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unidentified
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America First! | |
America first. | ||
- Good evening everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into. | ||
Big show! | ||
Our featured story tonight is about Walt Disney Company versus the state of Florida. | ||
And I hate DeSantis. | ||
You know that. | ||
I think he's a pawn of Israel, which sucks. | ||
But he's low-key based for going after Disney. | ||
And the big story tonight is that the Disney company is suing Ron DeSantis for picking on them, essentially. | ||
They say that DeSantis is singling them out and discriminating against them as a company for their opposition to the Don't Say Gay bill last year, which is an ideological matter. | ||
And the lawsuit's pretty strong, but it's a very good sign that this is happening because it raises a question about who is going to organize our society and how we're going to organize our society. | ||
Which is to say that Last year. | ||
And it's my understanding, by the way, that this bill has gotten better. | ||
This Don't Say Gay bill initially said that a public school couldn't teach the students about gender and sex orientation until fourth grade. | ||
Which I said is a little ridiculous. | ||
You're gonna ban talk about gay sex in the classroom until you turn eight? | ||
That doesn't sound right to me. | ||
Apparently they're changing the law this month so that it applies to all grades, which is an improvement. | ||
Regardless, Disney declares a boycott against the state, and they speak out powerfully against the state for making this move. | ||
And DeSantis comes down hard on the company, and he effectively does retaliate against the company. | ||
And now that Disney is suing DeSantis back, it raises a question in American public life about Who is in political control over the society? | ||
Is it the state? | ||
Or is it... | ||
This pressure, which is unseen most of the time from the private sector. | ||
In other words, if the public sector, DeSantis, the governor, if he makes a move and says, we're gonna ban this kind of talk in the classroom, I have a mandate, this is a conservative state, we will not allow this. | ||
But the private sector comes back and says, well we'll pour money into your opposition, we're gonna lobby against you. | ||
The outcome of this battle, of this bill, speaks to who is really pulling the strings. | ||
So we'll talk about that idea tonight. | ||
That's our featured story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about this Trump indictment in Fulton County. | ||
I haven't really wanted to talk about it because it's boring, but we'll talk about it anyway. | ||
And Fulton County has been investigating Donald Trump for putting pressure on the Georgia state government in 2020 trying to get them, excuse me, to change the outcome of that election. | ||
There were at least three calls to the Secretary of State and other state government officials where he, again according to the investigation, attempted to get them to change the outcome of the election, which would be corruption. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
It's the other big indictment that has been discussed so far. | ||
They say that it's a window between July and September when they may announce an indictment. | ||
And they have announced that so that the state can make proper accommodations and preparations for public unrest if there's going to be an indictment, just like in New York. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Excited to be back. | ||
Before we get into the news I want to remind you that our merch our merch store is closed on Friday. | ||
We have our Fuentes Rally merch available for sale right now. | ||
We have three shirts, we have a rally hat, limited time only, and I think it's pretty good stuff. | ||
Very cool designs, very neat hat. | ||
Everyone loves it so far. | ||
I think I just got mine in the mail actually and We're never going to sell it again after Friday. | ||
We're actually going to burn all of it. | ||
Everything that we don't sell, we're just going to physically destroy, delete all the files. | ||
You will literally never be able to get it again after Friday. | ||
So, if you even want it a little bit, you better pony up and go to the store and buy it right now, because I don't want to hear about it ever again after this. | ||
People always say a week later, Oh Nick, when are you going to reopen the merch store? | ||
unidentified
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Oh, I missed it. | |
Can I buy? | ||
I don't want to hear it. | ||
It's been on sale for a long time. | ||
We even had credit card processing for like a day. | ||
But it's at aff.events.merch Get it now because on Friday it's gone and I don't want to hear it. | ||
Last time. | ||
You don't want to miss out on this. | ||
You don't want to miss out on this incredible sale. | ||
You don't want to find yourself on Saturday saying, oh wait, it's closed? | ||
unidentified
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Damn it! | |
I wish I had that black hat. | ||
Cause it's gone. | ||
So it's closing down 48 hours and then irreversibly closed. | ||
That's it. | ||
Never again will you be able to buy these great items, these great products. | ||
So get them. | ||
aff.events.store slash merch that is. | ||
aff.events.merch Also remember to follow me here on Cozy. | ||
Smash the follow button. | ||
Get a push notification when I go live. | ||
Follow me on Gab, Telegram, True Social, Rumble. | ||
I'm on the air every night on Rumble as well. | ||
We've been getting pretty good viewership on Rumble, like between 500 and 1,000 viewers every night on Rumble. | ||
That's in addition to Cozy. | ||
Pretty good. | ||
They're still shadowbanning me though. | ||
They won't put me on the front page. | ||
They take me out so that when you go in the live video section they rank it by viewership and I'm consistently in like the top three or top five. | ||
That's not even my primary platform. | ||
But they don't put me on the list! | ||
So it's not surprising. | ||
I think that companies like Controlled by Israel probably like everything else. | ||
But anyway, you could catch me on Rumble, and all the replays are on Rumble as well. | ||
If you missed a replay from a couple weeks ago, it's on Rumble. | ||
Check it out. | ||
Okay, with that... There's one other thing. | ||
I promise I'm not gonna spend a ton of time on this, because we need to get into the news, but... | ||
Tucker Carlson just came out with a video today. | ||
I don't know if you saw. | ||
I'm sure you did. | ||
It was on my Telegram. | ||
But he released his first public comments since he was fired on Monday. | ||
Put out a two-minute video. | ||
Totally generic. | ||
Talking about how the government is censoring free speech. | ||
The two parties do not want you to hear the truth. | ||
This sort of thing. | ||
And there was also this really obvious stunt Daily Mail caught him on his way to dinner. | ||
They just caught him driving a golf cart from his house where he lives to dinner and they did a little photo op and they said oh we just we caught him we just photographed him outside his house and he had this cute line where they said what are you doing now and he goes I'm about to have dinner with my wife And they caught him outside. | ||
Photo op. | ||
Staged. | ||
Staged. | ||
Daily Mail. | ||
Staged. | ||
And he's driving his golf cart. | ||
And maybe I'm being a little hard on the guy, but it just, it stings a little bit. | ||
You got this guy making $20 million a year. | ||
He's driving around on his golf cart outside of his $10 million compound. | ||
Sounds like I'm seething right now, but I'm not. | ||
And the guy has his reputation as he's this big truth teller, he's out there fighting the good fight, and here I am racking my brain, when has this guy ever said anything based ever at all? | ||
All he does is downplay white identity, he'll play up white grievance, but downplay white identity, play up corruption, that sort of thing, but he's going to downplay any influence by the State of Israel or the Jews, Mom's texting me. | ||
The one, the link I gave for the store? | ||
What's the right, what's the right link for the store? | ||
Don't, please don't text me during my show, okay? | ||
That part is done. | ||
What is it? | ||
Maybe it is slash store. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Okay, yeah, it's aff.events slash store. | ||
Okay, happy? | ||
Thanks for interrupting my flow. | ||
Anyway, for, for the store it's aff.events slash store. | ||
Listen, you know, store, merch, please. | ||
We don't have time for this. | ||
Anyway... Wow, that really, that really... Please do not text me during... Thank you for the urgent message. | ||
I'm in the middle of something here. | ||
Yeah, but feel free. | ||
Just text me. | ||
Anyway, um, I don't even remember what I was saying. | ||
Tucker Carlson. | ||
I'm trying to rack my brain wonder wondering whack my rack my fucking son of a bitch. | ||
Seriously? | ||
Here I am trying to rack my brain wondering. | ||
What is a based thing that Tucker Carlson has ever said? | ||
Because all I can recall, two years ago, literally two years ago, he made some remark about how the ADL will support Israel having a closed border but advocates for open borders for the United States. | ||
And you know what? | ||
I'll give you that. | ||
That's pretty based. | ||
But that's one thing in five or six years. | ||
And everything since, he'll talk about replacement migration or even demographic change. | ||
But a friend pointed this out to me today. | ||
He's even doing a little bait and switch with the demographic change phrase. | ||
Because what we understand as demographic change, we understand that to mean the white race is dying in the world. | ||
The white race is not replacing itself organically And that without dramatic intervention, white people will be genocided in all white countries by their new immigrant majorities in the next century. | ||
But when you watch Tucker Carlson, and he popularizes the phrase demographic change, it's about voters! | ||
He says that the Democrats are importing Democrat voters who are going to be more obedient to corporations. | ||
But we of course support a race-blind meritocracy and a color-blind meritocracy just as long as they don't vote for the Democrats. | ||
That's a very pernicious way to obfuscate the issue, popularizing the phrase demographic change and not just Leaving it in an ambiguous way and saying the demographics are changing, draw your own conclusions, but explicitly saying the demographics are changing, but it isn't a race issue. | ||
It's not a race issue at all. | ||
And if you think it is, you're racist. | ||
And if you interpret it through a racial lens, you're a Nazi and I won't go along with that because that's evil. | ||
That's different. | ||
Do you understand where I'm coming from on this? | ||
I'm not trying to nitpick. | ||
I'm really not. | ||
But it's altogether a different and a separate thing to go out and say the Democrats are importing voters and they're changing the demographics of the country and let it land. | ||
Because what you would call that is a dog whistle. | ||
And it is! | ||
What you would call that is selectively omitting certain parts of the narrative so you don't get fired on Fox News or so that you don't arouse suspicion from the other side that you're a total white nationalist. | ||
Separate. | ||
It's a separate thing to say the demographics are changing, and no, don't even get it in your head. | ||
It's not about race. | ||
Because white identity politics is just as bad as any other identity politics. | ||
It's evil, because it erases the individual. | ||
And in the years ahead, when whites become a minority, someone's gonna come along and say they speak for white people, and that is some straight-up Nazi stuff, and I will not stand for that! | ||
I will not! | ||
These are totally different things! | ||
One of them, you could say, is somebody that is secretly on our side and trying to softly red pill people. | ||
The other thing is this is a guy that doesn't agree with us and he wants to make sure everybody knows and he wants to make sure that nobody draws the right conclusion. | ||
So when he goes up there and says, with Mensch's mold bug, that it's a decentralized elite, and it has no character or nationality, and it's really just these corporations, and it's got nothing to do with that other stuff, that actually demographic change is a voting rights issue. | ||
I'm scratching my head wondering what is the big deal. | ||
How is that different than Crowder or anybody else for that matter? | ||
How is that different than Alex Jones or any of these other guys? | ||
I'm just saying. | ||
So I see this photo op and, nice photo op by the way, and then you see this video and I'm not trying to be overly critical but he's talking about the Uni Party and it's like, I'm sorry, but what do you oppose that the Uni Party doesn't? | ||
Anyway, so I just saw that video. | ||
I had to throw that out there. | ||
I just see these hijinks and I'm like, really? | ||
This is not the face of the resistance. | ||
But we're gonna move on. | ||
I want to get on into our news here and our first story. | ||
We're finally gonna cover this Fulton County business. | ||
And this is the story. | ||
I'll just read it. | ||
Fulton County District Attorney Fannie Willis plans to announce this summer whether she'll bring charges against former President Trump or his allies for their attempts to overturn Georgia's 2020 presidential election results. | ||
Willis told local law enforcement officials in a letter that she plans to make an announcement on possible charges between July 11th and September 1st. | ||
The letter is another strong indication that Willis is seriously weighing bringing racketeering and conspiracy charges in connection with Trump's actions in Georgia around the 2020 election. | ||
In the letter addressed to the Sheriff of Fulton County, Patrick Labatt, who is in charge of courthouse security, Willis said that open source intelligence has previously indicated that decisions in this case could provoke significant public reaction that could result in violence. | ||
The letter said, quote, please accept this correspondence as notice to allow you sufficient time to prepare the sheriff's office and coordinate with local, state, and federal agencies to ensure that our law enforcement community is ready to protect the public. | ||
Willis kicked off her sprawling investigation in early 2021, shortly after she took office, and soon after the infamous January phone call became public, in which Trump pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to find the votes necessary for Trump to win Georgia's electoral votes. | ||
Investigators have at least three recordings of Trump pressuring Georgia officials, including a call that he made to the Georgia House Speaker to push for a special legislative session to overturn Joe Biden's victory in the state. | ||
There's also another recording of Trump's call to a top investigator with the Georgia Secretary of State's office in December 2020, while they were looking into quashed allegations of irregularities with signature matching in Cobb County in the Atlanta area. | ||
So this is the second major probe that will likely see charges against Trump in. | ||
The first we covered, I think it was either March or beginning of April here, which was the Manhattan District Attorney announcing charges against Donald Trump for this ledger error with his businesses in New York. | ||
34 charges based on False entries that a business has made and they say that that was about Stormy Daniels. | ||
And now this is a totally separate indictment which there sounds like they're going to announce this summer which is the Fulton County District Attorney and as the article says this is about Trump pressuring the Secretary of State to find enough votes to flip the election in that state. | ||
And so, just like with Manhattan, there's not a ton that we can say yet until we actually see the charges, which we don't have. | ||
As the letter says, that'll be sometime in July or August that we'll actually see the indictment and have the charges filed and have all of that information unsealed. | ||
So we really don't even know what the charges are going to be. | ||
We just know the subject of the investigation. | ||
But I talked a lot about this more during the Mar-a-Lago raid last August, which is that people don't even realize the scope of the lawfare against Trump. | ||
People were overwhelmed by the Manhattan charges. | ||
But there's at least five investigations going on. | ||
There's Manhattan, there's Fulton County, there's January 6, there's confidential records, and then I believe there's a separate probe in New York about his business dealings as well. | ||
And I may be wrong about that. | ||
That may have been the one that... | ||
has already been filed. | ||
But you have either four or five, or maybe even other unseen charges still, pending against Trump. | ||
And I talked about this back when the Manhattan charges were revealed, which is that the nature of lawfare, most often, is not even to get somebody in jail. | ||
It's not to win to get the person convicted. | ||
It's not to win damages. | ||
Most often the point of lawfare is to tie somebody up for a long period of time in very tedious legal proceedings. | ||
It is supposed to imperil them in legal jeopardy so that if they don't get caught up in filings and paperwork That they will be in peril, they might go to jail or pay lots of money, and it's meant to be very costly. | ||
And so when people saw the charges unveiled in Manhattan, a lot of people said that the charges were ridiculous. | ||
And they are! | ||
We talked in great detail about them a couple weeks ago, that he's got 34 felony charges, and with the particularities of New York law, The crime that he's being charged for should not be a felony. | ||
It really should be a misdemeanor. | ||
As to how it became a felony, it requires some secondary charge, a secondary crime which was never revealed and which there probably is not a strong basis for. | ||
And a lot of people based on that said, well, these charges will go nowhere. | ||
Maybe they'll get a sympathetic jury. | ||
Maybe they'll get a sympathetic judge. | ||
Who is going to be more lenient, even though the charges are very weak. | ||
But nevertheless, there just isn't anything there. | ||
And even many of the left-wing legal analysts, even many of the left-wing people in the media agreed with that. | ||
But that's not the point. | ||
And that's not the only one. | ||
Because there's going to be like five separate series of charges against Trump. | ||
Not five charges, five categories of charges. | ||
He's got 34 felonies in New York. | ||
He'll, I'm sure, have at least several charges in Fulton County. | ||
They talked about three federal charges for the classified information in Mar-a-Lago. | ||
There'll be a number of charges in connection with January 6th if the DOJ decides to charge. | ||
And there may be, again, other things and other civil litigation too. | ||
So you're talking about dozens Like, several dozens, many dozens of charges, in many jurisdictions, in New York, in Georgia, in Washington DC. | ||
And that means lawyers, that means lots of lawyers, that means teams of lawyers, firms. | ||
And you'll need lawyers in every jurisdiction, and you'll need specialists in every type of law, because it's gonna be different kinds of law. | ||
And that means trials, that means hearings, that means that instead of Trump going out there and campaigning, and fundraising and doing that sort of thing, he's going to be in depositions and he's going to be in hearings and he's going to be meeting with lawyers. | ||
And if there are any mistakes, if there's anything that is missed, if there's anything that isn't handled properly, then it's going to be obstruction. | ||
It's going to be contempt. | ||
It's going to be even more. | ||
And so that is the reality where... | ||
When people say weaponization of the legal system, I said the other day that it's fruitless to harp on that because people don't know what that means. | ||
And I think that most people, even people that are hip, I think that most people don't really understand the scope of that. | ||
This is what it means. | ||
This is how that's damaging. | ||
And this is how you can see it's part of this 10-year-long crusade against the president. | ||
From 2015 or 2016 all the way through until today. | ||
That was the point of the special counsel, that was the point of the first impeachment, the second impeachment. | ||
It is meant to constrain his resources, his time, his energy, political capital, and ultimately he could go to jail. | ||
That is still a very real possibility. | ||
It's not to say that just because that isn't necessarily what they're banking on, that that isn't a possibility. | ||
Just because, for example, in Manhattan, it's unlikely he'll go to jail for this, it doesn't mean that that isn't still a real possibility. | ||
He's a private citizen. | ||
And you know that a jury in Atlanta, or a jury in Manhattan, would love full of vaccinated liberals. | ||
They would love nothing more than to sentence Donald Trump to jail time. | ||
So it's in addition, it's an and, not an or. | ||
It's not a lawfare that drains you and kills you or something that results in jail time. | ||
It's an and. | ||
It's all the tedium. | ||
All of that noise in addition to the very real risk that he will have to pay a massive fine or that he will go to jail. | ||
Just look at Alex Jones. | ||
It's the same thing. | ||
Alex Jones has been involved in proceedings with the Sandy Hook parents for like nearly a decade. | ||
And not only is it doing all those aforementioned things which is it's extremely costly he has to pay a fortune of lawyers and it's also tedious he has to fly to depositions and go to hearings but also when all was said and done like we saw the result last year he has to pony up a billion dollars. | ||
Now he'll likely not have to pay all of that but he's gonna have to pay a significant sum at some point and he's already paid that much in lawyer fees And there's going to be yet even more lawsuits and proceedings going on, probably in perpetuity, into the future. | ||
And this is what they're doing against everybody. | ||
And all that is, is total political warfare. | ||
That's what that means. | ||
That when they go for these guys like, I would even include Madison Cawthorn in this, When they go for guys like Alex Jones, James O'Keefe, Madison Cawthorn, Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump, every case is a little bit different. | ||
In every case, they're applying a little bit of a different thing. | ||
But in every case, it is a total warfare. | ||
They look into every, or me for example, or Anglin, they look into every thing That they can use against a person. | ||
If that is an unflattering story in the media, if that is something they, if they can find a claimant to sue a person, we talked about that with Alex Jones, they found claimants. | ||
I'm sure SPLC, ADL, Soros types, they've been just looking for a claimant to bankroll, to bring down the Infowars empire forever. | ||
How do we get this guy off the air? | ||
Nothing we could do to him. | ||
So they look for a claimant. | ||
They look for somebody that has, not even something that could win, but something that will get in front of a jury, in front of a judge, and they're gonna pour money into it. | ||
And it's about looking for any vector of attack possible to ruin a human being. | ||
Because it's not just about outcomes. | ||
People think in terms of, well, maybe Trump won't go to jail. | ||
But he's a human being. | ||
And same with Alex, and same with Tucker, And people that have this dagger hanging over their head of going to jail, of lawyers, legal fees, that kind of peril all the time, it destroys a human being. | ||
And that's what drives a person like Alex Jones to have, and he's publicly admitted this, a little bit of a drinking issue. | ||
I don't say that in a negative way. | ||
I say this is a human being with the weight of the world on his shoulders. | ||
And he's got a family, and the weight of the world is on his family as well, and on his business. | ||
And you do that for decades, and eventually it takes a toll. | ||
I don't say that in any kind of disrespectful way. | ||
I mean, they're in the business of destroying people. | ||
People like Tucker Carlson. | ||
I would even say people like Matt Walsh. | ||
They go after his family, they hack his phone. | ||
Do you know how traumatic that is, probably? | ||
For somebody to access, in Matt Walsh's case, 20 years worth of emails? | ||
I don't like the guy, but that's horrible. | ||
But these are the kinds of things they visit upon anybody that is leading an organized opposition against the status quo. | ||
And those are the key words. | ||
Organized opposition. | ||
Anybody that's rallying people to take action. | ||
Anybody that is influential. | ||
Anybody that is independent. | ||
Truly independent. | ||
They're in the business of destroying them as a person. | ||
And that's where it goes beyond, we talked about with Tucker earlier, he gave this very generic take about how they're coming for free speech or whatever. | ||
It's not about free speech. | ||
Actually, Tucker had it right, I shouldn't say that. | ||
He said something like, they're turning from persuasion to force. | ||
And that actually is apropos. | ||
Because it's not about freedom. | ||
It's about a very particular conflict. | ||
Which is us versus them. | ||
The status quo versus this insurgent political force. | ||
This idea that it's about freedom or something generic, it's about everybody universally having a particular civil right like being on Twitter or being on TV, it's not about that. | ||
It's not about a universally applied standard. | ||
It's about a particular conflict between particular organized political groups. | ||
And it's about, one, using the law and using everything To try to physically destroy the leaders, the people that are leading the other side. | ||
And this gets into the idea that it's about people, not ideas. | ||
Fundamentally, ideas are great, and ideas captivate people, and of course In a very general sense, we are talking about things that are conceptual, like justice, or fairness, or morality, or things of that nature. | ||
But a lot of the discussion about figures like myself, or Trump, or others, is that We're not loyal to that man. | ||
It's not about Trump. | ||
It's about the ideas. | ||
It's not about Americans or the American land. | ||
It's about the American creed. | ||
It's about the American ideas. | ||
It's not about the leader of the movement. | ||
It's about the ideals that the leader represents. | ||
And I would say that when you look at what's happening here, that way of thinking is absolutely disproven. | ||
Because, and I've said this before on the show, ideas don't take over a nation. | ||
Ideas don't enforce the laws or make the laws. | ||
People make the laws. | ||
People enforce the laws. | ||
People make decisions. | ||
People act. | ||
Only people can make a willful decision to do a thing or to make the right decision or the wrong decision based on a value system or based on a concept. | ||
And we have a situation now, it's not that the ideas control the country, it's that very corrupt people control the country. | ||
And the problem is that when a person with the right ideas stands against them, those people are destroyed. | ||
And they're destroyed in the way that only a person can be destroyed. | ||
They don't destroy their idea by disproving it or arguing against it or invalidating it. | ||
They destroy the person by putting pressure on the person, on their physical person. | ||
They induce physical stress by attacking their family or their money. | ||
They induce physical danger by exposing their address or where they live so that people will harm that person and prevent them from acting anymore. | ||
It's a war between people. | ||
And we know this is true on a deep level because that's what our religion is about. | ||
Our religion isn't about a law. | ||
It's about a man. | ||
And there is a connection there. | ||
You hear a lot of these guys like Jordan Peterson. | ||
They say that Jesus and our current spiritual battle is really just about ideas. | ||
That Jesus was an archetype and he conveyed a moral code. | ||
And it's true that he represents an archetype. | ||
He's symbolic. | ||
And it's true that he conveyed a moral code. | ||
But he was also a man and he made it clear that it was about him as a guy. | ||
That he was a real guy. | ||
And he was a real God, and he did really die, and he did really rise from the dead, and it was about a physical and real communion with him as a person that saved a person. | ||
Not simply their adherence to a ritual or an adherence to a law, but an intimate personal relationship with a person of the Trinity, with a person in God. | ||
And so, there's something that's, there's a very deep And all of this is to say that when you look at what happens to Trump or Tucker or Alex Jones or Madison Cawthorn or Matt Walsh or Andrew Anglin or me, you have to realize that this is a spiritual battle, but we are the soldiers in it. | ||
The people are the soldiers in it. | ||
We're the only ones that can fight the spiritual battle. | ||
We're the only ones that can win the spiritual battle with God, obviously. | ||
But it is a consequence, necessarily, that we will suffer for it, and we will die for it, and be humiliated by it, and be attacked for it, and all those things. | ||
And, yes, we will also fall short, and we will be made hypocrites, sometimes, of our own actions, because we're all sinners. | ||
But fundamentally, that is the nature of our struggle. | ||
Good people, people doing the right thing, versus people that are doing the wrong thing. | ||
It's about people and their decisions and the trials and tribulations that they face in their lives. | ||
That's what this spiritual political struggle is really about. | ||
So people ought to meditate very deeply on this when they freely criticize a figure like a Trump. | ||
I would say even for a Tucker, maybe I'm a little hard on Tucker. | ||
Although I don't know what he's really suffering to be honest. | ||
But I'll extend a little bit of charity and say maybe I'm a little hard even on a guy like Tucker. | ||
Because Nobody is gonna fight these battles for us other than us. | ||
And there are people that answer the call, and they suffer immensely for it, and you see that. | ||
And so when I hear this talk like, hey, people gotta think about their real lives, and hey, don't you wanna have a family? | ||
And maybe it's just not smart to go out there and take any shots. | ||
Well, who's gonna do it then? | ||
If everybody is too above it all and too clever and they want to keep their hands clean, because they don't want to get in there and make hard decisions, who's going to go and fight? | ||
Who's going to be the front line? | ||
Who's going to be the rear guard? | ||
Who's going to be fighting the spiritual battle for us? | ||
Because the enemy shows up every day. | ||
So, that's what I have to say about Trump. | ||
It's horrible what they're doing to him. | ||
And I'm a little hard on him, but I'm critical. | ||
I mean, I don't think I'm unfair. | ||
I think I'm critical. | ||
But they are putting the screws in this man. | ||
And don't think for a second that just because he's old and a billionaire and powerful and all this, that it doesn't affect him as a guy. | ||
It does. | ||
He has just been strengthened. | ||
And he's been elevated and held up. | ||
And we should pray that other people be held up in the same way and be strong enough to take it like he has because he's the shining example. | ||
And they're gonna keep going. | ||
So that's the Fulton County story. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our Disney lawsuit story. | ||
Somebody else texted me. | ||
That's so funny. | ||
So hilarious, I get the joke. | ||
But anyway, we're gonna move on into our featured story here, which is about Disney. | ||
And this is another one which is... I don't love this story. | ||
I mean, I've talked about it a lot on the show in a very cynical way before, because I don't like DeSantis. | ||
But our feature story tonight is about this lawsuit. | ||
The Disney company is now suing the Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for unfair treatment. | ||
They say that he's retaliating against the company for their political viewpoint, for their political activism. | ||
And this all comes from that Don't Say Gay bill from a year ago. | ||
Where if you remember the Florida state legislature passed a bill that said that they couldn't teach in public schools about sex orientation or gender identity until the fourth grade. | ||
And Disney was a company very activist and very vocal against the bill. | ||
And DeSantis and the Republican regime in Florida retaliated by trying to remove some special provisions that apply to the Disney Company in Florida because they provide so many jobs and they basically built the city of Orlando. | ||
And so there's been this ongoing lawfare feud between the two parties for a long time. | ||
I was very critical of the bill itself because while it's certainly a step in the right direction, as I've said many times, It almost seems to concede the issue by only moderating it. | ||
If you're going out there and saying that you can talk about gay and trans in the classroom, just not until a child turns 8, are you really fighting gay and trans, or are you just setting a reasonable limitation on it? | ||
And thereby allowing it. | ||
By circumscribing a line around which it is acceptable, you're just making it acceptable in society. | ||
You're not really pushing it out. | ||
You're welcoming it in, just under certain regulations and expectations, which is still a concession. | ||
So that's been my take on it so far, but As this battle rages on, I have something new to say about it. | ||
And first, I'll read the story to bring you up to speed. | ||
It says, quote, Disney has accused Governor Ron DeSantis of organizing a campaign of government retaliation in a lawsuit. | ||
The two sides have been fighting since Disney criticized the Don't Say Gay bill. | ||
The lawsuit came after state officials voided a development deal involving the firm's Florida theme park. | ||
Disney said DeSantis' steps to assert control over its operations threatened its business and violated its constitutional rights. | ||
It asked the court to undo DeSantis' moves. | ||
The company said, quote, Disney regrets it has come to this but having exhausted efforts to seek a resolution, the company is left with no choice but to file this lawsuit to protect its cast members, guests, local development partners from a relentless campaign of government weaponization against Disney in retaliation for expressing a political viewpoint unpopular with state officials. | ||
DeSantis has previously cast the state's move as efforts to remove special perks for a company that no longer works in the public interest. | ||
He said the state would not bend a knee to woke executives and his communications director said we are unaware of any legal right a company has to operate its own government or maintain special privileges not held by other businesses in the state. | ||
Florida lawmakers voted to restructure the special district that had been created 50 years ago to oversee development of the land around Disney World. | ||
The move gave DeSantis the power to appoint members to the district's governing board, removing the authority from landowners in the district, of which Disney is by far the biggest landowner. | ||
Before the new board was installed, Disney reached a last-minute deal outlining the scope of development in the district and giving Disney the right to review any changes to properties within the limits. | ||
DeSantis said that Disney tried to pull a fast one and announced plans for government investigations and other actions. | ||
He referred to a series of possibilities, including new taxes tolls and opening a state prison near the parks. | ||
Disney CEO Bob Iger, who is Jewish, Called DeSantis' fight with the company anti-business and anti-Florida. | ||
In the lawsuit, the company said it planned to invest $17 billion at Disney World over the next decade, noting that development and investment of this magnitude cannot effectively take place when it can be nullified or undermined at the whim of new political leadership. | ||
And it goes on like this. | ||
The details are really unimportant. | ||
But basically, DeSantis starts this bill in the legislature. | ||
Disney fights it. | ||
DeSantis tries to take control over their special board. | ||
And Disney tries to get a last minute deal with the pre-existing board before the new board comes into power. | ||
DeSantis says that they'll review that deal and that they're considering retaliating for that. | ||
Now Disney is suing DeSantis for the retaliation. | ||
And Disney may win. | ||
The particulars though are not important. | ||
What matters is that this is a clash between the public representing the public interest versus the private which purports to represent the public interest. | ||
And you've got an extremely powerful company The Disney Company, which is an extremely rich company with a very high market capitalization, very powerful because of the business that they're in, which is media. | ||
So they're a lovable brand with brand recognition and brand loyalty. | ||
They're also a media company, so they influence people. | ||
There's a very intimate relationship people have with it, and they're very rich. | ||
So it's an extremely powerful company, of course run by Jews, and pushing a very progressive social agenda. | ||
Disney has gotten very liberal in recent years, in a way that I didn't even think would happen, to tell you the truth. | ||
I suspected it would go this way, but I just never could quite believe it, because it always seemed that Disney was a little behind. | ||
It was always behind the ball on a lot of the diversity and political correctness and even the gay and lesbian stuff didn't begin to penetrate Disney until just about five or six years ago, which is relatively recent considering the gay rights stuff really kicked up 10-15 years ago. | ||
But they're very progressive and very liberal now. | ||
They're going up against a state government with DeSantis, which is probably, although I don't like DeSantis, it's probably the most right-wing state government in the country. | ||
And there's a reason for that. | ||
DeSantis is trying to appeal to a right-wing base because he's got national presidential ambitions. | ||
Whatever the motive, he's very activist and very conservative. | ||
And so you've got a really good dialectic here, really good Example of this contrast between a conservative government ruling a conservative state, DeSantis has this mandate won by 20 points in the last cycle, versus a very powerful, very beloved media company pushing a progressive agenda. | ||
And they're fighting it out in the political realm. | ||
The state is using the law and the legislature and these enforcement actions and the power of taxing and jurisdiction. | ||
And the company is using the power of its money and also using lawfare, using the power of the civic rights, civil rights afforded to private entities, private business. | ||
And this is something which I think is good and should define the political landscape in America, which is the question of who rules. | ||
Because in other countries we know very clearly who rules, like in Russia. | ||
In Russia there are billionaires, there are what you would call oligarchs. | ||
You have very big, very rich, very powerful countries, companies. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
They do exist in a somewhat market economy, even if they have monopoly protections from the government, and you have the state. | ||
But it is very clear and unambiguous that the oligarchs and the businesses, no matter how powerful, no matter how rich, no matter how important in Russia, they answer to Putin. | ||
And I think they know that Putin can kill them. | ||
I believe the billionaires and the oligarchs in Russia know that if they step out of line, Putin will literally shoot them himself. | ||
I'm not exaggerating. | ||
I mean, he will pull the trigger on the gun that will shoot their heads. | ||
They know that. | ||
And the same is true in China. | ||
There was a story a year or two ago which was Talked about for the same reason. | ||
In China, the billionaire Jack Ma, who is the founder of Alibaba, which is one of the biggest companies in the world, they say it's the Chinese equivalent of Amazon. | ||
There was a time when Jack Ma went missing for months and they said that he was being detained by the Chinese government because purportedly he went against the Chinese interest. | ||
And at the time people said it's inconceivable that an American billionaire of comparable status like a Jeff Bezos would be ever detained by the American government without a charge, without an explanation, but because they went against the state. | ||
It's inconceivable. | ||
But it raised an important question. | ||
What should it be like in America? | ||
Is it a good thing that the billionaires do not fear the government? | ||
Is it a good thing that the billionaires are not beholden to the state? | ||
And what is the relationship between the Jack Ma analog in America or the oligarch analog in America? | ||
What is their relationship with the state? | ||
If there is a clear cut-and-dry relationship in Russia and China that the private sector answers to the public interest represented by the state, then what is the arrangement in America if it's not like that? | ||
Maybe we don't want a system where the president is killing billionaires or the state is detaining billionaires without charges. | ||
I think that that is probably excessive. | ||
And that is certainly the Eastern climate, which is far more collectivist and far more tyrannical than historically the West is. | ||
I recognize that. | ||
But what is the proper relationship between the private sector and the state? | ||
Because this is something we talk about a lot on the show. | ||
We understand that the state is sovereign, or rather the people are sovereign, but they delegate authority to the state through the Constitution. | ||
And insofar as the representatives exercise the sovereign authority of the people, if they are elected, and if they receive campaign contributions, and if they rely on media and money to win their elections, and to maintain their position in office, and to become the president, or to receive certain political appointments, or even for sponsorship on various initiatives, | ||
Then could it be said then that the money and the media are ultimately upstream from the government? | ||
Could it be said that if the representatives exercise the sovereign power and the representatives are beholden to or dependent on money and media, then it's really money and media that are exercising the sovereign power but with extra steps? | ||
And the distinction is that the money and the media do not have the same accountability that the government does. | ||
They cannot be replaced by election. | ||
There is no oversight over them. | ||
Nothing that is routine or formal. | ||
They could be called in by a committee, but there's no real process other than that. | ||
And if you've got unaccountable money and media running the country, then you've got the same tyrannical setup as you do in China or Russia, but instead it's by people that we don't know who they are. | ||
They may not be loyal to America. | ||
There's no accountability. | ||
There's no oversight. | ||
We don't know their names. | ||
It introduces all these types of problems. | ||
And so in a state like Florida, and here's where this is playing out, Finally, you've got a governor that says, hey, this is a conservative state. | ||
This is a conservative society that we have here in Florida. | ||
They elected me with a 20-point majority based on my opposition to this woke culture that's being produced. | ||
You fought against it, and now we're going to punish you. | ||
Because that's not how people in Florida want their society to be. | ||
And who are you, a multinational firm that does its business in China and Europe and the Middle East and Africa and South America and California, who are you to spend your billions of dollars that you make everywhere in jurisdictions across America and across the world to fight against the democratically sovereign elected government of Florida? | ||
And in this case, the government of Florida has a unique advantage because Disney has such a huge investment, such a strong capital investment in Florida with Disney World. | ||
They can't pick up Disney World and move it somewhere else like they could take the NCAA championship out of Indiana like they threatened to back when they passed a similar bill many years ago or in South Carolina when they did something similar. | ||
They have to stay there. | ||
It's buildings. | ||
It's huge rides. | ||
It's castles. | ||
It's a theme park. | ||
So here's a rare instance where the private sector, no matter how rich or multinational or operating in so many jurisdictions, it's stuck. | ||
And it has this capital investment that can be held hostage by the governor of Florida. | ||
And the governor says, even if Disney fights me, I'm still going to exercise the will of the people. | ||
And I'm gonna punish Disney for daring to oppose. | ||
And it looks like this is a rare instance where there's a success story because there's been many examples of this over the years. | ||
There was an example in South Dakota when Kirstie Noem tried to pass a bill. | ||
I forget the particulars. | ||
But she tried to pass a bill, I think about transgender bathrooms or something to this effect. | ||
And they tried to organize a giant boycott. | ||
The Chamber of Commerce organized a boycott of investment into the state. | ||
And you understand that the state needs, and particularly the politicians, they need the Chamber of Commerce. | ||
Because that's where they get their tax revenue to fund their operations and their projects. | ||
That's where they get the campaign money to win their elections. | ||
The people rely on that investment for their jobs. | ||
And so to take the investment out of South Dakota is to kill South Dakota. | ||
So they had to go with what the corporation said about the social issues, which should be the jurisdiction of the voter and therefore the government. | ||
They did a similar thing in Indiana, like I said, many years ago. | ||
You remember the governor there Who is, I believe at that time, Mike Pence, passed a bill for religious freedom. | ||
And NASCAR tried to boycott, and the NCAA tried to boycott. | ||
Same thing happened in South Carolina. | ||
And this has played out all across many conservative state jurisdictions over the last two decades where states have tried to, through the power, the devolved power, through federalism, through the Constitution, through the power of the states, they have tried to undo the social revolution through the power of the states, they have tried to undo the social revolution consistent with the will And they get thwarted by billionaires. | ||
They get thwarted by the Wall Street Stock Exchange. | ||
They get thwarted by L.A. | ||
They get thwarted by multinationals, by traders, the trade and trader, free trade and traders, people that do business all across America, people that do business all across North America, or in some cases across the Atlantic or Pacific. - It's epic. | ||
And so you've got this effect where the people have been robbed of their sovereignty because they're being held hostage by the money. | ||
The money says, well actually, we're going to tell you how it goes. | ||
We're a bunch of rich liberals from the capitals. | ||
We're rich liberals that are on the coastal cities and doing business in foreign countries, and we have our progressive ideas. | ||
And if you are not okay with that, then we're going to take your jobs, we're going to take your tax revenue, we're going to take your campaign contributions, and we'll kill your state. | ||
And the state is, of course, they have nothing that they can say. | ||
They're absolutely beholden, then, to the money. | ||
The money's being held hostage, so they answer to the money. | ||
And you could say then that in America, it's not just not like China or Russia, it's the opposite. | ||
That instead of Jack Ma being detained by the government, or an oligarch being killed by the president, you have the governor being detained by Disney! | ||
You have the governor being executed by Bob Iger! | ||
And which would you prefer? | ||
Would you prefer that the governor, who is elected every four years, who can be impeached, Who there's a media that looks into his affairs that is considered in the public interest that asked to answer to a division of powers with the legislature and the courts. | ||
Would you prefer that they have the final say and they determine what goes on or would you prefer that it's some business? | ||
Some business that may not even be headquartered in the state or even in the country and does maybe a large percentage of its business in China or in Mexico and gives their jobs to those countries. | ||
I think any sensible person would say it's got to be the country, it's got to be the nation. | ||
And so, a lot of conservatives are saying against DeSantis that this is anti-business and this is against small government. | ||
So, does small government and pro-business and the free market mean that billionaires get to control our country? | ||
Billionaires get to control the texture of life and the climate of our society? | ||
Which is to say that if we as a society, like Florida as a society, if the Florida society says, we don't want woke, we don't want trannies, we don't want gay propaganda, we don't want all this trash in our state, we don't want crime, that's why we moved here, They have a right to make it that way. | ||
Who is some company to say, no, the people of the world voted, the people of the boardroom in New York, the Jews in New York voted, and actually you're going to teach your kids about homosexuality and anal sex in second grade. | ||
I would prefer that the government, I would prefer to live in a world where the government can say no. | ||
I prefer to live in a world where the government has the power and the political will to say no. | ||
And sometimes it's not going to work out. | ||
Sometimes the government will go against what we like. | ||
Hello, we're kind of living in that! | ||
But I prefer to live in a world where, as an institution, the government has final say. | ||
State or the federal government, not these private businesses. | ||
This idea of, we'll just take our business and go somewhere else, is anti-patriotic. | ||
It's anti-national. | ||
The only people that can do that are aliens. | ||
Think about that. | ||
Because if you're in the state of Florida, and you're in the community, and you know the people you employ, and you're headquartered in Florida, and all the people that work there are from Florida, And you would never think of saying, I'm going to fire everybody in the community and move to another state. | ||
You could only say that if you had no loyalty to that place and didn't care about the people there. | ||
That's the only way you could do it. | ||
Where else would you take your business? | ||
I'm going to pack up and go to New York. | ||
I'm going to pack up and go to China. | ||
We don't need you. | ||
We don't need the people here. | ||
They're expendable. | ||
Only an alien can do that. | ||
And here's the thing. | ||
The state government of Florida is not alienated from the people of Florida. | ||
But a giant multinational corporation investing billions? | ||
They are alienated from the people of Florida. | ||
The governor is elected by the people of Florida. | ||
The governor is known to the people of Florida. | ||
Same with the state legislators and the state senators and the state judges. | ||
But some company that's being governed by executives in California, I mean they're aliens! | ||
And so who should be deciding what goes on in public life in any jurisdiction? | ||
It should be the people that are that jurisdiction. | ||
It should be that society, that community. | ||
So I support DeSantis and I support a national government doing that to our country. | ||
I'm telling these corporations that are headquartered here like Google, or Meta, or, and those are the big five, Amazon, Microsoft, and who's the fifth? | ||
Apple. | ||
Telling those companies, hey, you do business in America, so you answer to Americans. | ||
You don't answer to China, you don't answer to these other countries, and guess what? | ||
If you think you can pack up and go somewhere else, we will throw you in jail. | ||
If you try to move your company somewhere else, we will retaliate and punish you. | ||
Because as a private entity doing business at that level, you still have a public responsibility. | ||
Everybody has a public responsibility. | ||
Because we all live in a society. | ||
You employ people in America. | ||
You were built up by American investment. | ||
You sell your product to America. | ||
So yes, you answer to America. | ||
Not just your shareholders. | ||
Not just your boardroom. | ||
Not just your own conscience. | ||
Yes, you are a public figure. | ||
You have a role to play. | ||
You have responsibility. | ||
And the governor of a state should be able to say that, and ultimately the governor of America, the president, ought to be able to say that too. | ||
And we should foster a climate like this. | ||
It used to be like that. | ||
There used to be a national disposition like this, but there isn't anymore. | ||
In the last 40 years, all of that has gone away. | ||
With the deregulation and a lot of legal precedent that's been built up, Now you've got a moneyed media class that runs our country unopposed, and they feel no responsibility to our nation. | ||
And those two things can't work at the same time. | ||
So you need a president that's gonna get in there and this is what I said yesterday I love so much about the Trump announcement in 2016 when Trump announced his candidacy all the way back the first time it was in his first speech and it was Michael what's his name that did the 9-11 documentary you know I'm talking about the fat guy fat liberal Come on, what's his name? | ||
I can think of his face too. | ||
Well anyway, but he talked about this as well. | ||
Donald Trump in his announcement said that if Ford tried to open a new factory in Mexico, He would call them up and say, you can do that, but I'll charge you a 35% tariff on every car that comes into America and every part and everything that you sell here. | ||
And he said that if they try to call up and try to yank the chain with their lobbyist money, he said, I don't care. | ||
I'm a self funder. | ||
You're going to pay the 35% and he would force them to stay in America. | ||
And it was this guy, again, a name escapes me right now. | ||
It's on the tip of my tongue. | ||
Come on, he made Fahrenheit 9-11. | ||
You know what I'm talking about, famous liberal director. | ||
He said in a live show, I think a month before the election, he said that Donald Trump said that. | ||
How are you going to beat that? | ||
That's actually awesome. | ||
And that's the part of Trump that we all love and miss. | ||
And to some extent, to the extent that we like DeSantis, that's what we like about DeSantis. | ||
That's what nationalism looks like. | ||
That's what patriotism looks like. | ||
It's telling these giant companies, you're going to do what's best for America. | ||
Not what's best for your bottom line. | ||
And you get all these free market guys in there and they say, but then it's going to cost more, but if that happens then... Doesn't matter. | ||
The companies here have responsibility to provide jobs. | ||
Not just sell their stuff. | ||
They have responsibility to provide jobs. | ||
And they also have a responsibility to respect the society that they are in. | ||
Like in the state of Florida. | ||
If they don't want to get retaliated against, they shouldn't be participating in politics. | ||
It's good to see the roles reversed. | ||
Because for so long, a conservative state like South Dakota, which really has nothing going on, or a state like Indiana, same thing. | ||
State of Florida has a ton of trade and commerce and they've got a booming population a great real estate market and great capital. | ||
I mean that's a state that and it's a large state it's a large population with a large coastline. | ||
They can flex their muscle a little bit and you gotta pick your battles but they can flex and they can say that they're gonna make their will happen against Disney. | ||
It's refreshing to see that instead of South Carolina or Indiana or South Dakota getting their ass kicked by sports, by the NCAA and by the Chamber of Commerce. | ||
That's how it should be! | ||
So, I don't like DeSantis, but this is good stuff. | ||
I like that. | ||
And it's a shame that Trump and Nikki Haley are attacking him for this. | ||
They should have been doing this when they were in office. | ||
But instead, Nikki Haley was taking bribes from Boeing and Trump, he wasn't doing any of this. | ||
unidentified
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So, that's that. | |
But I want to move on. | ||
We'll get into our Super Chats here. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
Let me get my water. | ||
That's all I have for you. | ||
But it's true. | ||
And people don't realize the extent to which money and media are holding us back because it's a conservative nation. | ||
From Nevada all the way through to the state of Maine, you've got a conservative electorate. | ||
It's in California, Chicago, the New York mega metropolis, which is Newark and Boston and all that. | ||
Aside from those places, the whole Pacific Coast, a lot of the East Coast, And again, a few major cities. | ||
It is a conservative nation. | ||
It is mostly conservative states. | ||
It's like 25, maybe 27 of the American states are conservative. | ||
And the only reason some of them aren't is because of black people. | ||
You know? | ||
Like, Maryland. | ||
Maryland's a conservative state other than Baltimore. | ||
Virginia's a conservative state other than Nova. | ||
So, you have a lot, a lot of conservative states that would be electing very conservative governments. | ||
And most of the country would be extremely conservative if not for the pernicious influence of capital everywhere. | ||
Which is, you can't avoid it. | ||
And this is where it gets to, it's all or nothing. | ||
Because the same is also true of the federal government. | ||
A lot of the state governments are beholden to the federal government because they rely on the federal government They rely on federal subsidization of so much subsidization of so many of their programs. | ||
So you ask yourself, why can't a state like Florida, why can't every state from Idaho to Florida become a fascist theocracy? | ||
Capital and the federal government. | ||
And the only way you get capital under control is if you get the federal government under control. | ||
The only way you get federal government is by getting the federal government. | ||
So it's all or nothing. | ||
You got to take over the FedGov, reel in the private sector, and use the federal government to make these states more based. | ||
And if we could do that one time, if we just get one, if we get Trump in there again as an example, And if he fires 50,000 people and hires 50,000 Trump supporters... | ||
And if he dispenses with term limits and rewrites the Constitution, then he can literally remake America. | ||
Now, I'm not saying he'll be the guy that does it, but I'm saying that theoretically, America can be remade through the power of the federal government, and conservatives need to think that way. | ||
Conservatives need to become rich, they need to become powerful, and then they need to take over the federal government and remake the nation using the wealth and power of the U.S. | ||
government. | ||
Anything short of that is just a joke. | ||
Anything short of that is not serious. | ||
When people say, like, we're just going to tell people about freedom. | ||
Fuck you. | ||
We're just going to tell people about freedom and live by example. | ||
They're brainwashing your kids in school. | ||
You don't even have a chance. | ||
They're literally, they get your kids when they're five and they have your kids on their iPads for 10 hours a day if you look at the screen time. | ||
And people are like, well, we'll just share the Austin Peterson Show on my Twitter account with 300 followers. | ||
Okay. | ||
So, that's worse than doing nothing because you're just wasting time. | ||
You could just be living a happy life. | ||
Instead, you're persisting in this charade. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
We'll get on into our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you all have to say about this. | ||
Let me take a look. | ||
unidentified
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Let me take a look and get all this set up here. | |
Okay. | ||
Let me lower this. | ||
Alright. | ||
Reese sent $3. | ||
Let's show some love and support for Ethan Ralph. | ||
He's going through it right now. | ||
Sad. | ||
Poor Ralph. | ||
Pray for Ralph going through a divorce. | ||
That sucks. | ||
What happened? | ||
I thought they were... I thought they were happy together and I thought things were going well. | ||
That's terrible. | ||
Well, we're rooting for him. | ||
Old Ethan Ralph, he can recover from this. | ||
The Unknown Soldier sent $5. | ||
Why do every single one of these factory-assembled conservative bimbos like Tomi Lahren or Ella Mauldin cake themselves and make up? | ||
It's gross and fake-looking, opposite of conservative. | ||
Well, hey listen, we like Ella, okay? | ||
I don't really know anything about makeup. | ||
I honestly can't really tell when girls are wearing makeup because I just don't. | ||
I'm just like a little autistic like that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But they shouldn't. | ||
I don't like all the... I can tell when it's really caked on. | ||
I don't like that look. | ||
I don't think that makes a woman look better. | ||
I think it makes a woman look gross. | ||
Now, a woman needs a little bit of makeup. | ||
unidentified
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I think. | |
I think you need a little makeup. | ||
unidentified
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But... | |
But sometimes I see these women with it, and it's really over the top. | ||
And it looks like if you touch a woman's face, like you're gonna take your hand off. | ||
It's like you touched a wet paint sign, you know? | ||
So I, yeah, I don't like that. | ||
I'm opposed. | ||
I don't, and I agree with you, it is anti-conservative to put too much makeup on. | ||
The Unknown Soldier sent $3. | ||
Just saw you got $555 from Big Tech in the last replay. | ||
Damn, we all got worked by him. | ||
A-Logs got worked the hardest though. | ||
I love that. | ||
A-Logs were giving him money. | ||
Ultros gave him money, which by the way, he should refund those, I think. | ||
Ultros gave him $100, which is a little... Victor Sharpe, the gay pedophile. | ||
Victor Sharpe. | ||
unidentified
|
Victor Sharpe III, the gay pedophile. | |
He gave... | ||
Big Tech 100 bucks. | ||
So I think Big Tech should refund those if he wants to be consistent. | ||
But isn't that so funny? | ||
All these faggots gave him money and then he gave me 500 bucks. | ||
He gave me all their money. | ||
Like, thanks! | ||
Thank you! | ||
Thank you for the generous donation to America First. | ||
I am your leader. | ||
All the haters giving their money to America First. | ||
Hey, I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Hand rubbing intensifies. | ||
So yeah, that was masterfully played. | ||
- Can't knock it. - Foily sent $10. | ||
Five years of watching your show, I send my first $100 super chat and immediately after some woman sends you $1,500, how can a nigger compete with that? | ||
- Well, listen, it's not a competition. | ||
Okay, I I don't care about the money. | ||
All right, that that's really a joke So don't feel like you're don't do not feel pressure to give me lots of money. | ||
Do not feel bad. | ||
I Appreciate every super chat, even if it's well if it's three bucks, honestly, you can do a little better but not not you in particular three bucks is a little low, but you know, I Five dollars ten bucks. | ||
I appreciate all of it. | ||
It's not you really shouldn't measure up like that I think that's a very bad way of looking at it You know You know how I am if somebody gives me a hundred bucks. | ||
I'll shit on them just the same so it's it's really not about that and It's like the story in the Bible The rich man who gives a little bit versus the poor woman who gives her last shekel. | ||
unidentified
|
She gives her last coin That's how I think about it Jim's tattoos sent $5. | |
Some fake alpha male advice guy named Dream Johnson was ragging you on Twitter and got ratioed. | ||
He has millions of views on YouTube but get this, he's Jewish and married and on Levan's thought. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
So he emailed us last year and was like, hey, can I get into APAC for free? | ||
Can I get a booth? | ||
And we were like, no, not interested. | ||
unidentified
|
And he was like, come on, please, please, can I speak at AFPAC? | |
Can I please get in? | ||
And we said, like, no, not interested at all. | ||
And then he shows up to the conference with a ticket and he tries to get some prostitute in without a ticket. | ||
And we said, no, she can't get in without a ticket. | ||
You could buy her a ticket at the door. | ||
We'll capitulate on that. | ||
By the way, people wonder why I am with Jewish people or something. | ||
Imagine dealing with Jews your whole career and they're all like this. | ||
Go figure. | ||
Classic. | ||
Classic. | ||
By the way, people wonder why I am with Jewish people or something. | ||
Imagine dealing with Jews your whole career and they're all like this. | ||
Go figure. - Bastyrus sent $10. | ||
I think Big Tech is on another level. | ||
He's got some Jedi powers. | ||
And the cozy council keeps warning you about his powers. | ||
Also, he choked his wife like Anakin did. | ||
unidentified
|
That's pretty good. | |
That's pretty funny. | ||
Maybe you're right. | ||
Buffincel sent $10. | ||
We love you, King. | ||
Hey, love you too, buddy. | ||
Basterisk sent $5. | ||
Tenryo is Mace Windu BTW. | ||
He is. | ||
He really is the Mace Windu. | ||
A Sith Lord? | ||
If what you're saying is true, then the Council is in great danger. | ||
Yeah, Tenryo's... Tenryo shows up to Big Tech's office. | ||
Under the name of the Galactic Senate of the Republic, you're under arrest. | ||
Yeah, he fits the bill, because he's black. | ||
Yeah, he's hardcore. | ||
I don't know about that, but we'll see. | ||
sent three dollars you know ye x tucker tour nick versus tucker is more possible now than it was last week i don't know about that but we'll see pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent three dollars 178 your tucker carlson laugh impression was zeroly accurate thank you ye proof sent 17 dollars yeezy scnx approaching casting calls for skinheads today | ||
you have any insider knowledge on the collection uh listen bud uh I'm not at liberty to talk about anything confidential, but I had a conversation with him today and he told me some of the stuff he's working on. | ||
And, um, let's just say stay tuned. | ||
Papa John, stay tuned, okay? | ||
But yeah, I saw that and look, if you know, you know. | ||
And if you don't know, you don't know. | ||
But I'll just say this. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
I did see that. | ||
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
You said that in the finals of Extemporaneous Speaking and Speech Team you made a joke which basically won you first place against a girl from Southern Illinois. | ||
Do you remember what that joke was? | ||
I do, I absolutely remember. | ||
I was in, oh, was it Downers Grove South? | ||
I think it was, or Downer Grove North? | ||
I don't know which school it was, but it was like a big tournament. | ||
It was an important tournament. | ||
And I was in finals, and I didn't even think it was that funny, okay? | ||
Honestly. | ||
But I did an extemporaneous speech. | ||
It was my final speech. | ||
So, you do a few rounds, okay? | ||
You do, um... How did it work? | ||
I don't even remember. | ||
I think it's only two. | ||
So... So for my event, there's all different kinds of events at the speech tournament. | ||
My event was extemporaneous, which means that I arrive at the tournament, And all the people in the event, in the extemporaneous event, they go into the library and they pull out of a bag slips of paper. | ||
And you pull three slips of paper and each slip of paper has a prompt on there. | ||
It has a question. | ||
It'll say like, you know, at that time some of the prompts were like, how is Boko Haram taking over West Africa? | ||
Or it'd be something like, Sometimes there'd be a very obscure one like, what do you think about the flooding in Pakistan? | ||
Or something like that. | ||
But so, you would go up to the front, you would pull three prompts, and I think you would take two of them, and you would write two speeches. | ||
And here is what you were allowed to do. | ||
You were allowed to bring, you couldn't use the internet, you couldn't use a computer, couldn't use your phone. | ||
You had to bring a box of newspaper clippings. | ||
You had to clip the newspaper yourself, And so, in every speech, you had to write a, I think it was a 5 to 7 minute speech, 5 paragraphs, with 3 paragraphs in the middle, and each of the 3 paragraphs had to have 2 sources. | ||
And in each of the sources, you needed the publication and the date. | ||
So, That's everything that went into it. | ||
You had 45 minutes to prepare a 7 minute speech that you had to deliver completely from memory that you wrote on the spot Answering a prompt that was random with newspaper clippings that you had clipped the week before, and you needed six sources, and you needed to remember the date and the publication. | ||
So you couldn't just say, you know, I heard the other day this, that, and the other. | ||
You had to say, according to the New York Times on April 6, 2013, ISIS is the size of New Jersey. | ||
Something like that. | ||
Six of those! | ||
You had to memorize all those. | ||
And so, So you would go in, you would deliver your speech, and then you would, in a classroom, and you would sit down in the classroom, and the next guy would come in and give a speech, and sit down, and the next guy would come in, and then once everybody in your room, it was like five or six people in a room, would give their speech, then you did that another time, there were two rounds, and then they had a finals round, and in the finalist round, they took all the top scorers in the first two rounds, and they put them back in the library, | ||
You pulled three more prompts and you prepared a speech for finals, okay? | ||
So I'm setting the stage. | ||
So I'm at one of the best tournaments and I got some prompt, I think it was about minimum wage, okay? | ||
And I was like, booyah, minimum wage? | ||
I have the entire Free to Choose and Capitalism and Freedom by Milton Friedman, I have that memorized. | ||
I have Basic Economics and Facts and Fallacies by Thomas Sowell memorized. | ||
Minimum wage? | ||
unidentified
|
Easy. | |
So, I get the minimum wage prompt and I just stack it. | ||
I mean I just stack it. | ||
I raped this speech. | ||
I took this speech and I beat the shit out of it and then I raped it. | ||
And I went in there and in my intro... So what they always want you to do for these speeches is they want you to have a hook. | ||
And here's the thing. | ||
A lot of these kids were total faggots, okay? | ||
They would come in there, and their style would be like, in the ancient Greek play of Ajax, Ajax was like this, and so-and-so didn't like that very much, understandably, and it was very, like, all the motions are very choreographed, but here's what they would do. | ||
They would practice and practice and practice every day, all week, and they would rehearse the same intros, the same conclusions. | ||
They would basically cheat by pre-writing their speeches. | ||
And then whatever topic they got, they would just fit it into their pre-written speech. | ||
So they already had like five pre-written intros with very corny, very canned, pre-written hooks. | ||
And it was always about Greek mythology or something inoffensive. | ||
One guy sang. | ||
One guy. | ||
There was this one guy who three weeks in a row, it was me and him that wound up in finals. | ||
Three weeks in a row. | ||
We wound up in finals and I fucking beat him! | ||
Every week! | ||
I was first, he was second, three weeks in a row. | ||
And every week he got more desperate. | ||
The first speech sucked. | ||
The second speech, he hammed it up a little bit. | ||
The third one, he tried to sing in his intro. | ||
And I'm literally sitting there at my desk and I'm looking at the judge like... Now he's singing? | ||
This idiot? | ||
Oh, they're singing now? | ||
What will these people, what will these amateurs try next? | ||
You know, I remember looking around like singing, desperate, and I fucking kicked his ass a third week in a row. | ||
And it was awesome because in the awards ceremony They would say, okay, we're gonna bring up the finalists from Extemporaneous, and all the finalists would go up, and they would call in descending order, in seventh place, from this school, in sixth place, and three weeks in a row, it was me and him standing next to each other, and they would say, in second place, from wherever, this guy. | ||
And then it would be me! | ||
Then it would be me chillin' there and they'd say, and from Lyons Township, in first place! | ||
And I would come up, grab my thing, and I didn't even care about speech team, I didn't even try. | ||
I never practiced, I didn't clip anything, I would show up late, I'd be like, I would half-ass it, and then I would go to these tournaments and I'd just get first place every time, because I was the best. | ||
And I wouldn't even play by the rules, all these guys would go in there and say, In the Greek play, um, and Heraclitus said something quite funny, huh? | ||
And I would go in there and I'd be like, alright, listen you, listen motherfuckers, this is a speech, okay? | ||
And anyway, now I did give a really corny, so for this speech I did give kind of a corny intro. | ||
I came in there and I said something like, I said, in the words of the Wu-Tang Clan, cash rules everything around me. | ||
Gotta get the cream, dollar dollar bills, y'all. | ||
Now look, in retrospect, that's very cringe. | ||
In retrospect, in 2023, super cringe. | ||
But at that time, that was very funny, okay? | ||
The sort of like white guy doing the black thing. | ||
That was like, that played back then, okay? | ||
This is 2015. | ||
It was a different time. | ||
2014, 2015, that was funny back then. | ||
I didn't even think it was that funny, but the room exploded. | ||
Everybody was laughing. | ||
They were laughing. | ||
They laughed their little white asses off. | ||
All these hillbillies from Southern Illinois. | ||
They were laughing. | ||
unidentified
|
A hill, a hill, a hill. | |
That was the funniest thing they'd ever heard. | ||
And I just had them. | ||
I knew it from that intro. | ||
I'm like, I got this. | ||
I got, I won. | ||
I won. | ||
And I was a little nervous because this girl was good. | ||
She was, like I said, she was some hillbilly. | ||
With a Southern accent. | ||
And all these people prepared so much more than me. | ||
And she came in and gave a very perfunctory, very good speech. | ||
And I came in disrespectfully. | ||
I came in disrespectfully! | ||
Just with this crass hook. | ||
And easily coasted to victory. | ||
Epically. | ||
And she was second and I was first that week. | ||
And yeah. | ||
So. | ||
So yeah, those were the days. | ||
unidentified
|
Those were... those were the days. | |
Speech team, yeah, yeah. | ||
And I was the hero because all the... the whole team was women and gay guys and so I was just on my own. | ||
I would go to these tournaments and I would sit in the back of the bus with my headphones in and I would just look out the window. | ||
And I would go, and everybody would be getting set up in the cafeteria, and I would sit by myself, and I'd be reading my book, and then I would go and just kick ass, and I'd go to the award thing and just win. | ||
Because the thing is, all the other events were like acting, so it was like theater for all of them. | ||
Now, I did Extemporaneous, which is all political, and you had more, like, student council types in there. | ||
More, like, student council debate types did that event. | ||
But all the other events was, like, poetry and dramatic, and it was all theater kids. | ||
So... It was that clientele was there. | ||
unidentified
|
But... | |
You know, those were good days. | ||
Good days! | ||
And that was really where I got over my fear of public speaking. | ||
I remember when I was a freshman and I did an oratorical declamation, which is you just memorize a speech and just give a memorized speech. | ||
And the speech I gave was Stephen Colbert's commencement speech in Northwestern. | ||
That was the one I memorized. | ||
Remember at one school. | ||
I was thinking to myself, like, I'm going to go in there and I'm never going to see these people again. | ||
Like, they may think I'm terrible. | ||
They may judge me, but I'm never going to see them again. | ||
But I will see the people in my class who, you know, if I don't place, they're going to think I'm an idiot. | ||
So I went in there and I was like, I don't care. | ||
And I kind of, that's where I began to develop this kind of like sociopathic view on that. | ||
I was able to kind of disassociate a little and say, I don't care. | ||
I'm going to go in there and I'll try my best, of course. | ||
But if I make a fool of myself, what difference does it make? | ||
So anyway, those were the good old days. | ||
Well, these are the good days, but those days were fun, too. | ||
Yep. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
I remember I would be in the hallway practicing. | ||
They would always do this really weird thing and I hated it. | ||
Of course, these tournaments took place at a high school, you know, and the actual speaking took place in a classroom. | ||
And while people were waiting to go and present, they would be in the hallway and the whole hallway would be lined up. | ||
People would be facing the lockers and giving their speech to a locker. | ||
So you would walk down the hallway to your event and you would pass all these people and they'd be like, And they have their fucking binder at their feet on the floor. | ||
This and that. | ||
And I was the one guy, and I would just like a chat, I would just stroll up and down the hallway just watching everybody. | ||
Like, no, I'm not gonna practice. | ||
No, I don't need to talk to a locker. | ||
I don't need to practice. | ||
So I would just pace up and down the hall and kind of just like check everybody out. | ||
Oh, you don't need to practice? | ||
No, I kind of don't need to practice. | ||
I'm kind of fucking awesome. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
And one of these guys, there was one, oh man, get this. | ||
There was this one guy who was like Chinese and he was the best in the circuit. | ||
And I'm not going to dignify him by saying his name. | ||
But here's the thing. | ||
I didn't care about Speech Team. | ||
I cared about Model UN. | ||
I happen to be effortlessly excellent at Speech Team. | ||
But my passion was Model UN. | ||
So I would go to these tournaments and win, lose, or draw. | ||
I didn't give a shit. | ||
But there was one guy on the circuit who did my event. | ||
And everyone worshipped him because he did a few events and he was one of the best. | ||
He was some Chinese guy. | ||
And I remember a few years ago, like the first time I went viral, he went on Twitter and he was like, Nick Fuentes went viral, but I beat him at speech team in high school. | ||
And it's like, yeah, nobody likes your tweet, bitch, because this is a real world. | ||
And a real baller will win in speech team, and a real baller will rape in the real world too. | ||
Not just on the circuit with all these faggots and girls doing their theater event. | ||
unidentified
|
He was like, you know, well Nick Fuentes is rich and famous, but you know, speech team... Yeah, I didn't care about speech team then. | |
And guess what? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm smart. | |
That's why I succeeded in the real world also. | ||
I didn't just win in the simulation. | ||
I also won at the real thing against the competition of planet fucking Earth! | ||
Because I'm world class! | ||
Not just the best in like the state of Illinois or something. | ||
unidentified
|
Punk ass bitch. | |
You convinced some lard-ass fat theater judge that you're the best at oratorical declamation or something. | ||
Yeah, congratulations. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway. | |
So. | ||
That's that. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Apologies for the language. | ||
It's getting a little heated. | ||
I get a little bit... | ||
Little bit animated when it comes to that. | ||
But that's the thing that pissed me off about high school. | ||
As I would go into these simulations, they wouldn't like me. | ||
And I'm like, but I'm the best! | ||
But I'm the best! | ||
unidentified
|
You can't tell me that I didn't win! | |
I'm the best! | ||
You know, I would go into these Model UN conferences, and I would be ripping people in half, and we would literally be pushing people on the floor, and doing crazy stuff, But I would lose because it was some girl, high school or college student, who would be like, um, you weren't diplomatic enough. | ||
Um, you didn't build consensus. | ||
And I would say, but I won! | ||
But I was a rightful winner. | ||
I was the best. | ||
You can't tell me that I wasn't, you know, just because in your opinion. | ||
And so I used to think to myself, like, I can't wait to get into the real world because once I get in the real world, I don't need to convince a judge that I'm winning. | ||
I can just win. | ||
So, anyway... So, anyway, so that's that, but... Yeah, I mean... But it was really frustrating. | ||
I'll never forget that committee that I was in where, I mean, I just absolutely dominated the entire room. | ||
It was unbelievable. | ||
Absolutely, just methodically and masterfully dominated the entire room. | ||
Like, it wasn't even fair. | ||
It was like you sent in... I don't even know. | ||
It was like you sent in a grizzly bear to fight a daycare center. | ||
Imagine the carnage. | ||
Imagine if you released a polar bear into an infant ward. | ||
That's what it was like. | ||
Okay, imagine that level of carnage. | ||
Just slashing and biting and mauling and eating. | ||
It was like that. | ||
It was brutal. | ||
It was the most brutal performance that I had ever put on. | ||
And I remember thinking, like, there's no one that was even close. | ||
Like, I have to win. | ||
And we go to the awards ceremony. | ||
And they go third place, second place, and I get up. | ||
I'm like, here we go. | ||
You already know it. | ||
And they said it was somebody else. | ||
They're like, Thailand, from Lions Township, Thailand. | ||
I was France. | ||
And everybody was like, what? | ||
And I remember emailing the chair like, how dare you? | ||
I did everything. | ||
I passed every resolution. | ||
And the chair said something like, oh but you were too mean. | ||
You didn't build consensus. | ||
You were too... You know, they said that I was like divisive. | ||
And I said, but I won! | ||
But I won! | ||
So... And sometimes I feel like that in my real life now. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
Because it's like a lot of these A-Log types. | ||
They're like, he's winning, but he was mean to me. | ||
He's winning, but you know what? | ||
He's actually a jerk! | ||
Well... Sometimes you gotta be a jerk to cook it up, you know? | ||
But anyway... | ||
Anyway, so that's that. | ||
Little walk down memory lane if you'll indulge me. | ||
Indulge me in my trip down memory lane here. | ||
Just a little fun. | ||
Just a little Wednesday night, hump day reminiscing. | ||
Oh yeah, those are the days. | ||
I mean imagine a guy like me in a committee. | ||
Imagine a guy like me with all these high school kids. | ||
It was just brutality. | ||
unidentified
|
But, anyway. | |
But I lost. | ||
Sometimes. | ||
I remember I was in the finals at sectionals or regionals for speech team and I went into the finals and I think I've told this story a hundred times but I went in and I said something like Some speech about foreign policy and I made some extended analogy about baseball and I said now in baseball you get three strikes and you're out I said and we're at our third strike I said but you can't blame Barack Obama considering | ||
They don't know a whole lot about baseball and Kenya where he was born. | ||
I said something like that and I immediately lost. | ||
Like immediately lost because of that. | ||
And that was in like the first 10 seconds of my speech. | ||
And that was in the finals and like regionals. | ||
So I was like one of eight kids in my team. | ||
That advanced to the next level. | ||
And then I got in the finals and then I just like basically forfeited because I went in there and I'm like, well, you can't blame Barack Obama for not knowing anything about baseball considering he was born in Kenya. | ||
Some, some, that was, that was the joke. | ||
I don't remember the exact wording. | ||
It's considering he was born in Africa. | ||
Something like that. | ||
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
Have you ever been hassled by people when you're at a restaurant in DC? | ||
Are you referring to something specific? | ||
Let's continue, though, with the super chats. | ||
We'll see what else we got. | ||
Spinefish sent $3. | ||
Have you ever been hassled by people when you're at a restaurant in D.C.? | ||
Are you referring to something specific? | ||
Because I don't remember anything like that. | ||
Hassled at a restaurant. | ||
Hey man, he's just a patriot. | ||
- Anything specific. | ||
- Spinefish sent $3. | ||
What's Kid Rock's Endgame? | ||
unidentified
|
- Hey man, he's just a patriot. - Joe the Boomer sent $3. | |
People can point and laugh at me, but real loyalty/love is like a captain going down with his ship even when the ship doesn't love him back and it spends its time posting colon doing goofy spaces. | ||
- That's true. - Joe the Boomer sent $3. | ||
In time perhaps he will learn to value real loyalty slash love and friends as I have you Nick and vice versa. | ||
Real treasure is friends who stay by your side not suck-ups, sycophants, and cloud chasers. | ||
Love you man. | ||
Love you too Joe the Boomer. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Her loss. | ||
It's her loss King. | ||
It's her loss. | ||
Let's go out. | ||
Let's go grab a beer, okay? | ||
Let's go! | ||
You don't need her! | ||
You need to forget about her. | ||
It's her loss, King. | ||
Let's go out. | ||
Let's get drunk and high at the same time. | ||
We don't need to think about her. | ||
You're better off without her. | ||
There's plenty other fish in the sea, buddy. | ||
Okay? | ||
We love you, Joe. | ||
Alan sent $10. | ||
I'm sorry boss, my super chat was ass frowned. | ||
Yeah, it was, but you don't need to apologize, just do better, okay? | ||
Thank you for the super chat. | ||
APG sent $10. | ||
Do you prefer regular hard ice cream or soft serve? | ||
I only do... I don't like hard ice cream. | ||
I only like soft serve. | ||
The very packed, like, tough ice cream just doesn't do it for me. | ||
It doesn't hit the same. | ||
It tastes like processed, you know? | ||
Hey, love you too! | ||
Glad you appreciate that. | ||
Hi Nick, thanks for streaming earlier. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Love you big guy. | ||
Hey, love you too. | ||
Glad you appreciate that. | ||
Stimulant grow. | ||
I percent $10. | ||
Hi, smile. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
Chris. | ||
Chris underscore grow. | ||
I percent $20. | ||
Hi, Nick. | ||
I do fascial stretch therapy for a living. | ||
And I'm curious, would you ever do a 30 to 60 minute one-on-one table based stretch session with a certified stretch therapist? | ||
Uh, no, let me see what it is. | ||
What is fascial fascist stretch therapy? | ||
You, What, do you want to touch me? | ||
Fuck no. | ||
This guy wants to touch me. | ||
Is that what you're implying? | ||
This guy's like, I touch guys for a living. | ||
Can I touch you? | ||
I touch naked guys for a living. | ||
Can I get you on my table and touch you intimately? | ||
No. | ||
No thank you, actually. | ||
Look, I don't like people fucking touching me, alright? | ||
I don't need... Look at this. | ||
Google this on Google Images. | ||
You think I'm gonna let some super chatter... I'm gonna get up on a table in the fetal position and let you touch me? | ||
Gross. | ||
Get away from me, buddy. | ||
Get away from me. | ||
What the heck is that? | ||
So I do stretch therapy for a living. | ||
Would you ever do a 60-minute one-on-one table-based stretch? | ||
What the hell is wrong with you? | ||
Get away from me, dude. | ||
Get away from me. | ||
Do not touch me. | ||
Please, you can look, but you can't touch. | ||
Sheesh. | ||
Yeah, no thank you. | ||
No thank you. | ||
Does that sound like something that I would do? | ||
You think you're gonna throw me on a table and push me around like Play-Doh? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
I don't think so. | ||
What in the world? | ||
Stretch therapy. | ||
I do stretch therapy for a living. | ||
Would you ever do, and just out of curiosity, would you ever do a one-on-one table-based stretch session with a certified stretch therapist? | ||
No! | ||
Fuck no, dude. | ||
Never. | ||
Certainly not a guy. | ||
Jeez. | ||
What is wrong with you? | ||
I feel raped. | ||
You know what? | ||
I apologize, Smiley. | ||
I apologize to the accusers. | ||
I feel violated just for you saying that. | ||
I feel violated just by you saying that. | ||
Just putting that idea in my head, I feel violated by you saying that. | ||
How could you say that to me? | ||
What, do you want to touch me? | ||
unidentified
|
Jeez. | |
I feel raped. | ||
I disavow you! | ||
I disavow you, you pedophile rapist! | ||
I know I'm a 24-year-old man, but still. | ||
I'm childlike. | ||
Now you would want to molest me like that. | ||
It's pedophilic in spirit. | ||
I'm a childlike, boyish sweetie, so if you think of me in that way, spiritually pedophilic. | ||
Gross Imagining me on a table like that jeez Stretching me around, jeez. | ||
unidentified
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Ugh. | |
Yeah, I'd really go for that. | ||
Look at these pictures. | ||
Seriously? | ||
Good lord. | ||
I don't know how people do this stuff. | ||
I do not know how people do this. | ||
unidentified
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Ugh. | |
And Anyway. | ||
Oh man. | ||
I just don't know what... Do you know me? | ||
Do you, like, know anything about me? | ||
What about watching this show and knowing things about me would make you think that I would be into that? | ||
unidentified
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Huh? | |
Geez. | ||
You think I'd be like, oh yeah, that sounds great. | ||
Stretch me out. | ||
And then I'd be like, oh man, thanks for the session. | ||
That felt great. | ||
Same time next week? | ||
Gross. | ||
Get away from me. | ||
I need a restraining order against you. | ||
Rapist. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Not even like a, like you're like a gay rapist. | ||
You're like a gay molester. | ||
Not even like a rapist, you're like a gay molester. | ||
Sorry. | ||
I probably, you know, you're probably being nice, but it's still super gay and molesting. | ||
Amplify sent $3. | ||
Dear Nick's mom, thank you for giving birth to a legend. | ||
unidentified
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True. | |
We love you. | ||
Hey, I love you mom. | ||
I didn't mean to fly out the handle, but you know, could you not text me during the show? | ||
Appreciate it, but I, and I love you, but come on now. | ||
We've talked about this. | ||
How is it banned? | ||
How is it banned? | ||
Let me see. | ||
How is it banned? | ||
Nick Fuentes hashtag is blocked on Twitter. | ||
The band man strikes again. | ||
Got my rally merch delivered today. - How is it banned? | ||
unidentified
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- Now I have a new favorite shirt. - How is it banned? | |
Let me see. | ||
unidentified
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How is it banned? | |
I don't see a ban. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, there it is right there. | |
So what do you mean? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
I don't see what you're talking about. | ||
unidentified
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Somebody help me understand that All right Keckdog sent $3. | |
I had no idea Joe the Boomer was a veteran ace pilot. | ||
It's nice to know when everything falls apart he will fly us out of here like Hitler at the end of the war. | ||
Yep, yeah. | ||
He'll be the last line of defense. | ||
Cookies sent $5. | ||
Companies used to have to prove that they contribute to the common good to remain in business. | ||
The founders saw this kind of thing coming. | ||
Great show. | ||
Thank you! | ||
Goated underscore bigot sent $3. | ||
Would you accept a celebrity boxing match with Jonathan Greenblatt if he was up for it? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
How big is he though? | ||
Is he a big guy? | ||
Probably not. | ||
unidentified
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He's Jewish. | |
Some Jews are big though. | ||
I would have to. | ||
No matter how tall he is, I would have to box him. | ||
So the answer is yes. | ||
unidentified
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He's old too. | |
Absolutely. | ||
Prayers up for Ethan Ralph. | ||
May he find and accept God and rid himself of vice. - Absolutely. | ||
Prayers up for Ethan Ralph. | ||
- General Zoomer sent $4. - A. - D. - A. - The thin red line sent $4. | ||
I think I got banned from banned video. | ||
Go figure. | ||
or did Alex take it down? - I think he banned me. | ||
I think I got banned from banned video. | ||
Go figure. - Mason Campbell sent $3. | ||
Breaking the bank for this one. | ||
Did you ever watch the Nelk/Trump podcast from last week? | ||
Brief thoughts? | ||
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- No, I didn't see it. - Pastrami Brother sent $3. | |
True! | ||
that anthony johnson nigga is also hated in the manosphere he doxes people's families and is an uppity jew you were right not to get involved with him yeah he's an obvious jew protestant grow i percent five dollars i vow to never super chat under five dollars to not just nicholas j fuentes but any cozy streamer you cannot be bought i have witnessed you refund multiple triple digit scs for many reasons trust the plan true and i appreciate that thank you | ||
Vincent sent $3 What are your top 3 Stanley Kubrick Kinos? | ||
For me and Barry Lyndon, the best movie of all time, Eyes Wide Shut, and The Shining. | ||
2001 is overrated. | ||
Let me look up his filmography. | ||
unidentified
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I'll forget one. | |
If I don't have it in front of me. | ||
I would say... | ||
I'm not a huge, to be honest with you, I'm not a big Stanley Kubrick fan. | ||
I'm not like a big movie, like on a technical level, a big movie guy. | ||
I just watch them because I like to watch them. | ||
So from that perspective, I'm not a huge fan. | ||
But I would probably say Dr. Strangelove, Full Metal Jacket, and 2001. | ||
Those would be my top three. | ||
and And I've only ever seen, though, in addition to those, I've seen Eyes Wide Shut, I've seen Shining, I've seen Clockwork Orange. | ||
I haven't seen the others, though, so I don't really have a big... I haven't seen all of his work. | ||
But he's not... I mean, Martin Scorsese is probably my favorite director, not Kubrick. | ||
Or Christopher Nolan, maybe. | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
I have to think about that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Very good. | ||
Kind of. | ||
unidentified
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- Yeah, yeah, very good. | |
- Corelix sent $10. | ||
You really are the main character of the youth. | ||
- Kind of, I kind of am, aren't I? - Protestant Groiper sent That's totally wrong. | ||
6 and 2 better than 5? | ||
- I'm not going to like this, but the correct ranking of the Star Wars films is three, Vi, two, V, four. | ||
I rest are fake and gay, but Obvro and Solo are better than seven, eight, or nine. | ||
To be clear, Synth is best, but I love the other five, very close calls. | ||
- No, no, that's all wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
That's totally wrong. | |
Six and two better than five? | ||
No chance. | ||
- Real human being sent $3. | ||
My wife left me. | ||
Change her mind. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
You're the first person to make that joke. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
Joe the Boomer sent $3. | ||
Nick and I will retire together on memory lane. | ||
And yes, I am streaming again daily 8 to 10 hours. | ||
Come watch drama-free, Black Bill-free escape with me on the old Gaming Grind. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Joe the Boomer Gaming Grind. | ||
Daily Brap is back. | ||
Can't wait. | ||
No, no, there will be no donating on behalf of other people. | ||
how much grow hyper credit $3 super chat buys you. | ||
unidentified
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- It's true, that is pretty invaluable. - Andrew Matt sent $10. | |
Hey Nick, thanks for all the early streams. | ||
Great shows all week. | ||
Also, $3 of this is for Michael in chat since he never donates. | ||
- No, no, there will be no donating on behalf of other people. | ||
Michael is here all the time, he never super chats. - Polish underscore mail sent Why are there restraints on this street table? | ||
unidentified
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Gross. | |
Gross. | ||
Don't worry about it. | ||
Disgusting. | ||
Absolutely disgusting thought. | ||
The thinker sent $3. | ||
In your objective opinion, does he stand a chance in 2024? | ||
He's the favorite. | ||
In my opinion, he's the favorite. | ||
We got a super chat on Cozy Chief Trumpster. | ||
Says, great show tonight, O7 King. | ||
Thanks a lot, Chief Trumpster, and great work this week. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
Oh wait, we got one more here. | ||
Beardson Beardley sent $5. | ||
Hi Nick, I heard you like Christopher Nolan. | ||
Have you ever heard of Memento? | ||
We should hang out Earl and watch it sometime. | ||
I love Memento. | ||
Memento is amazing. | ||
Very funny. | ||
Very good. | ||
Throwback. | ||
Yeah, we never did get to watch that one, did we? | ||
Well, thanks Beardson. | ||
Yep. | ||
The old Memento. | ||
Who could ever forget? | ||
That guy always come in with the worst racks. | ||
Under the Silver Lake. | ||
What a dog water, dog shit movie that was. | ||
Anyway, thank you Beardson. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Gotta see Memento still. | ||
I don't think I could ever watch it again out of principle. | ||
Okay, we got one more. | ||
Protestant grow-iper sent $5. | ||
Donating another $5 for even $20 because I hate odd numbers. | ||
Quirky. | ||
Okay, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
Remember to follow me here on Cozy to get a push notification when I go live. | ||
Follow me. | ||
Follow me on Rumble also right now. | ||
Follow me on Telegram, Gab, True Social. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 9 o'clock Central, 10 o'clock Eastern Time. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America First! |