Speaker | Time | Text |
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Good evening, everybody. | ||
You are watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Monday. | ||
And it's actually a holiday. | ||
Very festive occasion. | ||
Happy Juneteenth, everybody. | ||
This is our... I think it's our second show in Juneteenth. | ||
Been doing this show five years, but it's only our second Juneteenth. | ||
We got a great show for you tonight. | ||
Lots to talk about. | ||
Our featured story is about Julian Assange, who is being extradited now to the United States. | ||
A big hurdle has been cleared and the British Home Secretary has cleared him and now he's one step closer to being sent back to the United States to be tortured and killed for his crimes against the national security apparatus. | ||
He's charged with 17 different things which carry a maximum sentence of 10 years each. | ||
So he is facing over 170 years in jail. | ||
And this is all connected to WikiLeaks and in particular their investigation in 2010 of classified government documents pertaining to the war in Afghanistan, the war in Iraq, as well as diplomatic cables as well. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about a new disease which is going around. | ||
They're calling it Sudden Adult Death Syndrome or SADS. | ||
This is a real phenomenon. | ||
Apparently, hundreds of young, healthy people around the world are dying spontaneously overnight due to cardiac arrest. | ||
Almost all of them are not even making it to the hospital. | ||
They will simply go to bed and then die. | ||
And doctors don't know why it's happening. | ||
They can't pinpoint anything, but this is now a new and surging phenomenon in Australia, United States, United Kingdom. | ||
It's all young, healthy people with no prior warning signs, and it's all arrhythmia. | ||
It's all cardiac arrest. | ||
It's all heart-related issues. | ||
So we're now encouraging everybody to go to the cardiologist at the young age to get checkups, even if you're still a teenager or an otherwise healthy young person. | ||
Pretty amazing stuff. | ||
Now, they reassure us, because I did the research, that this has absolutely nothing to do with the vaccine. | ||
How could you even say that? | ||
How could you even insinuate that? | ||
There's no evidence! | ||
But, what's the one thing, maybe, that's changed in the past two years, medically, that might induce something like this? | ||
Well, let's not talk about that. | ||
It's just random. | ||
It's just totally random. | ||
Nobody knows why it's happening. | ||
We'll talk about that too. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
I gotta be honest with you. | ||
It's just like nothing's going on in the news, man. | ||
They're killing me. | ||
This is always the worst time. | ||
This is like the worst time ever. | ||
I remember in 2018. | ||
2018 was brutal. | ||
2016, a lot of fun. | ||
2017, you know, a lot of fun. | ||
2018 was brutal. | ||
Brutal. | ||
Nothing happened and nobody cared about politics and the midterms sucked. | ||
And then things got sexy again in 2019. | ||
You know, then things got exciting. | ||
They had the primary. | ||
They had the Groyper War. | ||
People start caring about politics. | ||
But these midterm years, jeez, it's such a drought. | ||
Such a content drought. | ||
There's nothing! | ||
I'm checking the news every day. | ||
Every day! | ||
I'm on BBC, I'm on the New York Times, I'm on Fox, I'm on Revolver, I'm on the Stormer, I'm on 4chan, I'm on... I'm on everything. | ||
I'm on UNZ, I'm on Daily Veracity, I'm on Russia Today, I'm on Al Jazeera, and there's nothing! | ||
There's nothing going on! | ||
It's killing me! | ||
So, we're just waiting for something cool to happen. | ||
I guess the midterms will be fun. | ||
We have to make our own news. | ||
I guess we got to go out there and be the news. | ||
If there's no news happening, uh-oh. | ||
unidentified
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I guess it's time for us to go out and be the news. | |
Maybe we can't. | ||
If you can't cover the news, I guess you have to go out and create some news. | ||
No, kidding! | ||
Kidding, of course. | ||
Kidding. | ||
Kidding. | ||
It's good. | ||
It's good that we're staying out of the news to some extent. | ||
But, yeah, it's real, real drought. | ||
Real, you know, real downer. | ||
I'm bored. | ||
I'm bored lately with what's going on. | ||
But, you know, we got a few things going to keep us busy. | ||
I announced on Friday, in case you missed our show last week, I announced on Friday that we will be doing our premiere of the America First mini-documentary July 14th in Las Vegas. | ||
We'll be screening it at a movie theater. | ||
Tickets go on sale this week. | ||
We're looking tentatively at an $80 ticket. | ||
And the ticket will include admission, general admission to the showing, watch a documentary, we'll be re-airing episodes 1 and 2 of the mini-documentary, and debuting the longest episode to date, which will be, I think, longer than 1 and 2 combined. | ||
Episode 3, which was shot during AFPAC 3, and everybody's in it. | ||
All the cozy celebs are in it, all the AFPAC VIPs are in it. | ||
So it'll be 80 bucks. | ||
I think we're gonna peg it around... What did we agree? | ||
I think it was 80. | ||
And so it'll be at a theater. | ||
We're gonna show it in a theater. | ||
There'll be like a red carpet, you know, fun entry. | ||
We'll debut the picture. | ||
We'll then do a Q&A with the directors, and then we'll do a meet-and-greet. | ||
Everybody's gonna be there, I'm told. | ||
John Miller will be there, Kai Clibbs, Dalton, Tyler, Party Goy, Beardson. | ||
Everybody's gonna be there. | ||
It's gonna be a ton of fun. | ||
So we'll get to watch the movie, we'll get to do a Q&A, sort of like a live show. | ||
Hang out, take pictures. | ||
We'll be selling our hats, we'll be selling some merch potentially as well, some exclusive stuff. | ||
It's gonna be a lot of fun. | ||
And like I said, that'll be in Las Vegas on Thursday, July 14th. | ||
And I'll probably stick around that weekend. | ||
I'd like to get into Freedom Fest, because of course we're doing this in response to this Libertarian Film Festival that I got banned from. | ||
You know, we made this documentary a year ago, and the documentary is about how I'm the most cancelled man in the world. | ||
I'm banned from everything, put on the no-fly list, money frozen by the feds... | ||
And so we submitted this film to this libertarian film festival called Freedom Fest. | ||
Their theme is cancel culture. | ||
They're supposed to be against cancel culture. | ||
Our film is about the most cancelled man in the world. | ||
And they banned the film! | ||
They cancelled it! | ||
So we're doing our own thing. | ||
It's next to the Freedom Fest, which, you know, if you want to make a trip out of it, you could go to our thing, you could go to their thing. | ||
I'm going to try and get in. | ||
I'm going to try and buy a ticket or I'll sneak in or something. | ||
So it's going to be a lot of fun. | ||
It'll be a weekend in Vegas. | ||
We'll all be out there. | ||
And then I also told you we'll be doing a VIP option. | ||
It's going to be a fundraiser for our foundation. | ||
And so the VIP ticket, I don't know how much that's gonna cost, maybe a thousand and that will include a dinner with me and some of the e-celebs, the picture, and then we'll be having a big after-party in a penthouse suite on the Vegas Strip and everybody will be there too. | ||
So should be a lot of fun. | ||
That's July 14th and So anyway, we're doing some events and things, but it's one of those years where it's sort of like, you know, it's the off-season. | ||
We're sort of in like spring training, I guess you could say, politically. | ||
Because I'm flipping through the news every day and it's like, there's nothing going on. | ||
There's nothing on TV. | ||
There's nothing happening in politics. | ||
But we still have some summer fun planned. | ||
Like I said, tickets will go on sale this weekend. | ||
I'd like to get those up by Wednesday. | ||
No promises, but I'd like to get them up sooner rather than later, so we're working on that diligently behind the scenes. | ||
This thing kind of came together last minute. | ||
We only found out we didn't get into the festival like a week ago. | ||
So we've been throwing this thing together, but it's going to be a lot of fun. | ||
Anyway, in case you missed it, that was our big announcement on Friday. | ||
Hope everybody had a good weekend. | ||
It was a double holiday, Father's Day and Juneteenth. | ||
So I hope everybody had a great Father's Day. | ||
Happy Father's Day! | ||
I had a good Father's Day. | ||
I got in a big fight with my mom though. | ||
So that wasn't good. | ||
You know, we had our big Father's Day dinner. | ||
So we go to this restaurant. | ||
And you know we're supposed to have this nice Father's Day dinner and the restaurant and I don't know I'm sure you guys can relate to this as well. | ||
Everything is horrible now man. | ||
It's like we're in a recession. | ||
unidentified
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I keep hearing from people, well we don't know when the recession is going to happen. | |
Is it going to happen in 2024 or 2023? | ||
Everyone knows it's going to happen. | ||
Everyone knows it's in the process of happening. | ||
Stock market crashed. | ||
Crypto crashed. | ||
Housing is starting to cool off, it looks like. | ||
But we're in the recession. | ||
I don't know if you've been to a restaurant lately, but all the menus are shrinking. | ||
The menus are getting smaller. | ||
The portions are getting smaller, the waitstaff, you can't, the hours are getting shorter, and then when you can get into a restaurant the waitstaff isn't there. | ||
We went to this restaurant yesterday for our Father's Day celebration. | ||
And the place had to close at like 7 o'clock. | ||
7 o'clock on Father's Day because they couldn't find anybody to staff. | ||
And even while we were there they weren't short-staffed. | ||
They had like one server, one or two servers. | ||
Service was bad and the menu was smaller, like noticeably smaller. | ||
And then I got lunch with a friend today. | ||
A friend of mine came through Chicago. | ||
And I got lunch and we went to Kuma's Corner in the Fulton Market area in Chicago, which is a very trendy neighborhood, lots of restaurants, lots of development there, very yuppified. | ||
And Kuma's Corner is like this happening burger place. | ||
They had one server. | ||
We go in there to get a table and they go, hey, well bear with us, we only have one server today serving the whole restaurant. | ||
And this is like an upscale place in an upscale neighborhood. | ||
And again, the menu shrunk. | ||
So we're there. | ||
We're there, man. | ||
The shortages are here. | ||
Labor shortages, food shortages. | ||
Obviously the gas price is rising, price of everything rising, it's hitting, and by the way, the recession hasn't even hit officially yet. | ||
It's just starting, okay? | ||
This is for openers. | ||
And this is worse than anything that I can remember. | ||
And, you know, I was around for 2008, I was like, what, 10 years old? | ||
And I remember gas being like four bucks. | ||
And I remember... I remember being kind of poor. | ||
You know, my parents have any, you know, we would eat lots of ground beef and beans and stuff like that. | ||
But I don't ever remember anything like this. | ||
This is the worst economic crisis we've had in 50 years, arguably since the Great Depression. | ||
And it's, I mean, we're just beginning here. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So that was just one observation as we go to the dinner and I was like, wow, I mean this is getting bad. | ||
And it's been like this for a while and it's getting worse. | ||
So we had our dinner. | ||
Dinner was okay. | ||
And then me and my mom got in a big fight because I was supposed to go to my cousin's birthday party and then I canceled last minute because I went to bed really late the night before. | ||
And you know my parents are already there and they're like, hey are you coming to the party? | ||
And I was like, no I changed my mind. | ||
Because I had been working non-stop for like four weeks. | ||
I haven't taken a day off in like four weeks and I've been traveling in the past like six weeks. | ||
I've been to Florida, DC, Nashville, New York, Texas. | ||
Okay? | ||
I got sick. | ||
We've been dealing with all this drama. | ||
So I, and now we're planning three events. | ||
We're planning a rally against Joe Kent in Washington State. | ||
We're planning this event for the movie. | ||
We're planning this thing in October. | ||
So I was like, you know what? | ||
I'm not gonna be guilt-tripped. | ||
Like, you know, I love my family and everything, but I need a day off. | ||
So I was like, nah, I changed my mind. | ||
You know, I'm not, I just want to take a night off. | ||
I want to play Civ 5. | ||
I want to play Valorant. | ||
I want to eat pizza. | ||
And I just want to take the night off. | ||
So my mom's starting it with me. | ||
We're drinking coffee and my dad's opening his gifts and my mom's talking trash and then me and my mom get into it. | ||
That was a whole ordeal. | ||
But we achieved a resolution. | ||
We achieved a resolution by the end of the night and the dinner was salvaged. | ||
And the dinner and the holiday was salvaged. | ||
So that's never good, but I hope you guys had a good Father's Day. | ||
I had a good Father's Day, but you know just sometimes the sparks fly. | ||
Sometimes the sparks fly. | ||
The problem is me and my mom are too similar. | ||
We have strong personality. | ||
We're stubborn. | ||
We argue. | ||
We can never admit we're wrong. | ||
So we got into it a little bit. | ||
But by the end of the night, you know, we brought it back together. | ||
unidentified
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So that was great. | |
So that was that. | ||
But Happy Father's Day to all the fathers out there. | ||
Happy Father's Day to my father. | ||
It was a pretty good, pretty nice night. | ||
We got a reprieve from the heat in Chicago. | ||
Big heat wave but it was kind of cool yesterday. | ||
And then of course it is also Juneteenth and people have pointed out that it's a little bit cruel that they put both the holidays or I guess the holidays happen to land on the same weekend. | ||
In a sort of cruel twist of fate, blacks who are largely fatherless had to celebrate their emancipation from slavery on the same day. | ||
They had to think about the fact that they don't have dads. | ||
And, you know, it's kind of funny how these things all come together, right? | ||
Juneteenth, in case you don't know, is our newest federal holiday and we celebrate how the blacks were freed from slavery. | ||
And not only do you have this coinciding this weekend with Father's Day, but also, naturally, federal holiday, long weekend, during the summer, and so they're also out killing each other too. | ||
And in Chicago, there were... | ||
39 people shot. | ||
39. | ||
It's not funny, but... Juneteenth. | ||
unidentified
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I have a dream. | |
Marcus Garvey. | ||
Frederick Douglass. | ||
Sojourner Truth. | ||
Harriet Tubman. | ||
Harriet Tubman. | ||
unidentified
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39 people get shot in Chicago. | |
This is from WGN. | ||
39 people shot, 4 fatally. | ||
Majority of shooting victims were wounded on the south and west side. | ||
5 people wounded in a single attack Friday evening in the Douglas area on the south side. | ||
Standing in a parking lot in the 3000 block of South Rhodes Avenue when a gunman opened fire at 1145 p.m. | ||
Three men in their teens and 20s and one 18 year old woman were wounded in the attack. | ||
And this is really the kind of sick, this is the twisted joke. | ||
This is a turn of twisted humor and irony of America. | ||
Blacks are really the most ironic among us. | ||
You know, I get criticized a lot. | ||
People say, you're an irony bro. | ||
Nobody can tell when you're being serious and when you're being ironic. | ||
And that's a big problem because sometimes you talk about hating Jews and we don't know if you're kidding and sometimes But truly blacks are the most ironic among us. | ||
Masters of irony. | ||
Masters of the craft. | ||
You know, because they will put on these holidays like Juneteenth, or they'll create a street called Black Lives Matter, like Black Lives Matter Boulevard, or Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Boulevard, and then they come out at night. | ||
They come out at night to play, and they all kill each other. | ||
And they're all killing each other on Black Lives Matter Boulevard on Juneteenth. | ||
And there's sort of like this twisted... It's this sort of sick sense of humor that these blacks are having. | ||
And, um... | ||
It really sort of begs the question, it's sort of begging lots of questions such as, let's see, here we are celebrating the release of blacks from slavery and it sort of like answers the question of like, you know, what happens as a result? | ||
Yippee! | ||
Yippee! | ||
The blacks were all freed from slavery. | ||
Now they're all killing each other. | ||
Yippee! | ||
You know, we made Black Lives Matter Boulevard and we reminded the world that black lives matter. | ||
Now they're all shooting each other in the streets. | ||
Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Boulevard, Malcolm X Street, and historic black universities and colleges. | ||
It sort of asks and then answers a fundamental question about race, which, you know, we don't need to explicitly I don't need to tell you exactly what that is, but it tells a story all on its own, so... Happy Juneteenth, everybody! | ||
Happy freedom for enslaved... You know what's funny, is now they're getting away from calling them slaves, and they call them the enslaved. | ||
Because they say that if you say that blacks are slaves, that's like demeaning or denigrating, so you were supposed to call them enslaved, those that were enslaved. | ||
So we're celebrating the freement of the enslaved people so that they could go and kill each other on the subway. | ||
So that's that. | ||
I'm told, this is the last thing I'll say because I think it's funny and then we'll get on with the show. | ||
Apparently... | ||
Conservatives are unironically celebrating this. | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
I guess Steve Bannon today on the War Room. | ||
War Room is the Steve Bannon podcast. | ||
I guess he had a big Juneteenth blowout show today and had only black guests. | ||
Which it's like, honestly... | ||
What more is there to be said at this point? | ||
You either get it or you don't. | ||
And some people say, well what's wrong with that? | ||
Shouldn't we all celebrate that blacks were freed from slavery? | ||
And on some level, yeah, I think that race-based chattel slavery was wrong. | ||
I have to qualify that because, you know, I don't know that I'm actually morally opposed to forms of slavery, but the race-based chattel slavery of blacks I think was wrong. | ||
When you look at biblical slavery, it was really more like indentured servitude. | ||
And they were under contract for seven years and they had rights. | ||
Even in America, slavery really wasn't even that bad. | ||
The slaves didn't work very much. | ||
Which, there's a joke in there. | ||
I don't need to tell you exactly what it is. | ||
These days the jokes sort of write themselves. | ||
But, you know, they didn't really... If you look at the calendar year, they didn't work for most days of the year. | ||
The whipping was largely a myth. | ||
They really weren't whipped. | ||
They really weren't punished. | ||
Not many white people even had slaves. | ||
Jews basically ran the slave trade. | ||
The slaves were given housing and food and water. | ||
And once slavery ended, lots of blacks died because they just couldn't get along in America. | ||
They just sort of didn't really have the... | ||
They didn't really have the faculty to get along. | ||
And so, you know, a lot of people that argued against the abolition of slavery said, look, we're going to free all these black people and, like, literally what are they going to do with themselves? | ||
They're going to go and wander off the field and perish in the wilderness. | ||
And honestly, that's what happened for many generations. | ||
Some speculate that's why American blacks have a higher average IQ than African blacks. | ||
It's because there was sort of this Natural selection happening. | ||
I don't support this. | ||
I think this is horrible, but this is something that did happen, is that blacks were sort of released out there, they were sort of released out, and then many of them just couldn't make it, and so some speculate, I was told this by very intelligent people, that generations of sort of the least equipped were just sort of succumbing To the wilderness. | ||
And, you know, you have this sort of 10% being flushed out at the very bottom, generation over generation, and this sort of raised the average. | ||
In any case, what was I even talking about? | ||
I don't even know. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
So, like, it's technically a good thing that slavery ended, I guess is my point. | ||
The point was this, okay? | ||
unidentified
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The point was, the point was this, okay? | |
It's a very complicated issue, but on some level, it is a good thing that slavery ended, okay? | ||
I'll grant you that. | ||
Alright. | ||
For the sake of argument, I'll say, okay, I'll bite. | ||
Slavery was bad, and it's good that it ended. | ||
And, you know, it's technically appropriate that some might celebrate that. | ||
It's appropriate that people would celebrate the Emancipation Proclamation and the 13th Amendment and the freeing of the slaves. | ||
That's great. | ||
But here's the thing, and this is where conservatives are just ignorant. | ||
This is not really about that. | ||
This is about, you know, giving a middle finger to white America. | ||
That's what it's really about. | ||
Why did they give us Juneteenth in 2021? | ||
They gave us Juneteenth in 2021 because of George Floyd. | ||
That's what it was about. | ||
And it's not about celebrating freedom or whatever. | ||
Blacks want to enslave us. | ||
If you put out a referendum among blacks that said enslave all white people, 100% of people would vote for it. | ||
100% of blacks would vote in favor of that. | ||
They don't care about freedom. | ||
They're in favor of gun control. | ||
They're in favor of Hate speech laws. | ||
Blacks are the enemies of freedom. | ||
They hate freedom. | ||
Their sort of rambunctious and violent behavior is begging for tyranny. | ||
They don't care about freedom. | ||
They're all on welfare. | ||
They literally live in Section 8 and they get food stamps and all of that. | ||
So, please spare me with this. | ||
It's an American holiday and we need to celebrate it. | ||
This is about creating a new Independence Day for a new nation, for a new historical national myth. | ||
With new historical holidays and heroes and all of that. | ||
And they want to replace the founding with the emancipation. | ||
And they want to replace the founding fathers with the civil rights leaders. | ||
And they want to replace the Constitution with the Equal Rights Amendment and everything that they're doing to our government. | ||
That's what this is really about. | ||
And like I said, you can arguably say that it's a celebratory occasion. | ||
Yeah, on some level this is true. | ||
But everything must be viewed with its political, with its specifically political context. | ||
This is a political issue. | ||
This is not an historical issue. | ||
This is a political issue, not a moral issue. | ||
Everyone agrees slavery was bad. | ||
Everyone agrees it was a good thing that slavery ended in America. | ||
Making it a holiday? | ||
Making it, and the official name of it is like an Independence Day? | ||
This is meant in opposition. | ||
This is in contradistinction. | ||
This is against the idea of America. | ||
It's what it is. | ||
And you know that because, oh, these people care so much about freedom and slavery? | ||
Then why do they all support a vaccine mandate? | ||
And why do they support gun control, and hate speech laws, and censorship, and big tech monopolies? | ||
And on and on and on. | ||
They don't care meaningfully about bondage, slavery, freedom, these complicated issues of man and society. | ||
They don't care about that. | ||
It's about the white oppressor and the black slave, right? | ||
Or the black oppressed. | ||
That's what it's about. | ||
So... | ||
Anyway, so that's Juneteenth. | ||
You know, some jokes, but honestly, really, seriously, I mean, let's be adults here. | ||
Let's grow up and not be in 8th grade, you know. | ||
Four score and seven years ago... | ||
Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves in this kind of thing, and that was terrific. | ||
Yeah, it was good, but let's just be honest. | ||
Slavery is an historical institution that has existed forever in all societies and exists in the world today, even here and now, and not just in terms of human trafficking, but arguably wages are treated worse than slaves were. | ||
At one point. | ||
Arguably people that are subcontractors. | ||
You know I look at these people that toil in an Amazon warehouse or they're sort of like these sort of Now they've got Amazon truck drivers like Uber. | ||
You can sign up and drive an Amazon truck or use your personal vehicle to deliver Amazon packages. | ||
And you have people that like their job is delivering cheap packages and then doing DoorDash and doing this sort of suite of Subcontractor driver activities with no benefits with like they have to pay for their car, they have to pay for wear and tear for gas, like they live it they rent an apartment they can't afford in the city. | ||
This is worse than slavery. | ||
This is like comparable to slavery. | ||
So people that go on and on about this kind of stuff it's like very surface level understanding of the world. | ||
And even for the sake of argument, if we were to say, oh, let's not think in those terms about how bad slavery really was or what historically it really was in its institution, how it compares to today, the effects of slavery, whether we like it or not, ending in America, even all of that aside, the holiday itself was put up as a full frontal offensive against the historical American nation. | ||
There's no way around that. | ||
You can't celebrate it all you want and say, you know, this is the best thing ever, but it's what it is. | ||
So anyway... | ||
We're already 40 minutes into the show and I haven't even gotten into the news. | ||
But that's Juneteenth, so Happy Father's Day! | ||
Happy Juneteenth! | ||
Hope everybody celebrated. | ||
Hope you survived the weekend. | ||
Before we get into the news, I want to remind you again to follow me on this channel. | ||
Smash the follow button here on Cozy to get a push notification when I go live. | ||
Follow me on Gabin Telegram. | ||
The links are down below. | ||
And okay, so with that finished, we'll dive into our news here. | ||
First story is about sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
And we've been covering this now for a little while. | ||
This is not anything I guess totally new, but people are now straight up dying randomly because of the vaccine. | ||
And I find it very amusing. | ||
Well, I shouldn't say that. | ||
Everyone's dying. | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
Well, it is a little bit hilarious, but I don't totally mean that. | ||
What's funny is that when the vaccine started to roll out a year ago, and we warned everybody, we said, look, this is not healthy. | ||
This is not regulated. | ||
The technology is not proved and we have no idea if it's safe or efficacious. | ||
Everybody said, oh well, billions of people are getting it. | ||
If billions of people are getting it, you know, why aren't we seeing everybody affected? | ||
Why aren't we seeing, why aren't we seeing lots and lots of people dying? | ||
Why aren't we seeing lots and lots of like adverse reactions? | ||
If the magnitude of the rollout is in the billions, why don't we see And, well, the first answer would be, well, it doesn't happen immediately. | ||
There are a lot of adverse reactions, or there were, that did and are happening immediately. | ||
People getting paralyzed, people getting a sort of cardiac episode within a week of getting a booster shot or the second dose of one of the mRNA vaccines. | ||
But a lot of the issues you're not going to see until later. | ||
The issues with fertility, the issues with long-term damage to the cardiovascular system, and damage to the immune system, how it suppresses the immune system, and so on. | ||
But in any case, that aside, it is now killing people. | ||
People are dying in large numbers, and there's no explanation. | ||
And people see that and they go, "Oh, well, there's no proof." And it's like, okay, so billions of people are getting this untested vaccine. | ||
Then, coincidentally, months, a year later, everybody starts dying randomly. | ||
Not everybody, but a statistically significant number, more people than were dying before the vaccine. | ||
And nobody knows why, and they attribute it to all these weird things like post-pandemic stress disorder, this, this new thing they're calling sudden adult death syndrome, other things. | ||
And when that's brought up, they hand wave that away and say, well, there's no causal link that has been proved. | ||
I was like, really? | ||
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Okay. | |
This is the article. | ||
This is from the Daily Mail. | ||
It says, quote, healthy young people are dying suddenly and unexpectedly from a mysterious syndrome as doctors seek answers through a new national register. | ||
People aged under the age of 40 are being urged to go and get their hearts checked. | ||
They may potentially be at risk of having sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
SADS is an umbrella term to describe unexpected death in young people. | ||
A 31-year-old woman who died in her sleep last year may have had SADS. | ||
People aged under 40 are being urged to have their hearts checked. | ||
The syndrome has been fatal for all kinds of people regardless of whether they maintain a fit and healthy lifestyle. | ||
SADS is an umbrella term to describe unexpected death in young people, said the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, most commonly occurring in people under 40 years of age. | ||
The term is used when a post-mortem cannot find an obvious cause of death. | ||
So we're talking about young people. | ||
Not like technically young, like they're 50 and that's kind of young to die. | ||
We're talking about people that are like 20. | ||
Or in their 30s. | ||
And people that are dying and they literally don't know why. | ||
And understand, you know, some people might say, oh well, it's COVID related. | ||
Well, as we've pointed out many times over the past two years, they very liberally classify a death as a COVID death. | ||
A person can go into the hospital with something completely unrelated, die from that thing, in the autopsy they will be found to have had COVID when they died, and they'll call that a COVID death. | ||
So a person can walk in the middle of the street, get hit by a car, go to the hospital, die from their injuries, autopsies performed, they find the person had COVID, they'll call that a COVID death. | ||
And this is a thing which has happened. | ||
And that's an example of how they're counting these, where we're getting these numbers. | ||
And the same thing goes for hospitalizations. | ||
Even if you're sent to the hospital and don't die, if I cut my hand off and go to the hospital, and they sew my hand back on, and they give me a COVID test and I have COVID, they call that a COVID hospitalization. | ||
They count me as someone that was hospitalized with COVID. | ||
And the inference being that I had COVID that was so severe I went to the hospital. | ||
So the point is, if they can call something a COVID death, they will. | ||
If someone dies as a result of COVID, if someone dies as a complication of COVID, if someone dies for something completely different and they happen to have COVID, they will call that a COVID death. | ||
So we're not talking about people that have anything to do with COVID. | ||
We're talking about people that are under the age of 40, who are healthy and fit, dying for no reason. | ||
Nothing to do with COVID. | ||
Dying for no reason, and they don't know why, and they're young and they're healthy. | ||
What's the explanation? | ||
It's a syndrome. | ||
Sudden Adult Death Syndrome. | ||
That's the name. | ||
It says the U.S.-based SADS Foundation has said that over half of the 4,000 SADS deaths of children, teens, or young adults have one of the top two warning signs present. | ||
Those signs include a family history of a SADS diagnosis or sudden unexplained death of a family member and fainting or seizing during exercise or when excited or startled. | ||
Fainting or seizing during exercise, which that's one of the major warning signs of you're about to die suddenly as a healthy young person for no reason. | ||
What is exercise? | ||
What does exercise do? | ||
Running, jumping, weightlifting, it puts stress on your cardiovascular system. | ||
So we're not talking about a person can die suddenly for a lot of reasons, right? | ||
Suffocation, they could die from drinking too much water, having too much vitamin A, they can die from A brain bleed, a stroke, they could die from internal bleeding, sepsis. | ||
There's like a lot of reasons that a brain-eating bacteria, there's a lot of reasons that are random why a young healthy person might die. | ||
But almost all of the young healthy people that are dying are dying from, it's a cardiovascular issue. | ||
You know, so if we're trying to, if we're being, if we're being reasonable, You know, this has nothing to do with COVID. | ||
It has nothing to do with old age. | ||
It has nothing to do with health. | ||
Because these are fit people. | ||
These are people that are not necessarily obese or pre-existing conditions. | ||
It doesn't track with, oh, the parents had hypertension or... It says the only thing that tracks is that they did exercise and then fainted or had a seizure. | ||
So what we're talking about is something with no family history other than, oh, the other family member died suddenly. | ||
This is not a real phenomenon. | ||
This is descriptive. | ||
So there's no like pre-existing condition. | ||
It's not a genetic thing. | ||
It's also not something having to do with age, health, COVID. | ||
It's something that is cardiovascular. | ||
And so you would have to ask yourself, well, what is a thing? | ||
That is not genetic, not related to health and fitness, not related to age, that would be putting stress on the cardiovascular system in young people that is now suddenly happening, which now all of a sudden is a new factor. | ||
What might that be? | ||
What is a variable that might have changed that we could point to that is not age, genetics, health, weight, Or the pandemic that might be causing this. | ||
That might be causing a suddenly-onset, deadly cardiovascular syndrome. | ||
Definitely not the vaccine! | ||
Don't even talk, don't even insinuate that, because there's no evidence. | ||
Hey, there's no evidence! | ||
We studied it and there's no evidence. | ||
Well, we did study it, but nevertheless, the top two warning signs is, well, other people in the family suddenly died for no reason. | ||
And also they had a seizure during exercise, excited or startled. | ||
So they're having a heart attack to death at 30 and they're healthy when they're startled. | ||
This is normal stuff. | ||
It says, Melbourne's Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute is developing the country's first SADS registry. | ||
A spokesperson said there are approximately 750 cases per year of people aged under 50 in Victoria suddenly having their heart stop. | ||
Of these, approximately 100 young people per year will have no cause found even after extensive investigation such as a full autopsy. | ||
cardiologist and researchers, Dr. Elizabeth Peretz, said Baker's registry was the first in the country and one of the only a few in the world that combined ambulance, hospital, and forensics information. | ||
It allows you to see people have had the cardiac arrest and no arrest and no cause was found on the back end. | ||
She believes the potential lack of awareness may be due to the fact that a lot of it takes place outside of traditional medical settings, meaning people are dying in bed overnight. | ||
So, and this is what's amazing to me is, you know, let's just be reasonable here. | ||
Do we know definitively that this is being caused by the vaccine? | ||
No. | ||
I don't claim to have evidence that proves this. | ||
I don't claim to be a scientist that did a study and has all the data. | ||
You know, this is clearly not something that's being studied. | ||
This is clearly not something that's being researched. | ||
And it's not being researched for political reasons. | ||
There's an enormous push for this vaccine in government and from the pharmaceutical companies and from the medical industry. | ||
And so this is something that simply isn't being talked about. | ||
The adverse reactions to the vaccines is something that nobody was really even interested in when the vaccine was being rolled out or even later. | ||
And understand that there were real objections to the vaccine from the medical community in late 2021 The FDA and the CDC both rejected a booster shot for the general population. | ||
And those are doctors, those are epidemiologists, those were the so-called experts on the board of the FDA and the CDC in late 2021 after the initial vaccine rollout. | ||
They all voted nearly unanimously, threatening to resign if their vote was not counted. | ||
That a booster shot should not be recommended for the general population. | ||
And both the CDC and the FDA boards were overridden by the head of the CDC. | ||
And they got their emergency authorization, not just for the elderly and the people with the compromised immune system, but anybody with a vocational risk, which is everybody. | ||
So even the medical experts, even the doctors and the public policy experts in the government bodies, even in the advisory bodies, The FDA and the CDC, they all voted against a third shot. | ||
And the reason they voted against the third shot is because they said we don't know that the benefits outweigh the cost. | ||
Now what's the... Okay, so what does that mean? | ||
It means that the purpose of the vaccine is to provide immunity from COVID. | ||
And so there's only a benefit to the vaccine insofar as there is a significant risk posed by contracting COVID. | ||
Otherwise, immunity Whether it's good or bad against COVID is really immaterial if the risk posed by COVID is not great, which it wasn't in young people. | ||
Young people are not dying or being hospitalized from COVID in large numbers. | ||
And so receiving an immunity, whether you agree that the vaccine was very effective or not very effective, whether the immunity from the vaccine was inferior to the natural immunity or not, Whether or not the vaccine immunity in some ways suppress the natural immunity, it's immaterial. | ||
It could have been very good. | ||
But the point is, if it's not really such a benefit to even be immune from a disease that's not deadly, then the benefit is really nullified. | ||
So then if they say, well the benefits don't outweigh the risks, this begs the question, what then are the risks? | ||
And what they found last year, in August, is that for particularly adolescents, it seemed that the younger the person was who was inoculated, the more likely they were to be hospitalized from the vaccine. | ||
And so you had these studies coming out, data coming out last August and September that showed that adolescents aged 13 to 21 were more likely to be hospitalized from the vaccine than they were from COVID itself. | ||
And so, this tells us something about the policy decision and the health decision that's being made, which is not so cut and dry as, it's a vaccine! | ||
How could that possibly be bad? | ||
It keeps you from getting sick. | ||
Well, it's a little bit more complicated. | ||
The vaccine comes with risks itself. | ||
It's a potent, experimental vaccine. | ||
It's technology that hasn't been tried. | ||
And it's a large dose of it. | ||
And it's clearly overwhelming for young people. | ||
And it is hospitalizing them with adverse reactions. | ||
On the contrary, the immunity it provides, to the extent that it is even good immunity, is not really a benefit if young people aren't getting sick, and when they are, it's not severe. | ||
And anyway, so the point is, all of this is to say, We must acknowledge there was immense pressure coming from the pharmaceutical companies that sell the vaccine, coming from the government which set a public policy goal of getting people vaccinated. | ||
Why? | ||
Because if people were vaccinated, that allowed the government to send them back to work. | ||
To do what? | ||
Continue collecting tax revenue. | ||
Keep the businesses going. | ||
The economy was almost destroyed because of the shutdown. | ||
You think the corporations were okay with that? | ||
They weren't. | ||
The government and the businesses, they wanted everything to get back going and they needed the vaccine in order to do that. | ||
That was a public policy goal, in my opinion, in retrospect, I think that's what this was, is that they wanted everyone, they wanted to rush out a vaccine, maybe they even believed it was efficacious, so that they could send people back to work, and if they died, they died. | ||
But that was a way to get people out there, that was a way to, you know, who knows, that was a way to get everything going again. | ||
Some might contend with that. | ||
For the purpose of this is not really important, you know, the why. | ||
The point is that there was this immense pressure from the government, from the pharmaceutical companies, from the major corporations. | ||
They wanted everyone to get vaccinated. | ||
And so they weren't interested in this conversation about weighing the pros and the cons, weighing the risks with the possible benefits. | ||
They weren't interested in studying the risks, studying the adverse reactions. | ||
And of course anybody that did talk about this, well what happened to them? | ||
They got censored. | ||
They got shut down. | ||
They were banned from Twitter. | ||
Doctors, people that weren't even political. | ||
Their organizations were banned. | ||
The footage of them going to town halls were banned. | ||
People that didn't get the vaccine were fired. | ||
And so you've got this situation where This is a major thing that just happened. | ||
This is not insignificant. | ||
This is a big deal. | ||
Billions of people just got an mRNA vaccine. | ||
mRNA has never been tried before. | ||
It's been experimented on the population. | ||
Billions of people all at once, in high doses, in multiple rounds. | ||
And clearly there's lots of public pressure in favor of this and against anybody that's opposed to it. | ||
Now people are dying. | ||
Now is this to say that I know, that I have access to specialized knowledge about about public health that the experts don't? | ||
No. | ||
But the point is to say there's an open-ended question as to whether or not this is good and that question The investigation of this is clearly being stifled by the institutions. | ||
And then when you see lots of people dying randomly and they have no idea and they attribute it to things which are ridiculous. | ||
Post-pandemic stress disorder, sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
Sudden adult death syndrome? | ||
The syndrome is that someone just died from a heart attack at a young age with no genetic history, no pre-existing condition, perfect health, young, no warning signs. | ||
You're just calling it what it is. | ||
This person died suddenly. | ||
That's not a syndrome. | ||
Something's going on. | ||
Well, what is it? | ||
I'm open to other explanations. | ||
I'm open to... Who knows? | ||
Maybe it's the... Maybe it's the Havana, you know, sound weapon. | ||
Maybe it's... Maybe it's some kind of intelligence weapon. | ||
Maybe it's radiation from the sun. | ||
You know, who knows? | ||
But, it's hard not to say, gee, Here's a vaccine that is reported to cause cardiovascular damage. | ||
The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was pulled off the shelves for this reason. | ||
They're recommending people don't get it because there's such a high rate of complication. | ||
AstraZeneca, which is another one, same thing. | ||
They wouldn't even give it approval in the United States. | ||
Wouldn't give it approval in Canada and the United Kingdom because of the Adverse reactions. | ||
They said they wouldn't give boosters initially to the general population because they couldn't prove that the benefit outweighed the adverse reactions, which were more frequent than they previously thought. | ||
Now you've got young people spontaneously dying from cardiovascular episodes. | ||
Are we not supposed to ask that question? | ||
And if we do, it will show us the evidence. | ||
No one's researching it because the multi-multi-billion dollar pharmaceutical industry obviously has vested interest in not answering that question. | ||
And same with the government and the media and social media, which are all in bed together. | ||
And I think about this because I talked to Destiny about it last week. | ||
I was on Destiny's stream and we talked about how Justin Bieber has his face paralyzed and Hailey Bieber had a blood clot earlier this year. | ||
So two perfectly healthy young people with the best health care available Now I have these very weird issues. | ||
Blood clot and facial paralysis. | ||
Both of them. | ||
No pre-existing conditions. | ||
Again, young, healthy, fit, best healthcare money can buy. | ||
And one has his face paralyzed and the other has a blood clot. | ||
And he goes, oh you think that's because of the vaccine? | ||
Well don't you think that if the vaccine were deadly, lots of people would be having... Yeah, well it turns out that lots of people are. | ||
Lots of people are dying and lots of people are having heart attacks and Soccer players are dropping like flies, and 30-year-olds are dying in their sleep from heart attacks, and semen is less potent, and miscarriages are up, and women are having fertility issues. | ||
All of this is on the rise. | ||
And then they hand wave that away and say, oh well you can't prove that. | ||
Okay, well I don't think anyone's even looking into it, which is part of the problem. | ||
I'm open to other explanations, but even the doctors say we extensively investigate this and we literally have no idea. | ||
The only thing they all have in common is it's all cardiovascular. | ||
Well, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see what's going on here. | ||
Okay, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to look at the big picture and zoom out and say, you know, I don't need a paper to give me a hunch. | ||
I don't need a research paper to give me a hunch about what's really going on here. | ||
Which has happened before, by the way, in the history of humanity. | ||
It's happened with cigarettes. | ||
It's happened with thalidomide. | ||
It's happened with asbestos. | ||
People act like these kinds of things have never happened before. | ||
They're like, you really believe? | ||
You really believe that that everyone is doing something that is adverse to their health and the negative side effects are being covered up because of pressure from big money and industry and the government? | ||
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Huh! | |
That's ridiculous! | ||
That could never happen! | ||
That sounds crazy! | ||
Oh really? | ||
And that's why people used asbestos in construction for decades and that's why And that's why you see commercials at 3 a.m. | ||
every night for, if you or a loved one has mesothelioma from X, Y, and Z, you're entitled to compensation. | ||
This happens all the time. | ||
All the time. | ||
This happens with regularity. | ||
And even with over-the-counter stuff. | ||
People are discovering that over-the-counter medications have adverse side effects causing mental problems. | ||
In fact, it's really more like the opposite. | ||
It's sort of like that diagram of these are all the airplanes that came back from the battlefield and this is where the bullet holes were. | ||
It's like, look at all the drugs that are out there. | ||
I would say it's really more like probably most of the things they're putting out are adverse. | ||
Probably most of the drugs, over-the-counter, prescription. | ||
I would say that most of the treatments, what they're putting in the food... Like, are you kidding me? | ||
The idea that this is like something totally alien? | ||
How about microplastics? | ||
How about birth control? | ||
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How about... How much time do you have? | |
Seed oils and lots of stuff that just simply cannot be good for a human being. | ||
The standards for creating food in America compared to what they have in Europe. | ||
40% of the American population is obese. | ||
We're supposed to say it's completely crazy that pressure from government and money would sort of subvert our health. | ||
If anything, this is the rule, not the exception. | ||
So, anyway, I just don't, I don't know how, I don't know how people can be so foolish, but you know, I guess some people, it's their sort of willingness to believe. | ||
That's what I just can't get over. | ||
That's what I've been thinking about for years and years and years, is this fundamental willingness to believe. | ||
I can't wrap my head around it. | ||
Maybe I haven't read the right book yet, but... You know, how do you get these Destiny? | ||
Because they're such a quandary to me. | ||
They're such a puzzle. | ||
Because by all... Well, they're really not as smart as they think they are. | ||
I hate to say that because I like Destiny and we're becoming BFFs and all that. | ||
And he's a smart guy. | ||
But I don't think they're as smart as they think they are. | ||
I don't think they're wise. | ||
I think they're maybe smart, I think they've got a lot of processing power there, but they're just missing these things that are like... I'll never forget, I was talking to Destiny, and I was telling them Nikki Haley, she's the governor of South Carolina, she becomes the UN ambassador under Trump, and then she goes on the board of Boeing. | ||
And I said, how is that not evidence of corruption? | ||
What does she know about airplanes? | ||
That is just one obvious example of the revolving door. | ||
Which is to say that people get into this DC industry and they'll be on both sides of lobbying and then on the side of the lobbied. | ||
They'll go into Congress And they will be paid by lobbyists to write certain bills and then they'll retire and the companies that they benefit will then pay them a big salary so they can retire on the board or in the intermediary when they're between one office and the next and that's like an obvious example of Quid pro quo and pay to play. | ||
Boeing is not giving Nikki Haley a seat on their board because she's like a genius with airplanes. | ||
They're giving her a seat on the board because they know that she's a national name and she may run for president and when she becomes president, or if she becomes president, she'll repay the favor, right? | ||
Or she'll use her connections and whatever. | ||
And that's really, she should be working for the public, not for Boeing. | ||
And I'm explaining this to Destiny, who doesn't even know about this, and he's like, oh, well, maybe she just, did you ever think that she just knows a lot about the government, and they're hiring her for her expertise, and this is, like, totally healthy, and this is how it's supposed to work? | ||
And I'm like, what? | ||
Like, how naive can you be, man? | ||
Like, what do you think, who do you think runs our government? | ||
You think our government is run by angels? | ||
Like, And so you go from one thing to the other between the election and the Vax and 9-11 and all of it and these people are just like... They're like just not getting it, man. | ||
And I don't get it. | ||
I don't know how. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
I don't understand this willingness to, this faith that they have in the society. | ||
I don't know where it comes from. | ||
Is it they watch too much TV? | ||
Is it mind darkened by sin turned away from God? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Fine. | ||
You know, and even with this vaccine, I'm like, yeah, don't you think it's a little weird that Justin Bieber and the wife... Nope! | ||
This is totally normal. | ||
Seriously? | ||
Like what the f... You don't even have a doubt in your mind? | ||
I just trust the companies. | ||
I just trust the companies. | ||
The companies know what's right for me. | ||
The companies? | ||
And the CIA? | ||
Seriously? | ||
I don't know if that sounds crazy or not, but that's how I've been feeling lately. | ||
So anyway, that's sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
If you don't get it by now, what is it going to take, man? | ||
These people are dropping like flies. | ||
They got vaccinated and now they're dying suddenly overnight. | ||
Like, they got everybody vaccinated and now everyone's like suddenly dying. | ||
Such to the extent that they're calling it sudden adult death syndrome. | ||
Hey, you're gonna die suddenly overnight for no reason after you got vaccinated. | ||
Okay. | ||
Anyway, so that's that. | ||
But let's get into our featured story. | ||
We're an hour and ten minutes in. | ||
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Sheesh, and we haven't even started our super chats. | |
We're an hour and ten in, and we still have our featured story. | ||
Let me take a, let me take a sip of this SanPel to charge me up here. | ||
here is going to be a long show so let you know indulge me for a moment I'm still so hungry too I I had, like, half a burger this afternoon at, like, one o'clock, so I haven't eaten in, like, nine hours, and I barely ate, because I just woke up. | ||
Or, no, I actually didn't sleep all night. | ||
I was reading Peter Thiel's essay. | ||
Really good, actually. | ||
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Really interesting. | |
I was doing a lot of writing. | ||
I couldn't sleep last night. | ||
I went to bed early. | ||
Slept 3 hours. | ||
Woke up at 3. | ||
Literally could not fall back asleep. | ||
Just wasn't happening. | ||
So I got out of bed. | ||
I read for like 10 hours. | ||
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9 hours. | |
Something like that. | ||
Went out to lunch. | ||
I ate like half a burger. | ||
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And now I'm starving. | |
Now I'm an hour and 10 into the show and I'm ravenous. | ||
So you're gonna pay for that in the Super Chats. | ||
You're all gonna pay. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Alright. | ||
This is our last story. | ||
This is our featured story. | ||
Julian Assange extradited to the United States. | ||
Probably to be tortured and killed. | ||
And I'll just read you the summary. | ||
I don't really have the energy to give you the whole deal. | ||
This is from... Guardian? | ||
I forget which source I clipped for this one. | ||
It says quote, Julian Assange is another step closer to trial in the United States where he faces 18 federal accounts related to his publishing. | ||
Of classified diplomatic cables and sensitive military reports from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. | ||
On Friday, the British government formally ordered the Wikileaks founder to be extradited, but Assange has two weeks to appeal that order from the United Kingdom's Home Office. | ||
UK authorities arrested Assange in April of 2019. | ||
As the U.S. | ||
unsealed an indictment accusing him of a criminal conspiracy, resulting in one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States. | ||
A federal grand jury indicted Assange in the Eastern District of Virginia. | ||
If he loses his appeal and is extradited, his first court appearance would be in the Albert Bryan Courthouse. | ||
Blah blah outside of Washington. | ||
Assange, if indicted, could face up to 10 years in prison for each of the 18 most serious felony counts against him. | ||
Although the Justice Department notes that actual sentences for federal crimes are typically less than the maximum penalties. | ||
If Assange is extradited, he faces 18 charges under the Espionage Act and 175 years imprisonment for publishing what the American government and the British courts acknowledged was true information exposing U.S. | ||
foreign policy. | ||
The American government charges against him cover WikiLeaks' 2010 and 2011 publication of the U.S. | ||
Army's Iraq and Afghan war logs, its Guantanamo Bay detainee files, and 250,000 diplomatic cables. | ||
The Afghan war logs detailed atrocities that had never seen the light of day from NATO bombings of school buses and weddings to the existence of a US hit squad tasked with assassinating opponents of the occupation. | ||
The Iraq war logs recorded the deaths of 109,000 Iraqis, 66,000 of them described by the US Army as civilians. | ||
15,000 of those murdered would have left no trace in history but for Assange, because their killings had been completely covered up by the United States and its allies. | ||
American soldiers gunning down civilians at military checkpoints, their contractors opening fire in crowded markets, the torture of thousands of detainees by the U.S. | ||
puppet government were all registered in the logs as the norm, not the exception. | ||
The Guantanamo Bay detainee files expose the global dragnet of the war on terror. | ||
The files show that those being subjected to the most horrific forms of incarceration were overwhelmingly innocent civilians. | ||
An 89-year-old Afghan farmer with dementia was one. | ||
A 14-year-old boy was another. | ||
The diplomatic cables revealed that the illegality of the wars was standard operating procedure for U.S. | ||
imperialism all over the world. | ||
In their pages was proof of U.S. | ||
sponsorship of innumerable dictatorships, the plotting of coups, cultivation of agents and governments, friendly and hostile alike, and spying on U.N. | ||
officials. | ||
All the revelations were summed up in the collateral murder video. | ||
So if you don't know, this is Julian Assange. | ||
This is what he's about. | ||
gleefully gunning down a crowd of Iraqi civilians and two Reuters journalists. | ||
No other video in recent decades has played such a role in activating the mass anti-war sentiment that exists among workers and young people." So if you don't know, this is Julian Assange, this is what he's about. | ||
And it's interesting because, in case you're not familiar with how this all works together, So these were, in particular, the Bradley Manning files. | ||
Chelsea Manning. | ||
Bradley Manning. | ||
Bradley Manning was someone working in the US government who was facilitating all these documents being passed to WikiLeaks. | ||
Julian Assange, I believe, is Australian-based. | ||
WikiLeaks is his company. | ||
And so WikiLeaks was working with Bradley Manning, who was inside the military, to facilitate the publication of these classified documents. | ||
Bradley Manning goes to jail, becomes trans, comes out a liberal tranny. | ||
This is what they do to dissidents. | ||
They made an example out of him. | ||
Turned him into a transsexual. | ||
And so there's these 18 charges against Assange for these releases that came out in 2010-2012, the Bradley Manning releases. | ||
This doesn't even include the things that he, that Edward Snowden passed to him. | ||
WikiLeaks published the leaks. | ||
From Edward Snowden who was working for the NSA. | ||
Edward Snowden who's now a fugitive in Russia. | ||
And it was sort of a trick that Edward Snowden was able to escape the clutches of the U.S. | ||
government. | ||
He wound up in Hong Kong and there was this very tense and tenuous situation where he was able to get a flight to Russia and then get political asylum there. | ||
And the U.S. | ||
government can't kill him there and they can't extradite him there. | ||
But this doesn't even include The charges against Assange for WikiLeaks involvement with Snowden. | ||
This doesn't include WikiLeaks involvement in the 2016 election and leaking the information from the DNC. | ||
This is only from the Bradley Manning stuff. | ||
And anyway, this really turns the whole story on its head. | ||
This is the kind of thing where there's layers to this. | ||
Julian Assange and others say that this is about freedom of the press and this is about exposing imperialism and so on. | ||
My controversial position on this is that war crimes are wrong. | ||
Some of the things that we do are wrong. | ||
But sometimes doing wrong things is necessary as a federal government and the line between what is right and what is wrong is often blurred when it concerns matters of state. | ||
When you're talking about war, when you're talking about intelligence. | ||
And so, I don't know that I necessarily take this position that we're these bleeding-heart liberals that are against, you know, civilian casualties, because when you're in any kind of a war, these things happen. | ||
And you can conduct a war as humanely as possible, and you'll still get these things, because you know what happens? | ||
You send people into a war, And they're getting bombed, and they're getting shot at, and they're away from their home, and their people are dying. | ||
And yeah, sometimes they go into a village and they kill a bunch of people for no reason. | ||
And that's horrible, and it doesn't make it right, but these are things that happen in the course of a war. | ||
It doesn't make it right, but it also doesn't mean that we can't fight wars. | ||
It also doesn't mean that that indicts an entire nation, or entire government actually. | ||
These are things that happen. | ||
And yeah, sometimes the line is blurred when you're talking about the kind of conflict. | ||
When you're talking about the counterinsurgency in Iraq, the line between a so-called activist and maybe an opposition leader is blurred. | ||
Anyway, so these are complicated affairs and the edge cases are sort of important. | ||
And Schmidt talks about this and political philosophers have talked about this. | ||
It's not so cut and dry as it is. | ||
Me murdering my neighbor is not the same thing as a war crime happening in a war. | ||
It's not the same. | ||
That's what I mean to say here. | ||
And I will also say that it's not tenable for an American government to countenance whistleblowers. | ||
To some extent, the government has to punish whistleblowers. | ||
It's a deterrent. | ||
How else can you have secrecy? | ||
You can't really have a foreign policy. | ||
You can't have a military doctrine. | ||
If you have people in the military betraying and leaking, and yeah, some of the stuff it's nice to know as the American public, but other things, it gives ammunition to the enemies of the United States, which is an existential matter. | ||
So, you know, you can't make a policy. | ||
What's the policy where you allow whistleblowers but you don't have people betraying the government constantly and giving up things that do damage America, you know? | ||
So, in principle, in principle, As a matter of principle, I can't really say that I'm in favor of total whistleblowing and leaking, and this should be able to go unpunished and everything, because that sets a terrible precedent. | ||
If Assange is pardoned, if all these people get pardoned, then it's like open season. | ||
I guess people can leak anything and there's no consequences, and then the government can have no secrets, and some might say that's such a triumph for transparency. | ||
But on some level, a government requires some level of secrecy to function. | ||
A society is in some sense built on secrecy and uncomfortable truths about how we have order. | ||
So I don't know that I'm necessarily in favor of this liberal disposition that We need to know everything and we need a totally free press so people can betray the government and not get punished. | ||
And I also don't know how on board I am with this idea that, oh, America's an imperialist evil country because they bombed a wedding or something. | ||
I mean, not to be glib about it, but it's a war. | ||
It's a war. | ||
It's not Candyland. | ||
We're not talking about whatever. | ||
It's a war. | ||
All of that being said, I support Assange insofar as he is destroying the regime. | ||
Insofar as Assange is betraying this government, I support him. | ||
Insofar as Assange is exposing these people fighting this war in this time, I support it. | ||
In terms of the means, I don't really care about the means. | ||
I may, in principle, be opposed to these things. | ||
It's not a principle of good governance to pardon traitors. | ||
And by definition, that's what he is. | ||
He betrayed the confidence of the government. | ||
He betrayed... I mean, by definition, that's what it is. | ||
And you can't countenance that as a matter of principle. | ||
But as a matter of fact, because of the particularities of the situation, obviously I support it because it's to our advantage that our regime is discredited and delegitimized. | ||
And so I support it for that reason because it undermines Clinton, and it undermines the national security apparatus, and the NSA, and the Democratic Party, and the Pentagon, all of which are controlled by personnel who hate us and want to kill us and must be displaced in their roles by patriots. | ||
What's more, there is also something to be said about how this undermines the credibility not just of these institutions, but of the dogmatic liberal hegemony. | ||
So much of what we're hearing about Ukraine and Russia is about this moral high ground that the United States has. | ||
When we talk about Ukraine, It's not about strategy, and it's not about war, and we're not thinking about it pragmatically. | ||
What we're being told is that this is an evil dictator who's using completely brutal, primitive means of achieving what he wants, which is war. | ||
He's killing, and there's war crimes and all this, and the forces of good, the forces of democracy and human rights, rally together in the face of total evil to put down the murderers And it's on the basis of this moral high ground that we're condemning Russia, that the invasion is barbaric, that Putin's a war criminal and a dictator and so on. | ||
That's the basis of the foreign policy. | ||
That's the basis of our sort of stature. | ||
That's the basis of our posture towards the world. | ||
And things like this remind you that that's all crap. | ||
That is all a load of crap. | ||
Everything that Russia is doing in Ukraine, we did it 10 times worse than Iraq. | ||
And that's not whataboutism. | ||
That's not to say, oh, Putin's doing a bad thing, but what about the time we did a bad thing? | ||
It's to say that it's not a bad thing. | ||
That's the point. | ||
It's not to say, oh, Putin's doing something that we all agree is wrong and evil, but hey, sometimes we do evil things too, because the answer would be something like, well, two wrongs don't make a right. | ||
And, you know, we can be imperfect and still strive to be better and condemn those that are not. | ||
But that's not what I'm saying. | ||
I'm not saying, what about the time America did something evil? | ||
I'm saying this is how states behave. | ||
I'm saying that actually America did it and Russia does it and actually it's not wrong. | ||
And it shows that it's not wrong. | ||
Don't tell me what the United States says, tell me what the United States does. | ||
And by the United States actions, it acts as though these things are not 19th century anachronistic brutality, but actually these are simply These are the behaviors of a modern state. | ||
It doesn't matter the year. | ||
It doesn't matter the technique. | ||
It doesn't matter any of that. | ||
These are the means. | ||
These are the behaviors of states. | ||
They kill. | ||
They make war. | ||
They're in sort of a constant state of conflict or conflict being held in balance or in check. | ||
And sometimes there is violence. | ||
And when there is violence, it doesn't happen in the way that everybody's okay with. | ||
It happens in ugly and brutal and sometimes uncontrollable ways. | ||
And you try to mitigate that and limit that, but it's a war. | ||
We're talking about human beings going out and fighting to the death. | ||
And so yeah, sometimes things happen. | ||
Not to minimize it, not to excuse it, But it's what it is. | ||
And so the point is not to say, well, when I talk about Assange, the point is not to say, we need total transparency in government. | ||
It's not to say, you know, we need to pardon him and all of this. | ||
And it's not to say, well, what about the time America did something evil? | ||
I'm saying that In principle these things are wrong, but in particular, in general these things are wrong, but in particular this is good. | ||
And I'm saying that this undermines American credibility and exposes the sham of our soft power in the world, which is our so-called moral high ground, our moral credibility, that we condemn Russia not on the basis of strategy or on the that we condemn Russia not on the basis of strategy or on the basis of the behavior of states and the conduct of how states should behave, but on the basis of this impossible standard that, you know, states don't make wars and states don't spy on people you know, | ||
Example, you know, we're going to go out and condemn Russia and say, you know, they interfere in our elections. | ||
This is so evil. | ||
And it has been demonstrated for over a century that America meddles in other countries' elections. | ||
We're going to talk about war crimes in Ukraine. | ||
We've been committing war crimes in countries for decades. | ||
In Korea, in Vietnam, in Nicaragua, in Africa, in the Middle East, all over Central America. | ||
This has been norm uninterrupted for decades. | ||
We're going to condemn Russia because they spy on everything that we condemn Russia for we're doing. | ||
And it's not to say, what about the time we did it? | ||
It's to say, this is how states behave. | ||
So let's change the conversation. | ||
Do we need to go to war with Russia because they're the bad guys? | ||
No. | ||
Because if they're bad guys, then we're bad guys. | ||
So if we're going to war with Russia because they're bad guys, we need to destroy ourselves too. | ||
So if we're not going to war with them because they're bad guys, why are we going to war with them? | ||
That's an interesting question. | ||
If we're not going to war with them because of democracy and human rights and evil, then what are we really going to war with them for? | ||
Is it because of the... | ||
Holdover Jews in the State Department and Defense Department that hate Russia? | ||
Is it because there's a Defense Department doctrine about preventing a rival power from emerging? | ||
Is it about the Eurasian landmass? | ||
I mean, what is it? | ||
You know, what's really the doctrine? | ||
And then we can have a debate about what's best for America's interest, not what's the nicest Candyland way to be and be the nicest guy in town and Candy Cane and Penny Lane and Sweetie Pie and who's gonna win the popularity contest. | ||
The question is, What's in our interest? | ||
What's good for the world? | ||
What's reasonable and fair for people of the world based on the power projection capabilities and what we can expect from the decision makers in the capitals? | ||
That's the conversation. | ||
And that's what this kind of stuff helps to expose. | ||
It's all a big lie that a lot of people really believe. | ||
A lot of these libtards are out there putting Ukrainian flags on their porch because they really believe that like, you know, Putin's this Hitler-like figure and America's the good guys. | ||
And it's not like that. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
So, Trump should have pardoned Julian Assange, not because that's good policy necessarily for a state, but because that would have been a huge middle finger to the regime and that would have damaged the regime in a big way. | ||
But he didn't do that, and now Julian Assange will be extradited to the United States, and he will be probably tortured, imprisoned, and maybe killed. | ||
And that will be to send a message to any would-be leakers or any real opponents of the regime that if you damage the United States' foreign policy, they'll kill you. | ||
They'll literally drag you down to the ends of the earth and kill you. | ||
And maybe that would be a good thing if we had a good government, but we have a bad government. | ||
That's very bad, actually. | ||
And that shows that there's such a thing as being too truthful, because then the government will literally just kill you. | ||
And, you know, you'd just be a martyr. | ||
So, pray for Julian Assange. | ||
It's horrible what's happened to him. | ||
He did the right thing, because the empire is evil, and he betrayed an evil empire. | ||
So it was justified. | ||
I can't countenance that in principle. | ||
I'm not a bleeding heart liberal like he is. | ||
unidentified
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But... | |
He did something that helped our cause and for that we should be supporting him. | ||
That should be the kind of thing that we're rallying around. | ||
Trump should have pardoned Assange if not for any other reason than we're paying favors to and incentivizing more regime dissidents, more regime class traitors, regime traitors, which is what we want. | ||
And we want that kind of information to come out and that is part of the kind of Soft revolution that's happening against the credibility of the state, which is a big part of their authority. | ||
So that's Assange. | ||
That's what's going on there. | ||
I would love to talk to Destiny about this. | ||
I don't know if he watches my show or if his fans watch the show, but if anybody can get in touch with him, maybe I'll hit him up on Discord. | ||
I would love to talk with him about this because I'd be very curious in light of our debate about Ukraine because we got into this a little bit, but you know, what does he think about The stuff that's being put out by Assange and him being extradited and all this. | ||
And how then do you go and say Russia's evil and talk about maternity wards being bombed if the United States does the same thing? | ||
You know, that just becomes a moot point. | ||
So I'd be curious what he has to say about this. | ||
Because this is the difference in the worldview. | ||
We believe that the government's full of people that do what they must to retain power, and they believe that it works the way it does that you're taught in social studies class. | ||
I don't know how a grown adult could be that foolish about how the world actually is. | ||
Anyway, that's all I have to say about it. | ||
That's Assange! | ||
And we're 90 minutes in. | ||
So, I want to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our Super Chats and we'll see what you have to say about all this. | ||
Curious to see. | ||
unidentified
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And we're back! | |
Another Monday, another day of reading Super Chats. | ||
I love it. | ||
I love that. | ||
I love that about this, as I get to read Super Chats. | ||
Woohoo! | ||
Let's go! | ||
So let's pull these up and we'll see what we got. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
game. | ||
*ding* Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent three dollars. | ||
Hey friend. | ||
Day 49. | ||
Flew on a plane again recently. | ||
Still can't see the curve from up there. | ||
I'm getting suspicious. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, very funny. | |
Very true. | ||
unidentified
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It's a duplicate. | |
Alright. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, that was awesome. | |
He's doing really well, honestly. | ||
I really liked his most recent speech at, was it the Texas convention? | ||
I thought he did an excellent speech. | ||
Not just that, but his stuff about the trannies and Um, the whole speech was very good. | ||
I'm sick of it, too. | ||
I'm sick of these, uh... They're in such a hurry to kiss liberals' ass who agree with us on a handful of things. | ||
Nathaniel Westerman sent $3.00. | ||
Blacks. | ||
unidentified
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Real. | |
D.R. | ||
Dat sent $10.00. | ||
Nicolas Fuentes is the American Caesar. | ||
Very true. | ||
Yeah, well, we'll see about that. | ||
Cardarelli sent $10. | ||
First time I watched was day after Ben Shapiro walked out on that BBC interview. | ||
You gesticulated with a mug in your hand and it startled me because I thought liquid would fly out. | ||
Hooked ever since. | ||
Congrats on 1,000 episodes. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you! | |
Yeah, I remember that. | ||
When he flipped out. | ||
That was the only time he's ever really lost his cool in a big way. | ||
unidentified
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That was funny. | |
Justin sent $5. | ||
Ever feel like Truman Burbank? | ||
Yeah, I do actually, all the time. | ||
It's one of those things. | ||
Let's go, yeah. | ||
I think it was probably... it was after AfPak 3. | ||
unidentified
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Let's go, yeah. - Spinefish sent $3. | |
When did you tell Jaden that you didn't want him moving down to Florida with you? - I think it was probably, it was after AFPAC 3. | ||
I think it was, or maybe it was before. | ||
It was around that time. | ||
Because, you know, I was thinking about moving to Georgia, actually. | ||
And so, uh, I remember telling him, I'm like, you gotta move out. | ||
Cause, I'm moving out, and, you know, I'm not gonna have you, like, living in my building rent-free when I'm not even gonna be in Chicago. | ||
So you gotta move out. | ||
unidentified
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And he says, well, where are we going? | |
And I was like, well, I don't know. | ||
Maybe Florida, maybe Georgia. | ||
And he's like, what? | ||
I thought we were moving to Florida. | ||
unidentified
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I'm like, I don't know. | |
But you figure it out. | ||
That's how you tell that was heartbreaking to him. | ||
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
Dear Nick, you've said that you didn't like the Coloring Book album yet you played All We Got in the background of a commentary stream on February 11, 2020. | ||
Yeah, because Kanye is on there. | ||
I like some of the songs on the album. | ||
But, uh, the album overall is gay, and the songs that I do like are Guilty Pleasures. | ||
Who's listening to Coloring Book in 2022? | ||
Nobody. | ||
What are even the hits? | ||
No Problems? | ||
With Two Chains? | ||
unidentified
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That song sucks. | |
Summer Friends? | ||
Uh, you know, All Night? | ||
Jukebox Jams or whatever? | ||
Nah, it's a different song. | ||
Uh, Same Drugs? | ||
Who's listening to same drugs in 2022? | ||
unidentified
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So, the album's shit. | |
But that's a Kanye song, and I like Kanye on there. | ||
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
Joel and Tisya, Om. | ||
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
Difficult times reveal a man's true character. | ||
Loyalty is the bedrock of everything we do. | ||
Well said! | ||
Nick has always had my back and I'll always have his. | ||
unidentified
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Well said! | |
America first forever. | ||
unidentified
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Well said! | |
Yeah, yeah, go figure. | ||
Go figure! | ||
Until a 5 out of 10 DMs you on Instagram first and then all bets are off. | ||
unidentified
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You know. | |
I'll always have your back unless she texts you about your Italian beef. | ||
Unless she texts you about your big Italian beef before you fall in love with her! | ||
You know, then you're going to turn into a seething ex-bitch. | ||
Then you're going to turn into a seething bitch for months. | ||
unidentified
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That is what it is. | |
Well, you can control what you do, but if people want to be spiteful losers, that's their prerogative. | ||
But I'm doing my thing, and everybody will be dealt with in their own special way. | ||
But, you know, aside from that, life is really about how you choose to respond to things, and you gotta choose what you care about, you know, and what you're gonna do. | ||
unidentified
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Oh yeah, I love that one. | |
Loyalty is the bedrock of everything we do and it has always had my back and I'll always have his America. | ||
Yeah, yeah, there are a lot of things said like that that didn't really exactly pan out. | ||
unidentified
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So, yeah, gotta love it. | |
That's, that's politics. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what it is. | |
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
What years were you at your high school radio station? | ||
2012 until 2016. | ||
I had a show almost every semester except for one. | ||
I had a show every semester I was in high school except for one. | ||
I think my junior year, junior-sophomore year. | ||
But I had a show every year. | ||
I think I started out... I want to say my first slot my freshman year was Thursday 5 to 7. | ||
And then I was on the freshman show which is I think on Sunday night at like 9 to 10, or maybe it was Monday, something like that. | ||
But I was sort of all over the week over the course of my years there. | ||
2012 to 2016, I had a shell. | ||
And I had a couple co-hosts. | ||
My first co-host, his name was Aiden. | ||
unidentified
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Ah, those good times. | |
My first co-host, he's the one that got me into it. | ||
He was my best friend in middle school. | ||
He was kind of a silly guy. | ||
But he was my best buddy in middle school. | ||
I was in the stage crew. | ||
He was in the play. | ||
And then he joined stage crew. | ||
And we used to play cards. | ||
We used to gamble. | ||
We used to hang out. | ||
We were kind of in the same neighborhood and then he got really into radio freshman year and he invited me to be his co-host and we did a show and he was like a total dick like he would mute my mic and he would condescend to me because I was the obviously better broadcaster and but he wanted radio to be his thing you know and so he would constantly Every time I tried to shine, he would just like put me down, and one time I just called him on the carpet. | ||
I was like, hey, don't you fucking mute my microphone. | ||
We went on a, we did a, we did like a break, and we were kind of joking around. | ||
He muted my, he's like, I don't mute his microphone, because he was sitting in the big chair, because it was technically his show, and I was sort of in the cockpit, or the, what do you call it, the passenger seat. | ||
I was riding shotgun, And so we do that and I'm just sitting there seething and then we go to the music break and I was like, hey, I got like, I got real pissed. | ||
I was like, hey! | ||
I was like, don't you mute my fucking microphone, I'll walk out of here right now, I won't do this show anymore, I'll go to whoever, whatever. | ||
But I lost it. | ||
Because it was just the constant disrespect, you know, there's people in your life, hey, recent events show, there are people in your life that, and you can't tolerate this, there are people in your life that will see you shining, and they will want to knock you down a peg. | ||
And they'll do this in very subtle ways, they'll They'll say things that are sort of like passive-aggressive. | ||
They'll make these sort of like veiled attacks. | ||
You can't tolerate that. | ||
You can't let that get in your head because... | ||
That's been my entire life, because I'm a star. | ||
I'm a star. | ||
How can I not shine? | ||
I go in these areas, and I like to celebrate everybody's victories, and I like to be a team player. | ||
And some people see you shining. | ||
They'll see you being a great, they'll be you doing the best you, and then they'll try and throw shade your way and say, oh, it's my job to knock you down a few pegs. | ||
And you can't take that from people. | ||
And so yeah, he was kinda, and so I said, you know what, I'm doing my own show. | ||
So I went out, I tried out on my own thing, and I got my own show. | ||
And then I was able to run it the way I wanted to. | ||
And surprise, surprise, I was like a total rebel. | ||
You know, one time I played Christmas music on my show during like the spring or the fall and everyone got mad at me. | ||
They're like, you, hey, you can't play Christmas music! | ||
So then I did a show the next week and I did all Christmas music because I was like, you can't tell me what to do! | ||
I'll play what I, this is a rock and roll station, fuck you, I'll play whatever I want! | ||
How's that for rock and roll? | ||
And so... | ||
Listen, I'm a rabble rouser. | ||
Ever since I was a young man, I was causing trouble. | ||
You know, because I'm like a person who lives on the edge. | ||
I'm a person who lives on life's edge. | ||
And so things and people that come around me are sort of like crushed by my gravity. | ||
You know, I'm like a black hole in a positive sense, in the sense that I'm super massive. | ||
I'm sort of like the supermassive entity that sort of space and time bends around me. | ||
The rules of reality and things change around me when they come into my orbit because I live on life's edge. | ||
I live on the edge of what it means to be a human being. | ||
I live in a way that is strange and sort of You know, stripped away of the pretense. | ||
And so the things that I do and the things I say and the way that I am, it makes people uncomfortable. | ||
It makes people, it sort of challenges people's fundamental self-conception. | ||
And so that's where things begin to kind of break apart. | ||
They're sort of spaghettified around me. | ||
And it's only the strongest are able to withstand my gravity. | ||
You know, I'm sort of like this super massive black hole at the center of the American right wing and things kind of come into my orbit and some things sort of catch my gravity and they'll sort of whip around and then some things are sort of breaking apart and exploding and some people can't handle it. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
So... | ||
So it's really, it's always been like this. | ||
Oh, Aiden. | ||
Yeah, he was nice enough, but he was kind of like... He was a very mediocre person, and he would punish you for not being mediocre. | ||
He was one of these classic people. | ||
Very feminine energy. | ||
You know, there's like... I know my friends, because I'll say something weird to them, and they're like, I relate to that. | ||
Or they're like, oh, that's funny. | ||
Or they're interested. | ||
And then there's some people where you say you do something weird, and they're like, They give you that look. | ||
unidentified
|
They go... You knew that? | |
Oh my gosh, that's so crazy! | ||
And people like that need to be fucking murdered, okay? | ||
People like that need to get their fucking head cut off. | ||
People like that... I mean, you literally need to, like, get someone bigger than them and grab them and just, like, you know, smash their fucking head against a rock until they die. | ||
It's always that look. | ||
I've gotten that look my entire life. | ||
You know? | ||
Cause I'll say something that's like out of pocket or whatever and then people go, what? | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
You did what? | ||
You said what? | ||
And it's like, will you shut the fuck up? | ||
unidentified
|
Like... | |
And that's women. | ||
Women will give you that face, and effeminate men. | ||
You know, like, I'll tell my friends, I'll be like, you know, yeah, I woke up at like 3 o'clock in the afternoon today. | ||
And they're like, what? | ||
You woke up at 3 o'clock? | ||
Oh my gosh, like, when do you even sleep, bro? | ||
And it's like, you know, well I work at night, okay? | ||
And I'm like nocturnal, okay? | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Oh yeah, I know, it's so crazy. | ||
Sometimes people go to bed later and then they wake up later. | ||
I know it's like a... I know it's an earth-shattering concept for you to wrap your feeble mind around. | ||
You're not doing what everybody else is doing. | ||
What are you, crazy? | ||
Yeah, what if I am? | ||
unidentified
|
What if I am? | |
What if I am totally insane? | ||
So he was one of those kinds of people. | ||
You know, this, like, imperialistic mediocrity. | ||
He loved Dane Cook. | ||
If that tells you anything about a person, he loved Dane Cook. | ||
And, uh... Yeah, we would have to suffer through him watching his Dane Cook special. | ||
This is hilarious! | ||
unidentified
|
No, he's really not. | |
Mick. | ||
He was Irish. | ||
Fucking Mick. | ||
I can say that because I'm Irish, but he loved the Dane Cook specials. | ||
He thought it was so funny. | ||
And then there was this girl who was Jewish. | ||
And that kind of got between us as well. | ||
Which, whatever. | ||
You know, listen. | ||
I wasn't red-pilled. | ||
I was 14, okay? | ||
I wasn't yet red-pilled. | ||
That's some deep lore that I think I've mentioned once or twice on the show, but... | ||
Yeah, that was a contentious thing, because... Whatever. | ||
It's not important. | ||
But anyway... Yeah, so he would always give me grief about that! | ||
unidentified
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And, uh... Not because she was Jewish, but just generally. | |
So anyway... Women, as always. | ||
Yep. | ||
Yeah, I forgot about her. | ||
well so that was my old high school experience so that The old... with the crew! | ||
Yeah, he was such a jag. | ||
He was nice enough though, but... He was like, he was the baby. | ||
I think he was the baby of the family. | ||
So he suffered from like the youngest, youngest child syndrome. | ||
Somebody says, now you have good ol' Kathy Dock Zoo. | ||
Kathy, dude, Kathy Zoo and the Dog Martins, it's not even a joke, alright? | ||
That's the saddest thing is this... It's not even... Don't stop saying that because it's not a joke, alright? | ||
You people have no idea. | ||
unidentified
|
People have no idea. | |
Listen, I'm an eccentric guy. | ||
I'm an eccentric guy. | ||
Do you think that I'm this eccentric genius and you think I'm, like, just a totally normal individual? | ||
Like, how do you think that works? | ||
You think, like, here's a guy who doesn't eat, doesn't sleep, like, has made it his mission to just, like, say the N-word on the internet, like you know full of contradictions etc etc and then people are like oh but other than that that's the thing people really do expect me to be like a normal guy i'm not a normal person what do i have to say i say this all the time and people like can't grasp this | ||
People meet me and they're like, oh, and I said this last week, people like implicitly expect me to be like, to be like very social and muscular and maybe like more muscular than I am or whatever, because I'm really skinny. | ||
People expect me to have like an average composition. | ||
And then they meet me and they're like, what the heck? | ||
He acts like a total autist. | ||
He acts like a total schizoid and he's like rail thin and he's totally weird. | ||
And it's like, well, what did you expect? | ||
Like, is anyone surprised by this? | ||
I mean... Do you think I would have this groundbreaking vision for America first and also be a totally normal dude that... You know, just gets along? | ||
It doesn't work that way, so... Anyway. | ||
Cancel Bruce's average composition. | ||
I'm like wasting away to nothing. | ||
I don't know what's going on, but I'm like... | ||
I don't weigh anything anymore. | ||
I weighed myself the other day. | ||
I do not weigh a lot. | ||
Which I kind of, I'm kind of like, like that in a sense. | ||
Cause it's like, I like extreme. | ||
But I know, I know I gotta get, everyone on Gamer Uprising, he has no excuse. | ||
He needs to get a better diet and start working out and blah, blah, blah. | ||
Yeah, alright. | ||
I'm burdened, okay? | ||
I have a burden. | ||
But yeah, I'm lightweight. | ||
I'm lightweight, I'm agile. | ||
So, yeah, I guess I gotta beef up. | ||
I gotta get beefy. | ||
I gotta get beefy. | ||
Gotta get beefed up. | ||
All these niggas is sus. | ||
They wanted me to get nice and beefy. | ||
They want to fatten me up. | ||
For what exactly? | ||
Sickos. | ||
All these sickos want me to get nice and beefy. | ||
What the hell is that all about? | ||
We want you to live as long as possible? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I guess I do too. | ||
I guess I want to live a long time. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll see. | |
But anyway... Yeah, so how's my radio station? | ||
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
Nick is such an innocent sweetie, I can't believe people are so mean to him. | ||
I know, I am. | ||
I really am such a sweetie pie, but... You know, they're animated by the devil, straight up. | ||
I'm sort of the ultimate sweetie pie, and anyone that attacks me is really just a satanic evildoer, in my opinion. | ||
unidentified
|
So, how could you, how could you hate the ultimate sweetie? | |
You know, I'm the ultimate love monger and people, uh, people, people are mean. | ||
unidentified
|
People are mean to me. | |
But, you know, the thing is my sweetness conquers their hatred. | ||
I'm more sweet than they are evil. | ||
Spinefish sent three dollars. | ||
Grow hyper kickball game. | ||
Awesome, yeah, let's do it. | ||
Boogaloo woogaloo sent $3. | ||
The African reporter who tried to ask Jen Psaki a question on her final day and got shouted down by the press corps, revealed last Friday that he lost stripe processing for his publication. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Good, I'm glad. | ||
Kai Schwemmer sent $5. | ||
I'm so excited for the movie premiere. | ||
Full circle. | ||
First met you in Vegas during the WBS road trip and now I'll see you for the premiere. | ||
These two events alone communicate AF's success. | ||
So true, yeah. | ||
No, it's gonna be good to see you, man. | ||
I'm glad you're coming out for it. | ||
Yeah, I first met you in Vegas. | ||
Good times. | ||
Yeah, I didn't make a very good impression because I was mean. | ||
I was a little bit salty and mean. | ||
But that's just how it goes, I guess. | ||
Yeah, that's the other thing. | ||
Judas was all about the gambling on that trip. | ||
He really was a degenerate. | ||
That's why we weren't clicking, you know? | ||
Because when I met him, he was like, And I'm bringing it up because you reminded me of it. | ||
When I met him, he told me he was like, um, you know, I watched your show and you know, when you said you don't have to drink, you do drugs to have fun, that really meant a lot to me and blah, blah, blah. | ||
And I really thought he was like a kindred spirit. | ||
And then he moves out to Chicago and it's like, he's not a virgin. | ||
He's a fornicator. | ||
He's drinking all the time. | ||
He'd like, he's talking about he wants to try drugs. | ||
Not saying it, but he would say, like, yeah, I'd like to try it once in my life. | ||
Like, maybe if I were on my deathbed, I'd like to try pot or coke or what. | ||
And I'm like, who the fuck are you? | ||
Like, so you lied. | ||
Like, your entire, your entire thing was, like, just a false pretense. | ||
You know, as he turns into this serial simp and fornicator and drinking, you know, every week and getting drunk by himself and every time we go out he has to get drunk and then we go to Vegas and all he wants to do is gamble and I'm like, okay, like this is just not, this is not working out. | ||
This is not working out for me. | ||
So... | ||
I mean what's what's the what is the and I was really questioning I'm like what's even the basis of the friendship because I was trying to like repair that in my mind and I'm like what's the basis for the friendship? | ||
Because I would want to we'd be hanging out in Chicago and I would want to just like order a pizza and game or watch a movie or whatever and he would be like no I want to get drunk I want to go to bars I want to go to parties I want to go and I'm like why like why would you why would you Why would you think that this would be a good fit? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like... | ||
So it's just kind of deteriorating because if one person like wants to drink and talk to girls and simp and have sex and all that and one person is is uh abstinent or celibate and a virgin and is not drinking and is not going to parties you know like those kinds of people can be friends but how can there be any compatibility? | ||
How can there be any compatibility there? | ||
It just doesn't work. | ||
And so, I remember we were in Vegas, and all he wanted to do was gamble, and I'm like, dude, like, stop. | ||
Like, we're not here for that. | ||
We could play a few games or whatever, but he was like, oh, let's go back and play more slots. | ||
Let's go back and play. | ||
I'm like, dude, like, we're not here for that. | ||
Don't blow all your money. | ||
Also, stop getting drunk. | ||
He was just sucking down these, like, vodka slushies and hitting on the waiters and all this kind of thing. | ||
Or waitresses or whatever. | ||
And it's like, dude, Kai remembers. | ||
Kai remembers. | ||
He was there. | ||
unidentified
|
I was like, geez, like, who even are you? | |
I don't even know who you are. | ||
He was talking about he wanted a prostitute to rub his feet. | ||
I owe him that. | ||
He would literally... We got back to the hotel and he was drunk because he was sucking down these vodka slushies one after the other. | ||
And then he goes up and he's like, and he's always, my feet hurt, my feet hurt. | ||
And he was literally like, you think I could get a prostitute to... Just like weird, gross shit all the time. | ||
I was like, what the f... Who even are you, man? | ||
And uh... | ||
We were at the Meme Mansion. | ||
We were at the Meme Mansion and he got totally wasted. | ||
Totally wasted smoking cigarettes. | ||
You know, because he thought that made him look cool. | ||
He was sucking down cigarettes and he got totally wasted. | ||
He was literally running around the house with a bottle of Maker's Mark and probably drank like half of it by himself. | ||
And telling me, oh, I'm talking to this girl. | ||
First of all, he was all over me, which is very weird. | ||
Like, I was in the pool and he kept trying to, like, touch me and kept trying to, like, do weird stuff. | ||
And, um, and telling me, oh, I'm talking to this girl. | ||
I'm horny. | ||
Oh, I got blue balls. | ||
Just weird shit. | ||
And he was, like, wasted. | ||
And that's a big reason why I called John Miller the N-word, because they, honestly, they were all pissing me off. | ||
Trey was carrying on. | ||
John and Jaden were carrying on. | ||
So then, after we leave the White Boy Summer Pool Party in Phoenix, I'm like, what was that all about? | ||
What's going on with you? | ||
And he told me all this weird stuff. | ||
And at that point I was like, so he was simping for Ella Maulding at this point, which I don't know if I've talked about it, like I'm still gonna cover that eventually. | ||
There's some unfinished business to take care of and then I'll probably jump on maybe Weekly Sweat or something, Killstream. | ||
But, so we're on this road trip and the whole time he's simping for Ella Maulding. | ||
Like the entire time. | ||
And then, He, uh, then he's getting drunk everywhere we go. | ||
Everywhere we go he's talking about he has blue balls and all this weird stuff. | ||
And then he's all over me, and basically that night, I'm like, I basically realized, I'm like, we cannot be friends anymore. | ||
And I didn't want that to be the case, because I'm like, this is my bro, this is my guy, like, we've been through a lot together, and I'm thinking like, you know, how are we gonna make this work? | ||
But fundamentally, I'm like, this is just not really working anymore, you know? | ||
Cuz it was like... And also the blue ball comment is gonna have some salience later on. | ||
I talked to Ella Maulding in the past couple weeks, and whoo boy! | ||
Man, oh man. | ||
You guys are in for a treat. | ||
This blue ball thing? | ||
Very, very salient. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah! | |
He's literally talking about his blue balls the entire trip, and how he's texting Ella Maulding the entire time and saying, oh I have blue balls, oh my gosh, like... | ||
unidentified
|
And yeah. | |
So anyway. | ||
So between Vegas and Phoenix and Dallas, I was like, yeah, this isn't gonna work. | ||
This isn't gonna work. | ||
And it seems like there were some lies about Dallas. | ||
We were in Dallas, and you know, he told me one version of the story, and then I heard another version of the story, and jeez! | ||
I mean, come on, man. | ||
It's like... | ||
Now listen, I don't care, but, you know, the guy's gonna go out and air all my dirty laundry and make up all this stuff about me, and it's like, those that live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. | ||
I wanted to keep it professional, you know, I went on my stream and said, look, I think it's because he got a girlfriend, but I'm gonna answer these rebuttals, or I'm gonna rebut the accusations, and that's it. | ||
But he's gonna keep coming back and saying all this stuff. | ||
I don't like to divulge these types of things, but, you know, those that live in blue-balled houses should not be, you know, They shouldn't be throwing rocks at other people. | ||
unidentified
|
They shouldn't be doing that. | |
They shouldn't be accusing other people of doing things and divulging other people's personal details. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
And he sent me a cease and desist letter. | ||
It's all true, you know? | ||
So you can't sue me for defamation for saying true things. | ||
You can't sue me for defamation for things that are documented. | ||
So he sends me a cease and desist letter, and he's pretending on his show like he's gonna sue me. | ||
He's like, oh, I'm not gonna mention Nick, because it's an ongoing legal matter. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, pfft. | |
Bafangul. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
unidentified
|
Please. | |
I have one of the best defamation lawyers in the country. | ||
You think I'm afraid of a cease and desist letter? | ||
Blow it out your fucking asshole. | ||
Please. | ||
I can't wait for that stream. | ||
So anyway... | ||
Which the best part is, he's gonna do a stream, and he's gonna do streams for weeks, and every little thing, oh, I have lots of things that I could say about Nick, and I'm gonna say all these things, and then it's like, yeah, I think I'm gonna retaliate. | ||
unidentified
|
You can't! | |
I'm sending you a cease and desist letter. | ||
Really? | ||
What a little faggot. | ||
What a little faggot, man. | ||
What an unbelievable... And there's so... The thing is, I have such a memory. | ||
It's like, there's things in there... You know, how about the fact that his best friend in high school is closeted gay? | ||
Isn't that a little bit... You know, maybe he forgot he even told me that. | ||
But at one point he told me that he had his best friend in grade school and it turned out that that person was gay. | ||
Hmm that's interesting and you know and then there were some other sort of little data points you know there's a lot there's a lot there which wasn't relevant weeks ago when I was being accused of viewbotting or getting the money back or when it was about when there was this pretense that it was about professional stuff but if we want to get personal okay yeah if we want to get personal please | ||
So, yeah, how about that? | ||
A lot, a lot of data points. | ||
A lot of data points over the years. | ||
Yeah, there's that. | ||
And that's not even, that's not even the worst one. | ||
You know, do you understand? | ||
I've got a, on my notes app, I've got a list that's like this long. | ||
This is, this is a cheap stuff. | ||
This is a cheap stuff, okay? | ||
unidentified
|
So, yeah. | |
Anyway. | ||
But yeah, so that was Vegas. | ||
The old Vegas trip. | ||
The white boy summer trip, that was the beginning of the end, man. | ||
Because I was like, yeah, like... A friendship that's founded on a political movement that's about no e-girls and being right-wing and political, it doesn't really work when you're a fornicator and you drink and you like to party. | ||
It just doesn't work. | ||
That doesn't work. | ||
And you're not even Catholic. | ||
Um, that doesn't really work so well. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway. | |
And he was like a fornicator right up until he moved out. | ||
I remember we had the conversation about that and he was like, why haven't I had sex in a year? | ||
And I'm like, Jaden, you moved out one year ago. | ||
You moved out approximately one year ago. | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
That means that throughout the entire Gruyper War, throughout the entire 2020, or most of 2020, I was like, what's going on with you, man? | ||
Like I thought we were on the same page. | ||
I'm like, but I don't even really know. | ||
You lied. | ||
I'm like, you just lied about your whole deal. | ||
unidentified
|
So... Anyway. | |
And listen, it is what it is. | ||
It is what it is. | ||
You know, it's not to minimize it, but it is to say these are things that happen. | ||
But, um, you know, don't go and play this holier-than-thou. | ||
Oh, Nick, watch Euphoria. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, oh, oh. | |
And it's like, really? | ||
You want to go there? | ||
Okay, we could go there, Mr. Blue Balls. | ||
We could go there, Mr. Blue Balls begs for blowjobs. | ||
We could, we can all go there. | ||
unidentified
|
And we can have a good time. | |
But anyway, we're gonna have a good time. | ||
Have a good time. | ||
Yeah, that was an interesting revisionist history that I was told. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
And then the point is that that is an evil person. | ||
That is an evil person who succumbed to the pressures of the modern world. | ||
Succumbed to greed and lust. | ||
Ultimately. | ||
You know? | ||
The last thing he told Ella Maulding was, Wait for me! | ||
I need to get my finances in order! | ||
He needed to get his finances in order so that he could marry this E-girl. | ||
So, and then that kind of begs the question, it's like, gee, I wonder how much he got paid to betray America first. | ||
I wonder if like, you know... | ||
I wonder if betraying America First was part of his strategy to make more money. | ||
Because he was only getting 100 viewers when he went off. | ||
If you look at the viewership, there's a very interesting trend which is doing the gaming thing not really working, betraying America First, suddenly very lucrative, telling Ella Maulding, wait for me while I figure out my finances because I'm a lazy piece of shit. | ||
And this is what people will do, this is what people will do, this is what people will do for a crumb of pussy and for money. | ||
And so he's a corrupted individual, he betrayed his best friend for this. | ||
And anyway, so that's really, that's getting into more of the full, and there are so many details that will enlighten you on the real story here. | ||
But I wanted to wait for the dust to clear, because there was a lot of smoke, there was a lot of fog of war, you know, I was being accused of a lot of things, a lot of bullshit going on, and um... Just like with the Catboy-Cammie thing, and you know, once the dust settles, you know, people deserve to know the whole story there. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
Anyway. - Bye. | ||
So yeah, so what happens in Vegas, you know, doesn't always stay in Vegas. | ||
But yeah, just like, this dude was unhinged, man. | ||
unidentified
|
Unhinged. | |
And he's got issues. | ||
You know, I feel bad for him because he's clearly got issues. | ||
Like, there's definitely something wrong with him. | ||
I believe that. | ||
He would tell me about how he was, like, developmentally challenged. | ||
Like, in school, he would get disciplined and be sent into special classes, or not, like, special ed, but, like, detention and stuff, and... | ||
You know, he was, like, didn't participate in anything in high school. | ||
His parents are divorced. | ||
Parents have been, like, effectively divorced for a long time. | ||
So there's, like, clearly something wrong with him. | ||
He comes from, like, a broken home. | ||
Like, this is a deeply fucked up individual. | ||
I'm a weird guy, but fundamentally I come from a good place. | ||
My parents are married. | ||
You know, my parents are married. | ||
My parents have been together for 30 years. | ||
My parents believe in God. | ||
unidentified
|
Um... | |
You know, and going through school, I was a troublemaker, but I was also, I was also the student council president. | ||
I was, you know, I gave a speech at graduation. | ||
I was beloved by the community. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
And so, so I'm, I'm a weirder guy, but this is a person who's clearly got some deep-seated, like, daddy issues, mommy issues, something to, he wouldn't even tell me his ACT score because it was so low. | ||
Like, This is a person who's not really right in the head. | ||
And the constant seeking of validation from women is evidence of that. | ||
He was on Bumble, Tinder, Instagram, Snapchat 24 hours a day. | ||
And it was like, and it was always the same thing, I need it for the ego boost, that makes me feel good. | ||
And it's like, someone who has a deficit of feeling good, there's a problem there. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
There's like wanting a girlfriend, there's dating a girl, and then there's like, you know, all of your esteem and validation is bound up in that because, you know, for whatever reason. | ||
Someone says Grindr? | ||
Yeah, potentially Grindr. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
I don't think about that one, but maybe it was all the others. | ||
The people that he was going out with weren't even hot. | ||
Like, the girl that he first hooked up with, he was telling me, oh, the girl that I first hooked up with was a Swi- Dude, this is hilarious. | ||
He told me that the first girl I hooked up with was a Swedish exchange student, or Finnish, or some Nordic country, when he was like 16 or 17. | ||
He was like, the first girl I hooked up with, she was this exchange student from Scandinavia, and here I am thinking, Aw man, he was, he tapped a Finnish, whatever, Swedish exchange student and I'm like, man, she must have been hot. | ||
Then he showed me a picture of her and he was like, he was like embarrassed. | ||
He was like, I mean, she's alright, right? | ||
I mean like, yeah, like she's okay, right? | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, she was not hot, man. | |
Here I am thinking like, oh, she's from Scandinavia, she must be like, cause you think Scandinavia, like bombshell. | ||
And he shows me his picture, and she did not have it going on. | ||
And I told you, he hid the girlfriend from me. | ||
The girlfriend of two years, he literally hid her from me, and then he never told me her, even her name. | ||
And I found her, and it was like, bruh. | ||
And I'm sure, listen, I'm sure she's nice enough. | ||
I'm sure she's a very nice person and all that, but it was like, are you kidding me? | ||
And then even the most recent one, and I'm sure, again, she's probably nice enough too, but it's like, come on. | ||
Come on now. | ||
I saw him walking out of the building carrying her bags like a pack mule. | ||
It was the worst thing I've ever seen. | ||
You know, because I was at the building, I was doing remodeling stuff, whatever, and I'm looking out the window and I hear this big commotion. | ||
And she lived a couple hours away, a few hours away, actually. | ||
And so she would come and stay the weekend, and he would stay the weekend there. | ||
And so one time she was there for the weekend. | ||
And so, like I said, I'm at the place, and I'm doing my thing, whatever. | ||
And I hear this big thud or whatever, and I look out the window. | ||
And she's, you know, sort of marching over to her car. | ||
And there is the pack mule, literally over-encumbered with all her bags, struggling behind her, like three paces behind her. - All right. | ||
I was like, jeez. | ||
unidentified
|
I was like, oh my gosh. | |
Oh my gosh. | ||
When will it end? | ||
That's the thing. | ||
People always tell me I'm too nice. | ||
Everybody tells me I'm too mean, and then people behind the scenes tell me I'm too nice, because here I am getting dragged in the public square. | ||
Everybody's taking their shots, everybody's attacking me, and I'm like honestly being reserved. | ||
I'm honestly holding a lot back. | ||
And they keep pushing and pushing, and then I tell my side of the story and everybody's like, whoa, okay, so you're totally, you're totally in the right. | ||
And it's like, yeah, I know. | ||
But, that's because I'm fundamentally, I don't, I'm not a, I'm not really a mean-spirited person. | ||
You know, I like to make jokes and I like to laugh, but I don't really like to hurt people's feelings. | ||
And, you know, I'm just not that guy, but But anyway, he's carrying the bags, carrying the pack mule. | ||
Yes, miss. | ||
She was tall, too. | ||
She was very tall. | ||
Man, oh man. | ||
You know what the best part is? | ||
This was the funniest thing I have ever heard in my entire... | ||
I'll this is the last thing I'll say then I'll move on because this stuff is just I'm finally I'm glad that I can finally say this stuff Cuz I couldn't make fun of this guy ever, you know that because he would flip out So, you know me and him were talking about the girlfriend and And as he himself admitted I was very supportive of it. | ||
I was very supportive. | ||
I was encouraging, you know I wanted him to get better and him not having a girlfriend made him like suicidal and And so, you know, I remember we were in my office, and we were talking about it, and... And he said something like, oh yeah, she's tall. | ||
I'm like, well, how tall? | ||
And he's like, oh, she was like as tall as me. | ||
She was wearing boots, and she was like as tall as me, or maybe a little bit shorter. | ||
I was like, what? | ||
I said, I thought you liked shorter girls. | ||
And he's like, yeah, I do. | ||
I'm like, so what's going on with that? | ||
And he's like, well, you know, I don't know, and... | ||
And I'm, you know, and he was coping, and I was like, well, I said, I don't know, I mean, maybe like Trump and Melania. | ||
I said, Trump is tall, Melania is tall. | ||
I'm like, you know, so I said, that could work, you know, and I'm trying to be, because I'm a nice friend. | ||
I'm like a nice person. | ||
So I was trying to make him feel better, even though it was like, come on, man. | ||
I was trying to be nice and say like here try and feel better about your girlfriend who has tattoos and isn't a virgin and all this and is in debt. | ||
She's literally debt, tattoos, not a virgin. | ||
And tall. | ||
And I'm trying to make him feel better about it. | ||
And anyway, that just goes to show, I'm like such a bro. | ||
I'm such a good friend. | ||
And I go, yeah, what about like Trump and Melania? | ||
Kind of like Trump and Melania. | ||
And you know what he tells me? | ||
He's like, yeah, he was like, and I was thinking if I ever ran for office, you know, that would be like a good look. | ||
Like we would be... Let me do a spin. | ||
When he told me that, I was like, Run for office! | ||
unidentified
|
I'm like, run for office? | |
Jaden McNeil, run for office, run for Congress? | ||
That has got to be the funniest thing he's ever said. | ||
That has got to be the funniest thing that I've heard from him. | ||
Run for office? | ||
It's like, are you kidding me? | ||
You're functionally retarded. | ||
You're like a functionally retarded idiot. | ||
Your ACT score is probably like 24. | ||
You can barely stream a video game professionally. | ||
You stream Rust for two hours a night. | ||
You can't drive. | ||
You can't talk to people. | ||
Like, you're a fucking idiot and you know you're an idiot, you know? | ||
He would constantly tell me, I'm a retard, I can't talk to people, I can't talk to girls, I don't know how to talk to political people, blah blah blah. | ||
But here's the best part, but here's the best part. | ||
So I heard that. | ||
I heard that and I was like, I was like, yeah! | ||
I was like, yeah, you know, hey, totally. | ||
If you ever run for office, yeah, that'd be a great look. | ||
I'm shining them on. | ||
Okay. | ||
Now fast forward a little bit. | ||
Fast forward a little bit. | ||
And, you know, I'm realizing that this woman is in my building, so I'm like, this is exposure for me. | ||
She sees my cool car, she knows where I live, all this stuff. | ||
I'm like, I need to know who this person is, because I have a lot of exposure here. | ||
So I look her up, I Google her, and I find her LinkedIn. | ||
And you know what she's majoring in college? | ||
Political Science. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's another breadcrumb. | ||
Now me and Jade and Brian are driving down to Florida. | ||
I didn't actually doxed him. | ||
Our friend. | ||
We're driving down to Florida and we're in the car and I'm sitting there in the back seat and, you know, I'm thinking it's a long drive. | ||
It's like a 17-hour drive down to Florida. | ||
And so we're driving down there, and I'm sort of sitting in the back seat, and you know, when you're in a road trip, you think about a lot of things. | ||
When you're doing a road trip, there's a lot that you think about. | ||
And I'm like, hmm, I'm like, political science major, run for office, and then it was like a light bulb went on in my head. | ||
I'm like, now that I think about it, Judas has never, ever, ever talked about politics. | ||
He doesn't care about politics. | ||
He doesn't care about the substance of politics. | ||
He doesn't care about the business of politics. | ||
I said, she's a political science major. | ||
How much do you want to bet that she's in his ear saying, I'm going to be the first lady. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to be, you're going to be. | |
And like, that is just, that has got to be the most emasculating thing. | ||
That he's just like a little puppet on strings, I guess. | ||
She's the poli sci major. | ||
And so I'm sure in, you know, cause he has never had ambitions like that. | ||
He's never had an ambition in his life. | ||
His ambition... He used to idolize Beardson. | ||
He makes fun of Beardson now. | ||
He used to say about Beardson, Beardson's awesome. | ||
He lives a great life. | ||
Beardson's great. | ||
I want to be like Beardson when I grow up. | ||
Now he's telling me I'm running for Congress. | ||
I'm like, I'll bet you two bits. | ||
She got in there and said, oh you, you know, we're gonna run for Congress. | ||
unidentified
|
I was like, oh my gosh. | |
But this is the kind of stuff that happens, man. | ||
This is the kind of stuff that goes on. | ||
Too funny. | ||
Running for Congress. | ||
Yeah, we'll see about that. | ||
Well, with your lengthy experience of, let's see, working at a sporting goods store, getting kicked out of college, and playing video games for two years. | ||
That's a nice resume. | ||
People of Kansas! | ||
I've demonstrated my impeccable record by betraying everybody I ever knew. | ||
My Elijah Schaffer, Turning Point USA, Nick Fuentes. | ||
You know, cheated on my girlfriend. | ||
I'm Judas McNeil. | ||
I've betrayed Elijah Schaeffer. | ||
Elijah Schaeffer who put me up on his couch for months, and then when he wasn't cool, I threw him under the bus and called him a faggot. | ||
Charlie Kirk, who I took pictures with and who invited me to the Turning Point dinner at Mar-a-Lago, who I threw him under the bus the second it wasn't cool. | ||
Nick Fuentes, who I lived in his building and took money. | ||
Until I didn't like it and I threw him under the bus and my girlfriend of two years who then I got bored and then I made out with somebody while I was still in the relationship. | ||
It's a pattern. | ||
There's a pattern there. | ||
So that's a great record. | ||
That's a great campaign ad. | ||
So anyway. | ||
Anyway, so that was Vegas What happens in Vegas doesn't always stay in Vegas. | ||
Oh, yeah, I forgot to mention that the cheating. | ||
Yeah, that was that was interesting Which even even Patrick Casey will back me up on that You know, Judas was talking about this kind of stuff in June 2021. | ||
And Patrick reprimanded him and Judas got all offended. | ||
Because Patrick said, hey, you have a girlfriend, be respectful. | ||
And Judas flipped out and wouldn't talk to him for the rest of the trip. | ||
So there you go. | ||
Or that was, I'm sorry, that was June 2020. | ||
That was June 2020. | ||
Kai Klipsch is good super chat, right guys? | ||
Yeah, there you go. | ||
Yeah, and that's only part of the story. | ||
That's only part of a story which we're sort of mapping out all the time. | ||
But yeah, it's so funny. | ||
All these people are gonna turn on me, and it's like even Patrick had a problem with that. | ||
Even in June 2020, we were in Phoenix. | ||
We were all at that place. | ||
It's... What the freak is that stupid country place called on Mill Ave? | ||
We're at that place, and Judas was talking about other girls or whatever, and Patrick was like, hey, like, you have a girlfriend, like, that's not right. | ||
And Judas flipped out. | ||
What do you mean, you can't say that to me? | ||
unidentified
|
Blah, blah, blah. | |
Flipped out. | ||
Was just, like, inconsolable. | ||
You know. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
Anyway, so people say, oh Nick, you know, people say, oh a lot of people are turning on you. | ||
It's like, okay, well let's look at the record. | ||
Not so good with everybody else either. | ||
Let's see, Patrick Casey went from Spencer to Identity Europa, to AIM, to Groipers, to now it's his own thing. | ||
Jake Lloyd was at InfoWars, got laid off, tried to be a streamer, it didn't work. | ||
Went on a campaign that didn't succeed, started a new show that he, you know, can't follow through on. | ||
You know, so let's, you know, let's take a look. | ||
I think it's a little bit more two-sided than people like to make it out, but... Anyway. | ||
That's a slow news day, so we gotta... So we gotta spice it up a little bit. | ||
But yeah, thanks Kai. | ||
Thanks Kai. | ||
Yeah, so there's, uh, yeah, there's a lot there. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, but... We haven't even gotten into the good stuff yet. | |
The most sensational. | ||
There's some stuff that's more speculative that's a little bit more sensational, but... Real by the way. | ||
Real by the way. | ||
That's real by the way. | ||
That's real by the way. | ||
unidentified
|
Such a...man, that's funny. | |
You gotta love that. | ||
unidentified
|
You gotta love. | |
Like little children. | ||
They don't know. | ||
Pop's home, bitch. | ||
Daddy's home, bitch. | ||
unidentified
|
Like little children. | |
Anyway. | ||
Anyways. | ||
Anyways. | ||
Real, by the way. | ||
Anyways. | ||
Anyways. | ||
Oh man, that's funny. | ||
He should get his tongue fixed. | ||
He should get that speech impediment fixed so he doesn't sound like such a retard when he's trying to talk shit about all of us. | ||
That's the funniest thing is like, honestly, we have the best haters because now Judas, who is the prince of the haters, he is like their biggest retard. | ||
At least like Culture War Criminal sounds masculine. | ||
He sounds angry, but at least he's masculine. | ||
Judas literally has a speech impediment, so we have a literally... a literal disabled retard. | ||
You know, with sort of like this gay lisp. | ||
And a mouth that doesn't even work with this tongue issue. | ||
I don't know if you know that, but he's got this physical speech impediment. | ||
So that kind of helps. | ||
He should get that fixed. | ||
When you talk shit, it doesn't really land. | ||
Hey, Judas, when you talk shit, it doesn't really land when you sound like a total retard when you talk. | ||
When you don't have like a normal voice, it doesn't really land. | ||
unidentified
|
Actually. | |
So, anyway. | ||
unidentified
|
Mm-mm-mm-mm-mm-mm. | |
But that's just... | ||
Boo sent $3. | ||
I feel like public opinion is always reacting and changing like fads. | ||
You kinda gotta play it to stay on top. | ||
Like one bit will work for a while then PPL will want the opposite. | ||
Just shower thoughts. | ||
McLaren sent $3. | ||
Can't get over the fact that MediCorp is choosing to spend his final days on Earth hanging out with a cookhead and obese guy obsessing over another fat guy. | ||
Yeah, it's pretty sad. | ||
It's honestly a sad story with him, unironically. | ||
True! | ||
UQ sent $3. | ||
Most of the white people that came to America during the first half of the 19th century came as indentured slaves from the UK. | ||
This is forgotten and implies whites were all free and rich from day one. - True. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
- McLaren sent $3. | ||
Even funnier is Judas looking at this scene and deciding to nuke his AF career so he could be a part of it. - I don't think that was a real reason. | ||
We'll get into that another time. | ||
Now, it's this app. | ||
This app is very buggy. | ||
Sometimes it doesn't work. | ||
It doesn't work for a lot of people. | ||
I thought I was banned for being retarded, but I guess I'm just retarded. | ||
No, it's this app. | ||
This app is very buggy. | ||
Sometimes it doesn't work. | ||
It doesn't work for a lot of people. | ||
I get that complaint all the time. | ||
Yeah, I mean, class is real. | ||
There should be real classes. | ||
John sent $3. | ||
I grew up in a third world country and we had servants. | ||
They all develop a nice relationship with us and my parents. | ||
unidentified
|
And we're threaded far, far better in every way than a wagee in a sweatshop factory. - Yeah, I mean, class is real. | |
There should be real classes. | ||
And we do away with that. | ||
You get the sort of forceful reassertion of class in ways that are worse than if you just add them, you know, normally. - John sent $50. | ||
Nick, I haven't watched in a long time, and so far what I've seen so far in the show, you haven't lost a step. | ||
Great show. | ||
Love ya, man. | ||
We will win. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
Hey, love you too. | ||
Thanks for the super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, we are gonna win. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Jufri sent $3. | ||
Race mixing isn't a sin, unless she's fat too. | ||
If she's fat, you're both going to hell. | ||
unidentified
|
- Yeah, if you're fat, you're going to hell regardless 'cause you're a glutton. - Jufri sent three. - Whoops, duplicate. - Super Lionheart sent $5. | |
I'm sick of being constantly lied to between the stolen election and the vaccine. | ||
We're being told not to believe what we see with our own eyes and it's evil. | ||
Fake election, fake vaccine, fake country. | ||
Very true, Super Lionheart. | ||
Good to hear from you, buddy. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Yeah, I'm sick of it, too. | ||
Pragmatic Culture sent $20. | ||
Hey Nick, may not be able to make it to Vegas, but looking forward to everything else this summer. | ||
Speaking of summer, where is our summer little guy? | ||
unidentified
|
Here he is. | |
Here's our summer. | ||
Here's our summer guy. | ||
Sun Squad. | ||
Yeah, I forgot about that. | ||
It's summer solstice tomorrow, so it'll be officially summer. | ||
I don't know if we'll keep him around, but we can throw him up here for a minute. | ||
But thanks, man. | ||
We'll miss you in Vegas. | ||
Cool Handsome sent $3. | ||
Hi Nick, have you read Buchanan's Hitler, Churchill, and the Unnecessary War? | ||
Not a big book guy, but looking for something to read. | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
I appreciate you, Bestfriend07. | ||
Hey, thanks, Bestfriend. | ||
No, I haven't read that one yet, but I've heard it's really good. | ||
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3. | ||
Destiny's problem is that he doesn't believe logic is a valid explanation for anything. | ||
Probably the reason he isn't Christian. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
That's a good point. | ||
Zar Alexander sent $10. | ||
Sneet. | ||
Harp. | ||
Darpa. | ||
Soy. | ||
Malaysians. | ||
5G. | ||
Vax. | ||
Jews. | ||
Fluoride. | ||
Jews. | ||
Plastic. | ||
Birth Control. | ||
Jews. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Awesome. | ||
Yeah, but it's mostly just human behavior. | ||
It's mimesis. | ||
The NPC phenomenon never ceases to amaze. | ||
They replace agency with blind trust unknowingly or even knowingly out of faith. | ||
I still see masks everywhere and some restaurants still are fully masked. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, but it's mostly just human behavior. | |
It's mimesis. | ||
You know, everybody imitates everyone else. | ||
Hi, Cap sent $10. | ||
Thanks, Nick, for continuing to be the only viable right wing leader and continuing to lead young men towards Christ. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
McCoy sent $5. | ||
Is there a list of AF-supported candidates? | ||
I wanted to know if Andrew Badger is gay or gay. | ||
Pardon if this was ignorant of me. | ||
I don't know Andrew Badger, but we can't do a list because then everybody would, like, get pressured to disavow. | ||
Be like, you were endorsed by Nick Fletcher. | ||
Do you disavow? | ||
So we don't want to, obviously, create that opportunity. | ||
So we're supporting people in subtle ways behind the scenes. | ||
EpicGamerChem sent $10. | ||
Your thoughts about looking at the bigger picture with the VEX is spot on. | ||
The fact that many people just don't get it is such a painful concept to grasp. | ||
I feel like it's just in their nature of some assumed faux intellectual high ground. | ||
Stupidity. | ||
Yeah, seriously. | ||
I don't know how people don't get it. | ||
Nathaniel Westerman sent $3. | ||
Happy birthday, Nick. | ||
Hope you had a good day. | ||
It's not my birthday, but thanks. | ||
You think so? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It might be evenly matched. | ||
Joe Kent's a green beret. | ||
So it's a bounty hunter versus a green beret. | ||
I think it'd be close. | ||
They're both big guys. | ||
Hello there, sent $3. | ||
Did you hear Elon Musk's eldest son, Xavier, just turned 18 and has announced he is now a trans girl named Vivian? | ||
Also said he wants no communication with his transphobic father. | ||
I hate world. | ||
I did not hear about that, but that's tragic. | ||
Pray for Elon, that's horrible. | ||
Jeez, this trans thing is out of control, man. | ||
Everybody's becoming trans. | ||
unidentified
|
Sick. | |
Yeah, true. | ||
But by the way, morally superior. | ||
The forces of democracy coalesced to stand up to Putin. | ||
1970s 90s used the mental strain that participation in war crimes put on soldiers to funnel the same soldiers into organized task forces used for assassination and even domestic terrorism. | ||
Good guys though. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
But by the way, morally superior, the forces of democracy coalesced to stand up to Putin. | ||
Uh-huh, sure. | ||
Eternal Bench sent $5. | ||
Why do other cozy channels only show 3 replays and hide the later 3 replays that are still watchable if you have the link? | ||
So much content on here, I love this website. | ||
You and ZoomerDev are heroes. | ||
Thanks! | ||
Yeah, yeah, ZoomerDev is an unsung hero, truly. | ||
Nobody else, nobody else like him. | ||
Because you see these other sites and they just, they just can't do what he does. | ||
So for the replays, yeah, we're just limited on bandwidth. | ||
We got to get the site monetized before we scale up the bandwidth, because the bandwidth is the cost prohibitive aspect of this. | ||
And you know, insofar as we don't have subs and super chats and merch on the site, Cozy actually doesn't make money. | ||
That's a thing. | ||
I'm paying for it all out of pocket. | ||
You know, it costs money to run this site. | ||
It costs a significant amount of money, and I just pay for it out of my own pocket. | ||
and you know so we have to limit the replays and limit the amount of people I bring on because the bandwidth is only as much as you know I'm really willing to shell out before it becomes a profit-making enterprise once we get payment processing for the site so that's really why you're only getting three replays on the other channels is just a it's bandwidth economy so so that's why | ||
What's going on in the Missouri Senate? | ||
I've not been following that. | ||
Missouri State Senate? | ||
unidentified
|
Or... Oh, there are Gritens? | |
Let's see. | ||
I guess this just dropped today. | ||
Gritens campaign video... Oh, they said the rhino hunting? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, I think that's bullshit. | |
Yeah, I did see that. | ||
The rhino hunting permit? | ||
That's so ridiculous. | ||
But not surprising. | ||
Yeah, I talked about it on the show tonight. | ||
internet. | ||
What movie premiere? | ||
Am I retarded? | ||
unidentified
|
Lol. | |
Yeah, I talked about it on the show tonight. | ||
So we're doing a movie premiere, a mini documentary on July 14th in Vegas. | ||
Polish underscore mail sent $3. | ||
Fell asleep watching your show, had a dream I was explaining how to pour Pepsi Nitro to someone. | ||
We don't even have Pepsi Nitro in Poland yet. | ||
Wow, so I'm in your dreams too. | ||
Russwell sent $3. | ||
Thanks Nick. | ||
I'm Christian but not Catholic. | ||
I am working at learning the Rosary because of AF, but some of it causes me confusion. | ||
May I ask your opinion on Holy Spirit versus Holy Ghost? | ||
Um, growing up, it was always Holy Spirit, and then they changed it some years ago to Holy Ghost, I believe. | ||
unidentified
|
Because when I was brought up, it was always Holy Spirit. | |
And then I think they reverted back to Holy Ghost, which was the older form. | ||
I don't have a strong opinion on it. | ||
I don't really know the theology behind that. | ||
I don't know the theology behind that change, but they changed the creed in a few key ways, and they changed some of the call and response as well. | ||
They used to say, I forget what they used to say, but now they say, and with your spirit is the call and response in church. | ||
So, I don't actually know the theology behind the word changes, but I forget exactly what year it was. | ||
Because I remember the old way when I... I don't know if it happened before I had my confirmation or after. | ||
It definitely happened after my First Communion. | ||
And they handed out all these new prayer cards and everything in the church to help people go. | ||
And people still would say the wrong thing, you know, the older form. | ||
But I don't really know the theology behind it. | ||
unidentified
|
So... I'll have to look into that one. | |
Virginians sent $3. | ||
I'm going to go ahead and set a countdown clock for 40 years or whenever your tell-all book finally comes out lol. | ||
Shit's gonna be interesting. | ||
Considering Terry's still stuff you haven't told us. | ||
Well, yeah, I mean, the good news is if I don't succeed, I'll be able to write a tell-all and just, you know, going to, you know, I could just tell my story. | ||
Because here's the thing, it's like, if this is viable, I've got to play it very smart and very carefully to achieve a total victory. | ||
If, for whatever reason, that becomes, like, not tenable and the stakes are less, you know, then I could kind of just create entertainment. | ||
So, because there's certainly so much, and, you know, probably the people that watch America First would be interested, but I obviously can't do that if I'm still, like, in the game, you know what I mean? | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
But yeah, there's a lot of inside baseball that nobody even knows about. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
Hydecaps sent $10. | ||
Sandy Hook feels like the only other world event besides the Holocaust that is literally illegal to question. | ||
Sandy Hook has more rabbit holes than 9/11. | ||
Alex Jones took it on the chin for that, but he was right. | ||
- True, yeah, it is essentially illegal to talk about. - Golfing_Zoomer sent $3. | ||
What are her thoughts on the Texas GOP platform? | ||
It calls homosexuals abnormal, Biden illegitimate, a ban on abortion, a vote on secession and a banning of drag shows. | ||
I think it's great. | ||
I think it's a big step in the right direction, but the problem is that the Texas GOP is cucked. | ||
I mean, who do you have? | ||
Ted Cruz, Dan Crenshaw, Greg Abbott. | ||
You know, these are not great people. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
So, Louie, or not Louie, what's his name? | ||
Louie Gohmert's good. | ||
John Cornyn. | ||
So the Texas GOP, I mean, it's pretty hit or miss. | ||
You got some good people. | ||
You know, Louie Gohmert's probably the best one. | ||
But then you get these guys that are just horrible. | ||
So a lot of the politicians coming out of Texas are just cucked. | ||
Some of the worst people in Congress are from Texas. | ||
Cornyn voted for this red flag law. | ||
Dan Crenshaw, you know. | ||
unidentified
|
Obviously. | |
Ted Cruz, who voted for the Ukraine thing. | ||
Greg Abbott, who sat in front of an Israel flag and called Gab anti-semitic. | ||
So it's great that they write these platforms, but a lot of the time this is... You have to be very careful not to fall into the trap of taking what they say and, you know, saying, oh wow, that's a great thing that they said. | ||
Yeah, okay, anyone can say anything, but what do they do? | ||
Um, Republicans have said great things for a long time and then they all suck, you know? | ||
So, so I like the platform, but I have no confidence in the Texas GOP. | ||
Polish underscore mail sent $3. | ||
Super chatting is a lot like playing LA noir or Witcher 3. | ||
If you pick the right thing to say, you get a lot of information that will help you solve the mystery. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
You have to read my facial expression and pick the right option. | ||
Otherwise I'm going to shut it down. | ||
unidentified
|
That's funny. | |
Well, I don't know anything about that, but yeah. | ||
Thank you for that, I guess. | ||
Yeah. | ||
- Jaden, those off-white All Hallows Eve blazers I sent to your PO box were $45 from China. | ||
unidentified
|
Go fuck yourself, fake a self-faggot. - I don't know anything about that, but yeah. | |
Thank you for that, I guess. | ||
- Spinefish sent $3. | ||
The sleepy grow-apper seems to rest his head at night. - Yeah. - True. - Hidecaps sent $5. | ||
I remember in Atlanta being very close to one of Jaden's public speaking attempts and the uncontrollable shaking was distracting. | ||
I told him good job after to be nice, but I assumed he would get better. | ||
Well, you know, the fundamental problem with these guys is that none of them were ready for prime time. | ||
That was the issue, is that with all three of the traders, none of them are really good. | ||
None of them are really all that good. | ||
Patrick was an underwhelming speaker. | ||
Jake was just like a non-entity. | ||
And Judas, you know, it was just never going to happen for him. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
And so we had this crew of people that it was like just were not usable. | ||
These people could not become stars. | ||
These people could not be speakers at the conference. | ||
They had no star power. | ||
And that was another problem is, you know, where exactly are we going to fit a person who's completely useless? | ||
I mean, Judas was a completely useless person. | ||
There was not one use for him. | ||
There was not one thing that he could do well or do right or do anything that I had confidence in him. | ||
And so he was basically just kind of like a puppy. | ||
He was just kind of like, you know, I brought him around and he was just sort of like there. | ||
But yeah, I mean, it became apparent very quickly that he was not going to be It's not gonna happen for him. | ||
Contrast that with Kai and Dalton, who are stars. | ||
You know, or Wurzelrude or Tyler. | ||
Contrast that with Dalton, who's killing it. | ||
Contrast that with Kai, who's amazing. | ||
Tyler and Wurzelrude, who... Tyler hasn't been making a lot of content, but he's an absolutely solid guy. | ||
Doing Canada First, and with the truckers, with the politicians up there doing things. | ||
Wurzelrude, who is a major TikToker. | ||
All these guys have a feather under their cap. | ||
All these guys are doing their own thing. | ||
You know, Dalton's doing his own protest. | ||
Dalton's doing his own show. | ||
Kai's doing his own show. | ||
Kai's speaking at conferences. | ||
Kai's flying out and doing interviews because he's very well spoken. | ||
Tyler's up there in Canada organizing with the truckers and doing a show and doing a Canada First political action conference and Whirls of Root's big on TikTok and he's got a show. | ||
And you contrast what the new class has been able to do with the old class and it's without a shadow of a doubt a massive improvement. | ||
Without a shadow of a doubt. | ||
There's just simply no comparison. | ||
There's no comparison. | ||
And the proof of the pudding is in the eating. | ||
People say, oh, these people left or whatever. | ||
It's like, yeah, nothing of value is lost. | ||
And look at the people that have been gained. | ||
It's just not even close. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
You know, that's gotta be... It was never gonna happen for him. | ||
I mean, he's a retarded individual. | ||
And he really didn't... He almost cried. | ||
I called him stupid a couple times in January and he flipped. | ||
He did not like that. | ||
Well, he is stupid. | ||
He's a stupid idiot who can't do anything. | ||
unidentified
|
He's a useless person. | |
Who played video games in high school and messed around in college and then messed around and and basically The reason he needs esteem from girls is because he can't get it from anything else. | ||
He can't earn esteem from his peers or through You know any kind of thing that he can do You know and so that's that's really his life is You know, and that's why it was just never gonna, wasn't gonna happen for him. | ||
You know, it's sort of sad in that way. | ||
Sort of a sad story, but that's why people lash out. | ||
People lash out because they're, you know, they have their own problems. | ||
But yeah, I mean, I witnessed the laughable public speaking ability. | ||
Like, when he introduced me in Springfield, it was like, really? | ||
This doofus? | ||
I mean, and he dressed like a faggot. | ||
Like, jeez, oh man. | ||
You know, because I had that black outfit picked out. | ||
It was a theme. | ||
And he goes up there with these, like, light dripped jeans and these, like, faggoty sneakers and, like, this black coat. | ||
And he looked like a total chooch. | ||
I mean, jeez. | ||
I look at these pictures and it's like, you look like you have no drip, man. | ||
Like... | ||
Oh, it's embarrassing. | ||
But who else were we going to have? | ||
That was it. | ||
That's all we had to introduce. | ||
So I was like, well, I guess he could do it. | ||
And he goes and does it. | ||
And I was like, OK, after that great introduction, for crying out loud. | ||
So yeah, it was bad, man. | ||
It was bad. | ||
But it's over. | ||
But I'm glad it's over. | ||
And now we're in a good place. | ||
But yeah, that was rough. | ||
The modern monarchist sent $3. | ||
I was talking to this ginger midget, and she tiptoed on her little midget feet and whispered, make it funny and schizo. | ||
Jokehead is CIA. | ||
Calm. | ||
Jokehead is CIA. | ||
unidentified
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Calm. | |
JoeKentIsCIA.com. | ||
I'm told that everyone is saying JoeKentIsCIA.com. | ||
Did you hear that? | ||
Everybody is saying JoeKentIsCIA.com. | ||
They're all saying it. | ||
Everyone's whispering it. | ||
Everyone's looking it up. | ||
They're all going to JoeKentIsCIA.com and they're looking at JoeKentIsCIA.com because Joe Kent was in the CIA. | ||
And you can find out more at JoeKentIsCIA.com. | ||
And basically if you're voting for him, you're voting for someone who is CIA. | ||
unidentified
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So... I agree. | |
Hey, thanks man. | ||
- I agree. - The Union sent $3. | ||
It's the Lil Guy LFG. | ||
Look at that Lil Guy, he is indeed a whole Lil Guy. | ||
Okay, that's my last 107, God bless. - Hey, thanks man, appreciate it. - The Modern Monarchist sent $3. | ||
I recommend that book Hitler, Chungus, and the Man from Mars, not a big book guy, but it's lots of fun. | ||
Buchanan may be pissed at that one social media account, but he's an all goldifardi. | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
unidentified
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Which social media accounts? | |
The Modern Monarchist sent $3. | ||
Dude, no clue it was your b-day? | ||
Happy birthday, man. | ||
Snob my birthday. | ||
Everyone give this nigga birthday shake. | ||
Snob my birthday. | ||
Anon sent $3. | ||
Do you think Judas will kill himself when his GF realizes he's not going to be a US House Rep? | ||
Will she have guilt over his death or will she move on with little hesitation? | ||
I don't know what the story is there. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, I'm just praying that it doesn't have a tragic end because he's in a really, he's clearly a fucked up person. | ||
So, you know, we have to pray for our enemies and we have to pray for Judas to get well. | ||
It's not his fault that he's fucked up. | ||
we you know we pray that he repents for his evil and uh becomes catholic um because i mean it's it's clearly it's a it's a very sad story actually so black swan sent the To the chatter asking about Holy Ghost vs Holy Spirit, go follow de.me slash classicaltheist. | ||
He streams on Cozy once a week and takes user submitted questions exactly like that. | ||
Yeah, yeah, good point. | ||
Do it. | ||
Do it for sure. | ||
Anon sent three dollars. | ||
If you had to steal Jaden's GF, do you think you could? | ||
What does her body count and just how ran through is she? | ||
Is she a whore of Babylon? | ||
Yeah, I don't know all the details on that, but he told me that she used to have a long-term relationship with a guy that was like 6'5", and he was very, like, insecure about that. | ||
Because I guess she would talk about it, and the ex-boyfriend she had dated for a long time, and, you know, he said, well, I've had sex with more people, but she's had sex more times, and the ex-boyfriend was, like, this but she's had sex more times, and the ex-boyfriend was, like, I guess he was, like, an athlete or something, like, super tall. | ||
I forget all the details. | ||
And he was very insecure about the fact that the ex-boyfriend was bigger than him. | ||
was bigger than him and that was a big source of insecurity and why he didn't really maybe want to marry her and all this kind of stuff and he also got mad at her because she would apparently he said that she would want to go to these parties at college and he would be on snapchat like hey you need to leave right now like you stop partying and she was like i want to party i can go and party i can go and drink and he'd be like no you can't like you don't need to do so that that was like a big | ||
The games that these, the games that little boys and girls play, it's so silly to me, is all so, it's all so amusing. | ||
So that was another source of contention, is that she liked to party and he would always gripe about that, oh she's partying, I don't like that, she's got to stay home, she can't be talking to other guys, and it was like, it was a very sad affair. | ||
And she texted me first, you know. | ||
She texted me first, and she watches my show, and... You know... So... Who knows? | ||
Who knows? | ||
Who knows what evil lurks in the heart of man at the end of the day? | ||
But yeah, so there's a lot of insecurity. | ||
See me, I don't care. | ||
I'm an incel. | ||
I don't have to play these mind games about who's fucking who and who's going to what party. | ||
I'm just... I like to eat pizza, okay? | ||
I like to get a hot dog with fries. | ||
Simple pleasures in life, you know? | ||
I like to drive fast. | ||
I like to eat hot dogs. | ||
I like to play games with my friends. | ||
I'm uncomplicated. | ||
I'm unproblematic. | ||
And some people are caught up in this. | ||
unidentified
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Goofy shit. | |
So anyway. | ||
So that's the extent that I knew about all that. | ||
Oregon Zoomer sent $3. | ||
A lot of Wignits believe that race mixing is a sin. | ||
But would they ever tell their priests that they believe that? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You'd have to ask them. | ||
Hustlin' Russian sent $3. | ||
I'm in California. | ||
Where can I find more details on the Vegas event? | ||
When and where is it and what are the ticket prices? | ||
It's July 14th in Las Vegas. | ||
Ticket prices will be probably $80. | ||
Tickets are going on sale this week, okay? | ||
I said that at the beginning of the show. | ||
I'll put it on my telegram though so everybody can see it. | ||
Real! | ||
- "The Journal Binge" sent $3. | ||
unidentified
|
Real. | |
Once Cozy is monetized, it'll make so much money. | ||
I hope you and Zoomer dev become Zoomer versions of Donald Trump and Elon Musk. | ||
Golden towers and rocket ships. | ||
Cozy streams beam to us from satellites. | ||
- Real, real, real. - "The Modern Monarchist" sent $3. | ||
Polish Mail gets it. | ||
Underrated Super Chatter and Polish Makes stay winning. | ||
Can't keep animes at Rezyme at Obrego Zowieka WD. | ||
Very true. | ||
Yeah, I agree. | ||
The Modern Monarchist sent $3. | ||
You fit a person who's completely useless in prison where they belong. | ||
Puppies are good, but when they're disloyal you put them in the pound and lock them up. | ||
That's right. | ||
Golden Retriever types have to be loaded. | ||
unidentified
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Lock them up! | |
Lock them up! | ||
That's what I say. | ||
The modern monarchists sent $3. | ||
New fag. | ||
Old head. | ||
It's about loyalty. | ||
Real. | ||
That's what it's always about. | ||
Hidecaps sent $5. | ||
The Civil War was the last cool war. | ||
People need to stop paying attention to the other wars. | ||
No, no way, dude. | ||
The last cool war... I mean, honestly, Desert Storm was pretty cool, so I disagree. | ||
Civil War was cool, but there are cooler wars that have gone on, in my opinion. | ||
Okay! | ||
Wow! | ||
Three hour show. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
That's all I got for you. | |
That's all the Super Chats. | ||
Remember to follow me on Cozy. | ||
Follow me on Gavin Telegram. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday. | ||
9 o'clock Central, 10 o'clock Eastern Time. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you, and I will see you tomorrow. |