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unidentified
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Thank you. | |
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 Tuesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Actually gonna be covering everything that I was supposed to cover yesterday. | ||
But yesterday I got a little carried away talking about internet stuff. | ||
But tonight we're covering the big news. | ||
Our featured story is about this civil war that's breaking out in Israel over Benjamin Netanyahu's judicial reform. | ||
And it's sort of a complex... | ||
situation but I'll explain all the details tonight. | ||
What is the judicial reform? | ||
What triggered the protests? | ||
Why did the protests subside? | ||
What's the America First position? | ||
And really it comes down to what is the American perspective on Netanyahu and the Likud party? | ||
And it's interesting that what is best for Israel is not Maybe this goes without saying, not necessarily what's best for America. | ||
I've seen a lot of right-wing people on the internet say, well Benjamin Netanyahu is a Jewish nationalist, it's a right-wing government, he's overseeing a right-wing reconstitution of Israel, that's a good thing. | ||
And it's like, yeah, that's a good thing for Israel, but is it good for America? | ||
Because developments in other countries affect us. | ||
Specifically developments in countries that are close allies or adversaries. | ||
And so is it good for America that Israel becomes more nationalistic or right-wing? | ||
Is it good for America that the Netanyahu party and government is bolstered? | ||
No, it isn't. | ||
Especially considering Netanyahu masterminded 9-11. | ||
So I don't know why that's a good thing that he would be in power forever. | ||
So we'll talk about that, and I'll give you all the details. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about this transgender mass killing spree yesterday. | ||
Sick, twisted, depraved transgender person went into a Christian school and opened fire and killed a lot of people. | ||
And it's pretty interesting, so hey, guess what, leftists? | ||
Guess what? | ||
Now you got a mass shooter of one of your own, finally. | ||
Honestly, I think the politics of mass shooters is pretty lame. | ||
I'm not trying to be the guy taking the high road or being above it all, but it is meaningless to me. | ||
Because a lot of these mass shooters have connections to law enforcement. | ||
Who really knows what's going on with these mass killings? | ||
And I'll get into my take on this, but I really, and I, listen, I get it. | ||
And if people want to self-consciously go out there and say, and create this narrative about now there are like four transgender school shooters, And do this reverse and say, hey, pay no attention to the white supremacist shooters. | ||
There's transgender shooters! | ||
If you want to self-consciously do that, and that is, in other words, you're cognizant of the fact that this is a political narrative that we're creating and weaponizing for political purposes, fair enough. | ||
Okay, fine. | ||
But, if we're being honest, I don't know how much I buy into all of that, because I think that people that go out there and kill are mentally ill. | ||
I think that anybody that goes out there and says that they're going to murder strangers... I've said this before, if you consider white supremacist mass killings to be legitimate and not false flags or connected to FBI in some way, If you consider that there are probably legitimate instances of right-wing mass killings like this, I would say the same thing. | ||
It's really about antisocial. | ||
It's an antisocial action, more than it is an ideological action, more than it is a political action. | ||
I think it's an expression of antisocial. | ||
sentiments more than anything. | ||
So I want to get into that. | ||
I want to flesh that out a little bit. | ||
I don't mean to rain on everybody's parade. | ||
I know it's like, hey, the other side has someone that did a mass killing. | ||
Hooray! | ||
You know, I don't love that. | ||
And I don't, I think it's sort of sick. | ||
And I don't like that angle. | ||
And I don't really agree with it. | ||
I get why people do it. | ||
But that's, I don't, to me, that's very surface level. | ||
that's just very like, it's like K-Fob to me. | ||
It's like wrestling. | ||
I'm not interested in that. | ||
But I'll flesh that out a little bit. | ||
We'll get into that. | ||
But that'll be our show tonight. | ||
Before we get into our news, I want to remind you to smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live here on Cozy. | ||
Also, follow us on Gab Telegram, True Social, Rumble. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I'm streaming on Cozy and Rumble every night, so make sure to follow me on both. | ||
Follow me on Rumble. | ||
We have all the replays up there. | ||
The Rumble channel has been doing really well. | ||
And if you haven't heard yet, we have the Fuentes Rally Remastered Edition is on Rumble. | ||
So we streamed it and there were some issues with the stream. | ||
We had like an audio issue at the beginning and stuff like that. | ||
But we took a finished version of it and we color graded it and we have new angles, new footage from the rally and the best audio. | ||
And so we remastered the rally. | ||
It's about 42 minutes. | ||
So check it out. | ||
That's on our Rumble channel. | ||
We just released that, I think it was yesterday. | ||
So the remastered Fuentes Rally. | ||
Super awesome. | ||
Check that out. | ||
Also, we began selling Fuentes Rally merch yesterday and it exploded. | ||
We had hundreds of orders come in. | ||
But we got kicked off our credit card processor. | ||
Nobody's surprised. | ||
If you did submit an order, it will be fulfilled. | ||
If you bought an order with credit card, it will be fulfilled. | ||
Rest assured. | ||
But it's gonna take us a few days to get the site back online with Bitcoin option and maybe another payment option. | ||
So be on the lookout for that. | ||
I'll let you know later this week when the shop comes back online. | ||
But... | ||
This is just how it goes. | ||
We get a payment processor, we make a lot of money, and then we get banned in like one day. | ||
The good thing is, a lot of people bought the merge. | ||
We only have it for one day, but sometimes one day is all you need to make tens of thousands of dollars. | ||
So, whatever. | ||
We would make a lot more if we had it indefinitely, but I'll take it. | ||
So anyway, that's just some updates on that. | ||
What else? | ||
I think that's everything. | ||
Yesterday I was gonna cover these stories, but I launched into this big monologue about Pearl and about these Jewish subversives on Twitter. | ||
So we'll be doing all of these stories tonight. | ||
And I apologize, I was gonna try and come on at 10 o'clock, but I got another call. | ||
And I don't want to give away too much because we're working on something. | ||
We're working on something that is really interesting, really an interesting project for you-know-who, for the boss. | ||
And the other day somebody reached out and said, where can I send my resume? | ||
Because I gave some clues about what it's about and a lot of people started sending me their resumes. | ||
Now look, It's not really like that. | ||
I'm not really looking for people, but what I am interested to hear about is this I'm interested to hear if people have ideas about and I'm talking about novel ideas like actual interesting new ideas about real problems and when I say real problems, I mean things like microplastic pollution things like you know, why is everybody obese things like | ||
Mass transportation and infrastructure. | ||
Things like industry. | ||
If you have any kind of specialized knowledge or maybe any novel ideas, some of the resumes I got, I'm actually gonna start calling a few of these people and just start bouncing ideas off. | ||
I can't really give away too much, but if you have any interesting ideas, like I said, my info is on my Telegram. | ||
Yeah, and don't just send me like, hey, I read you Michael Jones, and I like him, but like, you know what I mean? | ||
I want to hear something I've never heard before. | ||
I want to hear something that's really technical, and maybe if you know about farming, if you know about healthcare, hit me up. | ||
Because I've been given a pretty big responsibility here to come up with some things. | ||
So I just thought I'd throw that out there if anybody's interested because like I said I mentioned that in the super chats and I got like 30 people sending me their resumes. | ||
I'm not it's not really like that please do not send me your resume but Because I said yesterday, I'm like, I'm like, send me if you know anything about tech. | ||
And people are like, hey, like, I'm a student. | ||
It's like, okay, Adam. | ||
Some guy said he was an engineer and then some guys like, hey, you know. | ||
So I'm really looking for something specific there, but I just thought I'd throw that out there. | ||
But anyway, that's that. | ||
I'm trying to think if there's anything else big that happened today. | ||
Not really. | ||
Did you see this big article in Claremont? | ||
Claremont Review. | ||
He puts out a magazine this week and it says Netanyahu is Israel's Churchill. | ||
That's on the front page. | ||
It's like, really man? | ||
And it just goes to show how thoroughly everything is subverted and infiltrated in our country. | ||
I am so sick of these Jewish people setting the agenda. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
I know I'm preaching to the choir here, but it's like they've just gone mask off lately. | ||
Claremont Review. | ||
Claremont is one of the big things happening in the right wing. | ||
It's a think tank and it's funded by Peter Thiel and Paul Singer. | ||
Paul Singer very well may be a straight-up Israel spy because that is how the Israeli state operates. | ||
Israel will groom Jewish businessmen into being spies for their government or They'll deploy them in America and cultivate them from the ground up. | ||
And this is very real. | ||
This is how Israel conducts their espionage and their influence operation in America. | ||
Some of the most powerful billionaires are agents of the Jewish state. | ||
Look no further, and we'll get into this, than the list of American Jews who have donated to Bibi Netanyahu. | ||
It's like a who's who. | ||
Rupert Murdoch, Sumner Redstone. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
And we're going to go through the list. | ||
There's other big names on there too. | ||
Some of them you've heard, like Sheldon Adelson, Paul Singer, who I just mentioned. | ||
But it's wild. | ||
And you wonder what is possible for this country If Americans, American-born, American-Americans, not Jewish-Americans, not African-Americans, but American-born, American-Americans start setting the agenda and start coming up with ideas and start leading our country again. | ||
Our country's pretty good. | ||
And this is our country being raped. | ||
It's not a terrible experience. | ||
It's not the best anymore in the world. | ||
And it's not as good as it used to be. | ||
But it's pretty good relative to other countries. | ||
And this is our country on being raped by foreign governments and spy agencies. | ||
What if America could unleash its full potential? | ||
What if we had a true patriot in the White House? | ||
What if we had true patriots What if we had a nationalistic, patriotic, Christian government regime with a Cold War mentality, pouring money into science, pouring money into engineering, into infrastructure, into education, into cathedrals and theology? | ||
What could be possible if that were achievable in our lifetime? | ||
I'm just sick of seeing all these spies jerking us around and wasting our time. | ||
I just hate it. | ||
I am just disgusted by it. | ||
Here we are trying to save our country. | ||
We're trying to save our inherited civilization and you have these Jewish people playing games. | ||
You have Jewish people playing these political games and trafficking and gossip and lies and all of that needs to be swept aside by a movement With real political will. | ||
I just can't stand it. | ||
And it's all, it feels like it's all sort of... It feels like it's all coming together. | ||
There's this feeling of everything coming together. | ||
Like this Bronze Age pervert thing, and this war in Israel, and Claremont, and Teal, and this NatCon, Tucker Carlson thing, producers of Jewish Spy, etc. | ||
And how it's coalescing around me, and Ye, and DEFCON 3. | ||
It's like it all seems like it's reaching a boiling point. | ||
But we'll see. | ||
Anyway, so those are just some thoughts. | ||
I saw that Claremont, I posted it on Telegram. | ||
This is what I've been talking about for over a year. | ||
This is your capture of the American opposition by the Jewish state. | ||
And I said this back in 2016, Trump rises up and he presents a challenge to the controlled opposition. | ||
What Trump represents is that we could have a true opposition in America. | ||
And if we were afforded simply that, which is a true opposition, meaning Meaning an organized movement that actually opposes, actually opposes the status quo. | ||
If we just had that, the opposition would overwhelm the status quo and we could have revolutionary change in America. | ||
That is what Trump represented as the hope that we could have a real, forceful, a genuine alternative to what we've been given. | ||
And then that was stolen from us. | ||
That became controlled also. | ||
Trump became controlled also by Kushner. | ||
And then you had this thing emerge during the Trump years, funded by these guys like Peter Thiel and Paul Singer and Claremont, and they said, we're the intellectual backbone of Trumpism. | ||
Hi, I'm Tucker. | ||
Hi, I'm Claremont. | ||
I'm Flight 93 guy, whatever his name was. | ||
We're gonna create the intellectual backing of Trumpism. | ||
And what was all of that? | ||
It was all Jewish spies. | ||
So it's like this nesting doll of where is the bottom? | ||
Where do you find an end to the lies and the trickery and the subterfuge? | ||
It's just gotta go away. | ||
I'm just sickened by by what I see. | ||
It's so complex and it's so hard to unravel and But this is what we have to do to create a genuine opposition and I think once you get that it overwhelms the system entirely and And we might even be afraid of what we create we have to to some extent labor to refine and control what comes next because I said this on a show a few months ago and people misunderstood it. | ||
I said something to the effect of, the Jewish people should be grateful for this show because the kind of anti-Semitism that is being unlocked can get far uglier than the things I say on my show. | ||
And they all said, oh he's threatening Jewish people. | ||
I wasn't threatening. | ||
I was saying that there is this will for change and It's going to move very quickly. | ||
It's going to accelerate very rapidly. | ||
And the point is, they're going to look for people that are actually sensible, that are grounded in principles, that are Catholic. | ||
They're going to want people like us, for their own sake, to be directing the traffic on that. | ||
Because once this thing really gets going in terms of, let's say there's a genuine opposition, I believe it will rapidly overwhelm the status quo. | ||
And it will no longer be a question of, can America survive? | ||
What will America do? | ||
It's going to be more a question of like, it's going to be like the French Revolution. | ||
Where's going to be an end to the chaos and this, you know, period maybe of tumult. | ||
And so it's a question of people like us, sensible, principled, frankly humanitarian, religious people trying to steer those forces in a productive direction. | ||
So, anyway, those are just some thoughts. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the transgender killing. | ||
A lot of people wanted to hear my take on this. | ||
And to me, I saw this and to me it doesn't really do anything because I don't really change my political viewpoints based on incidental crimes. | ||
It's a country of 330 million people. | ||
There's 400 million guns. | ||
Statistically, somewhere, someone is going to get a gun and someday do something heinous with it. | ||
I don't know that that really proves anything. | ||
I don't know that that really proves a larger trend, to be honest with you. | ||
And I say that when it's right-wingers, when it's trannies. | ||
It's a big country with a lot of people and even more guns. | ||
A very visible and sensational event like this, to me, does not reflect or say anything about society as a whole, in my humble opinion. | ||
So I see these kinds of crimes and just as much as I'm not moved to support gun control or moved to support 8chan being deprived of DDoS protection, equally I'm not moved to say that there's a larger problem here or something when it's... | ||
Ideological opponent who does something like this. | ||
That's just my first instinct. | ||
That's why I see this story and I'm almost thinking, what's even really the news? | ||
It's like these other stories, like a tornado or a hurricane. | ||
It's a tragedy. | ||
It's a terrible thing that happened. | ||
It's newsworthy. | ||
But is it political? | ||
I think only in as much as people want it to be. | ||
So, we'll go over the details here. | ||
This is the story. | ||
I'll pull up this article. | ||
It's this quote. | ||
Nashville police identified the shooter who opened fire on Monday morning at the Covenant School as 28-year-old Audrey Hale, whose real name I believe is Aiden, a transgender woman and former student at the private Presbyterian school. | ||
Three children and three adults were murdered in the shooting. | ||
Nashville Police Chief John Drake identified Hale as a transgender woman on Monday afternoon, but Hale listed he him pronouns on a LinkedIn profile. | ||
So I actually don't know what gender this person is. | ||
Is it a boy? | ||
Is it a girl? | ||
Is it a boy to girl? | ||
Is it a girl to boy? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It says Hale allegedly shot through a locked door around 10.13 a.m. | ||
to gain entry into the school while armed with two assault-style rifles and a handgun, then climbed the stairs to the second floor and opened fire. | ||
Two Nashville police officers entered the school and went to the sounds of gunfire where they fatally shot Hale around 10.27 a.m. | ||
according to police. | ||
Investigators found a manifesto and other writings that they are looking into as they search for a motive. | ||
Hand-drawn maps of the school detailed entry points were also located at the residence. | ||
A LinkedIn profile and personal website that appear to be affiliated with Hale describe her as a graphic designer who creates logos for businesses. | ||
She graduated from Noce College of Art with a degree in illustration and graphic design last year. | ||
So it's a transgender person who did a school shooting. | ||
And my take on school shootings is always the same, which is that logically these things will just happen. | ||
And that's not to say that they're not terrible, and it's not to say that there's no solution, but it is to say that statistically, it's gonna happen. | ||
There's 400, like I said, there are 400 million guns, there are 300 million people. | ||
What are the odds That one of these guns is going to get into the hands of somebody who has a bad day. | ||
It doesn't even have to be somebody who would be a threat their entire lives, but maybe a threat during a period in their lives. | ||
It's a very, it's like a perfect storm situation. | ||
What are the odds that a gun is going to find its way into the hands of a perfect storm individual Somebody who's troubled. | ||
Somebody who has the means and follows through with the plot to kill. | ||
Well, it's pretty good odds that that's going to happen someday. | ||
And the gun control advocates say something like, we can prevent mass killings at the point of sale of the firearm. | ||
And to me, that just doesn't make any sense. | ||
Because they'll say things like, one mass shooting is too many. | ||
How many times does this have to happen? | ||
And that's actually a good question. | ||
How many times is acceptable for a mass shooting to occur? | ||
Of course we'd like to say zero, but with 400 million guns, which cannot be controlled, cannot be... we can't identify all of them, we can't find all of them, we could never retrieve all of them, What's more, we can never prevent more guns going into circulation without banning 3D printers and banning... I don't know, it would be impossible. | ||
So... | ||
We're going to put in place a set of requirements for people who purchase firearms that it will never, nobody that purchases a gun will ever be in a state of mind that they would carry out a shooting. | ||
They will never be in the same household as someone who will carry out a shooting. | ||
Like it's just crazy the idea that you can control all the firearms that exist or all the firearms that will be sold and you can ensure that it will never fall into the wrong hands if you just ban a certain kind of person from buying them in theory. | ||
Or that you can ban a certain kind of gun from being sold. | ||
It's just impossible. | ||
Gun control is an oxymoron. | ||
There are too many firearms. | ||
You cannot control them. | ||
You cannot control the ones that exist. | ||
You cannot control the sale of them. | ||
The only way that you can control guns is to literally ban all of them. | ||
Stop selling them and ban all of them from going into... ban all the ones that exist. | ||
And you gotta find them all and you gotta destroy them all. | ||
And even then, you've got open borders. | ||
So, how can you control guns coming into the country? | ||
It's just something that is impossible. | ||
So, gun control is a non-starter. | ||
Well, what can be done? | ||
You can take reasonable steps. | ||
Like, for example, to get a concealed carry license, you have to demonstrate proficiency with a firearm. | ||
I actually think that's reasonable. | ||
Maybe you need a permit to own a firearm. | ||
Maybe I think that's reasonable too. | ||
I don't know. | ||
A lot of these gun hobbyists, they know the ins and outs. | ||
They're experts. | ||
I'm not a gun expert. | ||
But the point is, we can agree on some reasonable idea of how people can own and wield firearms in America. | ||
But we're never going to control all of them. | ||
So there has to be another solution. | ||
And I've always said that the best way to prevent mass shootings is not to focus on the firearm, but to focus on the people. | ||
Because what you'll find is that it's not the gun's fault. | ||
A gun, and I know it's like a Second Amendment talking point, but it's true, a gun is a tool. | ||
And equally, a deranged person could use a knife, or a sword, or a baseball bat, or a handgun for that matter, any kind of tool to harm other people. | ||
And, of course, people use firearms responsibly all the time. | ||
The problem is you have these people and the commonality is not just that they use firearms, the commonality is that typically they come from a broken home, typically there's mental illness, typically there's this idea that they go off the grid, that they're allowed to become isolated, they sort of slip through the cracks. | ||
And of course it's not an immediate solution, but the idea is that if we got to the point in our society where we had a neighborly society and we had a community, a true national community, it would be far more rare that people could simply disappear and become isolated and slip through the cracks. | ||
If you had a society where families were sticking together and parents were sticking together and There was this sense of stewardship that maybe other people's children are actually the responsibility of a community or teachers. | ||
There's not this idea of that's the parent's problem, that's somebody else's problem. | ||
I think bringing the social fabric tighter and knitting it tighter and closer together, that's a better way to be aware of people. | ||
And so if you have an awareness of guns and you have an awareness of people, you could probably reduce The amount of perfect storm combinations by a lot of guns getting in the hands of a person who has gone past the point of no return. | ||
We can identify all these things. | ||
We can be aware of all these things and prevent them from happening. | ||
I think that's the reasonable approach. | ||
In the short term, well it's very simple. | ||
What happens when a person gets a gun and goes to a school with the intention to kill? | ||
You call the cops. | ||
Why do you call the cops? | ||
Because the cops have guns. | ||
Somebody goes into a soft target like a school with a gun, you call somebody with a gun to come and kill them. | ||
I think you got to put guns in the schools. | ||
I think you have to maybe put police in the school. | ||
I don't know that you give them to a teacher, but maybe have a resource officer in every school and maybe you employ certain practices where you lock the doors. | ||
Ultimately though, there's only so much you can do. | ||
And I happen to be a big believer in the idea that you cannot solve every crime. | ||
You cannot prevent every crime. | ||
You cannot prevent every tragedy. | ||
And these school shootings are not as common as I think everybody thinks. | ||
There's all kinds of statistics that are promulgated about how there were 100,000 mass shootings this year. | ||
And all the mass shootings are like there's gang-related activity or it's like somebody kills himself in the vicinity of a school or something like that. | ||
And that's not to say that those things aren't bad, but it's not this. | ||
So those are just some general thoughts on school shootings. | ||
About transgenders, there is a point to be made about transgender people being radicalized. | ||
There is this idea promoted in the media that there's a transgenocide going on. | ||
I hear that from these left-wing circles where they say things like conservatives are trying to kill transgender people. | ||
There's a genocide of transgender people going on. | ||
And that kind of alarmist rhetoric might tend to radicalize people. | ||
I'm choosing my words carefully here. | ||
I'm not saying it does. | ||
I'm not saying that's necessarily the consequence. | ||
But it might tend to radicalize somebody if you're being told constantly, and especially, hey, transgender people are mentally ill. | ||
People that say they're transgender, it coincides almost one-to-one with mental illness. | ||
It coincides almost one-to-two with suicide. | ||
There is a problem here. | ||
So, if there is this population of mentally ill people with mood disorders and depressive disorders and so on, and they're being fed this extremely political, alarmist propaganda that, like, conservatives are trying to kill them, are we going to be surprised then that a mentally ill person is going to go to a school and kill Christians? | ||
Not necessarily. | ||
And you could say, hey, it's six of one, half a dozen of the other, that this is the argument from the left. | ||
They say that if we're out here saying that white people are being genocided in our own country, they're gonna say the same thing. | ||
They're gonna say, Well, is it a surprise that one of these white people is going to go into a synagogue or a black church? | ||
And I don't know that the two things are necessarily the same because, again, transgender people are mentally ill. | ||
But certainly, there are probably mentally ill people that identify with Fringe political ideologies on both sides. | ||
I think you'd probably find a higher incidence of antisocial disorders or mood disorders on the right-wing political fringe because to be on the political fringe is to be antisocial in itself. | ||
You probably find more mentally ill people at, you know, some extremist thing than you would find mentally ill people in a normal GOP meeting. | ||
So I get that, and that's why I say I think it's sort of weak. | ||
There's a tendency maybe that it promotes that, but of course there are a lot of left-wing people that are not going out there and thinking that the solution is to murder nine-year-olds. | ||
So I don't know that that's necessarily been established. | ||
I don't know that that's necessarily the case. | ||
It's like I said at the beginning of the show, I think that what any mass shooter has in common Whether they're a transgender person or some other person. | ||
And that's, by the way, granting, for the sake of argument, that all right-wing terrorism isn't by the government and it's false flag. | ||
For the sake of argument, if we're to entertain that there are multiple kinds of killers, I think the one thing they have in common is that they're all antisocial. | ||
I think that transgenderism is extremely antisocial. | ||
I think homosexuality It's extremely antisocial. | ||
I also think that when you look at these, if there's an incel terrorist attack, like they talk about Elliot Roger, Alec Manassian, antisocial. | ||
When they talk about, if it's Dylann Roof, or it's whomever, Far Right, whatever, it's antisocial. | ||
I think that's really the big thing. | ||
And so to me, the frequency of mass killings, these kinds of, and what is a mass killing? | ||
It's typically a young person, isolated, mentally ill, deranged, going out and killing strangers. | ||
Strangers in their community. | ||
Sometimes outside their community. | ||
But it's a very specific kind of violence. | ||
Because most murders, they kill people that they know. | ||
Most murders are killing a gang member, or a family member, or a friend. | ||
Most murders are not killing strangers. | ||
Also, most murders are killing, you know, a target or one person, not just killing for the sake of killing. | ||
And that elucidates what really animates these things. | ||
What's the profile of a person who goes out and kills strangers, or strangers in their community, and kills for the sake of killing lots of people? | ||
To me, that's not about... it's less important who they're targeting And it's more the prospect of... | ||
It's a person killing strangers for the sake of killing. | ||
And so it's not an expression of a political goal. | ||
Although they may talk about politics, although they may state that, I think to me that's more an expression of they are against society. | ||
And that says more about what the society is not providing for people rather than what the political factions are saying and the results of their ideas. | ||
I don't think that ideas create killers. | ||
I think that a certain texture of society creates killers. | ||
So... And by the way, I did the same show when it was the Buffalo Shooter. | ||
I did the same show when it was the Buffalo Shooter that I'm doing now. | ||
And I don't love this whole, ding ding ding, mass shooter's a tranny, points on the board for the right-wing people, because transgender inevitably leads to killing, or something like that. | ||
Now, granted, all ideas are not created equal. | ||
And I think that there is something nihilistic, and there is something depraved, and there is something that is a culture of death about transgenderism and homosexuality. | ||
Because these are things that thwart the natural process of life. | ||
Transgenderism thwarts puberty, which is the sexual, normal, natural sexual development of a person. | ||
It also inhibits a person's reproductive capabilities, in the same way that homosexuality thwarts the natural end of sex, which is creation and life, and also has a tendency of thwarting the reproductive, creative capability. | ||
So, I don't think that all ideas are created equal, that, hey, any idea, any extreme idea leads to anti-social violence. | ||
That's not true. | ||
Transgenderism will do that. | ||
I think that race idolatry will do that too. | ||
If you notice, even if we're going to grant that there are white supremacist killers, maybe there was one, if there are white supremacist killers, they're never Catholic. | ||
They're never Christians. | ||
They're always race idolaters. | ||
They're always in this sort of idea of a cult of the race. | ||
And they're dying for the flesh. | ||
And so there's something even, I would say, nihilistic, although less so, about that. | ||
Because it's elevating tribe, and war between tribes is the highest thing. | ||
I think that if you look at Christians, if you look at Catholics, then they'll throw in your face the Inquisition or the Crusades, but those are altogether different. | ||
It's a very different thing to say, we are going to war for the Holy Land, than it is to say, I'm going to go kill nine-year-olds for fun. | ||
Or, we are going to conduct an Inquisition in our country. | ||
So that we can have a Catholic society and we are going to make people convert and make people see the light as opposed to, again, we're going to go and kill people and get a high body count. | ||
It's also different when it's conducted by an institution as opposed to a lone insane individual. | ||
So, I also don't think it's fair to say that all ideas are created equal, even if the idea isn't necessarily the thing that causes people to kill. | ||
I think that the germ, or the seed, of both deadly ideas, which is, I'm gonna go out and kill because... | ||
It comes from nihilism. | ||
Whether it's, I'm gonna go out and kill because transgenders are under attack, or and that's because Christians are oppressing me, or I'm gonna go out and kill because I'm white and our race is under attack, or something like that. | ||
I think that the germ of both ideas is nihilism, a disregard for human life, this anti-society idea, this anti-God idea. | ||
And to me, that's the bigger conversation than this sort of cheap, like... Because I honestly think it doesn't really have the reward that people think it does when people go out there and say, Oh, there was a transgender killer. | ||
Now we can make the infographic of all the transgender killers just like the right-wing ones. | ||
It's like, okay, until they do a false flag or some right-wing person kills people, and then they throw it back at us. | ||
Do we really want to play this game? | ||
Is that the conversation we're trapped in is collecting mass killers? | ||
I think there's a deeper... I think there's a deeper... | ||
There are a lot of victims in a situation like this. | ||
the surface and if people actually care about people they would want to talk about that because in truth and this is going to be a little radical here so brace yourself but but hear me out there are a lot of victims in a situation like this there are no winners in this situation there are nine-year-olds who have their lives stolen from them which is whoever does that you Whoever does that should be killed. | ||
If you kill children, you should die. | ||
And old people, too. | ||
Nobody should be deprived of their life, but it's especially heinous when it's a nine-year-old. | ||
But by the same token, before this transgender person enters the school and becomes a horrible monster who is capable of killing children, that's a person who is suffering also. | ||
And it's not to say, it's not to exculpate them, because of course anybody that takes a life is morally responsible and should be killed and should receive the justice that is coming. | ||
But it is to say that there's a lot of suffering in this situation. | ||
And the true humanitarian who wants to bring an end to the killing and the bloodshed and the slaughter says that we are going to avenge the children. | ||
We're going to put to death the killer. | ||
We're going to do what it takes to make sure this doesn't happen ever again. | ||
But we're also going to look at the people that are hurting, who are mentally ill. | ||
We're also going to take a look at the people who are isolated, who are abandoned by the parents, by the society, by the family. | ||
It's not to say that those things justify or create a rational reason to do these things. | ||
But there is suffering going on there too. | ||
And so the humanitarian looks at the society which is killing itself, because that's what it is. | ||
It's all anti-social violence. | ||
It's all self-harm. | ||
It's all mutilation. | ||
It's all cruelty. | ||
Casual cruelty. | ||
Flippant, surreal, casual cruelty. | ||
And what's the answer to all of it? | ||
What's the answer for these kinds of absurd, heinous things? | ||
We have to look at why we think that they're wrong in the first place, which is that a human life has value. | ||
And a human life has value, and taking lives are morally wrong, because actions have a moral weight, because we have a moral universe. | ||
And we recognize that because we have a conscience, which is a moral law written in our heart. | ||
And if there's a moral law written on our heart, because we were designed, then who's the moral law giver, and who's the designer, and who's the creator? | ||
And if a human life matters, why? | ||
It matters because there's something more to a human being than atoms and stardust and flesh and blood. | ||
It's because there's something that animates a person. | ||
There is something that is timeless and eternal inside of a person, which presupposes that there is a soul. | ||
And maybe you don't believe in a Christian idea of the supernatural, but you believe there's something like a spirit or a soul inside of a person. | ||
And if we start with that idea, if we look at why is this, why does this make us feel this way, we can start to work towards an idea of if all of these things are the case, then we have got to start behaving in a totally different way in our society. | ||
We have to start taking care of people, we have to start observing a moral law, not just in the sense that we don't kill children, but we don't kill children with divorce, we don't kill children with pornography, we don't kill children with All the other things that are going on. | ||
We don't kill children with people being driven into isolation or put on drugs or have their genitals cut off or radicalized into thinking that they have to hate who they are, that they were put in the wrong body. | ||
In other words, we are a society that is totally amoral. | ||
We have abandoned the notion that there is a morality that we have to adhere to. | ||
We have abandoned the idea that there is a morality at all. | ||
And it's only when children are slaughtered in large numbers that we're shocked to our senses to realize that there actually is a moral way to live. | ||
And the response is people want to do these cheap things like take away the guns. | ||
And there's a deeper lesson to be learned here than that. | ||
We just need to subtract the weapons of war. | ||
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And what? | |
Then everything would be fine? | ||
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I don't think so. | |
If we could just disappear all the guns in the country then children would be killed and we could go back to pretending like there's no morality and instead we could get kids hooked on porn and drugs and they could start an OnlyFans and they could live in debt and never have savings and never start families and cut off their dick and balls | ||
And they could be polyamorous and they could get married and then split apart after 10 years and leave the kids picking up the pieces for generations. | ||
Like, oh and then that would be fine. | ||
Point is, kids are being killed. | ||
We can start that that's wrong. | ||
And if that's wrong, other things are wrong too. | ||
That's something that makes us feel horrible. | ||
Other things should make us feel horrible, too. | ||
It should snap us awake and say, hey, human life matters. | ||
Our lives matter. | ||
Our decisions matter. | ||
That proves it. | ||
Maybe that's a weird point to make, but I think we're finding that more and more is our society has been drifting and drifting and drifting and it's only when we see children showing up at drag queen shows Or people trying to normalize the molestation and rape of children and pedophilia. | ||
It's only when we see children being executed by guns in their schools where people start to say, hey, wait a minute. | ||
Actually, there is a morality. | ||
And so the answer is we need to rebuild our society. | ||
We need to rebuild The virtue in people. | ||
We need to start to live by a moral law, as opposed to say, let's just take away, let's take away the pointy objects in this insane asylum. | ||
We're living in this hellish wasteland. | ||
The problem is the weapons. | ||
Resume living in a hellish wasteland, but now you can't kill each other. | ||
Like, you know, we'll take the kids out of the drag queen story shows, then they can resume living in the hellish wasteland, you know? | ||
So, to me, that's the big picture every time a mass shooting happens, is that these things should shock us into realizing that life is worth living by a moral law. | ||
But anyway, that's that. | ||
So, I'm not interested in dunking on transgender. | ||
Like, do we need a transgender person to kill nine-year-olds for us to say transgenderism is wrong? | ||
Like, did that need to happen? | ||
Does that really add to it? | ||
It's like, they were cutting off their penises and then people are like, and they killed nine-year-olds. | ||
It's like, well, they were also cutting off their penises. | ||
Like, they're pretty fucked up already. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
I don't know why that's... Anyway, so that's my take on this whole transgender killing thing. | ||
And the flippancy, and I hate to be that guy because it's kind of gay when people go, the bodies aren't even cold and they're politicizing it. | ||
But there is something to that, that these things happen and everybody wants to rush to Twitter and say, oh they were trans, and I want to read their trans manifesto. | ||
It's like, you know, we can talk about morality without it, without needing like a body count to demonstrate it. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
So that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I don't know how popular that take is going to be. | ||
I know a lot of people want to hear me come on and say, and that proves that transgenderism is a mental illness. | ||
It's like we knew that already. | ||
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We knew transgenderism was a mental illness. | |
It turns out that mentally ill people kill people sometimes. | ||
Like, yeah, they're mentally ill. | ||
Hello? | ||
They kill themselves half the time. | ||
And then, I don't know, 10% of the time they kill other people. | ||
I thought we all understood that. | ||
But anyway. | ||
And then they turn it into, you know, and there is something troubling going on about this transgenocide idea, but I would just be careful about pushing too hard on that because that is gonna get thrown right back with white genocide, you know? | ||
Not to say that you shouldn't make that point, but, you know, you gotta, if you're gonna play politics, hey, that's kind of a dilemma, isn't it? | ||
They're talking about a transgenocide, and I understand that. | ||
They've deplatformed people that promote white genocide so people aren't wanting to deplatform the other side. | ||
I guess that makes sense, but... It really kind of gives credence to their idea. | ||
But I don't know that... | ||
Watching Vosch videos makes you want to kill people. | ||
I think being mentally insane makes you want to kill people. | ||
But anyway, I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into this civil war in Israel, which we covered kind of like a premise about this the other night. | ||
We talked about this Zionist infiltration on right-wing Twitter, but I want to get into specifically what's been going on in Israel. | ||
Which, it's been a very tumultuous situation over there. | ||
Listen, I'm not an expert in Israeli politics, so bear with me, but I'll give you the synopsis. | ||
Bibi Netanyahu, who runs the Likud party in Israel, he has been the Prime Minister since I think 2005 or 2006. | ||
He became embroiled in a very big scandal where he's been investigated by their head prosecutor in Israel and there's been talk of removing him from office. | ||
So Netanyahu has backed a judicial reform package in their legislature. | ||
The way it works is that their Supreme Court, their high court, is independent from the legislature to some extent. | ||
They're shielded from the legislature, and they have wide latitude to interpret the laws, because Israel doesn't have a constitution. | ||
What they do have are what they call basic laws, which have supremacy in a similar way that our constitution does. | ||
The Israeli high court has been one of the only institutions in the Israeli society, which is pushing back against the Likud and pushing back against the Israeli nationalists in protecting the human rights of the Palestinians. | ||
In the mid-1990s, the Israeli high court... | ||
Or rather, the Israeli Knesset, which is their legislature, passed a basic law about human rights. | ||
And for the last 30 years, the Israeli High Court has been reading into this human rights basic law protections for the Palestinians. | ||
So the Israeli High Court has been preventing settlements. | ||
They've been, in some cases, undoing some of the settlements. | ||
They've been standing athwart the very expansionist agenda of Netanyahu's Likud Party. | ||
The purpose of the Netanyahu judicial reform package is twofold. | ||
On the one hand, what the package does is it allows the ruling party in the Knesset to select more members of the High Court. | ||
It also allows the ruling party, which controls the Knesset, to determine the agenda of the high court and the things they can and cannot rule on. | ||
It also, in some cases, allows the Knesset to overrule the Supreme Court. | ||
So what it does is it gives more power to the Likud party, to the Israeli nationalists, and it deprives power. | ||
It deprives the high court, which has been protecting the Palestinians' rights, of power. | ||
At the same time, it also is going to change a particular provision about how the prime minister can be removed from office. | ||
And a lot of people are saying that if this judicial reform package goes through, even if Netanyahu is found guilty, if he's charged and convicted, he may not be able to be removed from office. | ||
So they see this as a power grab. | ||
It's twofold. | ||
It's going to Dilute the power of the Supreme Court and make it more nationalist? | ||
It's also going to insulate Netanyahu from this investigation which has been ongoing for years. | ||
So this is the story about the reform package. | ||
It says, quote, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu on Monday said that he was going to delay his coalition's judicial overhaul uh legislation after mass protests and a general strike that affected much of the country so well okay i'm reading ahead a little bit here um okay this is the part about the judicial judicial reform. | ||
It says, "Although several bills could affect Netanyahu, it is the one about declaring a prime minister unfit for office that has the biggest implication for the prime minister. | ||
Critics say Netanyahu is pushing the overhaul forward because of his own ongoing corruption trial where he faces charges of fraud, bribery, and breach of trust. | ||
The bill is largely seen by opposition leaders as a way to protect Netanyahu from being declared unfit for office as a result of the trial." As part of a deal with the court to serve as a prime minister despite being on trial, Netanyahu accepted a conflict of interest declaration. | ||
The Attorney General determined that the declaration meant Netanyahu could not be involved in the policymaking of the judicial overhaul. | ||
A petition is currently in front of the Supreme Court to declare Netanyahu unfit for office on the grounds that he has violated that conflict of interest declaration and the Attorney General has written an open letter to Netanyahu saying he is in breach of the deal and the law. | ||
Critics also argue that if the government has a greater say in which judges are appointed, Netanyahu's allies will appoint judges they know will rule in his favor. | ||
So this is why it's controversial. | ||
It's a big power grab. | ||
And additionally, Netanyahu's coalition rules with a plurality, not a majority. | ||
So 71% of Israelis do not support this judicial reform bill and the majority doesn't even support the Netanyahu government. | ||
There was a period over the last two years where the government went through, I don't know how many elections, but they went through a round of several snap elections because no party was able to form a coalition to rule. | ||
No party was able to form a coalition to govern. | ||
So this Likud, Netanyahu thing is not truly ruling with the will of the people. | ||
It's not like this is backed by a majority. | ||
Certainly not this provision. | ||
This is a power grab by one criminal. | ||
This is a power grab by one corrupt, despot, one criminal. | ||
Which by the way, if this guy wasn't a war criminal who has totally ruined America, then I would think there's something based about it. | ||
I'm being consistent here. | ||
I do think dictators are based. | ||
I do think there's something based about that. | ||
But this guy's a criminal who has destroyed our country in many ways and infiltrated our country. | ||
So I'm not really saying he's a despot. | ||
That's terrible. | ||
This guy's a scumbag because he betrayed our country. | ||
But in any case, This bill is not popular. | ||
This is why there is so much discontent. | ||
Last week, I think it was either Saturday or Friday, Bibi Netanyahu's own defense minister came out with a very public statement denouncing the judicial reform bill. | ||
In response to that, Netanyahu fired the defense minister. | ||
In response to that firing, protesters took to the streets. | ||
100,000 protesters shut down the highway in Tel Aviv and went out and actually went outside of Bibi Netanyahu's residence. | ||
You may have seen this rapidly escalate. | ||
Labor unions were talking about a general strike in the country. | ||
The teachers and universities were saying that they were going to close the schools indefinitely. | ||
Members of the Israeli diplomatic mission, like at the consulate in New York, said that they were going to step down pending the result of whatever is going on there. | ||
The president of Israel, which is a ceremonial role, came out and said he denounced the situation. | ||
Members of the IDF are saying that they wouldn't serve the government. | ||
If Netanyahu stays on, the IDF is talking about they're not prepared to defend the country, the Air Force might not be able to defend their airspace, like the whole country was disintegrating over the weekend in response to the Defense Minister being sacked. | ||
And this is the story about how this got resolved from Monday. | ||
Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu on Monday said he was delaying the coalition's judicial overhaul legislation after massive protests and a general strike that affected much of the country. | ||
Israel, including its economy, has faced instability and unprecedented political and social unrest since the plan to weaken the country's Supreme Court was announced in January. | ||
Netanyahu shocked Israel on Sunday when he fired Defense Minister Yoav Galant. | ||
Who a day earlier called for the legislation suspension saying that the plan created an internal rift that poses a clear and immediate threat for Israel's national security. | ||
After he was fired, spontaneous demonstrations erupted across the country. | ||
More than 100,000 Israeli protesters blocked Tel Aviv's main highway for hours on Sunday night, and thousands more demonstrated in front of Netanyahu's residence in Jerusalem and in other cities across the country. | ||
Protests continued into Monday with about 100,000 people rallying outside the Knesset. | ||
In a rare move, the head of Israel's workers' union announced on Monday morning a general strike across the country until the legislation was suspended. | ||
As a result of the strike, Israel's international airport and kindergartens were shut down and hospitals started dealing only with emergency cases. | ||
After his address on Monday, the unions called off the strike. | ||
So this is the situation and it's very interesting because, of course, there is factionalism within Israel and there is factionalism within world Jewry. | ||
I've talked about this for years. | ||
People always say, you treat Jews like a monolith. | ||
I've talked about this for years, that there is factionalism. | ||
There is what you would call, what I would call, world Jewry. | ||
And these are your international liberal Jews in New York, in L.A., in South Florida. | ||
These are your Jews in banking in London, Amsterdam. | ||
In Brussels, these are your Jews that did the Russian Revolution, that created communism. | ||
These are the Jews that started the Institute for Sexual Research. | ||
These are the Jews that did the Frankfurt School. | ||
So you've got your international Jewry, and this is your ADL, this is your finance, Hollywood. | ||
Academia, these are your revolutionary thinkers. | ||
Then you have Israeli Jewry. | ||
You have the Zionists. | ||
So you have the Jewish State, you have all the Jews that moved to Israel, you have religious Jews, Jews that believe in hardcore Jewish nationalism, Jewish terrorist groups like the Ergun. | ||
And then within the State of Israel, you've got left-wing Jews and you've got right-wing Jews. | ||
You've got the Likud party, which has very extreme Jewish supremacist constituents, or allies, I should say, that govern with the coalition. | ||
You've also, and the Likud party is expansionist, and they're in favor of pushing out the Palestinians and pushing the settlements as far as they'll go in Gaza and the West Bank. | ||
And then you've got left-wing Jews that favor a that favor a reproachment with Palestine and with the Arabs and favor Israel becoming like a liberal outpost or something like that. | ||
Here's the thing though. | ||
In spite of the fact that there is factionalism within Jewry, they're all part of Jewry. | ||
There is always overlap. | ||
And a lot of these Influential Jews in America will try to make us Gentiles, non-Jews, they'll try to make us think that this factionalism is something that is playing out in our society. | ||
That like, for example, The right-wing nationalistic Americans can side with the right-wing Jewish-Israeli nationalists against the liberal Israelis in Israel against the liberal Jewish, they call them Atlantic Jews, in America, New York. | ||
But the problem is that these conflicts are happening in the family. | ||
It's all in the family. | ||
It's sort of like this idea of, um, I can punch my little brother but you can't. | ||
But they'll go out and say, see, I'm punching my little brother. | ||
That shows that we're not a monolith. | ||
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See? | |
There's a family feud. | ||
See? | ||
My cousins and I are bickering. | ||
My aunt and uncle are fighting. | ||
My grandpa's mad at my nephew. | ||
So, see? | ||
We're not all working together. | ||
We're not all connected. | ||
Because we're all fighting. | ||
We all have different opinions. | ||
And we're all in conflict. | ||
But they're all part of the same family. | ||
And at the end of the day, they all move with the family. | ||
They will never side with an outsider against an insider. | ||
And so yeah, the older brother can pick on his little brother, but you can't. | ||
And yeah, the cousins can fight each other and they can exchange words, but you cannot call the cousin something. | ||
You cannot attack the cousin. | ||
Sort of like the Mafia. | ||
There are gang feuds in the Mafia, but of course they're all part of the same system, and such is the case with world Jewry. | ||
You want the proof? | ||
How about Jeffrey Epstein? | ||
Jeffrey Epstein is rolling with Prince Andrew, and he's rolling with... | ||
Bill Gates, and with JP Morgan, and with Hollywood celebrities, and the wealthiest financiers on Wall Street, and members of foreign governments. | ||
And you could say that as someone who is not religious, and somebody who never lived in Israel, you could say that a guy like him would be what we might consider part of this liberal atheistic Jewry. | ||
Finance, Hollywood, etc. | ||
And yet Jeffrey Epstein's girlfriend, Jelaine Maxwell, her father was in the Mossad, which is the Israeli intelligence services. | ||
So there's the connection for you. | ||
There's how they keep it all in the family. | ||
And there it goes from the Anglo-British Empire with Prince Andrew to liberal Jewish Wall Street to liberal Jewish Hollywood right back to Israel through this relationship and through the Mossad. | ||
How about Harvey Weinstein? | ||
Harvey Weinstein is one of these major Jewish Hollywood moguls, and when he gets put on trial in the MeToo movement for raping all these girls, who do we find out was silencing all of his accusers? | ||
Well, it's a firm called Black Cube. | ||
Black Cube is made up of, you guessed it, ex-Mossad agents. | ||
So, funnily enough, these left-wing liberal Hollywood Jews like Harvey Weinstein And these right-wing Jewish nationalists that are working for the Israeli intelligence agency, the Mossad, are somehow finding it a way to help each other out. | ||
Help a brother out, so to speak. | ||
And you see these kinds of connections all the time. | ||
How about Bibi Netanyahu himself? | ||
Well, Netanyahu, when he visited London, used to stay with Rupert Murdoch. | ||
Rupert Murdoch runs Fox News. | ||
And whenever Netanyahu stays in London, he stays at Rupert Murdoch's hotel. | ||
Rupert Murdoch is also a donor to Bibi Netanyahu. | ||
90% of Bibi Netanyahu's campaign contributions in the last election came from outside of Israel. | ||
And they came from guys like Sheldon Adelson, an American billionaire. | ||
They came from people like Sumner Redstone, who's the founder of CBS Viacom. | ||
You could say that's liberal media. | ||
They come from guys like Robert Kraft who just started a new anti-Semitism think tank with $25 million. | ||
Les Wexner, Henry Cravis, the Lauder family. | ||
And so there's a lot of overlap here between what we would call world Jewry and Israel. | ||
And even though they're not the same thing, even though there's factionalism, they're factions within the same thing. | ||
And it doesn't matter if it's an Atlantic liberal Jewish person running it or an Israeli Jewish nationalist running it, as long as it stays within the family. | ||
If you go on the ADL website, which I read something the other day from some Jewish spy, that said something like, the only reason the ADL and Israel don't fight is because of institutional inertia. | ||
Well, why is it then that ADL is a consistent supporter of Israel? | ||
ADL has the same stuff on his website as the Zionist Organization of America. | ||
And yes, the Zionist Organization of America has criticized the ADL recently. | ||
Why? | ||
Because the ADL's promotion of anti-white liberal policies is turning people against the state of Israel. | ||
So across the board, although it may appear to be different things, it's really all the same thing. | ||
I'll just put that out there. | ||
As far as BB Netanyahu goes and what he has to do with America, I look at Israel as a pariah state. | ||
Israel has thoroughly infiltrated our government. | ||
They have infiltrated the FBI, the State Department, the Pentagon. | ||
We know this, that it was Zionists that were the architects of the Iraq War. | ||
They were the loudest proponents of it in the media. | ||
They were the people that were quite literally drafting the plans for it before it even started in 1994 and before then even. | ||
They were the ones that executed it within the George W. Bush Defense Department and State Department. | ||
I mean, so these are all things that we know. | ||
And if you look at the Biden cabinet, it's full of Jewish people also. | ||
And so when I look at the State of Israel, I look at it through the same lens that I look at China. | ||
Why do I support China and Russia? | ||
Because China and Russia are humiliating and embarrassing the American regime. | ||
When Russia and China win, the American regime in Washington loses. | ||
When Russia and China expand, when they start expanding, for example, the adoption of the Chinese Yuan, what I see in that is an expanding market for a currency that is not controlled by the ADL, that is not controlled by Washington. | ||
I'm banned from American banks. | ||
If the Chinese Yuan is adopted more and more throughout the world, maybe that's an option for a guy like me to use currency and use banking. | ||
That's what I see. | ||
And so when I see Benjamin Netanyahu under fire in Israel, what I see is its relation to America. | ||
Bibi Netanyahu, as a strong force in Israel, has exerted a strong influence on our government. | ||
Bibi Netanyahu has exerted strong influence on American billionaires, on the American law enforcement apparatus, on the American security apparatus, and insofar as he is in power, and he is consolidating power, then that program continues. | ||
So Bibi Netanyahu being charged, being removed from office, being overthrown, If that diminishes Israel's influence over our government, that's a good thing. | ||
If that diminishes Israel's control over our politicians, that's a good thing. | ||
If that diminishes the power of Israel overall, that's a good thing. | ||
Is Israel good or bad for America? | ||
It's bad. | ||
It is bad. | ||
Why are we embroiled in the Syrian Civil War? | ||
Because of Israel. | ||
Why are we embroiled now in a cold war with Iran? | ||
Because of Israel! | ||
These countries should be our friends! | ||
Why do we have a foreign aid regime that favors Israel, Egypt, and Jordan? | ||
For their security! | ||
And it's these Israeli nationalists that are the architects of these arrangements, whether it's the Abraham Accords, or it's the deal that was struck with Egypt, or the deal that was struck with Jordan, or this program to destabilize the Middle East, starting with Iraq and moving into Syria and then Iran. | ||
If the political apparatus built by Netanyahu is being Dismembered. | ||
And it's responsible for all these things. | ||
That is a net positive for American nationalists in America. | ||
Now, a lot of people say, why is it a bad thing that this government's being overthrown for Israel? | ||
Well, I don't care about Israel, actually. | ||
I care about America. | ||
Would it be better for the state of Israel that Netanyahu's in power? | ||
I mean, maybe. | ||
Probably. | ||
But I'm an American. | ||
I'm an American. | ||
I'll probably never go to Israel. | ||
And Israel's on the other side of the world and it's full of people that hate me. | ||
It's full of people that spit on Christians. | ||
It's full of people that just a week ago wanted to ban Christianity. | ||
It's full of people that consider me an anti-Semite Nazi who should be killed. | ||
It's full of people who recognize this Holocaust which I've committed the cardinal sin of denying. | ||
So why should I care about they should have some kind of strong, awesome country? | ||
They're responsible for bloodshed everywhere in Libya, destabilizing Libya, in Sudan, in Somalia, in Syria, in Iraq, in Iran, in America, and now I'm supposed to go out there and say, oh but Israel should have a strong government? | ||
It's not my business. | ||
And that's not the business of the American regime. | ||
It's nice to see a color revolution happening there for once. | ||
Instead of a women's march, or instead of an Arab Spring, or instead of the color revolutions in Central Asia and Eastern Europe. | ||
So, the eradication of this Likud power structure Is a net positive for anybody that wants to create an authentic American opposition. | ||
And the thing is about these political institutions, is they're personal and once destroyed, they are not easily put back together. | ||
If Netanyahu is removed from office, this is going to change the trajectory of the State of Israel. | ||
This guy, not being in power anymore, is going to change the dynamic over there. | ||
And it's going to change it in a way that's good for us. | ||
Why would we not support that? | ||
If this Likud coalition is dissolved and in its place comes the government that came before this Lapid, I think is the name. | ||
I don't know how to pronounce it. | ||
That guy Lapid was investigating Israel's role in 9-11. | ||
He was asking questions to the dancing Israelis. | ||
That was the Prime Minister that was the interim Prime Minister between Netanyahu 2005 to 2020. | ||
And that's Netanyahu from last year until today. | ||
And you're telling me that Netanyahu's good for American nationalists? | ||
He isn't. | ||
I'll add something else. | ||
Why are no Republican politicians talking about this? | ||
Is it because they're afraid? | ||
Is it because Lindsey Graham is going to sit there next to Netanyahu holding up a sign that says, More for Israel? | ||
Do you remember that? | ||
And other politicians are going to go and do similar demonstrations of submission like that to this politician? | ||
Bibi Netanyahu has four names in America. | ||
He's got a social security number. | ||
He's got four identities in this country. | ||
He grew up in America. | ||
This guy is a spy. | ||
This guy has a blackmail network in America. | ||
He infiltrates through business with billionaires. | ||
He infiltrates government through politicians. | ||
He infiltrates The security apparatus through spies? | ||
And him being overthrown is a good thing for American patriots. | ||
Why is Claremont Review calling him the Winston Churchill of Israel? | ||
Maybe is it because Paul Singer funds Claremont? | ||
And Paul Singer is a Jewish Zionist spy for Israel? | ||
Could that be the case? | ||
And Claremont is one of the most influential right-wing think tanks. | ||
Tucker Carlson pulls his monologues from Claremont. | ||
They want to source the next Trump administration staff from Claremont. | ||
How many Publius Fellows and Lincoln Fellows do you see on Twitter? | ||
Jack Murphy, does that ring a bell? | ||
Claremont Fellow. | ||
Bronze Age Pervert? | ||
Claremont Review of Books. | ||
And you could go down the list. | ||
How deep does the corruption go? | ||
So it's a good thing. | ||
I love to see the shakeup happening over there. | ||
We need to have a mind towards unlearning everything we thought we knew. | ||
America should be in an alliance with Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, China, Turkey, France? | ||
America should be in alliance with all the great countries in the world for mutual prosperity. | ||
America and China could get rich together. | ||
America and China could... | ||
Explore the world and discover technologies together. | ||
America and Russia could become allies on the basis of Christendom and European civilization. | ||
Russia is a great civilization. | ||
Ron DeSantis goes up there and says, Russia's a gas station with nuclear weapons. | ||
No, it isn't. | ||
Russia is a civilization which is over a thousand years old and has produced some of the finest literature and the finest music and prodigal chess players and military technology and explored space. | ||
unidentified
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Russia is a great civilization. | |
Ron DeSantis has made three foreign trips as a congressman all to Israel. | ||
One trip as a governor also to Israel. | ||
Russia is a Christian, European civilization. | ||
It's very different from our own. | ||
They're not individualistic. | ||
They're not liberal. | ||
They're Asiatic. | ||
They're fundamentally different. | ||
But, like what Putin is trying to do, they're trying to become an Orthodox Christian country. | ||
They're trying to preserve an historic, European, Slavic identity. | ||
America should be allied with Russia. | ||
But instead we have Ron DeSantis, who is one of the most popular figures in America, and the governor of an American state, making these trips to a Jewish country that spits on Christians, a Jewish country that didn't exist a hundred years ago, which isn't even really a legit country, which spies on us, which tried to outlaw Christianity, He's going over there visiting them, putting his hand on the wailing wall and saying, more money for these people and pass laws in Florida banning Ben and Jerry's at their behest. | ||
What is going on in the right? | ||
And Ron DeSantis is supported by all these Tikvah graduates and all these Twitter alum like Dave Reboy and Dave Rubin, bold Jewish. | ||
And Ron DeSantis is in thick with the Claremont crowd. | ||
Where is the real American opposition? | ||
Will the real American Patriot Movement stand up? | ||
Pious Christians respecting their historic Western and European identity should be in league with the pious Muslims in the Middle East With the orthodox autocrat Putin. | ||
With the Chinese. | ||
The Chinese do not seek to take over the world. | ||
Take a look at Chinese history. | ||
There's a reason that there were 500 years of European domination. | ||
And that's because the Chinese burned all their ships. | ||
They're not looking to take over the world. | ||
Not in the way that Europeans did. | ||
There's no fear of them coming to our shores to invade. | ||
It's not going to happen. | ||
We can ally with these countries. | ||
We can seek harmony and mutual benefit. | ||
Which is the country which says that we have to war with the Muslims? | ||
Which is the country which is sending Muslim refugees to America? | ||
Which is the country supporting the liberal Hollywood producers and pornographers and financiers in America? | ||
Which is the country that is supporting these billionaires that are pillaging America's wealth? | ||
Who are we as Americans? | ||
We are not Judeo-Christians. | ||
We are not a vassal state for Israel. | ||
This is the new Holy Roman Empire. | ||
This is the new Holy Christian Empire. | ||
At least that's what it should be. | ||
That is what we should set our sights towards. | ||
Being the high civilization. | ||
Being the nucleus of the world. | ||
And being in harmony with other countries that are similar to our own. | ||
Not being some kind of belligerent client empire for Israel and world Jewry. | ||
So, I would rethink all of this. | ||
Netanyahu's going down and it is a good day in America when that government dissolves. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And anybody that tells you otherwise, anybody that's posting a gig of Chad with Hebrew writing, anybody that's talking about how the problem with the Jews is they're not like the Ergun and Jabotinsky, anybody that's telling you about Jewish factionalism is on the payroll of a foreign country that spits on Christians and thinks that we're animals. | ||
That's what's going on. | ||
That's what's up. | ||
Here's an article about Netanyahu in 9-11. | ||
It says, quote, When asked on the day of the 9-11 attacks how the attacks would affect American-Israeli relations, Benjamin Netanyahu told the New York Times that it's very good. | ||
9-11 was very good for American-Israeli relations, he said, before adding, well, not very good, but it will generate immediate sympathy. | ||
He then predicted That the attacks would strengthen the bond between our two peoples because we've experienced terror over so many decades, but the United States has now experienced a massive hemorrhaging of terror. | ||
Netanyahu, in a candid conversation recorded in 2001, said that Americans are naive. | ||
In that recording, he said, quote, I know what America is. | ||
America is something that can be easily moved, moved to the right direction. | ||
They won't get in our way. | ||
80% of the Americans support us. | ||
It's absurd. | ||
In addition, also on the day of the 9-11 attacks, Netanyahu, who at the time was not in political office, held a press conference in which he claimed that he had predicted the attacks on the World Trade Center by militant Islam in his 1995 book, Fighting Terrorism, How Democracies Can Defeat Domestic and International Terrorism. | ||
In that book, Netanyahu had posited that Iranian-linked militants would set off a nuclear bomb in the basement of the World Trade Center. | ||
A funny idea. | ||
During his press conference on the day of the attacks, Netanyahu also asserted that the 9-11 attacks would be a turning point for America and compared them to Pearl Harbor. | ||
Netanyahu's statement echoes the infamous line from the Rebuilding America's Defense document authored by the neoconservative think tank Project for the New American Century. | ||
That line reads, quote, Further, the process of transformation towards a neo-Reaganite foreign policy and hyper-militarism, even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event, like a new Pearl Harbor. | ||
Imagine that. | ||
We're never going to get these Americans to have a Reaganite foreign policy that supports our wars unless there was like, oh, I don't know, a massive terror attack on American soil. | ||
Then again, years later in 2008, the Israeli newspaper Meriv reported that Netanyahu had stated that the September 11th attacks had greatly benefited Israel. | ||
He was quoted as saying, we are benefiting from one thing and that is the attack on the Twin Towers and Pentagon and the American struggle in Iraq. | ||
Nice. | ||
This is the guy that Claremont is calling Winston Churchill. | ||
Maybe they're sort of like, is that Duper's Delight? | ||
Is that an unintentional honesty? | ||
He's like Winston Churchill. | ||
Oh, you mean he embroiled us in a war that defeated European civilization and Christendom? | ||
Oh, Netanyahu's awesome. | ||
This guy that loves 9-11 because it brought us to war for in service of his country. | ||
Claremont Review, Paul Singer. | ||
Jack Murphy, BAP, Ron DeSantis, they all think that's terrific. | ||
This is their guy? | ||
This is the Jewish nationalism they're in favor of? | ||
Now, let's also think about it this way. | ||
So 20 years ago they said the American right and the Israelis were on the same page. | ||
Why? | ||
Because of our Judeo-Christian heritage. | ||
And because we both share a strategic interest in fighting radical Islam. | ||
It's a no-brainer! | ||
The American right and the Israeli right are being forced into an inevitable alliance because we just have so much in common. | ||
Such as that we are Judeo-Christians. | ||
We're people of the book. | ||
And also, we both have a dog in the fight against Islam and Israel's on the front lines. | ||
20 years later, We hear from Ben Shapiro. | ||
The American right and the Israeli right have something in common. | ||
We are both conservatives. | ||
Israel is a beacon of Western civilization and individualism in a sea of regressive Islamic barbarism. | ||
What's more, America and Israel share the same political struggle because in America the conservatives are fighting against liberals who created this paradigm about oppressors and oppressed in the same way that Palestinians did. | ||
Black identity is a lot like Palestinian identity. | ||
And then fast forward two more years and you get Bronze Age Pervert and his ilk who say the Americans and the Israelis have so much in common. | ||
Netanyahu is a nationalist just like us. | ||
We're nationalists. | ||
And we're American nationalists just like they're Jewish nationalists. | ||
And we should really look to Israel because Israel's on the front lines of the nationalist culture war. | ||
Netanyahu's transforming Israel in a base direction like America needs to. | ||
Israel's the model for what nationalism should be like. | ||
We're being forced Into an inevitable alliance. | ||
And in the same way that Israel is being criticized by indigenous non-whites like Ilhan Omar and the Maori foreign minister in New Zealand, Donald Trump is being criticized by Rashida Tlaib and AOC. | ||
We just keep finding all these new reasons. | ||
Wow! | ||
All of these thinkers and commentators that are paid by the Israeli state through Claremont and through Paul Singer or others, they just keep finding new reasons for why every generation has so much in common with the Israeli right, with the Likud party. | ||
Hi, I'm an adolescent white Christian American from a working-class background and I just found out why the Likud party and the Israeli far-right nationalists are my closest ally. | ||
And why me, trying to afford a home and get married to a woman who doesn't have an OnlyFans, I have common cause with the Israeli settlers that are bulldozing Palestinian homes. | ||
Like, we're one in the same. | ||
This is madness. | ||
This is absolute madness. | ||
But this is what these Pharisees do. | ||
This is the depth and the complexity of their subterfuge, their deception against, perpetrated against the Americans. | ||
Why? | ||
Because they want to steal from us. | ||
This is the subterfuge perpetrated against us because of their interested relationship in our children fighting and dying for them, our children toiling and working and slaving for them. | ||
And never raising arms against them. | ||
Or asserting any kind of independent, whatever you want to call it, Nietzschean, Faustian, or Christian identity in the world. | ||
That's why. | ||
And it's the highest stakes in the world. | ||
Who will control the most valuable thing in the world? | ||
Which is the Western civilization in monetary value and productive capability. | ||
It's the highest stakes game in the world. | ||
Who will wield the productive capability and the ingenuity of Western European Christian civilization? | ||
That's the question. | ||
And the bigger question is what will win? | ||
The Eucharist or the Temple? | ||
We know what wins in the end. | ||
But we want to make it win now, right now, in our lifetimes. | ||
That's what it's got to be. | ||
It is the sacrifice on the altar, which is the represented sacrifice on the cross, the Eucharist, or it's going to be the rebuilding of a new temple and some kind of Antichrist, new Messiah, some political leader in Israel, or something like this. | ||
That's why it's Catholicism versus Zionism. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
We want a Catholic state, not a Zionist state. | ||
Forget this gay, globalist American empire. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
It is a zog. | ||
When you look at Rupert Murdoch and Sumner Redstone, And Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein, I don't see no globalist American empire or global n-word communism. | ||
I see a big, fat, Zionist occupied regime. | ||
And the answer to that is the Eucharist. | ||
Because if you're not a Christian, then yeah, let's just let these high IQ guys run our country because they're the most clever. | ||
They're the most clever, they're the most sophisticated, so let's just give them the reins. | ||
Them and the Indians, I guess, can run our country for us. | ||
So anyway, that's that. | ||
That's my take on the whole situation. | ||
It's pretty telling. | ||
Pretty telling. | ||
But... We're gonna move on. | ||
We're gonna take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
Let me get set up here. | ||
Let me get my headset. | ||
And turn on these Super Chats. | ||
And we'll see what we got going on here. | ||
But that, listen man, that's the deal. | ||
And that's the deal. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Let me get this. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Whoops. | ||
Peace. | ||
Yeah, I get... I didn't used to be when I was younger, but now I really... I cringe when I hear it. | ||
People say, gee, damn. | ||
Thanks for helping bring me to the church. | ||
Yeah, I get, I didn't used to be when I was younger, but now I really, I cringe when I hear it. | ||
I'm like, dude. | ||
Yeah, but hey, I appreciate you, buddy. | ||
Glad to hear it. | ||
OpticsZoomer sent $3. | ||
Any tips on good public speaking? | ||
You are very well spoken and clear. | ||
You are also the only funny person left on the internet. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Tips on public speaking. | ||
By the way, plum. | ||
Beach plum La Croix. | ||
Very good stuff. | ||
What a delight. | ||
That's a great flavor. | ||
Tips on public speaking. | ||
It's really, it's just all about confidence. | ||
Because it's mostly just a mental game. | ||
There's a lot of technique, but the biggest thing is just getting over that hurdle of being comfortable. | ||
And I think you only get comfortable with practice. | ||
You just got to practice your speech or practice speaking in front of people. | ||
Once you conquer that, the technique becomes a lot easier to hone. | ||
And it's fundamentals. | ||
Enunciate your words. | ||
Pay attention to how you enunciate words. | ||
And pay attention to your pacing. | ||
And try to use a dynamic vocal range. | ||
Like, I think I'm a strong speaker because I have a very conversational tone. | ||
And I'm interesting to listen to. | ||
It's actually like interesting to listen to because it's not monotone. | ||
And so that's something, you know, you could work on. | ||
Fluidity comes from preparation. | ||
If you prepare, you'll be fluid. | ||
You'll know what to say. | ||
But the biggest thing is just overcoming the anxiety or nervousness. | ||
Because people are natural, for the most part, people are naturally good at communicating. | ||
I think. | ||
Now, some people are more introverted or something, but I feel like even the most introverted people can talk. | ||
They may be shy, but they can talk, and they can talk about what they're passionate about. | ||
So it really becomes this mental thing of, how can I talk in front of people? | ||
And it's a skill, because talking in front of people is different than talking to people. | ||
I'm not good at talking to people. | ||
I'm good at talking... talking to myself. | ||
I'm good at just talking. | ||
I'm not good at talking to people. | ||
Um, it's more like a performance. | ||
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So, you just gotta practice. | |
Practice makes perfect. | ||
Just get comfortable. | ||
Just get comfortable with it. | ||
Just do it. | ||
Because I was a weaker public speaker when I started, but I've literally just done this for thousands of hours. | ||
I could put on a, like, there were times when I first started when there were shows that I would just panic. | ||
I'd be like, I don't have anything else to say. | ||
Uh, what do I say? | ||
I would, I would, you know, and it was never bad, but there were shows when I would kind of freak out. | ||
And now that will just never happen to me. | ||
And there were times when I would genuinely be at a loss for words or really fumble my words badly. | ||
Now, I do a two-hour extemporaneous show every single night with little preparation. | ||
So I'll flub a word here and there. | ||
I'll have like a brain fart. | ||
You know, I'll say the wrong word or maybe there'll be filler or I'll mess something up. | ||
But for what it is, I'm pretty fluid. | ||
And I tend not to do those things anymore because I've just done it so much. | ||
It's like you could do it in your sleep. | ||
You just do something a thousand times. | ||
This is what? | ||
Episode 1137? | ||
And you can add 70 to that because I did 70 shows with RSVN. | ||
And you could add a lot more experience to that in interviews, speeches, stuff I did before I did my show. | ||
I did radio for four years. | ||
It's like I've probably... | ||
I probably cracked close to 5,000 hours of public speaking, which is crazy. | ||
Most people don't have 10 hours of public speaking logged in their life, and I'm probably at like 5,000 hours. | ||
So I had a natural ability. | ||
Then I did it 500 times more than you. | ||
Now, for every one time you did public speaking, I did it 500 times. | ||
If you only ever did public speaking for 10 hours, for every hour that you did public speaking, I did 500 hours. | ||
That's crazy to think about. | ||
unidentified
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So... That's just practice. | |
Practice makes perfect. | ||
OpticsZoomer sent $10. | ||
Why do you believe in an intelligent creator? | ||
Is random particle interactions in the massive scale of the universe insufficient to explain complexity? | ||
Do you think consciousness cannot arise without intelligent design? | ||
Why Catholicism over other religions? | ||
For $10, why is there an intelligent creator? | ||
Is spontaneity insufficient to explain entropy and complexity in the universe? | ||
So, four questions about the meaning of life for $10. | ||
Well, the easiest one is, why Catholicism over other religions? | ||
Well, I would say Christianity over other religions because Christ fulfilled prophecies. | ||
Prophecies that were laid out hundreds of years before. | ||
And Christ came and fulfilled all of them. | ||
I think it's 600 and some prophecies that Christ fulfilled. | ||
Or maybe it's 400 something. | ||
I get it. | ||
There's 613 commandments in the Old Testament. | ||
I think Christ fulfilled 450 some prophecies. | ||
Then you also have the historicity of Jesus. | ||
I just talked about this recently, which is that the first copies of, I think it's the Gospel, can be traced back to the first century within a generation of Christ's death. | ||
You've got the testimony of the disciples, they went to their death. | ||
You've got the testimony of hundreds of others. | ||
You've got the rise and spread of Christianity in the Roman Empire in spite of martyrdom. | ||
And you've got miracles and all sorts of things like that. | ||
So I think there's a lot of evidence that Jesus Christ is God. | ||
I also think that the Christian metaphysics is otherworldly. | ||
I think it's something that is really not the thing that human beings would come up with if they came up with a religion. | ||
We know what human beings come up with, the primitive religions they come up with. | ||
And they come up with these things like, there's a God of war, and there's a God of this, and there's a God of that. | ||
And the, this idea of a triune god or a trinity, you know, a god in three persons and everything, without getting into all the complexity of Catholicism, which is really complex and mysterious and sort of, I don't want to say counterintuitive, but it's something that's sort of like, I don't know that that's what primitive man would come up with, ancient man would come up with. | ||
So there's reasons like that. | ||
I have a lot of reasons. | ||
It's a very complex topic. | ||
But those are some of them. | ||
Briefly. | ||
And then why Catholicism over other denominations? | ||
Well, simply because it's the only one that's one holy, Catholic, and apostolic. | ||
It's the only one that has all those four characteristics. | ||
It's the one that goes back to St. | ||
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Peter, and I know probably, oh, the Rock is a Peter, it's a... Okay, well... | |
Simon, or rather Peter, means rock. | ||
He changed Simon's name to mean rock and then said, you're the rock in which I built my church. | ||
And they're like, no, he meant the other rock. | ||
It's like, really? | ||
It's pretty obvious. | ||
So it all goes back to the rock. | ||
It goes back to the keys. | ||
It goes back to Peter's prominent role in the church. | ||
And then it's also just the current state of the church. | ||
The Roman Catholic Church is the only one that is Well, first of all, it's the one that assembled the Bible. | ||
It's the one that assembled the Creed. | ||
It's the one that has protected Revelation for thousands of years. | ||
You've got Protestants that are marrying gay people and trans people. | ||
And the Magisterium is the... this is the treasury of the faith, which has not been corrupted, which has not erred in 2,000 years. | ||
Protestants are speaking in tongues and jumping up and down, and they disagree on everything, and they're calling God a girl, and all these kinds of things, and it's like, oh, well, I'm the Protestant that has the right idea! | ||
It's like, oh, and how many of them are there? | ||
You're telling me that the correct Christian sect is the one that has a million members or something, the one that broke off 500 years ago, and it's some guy that founded it, and he just had the... this revolutionary reformist had the... It's crazy, like... | ||
I don't think... I could sit here and probably logically break it down, but I just think any serious person is just going to dismiss a lot of that. | ||
Can consciousness arise without intelligent design? | ||
Well, that's a very... I don't know. | ||
The nature of consciousness is a mystery which eludes us. | ||
We may understand the brain, but we do not understand the mind, and we certainly do not understand consciousness. | ||
So, I don't even think we have an understanding of consciousness to even understand that question. | ||
You know... You know, can consciousness arise out of intelligent design or not? | ||
We don't know how consciousness arose. | ||
We don't even know what consciousness is. | ||
How could we say how it can or cannot arise? | ||
I don't think we can have an answer to that question. | ||
Why do I believe in an intelligent creator? | ||
Because you see the language of design everywhere. | ||
You cannot even explain creation without using design language. | ||
Try to explain DNA without using language of design. | ||
Try it. | ||
When a scientist says, this is what DNA does, what do they say? | ||
It's a blueprint. | ||
It's a plan. | ||
It tells the cells what to do. | ||
It's like, it's coded. | ||
It's genetic information. | ||
It's like you literally cannot explain the function or the process of life without encountering its interdependency, without encountering Again, this, like, design language. | ||
It's loaded up with, like, intentionality. | ||
That, like, there are processes that start in one place and they're directed towards some other end. | ||
And it's like, so who's... who, what is directing these things? | ||
To even say that presupposes that there is a mover. | ||
That there is a designer. | ||
There is a creative force. | ||
There is a force moving it. | ||
As opposed to, it's all just here and it's all just going somewhere. | ||
So I think the fingerprints of design are everywhere you look. | ||
And are random particle interactions and the mass skill in the universe insufficient to explain complexity? | ||
Yeah, I think they are. | ||
I think there's a lot of things it just doesn't answer for, like life and consciousness. | ||
And you know, there's this theory of like, well, in enough time, and infinity is so big, then in enough time and enough possibilities, eventually a monkey will type the complete words of Shakespeare, eventually a human being. | ||
When you're talking about the odds, You know, you hear about this Goldilocks argument about the universe, and we think about this problem of primordial soup to, like, molecule? | ||
Like, primordial, rather, primordial soup to amoeba? | ||
To Proteus? | ||
Primordial soup to human being? | ||
Now that, now we, yeah, maybe we can't wrap our heads around infinity, but that's something. | ||
So it's a very complex subject. | ||
I can't give all these questions a full treatment for this Super Chat on the show. | ||
But these are just some of the things that I think about. | ||
I'm also not a technical philosopher, so I don't have a technical language. | ||
I'm a guy who... I trust my gut. | ||
I bring the truth out from within. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's what math is about. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, thank you man. | |
Silicon American sent $7. | ||
Email sent, engineer for Stark Industries here, waking up early, didn't tune in tonight. | ||
Still want to send some party funds. | ||
I was at Starbucks, $7 for a coffee. | ||
unidentified
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Hmm, gay coffee or America first? - Hey, thank you, man, I appreciate it. - Chuggers sent $5. | |
Just rewatched the Fuentes Rally on Rumble. | ||
It really is great. | ||
Perfectly shot, great rhetoric, great visuals, and great optics. | ||
Proves optics isn't about hiding your views. | ||
Gamer John. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Never has been. | ||
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3. | ||
163. | ||
I saw a disturbing discussion where Dennis Prager was explaining how lust and porn aren't intrinsically evil according to Jewish law. | ||
Really? | ||
Well, that's true. | ||
You know, because Jesus in the Gospel takes Jewish law further and says, if you lust in your heart, you've sinned. | ||
If you even have lustful thoughts, you're sinning which is not what jewish law says so so yeah i believe he said that he said a lot of things like he said something like everyone's bisexual dennis prager said everyone's bisexual and then they go and say trannies are real and they go and say lust isn't wrong and it's like That's always it. | ||
That, to me, that's always the crux of it. | ||
And it's not to say, like, oh, uh, you're, uh, you know, you won't answer the question, that means you're guilty. | ||
as opposed to getting people to spam his comments with Scott did nothing wrong. | ||
Makes him look very seuss and just cowardly. | ||
That's always it. | ||
That to me, that's always the crux of it. | ||
And it's not to say like, oh, you're, you know, you won't answer the question. | ||
That means you're guilty. | ||
But it's also kind of true. | ||
It's like, okay, if you are one of us, like, what's the explanation? | ||
All people want is transparency. | ||
Clearly something's up. | ||
Clearly something's going on. | ||
Now, you know, can you explain the argument or... Can you address that? | ||
Can you clarify? | ||
Because I'm not a bad faith guy. | ||
I know Scott. | ||
Scott's a friend of mine. | ||
I like Scott. | ||
I've been friends with him for years. | ||
So I'm not busting his balls. | ||
I'm not trying to be a jerk. | ||
But it's like, why are you putting down the Zog label? | ||
unidentified
|
He did a podcast explaining it. | |
But I just don't buy it. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
I hear ya. | ||
I hear ya, Joe. | ||
I percent five dollars less than three Joe the boomer sent three dollars yay. | ||
I'm nuts bonkers bananas. | ||
So what I'm really just crazy in love. | ||
That's all nothing weird I just wish they would stop toying with my heart. | ||
I'm too old for this. | ||
I hear you. | ||
unidentified
|
I hear you Joe You and me both desk sent ten I don't agree with that. | |
I didn't even think about it like that, but that's pretty good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, if you're calling it ZUG, you're just a brown person undergoing the ordeal of civility. | |
Unreturned Groy percent $10. | ||
Everyone calling me out as being Jewish must simply be brown greater than gets called out by Varg the next day. | ||
I didn't even think about it like that, but that's pretty good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, if you're calling it Zog, you're just a brown person undergoing the ordeal of civility, Jewish reference, by the way. | ||
And then gets called out by a pagan white nationalist to kill people. | ||
There you go. | ||
Nathan Sy sent $3. | ||
It's gayfabe. | ||
Which? | ||
Which part? | ||
Farid Lukovic sent $10. | ||
Great show. | ||
So if the U.S. | ||
would be liberated and the right people would be in power would that then trickle down into Europe and they would follow suit or would they try to subvert and turn on the U.S.? ? | ||
It would trickle down. | ||
So much of the gay world order proceeds from American embassies and the American State Department holding them back. | ||
Ritz garbage sent $5. | ||
The bear leaving its cave wasn't Russia. | ||
It was Chicago. | ||
Oh, like the bears! | ||
Like the Chicago bears! | ||
I'm like the Chicago bears. | ||
The bear leaves Chicago forever. | ||
I hope I don't leave Chicago forever. | ||
I want to come back eventually. | ||
I mean, I'm thinking about moving to Florida, obviously. | ||
The bear will leave its... The Chicago Bears! | ||
There you go. | ||
The star will gorge itself on clay. | ||
Am I the star? | ||
Am I a star? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Yay? | ||
Is Yay the star? | ||
Simon Skoula sent $3. | ||
Destiny is debating Milo in a couple weeks at University of Tennessee. | ||
Should Growipers show up and ask questions? | ||
I don't know if they're taking questions, but I don't know who is asking for that debate to happen in 2023. | ||
No, I'm not a Protestant. | ||
23. Leo Pius sent $3. | ||
Nick, you need convert to the true Catholic faith by rejecting Vatican II and the anti-popes. | ||
Why don't you look over the material from vaticancatholic.com? | ||
No, I'm not a Protestant. | ||
I'm Catholic. | ||
So I told you I'm Catholic, not Protestant. | ||
So, uh, no, I'm sorry. | ||
I'm not interested in your Protestant sect called Sede Vicantism. | ||
I'm I'm not, I told you I'm not a Protestant! | ||
I, I'm a Roman Catholic. | ||
I believe the One Holy Catholic Apostolic Church. | ||
Not this weird breakaway Protestant sect, which numbers, uh, not a lot of people with no apostolic succession. | ||
So I'm sorry, buddy. | ||
I don't need VaticanCatholic.com. | ||
We just simply have the Vatican. | ||
But I pray for your conversion to Catholicism. | ||
You know, we will forgive you. | ||
Simon Scola sent $5. | ||
It's so funny that BAP's response to Varg was basically, I'm also a flaming faggot on top of being Jewish. | ||
What a strange man. | ||
Well, he was making fun of paganism. | ||
That's what that was. | ||
But yeah, he did it in a way that was pretty embarrassing. | ||
Ritz garbage sent $10. | ||
When there's a RW political mass shooting it negatively impacts our side. | ||
But when a tranny does it they get exactly what they want. | ||
Raising awareness of these anti-trans bills and terrorizing people into submission. | ||
The media does the work. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
unidentified
|
That's the way of the world. | |
I think homosexuality is the result of the mortal sin of sodomy. | ||
The remedy is being in a state of grace. | ||
Only Catholics are Christians. - I think homosexuality is a result of the mortal sin of sodomy. | ||
Actually, the remedy of being in a state of grace, meaning you don't commit mortal sins. | ||
The remedy for mortal sins is not committing mortal sins. | ||
Wow, a hot take. | ||
These guys know what's going on. | ||
This sect, man, this is interesting stuff. | ||
Simon Skola sent $5. | ||
Do you see Josh Hawley as a possible candidate? | ||
If Ron DeSantis can't get off the ground, it seems like he would be the backup for that faction. | ||
Oh yeah, I don't think they're going to push him because he's just not a good candidate. | ||
He really lost a lot of steam. | ||
I haven't heard any buzz around him for 24, so you're right though. | ||
He would be like a He's right up their alley. | ||
He's their guy. | ||
They love Hawley. | ||
Seems like they traded him for DeSantis, though, like a year and a half ago. | ||
Because I remember Hawley used to be all the rage, like, I don't know, in 2021. | ||
And, uh, haven't heard anything since. | ||
Been DeSantis mania. | ||
So, I haven't heard any buzz around him. | ||
So, I don't think so, but who knows? | ||
Maybe. | ||
Ali Jamal 1776 sent $3. | ||
Each episode of America First keeps on getting better and better 07 Nick, God bless you. | ||
Hey thanks man, God bless, appreciate it. | ||
Mike Van sent $3. | ||
It's hard couching the idea of fed-ups among mass shooters particularly among right-wing terror. | ||
On one hand it's a credible pattern like Buffalo but isn't something necessarily optical to jump to. | ||
Okay, you're using optical all wrong, okay? | ||
Josh the Remover sent $3. | ||
Cozy.tv slash Vargwen? | ||
Never. | ||
Priz sent $25. | ||
Hey Nick, I love you so much. | ||
Hey, love you too. | ||
Myownworld98 sent $3. | ||
When you haven't seen a friend, around your age, for a while do you give them a handshake, dap them up, or nothing? | ||
Give them a handshake? | ||
I'm not really big on hugs. | ||
I just think it's awkward. | ||
Not awkward meaning like it feels awkward, but like going in for one is kind of awkward. | ||
I feel like whenever I do a hug it's always, it's always just a little bit off. | ||
It's always like your face is kind of like in a weird spot, you know, or you... | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
Like a hug is kind of a, there's no universal, do I hug like this? | ||
Is it like this? | ||
Is it like this? | ||
Is it like that? | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
Like there's a lot that can go wrong with the hug. | ||
Does it adapt into a hug? | ||
Is it a bro hug? | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
So I feel like the hug, unless it's someone you're hugging all the time, it's a very awkward, uh, That's why the hug is really only for people that you see all the time. | ||
Like, when I was in LA I was hanging out with a group of friends, and we were hanging out every night, and by the end of the journey there, it was like, alright, see you next time. | ||
We had it down. | ||
Because we see each other all the time. | ||
But, whenever there's a Christmas party, or a birthday party, and I see my relatives, I see my relatives like once or twice a year, it's always like weird, awkward, I like the handshake because it's like we know what to do. | ||
Simple, easy. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
Keep your eye on the ball. | ||
Watch the ball hit the bat. | ||
Watch the ball into the glove. | ||
Simple. | ||
Hey, put her there. | ||
Good to see you again. | ||
The dab is tricky. | ||
The dab's tricky. | ||
The hug's tricky. | ||
unidentified
|
I like a handshake. | |
So, I will go in for that. | ||
3 Act 70 10 faa cent $3. | ||
Mass shooters represent a fire alarm for a immoral country that is self-immolating. | ||
The solution is to build a country that people don't want to set on fire. | ||
Hiding the lighter is easier, let's do that. | ||
Well said. | ||
My own world 98 cent $3. | ||
Sending this today. | ||
Gonna see your reaction tomorrow because I haven't watched yesterday's show yet. | ||
Can't risk the spoilers DBH. | ||
Love you Nicholas less than 3. | ||
Hey, love you too! | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Well, I'll see you tomorrow then. | ||
Roman sent $3. | ||
Have you ever thought about adding a new segment to the show? | ||
Like reacting to something on Twitter or showing us something you received in your P.O. | ||
box? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know, man. | |
The bits are really corny. | ||
All right, time for the next segment. | ||
Oh, well, don't you all know this segment? | ||
We like to do this. | ||
Today's name... Fuck that. | ||
I hate gimmicks. | ||
I hate gimmicks. | ||
I hate gimmicks! | ||
Bits, segments, gimmicks. | ||
I hate that kind of thing. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm a crazy guy. | ||
I'm a crazy guy. | ||
I come on the show and I just rant, okay, for two hours uninterrupted. | ||
I just, I get on here and I just go. | ||
I just say, you know, this is what happened to me today. | ||
I went to McDonald's. | ||
I fucked up my order and these Jews are running everything and blah blah blah. | ||
And then I read your superchats and that's the end of the show. | ||
This idea of like, well, we got a segment for you today. | ||
Today we're doing our P.O. | ||
unidentified
|
Box segment and you guys always send me some crazy stuff. | |
Okay, let's open this one. | ||
You sent me this? | ||
Awkward. | ||
This isn't a TV show. | ||
This is me. | ||
This is a guy. | ||
This is a guy. | ||
This is my testimony. | ||
This is my diary. | ||
This is my diary. | ||
This isn't a show. | ||
This is not a sitcom. | ||
This is not a TV show. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey! | |
Brought to you by Pepto-Bismol. | ||
And hey, listen guys. | ||
I wouldn't promote these products if I didn't use them myself. | ||
Tactical underwear. | ||
Your balls sweat and the underwear captures the ball sweat. | ||
unidentified
|
That's like... And these are some great sponsors. | |
Fuck that. | ||
This is my testimony. | ||
This is my story. | ||
This is my story, and this is you responding to my story, and I respond to your response. | ||
This is a dialogue, okay? | ||
This is a monologue, and then a dialogue. | ||
This is a Plato. | ||
This is a Socratic. | ||
This is a Socratic session for me. | ||
Like I'm an actor. | ||
I'm an actor doing a show. | ||
And on this segment, hey, welcome to the show. | ||
Tonight we got an animal. | ||
We got the animal guy in. | ||
Tell us what animals you got today. | ||
Actually, I would like to do an... You know, maybe when the show gets a huge budget, we can do an animal segment. | ||
We could bring in an animal guy like on Jimmy Fallon or Johnny Carson. | ||
We could bring in animals. | ||
That would kind of be fun, actually. | ||
I would like to see the animals. | ||
unidentified
|
Animal stream... Alright, we'll workshop that. | |
We'll table that. | ||
We'll workshop that. | ||
Okay. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Whoops! | ||
Duplicate. | ||
Corelix sent $5. | ||
Israel's civil war is child's play in light of what would happen in our fractionalized society. | ||
Matthew sent $3. | ||
Have you watched 21 Jump Street? | ||
Yeah! | ||
Still don't like him. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Kidding! | ||
unidentified
|
Kidding! | |
I don't hate anybody. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't, uh... I don't hate any group. | |
But yeah, I've seen 21 Jump Street. | ||
So... Roman sent $3. | ||
Are we ever going to see Albert again? | ||
Is he still with us? | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, maybe. | |
Yeah, he's still alive. | ||
He's still kicking. | ||
unidentified
|
I got a new dog, Vito. | |
He's a little jerk. | ||
I don't think I said that. | ||
I don't think I ever said that. | ||
I think that's your idea. | ||
You are right about gym culture. | ||
It is a marker for sexual immorality in a society. | ||
I don't think I said that. | ||
The more a people work out, the more promiscuity and other degenerate sex things you will find in that culture. | ||
I don't think I ever said that. | ||
I think that's your idea. | ||
I never said that. | ||
Ritz Garbage sent $5. | ||
Jay Greenblatt says anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism because if Jews don't have a homeland the Holocaust will happen again. | ||
Literally the exact same argument Ben Shapiro uses. | ||
Different colors, same team. | ||
This to be honest. | ||
Mike Van sent $3. | ||
Emperor Hadrian and Saint John Chrysostom clinking wine having a laugh as the parasitic Jewish state crumbles. | ||
Shouldn't have tried to ban Christianity you get what you deserve. | ||
Let's not be, let's not get ahead of ourselves. | ||
Netanyahu's still in there. | ||
Also, this guy. | ||
unidentified
|
Bay Stepper Hadrian and John Cryst just don't be like, Beek! | |
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Just like that. | ||
- Victor Lawless sent $3. | ||
Eyebrows/G/ Can you use my expertise to help ye? | ||
Also Christ is king. - I don't know what G is. - Boogly woogly. | ||
Woogli sent $3. | ||
Great show tonight. | ||
Often have to stand back and appreciate the cutting edge we're lucky to hear. - Hey, you're welcome. | ||
unidentified
|
All I can say is you're welcome. - Ball Sweat sent $10. | |
Thesis, Nick says eat ice cream. | ||
Antithesis, Bap says eat raw eggs. | ||
Synthesis, cookie dough ice cream. | ||
unidentified
|
Great. | |
- Well done. - Johnny Bravo sent $3. | ||
Rumble appears to be shadow banning your account on the daily. | ||
This should serve conservatives as a reminder to not support the supposed conservative site. | ||
unidentified
|
They'll just backstab you at the end. - They're just stabbing me. | |
I'm the only one getting stabbed. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa! | |
I like Kevin James. | ||
He's funny. | ||
I like Kevin James. | ||
He's funny. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hey, thank you, buddy. | ||
Greasy grow I percent $3. | ||
You see the Indian guy in Canada stabbed to death a white guy because he asked him to stop blowing vape smoke around his kid. | ||
Not using deodorant is one thing but stabbing people is where I draw the line. | ||
Funny. | ||
Novel. | ||
Concept. | ||
Fresh concept. | ||
Fresh premise with that joke. | ||
No, I didn't see that story, but damn, that's great. | ||
The star will gorge itself on clay. | ||
The bear will leave its cave forever. | ||
unidentified
|
Who else? | |
What are the other three? | ||
- Oh, I didn't know that. | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
It can be before I died. | ||
- Oh, I didn't know that. | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
It can be before I died. | ||
unidentified
|
- Oh, I didn't know that. | |
- I didn't know that. | ||
- I didn't know that. | ||
- It can be before I died. - Leopius sent $3. | ||
Whatever Protestant sect you're pushing, I'm just not going to have this anti-Catholic commentary on this show. | ||
This is a Catholic show. | ||
He worships demons in public. | ||
unidentified
|
I could go on if you defend him or not Catholicly. - Listen, man, like I said, I'm not, are you Mormon or something? | |
I don't know, whatever Protestant sect you're pushing, I'm just not gonna have this anti-Catholic commentary on this show. | ||
This is a Catholic show. | ||
In this house, Pope Francis is the Vicar of Christ on Earth. | ||
If you are a Protestant, you know, that's fine, but just stop trying to evangelize me as a Protestant. | ||
It is not allowed to do protestant evangelism on this show. | ||
We allow catholic evangelism only. | ||
Not this protestant crazy stuff. | ||
Crazy! | ||
unidentified
|
You're crazy! | |
I know you appeal to the moral argument frequently to show that God is a necessary being for objective morality. | ||
Have you explored the ontological argument for God's existence? | ||
Farid Lukovic sent $10. | ||
Did you finish The Sopranos yet? | ||
Thoughts on the show and overall thought on the Italian Mafia as a whole from an Italian-American perspective? | ||
I did finish The Sopranos. | ||
Great show. | ||
unidentified
|
And, um... Thoughts on the Mafia? | |
From an Italian-American perspective? | ||
Come on, dude. | ||
Well, The Mafia, my grandma used to tell us about, in Chicago it's called The Outfit. | ||
And the difference is in New York they have five families, in Chicago we had one organization, it was called The Outfit. | ||
And we had sort of a complicated relationship with The Outfit because I believe, she never told me this, but I believe that my grandma got a loan from the mob because my grandfather killed himself in the late 60s and somehow my grandmother was able to make ends meet and there was a very prominent mobster who used to visit | ||
My mom's house on a regular basis and he would bring over fruit and groceries and all kinds of things and my mom believes in retrospect that he was collecting a payment on a on an outfit loan. | ||
On the other hand, they were killers. | ||
They were stone cold killers and I could tell you a lot of stories about Some of the things that went on. | ||
Now my family was never involved in the outfit. | ||
The outfit liked people in my family. | ||
My great-grandfather was a shoemaker and they loved him. | ||
They would bring him around, take him on trips, and hang out with him just because he was a great personality. | ||
But he wasn't involved. | ||
He was just a friend. | ||
Because he was a charismatic guy. | ||
I wonder where I get it from. | ||
And then I think my great-uncle used to run sugar for Al Capone, but everybody Italian did that. | ||
So, it's sort of a complicated thing. | ||
My grandma used to say, she used to say, these black guys, they're not gangsters, she said. | ||
She said gangsters were like the outfit. | ||
They wore suits, and when they wanted to kill somebody, they took them out to dinner, and they killed their guy, she used to say. | ||
She used to say, say what you will about the outfit. | ||
But they wore suits, and when they wanted to get somebody, they got their mark. | ||
They would take him out to dinner, and they would shoot him in the back of the head, she goes. | ||
It wouldn't be a stray bullet killing a three-year-old and everything that's going on. | ||
unidentified
|
They don't shoot sideways. | |
Very based perspective on that. | ||
And I don't know. | ||
I don't have very strong feelings on it, because that's not the world I grew up in. | ||
That's not my world. | ||
That's not my experience. | ||
But they provided, and that's the line on The Sopranos, and that's sort of how my family always felt, is they did provide a service for the community. | ||
They did provide like a... They did serve a function in this immigrant ecosystem in the cities for these Italians. | ||
And they ran this patronage system in Chicago. | ||
My great-uncle, I think I told this story a couple weeks ago, my great-uncle who was, I think, retarded, he got a job through the city, I think as a favor to a mobster or something like that. | ||
Or as a favor from a mobster. | ||
He got a city job doing, as a, in, what is it? | ||
He's a garbage man or something like that. | ||
And he was good at his job, but he got it because of political connection. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Chicago seemed to run better when it was a political machine run by gangsters. | ||
I'm just saying. | ||
And, uh, Italians had some representation, so... So I have, I have favorable feelings about the mob, but at the same time, you know, they were killers. | ||
And they were criminals, and you can't really countenance that. | ||
But it's, it's a little bit more complicated, because you could almost see them as sort of like a quasi-state, like performing the functions of a state. | ||
Obviously, they're criminals, but... In all these mob movies, it talks about this thin line between law enforcement and crime, and the idea is that Who has the monopoly on violence? | ||
Does the state have a monopoly on stealing and patronage and violence? | ||
Or can other people step up and fulfill that role also? | ||
So there is some complexity there. | ||
That's really what the... That's really the debate in The Sopranos and in movies like The Departed or whatever. | ||
Now the cynical side says, uh, no, these guys are just gangsters. | ||
These guys are just, uh, they're just glorified crooks. | ||
And I think there's an argument to be made there. | ||
Especially in the later years. | ||
But that's my take on that. | ||
But it's not my world. | ||
That was hilarious. | ||
Leo sent $3. | ||
I second that though. | ||
It was hilarious seeing you show off the stuff people send in your PO box and making fun of the dumb, silly shit people sent you. - That was hilarious. | ||
unidentified
|
But it was hilarious when you did that. - Leo Pius sent $3. | |
What are you, a layperson? | ||
So let me get this straight. | ||
right now is not the Catholic Church. | ||
V2 and the anti-popes have contradicted the infallible popes that almost every point of doctrine, e.g. Jews are not reprobate. - And who are you to say this? | ||
What are you, a lay person? | ||
So let me get this straight. | ||
You're protesting the Catholic Church because you, a lay person, are interpreting scripture? | ||
And you're telling me that the gates of hell prevailed over the church? | ||
Sounds like Protestantism to me, buddy. | ||
Maybe you need to get your head checked. | ||
Sounds like a little mental illness going on over there. | ||
I think you're confused. - Insurance and honor sent $3. | ||
Imagine spending hours frantically blocking every individual alt that posts a meme in your replies. - Well, in fairness, I would do the same thing. | ||
So you can't really, Chris. | ||
I don't know if I go that far. | ||
No, but I don't know. | ||
That was so long ago. | ||
could be stopped in 20 years times if women were banned from working for 15 years after giving birth. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know if I go that far. | |
Simon's school has sent $3. | ||
Have you ever called one of your teachers mom by accident? | ||
No, but I don't know. | ||
That was so long ago. | ||
I haven't been in school in five, well, five years, I guess that's not, no, six years, How old am I again? | ||
24? | ||
I haven't been in school in six years. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
I hear from these guys doing school. | ||
It's so funny. | ||
All my friends are in college or whatever and And they're talking about homework and pencils and tests And it's like what are you talking about? | ||
I pay taxes, I pay bills, I make money, I go to the bank, okay? | ||
I wake up and I make myself eggs. | ||
You, you're doing homework, you're sharpening your number two pencil, you're sleeping on a bunk bed, you're filling out a Scantron form, you're signing up onto Blackboard for the study guide. | ||
What the fuck is wrong with you? | ||
Time to become a grown-up for crying out loud. | ||
I am a grown man. | ||
I am a grown man. | ||
I pay my taxes. | ||
I pay my bills. | ||
I put my vehicle sticker on my car. | ||
I renew my license plate. | ||
I get mail. | ||
I shred papers. | ||
I go grocery shopping. | ||
Okay? | ||
I take care of business. | ||
I do adult things. | ||
I call the phone company. | ||
These are things that I do. | ||
These people that are in school, I just don't understand them. | ||
They're like, I gotta study for this big test. | ||
It's like, what are you, 14? | ||
Well, I gotta go, Nick. | ||
I gotta study for this test. | ||
I got homework. | ||
I got an 8 a.m. | ||
tomorrow. | ||
What are you, 14? | ||
You gotta get on the school bus? | ||
You gotta get on the big yellow school bus? | ||
To go to class and pack a fucking chocolate milk and banana and a ham sandwich and foil? | ||
You fucking idiot. | ||
Sorry! | ||
I love all my classmates. | ||
I love all the students and classmates out there, but it's just so silly. | ||
It's just so silly to me. | ||
I'm so old now. | ||
I'm a 24 year old. | ||
I'm a grown man. | ||
I'm eating steamed coral. | ||
I got office supplies for Christmas. | ||
You guys in school, you don't get it yet. | ||
You're not in the real world yet. | ||
You're not a man. | ||
I've been a grown man out in the world for years now. | ||
I am a grown-ass man. | ||
You live under my house. | ||
You live under my roof. | ||
You play by my rules. | ||
You understand me, boy? | ||
So... That's just crazy. | ||
What I would give to... No, I hated school, but... There's something that seems easy about just having to worry about homework. | ||
Homework! | ||
Mr. Brown assigned me more homework. | ||
It's like, shut the fuck up. | ||
Nigga's got bills to pay. | ||
I get on the scale. | ||
I look at my weight. | ||
I'm watching my weight. | ||
And you're talking about your study guide. | ||
Is this gonna be on the final exam? | ||
Is this gonna be on the midterm? | ||
Get a job. | ||
Get a fucking job. | ||
Grow up. | ||
Put down the Tide Pods and the Tic Tac and get a job. | ||
Contribute to society, huh? | ||
How about that? | ||
That's what I say. | ||
Jared sent $3. | ||
Funny how so many are anti-Catholic when Catholicism has literally been the only reason for the survival and prosperity of Christianity. | ||
Prats have no hierarchy and Orthodox is our missing brother. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Well, we can team up against that, but... The guy's a pagan, he doesn't like Jesus. | ||
I know him being pagan is cringe, but you two are favorite people in the world. | ||
The enemy of my enemy is my friend. - Well, we can team up against that, but the guy's a pagan, he doesn't like Jesus. - Cyprus, South Persia sent $3. | ||
I don't know if even can purchase a firearm due to the laws of your state, but do you think you ever will? | ||
Any models that interest you? - I'm not gonna talk about my gun situation. - Nationalist Action sent $3. | ||
Have you seen the Taliban Relations Department a Taliban PRD on Twitter sticking up for Christians after the Jew was mocking the death of Christian kids? | ||
I did see that, yeah. | ||
Mike Van sent $3. | ||
Love me Pope, love me church, love me Matthew 16-18 simple as. | ||
Simple as! | ||
Case closed. | ||
Conservative Eboy sent $3. | ||
Hearing you talk about metaphysics is really intriguing. | ||
Have you heard of guys like Chris Langan? | ||
Honestly would love to hear you talk more about that stuff. | ||
God bless and thanks for the great show. | ||
Yeah, I've heard of Chris Langan. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't really have a technical training in any of that so I feel a little embarrassed talking about it because I should read more on that and I should be more You know, but I didn't go to college. | ||
I dropped out. | ||
So I didn't take all those classes. | ||
But I really should study up on those things. | ||
Because I feel like I get it intuitively. | ||
I just need that foundation. | ||
Here we go on Cozy. | ||
We have Crybaby says, I don't sleep on a bunk bed. | ||
Okay. | ||
Lil Hitler says, have you ever owned a liberal teacher and you were in school? | ||
No, I think that's cringe actually. | ||
Okay. | ||
All right. | ||
That's our last super chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
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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, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America First! |