Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America First. America First. America First. America First. America | ||
unidentified
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First. America | |
First. America First. America First. America First. America First. America First. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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 Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into. | ||
Kind of a slow day. | ||
Slow news day. | ||
But our big featured story tonight, we'll be talking about the Chicago mayoral election which took place yesterday. | ||
It's actually a runoff election. | ||
But Chicago voted and Lori Lightfoot's out and now we have somebody even worse. | ||
This guy Brandon Johnson who is a black maniac who predictably, this is the city with the number one murders in America. | ||
He wants to spend less money on cops and give more money to mental health, education, good jobs. | ||
So it's over. | ||
It's over everywhere. | ||
It was over yesterday with the Trump speech and the election in Wisconsin with their Supreme Court and it's over here. | ||
It's specifically over here also in Chicago. | ||
So we'll talk all about the election and What's gonna happen here with this guy? | ||
It's not gonna be pretty, it's gonna be very ugly, but I almost kind of want it to get uglier because one, I'm gonna leave. | ||
Two, it almost seems like nothing ever happens. | ||
It feels like, and I alluded to this the other night in the super chats, things get worse and worse but just incrementally, just very gradually And when you look back over a period of three or five years, it's noticeable, but year over year, not so much. | ||
And maybe that's the problem. | ||
So I kind of want the city to explode, but we'll talk all about that. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight, similarly, very much in the same vein, about the founder of Cash App, who was stabbed to death in San Francisco last night. | ||
Or I believe it was actually this morning. | ||
And they don't even know who did it. | ||
This is the bizarre thing. | ||
So this guy was the founder of Cash App, which is, as you know, a massive financial tech platform. | ||
Apparently he was out there in San Francisco late last night, early this morning, and was stabbed to death. | ||
Nobody knows who did it. | ||
We don't know the story. | ||
Presumably it was some sort of Petty crime. | ||
We don't know if it was mugging, burglary, drug-related. | ||
Although, according to Charles Johnson's substack, apparently he was into the drug scene, into the prostitution scene. | ||
That's just something I read somewhere. | ||
Who knows if that's true, but we don't even know who did it. | ||
And so it's just another, another scene. | ||
Another vignette from America. | ||
Although, I have to say, it's a horrible situation. | ||
It's very tragic. | ||
But, There is something to be said. | ||
I don't know if you can relate to this, but I almost feel like there is a sense of justice. | ||
And I know that's going to sound insensitive. | ||
And I don't intend for it to come off that way. | ||
I don't think anybody deserves to get murdered for no reason. | ||
Certainly not like this. | ||
But I can't be the only one that feels a sense of cosmic justice when you see that a victim of a crime like this is a powerful person, as opposed to just some other white kid or student, or for that matter, even a black person, but somebody from just the neighborhood. | ||
Because of course the people that are typically the subject of this rapidly decaying society and all of its consequences are the middle class and the working poor. | ||
And they're not the ones that make the decisions. | ||
It's the elite and it's specifically somebody like this who is influential and according to his Twitter feed is talking about BLM and all the usual left-wing stuff And so when you see a guy like this get stabbed in San Francisco, it's like, hey, well, welcome to the club. | ||
Not like I got stabbed, but I've been a victim of crime out there. | ||
Like I said, I got my car broken into when I was out there in Los Angeles. | ||
Nobody cared. | ||
Nobody investigated. | ||
These are just things that happen. | ||
Just another... just another scene. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
We'll talk about the murder and the situation in San Francisco. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Like I said, it's not any huge national news tonight. | ||
Pretty slow day. | ||
It's been busy though, so it's actually nice to slow things down for a change of pace. | ||
It's been a very chaotic past couple weeks between the Trump indictment, this situation which seems like there's a lot of connected events, with this rapidly changing world order. | ||
Another big statement today by Macron, the French president, talking about how China should play a role in the peace process in Ukraine. | ||
And now there's talk about Paraguay breaking with the United States and no longer recognizing the sovereignty and independence of Taiwan. | ||
Seems like these things are moving very quickly, especially in the last few weeks. | ||
So today, it's our first slow day in a minute, but we'll cover all that stuff. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Before we get into that though, I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on Cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Also follow me on Rumble. | ||
I'm live on Rumble and Cozy every night. | ||
And on Rumble, I also have all my replays. | ||
So if you missed a show from a week ago, two weeks ago, most of the replays in the last, I think, six months are up there. | ||
Cozy will only store five. | ||
Rumble, it's got a lot more. | ||
So check it out. | ||
Follow me over there. | ||
Follow me on Gab Telegram. | ||
True Social links are down below. | ||
What else? | ||
Next week, as I, excuse me, as I mentioned, I won't be here next Thursday and Friday at least. | ||
Burp, excuse me. | ||
I just had dinner, so. | ||
But I'll be out of town next week, so no show at the end of the week. | ||
Might be Wednesday too, I'm not really sure yet, but I'll be doing a big collaboration out of town, so we'll be looking forward to that, but probably no show towards the end of the week. | ||
Aside from that, pretty slow day. | ||
Yeah, pretty regular day. | ||
I have to say though, it's actually not so regular. | ||
I actually got in a car crash today, which sucked. | ||
I've never been in a car crash before. | ||
But, and I'm okay. | ||
I'm alright. | ||
It wasn't a huge deal. | ||
But, yeah, what a shitty day. | ||
I was already blackfiled. | ||
I was already blackfiled last night about the Trump indictment and the terrible speech. | ||
And I was up most of the night. | ||
I was working on stuff, working on this super long project, like 20 pages for somebody. | ||
And so I was up all night. | ||
I went to bed in the morning. | ||
I had to go to the doctor, which I hate. | ||
And I was only going to the doctor to get a prescription And this doctor's like, I want to stick a camera up your nose. | ||
I'm like, yeah, that's not happening today, actually. | ||
I'm like, listen, I'm just here for the nasal spray, okay? | ||
I'm just here for the prescription. | ||
I just need, I just need some relief here. | ||
And she's, it's a nurse, and she comes in with her glasses and her ponytail and she goes, So what we're going to do is I'm going to spray your nose and it's going to be numb for about an hour and then I'm going to stick a camera. | ||
I said, uh, that's not happening. | ||
I'm not doing that today. | ||
And she gets all offended. | ||
She's like, oh, okay, well. | ||
Alright, well then, have a good day. | ||
I'm like, well, listen, lady, I'm here for the prescription. | ||
I'm not here for all that. | ||
If I were interested in anything like that, I'd just get the surgery to fix the deviated septum. | ||
I'm not interested in needles and sprays and cameras. | ||
Just give me the medicine. | ||
So anyway, so I'm at the doctor. | ||
That's how my day was going. | ||
I was gonna go and get some hot dogs because I'm like, you know, I hate the doctor. | ||
So I'm gonna get myself a treat for taking the trip out. | ||
For being a trooper. | ||
For being a good guy. | ||
And then... | ||
So I'm literally just driving down the street minding my business and some woman just slams into me perpendicular. | ||
She's coming out of some parking lot and I'm just driving this way and she just blasts into me and then she tries to get away. | ||
So I had to chase her down. | ||
She blasts into me. | ||
I'm flying all over. | ||
I launch up onto the curb And there's this getaway attempt. | ||
So I slam on the gas. | ||
I do a U-turn. | ||
I go against two lanes of traffic into oncoming traffic. | ||
And she pulls over. | ||
And I'm okay, and she's okay. | ||
And it turns out she was a young girl, so I was like, I was like, hey, I'm not mad. | ||
It's okay. | ||
I'm like, hey, it's alright. | ||
I just need your insurance information. | ||
Cuz I felt I felt kind of well, I mean I didn't feel bad, but listen I had to chase her down, but then we pull over and she's like this young girl She's 16, and I'm like hey, it's okay. | ||
I just needed to get your information. | ||
I'm not mad. | ||
It's okay You're all right. | ||
Uh-uh you know we're gonna be okay But yeah, so what the heck? | ||
And I was nice and everything, but I'm driving home and I'm thinking about it. | ||
I'm like, how does that even happen? | ||
How do you, how do you crash into a car that's in front of you? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
unidentified
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I was on the phone with somebody. | |
I was saying, you know, I understand if you, if you're driving down the street and you stop too late and you get in a fender bender, you rear end somebody, like I understand that. | ||
Or I understand if you're doing a lane change and you get in a crash. | ||
But there's a car in front of you, you just floor it? | ||
It's like a missile? | ||
I think it was an assassination attempt. | ||
She was trying to take me out. | ||
Another foiled assassination attempt. | ||
And the getaway! | ||
That was the... That was like in Star Wars. | ||
When they tried to assassinate Princess Amidala with those insects. | ||
And I'm like Anakin Skywalker jumping out of the ship. | ||
I hate when he does that, you know? | ||
Jumping out of the spaceship. | ||
So anyways, that was a pretty... That was eventful. | ||
Then I just... I'm like, forget the hot dogs. | ||
I drove home. | ||
I got a burger. | ||
Whatever. | ||
So that was my day. | ||
Yeah, pretty, pretty great week. | ||
Now I gotta get this taken care of. | ||
Now my car's all smashed and destroyed. | ||
I gotta figure that out. | ||
Just, it's always something, you know? | ||
But hey, I'm okay. | ||
I'm okay. | ||
Thank God. | ||
I'm alright. | ||
And she's okay also. | ||
But I was thinking, you gotta take these people off the road. | ||
Okay? | ||
Who are we kidding? | ||
The women driving thing, it's a punchline for a lot of people. | ||
It is not, it's unironically not a punchline. | ||
Especially for me! | ||
My life, my life was in danger! | ||
She tried to kill me, okay? | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
It's not a joke. | ||
These people should not be on the road. | ||
Women who are 21 can't drive. | ||
Women who are 30 can't drive. | ||
You're giving a license to a teenage girl? | ||
That's ridiculous. | ||
Anyway, so I'm unharmed cars damaged which sucks Whatever a lot of strange encounters like this a lot of strange last night. | ||
I saw a possum So funny I saw this possum last night and And he starts running away from me, tried to get through the gate and his body got stuck in the gate. | ||
So he just stopped and I'm like, what are you doing? | ||
What are you doing, man? | ||
You're stuck. | ||
You're not getting away. | ||
And so he turns around, he jumps between the trash bins with his little butt sticking out. | ||
Crazy. | ||
Anyways, a lot of weird things happening to me lately. | ||
These animal encounters, car accidents, car chases. | ||
Weird weather pattern. | ||
Very bizarre. | ||
Very strange time. | ||
Something's up. | ||
Weather machine. | ||
Weather machine is on. | ||
The Large Hadron Collider is on. | ||
Something's going on. | ||
Planets are aligned. | ||
You see this? | ||
The five planets were aligned the other night. | ||
I wonder if it has something to do with that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Well, what can we do? | ||
What can you and I do other than we just have to ride this wave? | ||
unidentified
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That's it. | |
That's all you really can do is we're just a ship. | ||
A ship against the current. | ||
Okay, but anyway, so that was my day. | ||
Pretty weird day. | ||
What else? | ||
There was one other thing I wanted to talk about tonight. | ||
Let me check my telegram real quick. | ||
I thought there was something I wanted to touch on, but I forgot. | ||
unidentified
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No? | |
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
I thought there was something. | ||
Maybe not. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
All right. | ||
Well, we'll move on. | ||
We'll dive into the show here. | ||
And we'll get into this. | ||
So our first story is about this Cash App founder, his name's Bob Lee, who got stabbed to death. | ||
In San Francisco, although it's not an uncommon thing, apparently in San Francisco the crime's just out of control. | ||
People say that if you go to San Francisco, what people there will do is they put a sign in their car window that says, the car is unlocked, do not break my window. | ||
There's so much vandalism and so much property theft that people just leave their cars open because they know that's going to get robbed and rather than have the car window broken, they say, hey, just go through my belongings because I rather that than you break the window, which it's very similar in L.A. | ||
And anyway, so as you know, the crime's been out of control in these major cities, especially on the West Coast, and now it's claimed a very high-profile victim, founder of Cash App, who was found dead this morning with two stab wounds. | ||
And this is a story from BBC that says, quote, the founder of the multi-billion dollar tech company Cash App, Bob Lee, Was fatally stabbed near downtown San Francisco on Tuesday. | ||
San Francisco police found a 43-year-old man with stab wounds and treated him before he later died in the hospital. | ||
His father confirmed that his son, who is also the ex-chief technology officer at Square, had been killed. | ||
San Francisco officials have been criticized for their response to a wave of violent crime in recent years. | ||
The California's San Francisco Police Department said officers responded to reports of a stabbing on Tuesday at around 2.35 local time. | ||
They found Mr. Lee unconscious on the ground with two stab wounds to his chest and they started to administer aid before rushing him to the San Francisco General Hospital. | ||
Mr. Lee's death has prompted renewed criticism of violent crime in the Californian city. | ||
Tesla founder and Twitter chief executive Elon Musk responded to tributes to Mr. Lee saying quote, violent crime in San Francisco is horrific and even if attackers are caught they are often released immediately. | ||
Data from 2021 shows that residents there face a 1 in 16 chance each year of being a victim of property or violent crime. | ||
Making the city more dangerous than 98% of U.S. | ||
cities. | ||
1 in 16! | ||
That's crazy! | ||
1 in 16? | ||
A victim of either a violent or a property crime. | ||
And I would venture to guess that it's actually even more. | ||
Because I think if anything a lot of these studies will underestimate the crime because at a certain point you have a problem of recording. | ||
How exactly are the crimes recorded? | ||
And I wonder how many crimes are just unreported, or for whatever reason don't make it into the calculation. | ||
So it's quite possible that it's even more than that, which is unbelievable to think about. | ||
Homicides have been a particular issue for San Francisco since the pandemic. | ||
There were 56 homicides in the city in 2021 and 2022. | ||
And preliminary police data shows there have been 12 homicides in San Francisco so far this year. | ||
I love, by the way, have you noticed this? | ||
Whenever they talk about the surge in crime in Chicago, LA, San Francisco, New York, they always say this. | ||
They always say that crime has been a problem since the pandemic. | ||
Really? | ||
Since the pandemic? | ||
Because, remind me again, when did the pandemic begin? | ||
March 2020. | ||
So they're saying that since 2020, crime has been a real problem. | ||
Well, what exactly would cause the increase in crime in 2020 that pertains to the pandemic? | ||
Some might say it's the unemployment. | ||
Some might say it's The fact that people aren't commuting to work, or that young people are out of school, something like that. | ||
Well, there was something else that happened in 2020 which I think also had a pretty significant impact on crime, which would be, you know, the death of George Floyd. | ||
Hello? | ||
In every one of these articles, and I've read a lot of them, when you cover crime, it's always about, since the pandemic, since the pandemic, since the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, I don't think to tell you the truth it has maybe it has a little something to do with the pandemic. | ||
I don't think for the most part it's the pandemic. | ||
As we know there is a cycle in this country and it's been going for a long time and it is a cycle which is that there will be no crime and then there's agitation for reduced policing and for opening up the prisons and this sort of thing and then To the surprise of nobody, the crime explodes. | ||
And then everybody gets an appetite for cracking down on the crime, and then we crack down on the crime, and then times are good, and then we get another cycle like this. | ||
And so here we are, in the middle of this cycle once again, where George Floyd is killed, and everybody protests the so-called police brutality, and the over-policing, and the militarization of the police, and the systemic racism, and As a result, the police stopped doing their job. | ||
Why would they go and risk their lives? | ||
to fight violent crime or solve violent crime if there's a high likelihood that they will literally be lynched. | ||
They will literally either literally be lynched by an actual lynch mob at their house or figuratively be lynched because they will be sent to jail for the rest of their lives or in some cases even potentially face the death penalty which was something discussed in the case of Derek Chauvin. | ||
And what's more Even when that doesn't happen, they don't have the support of the city. | ||
And the handcuffs are placed on them and their ability to police violent crime. | ||
That's even before you get to that point. | ||
So we know that it's got nothing to do or very little to do with the pandemic and everything to do with the response in the wake of George Floyd. | ||
I just want to point that out because you always, since the pandemic, know it's since George Floyd and this was the predictable outcome of defunding the police and of putting in place all these restrictive measures about chasing criminals and about rules of engagement and body cameras and all these kinds of things. | ||
And as a result you get totally wild out-of-control crime. | ||
And it's something interesting too about San Francisco which is that San Francisco is also one of the richest real estate markets in America. | ||
Or one of the most expensive I should say. | ||
Prohibitively expensive. | ||
And of course, San Francisco is also the seat of Silicon Valley. | ||
That's the major metro area where the literally the richest companies in the history of the world are headquartered. | ||
And not exactly in San Francisco, but that is the major metro area that serves Apple, that serves all the other big Silicon Valley big tech companies, And so here, maybe more than anywhere, you have, and we talked about this last night, you have on full display this anarcho-tyranny. | ||
Where on the one hand, you've got the tyranny of big tech. | ||
Silicon Valley is right in the backyard. | ||
And you've got all these problems of rent control. | ||
And also you have the property prices being driven up by the Chinese and by the rich people there. | ||
But nevertheless, you do have restrictive housing practices that make it very unaffordable to live there. | ||
You've got corruption. | ||
You've got some of the most corrupt companies on a national basis headquartered right there. | ||
But at the same time you also have the worst homeless problem in America and one of the worst crime problems in America there as well. | ||
And I said this at the beginning of the show and I think maybe this is a little controversial. | ||
There are many murders that happen like this all the time. | ||
Not necessarily in San Francisco which seems like not as much of a murder city, more of a theft city. | ||
But there are 700, 800 murders per year in Chicago. | ||
And it happens all the time. | ||
And there are a lot of murders in other cities too, like Los Angeles, and New York, and Baltimore, but the point is, it's not just about San Francisco, it's about this is what the major American cities, they're just like this now. | ||
They're dirty, they're filled with homeless people, there is a massive inequality in wealth, And there's a reason for that, which I'll get into in a moment. | ||
And there's this rampant, violent crime that makes the city inhospitable. | ||
L.A., unlivable. | ||
San Francisco, unlivable. | ||
Chicago, increasingly unlivable. | ||
We'll get into Chicago later tonight as well. | ||
In Chicago, crime has become an everywhere, all the time problem. | ||
It used to be confined to the ghetto and only on the warm weekends and during the night time or something. | ||
And now, it happens in the morning. | ||
It happens in the evening. | ||
It happens in the west side. | ||
It happens in the north side. | ||
It happens in the loop. | ||
It happens everywhere. | ||
And this is just what life is like now. | ||
You have the tyranny on the one hand, which is Donald Trump being dragged in front of a court yesterday and The very next morning the CEO of a major tech company is stabbed to death in the middle of the night on a weekday. | ||
And I said it earlier that maybe there's a sense of cosmic justice when you see something like this. | ||
Not because we want to see people die. | ||
Because I don't want to see anybody die, to tell you the truth. | ||
A lot of people like to talk tough about seeing leaders being hanged or executed and I think a lot of that is a LARP and I think a lot of that is a misplaced sense of powerlessness. | ||
They're sort of projecting their feelings of powerlessness in this way. | ||
It's like a way to compensate. | ||
I don't want to see anybody murdered. | ||
I don't want to see anybody get killed. | ||
That being said, okay that, I don't like that transition because it's not to say but, there is something to be said about the fact that this is a problem that as we know does not affect the rich. | ||
It does not affect the wealthy. | ||
And when we say the rich, I don't mean the rich meaning because, and there is a important distinction here, I would say maybe it's more something like the influential. | ||
Because you have rich people who are small business owners that don't maybe have a lot of pull, although they're more insulated. | ||
I'm talking about the influential people. | ||
I'm talking about the champagne socialists. | ||
I'm talking about these World Economic Forum technocrat types. | ||
Like this guy. | ||
This is a Silicon Valley guy, some kind of rich, progressive, big tech entrepreneur living in San Francisco And these are the people that are promulgating the diversity, equity, and inclusion, the environmental social governance, the BLM, the defunding of the police, the climate, business, all these left-wing policies, and yet ultimately none of it really matters because with enough money you can insulate yourself from everything. | ||
You live a totally different life than normal people. | ||
Normal people have to go to public schools where they're subject to the demographic changes. | ||
Normal people in many cases have to ride on the public transportation where the crime problem is extremely acute. | ||
Normal people have to deal with the homelessness. | ||
They don't get to go and jump into a black car or in some cases even an Uber which is a luxury lately. | ||
And so there's something about seeing one of the people who is not just in favor of these policies, but in some sense responsible for them being influential, being a victim of their own views, being a victim of the society that they are complicit in, or helping to progress. | ||
There's a feeling of justice. | ||
Well, this is the society that you created. | ||
And that's really the problem, is that the people that are keeping all of these policies onto the country don't really have to suffer any of the real consequences. | ||
That's borne by the regular people. | ||
That's borne by the average people. | ||
And I would say that that even goes into politics. | ||
When you look at Republican politicians, I look at a person like Marjorie Taylor Greene as a perfect example. | ||
She is at once the spokeswoman for the Republican constituency, which is the embattled, increasingly minority status, white people in America. | ||
Ostensibly the law-abiding people, the tax-paying people, the professionals, the literate people, something like that. | ||
And she goes out there and raises millions of dollars and she gets to function essentially as a celebrity riding around in DC in a black car and eating at fancy restaurants and going on TV and living the life and she gets to speak for people like you and me and particularly for the children, for the white people's children because it's the future that's up for grabs not so much the boomers and their social security. | ||
And she goes out there to speak for us when in reality she's a multi-millionaire who comes from money, who I guess her family has some construction company, she's loaded, and she goes out there every two years to say, I'm fighting for y'all and America, Americans need to make their voices heard and meanwhile not really doing a whole lot, really not doing anything. | ||
And when it comes to the ruling elite, and even when it comes to the opposition, whether they're totally in favor of the status quo or they're merely pretending to resist the status quo, neither of them are subject to the consequences of the status quo. | ||
And so they're perfectly content with perpetuating the status quo and perpetuating the system and perpetuating the machine that pays them and enables them. | ||
Meanwhile, it's everybody else that pays the cost. | ||
The problem, though, with this line of thinking, I think there's a limitation to it. | ||
It makes us feel good in a certain sense. | ||
Because you look at that and you say something like, hey, well, better him than Molly Tibbetts, or better him than Kate Steinle, or better him than some other victim of violent crime in America. | ||
Some other child, or student, or innocent person. | ||
That being said, a lot of times when these things happen, there's a chorus from the right where we say, maybe now things will change. | ||
Maybe now that the left got a taste of their own medicine, maybe now things will change. | ||
But there's a flaw in that line of thinking because has that ever produced, has something like this ever produced that effect? | ||
Because I've actually seen that it's the opposite. | ||
The rare occasion when one of the elites is a victim of the world that they created, is a victim of the violent crime or the so-called diversity. | ||
Whenever this happens, we don't hear any kind of introspection or regret, anything like that. | ||
Actually, they double down. | ||
And so watch, Elon Musk we know is more right-leaning and he's more sensible, and who knows what his deal is, how much of a legitimate actor he really is, but nominally we know that he's more of a right-leaning and so-called common-sense person. | ||
But I'll bet you, and I haven't seen a lot of the reaction, but the reaction from the big tech community will be that this is just another example for why we need more community policing, and more mental health, and more this, that, and the other. | ||
And so we're really in a situation where, and people don't like to hear this, there's almost nothing short of a catastrophe That is going to catalyze any kind of response. | ||
We talked about this a little bit last night about how there is a certain segment of the right wing that says that there is going to be a total collapse of the system. | ||
That it is only a matter of time and degree before things get so bad that the system will collapse, whatever that means, And then our goals will become more practical. | ||
Then our movement will become more viable. | ||
But you look at a situation like this where it's really bad over there. | ||
1 in 16 people are the victim of crimes. | ||
In the richest, wealthiest city in America, hottest real estate market in the country, Here you've got a major Silicon Valley CEO stabbed and even this will not only not catalyze however minimally a response in the right direction, it may even do the exact opposite. | ||
And so at a certain point you have to realize that events will not produce the change that we need. | ||
We cannot sit back and wait for history to produce the change that we need, like it will solve it on its own. | ||
Well, if we just sit back and wait for enough people to get murdered, or for enough crime to happen, or for the situation to become bad enough, everything will sort itself out. | ||
The system will buckle under its own weight, and history will provide an opportunity And I think that that is a totally bad mentality. | ||
It has got to be... timing is everything, don't get me wrong. | ||
But it's only through the political will of people that anything is going to change in a situation like this. | ||
How bad does it need to get? | ||
How bad can it get in Los Angeles? | ||
How bad can it get in San Francisco or in Chicago? | ||
Do you think that there will be any point at which these minorities will stop voting for Democrats? | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe. | |
Some say that it's just around the corner. | ||
It always seems to be that way. | ||
That Hispanics or Asians or even white people in significant numbers in these places will turn the corner and vote right, vote Republican or vote for tough on crime or various conservative policies. | ||
But it never seems to come to fruition. | ||
So it's a pretty ugly spectacle that's going on in San Francisco, and it's a symbol of what's going on throughout the country. | ||
And I also wanted to say, because I touched on this a moment ago also, when you look at a city like San Francisco or Chicago or New York, I think the most devastating thing is that that is America. | ||
The American population, the majority, lives in the cities. | ||
And so there's another tendency that I see on the right where people like to say, well, that's not America. | ||
That's those liberal cities. | ||
But the vast majority of people live in liberal cities. | ||
Even in the South or even in the interior of the country, the cities are liberal. | ||
If you look at the election results from 2020, it was even in red states like Georgia, or like Alabama, or like Nebraska, or like... I think there's only one state where the major city did not go for Democrats, and that was like Oklahoma. | ||
And maybe a couple of others, like the very sparsely populated states like the Dakotas or maybe Wyoming. | ||
But just about everywhere else, it's not just the major cities, it's not just the coastal cities, it is just about any large city in America, medium or large-sized city, no matter where you go, even college towns, are liberal cities. | ||
And the most populous ones, all of them, are exactly like this. | ||
There's not one that isn't. | ||
Which is to say that the housing prices are crazy, the public transportation isn't safe, the city's dirty, plagued with homelessness, and crime. | ||
Those are the things that New York, DC, the capital, Chicago, LA, San Francisco, Portland, Atlanta, Miami, they all have this in common. | ||
Every single one of them. | ||
Detroit, Milwaukee, you name it, they all have this in common. | ||
And if that's where the majority of the population lives, and that's where the economic activity happens, and that's where the billionaires live, and that's where the culture comes from, then that's America. | ||
And we've talked about this for a few weeks now on the show. | ||
America is not a great country anymore. | ||
I don't think there's any clearer symbol of that, or it's not even symbolic reality, that you could see other than going into these cities. | ||
And understand, it's not like this is just the way it has to be. | ||
I think a lot of people have this mentality. | ||
Where you remember back in 2016 or 17 Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, said that terrorism is just part and parcel of a major city. | ||
There's this attitude I think a lot of people have, subconsciously or consciously, that that's just how it is. | ||
That's just how it has to be. | ||
Homelessness, filth, crime, danger on public transport, inefficiencies, corruption, bankruptcy, that that's just how it is. | ||
But if you look around the world, that's not how it is in China. | ||
There is no crime in Chinese cities like there is here. | ||
That's not how it is in the Gulf. | ||
If you look at cities like Dubai and other cities in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, or elsewhere, Saudi Arabia, it's not like this over there. | ||
You look around the world and there are countries and cities in particular that have figured it out. | ||
They've made the public transportation safe. | ||
They've made the city safe. | ||
They've cleaned up the homeless. | ||
The cities aren't bankrupt. | ||
And the question is, at what point do we, and I've said this a lot on the show in recent years, make the decision that we want to join the ranks of futuristic developed cities? | ||
Because if we decided that we wanted these cities to be safe tomorrow, we could make it happen within a year. | ||
We could catch up to any one of these cities in a year if a decision was made that that is what we wanted for our country. | ||
But understand that what is holding us back from that is all of this progressive stuff. | ||
When people go out there and say, well, we're not racist, or we want diversity, or we want equality, or we want all of that, All of that comes at the cost of living in a great city. | ||
Why do you think San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit, LA, New York are like this? | ||
Take a look at who's committing the violent crime. | ||
It's all black people. | ||
It is for the most part. | ||
The vast majority is black people, and then the next most is Hispanics. | ||
End of list. | ||
That's it. | ||
That's who's doing the violent crime. | ||
Wonder why then that violent crime has been out of control. | ||
It's because black narcissism and the political establishment and media catering to it is at an all-time high. | ||
We could not arrest the black criminals because then we would get prisons full of black people and that would be racist. | ||
So, we can't have that. | ||
We can't have too many black people being arrested, or too many black people in prisons. | ||
So we just have to stop arresting them. | ||
And when they're committing violent crimes, we have to stop chasing them. | ||
And when they fight with the police, the police have to stop shooting them. | ||
So as a result, what do you get? | ||
A lot of black crime. | ||
Because to try to solve it would be racist. | ||
It would create a system-wide racist outcome. | ||
So we can't do anything about it. | ||
And then, so when black people are out there committing their crimes, where do they do it? | ||
They do it in, increasingly, the business district. | ||
So what does that do? | ||
Drives away investment, which causes bankruptcy. | ||
They do it on public transportation because they have a captive audience. | ||
And what does that do? | ||
That makes public transportation unlivable. | ||
And they do it in their neighborhoods. | ||
And when they do it in their neighborhoods, that makes the housing unaffordable. | ||
Because there's cheap, plentiful housing in most of these cities. | ||
The problem is, the cheap housing is where the violent black people are. | ||
To not live in a neighborhood full of black people that are committing crimes, you have to be in a certain tax bracket and a certain zip code that prices those people out of the neighborhood. | ||
So now you've also got a housing problem and an inequality problem. | ||
Do you see how all of this... Now I'm simplifying. | ||
This is a very reductive way to look at it, but All of these things logically follow. | ||
Is that the main cause of bankruptcy? | ||
Not really. | ||
Is that the main cause of the housing problems? | ||
In some cities I would argue it's a big factor. | ||
But do you see how just this one issue, and it's so transparent, We cannot arrest them because they're black. | ||
So then we're going to get a ton of violent crime, and the violent crime has very visible effects, which is people are getting killed all the time, and there are broken windows everywhere, but there is also an invisible effect of all of that, which is, like I said, the public transportation not an option, which makes it very hard for people. | ||
That means they got to move to the suburbs to commute with a car. | ||
Because you can't have a car in a lot of these cities. | ||
And the unseen effect is that it is going to drive away investment in the business district. | ||
And that is going to cause a huge deficit in tax revenue. | ||
That's another unseen effect. | ||
Another unseen effect is that all the gang violence in these neighborhoods takes a significant amount of the housing effectively out of the market. | ||
Because you've got affordable housing in a lot of, maybe not in San Francisco, but in a lot of these cities. | ||
But who wants to live in the ghetto? | ||
You could live affordably in the city, but you have to live in the criminal areas. | ||
And nobody wants to do that. | ||
How much housing would really effectively be available to people if there were no crime? | ||
If there was not Iraq-level violence in the city, specifically in my city, there'd be a lot more housing. | ||
It would be a lot more affordable to live in the city. | ||
There'd be a lot more property tax. | ||
There'd be a lot more kids in the schools. | ||
That's another thing. | ||
When there's violence, who wants to send their kids to school? | ||
So they go and leave and then there's a hundred kids in one school and the whole school is operating at a deficit. | ||
So do you see how there's this cascading effect? | ||
And it all comes from we cannot arrest them because they're black. | ||
So us not being racist has all of these consequences. | ||
If we decided tomorrow we will arrest as many criminals as possible and we don't care how many of them are black, we don't care how racist it looks, we want to fix it, Think about what a turnaround would be possible for the city. | ||
Think about what could be done. | ||
But we have made a choice that we're going to be pushed around by blacks. | ||
And specifically, and by the way, I want to say this. | ||
A lot of people might jump in and say, well, it's not blacks, it's the race hustling black political leaders. | ||
The blacks are innocent victims. | ||
No, they are not. | ||
They are not blameless victims. | ||
I am so sick of hearing that. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
Every election, they vote for this. | ||
When George Floyd got killed, was there really a loud voice coming from the black community saying, George Floyd was a predator! | ||
Our community suffers! | ||
Nope! | ||
They were all out there at the liquor store and the phone store and they were out there burning down Kmart with the rest of them. | ||
Are we really gonna pretend that that isn't the case? | ||
They go out there and dutifully vote for a politician, typically black, but always have to be progressive, who is going to tell them that the real problem is root causes. | ||
It's, we just need MoEdem programs. | ||
We don't need MoPolice, we need MoEdem programs. | ||
We need, we need education. | ||
We need reparations. | ||
Right? | ||
But you always hear, and this is just a little aside, I always hear from the right wing, they always say, no, no, it's those leaders, it's those race hustling civil rights leaders, the real victims are in the community. | ||
I don't doubt that there are real victims out there that do not like the way that things are. | ||
But let us not pretend that this is not something that is going on. | ||
With the assent or the complicity of most black people in these cities. | ||
With the way they vote, with the way they act, with their attitudes. | ||
They're all progressive on this issue. | ||
They all are anti-police for the most part. | ||
And that's just one thing when you look at the crime. | ||
Then when you look at the homelessness. | ||
Who is driving the homelessness? | ||
It's all these immigrants pouring into the cities. | ||
In a lot of cases, it's a migrant problem. | ||
It's not all the homeless people, but that is a lot of them. | ||
Once again, could we close the border and say, don't come here? | ||
That one's a little bit more complicated. | ||
It's not just about race, it's also about cheap labor. | ||
But that's another situation where it's totally in our control. | ||
The American government has the world's reserve currency. | ||
It brings in trillions of dollars of tax revenue every year. | ||
This is the most productive, richest country in the world, still, and if we wanted to secure the American border, we could do that. | ||
If we wanted to secure a few cities and prevent crime, we could do that. | ||
We did it in Afghanistan, we did it in Iraq. | ||
Don't get me wrong, it exploded once we left, but while we were there, it was relatively under control, and that was on the other side of the planet. | ||
Point is, If it comes to a full-on counterinsurgency in our own country against gangs and against black crime, we could do it. | ||
We have the money. | ||
It's in our backyard. | ||
They could find every capital rioter who trespassed based on their geolocation And their Bank of America records and chat rooms and live streams. | ||
They could solve the murders. | ||
They could solve it with facial recognition. | ||
They could solve it with genetics. | ||
They could solve it with hiring more police. | ||
They could solve it if they just wanted to. | ||
But they don't. | ||
That's just it. | ||
So these cities are our country. | ||
The problems in these cities are, they really are national problems. | ||
They are a reflection on our country. | ||
They are our country. | ||
That's how they all are. | ||
And we have chosen that because we don't want to be racist. | ||
And largely it's Whites that have enabled this. | ||
Now here's the problem. | ||
We're at a tipping point now where even if we wanted to turn it around, we really couldn't. | ||
Because now these minorities are outnumbering us. | ||
So now it's on the white man to go out and convince an ever-increasing share of Asians and Hispanics to do this. | ||
And how effective that's going to be? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Is any city, is the country going to be able to pull itself together over these racial divisions or over these competing ethnic interest-based politics to solve problems? | ||
I think the answer is no. | ||
In other words, in a lot of these cities you have a dynamic where it's just various ethnic enclaves fighting for money for their group, fighting for money for programs for their group or their neighborhood or their interest. | ||
And that's by design. | ||
That's a feature, not a bug. | ||
And so when you've got this Star Wars galactic senate of alien people fighting each other for a share of the money, how are you going to unite the city behind any kind of agenda that's going to solve problems for everybody, which is lock up all the criminals? | ||
Well, the blacks aren't going to like that, and well, some other group's not going to... the teachers union's not going to like that, and this one's not going to like that. | ||
So that's where we are. | ||
This is what's going on in the cities and that is America. | ||
And you can go somewhere else and it will go there too. | ||
You can go somewhere else and it will go there too. | ||
You can go out into the country. | ||
You can go... Unless you're willing to go out and just become like a farmer or something. | ||
This is just a reality. | ||
This is American life. | ||
And the best you could do as a farmer is maybe one generation before your kids want to go out and go to a college town, and they want to go where the jobs are, and they want to go out into the city. | ||
This is the urgent, pressing reality of our time, and it's getting worse, and the political dynamic is only complicating it because of immigration. | ||
This is why you need a dictator. | ||
That's why I've always said that I am not a Democrat in the sense that I don't believe in democracy. | ||
At some point, you need a Napoleon, you need a Hitler, you need a Trump, you need a Caesar to take over and say, we're going to restore law and order, we're going to literally just make the trains safe and run on time, we're going to make the neighborhood safe, we're going to make it safe to invest, we're going to build things, like, you just need that. | ||
Because otherwise I don't see how any long-term, big-picture project is going to get done. | ||
That he's a little bit unpopular with black people, progressives, gay people, women. | ||
That's where we are. | ||
So that's San Francisco. | ||
That's the stabbing of this guy. | ||
Yeah, well... | ||
You get what you pay for. | ||
This is what you wanted. | ||
He believed in diversity. | ||
He got it. | ||
Well, I guess that guy should have had the mental help that he needed. | ||
He didn't get the help that he needed. | ||
I think actually the killer is a real victim in this case because he was never given a chance, you know? | ||
If he had gotten his reparations and a tutor and a therapist, maybe he wouldn't be out stabbing people to death at night. | ||
Who knows? | ||
But anyway, that's San Francisco. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the Chicago situation because this is very much the same story. | ||
And this gets into what I was talking about with these black people and what they vote for. | ||
Yesterday we had the runoff election for the mayor in Chicago. | ||
Lori Lightfoot was defeated in the first round. | ||
And the runoff was between this guy, Vallis, who's really technically the Republican candidate, and he was supported by the police, and he was supported by the billionaires, and by Citadel, and Ken Griffin, and Betsy DeVos, and a lot of Trump donors. | ||
And on the other side, you have Brandon Johnson, who is a black, former teacher, Chicago Teachers Union activist, and hardcore progressive, endorsed by Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren. | ||
And it was very close. | ||
Brandon Johnson won by 2%, 100,000 votes, somewhere in the ballpark there. | ||
They're not finished counting, I don't believe, but he's a projected winner. | ||
And so let me go over, this is a story from BBC talking about the race. | ||
It says, quote, Former union organizer Brandon Johnson has been elected as Chicago's next mayor in a victory widely seen as a boost for progressive Democrats. | ||
Johnson won the hotly contested race over former Chicago schools CEO Paul Vallis, a fellow Democrat. | ||
The election comes as Chicago, excuse me, struggles with crime, a central theme of both candidates' electoral campaigns. | ||
Mr. Johnson has vowed to invest more in mental health treatment rather than on additional police and jails. | ||
When he takes office next month, Mr. Johnson will succeed Lori Lightfoot, who is the first black woman and openly gay person to serve as Chicago's mayor. | ||
Mr. Johnson was backed during the nonpartisan election by Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders. | ||
Speaking to supporters on Tuesday night, Mr. Johnson vowed to usher in a new chapter in Chicago in which residents from all walks of life would be cared for by city officials. | ||
He said, today is the beginning of a Chicago that truly invests in all of its people. | ||
In his speech, Mr. Johnson said his campaign was influenced by Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Today, the dream is alive, he said, so we celebrate the revival and the resurrection of the city of Chicago. | ||
The murder rate in Chicago has risen 20% since 2018, while car thefts have risen by 114% in the same period. | ||
While car thefts have risen by 114% in the same period, other forms of crime have risen over the same period also. | ||
While Mr. Vallis promised to hire hundreds of additional officers to fight crime and was endorsed by the police union, Mr. Johnson vowed to invest city funds in intervention methods focused on de-escalating conflict as well as addressing root causes of crime such as schools, jobs, and mental health. | ||
So this is pretty unbelievable. | ||
Chicago, in case you don't know, is a war zone right now. | ||
It couldn't be worse than it is. | ||
Just this morning in the Humboldt Park neighborhood, there was a crime spree that lasted an hour. | ||
Two cars full of black teenagers drove all over the city, stealing cars, mugging people. | ||
This is something that happens all the time now. | ||
This happened at 6 a.m. | ||
on a Wednesday morning. | ||
And stories like this are not uncommon. | ||
It's almost now every other day, every week, there is a story about 5, 6, sometimes more than 10 crimes being committed in a half hour, hour time span in the morning. | ||
People are getting shot all over the city. | ||
There are riots all over the city on a regular basis. | ||
Where spontaneously black people just start jumping on cars, shut down traffic, they'll swarm downtown and Millennium Park. | ||
People get shot now on State Street, River North. | ||
The city is totally up for grabs. | ||
Everybody knows it. | ||
Everybody knows that it's not safe anymore. | ||
This is the environment that we were in two days ago. | ||
And of course this is causing all kinds of other problems. | ||
This is precipitating all sorts of other things like major divestment from the business district. | ||
Businesses don't want to be a part of this. | ||
They're leaving. | ||
Schools are shrinking because parents are taking their kids to the suburbs. | ||
Public transportation is violent, unlivable. | ||
It's a disaster. | ||
Absolute disaster. | ||
And so if any time there was an election when there would be a reaction to the consequences of these progressive policies, it would be this election. | ||
You know, people are always talking about eventually things will just get so bad that the reaction will be voted in, or the reaction will take over. | ||
If ever there was a time in history, in a city, in America, it would be at this time, in this city, I should say in this century, it would be here. | ||
And not only does the right-wing guy not win, But a far-left, hardcore progressive wins, who's not only not the best candidate, but the worst candidate, who's going out there and saying, now people are getting executed. | ||
They're getting shot on their knees, execution style, in the middle of the city, the nice parts of the city. | ||
We elect a guy that is talking about, we're going to solve that with mental health and education and good jobs, okay? | ||
Redirecting money from the police! | ||
He wants to take $150 million from the police and invest it in de-escalation community strategies, whatever the hell that means. | ||
This is the result. | ||
And it was so funny. | ||
This is the first thing I noticed. | ||
I saw there was a tweet from somebody analyzing the race, and they said, here's a map of all the victims of violent crime, and here's a map of how the vote went down yesterday. | ||
And predictably, all of the areas with the most violent crime voted for Brandon Johnson, the black public teachers union Democrat. | ||
And everybody in the replies was saying, well look, see, the victims of the violent crime have spoken, and they say the solution to the crime is community policing. | ||
They say the solution is investing in our children, investing in mental health. | ||
So if they say that, then certainly that must be the answer. | ||
Well, we also know there's another layer there. | ||
There's another map you could draw that you could layer on top of that which is, gee, that's where all the black people live. | ||
That is where the black people and the white gay people live. | ||
That is, it's Lakeview, it's all the faggots from Boys Town, it's all of the all the libtarded, gay, yuppie, white liberals and the blacks in the South and West Side The classic alliance, they teamed up to vote for a black progressive who doesn't understand anything about evil and law and order. | ||
They're going out there saying, well I think they know, look the victims, it's black people. | ||
And it's not just black people voting for a black mayor, although that's always a part of it. | ||
It's black people voting for a black mayor who said, it's not your fault. | ||
Because when a black public school teacher union guy goes out there and says, it's about mental health, it's about schools, you know what they're really saying? | ||
They're really saying it's not black people's fault, it's white people's fault. | ||
Maybe that's a controversial take. | ||
But that is, you want to talk about dog whistling? | ||
That's what that means. | ||
In other words, these adolescent black teenagers are not driving around executing people, shooting people, stealing catalytic converters, stealing cars because that's just, they were not raised right, they are bad people, they are evil. | ||
They're doing that because they're victims of a racist system. | ||
They're doing that because in some sense, somewhere along the way, they didn't get what they were entitled to from the white taxpayer and from the white system. | ||
They didn't get the mental health program. | ||
They didn't get good schools. | ||
You know who makes the black schools bad? | ||
All the black criminals that make it an unlivable environment, actually. | ||
But it's always not enough money for them schools, not enough jobs. | ||
You want to know why there's no jobs? | ||
Because nobody wants to invest money in a war zone. | ||
Not a very good ROI putting down money in Humboldt Park when there's an hour-long crime spree and they don't even catch the perpetrators. | ||
So it's not just that the black constituency is voting for a black guy, although that is a huge part of it, it's also that they're voting for one of their own who is telling them it's not our fault, it's their fault. | ||
And so what's the Brandon Johnson program? | ||
Tax the rich. | ||
He wants to bring in 800 million more dollars in tax revenue by taxing the rich. | ||
This is the Chicago Teachers Union agenda. | ||
Redistribute the wealth. | ||
They want to tax the rich and give it to DEM programs, give it to the school, give it to the mental health. | ||
It's every bit as much class as it is race. | ||
Huge dimension to this issue. | ||
And so that was the first thing I saw. | ||
I goes out there and says, yeah, well, the victims of the crime are okay with this. | ||
Yeah, well, the victims are the perpetrators. | ||
It's the same people. | ||
They're all black and they're all part of it. | ||
And they all protect each other, and they all perpetrate a very criminal culture and that kind of mindset. | ||
It's not like this is something... It's not like we're getting any cooperation. | ||
If we were, then you'd see they would vote for the anti-crime guy, but they don't want more cops. | ||
They don't want more white police arresting their boys, arresting... He was on a roll student. | ||
He was turning his life around. | ||
They don't want, you know, they don't want any more cops throwing their people in jail. | ||
They think the problem is they just need more checks. | ||
They need more money. | ||
They're entitled to more things. | ||
They're the real victims. | ||
The crime was catalyzed by racism or something like that. | ||
That's what they voted for. | ||
This is what you get in these cities. | ||
And I don't know what's going to happen in Chicago. | ||
Will the city bottom out? | ||
Will it collapse? | ||
Here's the thing. | ||
I don't even know what collapse at this point would look like. | ||
It sort of already has, hasn't it? | ||
I look back at the George Floyd riots when the cities were literally being burned to the ground and they were deploying public works trucks to block the entrances to the highway. | ||
Isn't that something like what a collapse looks like? | ||
And nothing changed. | ||
All the businesses just left and a lot of people just fled to the suburbs and now things are just worse. | ||
And now that we elected a mayor like this, things will just continue to get worse. | ||
Gradually, incrementally, slowly. | ||
The investment is going to dry up. | ||
It's going to be a trickle. | ||
Slowly and continuously, the population will shrink. | ||
The violence will get worse. | ||
That will create a compounding effect. | ||
And pretty soon, the city's just going to be a wasteland. | ||
There's going to be no point at which there's going to be some vanguard that says, enough is enough! | ||
And they vote in, or they storm in. | ||
This is not going to happen. | ||
They just ruined it. | ||
It's just ruined. | ||
And that's the tragedy of our country, and this is a perfect example. | ||
If you were hoping for 10 years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, for this city to collapse, it's a collapse that never came. | ||
The collapse that would finally snap everybody back to reality and wake them up, make them come back to their senses, it never happened. | ||
And it never will. | ||
It just got worse and worse over time until it is so ruined that there's nothing worth saving anymore. | ||
That's going to be the reality in 10, 15, 20 years. | ||
This is one of America's most beautiful cities. | ||
At one point, one of its richest, most populous, most diversified, some of the best architecture, And it's just gonna be over. | ||
Like, it's already basically over. | ||
Nobody wants to move here anymore. | ||
Nobody wants to live here anymore. | ||
It's not worth it. | ||
The food, the nightlife, not even good anymore after COVID. | ||
And soon not even worth it with everything that's going on. | ||
Who wants to go out and then have to worry about getting executed and shot in the face and have your car stolen? | ||
I was at O'Hare recently and I got picked up by an Uber driver and he was telling me how he doesn't even do pickups or drop-offs in the city, just does the airport. | ||
That's it. | ||
And he was black! | ||
And he was on the phone with somebody talking about getting his concealed carry license. | ||
This is how it is in America. | ||
And here's the point. | ||
Nothing is going to change unless there is a political will. | ||
And when I say political will, I mean a straight-up tyrant, a dictator, a fascist, a zealot, a hardcore person to get into power and use it. | ||
That's what I mean. | ||
When I say political will, I don't mean elect another Marjorie Taylor Greene to give speeches and do photo ops and talk about Nelson Mandela. | ||
I mean, you need a straight-up dictator to go in there and raise up a coalition inside the government and then start breaking necks. | ||
Like, that's just what has to happen. | ||
Short of that, it will not get solved. | ||
And so there are sort of two sides to this complacency. | ||
There are people that say, well, we gotta vote, we gotta vote, we gotta show up, we gotta vote for these Republicans, and this and that. | ||
Because, you know, if you're not voting for a dictator, it just doesn't even matter anymore. | ||
And then there's another side of the complacency that says, well, we're not going to vote our way out of this. | ||
We've got to sit back, relax, and wait for the collapse. | ||
Because that's not going to happen either. | ||
Bold people are wasting precious time. | ||
And so what should be done is that people should be getting into positions of power. | ||
They should be getting involved in politics, building their network, making connections, making money. | ||
I saw something today, and I'm going to use Marjorie Greene as a punching bag. | ||
She's a good example of it. | ||
Marjorie Greene was doing some interviews covered in Human Events and she said something like, I'm calling on all Americans to make their voices heard. | ||
And I thought about that and I said, what the F does that mean? | ||
I'm calling on all Americans to make their voices heard. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Oh, I'm a guy that wants to make my voice heard. | ||
Well, I have a show, obviously. | ||
But for your average person, what does that mean? | ||
What are they gonna do? | ||
Go outside and yell? | ||
They're gonna go and post on Facebook about it? | ||
Go and post in the QA non-Facebook group about it? | ||
Post on True Social? | ||
We love you, Trump! | ||
Make your voice heard? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
What does that do for anybody? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Vote for me? | ||
Again? | ||
It's not tangible. | ||
It's not practical. | ||
And I've noticed something. | ||
Whether it's Daily Wire, or it's Infowars, frankly, or it's Marjorie, or it's Tucker, none of these people tell anybody to do anything! | ||
You have intelligent people in this country. | ||
The greatest, and this is something I learned from Ye that we've been thinking about a lot and writing a lot about, the greatest asset that we have is our people. | ||
We have brilliant people in this country. | ||
We have brilliant people that have put in the right position, could fix a lot of our problems. | ||
They could figure out the solutions. | ||
You have brilliant people, and types like Marjorie or Tucker or Alex or whatever, they've got an audience with these intelligent people. | ||
But instead of telling them, go out, become powerful, make money, get involved, do something, they're being told nothing. | ||
They're being told either some garbage like, hey, go out and make your voice heard, vote, make sure you vote on Tuesday, make sure you chip in 10 bucks, make sure, whatever. | ||
They're either being told something like that, or it's something like, you know, and subscribe, subscribe for more content, follow us on Rumble, do this and that. | ||
Or they're being told, This sniggering, above it all, chortling. | ||
How could it get any more crazy? | ||
It's a choice between crazy and normal. | ||
These Democrats, how could it get any more ridiculous? | ||
unidentified
|
Hunter Biden, what a crackhead. | |
And between, or they're being told some variation of, the Democrats are hypocrites. | ||
The Democrats are the real, where are the real liberals? | ||
Nowhere. | ||
All this money, all this messaging, this big political machine that everybody thinks exists is doing nothing other than perpetuating itself. | ||
Perpetuating its subscriber base, its attendance at its conferences, its viewership on TV, its votes, its majorities, its this. | ||
What we have been doing at America First is finding the intelligent people and building a nationwide network. | ||
And I don't talk about this a lot on the show because we're doing it discreetly. | ||
But the project that is underway now is that we are trying to find the most intelligent people that watch this show or believe these things and getting them involved in politics, starting them on the path to a career in politics in the last 40 years. | ||
And if we could get 5,000, 10,000 people that start now, or over the course of time, and they matriculate and they work their way up the system over the course of a generation, Then you will have an army. | ||
Then you will have a professional revolutionary class. | ||
Then you will have something that looks like a political will to overturn things. | ||
Right now we just don't have it. | ||
People just don't care enough. | ||
Republicans want to be left alone. | ||
Let's be honest. | ||
They don't want anything to change. | ||
They don't want anything even to get better. | ||
They just don't. | ||
They just want to be left alone. | ||
That's it. | ||
They don't want to clean anything up. | ||
They don't want to kill any criminals. | ||
They don't want to... | ||
They don't want to attract investment. | ||
They don't want to invent things or modernize the infrastructure. | ||
They want to be left alone because they're fucking pussies. | ||
This country is being destroyed. | ||
It's being raped to death. | ||
There will be no inheritance for your children at the rate we're going. | ||
And all these Republicans want is to just be left alone. | ||
They just want to retreat. | ||
Out there, retreat to the recliner, they want to watch TV unmolested and they want to go about their lives. | ||
In a time like this though, it's a very selfish thing. | ||
It is. | ||
And I've heard this all the time. | ||
For the longest time I've been on social media, I've been in this right-wing scene and I've always encouraged people to get involved and I've done my share of organizing and Activism and all that. | ||
And I've heard from these anonymous types, they say, don't ruin your life, kids. | ||
Don't ruin your life. | ||
You got a whole life ahead of you. | ||
Don't ruin your life getting into politics. | ||
And it's like, ruin your life? | ||
Our country's being ruined. | ||
What kind of quality of life can you expect, honestly, in this century? | ||
You know, politics isn't real life until something really horrific happens to you. | ||
Things are not going that well, actually. | ||
If you're rich, like a lot of these Jews are, and you can afford to live in the right zip codes, yeah, you're fine. | ||
But if you're just some white sucker with no legacy connections at a major university, if you're just some white sucker that doesn't have a ton of wealth, It's just a matter of time before you get caught up. | ||
You're on the wrong end of another vaccine mandate, or a George Floyd riot, or some other such thing. | ||
On the wrong end of a gun in the middle of the night. | ||
What kind of quality of life can you expect for you, your children, in a bankrupt country that's being totally invaded, that's completely corrupt, and dirty, and backwards, and degenerate? | ||
This is real life. | ||
This is your real life. | ||
Coming soon, if it's not here already. | ||
And it's going to be the life of your children. | ||
Unless people get off the couch and get involved and take the first step and do something. | ||
And by the way, that doesn't mean, and honest to God, that does not mean going out and getting a weapon and doing something like that. | ||
In fact, that's the opposite of productive. | ||
I mean going about it and doing the real soldier's work Of getting up and getting involved and working day in day out doing the tedium, doing the work of an intelligent professional revolutionary for 40 years. | ||
That's called giving your life. | ||
Any idiot can go and do a death by cop and give their life for their own narcissism or their own emotional response. | ||
Giving your life means going out there and living a life that may be unfulfilled, giving your full entire life to a professional revolutionary cause. | ||
That's what the intelligent, patriotic, pious people need to be doing, as opposed to every other activity which people can come up with. | ||
Vote. | ||
Don't vote. | ||
Stay at home. | ||
Wait for the collabs. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you know, we're gonna get bodybuilders to take out the electrical grid. | |
No, you're fucking not. | ||
So, I mean, I see these things that just makes me lose my mind because we're losing our country. | ||
And there was literally one guy that wanted to turn it around. | ||
His name was Donald Trump. | ||
And of course, one guy can't do it on his own. | ||
He's, in many ways, been defeated spiritually. | ||
I hate to say that, but you saw last night. | ||
He's still fighting, but he's weakened. | ||
One guy stepped up. | ||
I mean, he really stepped up to the plate. | ||
And others have, too. | ||
But let that be an inspiration. | ||
He, talk about ruining your real life. | ||
Look at the life he led and what he threw away to do what he's done. | ||
Now that's come with its perks, but if he loses, history will not remember him well. | ||
So, and I'm sure it's not going so hot right now either. | ||
So anyway, so that's the message tonight between Chicago and San Francisco. | ||
When are Americans going to stand up and get in there? | ||
Get in the arena? | ||
Should have been done 20 years ago, but better late than never. | ||
That's the thing, though. | ||
Just like today, 60 years ago, 50 years ago, 30 years ago, people just wanted to retreat. | ||
Not my problem. | ||
I'm going to go somewhere else. | ||
Not my problem. | ||
I'll go. | ||
They don't want to stand their ground. | ||
They don't want to do the hard work. | ||
The other side wanted it more. | ||
And now, look at the result. | ||
Very sad, but we have to be honest about it. | ||
The optimistic angle is that if we are honest about it, think of this. | ||
Think about the destiny that we share in this country. | ||
If we succeed, if we are successful, we can turn it around. | ||
It's all reversible. | ||
We can do anything. | ||
Anything is possible with the right people. | ||
It's just a matter of stepping up. | ||
Really, it's that simple. | ||
People are like, is it too little too late? | ||
If you have the right people in charge, it's never too little too late. | ||
We could always come back. | ||
We could always plant the seeds for another country. | ||
People and nations have come back from far worse. | ||
We could do it. | ||
But we just have to want it. | ||
We just have to make the decision. | ||
Do we want to be a country that is a tyrannical, racist dictatorship, but it's like China? | ||
It's like the Emirates? | ||
It's like the other great countries in the world right now? | ||
Or do we want to be... | ||
Cowards, and do we want to live under the sovereignty of narcissistic blacks, and Jews, and women, and liberals, and gay people, and every other group, and watch everything get destroyed? | ||
It's a decision. | ||
It's a decision. | ||
I decided I wasn't going to do that, and people have called me crazy, and they've called me a terrible person, and my name's been dragged through the mud, and I've gone through an ordeal, but when I die, I can say I didn't go along with it. | ||
I fought. | ||
I put up a fight. | ||
And I didn't go out there and do anything stupid. | ||
I did what was in my wheelhouse. | ||
I couldn't finish school. | ||
I'm terrible at school. | ||
I can't wake up on time. | ||
I don't do my homework. | ||
I don't study. | ||
So I couldn't have done that. | ||
But I did what was in my wheelhouse. | ||
I used the gift that I had to fight back in the way that I was good at. | ||
And whatever the result, I can die saying, I didn't go along with it, I did something. | ||
And I want to die victorious, don't get me wrong, but the consolation is, it was worth it. | ||
And everybody else is being told, well, just worry about yourself. | ||
You just get a normal job. | ||
You just go and sell insurance or something. | ||
Worry about your real life. | ||
Go and get insurance and marry some woman who probably divorced you in 10 years and get a bunch of friends that wouldn't like you if they knew your real views and wait to get old and die in a country that's unrecognizable. | ||
Welcome to your real life, said the Jews. | ||
Welcome to your real life, said Costan Alamariu and his Likud spy friends. | ||
Don't lift a finger. | ||
Just make your voice heard and vote and never show up. | ||
Okay, so that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
unidentified
|
this. | |
Excuse me. | ||
Oh, I keep burping. | ||
I I have this huge cheeseburger right before I started the show. | ||
So I'm a little a little gassy. | ||
I'm a gassy guy tonight. | ||
All right, let me get my water here. | ||
We'll get it started. | ||
Yeah, Max, what's up? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Corelix sent $20.00. | ||
Minorities will never vote red because they are already more conservative than white people. | ||
It's simply about power. | ||
They're not really more conservative than us though. | ||
unidentified
|
Honestly, yeah. | |
The abortion thing is a big deal. | ||
It's women, man. | ||
$20. | ||
After last night's Supreme Court election loss, I have heard establishment types like Ronna McDaniel blame pro-life messaging. | ||
I think it's a cop out to blame it all on abortion, but it does seem to be an issue that gets these sluts to the polls. | ||
At some point, we are going to have to deal with the WQ. | ||
Honestly, yeah. | ||
The abortion thing is a big deal. | ||
unidentified
|
It's women, man. | |
It's women. | ||
It's this nightmare coalition. | ||
It's... | ||
It's like I said. | ||
We did a big story about that color revolution. | ||
Was it in Georgia? | ||
That big riot over their foreign corruption law? | ||
unidentified
|
Love it. | |
The people are rioting because they want foreign corruption. | ||
Totally organic, by the way. | ||
I did a show about that which was going on, I think, two or three weeks ago. | ||
And whenever you look at these countries where there is a foreign-backed coup, it is always through the student groups, it's through women's groups, and it's through minority, religious and ethnic minority groups. | ||
Those are always, that's always the entry point for foreign subversion. | ||
unidentified
|
Go figure! | |
Why do you think that is? | ||
In Afghanistan and Iran, it's the women. | ||
In these Central Asian, Eastern European countries, Arab Spring, it's the young people. | ||
It's the college students. | ||
It's also these minority groups in a lot of them. | ||
It varies, of course, country by country. | ||
And the same thing is happening in America. | ||
It's the same deal. | ||
Every year it's the white guys that get taken to the cleaners at the polls by these susceptible women, feminist types, young people, easily influenceable young people, and religious and ethnic minorities. | ||
Is that not how the elections work? | ||
It should be the white guys voting, because then we would fix everything. | ||
I mean, are we gonna honestly pretend that wouldn't be the case? | ||
The thing is, the left almost doesn't even deny it. | ||
They don't even deny that white guys would solve everything. | ||
They just say, but it might be bad! | ||
White guys would fix everything, but what if they fix it too good? | ||
What if they fix it too much? | ||
What if the trains are so brutally on time that a poor person of color is late and they can't get on the train? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like that's the mentality. | ||
What if they do too good of a job? | ||
unidentified
|
So... We need jazz. | |
We need crime. | ||
We need a little gangbanging. | ||
We need a little of that. | ||
We need a little pedophilia and child rape. | ||
If the white guys were in charge, there'd be none of it. | ||
Yeah, that's kind of the whole point, actually. | ||
So... Yeah, no, the women thing's a big deal. | ||
Women suck. | ||
What can I say? | ||
They should not be voting. | ||
They should not be voting. | ||
They should not be driving. | ||
They should never be let out of the house without a guy. | ||
It should be from father to husband. | ||
That should be a woman's life. | ||
From father to husband. | ||
That's how it should be. | ||
But yeah. | ||
Yeah, it's real. | ||
It's a shame. | ||
It's just, what are you gonna do? | ||
PurpleGroIper sent $3. | ||
Saw a black guy walking his pitbull puppy in downtown LA today. | ||
He was kicking and screaming at it and it was shaking and crying. | ||
Blacks play a role in the pitbull issue. | ||
The Pitbull thing I'm really kind of over. | ||
unidentified
|
I feel like that's stale, to be honest with you. | |
Yo! | ||
Big shout out! | ||
Hey! | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
I like that. | |
Who said that? | ||
1 Timothy 6.15. | ||
of his time, who is himself the incarnation of that spirit. | ||
He does not come to destroy, but to fulfill it. - Mmm, I like that. | ||
Who said that? | ||
unidentified
|
First Timothy 6:15, is that it? | |
I can't find the direct quote. | ||
I like that though. | ||
unidentified
|
That's good. | |
Now that's not it. | ||
unidentified
|
What is that from? | |
I can't find it online. | ||
But hey! | ||
Thanks for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
Great quote! | |
Great quote. | ||
I like that. | ||
It's true. | ||
True. | ||
Have to work with history, not against it. | ||
Miguel Pimentel sent $16. | ||
Love you no homo, sweetie. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, thanks. | |
The vibe. | ||
Yeah, the vibe is unrecognizable. | ||
Sometimes I get like flashes of it. | ||
It's like a feeling. | ||
high schoolers even from 2004 seems like an entire different country. | ||
Not only the racial composition, but also the dress, social environment, and overall vibe is unrecognizable. | ||
The vibe, yeah, the vibe is unrecognizable. | ||
Sometimes I get like flashes of it. | ||
It's like a feeling. | ||
It's like a distinct feeling. | ||
You know what I wish... | ||
I wish I could have experienced like the 1970s or the 1980s. | ||
I feel like life before digital was like a different kind of consciousness. | ||
It's like a, it's a fundamentally different kind of civilization. | ||
The idea of being unreachable, like you drive somewhere and it's just you. | ||
You just take yourself with you. | ||
You don't take you and your phone with you. | ||
And the idea of ignorance, like not knowing things, being able to get lost, being able to be a stranger somewhere, being able to be in a... really being in the city. | ||
Right now we're kind of in this global village and where we are is somewhat arbitrary. | ||
Not really, but in some ways it is. | ||
And I feel like we... I had that for a very short time because I was born in 98. | ||
And so... | ||
I was around for, you know, probably 10 or 15 years before social media and the smartphone really became prolific. | ||
I remember very, very early, I remember when the cell phone was just like a, it was just like a very simple phone, before even the flip phone. | ||
I remember going to the waiting room at the doctor and just being bored. | ||
Mom, do you have games on your phone? | ||
You remember very rudimentary games? | ||
And I remember being a kid and thinking how cool it would be to watch TV in the car. | ||
Wouldn't it be cool? | ||
Because you would have the radio. | ||
Wouldn't it be cool if you had TV? | ||
You could watch live TV in the car or any video display in the car? | ||
I thought that was crazy. | ||
Or, I remember when I first got my iPod Touch and I watched a YouTube video on the couch. | ||
I was like, this is next level. | ||
So I remember a little bit of the pre, because it really was a second singularity. | ||
It was like the internet, which was email, home computer. | ||
And then the next wave was social media and smartphone, which go hand in hand, which is about 2012, 2015, when all that really took off. | ||
You'd have to go and hear about news and gossip in like a magazine or like the TV. - Okay. | ||
Crazy. | ||
It's just a different world, so... Yeah, I wish I could experience that. | ||
Different planet. | ||
Yeah, I guess that woman lost. | ||
I don't really follow Finnish politics, though. | ||
Hey, brofist. | ||
Yeah, I guess that woman lost. | ||
I don't really follow Finnish politics, though. | ||
Monk Seal sent $10. | ||
Brofist. | ||
Hey, Brofist, what's up? | ||
Daddy. | ||
Absolutely agree with that. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
Hi, I'm good. | ||
- Sent three dollars. | ||
This nation has fallen. | ||
Our enemies have left us with no other alternative. | ||
- Agreed. | ||
- We must build Mecha Hitler. | ||
- Absolutely agree with that. | ||
- Stimulant grow I percent five dollars. | ||
Hi, hello, how are you? | ||
Smile. | ||
- Hi, I'm good, how are you? - Sire Lancaster sent three dollars. | ||
Long time, Nick. | ||
Never stopped watching. | ||
Inspiring speech. | ||
I had gotten an interview for the first wave on interns, but your assistant at the time never made the meeting. | ||
Should I apply again? | ||
Sure. | ||
Yeah, why not? | ||
Donald E. Rump sent $3. | ||
How much traffic would there be if women weren't allowed to drive? | ||
Oh, there'd still be traffic. | ||
It's just there'd be fewer accidents. | ||
Hey, thank you. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
I don't know how much that's really a part of it, because we don't ever talk about it. | ||
He doesn't make small talk like that. | ||
from Chi City help you work so well with ye. | ||
Also, thanks for the great show as usual. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
I don't know how much that's really a part of it because we don't ever talk about it. | ||
He doesn't make small talk like that. | ||
It's so funny because people are always asking me questions and they just don't understand that when you talk to him, it's just all about the business, man. | ||
He's all about the business. | ||
All he thinks about is every project he's working on. | ||
Music, architecture, design, politics, He's the wheels are always turning So I've been in constant contact with them for how many months now? | ||
Since November. | ||
So what is that? | ||
Like, uh, five months? | ||
Just don't smile. | ||
And we've been together for a long time. | ||
Like, even when we were on the private jet, we'd be on the private jet for six, seven hours, and be sitting there talking, playing Mancala for hours! | ||
I told you that story. | ||
And sit and talk for hours, and it's just... And he talks a lot about his life and things, but he's a very deep person. | ||
I think we connect on that level. | ||
Because I'm very much the same way. | ||
I hate small talk, and I'm very much somebody that is questioning in the sense of... I like to tinker and interrogate ideas. | ||
Some people are not like that. | ||
But me, I like to sit there and think about, hmm, you know, why is it that way? | ||
Well, what about this? | ||
What about that? | ||
I think that's the sign of a creative person. | ||
I think about it like a Rubik's Cube. | ||
Or a puzzle, you know, like an intelligent person will look at an issue and kind of try different solutions and try different things and and use conditional statements to try and try to suss out the truth and the true nature of things. | ||
And I think Ye is very much like that. | ||
He's very much a thinker, and I'm often blown away by some of the things that he just has tremendous insight into. | ||
Like, he really just grasps politics, even though he's not really a political guy, as you know. | ||
He's not... That's not where he... That's not his domain. | ||
He comes from the music world and the art world and the fashion world. | ||
But his grasp on it blows me away. | ||
He's not even somebody that really... People think that he pays attention to the scene. | ||
He doesn't really pay that much attention to any scene. | ||
He just thinks. | ||
And he just gets it. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
So I think we just have a very similar kind of mindset. | ||
I think also Chicago is kind of a rugged city. | ||
I like to think of Chicago as a tough city. | ||
It's got a lot of tough people. | ||
Chicago's a lot of strivers, a lot of fighters. | ||
My parents are the same way. | ||
Maybe that's just... Maybe I'm biased. | ||
But I feel like Chicago is that way. | ||
He had a struggle growing up. | ||
His mom was single. | ||
Although he grew up in a nice suburb, I believe. | ||
So it's not like he was really in the ghetto so much. | ||
Still, single-parent household and trying to make it in the rap game, he's scrappy. | ||
And I feel similarly. | ||
I also feel scrappy. | ||
I was raised by single parents. | ||
My parents had a tough upbringing. | ||
Both my parents were raised by single moms for reasons of death, not divorce. | ||
Both of my parents, their fathers died very early on. | ||
So... | ||
Maybe that's got something to do with it? | ||
I don't know, but... For whatever reason, we just have a... I feel like we just have a... a connection. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, thanks a lot! | |
You sent 3 mei yuan. | ||
Hey Nick, I finally got a job as a Java developer at this company, so DoorDash a lot less now. | ||
Love watching your show. | ||
Here is your tip, San. - Hey, thanks a lot. | ||
Congrats on the new job. - I dole and grow I percent $3. | ||
The quote was Spengler. | ||
unidentified
|
You're the future big guy. - Love Spengler. | |
I gotta go back and read. | ||
I read Decline of the West years ago. | ||
I just did not have the vocabulary for that. | ||
Don't get me wrong, I understood it. | ||
But it goes deep into... because Spengler was a towering intellectual. | ||
What he was trying to do with Decline of the West was to create a new discipline, a new study of civilizations. | ||
Separate from the study of history, separate from the study of anthropology or political science, he wanted to create a new discipline which is the study of civilizations. | ||
And so to understand that, he had to understand everything within the civilization. | ||
So, he writes about what he called the Faustian civilization, the Magian civilization, the Apollonian civilization, Apollonian being the ancient Greek Romans, Magian being the, I believe, the Byzantine religious civilization, Levantine, and then the Faustian being from, I think, the Middle Ages on in Europe. | ||
Which is the civilization of of Europe striving and embodied by Mozart by the infinitesimal principle and calculus by Rembrandt and Anyway, so he writes about he writes in great detail about art and math and architecture Gothic architecture in particular flying buttresses and some of the features of cathedrals and about calculus | ||
And so you have to understand calculus. | ||
You have to understand architecture. | ||
You have to understand art. | ||
You have to understand all the... Now, I don't know anything about art. | ||
And I know a little bit about music. | ||
I know some about calculus. | ||
I don't know anything about architecture. | ||
So reading it was... It was tough to get through. | ||
And I read the abridged version. | ||
So at some point I'd like to... In some days I wish I were a real academic. | ||
But... | ||
I'm a man of action. | ||
You know? | ||
And there is a real difference. | ||
Because I'm a fighter. | ||
I'm that guy that gets in a car chase. | ||
I'm that guy that throws the sprite. | ||
I'm that guy that punches the guy at the hotel. | ||
I'm a man. | ||
I'm a doer. | ||
I jump in. | ||
I take action. | ||
I say, what is to be done? | ||
I wish that I was more of an academic. | ||
I'd like to be more of an academic. | ||
I just don't have the patience or the discipline for that, but I'd like to develop it. | ||
But it's hard, because I feel like I have to be everything sometimes, and I want to be, but it's difficult. | ||
But anyway, so I've got to revisit Decline of the West, but anyway, thanks! | ||
Great quote. | ||
Tarkan Growiper sent $3. | ||
I just left the studio, did 24 songs, I've been on my shit, I've been off the grid, I can't disappear, I gotta watch my kid, I gotta watch my shit, I gotta watch my sis, everything getting bigger. | ||
Hey, sounds good man. | ||
Exciting stuff, thanks. | ||
Frank V sent $3. | ||
Sorry if retarded but thoughts on the accusations against Ali? | ||
I know your retarded loser enemies don't have anything on you so they attack your professional acquaintances. | ||
Anyways, God bless you King. | ||
You know, I've heard about that stuff for a long time, and as far as I know, I don't know that there's anything new, I don't know that there's anything out there that's... Like, are there any accusers? | ||
As far as I know, there's some screenshots, and there have been screenshots floating around for years. | ||
But the claim is not, he flirted with somebody, because he's very open that he was bisexual at one point, As far as I know that's no longer the case or at least not acting on it But then there's this claim that he's an abuser and all this stuff and you know what I've heard for years From his adversaries who already don't like him. | ||
Well, it's just around the corner just around the corner There's gonna be a report just around the corner. | ||
I say well, can you show me the evidence now? | ||
They say no, I'm like, okay so the day that anything The day the charges are filed, the day that anything conclusive comes out of there, then I will have something to say about it. | ||
But until that point, you got some screenshots, some flirting that's going on. | ||
Now, it's not like, you know, I don't find that savory at all, but what people are making it out to be is a little ridiculous. | ||
And I say, where's the receipts? | ||
That's when it comes to anybody. | ||
When Jesse Lee Peterson was being accused by Church Militant, I was being told by the same people, you gotta throw... For months! | ||
This hit piece on Jesse Lee Peterson came out, I want to say in June of last year. | ||
And I was told in like February or March, I was told Jesse Lee Peterson's a gay pedophile and you better just disavow him before this thing drops because it's going to be ugly and everyone's going to blame you. | ||
And I said, well, can I see the evidence? | ||
They said, no. | ||
I said, okay. | ||
I said, well, I'll wait to see the evidence with everybody else. | ||
I said, I'm not going to throw this guy under the bus. | ||
Based on hearsay. | ||
I'm not gonna throw him under the bus based on somebody doesn't like him. | ||
I said, if there's all this evidence, I'll wait and when it comes out, I'll be the first one to disavow with everybody else who sees it. | ||
And I was, oh that's a terrible idea, you shouldn't do that, oh that's a big mistake. | ||
Well then they come out with their hit piece and what hard evidence do they have? | ||
They have a photograph? | ||
This guy allegedly lived a double life for 10 years. | ||
Raging, abuser, And you got, like, three crackheads, some deranged person, a guy literally with a hole in his head. | ||
Oh, here's my photograph of us hugging. | ||
We had a 10-year relationship. | ||
Here's a photograph of us hugging one time. | ||
Really? | ||
And I feel similarly about the Ali situation. | ||
That stuff has been around for a long time, promulgated by adversaries of his, which doesn't help, by the way. | ||
People that aren't very credible. | ||
And I saw a photograph, somebody alleged, they said, oh, this is Ali with a kid he was abusing. | ||
And the guy in the picture is someone who I've seen around, and that guy is 27 years old. | ||
So I know that's a lie. | ||
And I don't, you know, that's very problematic for your credibility, actually. | ||
I think that really is, that speaks to the whole situation. | ||
You gotta disavow, you gotta disavow. | ||
Here's a picture of him with one of his underage victims. | ||
unidentified
|
Really? | |
Because I know that guy, and that guy's 27. | ||
So... I hear a lot, a lot of talk, a lot of talk, not a lot of receipts though. | ||
So... Um... | ||
And here's the reason why I'm sympathetic. | ||
Many accusations have been made about me in a similar vein. | ||
Do you remember years ago, there was allegedly a sex tape being shopped around? | ||
Do you remember that? | ||
There was some tip on Crazy Days and Nights that said, Rumor is, somebody's asking for a quarter of a million dollars for the Nick Fuentes sex tape, which I know doesn't exist because I've never had sex. | ||
unidentified
|
But everybody goes, oh boy, oh my, OMG. | |
Really? | ||
and you know and every other accusation and whatever so that's and I'm sympathetic to it for that reason and also because um you know I you know how I am I'm a loyal person I don't throw people under the bus for no reason everybody's trying to get me to throw my friends under the bus all the time and um you know whether it's Beardson or Baked Alaska or Ethan Ralph or Loomer or Steve or | ||
Literally anybody. | ||
So... So that's how I feel about it, but I'm not aware is that a new dilemma or what? | ||
Because I haven't heard anything about that lately. | ||
But I've heard about that a lot for a long time. | ||
Now that being said, now listen. | ||
Now that being said, here's the other side of it. | ||
If there's proof of Pedophilic abuse. | ||
I'm the first person to disavow. | ||
There should be no tolerance for that, no acceptance of that anywhere. | ||
But that's a big accusation to make. | ||
And for people to go around and make these accusations without proof, and honestly, knowingly lying is disgusting. | ||
And I know because someone shared it with me, I saw at least one. | ||
Somebody sent that to me the other day. | ||
They said, oh, here's somebody accusing Ali with the photograph, and it's a guy who I know is 27. | ||
So not only do you accuse, say, well, the evidence is just forthcoming, always forthcoming, always forthcoming, it's never... the accusation comes without the evidence always. | ||
And then when something is provided, it's like, oh, well, here's an abject lie. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's just a straight-up lie. | |
Now, that's gross. | ||
I don't care what you think, but lying about somebody, a knowing lie, a knowing, blatant, explicit lie to that effect? | ||
Gross. | ||
Absolutely gross. | ||
And if Ali is guilty, that's gross, but that's a lie. | ||
I know that's a lie because I know that person-to-be closing in on the age of 30. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
And as always, you gotta question the source. | ||
Typically, that's the first thing you do. | ||
Let's question the credibility of the source. | ||
Where do the claims come from? | ||
Someone with a great track record of honesty, or being a lying Jew? | ||
That's what I always ask. | ||
unidentified
|
But anyway. | |
So that's my view on that. | ||
But I'm not going to address that. | ||
I've addressed it. | ||
I'm not addressing it any further. | ||
Unless there's something new. | ||
I never will. | ||
John Boner sent $5. | ||
One man scorned and covered with scars still strove with his last ounce of courage to reach the unreachable stars, and the world will be better for this. | ||
Miguel de Cervantes. | ||
Don't ever give up. | ||
I never will. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Is that any surprise? | ||
That's so funny though! | ||
Because a lot of people think the Jewish thing is fake and then they see behavior like that from ordinary Jews. | ||
Jews in the room. | ||
The rabbi said the Pledge of Allegiance and around half the room stood. | ||
98% stood for Israel's anthem. | ||
Is that any surprise? | ||
That's so funny though, because a lot of people think the Jewish thing is fake and then they see behavior like that from ordinary Jews. | ||
unidentified
|
Go figure. | |
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3.00. | ||
168. | ||
Have a great night, friend. | ||
Hey, thank you, man. | ||
unidentified
|
You too. | |
BassBudz sent $5. | ||
The part where you talked about the importance of young people making change and becoming active in politics got me hyped. | ||
This is the message that people need to hear. | ||
What's the deal with the team? | ||
I'm not telling you the deal with the team. | ||
That's very... That's not something that we're gonna be open about, obviously. | ||
But, uh, listen. | ||
You get involved, we'll find you. | ||
You get involved in politics, you raise to a significantly high level and we'll find you. | ||
Uh, well... Yeah, basically. | ||
- Did he send $6? | ||
Decrypted communicate from Spinefish, Nick. | ||
On August 12th at precisely 4:22 AM, you stated that you prefer Pepsi over Coke. | ||
Do you still stand by this statement? | ||
Over. - Well, yeah, basically. | ||
unidentified
|
I like Mexican Coke better though. - Dimitom Dres sent $3. | |
What style of architecture does Y like the most? - He likes very minimal, brutalist architecture. | ||
If you've seen his house, he likes that. | ||
He likes these dome shapes. | ||
He likes concrete. | ||
He likes that sort of... I don't know what the style you would call it is. | ||
I guess it would be brutalist. | ||
But he likes very simple. | ||
Very simple, very clean, very industrial. | ||
That's his style. | ||
I saw that. | ||
Yeah, it was awesome. | ||
- I saw that, yeah, it was awesome. | ||
Great content. | ||
unidentified
|
- Chandler sent $10. - I saw that, yeah, it was awesome. | |
Great content. - Chandler sent $10. | ||
Thanks for everything you've done and everything you've sacrificed. | ||
Just wondering how the email ideas thing is going. | ||
I sent one the other day regarding the basics of diet, and I've got a lot more in the same field and also informing to share you. | ||
Yeah, I'll be reaching out to some people this week. | ||
I'm not going to reach out to everybody because not everybody had good... Some people were emailing me just like, I'm asking for expertise. | ||
I'm looking for experts, technical experts, people with experience, people with education. | ||
I'm not looking for people somebody was like oh we should ban soybeans and polyunsaturated fat whatever that is polyunsaturated fats and uh what would poof us whatever that's I don't even know what it stands for and we should um so we should ban those things and we should have everyone eat raw meat that's like okay so I don't Yeah, I've heard of raw egg nationalist. | ||
I've heard of soul brah. | ||
I'm looking for looking for people like that are expert I think I was pretty clear when I said looking for not that there's anything wrong with that But I'm looking for technical expertise not people that are just like hey, so, uh, I think that we should have like a based policy of like So I'll be some people be hearing back from me this week, okay, I Ernan sent $3. | ||
As an Uber driver who's constantly speeding through traffic, traffic would be nearly eradicated if women couldn't drive. | ||
That and boomers. | ||
Love you, Nick. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
And porn retarded. | ||
Wish I could send more. | ||
Thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
Ah, don't worry about it. | ||
It's not about... It's not about the money. | ||
It's about sending the message. | ||
The super chap. | ||
Richard Percival sent $10. | ||
There's something really comforting with what you said about laypersons not concerning themselves with the inner workings of the church. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
I think so. | |
I think so. - Pretty_fly_white_guy sent $3. | ||
168. | ||
I've never thought about why Jews insist on having a country. | ||
Is it a place of refuge for them or what? - That's part of it. | ||
Well, there's a lot of reasons Now, some people want a country so that they can create like a biblical monarchy and have a messiah and bring about the end of the world and rebuild the third temple. | ||
Some people want a country because they said that that's the solution to all the pogroms and genocide and expulsions and things like that. | ||
So it depends. | ||
Well, I believe that... I believe in technological progress. | ||
I just think that it needs to be regulated. | ||
In the Pearl interview, you expressed your concerns about rapid technological change. | ||
What do you think is the appropriate way to develop new technology in a Christian futurist America considering the negative effects of technology on society? | ||
Well, I believe that I believe in technological progress. | ||
I just think that it needs to be regulated. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
Like I look at China, China. | ||
China says you can't play video games for more than two hours today. | ||
And certain countries say you can't have pornography. | ||
And some countries say, you know, there are limitations that are being imposed on the use of technology in other countries. | ||
And all I'm saying is the government should have the ability to do that. | ||
So in terms of specifics, I think that's a good place to start. | ||
Banning pornography, that's easy, done. | ||
I would limit The use of video games, I would start to put limits on smartphone use for children, in education, those sorts of things. | ||
Because for me it's not so much the effect of technology on the society, it's the effect of technology on human development that is concerning to me. | ||
Although there are effects with society also, but I think that in a lot of cases you have to a lot of times You have to wait and see like you can't you can't really know about unintended consequences until they happen But then the government needs to be able to respond and act accordingly. | ||
That's all So and we should probably I mean to be competitive we have to in some sense. | ||
It needs to be free the development of technology needs to be free But the government should also have the authority to react. | ||
That's generally how I feel about it. | ||
Jim's Tattoo sent $5. | ||
Praise Jesus, highly. | ||
Listen to Nick and no simping. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Amzico sent $20. | ||
Hi Nick. | ||
First Super Chat. | ||
Just wanna say thank you for all you do, and God bless you. | ||
Started watching you after you got in contact with ye and after I started my conversion into Catholicism God's timing. | ||
I am also getting involved in my local politics. | ||
You make a difference. | ||
Love to hear it. | ||
God bless, man. | ||
Good for you. | ||
Keep going. | ||
Keep going down that road. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what we need people to do. | |
Maxia Bros sent $100. | ||
Hey, Jake Lloyd, how would you feel if you didn't have breakfast this morning? | ||
Jake Lloyd, I'ma stop you right there, partner. | ||
I have eight helpings of biscuits and gravy every morning. | ||
Okay, well, hey, thanks for the big super chat. | ||
Didn't really get a laugh. | ||
Not really getting a laugh. | ||
I didn't really love the message. | ||
But hey, thanks for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Big shout out. | ||
Maxi Bro, friend of the show. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Yeah, but I don't know. | ||
I don't know how that joke is doing. | ||
I don't know how that joke is doing. | ||
Uh, I'm just minding my own business. | ||
That was so sad, dude. | ||
Uh, uh, I'm just minding my own business. | ||
What a pussy. | ||
He doesn't square up or anything. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, uh, I'm just minding my own business. | |
Hey! | ||
And he gets water thrown at him, and instead of being like, hey, fuck you, he turns the camera around to say, look at what he did to me. | ||
Look at how this homeless guy just threw piss all over my face. | ||
Look at me. | ||
Look at my piss-covered face. | ||
Really, dude? | ||
You know, and you can't LARP as a tough guy if you're like that. | ||
Granted, in that situation, the right decision is not to BE there. | ||
You don't want to wind up in a confrontation with a crackhead? | ||
Don't put yourself in that situation. | ||
That's one. | ||
But two, you can't go out and LARP as some tough guy if you get piss thrown on your face and you're gonna say, hey man, sorry, I'm minding my own business. | ||
Look at me, he threw piss on me. | ||
Really? | ||
Honestly, Bryson is one of the best guys I know. | ||
People gotta take it easy on Bryson. | ||
He's just defending his race. | ||
He's wrong, but Bryson is good for AF. | ||
unidentified
|
The way he adheres to his convictions is incredible. - Honestly, Bryson is one of the best guys I know. | |
And I don't agree with him on everything. | ||
Like I'm Catholic. | ||
He has these religious views, which are like a little Old Testament. | ||
He's sort of like Jewish in a sense, like he believes the Sabbath is on Saturday and some of these things. | ||
So I find that to be a little peculiar. | ||
But that being said, the character speaks for itself. | ||
He's one of the most upstanding, most generous, most pious, most loyal people I have ever met. | ||
Just nothing but nice. | ||
He comes from a great family. | ||
His parents are nice. | ||
His family's hilarious. | ||
They really are great people. | ||
I can't say enough positive things about Bryson. | ||
I don't have one negative thing to say about him. | ||
I'm Catholic. | ||
He's Protestant. | ||
I know that he disagrees with a lot of gripers on the race thing, but he is an absolutely solid guy. | ||
He's confident. | ||
He's got conviction. | ||
Loyal to his fiancée, like, and so pious. | ||
Very Christian. | ||
One of the most Christian people I know. | ||
And not sanctimonious about it at all. | ||
He just, he talks the talk and he walks the walk. | ||
He's a great guy. | ||
So yeah, Groipers, take it easy on him. | ||
He's a good guy. | ||
Let's chill out. | ||
Focus on the enemy, alright? | ||
He's a good man. | ||
Love to see it. | ||
AngloZoomer sent $5. | ||
It felt great seeing the replays from TV of My Hat and Rosary at Mar-a-Lago. | ||
I thought they wouldn't make it in. | ||
I'm glad you liked it. | ||
Love you Nick. | ||
Hey, nice work buddy. | ||
Love you too. | ||
Very awesome to see the cameo. | ||
RetardedNigga sent $3. | ||
Hello Nick my sweet glorious king. | ||
Mind sharing the secret to your skincare routine? | ||
This ice cream diet got me looking all kinds of fucked up. | ||
I don't have a skincare routine. | ||
I just wash my face every day. | ||
I put on moisturizer. | ||
My skin gets a little dry in the winter. | ||
That's it. | ||
unidentified
|
That's it. | |
No skin. | ||
I eat garbage and I wash my face. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Jews Stay Killing Christ Sent $3. | ||
What's Worse The Tranny Pastor Comparing Aiden Hale To Jesus? | ||
Or Janet Protosewicz The Fake Catholic Who Vows To Send Gelatinous Cheesehead Fetus To Israel So The Liquid Party Can Spread It On Matzah? | ||
I haven't seen Janet. | ||
She's the Supreme Court Justice. | ||
And Aiden Hale, that was the shooter. | ||
I don't know, dude. | ||
They're both pretty scumbag. | ||
Both pretty scummy. | ||
Probably the former, though. | ||
Maybe the latter, but I don't know. | ||
I was never a fan of Britney Spears. | ||
I was... Out of all those types, I liked Rihanna back in those days. | ||
I like... No, Avril Lavigne. | ||
that Britney Spears is the queen of pop and the epitome of 2000's white excellence, right? | ||
Degeneracy aside. | ||
I was never a fan of Britney Spears. | ||
I was, uh, out of all those types, I liked Rihanna back in those days. | ||
I like it. | ||
No, Avril Lavigne. | ||
Avril Lavigne is very much that way. | ||
I never liked Beyonce. | ||
I never liked Britney Spears. | ||
I thought Rihanna was okay. | ||
I liked, like I said, Avril Lavigne. | ||
I liked, uh... But I was really into, like, Maroon 5. | ||
I was really into, like, the 2000s. | ||
Really into Maroon 5, Black Eyed Peas, Flo Rida. | ||
What else? | ||
unidentified
|
Trying to think. | |
Long time ago. | ||
I was always into Ye. | ||
unidentified
|
At that time, Kanye. | |
I like Neo. | ||
unidentified
|
And... | |
Love pink. | ||
Gotta love pink. | ||
And what else? | ||
But I was really into the oldies. | ||
I was never into pop music until recently. | ||
Until the last, probably four or five years. | ||
Hey, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks a lot! | |
I appreciate the money. | ||
You know, you don't gotta try so hard. | ||
Just speak from the heart, you know? | ||
But I appreciate it. | ||
Classic American Man Sent $10. | ||
That was the Teenage Pixie Dream Girl. | ||
No, not really. | ||
I told you, the Manic Pixie Dream Girl was in Miami on my birthday. | ||
I bumped into her. | ||
Do you remember that? | ||
unidentified
|
And she did this. | |
That was crazy. | ||
Yeah, there's been some situations like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Pretty wild, huh? | |
She's out there. | ||
She's out there. | ||
The real, the manic pixie dream girl that I marry, she's out there somewhere. | ||
She does something sexy like that. | ||
There's like a tension. | ||
It's gotta have a tension. | ||
It's gotta be a tension. | ||
It's gotta be like we're adversaries. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
Here's my vision, okay? | ||
Bear with me here. | ||
When I see myself getting married, I don't see myself like falling in love with a girl where I'm like, Hey, wanna go on a date? | ||
Like, I just, I'm crazy about you. | ||
I see it as sort of like, I've said this before, but we, she bumps into me, and I'm like, hey, watch where you're going, will ya? | ||
Hey, you know, and I'm sort of like a Han Solo, I'm sort of like a loner, rough-around-the-edges guy, and she's kind of like, hey, watch where you're going, oh my god, you know, and at first it's very negative, but we like keep bumping into each other, in some way we're forced to be together, And it's like, hey, I don't, hey, don't flatter yourself, toots. | ||
Hey, listen, your worship, hey, I, I, you think I want to be here either? | ||
You know, but over time, over time we fall in love. | ||
I sort of, I sort of see it playing out in that way instead. | ||
Instead of this, like, uh, Oh, I meet this girl, we hit it off. | ||
It's gotta be negative at first. | ||
And here's why. | ||
Because then it's real. | ||
If it's adversarial at first, it means we're both being real. | ||
We've skipped this awkward part where we have to pretend to be nice to each other and like each other. | ||
That's why I love confrontation, because in a confrontation you're being real. | ||
You get to say all the things you're thinking. | ||
You get to say how you really feel. | ||
So I like to start with the fight. | ||
That goes with friendships, and that's how I'd like to go if I get married. | ||
It's like that. | ||
Nick horny posting? | ||
It's not horny. | ||
Oh, said Michael. | ||
Yeah, banned by the way. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
How about you can't horny post in here for an hour? | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
So... So it's about a conflict. | ||
It's about attention. | ||
It's about a conflict. | ||
unidentified
|
I want the smoke. | |
That's so Patrice O'Neal. | ||
I don't, I don't, I'm not really familiar with that. | ||
But, uh, but this is, this is what all guys want, I think. | ||
You want it to be adversarial. | ||
You want circumstance to drive. | ||
You want fate and circumstance to drive the relationship together. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway, so that's... | |
How did we get on this? | ||
Oh, Manic Pixie Dream Girl. | ||
Yeah, because there have been... I've seen the Manic Pixie Dream... I've seen the Manic Pixie Dream Girl before. | ||
and, you know. | ||
But you just have to be forced into that It just has to happen in that right way. | ||
Has to happen in that right way. | ||
Like that movie. | ||
Ever see that movie The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon? | ||
And I think is it Emily Blunt is in that? | ||
Or is it... What's her name? | ||
Who's in that? | ||
Matt Damon. | ||
I forget the girl. | ||
But And that movie, it's like God has a plan for everybody. | ||
But God is like, it's like a corporation and there's a plan for everybody's life. | ||
And there are these people called the Adjustment Bureau. | ||
They go out there into the world and they make adjustments to make sure that everything goes according to plan. | ||
So that's like a anthropomorphism. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to put to this word. | |
Anthropomorphize version of fate and so the Adjustment Bureau these guys in suits and fedoras they go in and make adjustments to make sure everything and anyway Matt Damon and this girl keep bumping into each other but they're not supposed to be together it's not part of their plan and so the Adjustment Bureau comes out and says listen Matt Damon if you keep trying to hook up with this girl we're gonna kill you And they say, we don't care! | ||
We're going against the plan! | ||
We need to be together! | ||
And it turns out that they were supposed to be together is a major thing in their lives, but it was changed. | ||
And so they're resisting the change, and that wound up being part of the plan, is that they resisted. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So I've always sort of seen it as unfolding in that, not like the, not like the corny sci-fi aspect of it, but the, this like, whoops, oh, we're on the same bus, whoops, oh. | ||
Got the same coffee order. | ||
Hey, get out of my way, will ya? | ||
Ah, you first, you big jerk. | ||
Oh, I don't even like you. | ||
unidentified
|
Something like that. | |
Anyway. | ||
Whatever, that's just, whatever. | ||
You know, I know you don't care. | ||
I know you're gonna call me a son. | ||
I don't even care. | ||
Nationalist action sent $3. | ||
Saw TikTok about Stalin. | ||
He had a girl run into his bulletproof car. | ||
Joked with her about indestructible car after and made sure the authorities left her alone for the mistake. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't get it. | |
The way you're saying it doesn't make any sense. | ||
Oh, crashed into his car? | ||
That's pretty bad. | ||
Stalin was a good guy like that, aside from killing a lot of people. | ||
Real Paisan sent $5. | ||
Banning women from driving is the fastest way to eliminate traffic and is a pretty pro-natal policy. | ||
They say that Stalin would sometimes accidentally drop ash on the carpet, and then he would bend over to clean it up himself. - Love. | ||
A very modest office. | ||
unidentified
|
So he was a humble guy. | |
Justin sent $3. | ||
unidentified
|
Holla! | |
Can't wait to see what the next political wank. | ||
Holla. | ||
unidentified
|
Holla. | |
What up Justin? | ||
unidentified
|
Cathy Ju sent $3. | |
Will Kanye release any new music on Spotify? | ||
What has he been thinking? | ||
I'm not gonna disclose any private information like that. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not a rumor mill. | |
Tarkan Groper sent $3. | ||
I know she suck dick. | ||
I know she not shit. | ||
I've been thinking bout it. | ||
Finna cut off this bitch. | ||
She don't cook. | ||
She don't clean. | ||
But she want Ruth Chris. | ||
I don't even like to hug. | ||
I don't even like to kiss. | ||
Jews stay killing Christ sent $3. | ||
Ever hope Israel is fencing itself in and not us out? | ||
That the Iron Dome will be an iron cage so Palestinians can pay to feed the beast lizards cold hot dogs and pig ears like at a zoo? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah! | |
Anon sent $3. | ||
Hey Nick, I love the message about gaining power and making an impact. | ||
I've taken your advice and have been working diligently. | ||
I am now a manager at Wendy's and if any grow-appers want a job call me. | ||
unidentified
|
Great! | |
Kenny sent $3. | ||
What kind of expert should GrowAppers become? | ||
I've been thinking of going to law school or architecture school. | ||
Dimitri sent $3. | ||
Does he like drill beats? | ||
We're not, we don't really talk about beats and things like that. | ||
He likes, uh, well, I can't say that, but, um, No, I don't think so. | ||
I mean, he hasn't played any drill. | ||
He plays his own music. | ||
He played Drake one time, but that's about it. | ||
Millennial underscore boomer sent $10. | ||
Where do I send my resume? | ||
I'm a full stack web developer of 15 years. | ||
Other tech talents too. | ||
We don't really need web developers at the moment, but thanks. | ||
Stimulant grow I percent five dollars good show. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thank you Okay, I love when people look the emails closed right now. | ||
You can email me my emails on my telegram, but I'm not I'm not really opening up the application right now Okay, let's check on cozy do we have any here I Genko Capital says, just noticed how these conservative guys say they want feminine women and then get off to girls doing the most masculine shit, shooting guns, drinking beer. | ||
What is that? | ||
Tucker talked about it with the woman chewing tobacco. | ||
Yeah, it's disgusting. | ||
I'm not into that at all. | ||
SSRI Cozer says, my buddy told me he was unable to make a stream payments account for his Super Chat. | ||
$4.50 cozy streak. | ||
Figured I'd chip in for the site as well, King. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot, man. | ||
Yeah, this is a real janky site, but that's what we got. | ||
Okay, all right. | ||
That's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me. | ||
Remember to follow me here on Cozy. | ||
Smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
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Links are down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 9 o'clock Central, 10 o'clock Eastern. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
In particular, Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | ||
It's going to be only America first! | ||
Super Chatters, everybody that watches, we love you, and I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be over. | ||
America First! |