-wing versus left-wing. | ||
That's a new dialectic from 300 years ago. | ||
Right versus left-wing comes from the French Revolution. | ||
It's not conservative versus liberal, which those sort of temperaments have been around for thousands of years. | ||
Or democracy versus authority, that goes back to ancient Greece. | ||
The distinction has always been between, in my opinion, Christ and everything else, or at least even in the times before Christ. | ||
Well, I guess that makes no sense before Christ, but there was no revolution before Christ, to be fair. | ||
So I guess it doesn't really make sense outside of that context. | ||
We're talking about counter-revolution, not counter-cultural, counter-revolution. | ||
I don't think I said counter-cultural, I said counter-revolution. | ||
And the revolution we're talking about is this It's the French Revolution, it's the Enlightenment, it's this social progressive stuff, this liberal stuff, humanism, this idea that what matters on the world is more important than what happens in heaven, this idea that there's no supernatural or the fake supernatural, this idea of like paganism or something. | ||
Because when you look at anything that isn't Catholic, when you're looking at Protestantism, Protestantism is infected with liberalism and it's anti-authority and it's individualistic. | ||
So it's not really counter-revolutionary. | ||
You can say that the Reformation planted the seeds for the revolution. | ||
So it's not going to be found there. | ||
And then you look at the spiritual fascist, spiritual, you know, perennial, primordialist type people. | ||
And even there, there's no there's no God. | ||
There's no religion. | ||
And if there is a religion, it's self-conscious. | ||
You get Nietzsche, you get the sort of, you know, Faustian spirit, you get the Übermensch and all this, which isn't real. | ||
It's a self-conscious sort of reenactment of something like that. | ||
So... | ||
That's why the only counter-revolutionary force is Catholic. | ||
That's what the revolution is against. | ||
The revolution is against Catholicism. | ||
That's what the French Revolution was about. | ||
That's what all the revolutions are about, is against Catholicism. | ||
So Catholic Church representing, and what's more, Catholicism representing the ultimate authority, which is God, and the Catholic Church being God's authority on earth. | ||
It represents the ultimate authority. | ||
And so as the ultimate authority, representing the ultimate and objective moral law, representing the ultimate and the real and the one true God, that makes the Catholic Church the most conservative, the most counter-revolutionary, the only real counter-revolutionary institution in the world. | ||
Everything else does not recognize that authority. | ||
And so everything else is in rebellion against God's authority. | ||
That's why. | ||
Because God gave us a Savior, and the Savior gave us a church. | ||
And the church was appointed a representative. | ||
And that institution and that representative are God's extrinsic authority, in terms of it's outside of our mind. | ||
That represents His authority in the world. | ||
And so, you can come up with some idea, you can come up with a fictional god or a constitution or an ideology, but it's not the last word. | ||
It's not the ultimate authority. | ||
Ultimate authority is God's authority. | ||
It's the divine right. | ||
And the divine right is given by the church. | ||
And so everything else is in rebellion against that divinely installed authority on earth. | ||
Everything else is a king of the hill. | ||
That's what Protestantism is. | ||
That's what conservatism is. | ||
That's what National Socialism is. | ||
That's what all those things are. | ||
Ultimate authority comes from God. | ||
So that's why the Catholic Church, being a representative of God's authority, is the only real conservative, counter-revolutionary institution in the world. | ||
Everything else is in revolt against that. | ||
Republicanism, democracy, the age of ideology, Marxism, it's all in rebellion. | ||
Humanism, secularism, all in rebellion against the Church. | ||
So that's why. | ||
Cyber Jars at $3. | ||
The incident that caused affirmative action for black pilots. | ||
What you mean I don't qualify for the license? | ||
What you mean? | ||
Ha. | ||
Yeah, good one. | ||
Tuturu sent $5. | ||
That nigga Rikita really lying on yo name like that fuck that ho nigga FR. | ||
Yeah, real. | ||
Gloyper4life sent $3. | ||
This message is only available for Cozy Plus members. | ||
PepeTheFrog sent $5.00. | ||
PepeTheFrog sent $5.00. | ||
Lean Day 2. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Okay. | ||
Wow. | ||
Great Super Chats tonight. | ||
Really, really great stuff. | ||
Really riveting stuff in here. | ||
Lots of great content. | ||
Hilarious, funny content to react to. | ||
So, thanks for that. | ||
But that's our last one. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
So, thanks for watching. | ||
Remember to follow me here on my Cozy Channel. | ||
Follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock Central, 9 o'clock Eastern Standard Time. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters, and especially to our top three tonight, Piss, Van, and Modern Monarchist. | ||
Thank you to our top three. | ||
We appreciate it. | ||
Thanks to all of our Super Chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you, and I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, 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. | ||
First! |