Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Damn, I've been here for... ...be a real great reset in the Republican Party! | |
And that real great reset should take the donors and take the global special interests out of the GOP, and in its place should be us, the American people! | ||
The new Republican Party must be America first! | ||
America First means finally an end to these Middle Eastern wars that do not benefit us. | ||
America First means an end to this mass immigration, this invasion of our country by foreigners. | ||
As President Trump said in his inaugural address, from this day forward, a new vision will govern our land. | ||
It's going to be only America First! | ||
America First! | ||
We're standing on the shoulders of great American patriots. | ||
They didn't have a lot of money. | ||
They didn't have a lot of luck. | ||
But they had grit. | ||
And they had faith. | ||
And they had courage. | ||
And they had each other. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
But they all had one thing in town. | ||
They loved their families. | ||
They loved their country. | ||
and they love their god our beautiful ancestors won two world wars defeated communism and put a man on the face of the moon We are calling for a great reawakening of America, a resurgence of confidence, and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity, and pride. | ||
And we are returning to the wisdom of our founders. | ||
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital, and in every hall of power. | ||
unidentified
|
From this day forward, a new vision will govern our land. | |
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First! | ||
America first. USA! | ||
Thank you. | ||
USA! USA! | ||
USA! | ||
To those who wreaked havoc in our capital today, you did not win. | ||
That's how this country works now. | ||
Everything is rigged. | ||
They tell us for years. | ||
And if you don't like things, run for office. | ||
That's what Barack Obama said. | ||
Hey, go in an election. | ||
Okay, yeah, we did that. | ||
We elected Donald fucking Trump. | ||
And what did the system do? | ||
Impeached him. | ||
They investigated him. | ||
They submitted him. | ||
unidentified
|
And every last Republican that betrayed him, that their days are numbered, we are going to primary that their days are numbered, we are going to primary every last one of them. | |
All of the billionaires and the top politicians in the world get together and they plan out our lives. | ||
And you have to ask yourself, who are they really serving? | ||
It is about the forces of evil versus the people of Jesus Christ. | ||
unidentified
|
And if there's anything that the globalist establishment has to fear, it is Christian patriotic young men! | |
They can't live in their gated communities. | ||
They can't live at the top of their high-rise luxury apartments without us! | ||
And if they continue to take away our rights and destroy our way of life, then we will shut the country down. | ||
It is us, the nationalists, people that are authentically and truly opposed to the globalist world order that are the ones doing any kind of resisting. | ||
It is now a new chapter in American history. | ||
I think everybody's starting to see that we are actually the real resistance, truly. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
unidentified
|
America first, bitch. | |
America first, bitch. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
America first, bitch. | ||
unidentified
|
America first, bitch. | |
They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position. | ||
You, America, in such a way is merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiot. | |
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. . | ||
When's enough enough, eh? | ||
When's enough enough, eh? | ||
Shit! | ||
Just eat a big mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not funny. | |
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some pasta. | ||
Having some pizza. | ||
Oh. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the father. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm the father. | ||
I'm 14. | ||
I'm original. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm original. | ||
One, two, three, four. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
Give me a little. | ||
Give me a little. | ||
You are out of my league. | ||
All the things I believe. | ||
You are just the right kind. | ||
Yeah, you are more than just a dream. | ||
You are out of my league. | ||
Got my heart beat racing. | ||
If I die, don't wake me. | ||
Cause you are more than just a dream. | ||
I'm out of my league. | ||
The homes for other world. | ||
It's an irony. | ||
Masked ambition is deadly serious. | ||
For fuckers. | ||
I'm an America first bitch. | ||
I want to get in front of somebody and say, it's America first, bitch. | ||
There we go. | ||
Yeah! | ||
White people founded this country. | ||
This country wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
And white people are done being bullied. | ||
And white people are done being bullied. | ||
And white people are done being bullied. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can just play a play. | ||
I can just play a play. | ||
I can just play a play. | ||
I can endorse them, alright? | ||
Blacked out with God. | ||
Everything. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to approach. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to approach. | ||
unidentified
|
Warming on everybody who dared to approach. | |
And your mama ain't cheap. | ||
And daddy is cheap. | ||
And I've been working ways way before the star kick. | ||
Y'all did it when I was just a chick. | ||
With the all black said it thinking with the way to fit. | ||
Y'all was it the shit. | ||
Yeah, I was three, six, who tight? | ||
Yeah, I'm sad. | ||
Yeah, I'm taking my first shows. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to approach. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to approach. | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant family. | ||
One day see the light. | ||
unidentified
|
Well hey thanks, love you too, but sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense, so... so... | |
Let's just call it what it is. | ||
The system hates white people. | ||
It's just what it is. | ||
And everybody wants to call it everything other than that. | ||
They want to call it everything other than what it is. | ||
You may hear conservatives talk about cultural Marxism. | ||
Critical race theory. | ||
That's the new one. | ||
Gotta ban critical race theory. | ||
CRT. | ||
And critical race theory has Marxist origins. | ||
It's socialism, it's communism, it's anti-western. | ||
It's anti-western civilization, anti-western culture. | ||
Conservatives even will call it anything other than what it is, because it's not politically correct to say what it is. | ||
You can't utter it in polite society, but we all know what it is. | ||
It's racial. | ||
It's racial hatred. | ||
They hate white people. | ||
This little boy, Cash Gernon, was murdered, dragged out of his bed, in the middle of the night, in his home, and murdered outside his house in the street by a black man because he was white. | ||
That black guy killed a white boy because he was white. | ||
And this black guy hated white people. | ||
That's why he did it. | ||
It was an act of hatred. | ||
It wasn't random. | ||
It was an act of racial hatred perpetrated by a black male against a white boy. | ||
And why is everybody so afraid to call it that? | ||
Of course that's what it is. | ||
What has been engendered in the population for the past two years? | ||
What's been engendered in the population for the past 30 years? | ||
Other than anti-white hatred. | ||
What are people learning in the schools? | ||
When you go to grade school and you go to American history class, what do you learn about? | ||
In the new Howard Zinn curriculum, you learn about how white people genocided the indigenous Americans. | ||
White people enslaved black people and brought them over here. | ||
Once freed by whites, whites mistreated blacks by being racist towards them, terrorizing them with the Ku Klux Klan. | ||
Segregating them, making them drink in separate water fountains. | ||
We hear about how white supremacist Nazis try to take over the whole world with their fascist ideology in World War II with Adolf Hitler. | ||
And it was white. | ||
It was because they were Aryan. | ||
It's because they were white supremacists. | ||
Because they believed in racial purity of the Aryan race. | ||
That made them uniquely evil. | ||
They perpetrated the Holocaust against Jews. | ||
And that was, by far and away, the most obscene, worst genocide ever in the history of the world. | ||
And then, when all was said and done, white people were racist to the Muslims that blew up the World Trade Center. | ||
White people are racist to black criminals and the police. | ||
Basically, people are bred from cradle until grave thinking that white people are uniquely evil people. | ||
White people bear a special guilt for all the problems of this country, all the problems of every other group, and really, like, all the problems of humanity. | ||
And that's a guilt that is ancestral, it's not individual, everyone has it, and you can never overcome it. | ||
There's no clear way, discernibly, that you can ever overcome it and ever achieve equality with these non-white people. | ||
And it's as a consequence of this that these things are becoming more and more common. | ||
White people are being dehumanized. | ||
And when white people are dehumanized, black people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
And other people are going to start killing white people because they see them as less than human. | ||
How much do you want to bet that this, uh, whatever his name is, Darren Brown, whatever, was radicalized by the media into thinking that white people are racist and responsible for his suffering, not just as a black man, but as a gay man too. | ||
And that he committed this crime in retaliation for that perceived prejudice, perceived hatred against him. | ||
That's the consequence of all this anti-white hatred and dehumanization in the media, education system, and it's even enshrined in the law systematically through the government. | ||
I mean, what do you think affirmative action is? | ||
And a lot of white people don't want to talk about it now. | ||
They don't want to address it. | ||
They want to pretend that that's not the case because Honestly, I think a lot of white people think that it's beneath them. | ||
I think that white people think that it's our job to be better, to strive towards a post-racial society, that we ought not to notice race, and we should try not to notice race, that it's a good thing to aspire to, to not notice race. | ||
I think that white people are under the impression that to be cognizant of race, and to mention it and act like it matters, is beneath us, like it's backwards, it's regressive, it's primitive. | ||
And a big part of that, too, is because white people have, I think, internalized a lot of what the media says about us, which is that, well, we're on top of the world, so what do we really have to complain about? | ||
But here's the problem. | ||
This is not going to be a white country forever. | ||
And it's not going to be a white country for very much longer. | ||
In a lot of places, it already isn't. | ||
And in a lot of ways, it already isn't a white country anymore. | ||
And as the percentage and proportion of white people diminishes in America relative to non-white people, it's going to become more and more of a problem for white people that non-white people don't like us. | ||
It's just that simple. | ||
Just think about it in these simple terms. | ||
The media attacks white people. | ||
They say that white people cause the suffering of non-white people. | ||
Increasingly, non-white people don't like white people. | ||
Nobody talks about that. | ||
But we know that non-white people largely regard white people with suspicion, distrust, and in some cases just don't like them, hate them. | ||
Nobody wants to say that. | ||
People are very comfortable talking about racism against blacks or other non-whites, but nobody talks about the distrust, nobody talks about the resentment that non-white people have for white people in the country. | ||
And it's not everybody, but it is a lot of people, and everyone knows that. | ||
As the population becomes less and less white, and as the people in charge of the country and the people enforcing the laws of the people in the country, in charge of the country, become less and less white, that's going to matter a lot more. | ||
unidentified
|
The End | |
Everybody wants to die. | ||
Everything is so great, or we're supposed to believe. | ||
Everything is flashy, bright colors, and stimulating, energetic music, and all of this, and parties, and you name it. | ||
Wealth, riches, opportunity, and recreation, but yet everybody is literally killing themselves, directly or indirectly. | ||
And we really are just a collection of atoms, If we're all just carbon walking around, you know what you are? | ||
You're nothing. | ||
We're nothing. | ||
We live on this big rock in the middle of an empty universe, in the middle of nowhere. | ||
And you know what we're living for? | ||
We're living for the aesthetic emotion, which is to look at certain things and experience awe, or experience beauty. | ||
To look at novel things and experience pleasurable chemical reactions. | ||
That doesn't make any sense! | ||
That doesn't make any sense! | ||
And people can't live like that. | ||
All the material wealth, all the diversions and distractions, recreation, everything I've just described cannot fill the hole in the heart of man that has been left by God. | ||
That has been left by Communion with a Heavenly Father, and an explanation for it all. | ||
An explanation for why we're here, what we're doing here, where we're going. | ||
All of that taken together, and the biggest excesses of all of it, does not even come close to justifying mankind's existence in his heart of hearts. | ||
And that is why people are killing themselves. | ||
unidentified
|
The people that want our federal government, they hate you. . | |
They hate us. | ||
They hate the people of this country. | ||
Because we believe in Almighty God. | ||
So we're willing to drink death like water if we have to. | ||
But I don't think we're better. | ||
And we're bigger and stronger and tougher and meaner. | ||
And we want you more than they do. | ||
We will shut this country down. | ||
We will shut this country down. | ||
The riots is a choice. | ||
I choose to be a free man. | ||
If you want to try and put us in a concentration camp, if you want to take our rights, I'd say come and try. | ||
We will shut this country down. | ||
Our show for Republicans is over. | ||
This city belongs to the Kruipers! | ||
Kruipers! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
We're about to go! | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory. | ||
Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. | ||
Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Thank | ||
you. Thank you. | ||
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. | ||
in 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. | ||
Life like this is what you like. | ||
Like trying to live life right. | ||
Who really know you and your friends like. | ||
Like right. | ||
This is like the movie. | ||
But it's really very tight. | ||
Like every single night. | ||
Right. | ||
Every single fight. | ||
Right. | ||
I was looking at the family. | ||
I don't need to fight. | ||
Like. | ||
I was screaming at my daddy. | ||
Don't be in Christ. | ||
Like. | ||
I was screaming at the family. | ||
We just like. | ||
Mike. | ||
Looking for a fight. | ||
Like. | ||
I was screaming at my daddy. | ||
Don't be in Christ. | ||
Like. | ||
But nobody never tell you. | ||
You need me. | ||
Like Christ. | ||
Only if I see it. | ||
Only when they see me. | ||
Like a child. | ||
A parent. | ||
I'm going to be. | ||
Now you want to see it. | ||
Now you want to see it. | ||
Like to see it. | ||
Be a piece. | ||
Tell me what you like. | ||
Like. | ||
Turn it down. | ||
Right. | ||
Like. | ||
I was like. | ||
My dad. | ||
And he told me it ain't Christ. | ||
Like. | ||
I'm just trying to find. | ||
I better support. | ||
Just really trying. | ||
To the. | ||
I don't have a. | ||
I don't have a. | ||
No more. | ||
I don't have a. | ||
No more. | ||
I don't have a. | ||
I don't really want to. | ||
I don't have a. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
America first is inevitable, unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is America. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
First! | ||
America First. America First. America First. America | ||
unidentified
|
First. | |
America First. | ||
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 here with you tonight on Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into tonight. | ||
Big featured story. | ||
Inflation is at an all-time high. | ||
And we just got the new inflation numbers for this month. | ||
Inflation is now officially 8.3%. | ||
Which is the government number. | ||
That's the official number. | ||
And that is a 40-year high for inflation. | ||
That's what the government's telling us. | ||
If, however, you just consider 40 years ago they were using a different way to measure inflation. | ||
If you use the same measure that they used 40 years ago to measure inflation today, inflation would be 17%. | ||
And unemployment 25%. | ||
So we're essentially in a full-blown economic crisis, and that'll be our main story. | ||
We'll be talking about that. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about the big military spending aid package, which is passed in the U.S. | ||
House of Representatives. | ||
Forty billion dollars sent from the United States to Ukraine. | ||
Which, if you recall, that's actually seven billion dollars more than what we reported, I think, last week or the week before. | ||
Which brings the total to nearly $60 billion in American military aid to Ukraine since the war has started. | ||
And it's pretty interesting because, you know, we're talking about both of these things on the same night at the same time that inflation is 8% and unemployment Officially, the numbers are much lower than what it actually is. | ||
It's really 25% if you consider the workforce participation rate. | ||
At the same time that you've got stagflation, shrinkflation, you've got record high unemployment, worker shortages, we're also sending $40 billion to another country to fight a war that they can't possibly win. | ||
So the two things are kind of related, but we'll get into all that. | ||
That's our news. | ||
Before we jump into that, I want to remind you to follow me here on Cozy. | ||
Smash the follow button right below the Russian flag. | ||
Make sure to follow. | ||
We're almost at 18k. | ||
We just hit 17.7k I think on Monday. | ||
So I think I've gained like 3,000 followers in just the past couple months. | ||
So make sure to follow to get a push notification whenever my show begins. | ||
Also, follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I am absolutely dying right now. | ||
I don't know if... I don't know if you know, but my AC is broke right now and I'm just like melting. | ||
I don't know if you could hear it, but I have two fans I tried to put him as far away from me as possible so you can't hear it. | ||
I don't know if you hear a little buzzing. | ||
I don't know if you can see it, but I am covered in sweat. | ||
I just got out of the shower and I am already covered in sweat. | ||
And I'm already soaking wet. | ||
And we haven't even started. | ||
I'm gonna check the live chat. | ||
Can you hear the fans? | ||
I don't know if you hear the fans and the I have two fans going, but it's not enough! | ||
unidentified
|
It's not enough! | |
I am melting right now. | ||
So I think that should be, excuse me, should be fixed tomorrow or I don't know, if not, maybe next week. | ||
But it's brutal. | ||
It's, you know, you turn on the AC on the first hot day. | ||
It's like the first hot week in Chicago. | ||
I think it was like 90 degrees today. | ||
unidentified
|
90 degrees! | |
And with no AC, it's like 150 degrees in here. | ||
So I'm...I'm cooked. | ||
Okay, I'm cooking right now. | ||
So hopefully we get that sorted out. | ||
You know, I don't know if I'm able to see it, but I'm just like covered with sweat. | ||
I have a towel. | ||
I have a towel here. | ||
Ugh. | ||
unidentified
|
Because I'm...I'm just...I'm dying right now. | |
But I'm gonna try to get through this show. | ||
unidentified
|
It might be a little bit shorter because I'm just... | |
I'm gonna have to, I don't know, take a cold bath or something? | ||
Take a bath with some ice cubes? | ||
Because I might die before the show is over. | ||
So anyways, I'm gonna try and bear with me because I'm suffering heat stroke throughout the show. | ||
Also, before we get into the show, I want to show you something I just got in my P.O. | ||
box. | ||
ChicagolandGroiper sent me this cool hat. | ||
Check this out. | ||
unidentified
|
So I just wanted to show that off real quick before I start the show. | |
Yeah, I went to check my P.O. | ||
box. | ||
I had to send off some legal forms and... Not related to anything recently. | ||
Related to the no-fly list before, you know, everybody jumps on my case. | ||
But I got this cool... but somebody sent me this cool hat! | ||
So thanks, ChicagolandGroiper. | ||
Very epic. | ||
Very cool. | ||
That's the Kanye graduation bear, in case you don't know. | ||
So I've been wearing it all day. | ||
So thanks for that. | ||
I'm trying to think, is there anything else going on? | ||
Not really. | ||
Yes, that's all I got for you for now. | ||
And, you know, we had kind of like an unusual show yesterday. | ||
I just want to reaffirm Totally normal show tonight. | ||
I'm not going to address any drama in the Super Chats tonight. | ||
If you send in a Super Chat talking about drama, I'm probably not even going to read it. | ||
We're moving on. | ||
We're getting back to business. | ||
Back into the important work of America first. | ||
So just a heads up. | ||
I know yesterday was kind of a weird show and maybe some people didn't even really know what I was talking about. | ||
A lot of people wanted to hear my take on all of that. | ||
So I actually talked about it way longer than I intended to. | ||
I was only gonna go for like 15-30 minutes. | ||
But that's finished. | ||
So we're going to dive right into the nose here, the news here, the nose. | ||
We're going to dive into our noses here. | ||
We're going to dive right into the news. | ||
Our first story tonight is about Ukraine. | ||
And I think we covered this, I don't know if it was last week or the week before, but it's... | ||
It's almost hard to believe. | ||
Well, it really isn't, but it's outrageous. | ||
It's not hard to believe, it's not surprising at all, but it is outrageous. | ||
We covered this earlier this month, maybe late April. | ||
The Biden administration, the White House, requested a $33 billion aid package to Ukraine. | ||
And I flipped out about this. | ||
We did a whole show about it. | ||
And calculated that if you add up all the aid up until this point you're hitting 47 close to 50 billion dollars in aid to Ukraine since this whole thing started. | ||
Which is crazy because 50 billion dollars is a lot of money. | ||
It may not sound like it because our government spends trillions and especially in the past two years since the pandemic our government's been spending trillions. | ||
The deficits are And they don't even report this stuff anymore because it's so outrageous. | ||
The deficits have been in the trillions. | ||
The debt hit $30 trillion recently. | ||
But $50 billion is still a lot of money. | ||
And I use the comparison of the wall. | ||
Trump's border wall, if he got everything he wanted back in 2018 when he released the blueprint for it and the budget proposal for it, it would have cost $17 billion to build the wall and about $22 billion to fund the wall plus additional border security, ICE agents, that kind of thing. | ||
So we have sent, with the 33 billion that the Biden admin requested a couple weeks ago, we would have been at 50 cumulatively, which is, if you do the math, then more than twice as much as a permanent border wall and border security would have cost. | ||
And then I also compared it to the COVID stimulus. | ||
The COVID stimulus, the second round of it back in 2020 amounted to something like $3 trillion. | ||
But the $1,000 cash payments to all Americans, that portion of it only cost $250 billion. | ||
cost $250 billion. | ||
So you could send $200 to every American that received $1,000 from the first COVID stimulus with $50 billion. | ||
Instead of sending $50 billion to Ukraine, the government could have given $200 to every American earning between-- what was it, $15,000 and $100,000, or something like that. | ||
I forget what the exact qualifications were. | ||
And that's not to say, by the way, that $200 makes a crazy difference, but it is to give you an idea of the scale. | ||
The government paid $200 to tens of millions of people, I think more than 100 million people. | ||
That's how far that kind of money can go. | ||
So Biden requested $33 billion a couple weeks ago. | ||
Now, the Congress passed $40 billion in aid, which brings the total to more than $50 billion. | ||
So this is the story. | ||
I'll read the article to you. | ||
That says, quote, the Democratic-led House of Representatives voted 368 to 57, so almost nobody voted against this, on Tuesday evening to pass a roughly $40 billion bill to deliver aid to Ukraine as it continues to face Russia's brutal assault. | ||
All 57 votes in opposition were from Republicans, which is interesting. | ||
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said earlier in the day on Tuesday that after the House approved the package, the Senate will move swiftly to get the measure passed and sent to Biden's desk. | ||
Aid to Ukraine has been a rare bright spot of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill, with Democrats and Republicans largely rallying around a call to help the nation as it faces Russia's attack. | ||
Lawmakers unveiled bill taxed earlier in the day ahead of the House vote. | ||
The legislation the House approved provides funding for a long list of priorities including military and humanitarian assistance. | ||
The bill includes an increase in presidential drawdown authority funding from the $5 billion in the Biden administration originally requested to $11 billion. | ||
Presidential Drawdown Authority funding allows the administration to send military equipment and weapons from U.S. | ||
stocks. | ||
This has been one of the main ways the administration has provided Ukrainians with military equipment quickly over the past 75 days over the conflict in Ukraine. | ||
In the Ukraine aid supplemental that was signed into law in mid-March, $3 billion in this kind of funding was included. | ||
The Biden admin has been using that funding to provide military assistance to Ukraine in a series of Presidential Drawdown Authority packages. | ||
The bill also provides $6 billion in Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative funding, and the details really aren't important. | ||
The figure that matters is $40 billion, and that's in addition to the $16 billion earlier this year, and the $150 million earlier, and the $3 billion before that. | ||
We're talking about close to $60 billion in foreign aid to Ukraine. | ||
And this was passed in an emergency fashion, bipartisan, because if this did not get passed, Ukraine would have ran out of money, like this week. | ||
Okay? | ||
The Ukrainian Armed Forces is running out of money. | ||
They're running out of equipment. | ||
They're running out of vehicles. | ||
They're on their last legs here, and Russia's dug in. | ||
I know there were rumors, for example. | ||
I saw a news story earlier this week. | ||
It said that Russia was going to declare either an end to the war on, I think, May 9th or May 7th or something, or they were going to either formally declare war or finish the war. | ||
Neither of those things happened. | ||
There was no formal declaration. | ||
They didn't end the war. | ||
They're dug in. | ||
They're in. | ||
They're in eastern Ukraine. | ||
They are there for the long haul. | ||
There's no signs of this war ending anytime soon. | ||
Except that Ukraine was just about to run out of money and equipment. | ||
And then probably the war would have ended, or at least been on its way to ending. | ||
And now we've just re-upped with another $40 billion, and I'm sure there'll be more of that later on. | ||
And it's pretty amazing. | ||
I think one of the big takeaways here, which is interesting, is that it's only Republicans, and these specific types of Republicans, which are voting against foreign aid to Ukraine. | ||
It's kind of amazing. | ||
I know I've said this on the show before, but I just don't understand the cognitive dissonance that 20 years ago, Democrats were against American empire, against American wars. | ||
50 years ago, 20 years ago, since Vietnam, Democrats were supposed to be against American Empire, against proxy wars, against nuclear war. | ||
Now it seems like Democrats are literally the party of nuclear war. | ||
They're the party of double down and never back down, and war against autocracy, and this arms race with missiles, and you name it. | ||
And it's actually just a small contingent of Republicans that are going against that. | ||
And that's even a little bit disappointing. | ||
It's interesting that they flipped, that the sort of anti-war faction, which was small in the Democratic Party, honestly, at one point, it flipped from the left to the right, and now you've got a small anti-war faction on the right. | ||
But they're all, generally speaking, still for it. | ||
Most Republicans, and of course all the Democrats, literally every single Democrat is still for it. | ||
And there's no anti-war party. | ||
And that leads me to something that I saw today. | ||
I saw a post from Donald Trump, I think it was on Truth Social, and I reposted it to my Telegram. | ||
And I may respond to that in full tomorrow. | ||
I kind of want to break it down and talk about some recent developments with Trump. | ||
But he put out this post on True Social and he said something to the effect of, Trumpism and America First is about these things. | ||
And he goes through the list, and it was just shocking. | ||
It was like the standard, like, establishment, mainstream Republican platform. | ||
Low taxes, low regulations, energy independence, good healthcare, border security, pro-life, pro-2A, big military. | ||
He said, that's what America First is about. | ||
That's what Trumpism is about. | ||
And I'm sitting there and I'm like, no it's not. | ||
Actually, no it's not. | ||
That is not at all what Trumpism was about. | ||
If Trumpism was about anything, it was about at least two things. | ||
At least. | ||
If you're talking about public policy, two, maybe three things. | ||
We know that Trump broke from the establishment in 2015 and ran against, as we know, not just Clinton, but really ran against the entire party, which had coalesced against him. | ||
And the main breaks from the GOP were what caused this sort of revolutionary phenomenon, this revolutionary, different, unprecedented historical movement. | ||
It was three, at least two, maybe three things. | ||
And that was immigration, obviously, and foreign policy. | ||
Those were the, and you could say trade was maybe a third one, and that was mentioned in the Post. | ||
But those were really the three, two or three core things. | ||
Really though, immigration and foreign policy, I think would be the two biggest ones. | ||
And I remember when Trump ran for office, he wanted the rapprochement with Russia, specifically. | ||
He also said the Iraq War was a mistake, which is something that Republicans hadn't said. | ||
And even attack Clinton and Obama for wanting to continue all of that. | ||
And so what is the relevance here? | ||
Well, fast forward six years after the Trump Revolution when there was actually an anti-war president. | ||
Believe it or not, despite what some have said, he put John Bolton in the cabinet and the Pentagon did a lot of shady things, but we did, in fact, have an anti-war president. | ||
And as president, he is the effective and the de facto leader of the party. | ||
I don't know if you know that, but the sitting president is, in an official, formal capacity, the leader of the Republican Party. | ||
Or any party, if they are the president. | ||
So you have the leader of a major party, obviously, and the president of the United States, anti-war. | ||
Now that he's out, there's nothing. | ||
There is no anti-war anywhere. | ||
Not the Democratic President. | ||
Not the Democratic Party. | ||
Not one Democratic representative in the House of Representatives. | ||
Not one. | ||
Not one voted against this. | ||
And not one has been outspoken against what we're doing. | ||
And I'm sure when this bill goes to the House, not one Democrat will vote against it there either. | ||
So you've got the Democrat Party is 100% pro-war. | ||
The President is 100% pro-war. | ||
The majority in the House and the majority technically in the Senate, 100% pro-war. | ||
And then on the Republican side, you have Trump, who is now the de facto head of the party. | ||
He's seen as a spiritual leader of the party. | ||
He's not really anti-war anymore. | ||
He's not, I wouldn't say pro-war, but he's not anti-war. | ||
And most Republicans in the House are not, the leadership is not, and most Republicans in the Senate are not. | ||
And this is exactly the kind of thing that I've been talking about since I started my show. | ||
This is And I think I talked about this when I spoke on J.D. | ||
Vance's victory in the primary last Tuesday. | ||
It's this battle over the succession of Trump. | ||
The battle for succession of Trump within the Republican Party and who will carry on the legacy of Trumpism. | ||
And what is that legacy that we seek to be the vanguard of? | ||
What are we trying to protect? | ||
It's things like this. | ||
Because, you know, some people say, oh, I'm pro-Trump. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
You know, you guys aren't the real Trumpists. | ||
Trump disagrees with you. | ||
And it's like, it's true. | ||
I remember I debated some Republican hack named R.C. | ||
Maxwell years ago. | ||
He was a never-Trumper, liberal, token black, GOP apparatchik. | ||
And he was against Trump in the election. | ||
Then Trump gets in office, the White House is taken over by rhinos, and now every weekend that guy's in Trump Hotel with a MAGA hat on saying that Trumpism is really about low taxes and all that kind of stuff. | ||
And for a couple years now, and I've spoken on this on the show for a long time, it's almost like the MAGA movement itself is Trump is not carrying on the legacy of Trump. | ||
I know it's not a hot take, but telling us specifically, Trump disagrees with you. | ||
That may be the case. | ||
We still need to protect the legacy of Trump. | ||
In a sense, we're almost protecting the legacy of Trump from himself. | ||
Because the Trump in 2016 is very different from the Trump in 2022. | ||
The Trump in 2016 was saying, we have to resist the false siren song of globalism. | ||
Why would we want war with Russia? | ||
We should be friends with Russia. | ||
The war in Iraq was a mistake. | ||
The World Trade Center fell under your brother. | ||
And now, he says Trumpism is about having a big military, and nothing about non-intervention, nothing about being America first in foreign policy. | ||
That is why what we're doing is so essential. | ||
And where you do see the holdouts, where you see those Republicans voting against the House package, and even the Republicans that are breaking away from the bipartisan consensus on the conflict in Ukraine, where you even see any Republicans going against this is those that profess the real America First platform, the real America First foreign policy in this case. | ||
I know I go further than anybody on this, which I'm proud of. | ||
People call me an extremist. | ||
I know some people have said it's bad optics. | ||
People have said it's provocative and sensational because I literally have a Russian flag flying on my shell. | ||
And I let a Putin chant at AFPAG and all that. | ||
I'm proud of that, yeah! | ||
I support Russia. | ||
I support Russia and I do not want this I don't think that's America first. | ||
I don't think that's helping anybody. | ||
I think that's only going to bring death and destruction and misery. | ||
And if you look at the real effect of it, liberalism to the rest of the world, which I do not want. | ||
I'm proud of the fact that I'm more extreme on that than anybody. | ||
But even where you see people, at the minimum, breaking from the consensus, it's coming from the America First congressmen. | ||
It's coming from people like Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
It's coming from people like Paul Gosar. | ||
It's coming from Matt Gaetz, Madison Cawthorn. | ||
It's coming from those congressmen, or congresswomen. | ||
And God bless them, because they're the only ones standing up to it. | ||
And that's the thing, the pro-war momentum in Washington DC, that's one of the most powerful, as you know, for 60 years, 60 years plus, that's been one of the most powerful factions or forces in American politics, is the pro-war lobby. | ||
The National Security Council, the Military-Industrial Complex, the Pentagon, the DoD, even these think tanks like the Brookings Institute and the Atlantic Council, NATO itself obviously, and the leadership over there in Europe, It's been one of the most pernicious and influential lobbies in America. | ||
That is why we have to foster a true America First wing of the Republican Party. | ||
It all will have been for naught, Trump running and winning, anti-war and so on, if we're just going to throw it away now in this proxy war with Ukraine and sort of claw and allow the neocons to claw back a pro-war, pro-empire consensus. | ||
And that's really what this is about. | ||
I mean, you could connect it to the next story, which I'll talk a little bit about that. | ||
I think that's sort of obvious. | ||
It's not great optics that you've got 17% real inflation and we're sending 50 billion, 60 billion dollars to Ukraine. | ||
I think that's kind of an obvious take. | ||
And it's more just like an attack on maybe something like hypocrisy. | ||
But I want to get to the values of it. | ||
What this really shows, if you're looking at the sort of longer arc of American politics, is that there was an anti-war movement in America, which had someone in the White House, we had an anti-war president, now we have a pro-war president. | ||
We did have a large grassroots populist anti-war movement led by Donald Trump. | ||
Now, it almost seems like Donald Trump and the rest of the GOP are sort of redirecting that movement back towards war. | ||
And the Republican electorate, the Republican constituency, they too seem to be supportive of all of this intervention in Ukraine, whether it be direct or indirect. | ||
And that is really problematic. | ||
Because we've got a lot of problems internally in America, but I've already laid out for you the crisis that we're talking about in this century. | ||
The decline, the relative decline. | ||
Not the absolute, but the relative decline. | ||
And the difference between absolute and relative, of course, is that America will increase in power, I believe. | ||
America will continue to increase in power in absolute terms. | ||
If they have, you know, this much power today, they will have more power tomorrow, in my opinion. | ||
For the foreseeable future. | ||
That's what absolute means, in case you don't know what I mean by that. | ||
But they are declining in relative terms, meaning that if you take a percentage of global firepower of every country, well, China is rising at a faster rate than America. | ||
And so the relative power of America, the power of America relative to the power of all the other countries is going down. | ||
So that's the crisis of this century, and that's something that just cannot be stopped. | ||
Because China is a developing country, and we are a developed country, because China is in a sense catching up over 500 years, and there's a lot of factors for this, Russia is recovering from the dismemberment of the Soviet Union, and on and on. | ||
This is something which is inevitable. | ||
It's not to say America is failing, it's just to say that the global balance of power is going to change. | ||
It is a very dynamic situation. | ||
There are forces that are historical here that no amount of smart American policy can change that. | ||
China will rise. | ||
It's their population. | ||
It's their human capital. | ||
It's their IQ. | ||
It's their education. | ||
It's their land. | ||
It's their natural resources. | ||
It is their good governance. | ||
That's part of it, too. | ||
Russia has risen over the past 30 years. | ||
That was inevitable. | ||
They recovered from the Soviet Union. | ||
They recovered from the 10 years of liberalization and vulture capitalism. | ||
And under a new autocrat who's consolidated power now, Not as powerful as they were 50 years ago, but they're more powerful than they were 30 years ago. | ||
These are trends which really cannot be compensated for by marginally better governance in America. | ||
So, the relative American decline is baked in. | ||
And with that comes a receding American periphery. | ||
And that is a very dangerous prospect. | ||
Because you can see in Ukraine, we're talking about using nukes. | ||
And it's kind of common sense, but like the higher the frequency of conversations about war with Russia and nuclear war and tactical nukes being used on the European continent, probably the less safe the world is. | ||
And if you think it's bad now, I mean this Ukrainian thing has forever changed the world. | ||
It's a world historical moment, one of the most significant things to happen this century. | ||
Just wait until that showdown with China over Taiwan, which will be extremely similar. | ||
And that is coming in 10 to 20 years. | ||
So that's to spell out the gravity here of the situation. | ||
That's why Trump At least in one respect. | ||
There were a lot of respects in which he was important. | ||
But at least one of the respects in which he was very important is because he was bringing a de-escalatory pressure to this very dangerous situation. | ||
That is one among many reasons why he was so miraculous and important. | ||
Because if we're going to have 10 to 20 more years of Bidens and of the kinds of people running the Pentagon and DoD now without any kind of accountability, without any civilian leadership reining them in, it is all but certain just based on probability that we will see a great power conflict in this century and it's going to be devastating. | ||
It may be world-ending. | ||
So, when I see this $40 billion aid package, this is passed, by the way, like two months after the war started. | ||
It's not working. | ||
We know it's not working. | ||
We know Ukraine won't win. | ||
Even the American media is now admitting that America, or rather Ukraine, is not going to win this conflict. | ||
And yeah, by extension, America. | ||
The Ukrainian Armed Forces has been destroyed. | ||
In every meaningful way, the Ukrainian Armed Forces has been devastated. | ||
And it's really just a matter of time. | ||
Now it's a war of attrition. | ||
And some have suggested that America continues to supply Ukraine with these materials because they just want to make it more costly for Russia. | ||
But again, that is colored with a very particular kind of imperial mindset. | ||
Why would we want to bleed Russia? | ||
I just don't understand. | ||
What's the point? | ||
We should be trying to use countries like Russia or India To counter the rise in China, like that would be a more sensible, even if you were a little bit more of a realist as opposed to like a non-interventionist, that would be the more sensible approach. | ||
Marjorie Taylor Greene had a great tweet about this today. | ||
She talked about how the Biden administration is pushing India away and alienating them. | ||
India is not participating in our sanctions against Russia. | ||
We should be inviting them in because India on the continent with China, this is a country of a billion English speakers, like she said, and, you know, closer in alignment with our values and historically have a better relationship with them. | ||
And of course, India is one way to check Chinese power. | ||
That's going to be diplomacy for the next 100 years, is India and China and Russia, America and continental Europe, specifically looking at Asia, looking at the Eurasian continent. | ||
For us to be doing these kinds of things, it's not sensible and there's only this, like I said, this very small contingent, which seems to no longer even include Trump anymore, who is still carrying on the anti-war Legacy that part of the Trump revolution from 16. | ||
That's that's why it's so important that we're out here that you know People say why do you support Russia? | ||
This is why because if there's not me Pulling everyone here if there's not this America first faction in Congress if there's not people speaking out about it on Twitter You know a Tucker Carlson on his show who has been incredibly courageous about this and he I think he has been more What would the word be? | ||
If I'm the most heterodox on this, he's probably right there as much as he can be on Fox News. | ||
And obviously with a much bigger platform, so God bless him. | ||
But this is the conversation that needs to happen. | ||
In 2024, what is going to be the color of the Trump Revolution? | ||
Is it going to be this Peter Thiel network? | ||
Is it going to be industrial policy and multiracial working class populism? | ||
Is it going to be this MAGA Inc.? | ||
Of like... | ||
MAGA grifters and these sort of this cadre of deadbeats used to hang out at Trump Hotel. | ||
Some of them I like, but some of them are totally corrupt. | ||
Or is it going to be the true America First faction, which is Christ is King and America First, and talks about immigration moratorium, an end to this sort of pro-war military-industrial complex guided foreign policy, And a return to social conservatism. | ||
That's what it's about. | ||
And I think I want to do a big show on that topic in particular. | ||
Maybe when I'm not sweating so much. | ||
Maybe when I'm a little better optics. | ||
Because it's going to be an important show. | ||
But I want to get into that because that is the big idea which is going to guide everything we do for the next two years. | ||
Getting into 2024. | ||
That is the big mission, that's the big fight of the next two years, is we need the true America First coalition. | ||
If Trump runs, we need that true America First coalition to be the one that defines his next candidacy and his, hopefully, next administration. | ||
That's the big picture over the next six years. | ||
Two to six years. | ||
So very, very important to start getting that message out there. | ||
So anyway, that's Ukrainian aid. | ||
You know, I could have just came on the air and said like, well, here's the deal. | ||
You know, the Biden administration sends money to Ukraine while Americans starve. | ||
In my opinion, that's just sort of like the easiest, most basic. | ||
We need to get to the fundamentals here. | ||
All of Congress is pro-war. | ||
The White House is pro-war. | ||
We are not pro-war. | ||
That's what matters here. | ||
They're giving money it's like if there wasn't an inflation crisis would we still want like do you understand why that doesn't work? | ||
They say we're sending 40 billion dollars while inflation is bad. | ||
Okay well what if inflation wasn't bad then would we then would it be a good idea to send 40 billion? | ||
No it still wouldn't. | ||
So I don't even want to go there. | ||
I actually just want to dispense with that kind of thing And some have also said, like, we are borders under attack and we're defending Ukraine's borders. | ||
It's like, again, that's effective rhetoric. | ||
I don't think it's bad rhetoric and I don't think it's wrong, but it also doesn't quite work. | ||
Okay, what if we didn't have a border crisis? | ||
Would we be defending Ukraine's borders then? | ||
No, it still wouldn't be a good idea. | ||
So I don't even really like that, because it's almost like just a diversion. | ||
It's almost just like a pivot. | ||
It's like, you know, address this Ukraine conflict, this aid we're giving them, Prospect of a World War 3? | ||
Nevermind, we need to focus on other things. | ||
It's like, well, we can have a position on both things. | ||
My position is that NATO should be disbanded or should include Russia. | ||
NATO should either be disbanded or it should include Russia. | ||
That's my opinion. | ||
We have to get out of Ukraine, stop fighting a proxy war with Russia. | ||
Ukraine isn't a member of NATO, so why do we care that they were attacked? | ||
They were attacked 8 years ago when we overthrew their government in Kiev. | ||
That's my position on this. | ||
And my position is we should stop inflating the value of the money. | ||
And we should secure the border. | ||
But we can have positions on both things. | ||
We need to have America First positions on both things. | ||
It's not good enough. | ||
I don't like that I'm just not hearing any more. | ||
When Donald Trump ran, what I'm trying to say is when Donald Trump ran, he articulated a real solid alternative and really attacked the core of the pro-war worldview. | ||
He didn't say, we're fighting the war in Iraq while things are going on. | ||
He said the war in Iraq was a mistake. | ||
We've been in there 20 years and we haven't gotten anything. | ||
Right? | ||
It cost six trillion dollars and we don't have it. | ||
That's different than saying, uh, let's talk about, and it's not, I'm not trying to mock people that say that, like I said, I think it's effective rhetoric. | ||
But we've got to have somebody articulate a real anti-war alternative, a real America-first foreign policy. | ||
I'm sorry, but saying like, uh, let's not talk about this, let's talk about something else, that's, that's not actually like a real America-first foreign policy. | ||
And I miss that about Trump, because that's what Trump did. | ||
And now Trump doesn't even talk about that. | ||
And now, you know, I'm not even hearing that from really... I'm hearing it from Tucker. | ||
I'm hearing it from Marjorie Taylor Greene. | ||
Like I said, I'm hearing it from these kinds of people. | ||
And good for them. | ||
Honestly, you know, God bless all the America First congressmen. | ||
God bless Trump. | ||
Or I should say Tucker Carlson. | ||
Not Trump so much in this case. | ||
In this small area. | ||
But God bless Tucker and the America First people for saying, in some sense, as much as they can, or saying something a little bit different. | ||
But I really liked the sort of forceful Trump messaging where he said, the war in Iraq was a mistake. | ||
Similarly, I want to hear somebody say, proxy war against Russia is a mistake. | ||
Why is that controversial? | ||
That should be the refrain. | ||
That's what the Republican Party should be saying. | ||
We do not want a proxy war with Russia. | ||
Forget about, oh, democracy under attack. | ||
A proxy war with Russia is not in our interest. | ||
It just isn't. | ||
It's not gonna work, and it's not in our interest. | ||
Just like a proxy war in Syria wasn't in our interest. | ||
Just like a proxy war in a lot of the... Pakistan and a lot of these places wasn't in our interest. | ||
unidentified
|
So... It's... | |
This is a testament to just how much maybe people took for granted what the significance of the Trump revolution was and how much the consequences of it have been degraded over time. | ||
And that's how much work we need to do. | ||
We need Trump to once again be the anti-war leader. | ||
We need Trump as a leader of the GOP to be an anti-war, not necessarily anti-war, but America first on foreign policy. | ||
We need him to once again articulate that America first idea. | ||
In contradistinction to the bipartisan consensus that he did in 2016. | ||
And we need him to do that in 2024 if he runs. | ||
Because otherwise, it's not going to go well. | ||
This is a big crisis. | ||
So anyway, that's that. | ||
I want to move on to our featured story about inflation, which is a little bit more pressing. | ||
And let me just grab my towel here. | ||
As I soldier on in this safari climate, in this jungle climate, I'm profusely sweating. | ||
Let me take a little sip of water here. | ||
The whole bottle is sweating so much because it's so hot in here Okay, oh Alright. | ||
We're getting, we're getting through it. | ||
We're getting through it. | ||
It's tough. | ||
This is a hard, this is a hard show. | ||
This is a hard show to do, but we're trying to get through it, man. | ||
My hair is like wet. | ||
Look, look at me. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm, I'm, I'm dying over here. | |
Okay, so. | ||
So anyway. | ||
So our feature story is about inflation. | ||
And just a note on this before we proceed. | ||
Do not pay attention to the official numbers on anything. | ||
Whenever you look at these economic numbers that are put out the government, they're all wrong. | ||
And it's been this way for like 20 years. | ||
And the thing that a lot of people don't realize about the economy is that this economy has never been sustainable. | ||
It is a system which is fundamentally unsound and has been for a long time. | ||
People think that because it's working for now and because it worked for the past 50 years, that it will work indefinitely. | ||
That is not true. | ||
Ever since we left the gold standard in the 1930s, ever since we doubled down on that in the 1970s, and especially since what we've been doing in 2008, Quantitative easing and zero interest rates. | ||
We have been on a credit binge. | ||
We have been pursuing an unsound money policy for a long time. | ||
And it's never been sustainable. | ||
And I'm a little bit maybe more like libertarian on this, I guess, because I used to be a libertarian, so I have maybe like somewhat of a libertarian streak on this. | ||
But we're in a system which is just not sustainable. | ||
And because of that, what I'm trying to get at here, I'm not going to explain the full complexities of the system, but we may do a deep dive on that on a show in the future, but the point is this. | ||
They have been rewiring and changing how they even calculate these numbers because of this. | ||
A big reason why people perceive the system to be sustainable or working or something is because the numbers that they use when they talk about inflation or unemployment or any of this stuff just keep changing over time. | ||
And so while the situation has been getting worse and worse, they keep changing how they quantify all of this and how they analyze all of this so that it doesn't look like it's getting as bad as it is. | ||
And so the big story tonight is that real inflation, or rather the official inflation number that the government puts out is 8.3%. | ||
unidentified
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8.3%. | |
Which even according to the government numbers is very high. | ||
40 year high. | ||
Hasn't been this high since the 80s. | ||
That's what they say. | ||
And what they say is really, really bad. | ||
What it actually is, and think about it like this, they say inflation today is 8.3%. | ||
They say that's higher than it's ever been in 40 years, which implies that 40 years ago inflation was 8.3% or more. | ||
But in the 1980s, when the reported inflation was 8.3%, they calculated inflation in a different way. | ||
So to say inflation is 8.3% today and it was 8.3% in the 80s, it's apples and oranges, because how they got that figure in the 80s is different than how they got that figure in 2022. | ||
If you use, and I looked up, there's a website, it's called, I think, Shadow Government Statistics. | ||
If you use the same metric that they used to measure inflation in the 80s when they got that 8% number 40 years ago, to measure today's inflation, our inflation is actually 17%. | ||
So it's actually twice as high as it was 40 years ago. | ||
Even though the recorded inflation, even though the measured inflation is the same reported number as it was 40 years ago, well they changed how they reached that number. | ||
So it's a 40-year high with all this sort of trickery that's being used, this statistical trickery. | ||
But if you're using the same standard, that's how you have to measure, that's how you compare two things. | ||
You apply the same standard. | ||
It's actually double what it was 40 years ago, which means it's higher than it's ever been, ever, in the history of America. | ||
We have all-time high inflation. | ||
Not 40-year high, not 8%, all-time high, 17%. | ||
28% all-time high, 17%. | ||
Which, you know, I know a lot of the people watching this are young and don't understand, but inflation is more destructive than any other force in the economy. - Okay. | ||
I was, like I said, I was a libertarian in high school, and the soundness of money is something that libertarians focus a lot on. | ||
It's something, actually, that maybe nationalists are not too good on. | ||
Libertarians are very good on this stuff. | ||
The soundness of the money is maybe one of the most critical things, maybe just shy of demography. | ||
I know we always say demographics is destiny, and I think demographics is more important than money, but money is maybe like right up there. | ||
If demographics is number one, money is like number three. | ||
It's maybe number three or four. | ||
Behind, like, faith and, you know, maybe more like social, cultural type things. | ||
Money. | ||
Not the economy, but money. | ||
The minting and the production of money, the management of the money supply, that's probably, like, right there. | ||
Because, of course, the medium of exchange, that's really what the economy is built around. | ||
And we've seen that throughout history. | ||
The French Revolution was preceded by a monetary crisis. | ||
Hitler! | ||
Hitler came about because of a monetary crisis. | ||
Governments have fallen, societies have collapsed because of monetary crises. | ||
And that's what we're in right now, is a monetary crisis. | ||
And I was going to get into, so the soundness of the money is important. | ||
And for the younger viewers watching, we just got our new numbers from SimilarWeb. | ||
I guess like 30% of the people that watch the show are like under the age of 25. | ||
What inflation in effect does is steals the value of your money. | ||
You have, and I know I'm being a little remedial here, but some people need this. | ||
You know, if I have so much money in the bank and inflation is 17%, that means that it's almost like I lost 17% of my money in a given year. | ||
If I have $100 today and inflation is 17% over the next year, That means that the buying power of the dollar has gone down 17%. | ||
That means that even though I'll still have that $100 in the bank a year from now, it will buy 17% less. | ||
Meaning that I effectively have $83 in real terms. | ||
Over one year. | ||
That's just the attrition over one year. | ||
So you're seeing at the same time, the value of money is going down, prices are going up, and wages are going down. | ||
So people are being paid less, they're able to buy less. | ||
And they're able to buy less at an accelerating rate as time is going on. | ||
So, people, and the way to say this is that this is making people more poor. | ||
This is the way to say it, and there's no way to protect against this. | ||
There is nothing you can do to protect against this. | ||
You invest in stocks, so stock market's down. | ||
You invest in crypto, crypto's down. | ||
I mean, normally you invest, you take your capital, you take your cash, and you convert it into something that will retain its value when the dollar does not. | ||
But right now, it's all crashing. | ||
The economy's crashing. | ||
The inflation is up. | ||
And so there's almost really like nothing you can do. | ||
Even if you were to invest in the stock market, let's say over 5 years you invest in the S&P 500, on average, the S&P 500 has an annualized average return of about, what is it, 7 or 8%. | ||
And the longer it is, the higher that annualized average goes up. | ||
So if I put my $100, instead of just leaving it in the bank and inflation eats away at the value of that cash, if I take that cash and put it in an S&P 500 index fund, The annualized rate of return on average for a year over the course of 5 or 7 or 10 years is something like 7-8%. | ||
It can get higher the longer the time frame is. | ||
So you're gaining over 5 years an average of 7% return year over year. | ||
And then it's compounded of course if you're reinvesting that. | ||
And so if inflation is 8 or 17 percent, whatever the number is, that means that even if you put it in like a, you know, putting it in an index fund, that's a relatively conservative investment, but it's still stocks. | ||
Even if you're putting it in something like that, which is reliable and investing for dummies, you're still going to lose money. | ||
So there's, when inflation is that high, there's almost nothing you could do to protect the value of your money. | ||
There's almost nothing you could do to protect your wealth. | ||
You put some say in gold and silver, some say in Bitcoin. | ||
I'm a little bit skeptical of that. | ||
I don't think there's anything you could put in it, to be honest. | ||
Not financial advice, by the way. | ||
What I'm trying to say is that's why this is so devastating. | ||
The Federal Reserve is making you more poor. | ||
And here's really what happened. | ||
In 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic happened and they shut everything down, the government printed a lot of money and they started giving it away. | ||
And they started giving it away to people and businesses. | ||
And in a sense, they were financing the economy in 2020. | ||
They were propping up the economy in 2020 by borrowing from the future. | ||
And so what they do is they print all this money, the money goes out there, and people are able to still buy and sell things. | ||
Except that nothing's being made. | ||
All the businesses are shut down, all the trade is shut down, so everyone is still buying things and prices aren't really going up. | ||
You know, the money supply's been increased, but this hasn't really been felt yet. | ||
So people are still buying, even though things aren't really being made anymore. | ||
And then of course as time goes on, now we're starting to see these big time shortages and other disruptions and it turns out it's not quite as simple as just reopening the economy. | ||
Let's just start it up again. | ||
And so now as the economy picks back up again, now we're feeling the effects of doubling the money supply in 2020 to keep the economy afloat. | ||
And as a consequence of doubling the money supply, now the money is worth a lot less. | ||
And as a consequence of Demand and supply being artificially stabilized. | ||
Now we're starting to see big-time shortages. | ||
Now we're starting to see, I mean, what is a price spike? | ||
Of course, it's when demand exceeds supply. | ||
So now all the economy was kept going based on voodoo economics from the Federal Reserve for the past two years. | ||
Really for the past, like, since 2006. | ||
Since the housing crash. | ||
And they dropped interest rates to zero and it was free credit. | ||
Now we're paying for that. | ||
That credit binge that we went on for the past 16 years, and in particular the kind of inflationary activities over the past two years, now we're going to be paying for it for the next, like, 20 years. | ||
And some economists have said this. | ||
They've said that inflation is not going down. | ||
Some economists have said that this is the new normal. | ||
The era of 1% inflation, 2% inflation is over. | ||
It may stabilize, it may go down, it may go down to like 3 or 4%. | ||
We're talking about high inflation being a fixture, being a fact of the economy indefinitely for the foreseeable future. | ||
So we find everything that we did in the past two years, in the past 16 years, we are paying for in the next 20 years. | ||
And we're paying for that in No wage growth and we're paying for that in higher prices and shrunken goods. | ||
We're paying for it because the money supply is doubling too. | ||
So, as a consequence, everybody is going to get a lot poorer over the next 10 years. | ||
And what that means, in fact, is very simple. | ||
You are just not going to be able to buy as much. | ||
You will get paid the same or less, but you will not be able to buy as much as you used to. | ||
You will be able to buy less food, smaller house, you name it. | ||
All the essentials. | ||
Your utilities, energy, gas, car payment, all of it. | ||
And this is the article that goes into this a little bit. | ||
It says, quote, inflation cooled on an annual basis for the first time in months, but rose more than expected as supply chain constraints, the Russian war, and strong consumer demand continue to keep consumer prices running near a 40-year high. | ||
The Labor Department said Wednesday that the Consumer Price Index, a broad measure of the price for everyday goods, including gasoline, groceries, rent, rose 8.3% in April from a year ago, below the 8.5% year-over-year surge recorded in March. | ||
Prices jumped 0.3% in the one-month period from March. | ||
Those figures were both higher than the 8.1% headline figure and 0.2% monthly gain forecast by Refinitiv economists. | ||
So-called core prices, which exclude more volatile measurements of food and energy, climbed 6.2% in April from the previous year. | ||
The slight slowdown in inflation last month came as energy prices declined 2.7%, driven by a 6% drop in gasoline. | ||
Still, price increases are widespread. | ||
Food prices have jumped 1% over the month, marking the 17th consecutive monthly increase for that index. | ||
The largest monthly increases were in dairy, meat, poultry, fish, and eggs. | ||
Shelter, which accounts for about one-third of the CPI, also rose by 0.5%. | ||
The gauges climbed 5.1% on a yearly basis, the fastest gain since 1991. | ||
Airline fares also surged as more people began to travel. | ||
Prices soared 18.6% in the one-month period and are up 33% over the past year. | ||
That is the steepest one-month increase since the inception of the report in 1963. | ||
Rising inflation is eating away at the strong wage gains that American workers have seen in recent months. | ||
Real average hourly earnings decreased 0.1% in March from the previous month as the inflation increase eroded the 0.3% total wage gain, according to the Label Department. | ||
On an annual basis, real earnings actually dropped 2.6% in April. | ||
So, we're two years into the pandemic. | ||
One year into the Biden administration. | ||
Wages are down. | ||
Unemployment is up. | ||
Inflation is up. | ||
This is what we've been talking about for the past five years. | ||
When I say America first is inevitable, this is actually exactly what we're talking about. | ||
Things are going to get worse. | ||
What things? | ||
All of them. | ||
What do you mean by that? | ||
Everything. | ||
Well, like how? | ||
How is that going to affect me? | ||
In every way. | ||
Everything. | ||
Listen, there's an upside here. | ||
But I'm telling you this now. | ||
Everything is going to get worse indefinitely. | ||
Okay, now you need to prepare for that, but all of the things will be getting worse all the time, and this will not stop. | ||
There's no stopping point yet. | ||
And what do you mean by that? | ||
Well, you're starting to see it already. | ||
Planes falling out of the sky. | ||
Crime is up. | ||
People in Chicago, 900 police officers resigned this year and 50 joined the police force. | ||
So we lost a thousand cops in Chicago. | ||
That's how. | ||
Immigration is, illegal immigration at least, is set to double. | ||
From $200,000 a month to maybe half a million a month. | ||
Illegal immigration. | ||
And they're not even going to be able to prevent people from coming in. | ||
Inflation will get worse. | ||
Everything will get more expensive and you will have less money. | ||
Interest rates are going up, so it's going to be more expensive to borrow money to buy a home or a car. | ||
Foreign policy? | ||
Getting worse. | ||
Closer and closer to war. | ||
Everything is getting worse. | ||
Energy is going to become more expensive. | ||
It is going to become more expensive to heat your house or cool your house. | ||
You may not even be able to do that. | ||
The energy grid may suffer. | ||
You may not be able to have reliable, cheap energy to light or heat or cool your home. | ||
You're gonna go to the store and not be able to buy the thing that you want because the shelves are empty. | ||
And more things will be out of stock for longer as time goes on. | ||
And when they are there, it will be expensive. | ||
And when they are there, the shelves will be disorganized and the stores will be dirty and the workers won't care. | ||
Everything will be getting worse in material terms. | ||
And we are going to have to prepare for that. | ||
You're going to have to prepare for that. | ||
You're going to have to be really smart with your money. | ||
You have to be very smart with your money. | ||
And you're going to need to steel yourself because it's going to be spiritually very difficult. | ||
But the upshot is that this is when... this is when a catalyst for real change can emerge. | ||
We've seen in history, you don't get the kind of regime change that alters the direction of a society without calamity. | ||
It just doesn't happen. | ||
I'm not advocating for a revolution. | ||
I'm not saying a bloody civil war. | ||
I'm saying a real change in management. | ||
I'm saying a real change in leadership and a real change in direction. | ||
It never happens when things are going really well. | ||
In fact, it doesn't happen when things are even going okay or fine. | ||
It happens when things are going badly. | ||
Because, of course, it's all about a cost-benefit analysis. | ||
When people live acceptable lives, the cost for going against the society that provides the benefits of living in a society is too high. | ||
Most people for the past 60 years are able to live in temperature... I keep coming back to temperature because I'm sweating my ass off. | ||
That's got nothing to do with any of this, by the way. | ||
I can't blame the White House for the AC being broken, but When people live in air-conditioned places, climate-controlled rooms, and when they eat whatever they want cheaply, and when they get their cheap gas, and when they are not getting shot and stabbed and held up, and when the traffic's not bad because the shooting's on the highway, and when everything's going well, Housing is cheap. | ||
Credit is cheap. | ||
Borrowing is cheap. | ||
And everyone can have as much as they want or need, reasonably. | ||
And everyone's able to live a pretty nice life. | ||
The cost of going against society and losing all of that is just too high. | ||
The society, which is governed by the sovereign, the government, is providing benefits to them which they don't really want to give up. | ||
And that is what is entailed by going against the regime. | ||
The regime is the sovereign, the sovereign governs the society, the society provides benefits to people, and the benefits are pretty damn good. | ||
The benefits, even though you might take them for granted and not see them every day, they're pretty good. | ||
America's pretty good, by and large, and has been for a long time. | ||
But that's not going to be the case forever. | ||
And in fact, it's not going to be the case a year or two from now. | ||
And when that happens, this cost-benefit analysis changes. | ||
And suddenly, when people aren't getting the benefits from society that they took for granted, when suddenly there's a rolling brownout, And they lose electricity for a few days. | ||
And suddenly when it becomes a lot more expensive to fill up their car. | ||
And suddenly when there's a lot more traffic because people are getting shot on the highway. | ||
And suddenly when their kid gets killed by a black. | ||
Suddenly when illegal immigrants pour into their neighborhood and set up a tent village and they smell like shit and there's crime and all the associated problems that go with that. | ||
Etc and it goes on and on. | ||
Suddenly then people start to, not consciously, but suddenly they just start to say, hey, wait a minute. | ||
Hey, you know what? | ||
This sucks. | ||
I am hungry and I'm sweating and like you see me when I do the super chats when I haven't eaten or when it's too hot. | ||
Suddenly then the mindset changes and they're willing to stomach abrasive, a breakdown in civility. | ||
Suddenly they're starting to stomach these kinds of things that were a luxury to care about when times were so good. | ||
Suddenly they don't care so much about pronouns and like gay rights and feminism and pronouns and all that kind of stuff. | ||
Suddenly they're like, I'm hungry. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I don't care if Donald Trump raped a woman or whatever. | ||
Not that he did, but that's what the left says. | ||
He's a bully. | ||
Bullies never win. | ||
You're not going to insult your way to the presidency. | ||
Suddenly, they don't care about that because they want to eat and they hate the government. | ||
Suddenly, a guy like me becomes a lot more palatable because they say, They say he's a Holocaust denier. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I'm hungry. | ||
I'm mad at the other races for killing my daughter. | ||
You know, something like that. | ||
What is bad for the system is good for us. | ||
That's the motto. | ||
That's the motto that's going to keep your head on straight in the coming years. | ||
That is also called the playbook. | ||
What is bad for the system is good for us. | ||
What is bad for the system is good for us. | ||
NATO and America being humiliated and defeated in Ukraine is bad for them and good for us. | ||
An unprecedented refugee crisis in Europe, which is going to cause all kinds of ethnic strife and conflict and lead to a surge in rising populism, bad for the system, good for us. | ||
When black crime in the city of Chicago or elsewhere surges, when cops walk off and the cities aren't safe, bad for the system, good for us. | ||
Now it's not to say that I'm cheerleading decline. | ||
I'm not. | ||
I wish this stuff wasn't happening, but it is happening because the regime is pushing policies and a worldview which creates calamity. | ||
And insofar as they are in control of these institutions and people are too comfortable to upset that, these calamities are going to be a necessary part of the process of reversing the policies that created these things. | ||
I don't want to see people die. | ||
I don't want to see people go hungry. | ||
I don't take joy in that. | ||
I don't take pleasure in that. | ||
I don't like that. | ||
I wish it wasn't happening. | ||
But, we have been sentenced to this by a regime which refuses accountability, transparency, or reform. | ||
We tried to elect Donald Trump in 2016. | ||
And we did. | ||
And then they sabotaged him, and they backstabbed him, and they infiltrated his White House. | ||
They disobeyed his orders, and then they impeached him, and then they stole the election, and they threw him out of office, and they put in place a mental retard. | ||
What other options do we have? | ||
We tried to speak out about it, and then they banned us from everything. | ||
We tried to build our alternatives, then they froze our bank accounts or prevented us from processing credit cards to make it a profitable business. | ||
So, They are in control of all the institutions and it is such an asymmetry in power that there's really nothing we can do to compete. | ||
And so they will persist with a fundamentally flawed and unsustainable world which will create hardship and strife and calamity until such a calamity happens that defections will begin Citizen defections and regime defections will begin and finally there will be a course correction. | ||
This is why the body feels pain. | ||
Why do we feel unpleasant sensations in the body? | ||
Because then we're alerted to a problem and then you can fix it. | ||
That's why there is negativity. | ||
That's why there is pain. | ||
That's why we go through things like that. | ||
That is why a society goes through things like this. | ||
We have a problem. | ||
These are the symptoms of the problem. | ||
We have to experience the symptoms to solve the problem. | ||
It's just a mechanical thing. | ||
It's sort of an organic law. | ||
Maybe not mechanical, but what I mean to say is that it's process-oriented. | ||
You're not going to get the outcome you want without a certain kind of environment and a certain kind of catalyst. | ||
So I wouldn't call myself an accelerationist. | ||
I know that's a term that's used a lot. | ||
I'm not an accelerationist. | ||
Because I do believe that we do need to try and build a parallel society that will be ready when something happens, but I think that inevitably there will be calamity. | ||
You can feel it in the air. | ||
You can see it. | ||
It is written on everyone's face. | ||
It's, like I said, it's palpable. | ||
the dread, the sense of something coming to an end, the sense of a calamity on the horizon, and it's there. | ||
And even if it wasn't, it's being projected, and it may be just as real because of that. | ||
So in some sense, it's a destiny. | ||
Our destiny is doom. | ||
All the more reason we need to prepare ourselves for that moment because that just might be the moment when things could be so flipped upside down on their head that some radical change in direction can occur. | ||
That's always when America First is inevitable as men. | ||
As things get worse, people look to alternatives, and the people on the fringes become, obviously, the choice to run things. | ||
And when that intersection happens at some point in the future, we're using abstract points, things were good then, they will be worse later, and they will be worse after that. | ||
When things are really good, people are not really so open to things that are abrasive and offensive and heterodox. | ||
When things are as worse as they can be, people will be very willing to embrace alternatives. | ||
Because if the system is mainstream and the mainstream is failing, they'll look to the alternative. | ||
The alternative is on the fringes. | ||
So at some indeterminate point, there will be something in the middle there. | ||
That's the intersection. | ||
People say, there's no political solution, blah blah blah. | ||
I don't know what the solution's gonna be, but that's where it will lie, and that's where it will be America first. | ||
That's where we're going to win. | ||
So, things are going badly, but don't forget, it's part of the process. | ||
Things are going to get worse in America, it is part of the process. | ||
You have to go over the mountain and back, right? | ||
Sometimes. | ||
unidentified
|
We have to go through things. | |
And that's okay. | ||
It's, again, it's part of the process. | ||
It's gonna be tough. | ||
We're gonna help people. | ||
We're gonna try to help people through it. | ||
We're gonna pray. | ||
And we're gonna pray that things don't get too bad. | ||
I don't want things to get bad. | ||
I wish they couldn't. | ||
I wish we could all live great, happy, healthy lives forever. | ||
But that's why I have been doing a show for five years, getting punished by the government and the banks and having personal problems and so on. | ||
It's because Five years ago, I said, I see the writing on the wall, we're headed for collapse, we're headed for calamity, and that's why I started this crazy internet show to tell people what's up. | ||
Because I knew it was going to be bad, it is bad, and we want things to be better. | ||
But it may have to get worse before it gets better. | ||
Hopefully not too bad, I don't want it to get bad, I wish it never did, but... | ||
The signs were there. | ||
They've always been there. | ||
It was always going to happen. | ||
The money, the fiscal policy, the global government, the NATO military-industrial complex... | ||
The progressive takeover of the social and entertainment institutions, the corruption, the foreign interest lobbies, it was always going to happen. | ||
It was always there. | ||
But people just don't think ahead. | ||
People watch too much TV. | ||
They just don't know. | ||
But anybody that's been looking at any of this stuff for any amount of time over the past 20 years, 30 years, Whether it be Alex Jones, or me, or Tucker, or Trump, or anybody, they've all seen where this is headed, and it's nowhere good. | ||
And we tried to change it, and the change seems to be being resisted on a level that, logistically, we just can't compete with at this moment. | ||
But that's why a total change in the dynamic will be required in the future to change those odds, and to change that calculus in the minds of the citizenry, in the minds of the people. | ||
So that's inflation. | ||
It's bad. | ||
It's gonna get worse. | ||
This is our new reality. | ||
But, in some sense, in some sense it's almost a good thing. | ||
This is the last thing I'll say because I am literally melting. | ||
unidentified
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Too hot. | |
Um, and, The last thing I'll say is this. | ||
It's almost a good thing. | ||
Here's why. | ||
Here's why it's almost good in itself. | ||
I wish I was wrong about everything. | ||
I honestly, I really do wish I was wrong. | ||
Because man, the liberal idea of the world is just so nice. | ||
It's such a nice idea. | ||
And I think that's why there are a lot of liberals because liberalism appeals to our It's wrong, but a certain idealism, a disordered sort of idealism. | ||
Liberalism appeals to our empathy and liberalism appeals to our emotions, obviously, and our sense of fairness and universalism and justice. | ||
Liberalism has a lot of false promises. | ||
And I wish that they were real. | ||
I wish we could have... I wish that we could have heaven on earth. | ||
That is ultimately the promise of liberalism, is that progress is real, progress can happen, people can get better through education and through material... | ||
Environmental processes. | ||
People can get better. | ||
Society can get much better. | ||
And we could have something like heaven on earth. | ||
We can end homelessness and hunger and hatred and bigotry and bullying and meanness. | ||
Yeah, and we would be creating something like the Garden of Eden. | ||
We'd be creating something like a heaven on earth here. | ||
And, you know, that's a nice idea, I guess. | ||
It's sort of a fanciful notion. | ||
And I wish I was wrong that tribalism is an intrinsic part of human nature and cannot be overcome. | ||
I wish I was wrong that our economy is built on unsustainable money policy, monetary policy. | ||
Yeah, I wish all these things were not true. | ||
I wish we were not heading for doom. | ||
I wish we were headed for a great society and a shining city on a hill. | ||
But we're not. | ||
And we know that. | ||
We know that because we think about these things and we understand the systems. | ||
And when we see these things collapsing, it proves our worldview is true. | ||
And that is something which It's very easy to be gaslit because there's such a social consensus around these liberal premises. | ||
There's like this consensus that, you know, women's rights are awesome and abortion is cool and gay people are just like us and blacks and whites can hold hands and, you know, be best friends all the time forever and all of these, all of these things They're wrong. | ||
It's sometimes hard to know they're wrong when everybody's saying otherwise. | ||
We may think about it and think, of course that's wrong, but if everyone else is saying it's right, could I just be the only one that's right? | ||
unidentified
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Yes! | |
Yes, you are. | ||
Yes, you are. | ||
And when we see things collapsing, it's horrible, but it's also somewhat of a vindication, and it's almost like a proof of our whole worldview. | ||
If we were wrong, things would be going fine. | ||
If we were, if I was some kind of grifter, because what they say is like, oh Alex Jones and people like him, they make money off of fear. | ||
They say there's a profit motive. | ||
Why would somebody be some kind of rabble rouser, political extremist? | ||
Well, they say because of some kind of personal failing, some kind of personality flaw, some deep-seated character flaw, or they say it's for cynical, superficial reasons like greed, right? | ||
Because how else would you explain it? | ||
When you see somebody like Alex Jones, who goes through so much, and is banned from so much, and they would say, well, what would possessive person to do that unless they had sincere convictions? | ||
Oh, well, something went wrong in his childhood, or he just wants money. | ||
That's always what liberals will say. | ||
And same thing about me. | ||
Who hurt you? | ||
He's only doing this because he never felt the touch of a woman. | ||
He's doing this for money. | ||
He's doing this for ego. | ||
He's a narcissist. | ||
Whatever. | ||
They'll try to take the wind out of our sails by saying like, in other words, no one could possibly sincerely believe that there's anything wrong with the system. | ||
The only reason people might think there's something wrong with something that's obviously good is because they're evil or broken or greedy. | ||
Or some combination of the three. | ||
But when you see their worldview, their government, this regime, this status quo produce calamity after calamity, you realize we're right. | ||
You realize the proof is we're right. | ||
Because if we trusted them and said, okay, you're right, all your... | ||
Your whole worldview is correct, and you've got the studies to prove it, and you're just a better person than us. | ||
Okay, well then why is every single thing so bad? | ||
Why is everything dirtier? | ||
And why is everyone poorer? | ||
And why is the world more violent, and less safe, and more evil than it was 20 years ago? | ||
30 years ago, 50 years ago, 60 years ago, why is everything so much worse? | ||
It's because you're wrong, and we're right. | ||
And eventually, people are going to start to hear that message because they're going to be looking for it. | ||
When people are hungry, and when people are tired, and when people are pissed off, they're going to be looking for the people for 50 years that have been saying, this cannot go on forever. | ||
And then, it won't. | ||
And when that happens, it will be a very short time before it does come to an end. | ||
So that's why I don't cheer it on. | ||
I don't like to see human suffering, but it is part of the process and it proves we're right. | ||
It proves we are the people. | ||
We're the prophets. | ||
We're not in a biblical sense, but we're the ones that see what's coming. | ||
We are the ones that, prophets of doom, we're the ones that see the calamity on the horizon. | ||
And therefore, we're going to be the ones that will have a chance, will have a fighting chance to inherit the society when things do come undone. | ||
We'll be there and we got to be ready. | ||
That's just it. | ||
It will happen. | ||
We have to be ready. | ||
There will be an opportunity. | ||
The worst things get, the more Black Swan events happen, the more The more unforeseen, strange, unpredictable things will happen, and as they increase in frequency, the dynamic will fundamentally change, and there will be an opportunity, and we have got to be ready. | ||
That's, you know, what's the plan? | ||
That's the plan. | ||
We've got to be ready. | ||
With resources and manpower, we have got to be ready. | ||
To inherit the society, and then fix things. | ||
That's what we're trying to do here. | ||
So that's inflation. | ||
But we're going to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say. | ||
But what's your take on all this? | ||
Let me take another swig here. | ||
Getting dehydrated. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
All right. | ||
Hmm. | ||
I'm dying back here, man. | ||
I'm just dying. | ||
Okay, but we'll read your superchats now. | ||
We'll see what you have to say about all this. | ||
I'll try to get through it. | ||
I'm gonna try and go through a little fast. | ||
My apologies, but... But it is sweltering for an hour and 20 minutes. | ||
It's probably 80 degrees in here and I'm wearing a suit with this computer and these lights on me and I'm melting. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
But I do it for you, the people. | ||
Okay. | ||
Um, excuse me. | ||
So let's see what we got here. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoops. | |
Huh. | ||
I feel like Patrick in the, uh, Tree Dome. | ||
Take your jacket off? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I might be covered in sweat. | ||
That'd be kind of like bad optics, right? | ||
Am I covered in sweat? | ||
I am! | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm not. | ||
I'll take the tie off. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not gonna take the suit off and show you my sweaty shirt. | |
This is the worst feeling ever. | ||
My back is sweaty. | ||
That's the worst. | ||
Worst feeling ever. | ||
This one says bra. | ||
But I do it for you, okay? | ||
I'm doing it for you. | ||
unidentified
|
I do it for you, the people. | |
Alright. | ||
That's a little bit better. | ||
Okay. | ||
Let's see what we got. | ||
unidentified
|
Yo! | |
Thank you, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
sent $50. - Yo! - 07 King. - Thank you, man, I appreciate it. | ||
07s. - Blinnie and Joyer sent $3. | ||
The most interesting thing I learned from this drama is that you started working out. | ||
It's good for your mind. | ||
I hope you can get a more solid gym buddy than you did. | ||
Get ripped and mock John Doyle. | ||
Alright, remember, no drama tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
We're done with the drama. | |
Yeah, I've given in. | ||
I've given in. | ||
Now I need to become... I had this conversation with Milo the other day. | ||
And Milo is like, you know, you got to become like the father now. | ||
He was like, you were sort of like the rebellious son, like the elder rebellious son. | ||
Now you need to become like the father. | ||
And I'm like, I don't want to be the father. | ||
I don't want to be the angsty Tina. | ||
I am not getting old. | ||
You know, I want to be, I want to be skateboarding on the half pipe and, uh, you know, gaming and eating pizza forever. | ||
And he's like, you got to be like a role model now. | ||
You got, and he's right. | ||
He's right. | ||
So he's like, you know, you gotta, you gotta stop this insult thing and, you know, you gotta start working out and... And I'm like, yeah, he's right, he's right. | ||
If I'm gonna be the leader, I have to be a role model. | ||
True. | ||
True. | ||
Framed that way, it's like, okay, when people say, being mean to women is blasphemy! | ||
Like, okay, I'm gonna push back on that. | ||
But when you say you need to be a role model, you're a leader, it's like, you know, yeah, you're right. | ||
The thing is, I'm eccentric, okay? | ||
I wish I could just be like an artist. | ||
Honest to God, I feel like I have kind of like the soul of an artist. | ||
I want my life to be self-expression, but I realize that self-expression is self-indulgent. | ||
And also, I am a leader. | ||
I'm called to be a leader. | ||
I'm reluctant about it. | ||
I wish I could just be, you know, something with a little bit less restriction and lighter obligation, but that's what I've been called to do. | ||
It would be much easier if I didn't do that. | ||
It would be much less demanding. | ||
And you know me. | ||
What motivates a person? | ||
Money doesn't motivate me. | ||
Power, fame doesn't motivate me. | ||
What motivates me is authentic expression. | ||
I want freedom. | ||
I want to say what I want. | ||
I want to do what I want. | ||
And that is a sacrifice. | ||
That's a price I have to pay to be a leader and to actually create change. | ||
And he's, you know, so he's right about that. | ||
So, yeah, I've accepted there are some things that are going to have to change as I mature and as this show matures and as this matures into a political movement. | ||
You know, a lot of people are very critical of me, but you got to keep in mind I'm 23 years old. | ||
I haven't been around for a long time. | ||
It's not an excuse, but it is to say that you have to give time for a situation to evolve. | ||
And I think I recognize that, you know, it's time for America first to level up. | ||
And if the state is me, you know, what is the quote by Louis XIV? | ||
I am the state. | ||
If I'm the movement, then that means I have to force myself to evolve. | ||
Which I am doing. | ||
And I appreciate a lot of people believe in me. | ||
A lot of people have patience with that. | ||
So I'm not saying it's everybody, but a lot of critics say, oh, you know, you've got to be this or that. | ||
And people are saying Kai vindicated. | ||
Yeah, maybe. | ||
Honestly, maybe. | ||
Maybe. | ||
I'm man enough to admit, I don't want to say that I'm wrong. | ||
I think that I was presenting like a different perspective. | ||
I'm not gonna say that I'm wrong. | ||
Because I wasn't wrong. | ||
But I am mature enough to say that, you know, maybe things can evolve, okay? | ||
I wasn't wrong! | ||
I'm just evolving, alright? | ||
I'm just evolving. | ||
KaiCoin exploding! | ||
I really like Kai, I have to say. | ||
I didn't care so much for his reaction to the latest drama, but I think he is a good kid. | ||
I think he's having a real positive impact on the movement. | ||
I think he's sincere. | ||
I do think he's sincere. | ||
I think he comes off sometimes a little stilted. | ||
People say that about me, but I think he's a sincere kid. | ||
And you know what? | ||
When I hear it from Myla, it's like, okay, I think he gives sound advice. | ||
Now, don't get me wrong. | ||
It's not to say that I'm, like, not gonna be fun and funny and everything, but it's just time to take this seriously. | ||
If I'm gonna wield control of America, I need to be fit enough to do that. | ||
If I'm gonna wield control of America, I'm gonna have to level up. | ||
I can't be rebellious and self-indulgent forever, and I think there's a lot of truth to that. | ||
So anyway, yeah, so yeah the working out but I still feel the same way about all of it But just not a practical for practical reasons. | ||
I'm restricted. | ||
Don't get me wrong I'm still right about all that stuff, but I just can't do it because I have to be a leader. | ||
That's all If I weren't the leader, I would still believe all those things and still be pushing all those things Still an incel by the way, but I But my role demands. | ||
But my work demands. | ||
See, I'm putting you ahead of me. | ||
So... New arc? | ||
Nah, I wouldn't say it's a new arc. | ||
It's the same arc. | ||
It's the same arc of my life. | ||
I'm a growing legend, okay? | ||
I'm a growing Nick training arc. | ||
Yeah, I gotta get a big sexy body so that I could be better optics for the movement, okay? | ||
You happy? | ||
I like that. | ||
We should do something with that on Friday. | ||
Maybe we could do a fasting stream or a rosary stream. | ||
- Howdy friend, day 30. | ||
The USCCB is inviting people to fast and pray the rosary on Friday in the midst of everything happening. - I like that. | ||
We should do something with that on Friday. | ||
Maybe we could do a fasting stream or a rosary stream. | ||
I really like that. | ||
If I could get air conditioning back, I don't know if I could do like a long stream without air conditioning, but if I could get that going, then yeah, I would love to do something like that. | ||
Maybe do like a 12-hour stream, fasting, maybe like do a rosary stream with Baked Alaska or something. | ||
I know he does them. | ||
Let's do, yeah, I like that because I said we should do something for the Roe v. Wade thing last week. | ||
I think that's a great, that's perfect. | ||
Right up King Phat has sent $10. | ||
Been wondering for a while why it seemed like all AF promo footage for an entire year was all recycled stop the steal footage. | ||
Your talk on Simon last night clarified everything. | ||
Your new interns are much better. | ||
This one's for them. | ||
Well, again, not trying to address any drama, but thanks. | ||
I do appreciate it. | ||
King Phat has sent $5. | ||
Back in 2020 you said that even though you wanted Trump to win, it would be better for AF if Biden won. | ||
Do the last few years bear that out? | ||
Well, what I said is that historically, there's two things I said. | ||
I said that it may be the case that Trump losing in the way that he did might be the best possible outcome. | ||
I didn't say Biden winning is better. | ||
At one point in time I said that Trump getting cheated out and losing and Biden winning and Trump coming back and winning, I said that may prove to be the best possible outcome. | ||
But it's not definitive yet. | ||
It may be. | ||
There's one trajectory where it could be better, and you could see, like, you get a dark MAGA, a vengeful Trump comes in harder than ever before, makes a revolutionary change necessary because the Biden admin's a failure, and, you know, creates these sort of revolutionary preconditions. | ||
That's what I meant, is that Trump losing in that way, in an illegitimate way, could create the conditions and set the stage for A vicious comeback. | ||
Vengeful comeback. | ||
I also said that I had been told by some people, some political people, that when Biden, when the opposition party wins, or rather the opposition media always does better. | ||
In other words, When a Democrat's in the White House, the Republican media does better. | ||
When a Republican's in the White House, the Democratic media does better. | ||
And that's borne out. | ||
You know, CNN had their best ratings ever the past four years under Trump. | ||
And under Obama, that's when talk radio and all that stuff flourished. | ||
That's what produced the Milos, the Breitbart, the Shapiro, all that kind of stuff. | ||
And so some people are saying, you know, it may be better for you if Biden wins. | ||
Because if Biden wins, opposition media will do well and people look to guys like you. | ||
And I think there is some truth in that, but then you have this... but that's... but honestly that is sort of a dated mentality because of course now it's a different game. | ||
That may have been true under Obama or Trump, but it's not true now because now they're prosecuting their enemies, they're investigating their enemies, they're censoring their enemies. | ||
This is a new dynamic. | ||
So that may be... that may have been true over the past 40 years, 30 years, but it's a different dynamic now because you have this censorship component, this persecution component. | ||
unidentified
|
So, that's what I meant by that. | |
KingFat has sent $5. | ||
Hope you haven't lost too much in crypto holdings with the markets crashing. | ||
I know the amount I have to offer is meager, but hopefully it's of some small relief. | ||
Let me, let me pull it up. | ||
Well, no, I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna talk about my finances on the air. | ||
Jeez, it just went down another... Jeez. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me take a look at my portfolio right now. | |
Live portfolio check. | ||
unidentified
|
Red. | |
It was all red. | ||
Let me, let me see. | ||
Uh, well I'll just say it's down, my portfolio is down 30% in the last three months. | ||
50% in the last six months. | ||
Let's see what the actual, oh no! | ||
unidentified
|
That's a six figure sum. | |
It's, it's gone down. | ||
That's a lot of money. | ||
Oh man. | ||
unidentified
|
I lost a lot of, that's okay. | |
But yeah, it's been, it's been not so good. | ||
But I'll just buy more. | ||
I'll just buy more. | ||
I'll just buy more. | ||
Yeah, that's rough. | ||
unidentified
|
That's a lot of red. | |
I should say it's a lot of white on that chart. | ||
Not a lot of it is filled in. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so. | |
That's not so hot. | ||
But I appreciate you helping me out there. | ||
Well, I mean, honestly, if you don't get it, you just don't get it. | ||
I think it's pretty self-explanatory. | ||
for cozy and notice the name of your LLC. | ||
I'm curious why you chose that. | ||
All the best. | ||
Well, I mean, honestly, if you don't get it, you just don't get it. | ||
I think it's pretty self-explanatory. | ||
It's kind of an inside joke, but so I can't really explain that, but, but thanks a lot. | ||
You just, you just got to look into that one a little bit. | ||
unidentified
|
You'll have to take a look at that. | |
Pubert Brogan sent three to the Do you think NPCs have always existed in some form, like the philosophical zombie, or are they a uniquely recent phenomenon? | ||
I think they've always been around. | ||
I think that's always been the state of man. | ||
Forever since the pyramids. | ||
That's why I've always said that we have not changed all since pyramids We had a Pharaoh and the priests and then like a billion slaves farmers and slaves. | ||
I Think that you know, most people are Pyramid builders and That's just kind of how the human race is I think it's always been that way. | ||
I think most people just can't really think at all. | ||
I'm so sick of people. | ||
Why are you getting banned? | ||
It's called don't get banned Excuse me. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
I am I I unmuted you, but I'm only gonna do it once, okay? | ||
White Power Rangers sent $3. | ||
Unban me for real. | ||
I'm gonna punch my black neighbor if not. | ||
Real. | ||
I just saved a black man from being punched. | ||
White Power Rangers sent $3. | ||
The mustache is looking great BTW. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you! | |
Yeah, should I keep it? | ||
I don't know if I should. | ||
Press 1 to keep, press 2 to shave. | ||
1 to keep, 2 to shave. | ||
Let me know. | ||
1 to keep the mustache, 2 to shave the mustache. | ||
Let me know what you think. | ||
Okay, 1, 1, 2, 1. | ||
1, 1, 1, 2, 1. | ||
unidentified
|
1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1. | |
Okay, a lot of 1's. | ||
Some 2's. | ||
Mostly 1's. | ||
Mostly people want me to keep it. | ||
Smattering of 2's. | ||
But mostly 1's. | ||
Wow, look at that live chat fly. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Jeez, it's like moving too fast. | ||
You can't even load it. | ||
It's moving so fast. | ||
So it looks like a lot of 1's. | ||
Alright, I guess I'll keep it for now. | ||
I might get rid of it soon though. | ||
Thanks for the advice, guys. | ||
It's a duplicate. | ||
Thank you, though. | ||
October? | ||
unidentified
|
- It's a duplicate, thank you though. | |
- Spinefish sent $3. | ||
When is the pumpkin on the desk coming back? - October, it's an October seasonal decoration, okay? - Total Zoomer Mode sent $3. | ||
Satan has an awfully disproportionate nose. | ||
Kinda Zeus. | ||
Love you King. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
Hicks sent $25. | ||
love you too yeah there's maybe some truth to that certainly the antichrist hicks sent 25 dollars just thought you and everyone should know that simon follows soft core porn anime boogly woogly sent three dollars we need america first trumpianism not be trump loyalists if that doesn't sound retarded um well we are trump loyalists but yeah we're trying to put well | ||
trump is really like this phenomenon that we need to push in the right direction - Okay. | ||
It's, in some sense, I mean, I'm loyal to Trump, but also we need to It is kind of a complicated equation, I guess. | ||
But yeah, I guess you said it right. | ||
We do need America first. | ||
Trumpism is really more about America first. | ||
Insofar as Trump is the guy who will deliver America first, we need to be loyal to him. | ||
That's really what it is. | ||
I think that's a better way to say it. | ||
Yeah, I still have two. | ||
I have two of the African politics textbooks. | ||
Anything interesting you remember from that class? | ||
Yeah, I still have two. | ||
I have two of the African politics textbooks. | ||
And, um... | ||
No, I don't think I learned anything too interesting. | ||
Um... | ||
I'm trying to remember... | ||
What did I learn? | ||
I learned about Ethiopian ethnic federalism, which is interesting. | ||
I learned about... What else? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't even remember any of that shit. | |
Well, I remember my research essay was about Libya and how Libya historically is like really three countries put into one. | ||
You've got the Saharan part of Libya, the south part of Libya, which is these like tribes, Saharan tribes. | ||
And you've got, I think it's the east and west in the north. | ||
And one of them is Roman and one of them is like Carthaginian. | ||
I don't even remember. | ||
One of them was like, yeah, I don't know. | ||
I don't even remember. | ||
unidentified
|
Or was one of them, what the fuck was it? | |
I don't know. | ||
This is embarrassing. | ||
I don't even remember. | ||
That was so long ago. | ||
But basically there's like, all that I remember is there was like three sort of cultures in Libya. | ||
That's what my research essay was about and how like the ongoing civil war is really a consequence of that and only Muammar Gaddafi could unite all of them. | ||
What the hell was it? | ||
Or was it the... I don't know. | ||
the Phoenicians Phoenicians and Carthage was in Tunis Yes, I don't even, I don't even remember. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not even gonna try and impress you because I don't even remember what my essay was about. | |
I don't remember anything from that class. | ||
Because a lot of it was just sort of explaining like why African politics doesn't work. | ||
And they never really gave the correct answer. | ||
It's like, well, it doesn't work because, you know, they just are always having revolutions and, you know, talking about how different African countries are in different stages in democracy and how they're trying to have democracy. | ||
Bedouin, yeah, the Bedouin tribes in the South. | ||
unidentified
|
So anyway. | |
No, I don't remember anything interesting. | ||
Michael Anderson sent $10. | ||
For air conditioning energy bill. | ||
Eddie Van Graham sent $3. | ||
Are you a believer in the ends justify the means? | ||
I don't like the idea of fighting dirty and breaking the rules, but when those lording over us are breaking the rules themselves. | ||
To an extent. | ||
I don't believe in sinning. | ||
I don't believe that in any situation you're justified to sin. | ||
Because if you do that, you're basically saying, like, I know better than God. | ||
It's like, hang on God, but I need to do this. | ||
Which is really the opposite of what I saw faith, you know? | ||
So I think, I feel that way about principles, I do not feel that way about morals. | ||
I think that principles can be flexible, I think that morals are inflexible. | ||
So for example, I would never kill anybody to get ahead, because killing is a sin. | ||
I would never have sex with anybody to get ahead or to win, in terms of like adultery, you know what I mean? | ||
Like some people do the casting couch stuff or what, you know, Espionage? | ||
I don't think that's moral. | ||
So I wouldn't... I don't think that the so-called ends justify sinning. | ||
I don't think that victory... because, you know, God does not give you victory if you sin. | ||
Well, I mean, you can have a... you can... obviously people succeed in life even though they live a life of sin. | ||
What I mean is, like, it's just a completely upside-down view. | ||
Like, There's nothing good that can come from sinning. | ||
Like, if you go out there and sin, like, you know, that's not, in the truest sense, that's not gonna... If you have to sin to win, it's not a real victory, is what I'm saying. | ||
Some people sin to get rich and famous, and guess what? | ||
You didn't win. | ||
unidentified
|
You lost. | |
You're going to hell, you know? | ||
If you die an unrepentant sinner, you die and go to hell, you know what I mean? | ||
So that's not really a victory at all. | ||
So I think that you can, there are certain things that you can kind of be flexible with. | ||
Like when it comes to conservatism, like I don't, I'm not going to kill America because of the Constitution says we have to play by certain rules. | ||
But I don't think that we, it's like ever a policy to say we need to sin and break and not be Christian in order to win. | ||
I think that's completely wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
Hicks sent $3. | ||
5% to your church, 5% to charity, 5% to Nick. | ||
It's that easy guys. | ||
That's right. | ||
Or like 80% to America First, like 90% to America First, 10% to the church, something like that. | ||
No kidding of course. | ||
Hey Nick, I've been a big fan since 2018. | ||
Meant to super chat last night but couldn't catch the show live. | ||
Thank you for all your hard work. | ||
You're our leader. | ||
We'll support you for life. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
2018, that's old. | ||
Wow. | ||
I cannot believe 2018 was four years ago. | ||
unidentified
|
That's just crazy to think about, but time flies, I guess. | |
But thanks a lot, man. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
Jesse sent $3. | ||
Hello there, future Mr. President Fuentes. | ||
Jesse sent $3. | ||
My crypto is World of Warcraft Gold. | ||
Jesse sent $3. | ||
Remember that one girl that donated and wanted to take care of you? | ||
Like, iron your clothes and lay out your suits for you. | ||
Imagine that. | ||
Well and then she turned out to be crazy, then she turned out to be like 30 years old and like just got out of a 10 year relationship and she was like totally insane. | ||
Is that, are we thinking of the same one or a different one? | ||
Because I remember everybody got mad at me because I spurred doubt about that. | ||
I was like, don't, don't talk to me like that. | ||
Don't, don't proposition me like that. | ||
And everybody's like, wow, Nick, Nick Fuentes spurts out over girl asking him out and then she turned out to be fucking insane. | ||
Then she turned out to be like on antidepressants and like a total crazy. | ||
And then it was like, yeah, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
So maybe, maybe vindicated, maybe vindicated after all, actually. | |
You think so? | ||
He is really good on economics. | ||
You think so? | ||
He is really good on economics. | ||
I think he's better on philosophy, but he certainly is good about economics. | ||
I'll talk to him about that. | ||
I agree. | ||
Deflation... Yeah. | ||
The important thing is that you have sound money. | ||
But having 17% inflation is not sound money. | ||
You know? | ||
Because it's true. | ||
I think inflation is healthy. | ||
You'd have a healthy level of inflation. | ||
unidentified
|
But... Not like this. | |
Obviously. | ||
The money supply needs to increase as the economy grows. | ||
Obviously. | ||
Of course. | ||
Money is the medium of exchange. | ||
So as there's more people and more goods and services, more capital that's created, of course the money supply must expand. | ||
But what's happening now is not that. | ||
What's happening now is a lot different. | ||
So yeah, that is a good point though. | ||
Jesse sent three dollars. | ||
Hey Nick, would you like to know who I straight up do not fuck with? | ||
That nigga Roger Stone. | ||
But you? | ||
I fuck with you heavy dog less than three much love. | ||
Hey, love you too, Jesse. | ||
I don't know Roger Stone, I've never met him, so I don't, I can't really speak too much on him, but, um, but I appreciate it, buddy. | ||
Fuck with you too, nigga. | ||
But, uh, yeah, I don't really know Roger. | ||
I didn't say that! | ||
I didn't say that! | ||
unidentified
|
Nick inflation is how we get hit chat. | |
Let's fucking go. | ||
I just said that's that's when you see society turn around. | ||
Jesse sent three dollars. | ||
Oh, and that bitch Ann Coulter. | ||
Fuck that bitch. | ||
Trump is so over. | ||
Actually, I think you and your fake-ass books are over, Ann. | ||
K. Love you, big guy. | ||
Good night, Nick. | ||
Good night, King. | ||
Yeah. | ||
She's such a resentful... It's really sad, because she was the biggest Trump... I think it was a lot of ego stuff. | ||
She was a big Trump sycophant, and I think Trump wasn't really warm to her, and then he flipped out, and she flipped out. | ||
Plus, Ann Coulter's cringe. | ||
She, like, supports reparations for blacks because she's into black guys. | ||
Which is about as cringe as it gets. | ||
She's always out there saying, blacks, unlike Mexicans, deserve reparations. | ||
And that's because she exclusively dates non-whites, so... | ||
Typical. | ||
Typical woman. | ||
Typical WQ. | ||
It's just like when a Jewish guy, well, be right on everything, but then, like, totally get offended over the Israel stuff. | ||
Same thing with, like, women and shit like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Me too. | |
Piss sent $5. | ||
I blame Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen and Ben Shapiro. | ||
unidentified
|
Me too. | |
I blame all of them as well. | ||
Jino sent $4. | ||
Wignettes and pagans keep bringing up how brown babies are overrepresented in abortions. | ||
They think they finally got their situation where Christianity is in the way of white preservation. | ||
07BTW. | ||
Well, I mean, there is no white preservation if we're all burning in hell. | ||
So, you know, how is that preserving white people if we're all, you know, We're all incurring the wrath of God in this life and the next. | ||
I don't think that's good for white well-being, actually. | ||
I'm glad that that distinction has arisen because now people can see You know, what we are about at the end of the day is Christianity. | ||
And I do believe in white identity politics, but of course I believe in God more. | ||
And, you know, that precludes us from the kinds of things they accuse us of being, which is like, we want to kill people or genocide people. | ||
We're Christians. | ||
We're white and we're American. | ||
We're Christians, first and foremost. | ||
unidentified
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So... Kyle sent three... | |
I think it's real. | ||
I think it's real. | ||
Well, I think they want to do that, but I think they may have trouble implementing it. | ||
But I think that that is what they want to do because that is how they completely control the use of money. | ||
If all the money is digital, that means that they will control all of it. | ||
That means all... Like, think about that. | ||
That is how they eliminate cash and crypto. | ||
If all the money is just on a digital centralized ledger in a bank or some financial firm, if you can't hold your money digitally, privately, independently, that means that private and public institutions control all the money. | ||
All the fucking money. | ||
That means all the transactions are recorded with your ID. | ||
That means all the transactions can be unmasked and seen. | ||
That means all the money can be seized if necessary. | ||
That is how they have total control over the economy. | ||
Think about that. | ||
Cryptocurrency you can have because if you know anything about Bitcoin as an example, it's built on the blockchain and the blockchain Allows people to hold digital money privately because the blockchain is so large that no institution can manipulate the ledger because the ledger is maintained by an insurmountable amount of computing power, right? | ||
That's why cryptocurrency is such a revolutionary thing and why I support it deeply. | ||
When they introduced central bank digital currencies, Of course you cannot hold digital money privately. | ||
You can't like have that money on your computer. | ||
That money has to be recorded somewhere in a bank account or in some kind of maybe some kind of government account. | ||
How are people going to have their money? | ||
They can't. | ||
And if the money is all sent and received digitally that means it is recorded everywhere digitally forever. | ||
That means all financial transactions can be unmasked and seen and recorded. | ||
Time, date, location. | ||
Recipient, sender, amount, all of it. | ||
They can collate that data, create patterns, networks. | ||
That's like when Bruce Wayne builds that surveillance thing in Dark Knight and Morgan Freeman is like, this is wrong. | ||
This is wrong. | ||
That's what they're creating with that. | ||
And so, I mean, that's like the endgame, man. | ||
It's totally the endgame. | ||
That's why I have lots and lots of crypto. | ||
Because once you get rid of cash, cash is like the only way now you go and you can buy things and there's like a name is recorded, a location is recorded, just reported to the IRS by the business. | ||
You know or when it's person-to-person it isn't even recorded, it may be recorded by the IRS. | ||
unidentified
|
But if it's all digital, the FBI can see it all. | |
NSA can see it all. | ||
They can see your whole life. | ||
Create a financial footprint. | ||
And that's what we're talking about is total surveillance and total intelligence power. | ||
It's like they can see, hear everything through cameras and microphones. | ||
They can see every financial transaction, search queries, text messages, emails, you name it. | ||
Total antichrist system. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Johnny Bravo sent $3. | ||
I'm really confused by all of this. | ||
Trump himself does not believe in Trumpism. | ||
Why not go for DeSantis with the Trumpist message then? | ||
I don't get it. | ||
What does Trump have to do to lose our support? | ||
I've already answered this question. | ||
It's not about what does so-and-so have to do to lose our support. | ||
It's about the man. | ||
It's about the character of the man. | ||
Ron DeSantis Why do you want to support Ron DeSantis so bad? | ||
Everything you can say about Trump, DeSantis is worse. | ||
DeSantis is totally mobbed up with the Jews. | ||
We know that. | ||
He's totally mobbed up at the Israel lobby. | ||
DeSantis is a creature of the GOP. | ||
Bill Kristol likes him. | ||
National Review likes him. | ||
Washington Post writes good things about him. | ||
Hello. | ||
And what's more is DeSantis seems to be pushing this kind of like multi-racial, working class, populism type stuff. | ||
So it's a big deception. | ||
People are only going to DeSantis because they're scorned over Trump. | ||
DeSantis has all the same flaws, if not more. | ||
DeSantis will have a worse staff. | ||
If Trump gets in, I know for a fact he will have a better staff. | ||
If DeSantis gets in, I know who his staff will be and it's worse. | ||
The personnel will be GOP hacks, and it will be worse. | ||
So, if Trump gets in, he comes in with a vengeance. | ||
He got screwed over. | ||
He's done it before. | ||
He knows the score. | ||
He is a political outsider. | ||
He has bad people advising him. | ||
That's always been the story. | ||
We have to fight for Trump. | ||
We have to fight for that administration. | ||
If DeSantis gets in, that is just, you know... With Trump, there's like a 50% chance it's really, really good. | ||
Maybe higher. | ||
With DeSantis, there's like a 0% chance. | ||
What does Trump have to do? | ||
That's not a logical way to approach the problem. | ||
That's not a logical way to approach the situation. | ||
The question is wrong. | ||
You're asking the wrong question. | ||
The question is, who is going to be most likely to give us America first? | ||
Not, what does he have to do to lose our support? | ||
As if that even means anything. | ||
What's the right question to ask? | ||
The question is, how do we win? | ||
The question is, who or what is most likely to deliver us an America First victory? | ||
Is it the guy that got screwed over and did it once and who the whole media hates, who the regime tried to destroy because he was so successful? | ||
Because he won Michigan and Wisconsin and Pennsylvania because he named the globalist, etc, etc, etc? | ||
The guy that is now, you know, maybe vengeful against the Israel lobby? | ||
The guy that learned his mistakes with personnel and corrected in the last year? | ||
The guy who we know will have a good staff, or is it going to be the guy that is none of those things? | ||
The guy that has none of that going on? | ||
That's the question that matters, not what does so-and-so have to do. | ||
It's about which is the inferior option. | ||
DeSantis is clearly the inferior option for all those reasons. | ||
unidentified
|
So... You still don't get it. | |
You ask that question... Sewer Lizard sent $5. | ||
Wow. | ||
Nick has an artist soul? | ||
He's just like me. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
We're very similar. | ||
John Knight and Wimberly sent $10. | ||
Good monologue tonight, dad. | ||
Press D for our dad. | ||
Thanks, son. | ||
Hey, thanks, son. | ||
What's up, kid? | ||
I'm becoming my dad. | ||
I find myself saying things that my dad says these days. | ||
And, you know, and I know that I think everybody kind of goes through that to some extent. | ||
But as I get older, I find myself, like, becoming my dad in certain ways. | ||
Me and my dad are very different in some respects. | ||
unidentified
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But, you know, I'm still his son. | |
So I'm becoming my old man. | ||
But, yeah, thanks. | ||
We have sort of a different temperament. | ||
He's a little bit more laid back. | ||
unidentified
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But maybe for the better. | |
So, D for D for dad. | ||
All right, kid. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Anon sent $5. | ||
Nick, can we get the official AF steroid stack? | ||
Maybe Partigoy can help? | ||
I don't take steroids, okay? | ||
I'm not a steroid user. | ||
Anti-steroid. | ||
Whoops! | ||
Gfigu sent $3. | ||
Milo wants you to work out so you can be nice and plump for him. | ||
Nah, I don't think so. | ||
But, I mean, I think a lot of people want me to work out for that reason. | ||
I think a lot of the gym heads, they just wanna, they just wanna see a sexy nigga. | ||
They wanna see an R&B nigga with a six-pack. | ||
Do you want a boss or an R&B? | ||
That's so me. | ||
You want a boss or an R&B nigga with a six-pack? | ||
I'm a boss, nigga. | ||
unidentified
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I'm that boss, nigga! | |
Hmm, maybe I will. | ||
I hate golf, but maybe I'll give it a try. | ||
I've played golf when I was a kid. | ||
I took golf lessons with my dad. | ||
But I just never really liked it, because I'm not good at it. | ||
in the serious strikes in 2017 you saved me from being a drs guy you should try golf very presidential i hate golf but maybe i'll give it a try i've played golf when i was a kid i i took golf lessons with my dad but i just never really liked it because i'm not good at it i can't like my i'm not physical at all i'm not good at it I'm not athletic. | ||
I'm not physical. | ||
I'm cerebral. | ||
I'm mental. | ||
I'm a brain in a vat, okay? | ||
My body is just a vessel for my mind. | ||
My mind, I'm like Professor X or something. | ||
You can put my brain in like a tub of water and just roll me around on wheels with like a voice modulator. | ||
That's what I am. | ||
I'm not a very physical guy. | ||
So I tend not to like the physical activities. | ||
I'm not very good at them, but my brain and my body are just speaking a different language. | ||
Maybe I'll try when I get down to Florida, but thank you very much for the big super chat. | ||
Take the pledge. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, the Sirius Strikes was an important show. | ||
I remember it well. | ||
I remember that week very, very well. | ||
Very formative. | ||
That's April 2017. | ||
It's like April 12th, 2017. | ||
Right around there. | ||
And I remember it so well. | ||
unidentified
|
I tell you how that whole week transpired. | |
Because that was my first big moment when I was like, because I started my show on February 17 and that was like my first big story when I was like, I figured something out that nobody else did. | ||
unidentified
|
And I was the first one to say it. | |
So I'm not going to bore you with the details, but thank you very much for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciated. | ||
Billiam, longtime fan of the show. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Yeah, trust me, I go easy. | ||
Trust me, I'm going easy mode. | ||
I'm not trying to be some nasty beast. | ||
I'm not trying to be a powerlifter. | ||
with heavyweight and you cripple yourself focus on aesthetics not power shitting go easy on squats too if you like your knees yeah trust me i go easy trust me i'm going easy mode i'm not trying to be some nasty beast i'm not trying to be a power lifter i'm just trying to stay in shape and you know just Do you think the idea that a demographic crisis will result in collapse and war in Russia and China? | ||
that stuff because it is it is like i'm not gonna be like a bodybuilder i'm just gonna work out you know that's what it is overman sent five dollars do you think the idea that a demographic crisis will result in collapse in war in russia and china someone claimed that this is why they're trying to claim victories while they still can the demographic collapse will result in collapse in a war in russia and china i don't know what i mean i don't know what i mean i don't know I don't, I don't see how those things are related. | ||
You have to explain that. | ||
But no, I don't think that's why they're trying to collapse. | ||
SafeDog sent $3. | ||
Huge respect for taking Milo's advice seriously. | ||
Been watching for two years now and the big brother advice you give every night is irreplaceable. | ||
Forever loyal. | ||
Hey, thank you man. | ||
Well, uh, it's um... It's just something I've been thinking about a lot because I am a man. | ||
I'm a man. | ||
In both senses of the word in the sense that I'm immortal and fallible and all that and I'm You know, but I'm also a man and You know, so I know a lot of people look at me as | ||
Is the internet personality, but I'm a guy and I'm a guy that's growing up I'm a guy that grew up doing this I'm a guy that grew up I was 18 when I did this and I'm growing up doing this and it's very difficult I've done incredibly well because I'm a genius and have great instincts and I'm extremely talented extreme amount of raw talent and basically great moral conscience and just just all around a terrific guy that no one else could say the same if they're in my situation, but I'm still a guy that's growing up and | ||
You know, America First just has never stagnated because I've always been growing. | ||
I'm not the same guy now that I was last year. | ||
I'm not the same guy last year that I was the year before that. | ||
And I'm not every day going to come on the show and say, Hi! | ||
I did this today! | ||
But, you know, there's character development. | ||
The America First movement is growing up and evolving and maturing. | ||
It started out as just some ridiculous show. | ||
And I say that in a nice way. | ||
It was sort of zany. | ||
And it's grown into a real political movement. | ||
And now that we really are getting ambitious, now it has to really mature and evolve. | ||
And I don't want to lose the secret ingredient. | ||
I don't want to lose that sort of X factor that got us here. | ||
So it's a delicate thing, because you want to refine. | ||
You want to discharge the things that are holding you back, but without Without you know, you want to not throw the baby out the bathwater you want to discharge maybe the more self-indulgent maybe juvenile things that while retaining these the authenticity the realness the | ||
The ingredients the goddess and that's sort of a tricky thing It's a tricky thing to maintain because a big part of my appeal is that I'm controversial and I'm outrageous and all that but of course it's At the same time my success is because I'm ruthlessly pragmatic ruthlessly practical and And also ambitious and have a mind towards building a movement and building infrastructure. | ||
And so it's just where do you find where do you find that balance? | ||
Where do you find where do you find the perfect ratio the perfect ratio of? | ||
You know my sort of what would you say impishness? | ||
Where did you find the the Sweet spot of impishness and innovation and eccentricity and differentiation but also with the pragmatism and the maturity That is worthy of our ambitions and that's sort of a thing that I've been working out for as long as I've been doing this and it's something that's always It's something that's always happening. | ||
So And you know Milo gives good a lot of people give me advice on that stuff and I've been thinking a lot along the same lines So anyway Yeah, I talked to him the other day and he said that, but anyway. | ||
Hicks sent $3, but don't get it twisted. | ||
I may have to change to be more professional in the future, but I will always be the same guy deep down. | ||
I'll always be Nick, said by you a long time ago. | ||
A great moment. | ||
True. | ||
I am gonna be the same guy, but you just, you mature, you get older. | ||
It happens with experience. | ||
When I started doing this, I had no experience and I didn't know what I was doing at all, but I threw myself into it. | ||
And at some point that has to give way. | ||
That was good. | ||
Because I just went in there and I just tried it and I just took action. | ||
And sometimes that is what a person has to do. | ||
But then it has to give way to a more... It has to give way to something. | ||
That is more skillful, you know? | ||
So anyway, I'm not, it's not a concession, it's not a concession or anything, but it's just to say that I've always said that. | ||
I'm the same guy, but I'm always, you know, people say, you're working out now? | ||
It's like, well, you know, a lot of the things I say on my show, I say to be provocative or funny or whatever, but at the end of the day, I still do ruthlessly want to win for America first, and I'm going to, and I will not let anything stand in the way. | ||
That's always what I've said. | ||
It's all about winning. | ||
All about total victory. | ||
Nathan Sai sent $3. | ||
Do you like The Shining? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, I do like The Shining. | ||
I like Stanley Kubrick. | ||
unidentified
|
And I like... Come on now. | |
Come on now. | ||
What's the main guy? | ||
I think it... Come on now. | ||
I know who it is! | ||
What the f... It just escapes me right now. | ||
It's embarrassing. | ||
Come on. | ||
I know exactly his name. | ||
Don't tell me. | ||
Don't tell me. | ||
it's um come on now Jack Nicholson There it is. | ||
Yeah, I like Jack Nicholson. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a fan of The Shining. | |
I like that movie because it's not jump scares. | ||
I hate jump scares. | ||
I don't mind a creepy movie like Silence of the Lambs or The Shining. | ||
I do not like jump scares. | ||
I don't like being startled at all by anything. | ||
So. | ||
But yeah, Shining is very heartful, very masterful. | ||
So, good question. | ||
That's not a bad idea. | ||
That's not a bad idea. | ||
I'll tell a dev team about that. | ||
I did say that! | ||
There were more. | ||
I said that. | ||
What do you mean admit it? | ||
unidentified
|
I said that. | |
No, I missed it actually. | ||
I missed it. | ||
I was getting dinner during that. | ||
Pepe the Frog sent $10.07. | ||
Did you catch Stu on G&G tonight? | ||
No, I missed it actually. | ||
I missed it. | ||
I was getting dinner during that. | ||
But, um... | ||
I have to say he is right about that kidnapped kid up in Idaho. | ||
unidentified
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He's here. | |
He's been really solid on that issue. | ||
So, you know, good for him on that, I guess. | ||
GFigu sent $3. | ||
Niggas be named Dupree. | ||
Wayne gang. | ||
Wayne gang, Wayne gang. | ||
Same thing. | ||
Johnny Bravo sent $3. | ||
Hey Nick, I was going through your Twitter mentions and noticed people talking about you and Laura Loomer not being friends anymore. | ||
Hope things between you two are okay. | ||
Me and Laura Loomer are best friends. | ||
And when I saw her at Half-Pack 3, I gave her a big fat hug. | ||
I went up to her and I was like, aw, come here! | ||
I love Laura Loomer. | ||
We're BFFs. | ||
BFFs 4L. | ||
So, uh... | ||
No, not true at all. | ||
Nothing will get between us and our unbreakable friendship. | ||
Anon sent $3. | ||
Remember when your dad said people fire themselves? | ||
Now you know for sure. | ||
Yeah, I always used to ask my dad. | ||
I was like, you know, have you ever fired anybody? | ||
Like, what's that like? | ||
unidentified
|
Is that... Do you do it like Donald Trump? | |
That's where he strikes the apprentice and he's like, no. | ||
He goes, I tell people why they're going. | ||
He goes, no, nobody gets fired. | ||
He said people fire themselves. | ||
That's kind of like one of those, like, business, like, managerial, like, bullshit things, you know? | ||
You know, I'm not fired, you fired yourself, but... You understand what that means. | ||
It means people are, uh, accountable for their terminations. | ||
That much is true, but yeah. | ||
Piss sent $5. | ||
Being strong just feels based as fuck and massively increases your confidence. | ||
You are a chad without muscle, so now you're gonna be a gigatrod in, like, six months. | ||
It's not just about being a sexy nigga. | ||
I guess that's true. | ||
I feel very confident, though, without it. | ||
I'm confident because I love life, okay? | ||
Okay. - Gestapo Groeper sent $3. | ||
People talk about the money taxpayer money that goes to war. | ||
However, a lot of it goes to Medicaid fraud for Hasidic Jews and minorities. | ||
They live in mansions and get free rides off taxpayer money. | ||
- Yeah, that's true, but also kind of missing the point. - Brandon sent $3. | ||
Maybe just my genetics, but 6-10 hours a week for 5 months and you can have a very muscular, strong physique. | ||
I never work out for more than 6 months at a time. | ||
Steroids unnecessary unless aiming high. | ||
Golfing underscore Zoomer sent three dollars. | ||
Can you give any specific insight on the potential Trump admin? | ||
I've heard you mention John McKinney before. | ||
Was he really that powerful as that Atlantic article made him out to be? | ||
Would he call the shots? | ||
I'm not gonna speak on any inside info or anything like that, but what is going on is that, well I'm not gonna get into insider info, but if you know what's going on with If you read that article, you kind of understand what happened with personnel in 2020, and there'll probably be more of that in 2024 if Trump gets in. | ||
But I can't get too specific. | ||
Yeah, Tether, right? | ||
I heard about that. | ||
- Major USD stable coin dropped to 30 cents in the crash. | ||
- Yeah, Tether, right? | ||
I heard about that. | ||
I don't even know how that works, but that's just insane. - GFigu sent $3. | ||
How do you like her coffee? - I like lots of cream and lots of sugar in my coffee. | ||
I like it to be sweet and delicious. | ||
I like French vanilla cream and sugar. | ||
You don't really need sugar though if you have French vanilla cream, but otherwise lots of cream, lots of sugar. | ||
Four cent ten dollars. | ||
Nick if you're interested, I will buy you three month membership to a boxing gym I know in Elmhurst. | ||
All you gotta do is show up nigga. | ||
I started boxing lessons when I was 25 and it changed my life. | ||
I appreciate that, but I just don't really want to do that for like OPSEC reasons. | ||
I'm not gonna like... I may do boxing lessons or something, but that just might compromise my security. | ||
But I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, I may do that. | ||
But okay, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
Now I can go take an ice bath or something, but thanks a lot. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Remember to follow me here on this channel. | ||
Smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Remember to 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. | ||
In particular, our top three. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America First! |