Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The End The | ||
End | ||
The End | ||
The End Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're 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. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight, lots to get into. | ||
Another big show out here in L.A., and our featured story tonight will be talking about Donald Trump's truth social, which was kind of going off earlier today, I think in the morning. | ||
And I posted a little bit about this on Telegram this morning but I wanted to spend a little bit more time talking about it tonight because it's a very important thing and obviously super relevant to what's going on over the last three months. | ||
This has kind of been like the most, the idea that Trump is cucking is kind of like the most significant development since Probably since November, because it totally changes the trajectory of everything, and particularly of our plans. | ||
And so, for the last three months, as you know, I've been doing the show, and I've been talking a lot about this, that the Trump 24 thing is just, like, not gonna happen. | ||
I don't feel very confident that he's gonna win. | ||
If he's the nominee, that is. | ||
And I also don't like the way that his campaign has been going. | ||
I don't like how anything has been going, really, over the last two years in the Trump camp, and really in the last like five years, really five, six years since 2017. | ||
But I've noticed something in the last three days. | ||
I don't know when the first thing happened, but I think this was a few days ago. | ||
Trump went to some press conference and he said that illegal immigrants are rapists. | ||
And I know that somebody texted me and said, oh, I thought this clip was from 2016 because it sounded so similar. | ||
unidentified
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And I said, oh, okay. | |
And I think there was one other thing like that, and then today he goes off on True Social, and he calls Ron DeSantis a globalist, and he's going after Club for Growth, which is the Grover Norquist, like, pro-business lobby. | ||
And it's very clear, I wasn't sure before, but it's very clear now that he is trying to recapture that 2016 attitude and that energy, which is a good sign, because, I mean, that's literally what I told him at dinner. | ||
When I met with him in Mar-a-Lago, that was exactly what I said. | ||
I said, attack Ron DeSantis more. | ||
I said, when you posted that stuff on True Social about Ron DeSantis, I said, Trump returned. | ||
Like, he's back, you know? | ||
And that's when Trump said, boy, this guy really gets me. | ||
He goes, so that's exactly what I asked for. | ||
And I'd like to see it. | ||
But I want to talk a little bit about it and why it's it's almost not good enough. | ||
It's a step in the right direction. | ||
It's a very encouraging and positive sign. | ||
I'm very happy about it. | ||
With that being said, I don't think that in its current form it's going to take him all the way. | ||
And I'll explain what I mean by that. | ||
I talked a lot about this on Telegram this morning. | ||
But I want to elaborate a little bit. | ||
You can't just turn back the dial and go back to 2016. | ||
Because it's not 2016 anymore. | ||
It's 2023, obviously. | ||
anymore. | ||
It's 2023, obviously. | ||
And in 2023, we're in a world where 2016 already happened. | ||
When 2016 happened, it happened in a world where it hadn't happened yet, if that makes sense. - Yes. | ||
In other words, when Trump came on the scene and did that routine initially, he was doing that in a world where that had not been done. | ||
But now that he comes back and does the 2016 thing again, he's doing it in a world where that happened almost 10 years ago. | ||
And so, as a consequence, it's very different. | ||
So, I'll talk a little bit more about that tonight. | ||
That'll be our main story. | ||
Really important. | ||
I also want to talk tonight about this story from TMZ, which is reporting on me again. | ||
And I'm actually not used to TMZ talking about me. | ||
And Oli texted me, he wants to make sure I get it right. | ||
Because I'm sure I put in Telegram, I said, I'm gonna talk about the TMZ article, and I'm sure Oli's freaking out, like... Don't! | ||
Careful what you say, you know? | ||
Yeah, I know, I know, I know, I know. | ||
So I want to I want to correct a record a little bit about this TMZ thing there is a big report about me and TMZ today where They're talking about this reimbursement. | ||
Whoops. | ||
They're talking about how I got reimbursed for the Kanye 2020. | ||
The Daily Beast asked me for comment, and it was all over Twitter and everything. | ||
They're turning this into a story, and I'll talk a little bit about it. | ||
I'm not going to get into too much detail, because again, I'm not really at liberty to talk too much about it. | ||
But the thing is, it's a fake story. | ||
I mean, I'm doing political work. | ||
I'm getting my expenses reimbursed. | ||
This is not a story. | ||
I, you know, I don't understand. | ||
The big headline was Milo gets reimbursed $40,000. | ||
Nick Fuentes gets reimbursed $15,000. | ||
And, you know, what exactly is the news? | ||
It's well known that Milo was working with Ye until he was fired. | ||
So he got his expenses reimbursed. | ||
And it's also well known that I am working for Ye and I'm also relocated to LA and as part of that I got my expenses reimbursed. | ||
This is just a normal way of doing things so we'll talk about that as well and I'll provide a little bit more insight because you know it's interesting my story is also not even people don't even know the full context so I'll I'll give a little bit of new information a little insight into all that and | ||
I will say, what's amazing is working with Ye, of course we all know how bad it is with the media, that the news media just makes stuff up and lies. | ||
But it seems that the more famous you get, the more there is this proclivity for them to just make things up. | ||
Because as you know, I've been lied about in the press for years, for as long as I've been doing this. | ||
But what they'll do is they'll take things that I say out of context and they'll misinterpret what I'm saying. | ||
And it's so obvious, it's so blatant. | ||
But ever since I started working with Ye, I noticed that these paparazzi types like TMZ, they just make stuff up. | ||
And it's happened to me and I've seen it happen firsthand to Ye. | ||
They just come up with stuff out of nowhere. | ||
And I don't know if that's the entertainment world. | ||
I don't know if that's because he's just more famous. | ||
He's just one of the most famous people. | ||
So it's like the more famous you get the more that happens. | ||
But it's ridiculous. | ||
And so like I'm reading this and it says, you know, Ye has parted ways with both guys and it's like, I talked to him the other day. | ||
It's like, so that would be news to me. | ||
And we're scheduled to have a meeting this weekend. | ||
So, I don't understand. | ||
Again. | ||
Where they're getting this, I guess they just make it up. | ||
And even with regard to this, the money. | ||
And we'll get into it, of course. | ||
But they got this from FEC documents and things like that. | ||
But it's, you know, they didn't try to reach me or anything. | ||
They didn't try to reach anybody involved. | ||
If they did, maybe they'd get more insight. | ||
But anyway, I want to correct the record a little bit, as much as I can, and shed some light on that. | ||
And it's also kind of a slow news day, so... We'll talk about all that. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Excited to be back. | ||
I'm not feeling so hot, though. | ||
You know, my neck hurts really bad. | ||
I slept on it funny, and I've had, like, a stiff neck for the past three days. | ||
I just, like, can't even move around. | ||
unidentified
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So I don't know what happened. | |
You know, I started working out and everything. | ||
And then I get hurt! | ||
It's like I start working out, then I get hurt. | ||
You know, now you see why I don't do anything. | ||
I'm like a sickly... I'm like a sickly guy, okay? | ||
I can't just go and work out. | ||
I start to break down. | ||
I'm very... You gotta take care of me, you know? | ||
unidentified
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I'm... | |
I'm not really built for that sort of thing. | ||
I'm not really built for this, you know, jogging around and jumping around and all that. | ||
I'm just not really built for that. | ||
I'm more built for, like, making decisions and creating ideas and, like, telling people what to do and stuff like that. | ||
So yeah, I'm not feeling so hot today. | ||
My neck hurts. | ||
My stomach kind of hurts. | ||
I ate nothing but donuts today. | ||
I ate like five donuts today and that was it. | ||
So I'm just not really feeling it too much. | ||
I'm a little sleepy. | ||
I just woke up like a half hour ago. | ||
So I'm feeling okay. | ||
I'm feeling a little, you know, not feeling the best, but we still got to do a show. | ||
Before we get into it, though, I want to remind you to smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live on Cozy. | ||
Also, follow me on Gab Telegram. | ||
True Social. | ||
Link's down below. | ||
Make sure to check that out. | ||
What else? | ||
No other big updates. | ||
I'll be here all week. | ||
Yeah, I had an okay day. | ||
You know, yesterday I was starving. | ||
I had, like, the perfect day yesterday. | ||
And I've been feeling good. | ||
I had just like the most aesthetic, perfect day. | ||
Yesterday, I woke up super late, and I was gonna go to church at like 5, and then I was procrastinating, and then I was gonna go at 5.30, and then I was procrastinating, then I was gonna go at... Then I was like, you know what, I'll just go at 7. | ||
Give myself some time, and... | ||
So I go to church at 7, I get done with church, I haven't eaten all day, I go out to Domino's, I get a pizza, I get a box of wings, I come home, I eat the pizza, I eat the box of wings, and then I just crash like instantly, like a baby. | ||
I get home, I just devour this pizza, and I just like lay down on the couch and I'm just out. | ||
Then I wake up at 5 a.m., I go out, I get my coffee, I get a box of donuts, I get an egg, ham and cheese sandwich, and I'm just sitting in there, chilling, I put a lot of cream in my coffee, I'm drinking my coffee, I'm eating my donuts, ate my sandwich, I was just chilling, I watched the sun come up, came home, did some work, fell asleep, took a nap, woke up, do my show, | ||
So I'm really kind of getting into a groove, even though that maybe wasn't the best health decision, even though that wasn't maybe like the healthiest option. | ||
It was good for the soul. | ||
And I have to say, I put this out on Telegram today, maybe you guys were confused what I was talking about, but today on Telegram this morning, I said I love Mexicans, and I got like 500 downvotes, which is a little bit weird because, you know, I'm Mexican, so I don't know, you know, you do know I'm Mexican, right? | ||
I put out on Telegram I love Mexicans, and all these people that follow me are like, boo, fuck that, we don't love Mexicans. | ||
It's like, hey, I'm Mexican! | ||
What, are you not like me? | ||
Maybe not. | ||
Maybe you guys are racist after all. | ||
It would be news to me, because I'm not. | ||
I love everybody. | ||
But anyway, so I put out on Telegram, I said, you know, I love these Mexicans. | ||
And the reason I said that is because I'm out here in L.A. | ||
And I go to church among the Mexicans. | ||
This is where I see them. | ||
Because, you know, otherwise I'm just hard at work and I don't really go out too much. | ||
And when I do, I go to these restaurants and there's a lot of, like, yuppie types. | ||
But the two primary places that I see Mexicans are, I go to church and they're always there. | ||
It's always packed. | ||
And listen, hey listen, I'm not trying to do this like natural conservative thing. | ||
I'm not, okay? | ||
Just to preface, I'm not about to go on a big rant and say, you know, maybe they're not so bad. | ||
Maybe they're natural conservatives. | ||
Look, We still need to build a wall. | ||
We still need to deport, like, you know, 30 million people or whatever. | ||
I still don't love the fact that there's this Balkanization occurring in the Southwest, okay? | ||
I'll preface it by saying my baste, that's my baste opener. | ||
But here's what I will say. | ||
The two times that I see Mexicans are when I go to church, and their churches are always packed, And say what you will about the political implications of this. | ||
Of course, they vote for, like, gay marriage and abortion and gun control and all that. | ||
But they are in church, no matter what time you go. | ||
Because sometimes I go very early in the morning, sometimes I go very late at night. | ||
It's always packed. | ||
They're always there. | ||
And they do things a little bit differently there, you know. | ||
But they're there, and that's what counts. | ||
And then I also see them when I go and I get my coffee and there's always a steady stream of them coming in. | ||
They come in and they pull up in their pickup truck and they come in and they're all wearing their work boots and they got their sweatshirts on and they're all like a little group and you know some of them got their toolbox or some of them they got the trailer with the landscaping stuff. | ||
Some of them are business people as well. | ||
But that's where I see them. | ||
And so, like, just the past couple days, you know, I was at church, and I see them all, and then I crash, I wake up, I go get my coffee, and I see them all coming in, and, you know, they get their coffee, and they're... they're pretty cool. | ||
And I was thinking, you know, they're not that bad. | ||
Like, I do, uh... I do love Mexicans, okay? | ||
I love us! | ||
Maybe I'm biased. | ||
My father's half Mexican. | ||
You know, I'm a quarter Mexican. | ||
My uncle looks really Mexican. | ||
My uncle looks like... It's kind of like a gradient, you know? | ||
Because my father looks about half, half and half. | ||
And one of my uncles looks white. | ||
And then my other uncle looks like Mexican. | ||
So maybe I'm biased, you know, because I am, because it is my family, but I was watching the steady stream of them coming in, and they go to church, they go to work, now they do consume government payouts and transfers at a higher rate, you know, that is the thing. | ||
We all know. | ||
They pour into the country, and they work these low-wage jobs, and the only way that they're able to do this is because it's subsidized by the government. | ||
It's something like 63% of Hispanic immigrant households are on some form of government assistance, whether that's the EBT, or it's public housing, Section 8, or it's just straight-up welfare disability, or something like that. | ||
So we know that this is a subsidized community, like blacks. | ||
Although Hispanics, I think, work more than blacks, probably. | ||
Hispanics know that. | ||
It's sort of like a source of tension, because I think Hispanics know that they are on assistance, but they also work, and blacks are really just, like, on assistance for the most part. | ||
And anyway, so we know there are some problems here, and there's some problems with they don't speak English, and there is this There's this concept that they're concentrated in a particular geographic area, so they create these enclaves, and we know that. | ||
But all that being said, I genuinely do not like when people say that we're haters or something, because I don't hate these people. | ||
And ultimately, to be very clear about what we're after as a movement and what America First stands for is this. | ||
I am in favor of shutting down all immigration. | ||
Like, make no mistake about it. | ||
We need to close the border. | ||
A hundred percent. | ||
Close the border to illegal immigration and legal immigration. | ||
Because, despite the fact that they are good people, despite the fact that these are people who are not, you know, we're all human beings and everything. | ||
We're all real human beings. | ||
Despite all that, The country is not getting better when it is becoming a majority-minority country. | ||
Whether you like them, don't like them, whether that's based out of hatred or not hatred or something, the fact of the matter is simple, and I've said it before on the show many times, and you get that, but just to restate it, The country is being fundamentally changed at the demographic level, and we're going to get a different country as a consequence. | ||
The Hispanics, whether they go to church or not, are not like the white people that came before. | ||
And just like the Italians and the Irish were not like the Germans and the English before them, and just like the English and the Germans were not like the Indians before them. | ||
People are different, and so If you have a country with one kind of person versus another kind of person, the whole country's gonna be different. | ||
So the country was one way when the Indians were here, the country was another way when it was all English and Germans, the country was still another way when it was English and German, and then you had the introduction of the Southern and Eastern Europeans. | ||
And the country will, once again, become different when you have this increasing proportion of Hispanics and Asians. | ||
That's just true. | ||
And it's not going to be in minor ways, it's going to be in every way. | ||
The whole look, and the whole culture, and the texture of life, and the quality of life, too, is going to change, and we know this. | ||
Because the people are different in terms of their capability, too. | ||
We see that different peoples are able to create different kinds of countries. | ||
Japan has created a very unique society, and that's because of the way Japanese people are. | ||
And the Africans have created a very specific kind of society because of the way they are. | ||
And even in Europe, from Italy in the south to the United Kingdom in the north, the Italians and the English have created two different kinds of societies based on the way that those two different peoples are. | ||
So we know that. | ||
And certainly the country becoming more non-white is going to be bad for two reasons. | ||
One, because a more diverse country is weaker. | ||
And because a country with more of those particular kinds of people is... it's gonna be probably worse. | ||
It's gonna be different. | ||
Look at America, look at Mexico. | ||
Why is there a bleed of the population of Mexico into America? | ||
It's because the U.S.-Mexico border is the greatest differential in terms of wealth and quality of life between any two countries in the world. | ||
There is a 2,000 mile border, which is a huge border, and there are no other two countries in the world where there is a greater disparity in the standard of living. | ||
Think about that. | ||
When you look at any other country in the world, there is no greater gulf that separates the human development of two countries than there is between America, which is, you could say, one of the highest quality of life countries in the world, and Mexico, which is certainly, like, bottom half. | ||
Or certainly, it's not in the top 50. | ||
Let's put it that way. | ||
And so, and also, by the way, that's true of every country south of Mexico, In the entire Western Hemisphere. | ||
And that is why increasingly we're getting illegal immigration from these Northern Triangle countries. | ||
That's why increasingly the immigration is not even from Mexicans, it's from Salvadorians, Guatemalans, Hondurans, Nicaraguans, coming through Mexico from south of Mexico. | ||
It's because that's even truer the further south you go. | ||
And so America, being the richest, most capital-intense country in the world, most human capital, most entrepreneurial, most productive, it is bordering some of the poorest, most violent, lowest IQ countries on earth. | ||
And that's why the population transfer goes one way, for the most part. | ||
There's some gentrification going on in like Mexico City and stuff, but we're talking in terms of the millions of people, we're talking on net, they're coming from south to north. | ||
And so that's why the immigration is bad for two reasons. | ||
It's bad, number one, because even if they were high IQ people, even if they were people that came from advanced societies like Japan or China, what is happening is you're still transforming America. | ||
It's still becoming alien. | ||
They're bringing the foreign here. | ||
And also they're making it more diverse. | ||
So they're making it more incoherent and more chaotic and more difficult to To understand each other and to unite because you introduce these complications like difference in alphabet language culture sense of humor body language religious belief those kinds of political culture It creates these tensions and friction So that's one dimension of it. | ||
It's how the introduction of people changes the whole. | ||
And then you've also got this idea that the people that are coming here objectively come from countries that are having a hard time, to put it nicely. | ||
With all that being said, though, what must be done is this. | ||
You have to shut down the immigration. | ||
You have to shut down people coming into our country. | ||
It's just got to stop. | ||
And you also have to get a lot of these people out. | ||
Because a lot of these people came here illegally, recently. | ||
And you probably can't get rid of anybody that has citizenship. | ||
I think that would probably be too far. | ||
But you've got people that came here, and a lot of them are criminals, and a lot of them are here strictly as economic migrants to come here and Work these jobs. | ||
Send money home to their families in another country as remittances. | ||
Subtract money from the economy. | ||
Some of them move back and forth between their native country and here. | ||
Some of them will work here for a couple decades and move home. | ||
And, of course, a lot of them intend on having kids so that they can stay here indefinitely. | ||
And we just have to get a grip on that kind of thing. | ||
So, with that being said, once we do that, at some point we are going to have to bring the country together. | ||
And this is the part where I don't like when people call me a white nationalist because it's like, look, the immigration thing is kind of like a done deal. | ||
We need to shut it down and stop it from getting worse and get a handle on it. | ||
But as far as the country being transformed from this white nation that it was, like a truly, like a nation, When it was a 90% white, 10% black nation. | ||
Like a white nation with a black minority. | ||
And there were these immigrant groups in here, but as recently as 1990, half of the country was descended from the founding stock. | ||
Think about that. | ||
As recently as 30 years ago, half the country was descended from the original people in the 18th century. | ||
That's pretty crazy. | ||
So, in the mid-20th century through to the end of the last century, you had basically a different kind of a setup here. | ||
It was a truly white nation, which was largely descended from its founding stock, much more coherent in terms of its ethnicity, its heritage, its culture. | ||
It was transformed a little bit in the 20th century with the white ethnics. | ||
And then in the latter half, in the final quarter of the century, it was transformed again with all these Hispanics and Asians. | ||
And so now you've got something like a truly multiracial empire. | ||
It's no longer a nation. | ||
You don't any longer have this sense of solidarity or coherence. | ||
You can't say that it's one coherent whole in the center. | ||
It's really more like this 50% white core as the nucleus, with this constellation of ethnic enclaves, with your black group and your Hispanics in the Southwest and in the major cities, and increasingly these Asians. | ||
And so it's really like a... It's more like a China or like Russia or like some of these other Massive countries, massive nation states. | ||
We've got like a core, which is, you know, that's probably white people in America, specifically like founding stock and maybe these ethnics. | ||
And then you've got these spokes that go out and connect to a significant black minority, a significant Hispanic minority, a significant Asian minority. | ||
And so once we shut down the immigration, that's still going to be the dynamic. | ||
We could probably freeze it like that. | ||
We could probably keep it that way. | ||
And we could probably keep it at something like 50-60% white with 40% these various minority groups. | ||
And I think it's possible that we can balance these people out. | ||
I think it's possible that you can create a harmony between the groups. | ||
And you can have an understanding. | ||
You can have a country that has other racial groups in it. | ||
And that is really the task. | ||
Once we shut down the immigration, and these things really happen concurrently, once you shut down the immigration and build the wall and make everything airtight again, At that point, then, you're going to have to figure out how does America become a great country with this huge diversity, with these new large ethnic enclaves, these new large minority groups. | ||
How do you bring them together? | ||
How do you bring them in and make them participate in American greatness? | ||
How do you have America retain its historic culture and its historic ties to Europe without Alienating these groups, you know, because these groups are gonna maintain their own culture. | ||
I don't really believe in assimilation. | ||
I don't think anybody does assimilate, ever. | ||
You know, the blacks certainly haven't assimilated. | ||
The Hispanics aren't assimilating. | ||
The Asians are probably assimilating more than anybody. | ||
So, how do you retain America's core, while these other groups retain their identity, but also have them be in harmony and have America become A great country again. | ||
That's what we're trying to do. | ||
And that's where I like the yay message of love everybody and this idea of using Christianity to bring everybody together. | ||
Because to me, and this is me speaking as me, not me speaking for yay, the fact of the matter is, like I said, the demographic change is already baked into the cake. | ||
And it is what it is. | ||
Don't love that. | ||
It's sort of unfortunate that that happened, but it did happen and that's the way our country is now. | ||
I don't think anybody would say it's an improvement. | ||
I don't think anybody would look at LA today versus how it was 60 years ago and say, LA is so much cleaner and safer and nicer. | ||
You know, nobody would say that. | ||
L.A. | ||
is like the hub of that. | ||
It's kind of like ground zero of mass immigration transforming the nation into this multiracial country and Hispanicizing it and all that. | ||
And look at the result. | ||
Look at the result in San Francisco. | ||
Look at the result in L.A. | ||
Would anybody Who had been to California in the last century and then who comes to L.A. | ||
today. | ||
Would anybody say that L.A. | ||
is cleaner, safer, nicer, friendlier? | ||
Of course not. | ||
So that's just how it is. | ||
And a lot of people hear somebody like Ye or me, and how we talk about how it's really about Christianity, and we want everybody to be Catholic, and we want everybody to come together, and they say, oh, you're a civic nationalist. | ||
You don't think that race matters. | ||
You don't think that there's any racial aspect to the country. | ||
And that's really not the case. | ||
It's simply that the world is a complex place. | ||
We have to work with what we've got here in America. | ||
I mean, none of that is going to change. | ||
And so the question is, how do we work within the current paradigm? | ||
How do we work with the current demographics we have? | ||
How are we going to bring the country together and forge a harmony and a peace between the groups and an understanding between the groups and be able to all live good lives? | ||
The only way you're going to do that is to make everybody a Christian. | ||
That's the only way. | ||
And a lot of the problems that people have with immigration, I do think can be ameliorated by religion. | ||
I don't know that everybody is going to become a scientist. | ||
I don't know that all, that these, this 40% of the country, this non-white minority, I don't know that they're all going to become rocket scientists. | ||
Just like, you know, not everybody is going to become a rocket scientist. | ||
So maybe they'll work lower-wage jobs, and it does seem that they're forming this underclass, which has some staying power. | ||
But what we can do is, through religion, we can ameliorate the worst aspects of this. | ||
It can make people responsible. | ||
It can make people accountable. | ||
It can make people moral. | ||
It can make people at least work within a framework where there can be some structure, where there can be mothers and fathers in the home. | ||
And so even if you go to an Hispanic neighborhood or black neighborhood, it's going to look different than a white neighborhood. | ||
least we can maybe make it clean and safe and make it decent and and things like that and that that's Lately just how I've been thinking is what really is our end goal? | ||
My end goal is I want America to be a great and powerful country and I want people to be happy and probably And this is just what we see from how people vote with their feet. | ||
It seems that people tend to self-segregate. | ||
Certainly that's true in Chicago. | ||
Certainly that's true to some extent in Los Angeles. | ||
You could say that wealth plays a factor, income plays a factor. | ||
But it's also true that People do tend to self-segregate. | ||
They like to be among their own. | ||
And so as long as you're in a place where if you don't care for the diversity or something, as long as you're able to live in a community that you like, and as long as it's rich, and it's prosperous, and it's safe, and you're with the people you like, and everyone's going to church, I think you can make everybody happy. | ||
I think you can make a good country out of that. | ||
And that's lately kind of how I've been thinking, is what are we really after here? | ||
What realistically is the goal in this century? | ||
And to me, the immigration is still very much a part of the agenda. | ||
It's got to be like the first thing that you do, is close the border to legal and illegal immigrants. | ||
You gotta deputize people, get at least like 15 million illegal immigrants out, you gotta do mandatory e-verify, you gotta crack down. | ||
Because all that is, is just, it's straight up corruption. | ||
It's like—and we know why this is happening. | ||
It's the Democrats bringing people in to vote for them. | ||
It's the capitalists bringing in their cheap labor source. | ||
It is, in some sense, Jews and other groups that like diversity and like liberalization and globalization because they benefit from it in other ways. | ||
I mean, that is happening, and they've said it themselves. | ||
They've said that liberal internationalism is good for them. | ||
It gives them a cover. | ||
We know that. | ||
That is ideological liberals. | ||
It also happens to be a lot of Jews that feel that way. | ||
So, the immigration's got to be shut down. | ||
You gotta crack down on this corruption, and the immigration policy has to put Americans first. | ||
That's gonna make it easier for Americans to get jobs, for wages to go up, it's gonna make the cities manageable. | ||
The cities already have problems. | ||
Then you have all these so-called undocumented people coming in who They don't speak the language. | ||
They don't know where to go. | ||
They don't have a house. | ||
I mean these people are just like, I don't say this ignorantly, but they're like peasants. | ||
They're like peasants coming from third world countries with like no skills. | ||
Some of them don't even know how to read or write. | ||
They don't speak the language. | ||
It's like the city's already a shithole. | ||
Then you're dumping in tens of thousands of these people, hundreds of thousands of these people, millions, into the cities constantly. | ||
Here's a bunch more people at the bus stop. | ||
Here's a bunch more people. | ||
Just, you know, let them loose into the city. | ||
You can't do this. | ||
So, that's just plain and simple. | ||
They're selling out Americans, and it's corruption. | ||
It's for profit, it's for political gain, it's for some weird apocalyptic Jewish agenda, you know, God only knows. | ||
And so, that's got to be the first thing that you do. | ||
But what happens on day two? | ||
Day one, you shut everything down, you drop a 50-foot electrified border wall with turrets onto the Rio Grande, and you catapult everybody into outer space who isn't supposed to be here. | ||
What do you do on day two, when you still have a pretty diverse country? | ||
What do you do? | ||
Well, you gotta restore order. | ||
You gotta put the soldiers on the ground, and they gotta restore law and order. | ||
You gotta go into San Francisco. | ||
You gotta go into Chicago. | ||
You gotta go into New York. | ||
And when you see looters and smash and grab and all this, these people gotta be hunted down. | ||
They just gotta be hunted down. | ||
They can't get away with it. | ||
It's gotta be like Tombstone. | ||
The National Guard or the Army, rather than focusing on Trump supporters and creating ISIS in the Middle East or whatever, Russia, or trying to go to war with China, let's use DHS and the NSA and the FBI and the military and the National Guard to go after the scourge of crime. | ||
We can solve all the crime. | ||
You could go into these horrible neighborhoods and you could clean them up in a week. | ||
It doesn't have to happen for very long. | ||
You need to have a really brutal period where, you know, looters are just getting, like, shot, okay? | ||
It's gotta just be, like, the Wild West. | ||
It's gotta be, like, Tombstone for, like, a little while. | ||
And it's like, these people are, they're like, alright, you know, I bet, I bet, you know, and then they go and they steal a catalytic converter and then they just get wasted, you know? | ||
They just gotta get wasted. | ||
They start running, and they think the cops aren't going to chase them, and they just get wasted. | ||
They just, like, head exploded from a mile away. | ||
Military sniper just blows their head off. | ||
And, you know, people are going to complain. | ||
They're not going to like it. | ||
But that's, like, the kind of thing that's got to happen. | ||
It's for everybody's benefit. | ||
And I'll be a little afraid. | ||
I'll be afraid. | ||
I'll be like, man, I better not get out of line. | ||
I'm going to drive the speed limit. | ||
I'm going to be, I'm going to keep it cool. | ||
Cause I'm like, you know what? | ||
I don't, I want to be a part of the solution. | ||
Hey man, I'm okay. | ||
I'm not part of the problem. | ||
We need to have a period like that. | ||
And then, over time, like they did in New York, the crime will subside. | ||
And once you can reliably restore order, then you can get investment. | ||
Then you can get jobs. | ||
Then you can get economic development. | ||
Then you can go in there and you can do missionaries and social programs and things like that. | ||
You can bring families together. | ||
You can have a school that has discipline. | ||
You know, bring back, like, corporal punishment or something. | ||
You look in these schools where black students in, like, Chicago are beating the shit out of their teachers. | ||
You can't do that! | ||
You know, so we need a real Caesar to come in and break this cycle with, like, two years tops of kind of, like, a brutal regime. | ||
And I don't say that glibly. | ||
I don't say that like it's funny. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
We're in a crisis right now. | ||
And you need, like, this transition period of real brutality to break the cycle and stop this downward spiral. | ||
Because that's what it is. | ||
There's no end in sight. | ||
And so, if you can break the cycle of corruption and of mass migration and of these government contracts and regulatory capture that are being abused, and if you can break the cycle of crime and of immorality in these places, you can really start to make America a futuristic country. | ||
The country can be wealthy without the corruption and without the brainwashing and political crap in the schools. | ||
You can have great engineers. | ||
You can have great scientists, great infrastructure. | ||
The technology can be advanced. | ||
People will be productive. | ||
People will be proud of the quality of their work. | ||
They'll have kids. | ||
We could start making our own babies again. | ||
Like, this is what becomes possible. | ||
And by the way, I believe we can do that even as a diverse country. | ||
You know, I'm not... I don't just say I'm not a white nationalist because I don't like the label. | ||
It's just true. | ||
I think that I'm an American nationalist. | ||
We're going to shut down the immigration and then we'll be left with our American country that we're going to have to figure out how it comes together and becomes powerful in the next, in this century. | ||
So anyway, we're out of time. | ||
Before we even get into news, yeah, we're out of time. | ||
I didn't mean to go into a whole rant about all that, but, um, but yeah, I mean, the thing is, I'm not, my ideology is not like, uh, hatred of, of, uh, minorities or something. hatred of, of, uh, minorities or something. | ||
I mean, My ideology is, look, we gotta be honest about what's going on. | ||
When I say there's race differences, I don't mean that to be vindictive or nasty. | ||
I say that because, look, simply saying that white people are the cause of income inequality or wealth inequality or these broad disparities in outcomes between the races, it just isn't true. | ||
You know, diversity is our strength. | ||
It's not true. | ||
We know that. | ||
I'm not telling you anything new here, but the point is, I don't say these things to be, and I'm so over the lazy, like, oh, well, you're a white supremacist because you said this, because you said the N-word one time, because you said whatever. | ||
It's like, I'm so over that. | ||
It's so lazy. | ||
It's so, you know, dishonest. | ||
We have to be honest about it because we want the country to be great. | ||
When you go to church, that's like, that's the vision of what the country could be like. | ||
You know? | ||
Anyway. | ||
So that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the news. | ||
I didn't mean to spend too much time on that. | ||
But you know, I was sitting there. | ||
I was thinking all this. | ||
I was sitting there. | ||
I got my box of donuts. | ||
I got my coffee. | ||
You know, it's Asians running the place. | ||
Some Hispanics come in. | ||
They get in their coffee before they go to work. | ||
And I'm like, you know, we can make this work, okay? | ||
We can't make the whole country like this. | ||
We don't want to make the whole country like this, but we can make this work. | ||
If we just have a robust security state, if we just have a robust security policy, if we just have—if we eliminate the corruption, if we convert these people to Catholicism, we can make this work. if we convert these people to Catholicism, we can make This can be a great thing, really. | ||
But the problem is, and I was thinking this too, because I'm thinking, but let's think about some of the negativity. | ||
I was thinking, you know, I'm feeling very positive in this moment, but I'm thinking, what's the negativity? | ||
What do I dislike about Hispanics? | ||
I don't like a lot of the ghetto culture. | ||
And I was thinking that the problem is all the people in America are assimilating downwards instead of upwards. | ||
They're assimilating downward into the ghetto. | ||
And I don't mean to point the finger at like black people, but they are kind of like the shining example of this. | ||
Whites, Asians, Hispanics, blacks, they're assimilating downward towards the lowest common denominator. | ||
You know, these Hispanics will come here and they're like, you know, like I said, they're sort of like agricultural laborers in Mexico. | ||
And they come here and then they'll adopt this like street gang. | ||
And, you know, maybe there was a little bit of that in Mexico, too. | ||
But they adopt like this black culture, you know, like the hip hop and they're sagging their pants and the chains and all that. | ||
They're adopting this like Jewish, black, Hollywood thing. | ||
And you have the existence of these like Wiggers and all that. - Yeah. | ||
And the problem is, maybe a hundred years ago, immigrants wanted to assimilate up. | ||
Like, I know that my ancestors wanted to be like the white people. | ||
You know, my Italian ancestors, they wanted to assimilate. | ||
You know, my grandmother, who was, I think, a second-generation immigrant from Italy, She doesn't have an accent. | ||
She never used Italian. | ||
She... I mean, when she was alive, we would have Thanksgiving and have Thanksgiving turkey and stuff like that. | ||
You know, we assimilated. | ||
My mom, my grandmother, her parents, they worked as hard as they could to assimilate and be like the Americans. | ||
As Italians, you know, or even as Mexicans or as... The Mexicans and Irish didn't do as good of a job, but the Italians... | ||
Well, they didn't do such a good job either. | ||
There was a lot of crime as well. | ||
But, point being is, selectively, some of them, the ones that did well, they tried to assimilate upward and to be like the Americans. | ||
To work hard, and to follow the rules, and to speak English, and that kind of thing. | ||
And I feel like that there was a pride that the American ethnics took in being that way. | ||
Certainly there were a lot of criminals and there was a lot of like that kind of thing when we first came to the shore, okay, a hundred years ago, 130 years ago. | ||
Um, but I think that there was this attitude, and honestly it was because of, like, race. | ||
I think a big part of it was because of, like, racism, you know? | ||
It's like, they didn't want to be perceived as, like, some criminal or some drunkard from Ireland or Italy, you know? | ||
Irish need not apply that kind of thing it largely was like racism that they kind of want to prove themselves or whatever and Then since the civil rights movement, it was like hey, we ain't got nothing to prove We gonna be ignorant and shit and it's like why though? | ||
I mean, I felt like we were headed in the right direction It felt like we were really headed in the right direction through racism basically through discrimination and racism The white people said, hey, none of that Dago business, huh? | ||
Act like a white man. | ||
And we were like, sure, totally, yeah, absolutely. | ||
And nowadays, you got all these ignorant people where they're like, you know, hey, fuck you, S.A., fuck you, gringo, fuck you, white man. | ||
I'ma keep my culture. | ||
And it's like, okay, but your culture's like being poor. | ||
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You know, your culture's like not, you left! | |
You left! | ||
You didn't have any jobs over there, you left! | ||
So clearly, like, you gotta change a little bit. | ||
You gotta, okay, it's a give and take. | ||
You wanna come here and be a part of it, well, you know, there's a reason that you wanted to come here. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
So I feel like that is, and again, I don't really believe in assimilation. | ||
Like, I don't think that at any point one person is going to be interchangeable with another person. | ||
I don't think that that, for the most part, ever happens. | ||
Certainly it can happen within reason. | ||
But the idea that one day black people are going to wake up and say, we're the same as white people, well, it's not going to happen. | ||
The idea that Hispanics are going to wake up with black hair and brown skin and they're 5'6", they're never going to wake up and say, I'm white just like you. | ||
People are who they are. | ||
What people can do, though, is learn to be, perhaps, A little more civilized, that's all. | ||
Learn to adopt, again, within reason, a more advanced culture. | ||
And I think that you do that through cops and priests. | ||
That's how you do it. | ||
Because not all of them are going to be able to hack it, and those people have got to go to jail. | ||
And the people that are maybe on the borderline, the people in the middle, well, they need to be religiously inculcated and brought into the church. | ||
But that's what you gotta do. | ||
You gotta build the prison, you gotta build the cemetery, you gotta build the church. | ||
That's how you build a society. | ||
That's the foundation. | ||
So anyway. | ||
But that's that. | ||
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I want to move on. | |
Because I was thinking, man, you know, I'm feeling so good about these Mexicans. | ||
Why did I ever have a problem with them? | ||
And I was like, oh yeah, it's like the baggy pants and the gang crime and the, like, stealing from people and stuff like that. | ||
And then I'm like, man, if they could just be like us Italians, that would be better. | ||
But anyway. | ||
All right, but let's move on. | ||
Let's get into the news here. | ||
And our first story, I want to talk about this reimbursement. | ||
And I'll read this article from TMZ. | ||
So there's a big story in TMZ today about how I got reimbursed by the Kanye 2020 So I'll read this from TMZ. | ||
It's kind of ridiculous because it's not even really like a story, and I'll explain why. | ||
It says, quote, Kanye West's presidential aspirations don't come cheap. | ||
Just ask his campaign, which paid Milo Yiannopoulos tens of thousands last year, while reimbursing Nick Fuentes for a few expenses as well. | ||
According to FEC filings obtained and viewed by TMZ, Kanye 2020, his official presidential committee that appears to still be active, shelled out a whopping $40,000 to the alt-right media personality with whom Ye recently cut ties amid his anti-Semitic spiral. | ||
The docs show that Milo, excuse me, was paid this amount for campaign wrap-up services, with the cash getting dispersed about a week or so before Christmas 2022. | ||
That would seem to line up with what we were seeing at the time publicly. | ||
That's not the end of Milo's payday, though. | ||
The filings show a separate $9,955 that was paid to him by the Kanye campaign in November for what they describe as a domain transfer. | ||
Keep in mind, Milo is claiming in early December that Ye actually owed him $116,000 for campaign consulting. | ||
But our Ye sources said nothing was ever in writing. | ||
Well, it certainly was in writing. | ||
Just not, like, on a contract. | ||
Certainly there are receipts that that was demanded, but nobody ever agreed to that. | ||
It says, on top of this, the FEC docs also show that Nick Fuentes was paid back by the campaign for travel costs totaling $14,700. | ||
You'll recall Nick Fuentes was on Ye's national press tour for a while, too, going city to city with Kanye for months on end. | ||
And by the way, it's Ye. | ||
Since parting ways with both guys, not to mention getting effectively cancelled by a bunch of orgs he used to be affiliated with, KW hasn't talked much politics in a while. | ||
So first of all, We have not parted ways. | ||
I'm in LA. | ||
I talked to Ye the other day. | ||
I'll be seeing him this weekend. | ||
So... I mean, that's not true. | ||
But I saw this story. | ||
I got like a question... Or what is it called? | ||
A request for comment today by Daily Beast and I think one other publication. | ||
They said, you know, we want to comment on this Kanye 2020 reimbursement. | ||
And before we even get into the details here, it's like... | ||
I don't understand. | ||
I mean, the $50,000 for Milo is absolutely, like, conspicuous. | ||
Well, let's just put it that way, okay? | ||
And I'm not going to get into that, okay? | ||
That's his business. | ||
He can answer questions about that. | ||
As much as I'd like to, I'm not going to get into that, because I have my own opinions on that. | ||
And I know the whole story, but you know, maybe you can infer, maybe you can imagine what's going on there. | ||
But anyway, as far as my reimbursement is concerned, I don't understand even why this is newsworthy. | ||
I had been working for EA for two and a half months. | ||
I relocated to LA. | ||
You know, I flew out to LA in the middle of November, and I lived in a hotel for a month and a half. | ||
And Uber to work every day, and all this kind of thing, and then I move back out here in January, and same story. | ||
It's like, so the idea that being reimbursed is somehow newsworthy, that's actually just like how, that's actually just how these things work. | ||
You know, I think any business is not going to force you to pay for travel costs related to the business. | ||
And also, I believe if you do work, you'd get compensated. | ||
So, I don't know why that's newsworthy. | ||
And as far as my total goes, it's actually interesting. | ||
This is the detail I wanted to provide. | ||
And I don't want to get too much into the weeds on the dollar amounts because I think that's kind of tacky. | ||
But this just goes to show. | ||
So I got reimbursed like $15,000 for that half of November and the full month of December. | ||
And it's like $5,000 of that wasn't even really my expense. | ||
Because when me and Milo first got out to LA back in November, we go to this hotel, and so he booked a room at the hotel, And I went down to the front desk and said, like, hey, I'm going to need another room for the next three nights or whatever. | ||
So we would have two rooms. | ||
And the lady goes, OK, do you want me to, like, add that? | ||
You know, I'm going to say this part, because I'm not going to be embarrassed by this, OK, after this. | ||
This RNC, you know, if that's how it's going to be, if it's going to be like, hey, every man for themselves, OK, you know, I'm just going to correct the record. | ||
And that's it, in a very narrow way. | ||
So we go to this hotel, because Milo booked his room, and so I go down and say, I'm going to need another room. | ||
And she goes, would you like to put it on the existing reservation? | ||
The card on file, I was like, yeah. | ||
And the card declines, because this is like, you know, this is a kind of a thing that happens. | ||
She's like, do you want me to put it on the card that's already on file? | ||
I'm like, yeah, sure. | ||
That'd be great. | ||
You know, cause I would just, I would just pay Milo back or whatever. | ||
And the card declines. | ||
Okay. | ||
So I'm like, you know what? | ||
Just put it on my card. | ||
I said, cause I was in a hurry. | ||
I was like about to catch an Uber. | ||
We're going to the office. | ||
I'm like, you know what? | ||
Here, just put it on my card. | ||
Put the new room on my card. | ||
She's like, okay. | ||
And so then me and Milo's rooms were on my card for like, I want to say a week and a half. | ||
And so, I'm doing my expenses at the end of the month, whenever it was, I think in the first week of December, like December 6th, I'm doing my expenses. | ||
And so, I'm going through all my debits on my card, I'm going through all the transactions, and I see there's like, there's like a, I don't know the exact number, but there was like a $6,000 authorization from that hotel. | ||
And I was thinking, how is that possible? | ||
I'm like, we're staying at this hotel, it's like $215, $250 a night for 10 nights. | ||
I'm thinking this can't be more than $3,000. | ||
And then it dawned on me, I was like, oh, I must have been getting charged for two rooms. | ||
But I was thinking Milo was only there for, like, nine nights. | ||
He was only there for, like, nine or ten nights. | ||
I stayed probably, like, another week or more after him, because he got fired, of course. | ||
And so I go and I try to get the receipt. | ||
You know, I'm looking through my email for the receipt from the hotel so I could parse out. | ||
I wanted like a line item of the room charges and that kind of thing, but the receipt didn't go to me. | ||
It went to him because he wanted the reservation on his account so that he could get the points. | ||
You know, he's like a point Jew. | ||
He's one of these guys. | ||
He wants to, he wants to get reimbursed for everything, but he wants everything on his card so he could get the rewards points. | ||
Which is just like so... You want to know how I knew he was Jewish? | ||
Well, that was one reason. | ||
He's telling me, no, no, we have to put it on my card so I can get the points. | ||
So I can get the Marriott, Bonvoy, Platinum, whatever. | ||
I'm like, aren't you supposed to be like rich or something? | ||
You're like, you're like being a points, being a Jew over the rewards points. | ||
I'm like, aren't you supposed to be, he's always going on and on. | ||
I am rich. | ||
I am rich. | ||
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Blah, blah, blah. | |
And he like won't fly first class. | ||
And he's like a Jew about the points and his card declines. | ||
I'm like, you know, that's weird. | ||
That's the first, that's the first, um, Eight-figure net worth person. | ||
I've ever met where that that's what's going on. | ||
But anyway, you know, hey, to each their own. | ||
Maybe he's just very frugal. | ||
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Or Jewish, I guess. | |
So he's like, you know, I need the points, blah blah blah. | ||
So I didn't even get the receipt. | ||
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So I gotta call the hotel. | |
And I'm like, uh, hey, you know, can I, can you send me the, uh, can I get a printout of all the charges? | ||
Cause, you know, there's this, there's been a mix up here. | ||
Like there were two or three cards on this reservation. | ||
All these, all these expenses are being made. | ||
I'm like, you know, this is way more than I thought it was. | ||
And so they send me this printout. | ||
And I get a line item review of the expenses, and so it turns out my card was being charged for my hotel rooms, which was like for 15 days, and for Milo's room, which was like for 10 days. | ||
But I'm like, it's still too much. | ||
And so I'm going through the line item thing. | ||
I mean, I could literally pull it up right now. | ||
I mean, I literally have the receipts. | ||
You know when people say, I have the receipts? | ||
I mean, I literally have the receipts. | ||
I'm not gonna do that. | ||
But it was like, you know, my room, my room was like, you know, room charge, room charge, room charge, you know, for every night, you know, one night, one night, one night, $200, $200, $200. | ||
$200, $200, $200. | ||
I look on Milo's room and it's like room charge, pantry wine, pantry wine, pantry wine. | ||
Bottle of wine. | ||
Bottle of wine. | ||
Frozen snack. | ||
Frozen snack. | ||
Room service. | ||
At the restaurant. | ||
Pantry snack. | ||
Pantry drink. | ||
Bottle of water. | ||
Bottle of water. | ||
Like, for one day! | ||
For one day! | ||
It took me, like, ten minutes to put mine into a spreadsheet because it was like, day one, room charge. | ||
Day two, room charge. | ||
Day three, room charge. | ||
His was like, day one, room charge, two bottles of wine, five snacks, five drinks, charge at the restaurant, overnight parking. | ||
Day two, room charge, bottle of wine, overnight parking. | ||
You know, all these drinks, all these snacks. | ||
And I had no idea. | ||
I had no idea that that was going on. | ||
Because he had said like, oh, I was famished last night. | ||
I had to get one of those little frozen whatevers. | ||
This dude was like... Man, this dude was eating good. | ||
He was getting some late-night cravings. | ||
Let's put it that way. | ||
Ice cream, wine, food, drinks. | ||
Every day! | ||
You know how much that stuff adds up? | ||
Like... Anyway, so get this. | ||
So I submit my first reimbursement. | ||
My first reimbursement was like, for me, Two weeks worth of hotel, flights, Ubers, you know, like it was all my travel expenses. | ||
And all my travel expenses for two weeks in Los Angeles was like $5,000. | ||
His hotel stay, just the hotel stay, for a fraction of the time, for like 10 days, was $5,000 also. | ||
So I was reimbursed like $15,000 from the week before Thanksgiving until the end of December. | ||
And $5,000 of that was just Milo's 10-day stay at the hotel. | ||
Okay? | ||
So it's like, so when you put the, and the reason I bring it up like that, the reason I say that is because, you know, they're trying to make it out like, oh, you know, I'm, I'm like cashing in. | ||
Like that, that's what the article said. | ||
It said bankrolled. | ||
Kanye 2020 bankrolls Nick Fuentes. | ||
$10,000 living in a hotel in Los Angeles for six weeks and traveling around the country is like nothing. | ||
It's nothing. | ||
You know? | ||
And the only reason I get into it is when they say, oh, he's being bankrolled. | ||
Like I'm, like, stuffing my pants with fistfuls of cash or something. | ||
It's like, I paid for all that out of pocket and then got reimbursed. | ||
You know, who could afford to quit their job for six weeks and then go live in hotels in one of the most expensive cities in the world for six weeks at the drop of a hat? | ||
And that's why it's so wrong, because I was really willing To go out there and just, and just make, and I didn't even think I was going to get reimbursed initially. | ||
I thought I was just paying all that out of pocket. | ||
And that's what I was willing to do. | ||
I didn't do a show for six weeks. | ||
I didn't make any money for like six weeks doing the show. | ||
As you recall, I put the show on hiatus from mid-November through to the first week in January. | ||
And so, I put my job on hiatus. | ||
And I come out here, and it costs a fortune to live like that, to eat out at restaurants, and live in hotels, and Uber to work, to and from work every day like that. | ||
It costs like a fortune to do that. | ||
And I was willing to not only quit my job indefinitely, but also pay out of pocket indefinitely for my own stuff. | ||
Now eventually I got reimbursed and all that, but that's what I was willing to do at the time, and I was still being very frugal once I was reimbursed. | ||
And so the idea that I was like, uh, I hate that so much when they say, Oh, Nick is taking advantage. | ||
Oh, he's, he's being bankrolled or something. | ||
It's so not like that. | ||
It's so isn't like that. | ||
I'm so not that way. | ||
And, um, so, so I don't say any, any of that's like throw Milo under the bus or embarrass him. | ||
Although, you know, maybe I did. | ||
But, hey, I mean, if he's gonna go and correct the record on the RNC thing, I'm gonna correct the record on this. | ||
If he's gonna go and say, oh, I'm not with them, it's like, okay, well, I'm not gonna take the hit for your $5,000 hotel wine binge or whatever. | ||
Like, that's just bullshit. | ||
You know? | ||
So, anyway. | ||
So that's the scoop on that, and, you know, once again, I don't think that that's even, like, a news story to say that I got reimbursed for travel expenses. | ||
I mean, it's expensive to travel, you know? | ||
to be flying around the country like that and and to be dropped into LA and be in the temporary housing setup and all that it's you know it gets expensive and you know $10,000 for six weeks is not that's not crazy So, if anything, it's even less, because they said my reimbursement was like $14,700, and $5,000 of that was my loss. | ||
We're talking about a little bit more than $9,000 for 45 days in Los Angeles. | ||
You know, what is that? | ||
$200 a day? | ||
Hotel, Uber, you know, lunch. | ||
That's not crazy. | ||
In addition to other equipment and office supplies and stuff like that, that's not so... | ||
If anything, you would scratch your head and wonder how I was that economical. | ||
But anyway. | ||
So that's that. | ||
I just want to come on and correct the records. | ||
I just think that's, you know, number one, it's like BS. | ||
And two, you know, once you see the whole story, it's like, oh, okay, so travel expenses reimbursed. | ||
Yeah, bombshell. | ||
Major headline. | ||
Travel expense reimbursed. | ||
Because that's totally unheard of. | ||
And, you know, as far as the 116,000, you know, I'm gonna verify that that was a number that was submitted, which was pretty ridiculous. | ||
And again, I've got my own feelings on that, but I'm not really in a position to talk about that whole situation. | ||
That's really, if Milo wants to talk, if he wants to talk about his Christian charity, You know, he can explain that one, you know, how you build a campaign, $126,000, 116 plus a 10,000 domain for, you know, 11, 10, 11 days worth of work. | ||
You know, you can explain how the Christian charity behind that one, but I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna get into that. | ||
Pretty ridiculous, if you ask me. | ||
And you know what's funny? | ||
Because at the time, it was kind of like a difficult situation because everybody was texting me and saying as much, you know, hey, Milo is such a... When people had heard that me and Milo were on the campaign, the Kanye 2020 campaign, that is, they were saying, you know, Oh, uh, you need to watch out for his Christian charity. | ||
That's what they were saying. | ||
They were saying, you and Ye are so lucky because Milo is such a charitable and honest person. | ||
That's what they were saying. | ||
Everyone that had ever worked with him or knew about him was reaching out desperately to encourage me and say, we love him. | ||
He is a pathologically honest and charitable person. | ||
And, um, you know, And they were right. | ||
And even though it was a delicate situation, they all turned out to be right. | ||
And I was telling them, like, I know, I know, but it's a delicate situation. | ||
I can't just go and tell everybody what a charitable and honest person he is. | ||
Because I don't want to embarrass the team or anything. | ||
But anyway, he's a pathological honest guy. | ||
Pathologically honest guy. | ||
unidentified
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Pathological truth teller. | |
Oh, man. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
One of these days I'll write my memoir. | ||
I mean, it really is insane. | ||
The stuff that goes on behind the scenes. | ||
Politics sucks. | ||
I mean, I love it, but the people that you meet in politics are unbelievable. | ||
And, you know. | ||
If I ever fail or anything at Lauren Southern and all I have left is write my memoir or whatever, do my video, or I say, OK, here's the real story. | ||
Because I feel like you only do that when you're a failure, basically. | ||
Or you're so powerful it doesn't matter. | ||
If I'm ever in a position you guys, you're gonna flip when you hear all the, because there's so many lies about me and so many rumors and people can really say whatever they want to say and the thing is like I can't rebut every little thing and I can't tell the full story because I'm still in it. | ||
I'm still in the arena and so when you're in the arena you can't go And talk about all the inside baseball because you're still, it all still matters. | ||
Like you're all, you're still building something. | ||
And the only people that have the luxury of just flaming out and making wild accusations and giving their inside scoop are literally people that are ready to cash their chips in. | ||
It's like with Trump. | ||
Have you ever noticed that during the Trump administration, you'd have all these guys that would get fired, or they'd flame out, or they'd serve their two years and quit, and then what was their move? | ||
Tell all book. | ||
They write their Fire and Fury, they write their James Comey book, they write their... Once they've flamed out, once they have nowhere left to go, once they have no more moves to make, they're ready to cash their chips in, and what do they do? | ||
They sell their story! | ||
They sell their story! | ||
And they cash in their chips, whether it's a book or whatever, and they cash in, and that's their golden parachute. | ||
That's their severance. | ||
And that is maybe, like, the most frustrating part, because, you know, there's two sides to every story. | ||
Every story that you've ever heard about me, from, you know, going back all the way to the beginning, from, like, Charlottesville and Cassie Dillon, all the way through to things like this. | ||
There's two sides to every story you've heard about me, every rumor, whether it's about the Capitol, or it's about my personnel, or it's about my views, or whatever. | ||
And it's a pretty amazing story, but I'm still in the story. | ||
I'm still in the story. | ||
It's still unfolding all the time, and it all still matters. | ||
And so the idea that, you know, and that's why I tell people trust the plan, because the idea that I could sort of step outside the narrative, the idea that I could step outside and break the fourth wall and say, hey guys, Nick here. | ||
So I bet you're wondering about this this well actually here's my social security number it doesn't work that way and so that's the most frustrating part is like TMZ or whatever you get lied about and because you're still involved in like a high-stakes thing Whether it's on a political team, or you're being investigated by the FBI, or you're trying to get on social media, you know, all these different kinds of things, they all come with constraints. | ||
And... So not being able to say, no, no, here's what really happened, like, this is bullshit, whatever, that's the most frustrating part. | ||
And stuff like this, you know, I can correct the record a little bit, but I can't even, I can't even go into the whole thing and, you know, And it sucks, particularly with people like Milo, because I've known Milo for a few years. | ||
And from the beginning, people made stuff up about that. | ||
They're like, Milo made his website, and blah, blah, blah. | ||
And it's like, for a long time, I was basically just trying to play nice and everything. | ||
But it's like Milo didn't build my website ever, okay? | ||
I talked to... I texted him in like 2020 and said, hey, I'm building an alternative streaming platform. | ||
Do you know any web developers? | ||
And he said, well, here's a number for our guy at Sensor TV. | ||
And I texted that guy, and he said, yeah, yeah, I'll help you for free. | ||
And then he like never got back to me. | ||
But I mentioned that in passing on my show, like, oh, Milo's doing a lot to help me with this website. | ||
And for years, people were like, Milo is running his website, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Same thing with Zimmerman. | ||
You know, Zimmerman worked at Epic, which is domain registrar for a time. | ||
He doesn't even work there anymore. | ||
And he's another one who I texted and said, hey, I'm building this site. | ||
Is there any way you can help? | ||
And he said, yeah, well, I'm at Epic. | ||
We can help you set up domain registrar, whatever. | ||
I said, thanks a lot. | ||
And then people, oh, he runs the website, blah, blah, blah. | ||
And it's stuff like that where I'm like, you know, if only you could just... But that's the problem, is you can't fight the battle, like, offensively, but also defensively at the same time. | ||
You can't create your own narrative while responding to everything like that. | ||
And sometimes you can't even respond fully. | ||
Like when Patrick Casey went out and said, oh, Nick Fuentes got his bank account frozen by the feds. | ||
And I didn't even know that at the time. | ||
And I had to come out and say, well, it's like kind of true, but also it's not, but I can't really talk about it. | ||
And everybody was like, oh, you're full of shit. | ||
And I was like, no, I'm just under a grand jury investigation. | ||
You can't just talk about those things. | ||
But you can if you have nothing to lose, if you're flaming out and cashing in, you know? | ||
So anyway. | ||
Not not to go on like a personal rant or whatever, but it just kind of gets to the whole dynamic which sucks So and and being around certain types like that like You know, I'm not gonna lie like The Jewish thing, like, I'll just say this about it. | ||
I've seen it in real time, okay? | ||
I probably feel the same way about it as Ye does, because it has happened to me too. | ||
And it is unbelievable. | ||
And unless you've ever worked with them, you just have no idea. | ||
You wouldn't believe it. | ||
And yes, it is a Jewish thing. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
It is like the same thing, probably, as working with other kinds of groups. | ||
You know, not quite the same thing, but in the same way that, you know, I don't want to get into something like racist or whatever, but in the same way that you might work with another group and they might have certain attributes, you would not believe. | ||
Like, Harley Pasternak texting Yay and saying, I'll send you to zombie land, All day, all day, man. | ||
I believe it all day. | ||
Not surprising in the slightest, because that's how it is. | ||
And I know that because it's happened to me. | ||
I've seen it. | ||
You wouldn't believe. | ||
unidentified
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It's like crazy. | |
And what sucks and is so unfair, I come on the show and I'm as real as it gets and I'm the real deal. | ||
And then you get these people behind the scenes that are just, like, absolute snakes. | ||
And, you know, I'm not, like, a perfect person. | ||
You want to say I'm, like, amateur, like, I'm unprofessional, or, you know, impulsive, or moody, yeah, okay, guilty as charged, you know? | ||
If you want to call me an incel, or, like, skinny fat Mexican, it's like, yeah, that's all true too. | ||
But I am who I am. | ||
I'm a pretty open book. | ||
And then you get these other people where they're just, like, so dishonest. | ||
It's, like, it's crazy. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
unidentified
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So, anyway. | |
You know, like, Milo's a perfect example. | ||
And he's not the main person I'm thinking of. | ||
But, like, Milo Like, insisting to me for years that he wasn't Jewish, and saying like, Oh, I took a 23 and I always thought I was Jewish, but I'm not! | ||
I wish I was! | ||
It's like, I knew you were lying, you fucking liar! | ||
I knew you were lying! | ||
I knew you were lying then, I called you a liar, and he made me feel bad about it! | ||
He was like, he was getting like, upset, and like, offended that I was saying he was lying about that. | ||
And then he goes and writes this letter to the RNC and says, I am Jewish after all. | ||
My mother's Jewish. | ||
It's just crazy! | ||
But, and that's why I put something out. | ||
This was a subtweet of Milo. | ||
I put something out a few months ago where I said, you have to be on guard about people manipulating you because people manipulate you in ways that you don't even understand. | ||
And that's why you have to be disagreeable. | ||
Because if you're agreeable, people will push you around, they will manipulate you in ways you don't even understand until it's too late. | ||
Jewish people are very good at that, particularly people like Milo. | ||
And here's what they count on. | ||
They count on everybody to expect that you're telling the truth when you're not. | ||
That is how people get tricked. | ||
That is how people get manipulated. | ||
Because it's sort of like an Occam's razor thing. | ||
People don't expect to be deceived. | ||
People don't expect to be the victim of a very calculated, premeditated deception. | ||
And if they do think they can be, they think that they would see that. | ||
And that's why, in some ways, you just have to be disagreeable, and you almost have to test people. | ||
You almost have to... I would say something like read between the lines, but you almost have to be disagreeable and kind of suss out What's really going on? | ||
Sometimes you just have to not do what people say. | ||
Even if you agree with what they say, you have to do something else. | ||
Just, just to prove to yourself that you can, like, that you're still in control. | ||
And, um, that's why I totally understand Ye. | ||
Because Ye is somebody who his entire career, I'm sure, has been told, you gotta do this, you gotta say that, you gotta do this. | ||
And so I'm sure he wants to he has like you know he feels like I don't want to do that or I don't feel like doing that and a certain point you're like you know what I'm just gonna go off I'm just gonna go and go on a rant I can't hold it back anymore and I kind of feel similarly so I keep going back to if you want to understand what it's like watch that movie watch the Elvis movie With Tom Hanks. | ||
And that Tom Hanks character, behind every celebrity, behind every politician, behind everybody, is that character. | ||
Watch the Elvis movie with Austin Butler and Tom Hanks, and the Tom Hanks character, there is a Tom Hanks snowman behind everybody. | ||
When Ye talks about a Jewish handler, when he talks about Rahm and Kushner, That is absolutely 100% true. | ||
That's the system. | ||
That is our system. | ||
There is a snowman, there is a Tom Hanks that is holding the leash, holding the chains, and saying, you know, do the Christmas show. | ||
Put on the Christmas sweater and do the Christmas show. | ||
Sell the refrigerator. | ||
Do the movie. | ||
Do the tour in Europe. | ||
Don't do the tour in Europe! | ||
It's dangerous! | ||
Stay here! | ||
Stay in Vegas! | ||
You know, that character is everywhere. | ||
And then, then when you fire them, then they say, you owe me 20 million dollars, like in that movie. | ||
You know, then when they get fired, then when you say, the dream is over, you lose your job, I, you know, I don't, I don't want you to handle me anymore. | ||
Then they say, erm, you owe me all this money. | ||
You owe me all this money, actually. | ||
unidentified
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No. | |
You owe me all this money and I'm gonna sue you and I stole all your shit and blah blah blah. | ||
And I'm not talking about anybody specific there. | ||
I've seen that happen actually several times. | ||
I've seen that happen actually several times. | ||
So. | ||
unidentified
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Anyway. | |
So that is such a real... That is such a real phenomenon. | ||
unidentified
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Anyway. | |
That's why it's so important that you have Christians. | ||
That's why I'm so averse to that. | ||
Because they tried to do it to me, not like they, just like people have tried to do it to me. | ||
Not like a group or anything, but like individual people have really tried to Jew me in my life. | ||
And you know, Without getting too into detail, like, it was, um, it really sucks. | ||
And it's really offensive and gross. | ||
And that's why I have such an aversion. | ||
I'm so averse to that kind of thing now. | ||
And it's like, you know what? | ||
We just need white-ass niggas going hard as fuck. | ||
That's why I said that. | ||
You know, that's where that comes from. | ||
It's like, we don't, we, I don't want to just be, you know, bossed around and told, like, this is what's oy vey, it's good for business. | ||
Like, we just, we need uncontrolled Christian people to just go off. | ||
That's why I love Ye. | ||
That's why I'm about it, because I'm like, fuck all that noise with, like, Trump, where he's surrounded by all these handlers and they're controlling what he's going to say and telling him who to disavow and all this. | ||
And same with, um, Like Marjorie. | ||
And same with, same even to some extent with Alex Jones. | ||
It's like, you know, he's telling David Duke, he's like, I got a Jewish producer right here! | ||
And it's like, dude, dude! | ||
Cringe! | ||
Fucking cringe! | ||
You know, we need just like Christians to rise up and just say what we're gonna say. | ||
And everybody else has to be okay with it. | ||
Everybody else has to be okay with it being unrefined and it being not politically correct. | ||
Because all those things are how we're controlled. | ||
Everybody clutching their pearls and saying, oh, that was offensive to my sensibilities. | ||
That is the mechanism with how people are controlled. | ||
That's why people just need to go off. | ||
We just need to run in like a zigzag. | ||
They can't shoot us if we run in a zigzag. | ||
We have to break. | ||
The mold. | ||
We have to break the pattern. | ||
We have to be unpredictable. | ||
We have to act in such a way where they don't know what our next move is gonna be. | ||
And we have to rely on faith, and heart, and miracles, and prayer, instead of this, like, you know, Kabbalah, ritualistic magic, and spell casting, and deception, and killing, and all that kind of stuff. | ||
unidentified
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So. | |
Because I'm really, I'm not that guy. | ||
I'm just a big lover. | ||
You know what my superpower is? | ||
It's my ability to relate to people. | ||
My superpower, I'm not a very Machiavellian person. | ||
I'm not even really a very untrusting person. | ||
My superpower is, I think that I could just wrap my arms around everybody | ||
And bring them in in a loving embrace even and I'm strong enough to be stabbed a hundred times I'm strong enough to be cut up in the process But I feel like my love and my understanding is big enough to bring everybody in and overcome all the lies all the tricks all the rumors and the conventions and the betrayals and and that kind of thing and be able to exert | ||
That love on the world, you know that that's that's my superpower because that that's what I rely on as opposed to You know, I got a check and make sure this one's okay, and that one's okay. | ||
It's like at a certain point. | ||
You just got to live like Live like a Christian anyway So that's that All right. | ||
What else? | ||
We're already like an hour and a half in. | ||
I kind of just want to go eat. | ||
I can't believe... I always do this. | ||
I'm too... You gotta yell at me. | ||
Maybe I do need a handler to come in and say, Hey, wrap it up! | ||
Time to move on to the next story. | ||
Because otherwise I just talk and talk and talk and I'm just kind of telling you what's up. | ||
So... | ||
Yeah, you know what? | ||
I think we're good. | ||
Because I really want to spend a lot of time on the Trump thing, so I'm going to save that for tomorrow. | ||
So let me retitle the show, and then I'll move on, and we'll look at Super Chats. | ||
Okay. | ||
Let's say, what's the title going to be? | ||
unidentified
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Let's say, what's the title what's the title going to be? | |
What should it be? | ||
It's such an un-newsworthy thing. | ||
What should it be? | ||
something about yay strongest soldier Nick Fuentes | ||
I don't even know what the title what what's even really like the news like Like, Nick Fuentes reimbursed? | ||
What's... How do you even spin that as, like, a dramatic fake news? | ||
Yay, strongest soldier Nick Fuentes. | ||
Defamed? | ||
unidentified
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I don't even know. | |
Defamed by Jewish media. | ||
How do you... What am I supposed to do with that? | ||
It's not even really, like, a big story. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Alright. | ||
Let's move on. | ||
Let's take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what we got here. | ||
unidentified
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All right, I got my water. | |
I gotta get my burger. | ||
I gotta go burger mode. | ||
Alright. | ||
Ray William Johnson says, Did you see that RSBN removed every America First episode from their channel? | ||
No, did they? | ||
Damn, I hope someone archived those, cuz I didn't. | ||
unidentified
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Well, did I archive them? | |
I don't think I did. | ||
They're just gone forever now. | ||
unidentified
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Bye. | |
Buh-bye. | ||
unidentified
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That sucks. | |
Whatever, they weren't very good anyway. | ||
But it's part of history! | ||
That's like part of history! | ||
unidentified
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Whatever, I don't even care. | |
R.S.B.N. | ||
unidentified
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That's okay. | |
That's okay, you know. | ||
Not a surprise. | ||
They want to keep their YouTube. | ||
unidentified
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Big whip. | |
Pretty Fly White Guy says, what does Ye think of Catholicism? | ||
I think you've mentioned he was interested in Orthodoxy before. | ||
He doesn't have very favorable views about Catholicism. | ||
He, um, As much as he said is he he he's just like a real Protestant. | ||
He thinks that we are He doesn't think that we're saved by acts. | ||
He thinks that we are Saved by our faith alone, you know that that Christ dying on the cross saved everybody and I You know, because I think he said something on Alex Jones recently. | ||
Oh, I thought dying on the cross was enough, but apparently you need to do more or something. | ||
So, and he also has asked questions about like worshiping Mary. |