Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be over. | ||
America First! | ||
America first. | ||
. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas Chaif-Wentz. | ||
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 tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Big stories. | ||
Interesting stories. | ||
Our feature story tonight will be talking all about Ron DeSantis' trip to Israel last week. | ||
I just missed it. | ||
I took a little bit of a break. | ||
Over the last week, which I'll explain that in a minute, but I just missed it. | ||
It happened right before catastrophe. | ||
And I'm sure you all saw, but the governor, Ron DeSantis, who is still unannounced in the 24th presidential election, makes his second foreign trip as governor, of course, to Israel. | ||
This time, he does a little bit of trickery and he arranges this whole big multi-country trip So he's actually going to Israel, South Korea, Japan, and I think he's finishing in the United Kingdom. | ||
But it's the second foreign visit. | ||
The first one was to Israel shortly after getting elected. | ||
And the second trip, although there's other stops, starts in Israel. | ||
And a lot of you saw there's actually two developments. | ||
The first is he signed a major bill into law. | ||
A bill for America, by the way, a bill for Florida. | ||
He signed a bill that prohibits certain kinds of flyering and other political activities in the state of Florida. | ||
Flew to Israel, though, to sign it, and essentially outlaws anti-Semitism. | ||
And then the secondary story, which a lot of people didn't cover very much, is that he met with several very high-powered Jewish donors, hardcore Jewish Zionist donors, In Israel as well. | ||
So he goes over there. | ||
Again, potentially weeks or a month before he announces, he signs a bill outlawing anti-Semitism in Florida, and then he goes and meets with Mariam Adelson, the wife of Sheldon Adelson, of course, as well as some others who we'll name. | ||
It's a very interesting trip. | ||
So we'll cover that whole story. | ||
It's the usual stuff. | ||
Not a lot of surprises there. | ||
Honestly, I don't know how people look at that and don't just instantly get it. | ||
It's like this guy has clearly been tapped, like he's been selected to be the replacement for Trump or the Trumpism without Trump. | ||
And like literally a week, two weeks before he's supposed to announce he flies to Israel to sign laws and like meet with Jewish donors and people are like, yeah, well, so what? | ||
If any, and I know, I know we all get it here, but if anybody did that to any other country, we would call them like a spy and put them in jail. | ||
I don't know how people still don't get it. | ||
It's 2023 and people are still, you know, they're not getting it. | ||
We'll talk about that. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about potentially a secret blacklist that Twitter is operating. | ||
As you know, Andrew Anglin was banned from Twitter last week. | ||
A great tragedy. | ||
One of the best reinstated accounts, actually. | ||
He was banned seemingly for no reason. | ||
But more conspicuously than this, because you could probably write that off and say, well, he's a little bit of a controversial poster. | ||
Some of the stuff he says you could say crosses a line. | ||
The same week though, last week, they banned Andrew Anglin, they banned Kevin MacDonald, author of Culture of Critique, they banned Tomislav Sunic, who's a major white nationalist, they banned James Edwards of the Political Cesspool, Varg, who is a white nationalist terrorist in Europe, and that's all in addition to Andrew Anglin, all at the same time. | ||
And that's, of course, months after they banned me, after they banned Ye. | ||
And, like I said, you could look at me, or you could look at Anglin, or even Ye for that matter, and say, well, we all see where they found the pretext to ban us. | ||
In the case of Ye, it was a swastika. | ||
In my case, they say it was a Twitter space ride declared war on Jews. | ||
Allegedly! | ||
Allegedly, I said something like that. | ||
But in all these other guys' cases, Kevin McDonald never got banned. | ||
He was never suspended, never reinstated. | ||
But for some reason got banned last week, his content notoriously tame. | ||
Same with Sunic, same with James Edwards, same with really all these guys. | ||
And so what it tells us that they all got cut down the same week, and that people like me and others remain banned, Suggests that these names are being pulled from some kind of list. | ||
And that they weren't banned, in other words, for their behavior, but they were banned at the behest of some activist group. | ||
We could probably surmise who or what group that might be. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
I'm excited to be back. | ||
I apologize for the absence. | ||
I was a little bit... I didn't say too much last week, but I was fully intending on doing a show on Thursday. | ||
Normal day. | ||
Nice weather. | ||
Sun was out. | ||
Now, you remember I actually got in a car accident two weeks ago. | ||
And it was relatively minor. | ||
I mean the damage to my car was Moderate. | ||
But I was unharmed a couple weeks ago. | ||
That's my new car. | ||
I took it out. | ||
I actually went to the doctor and some 16 year old girl flies into me, blasts into my trunk, rear side, passenger side. | ||
And so that car is getting fixed. | ||
So I go and I start driving my old car, which is also a Mustang convertible. | ||
I've been driving this old car around. | ||
I took it to the car wash. | ||
Got a $50 detail interior hand wash, exterior hand wash. | ||
I get a new battery. | ||
I get it all set up. | ||
The works. | ||
And so the other day, it's day like any other. | ||
I jump in the car. | ||
Nice weather. | ||
I take the top off. | ||
I go for a drive. | ||
This isn't... So I crashed a Mustang two weeks ago. | ||
I take out the old car. | ||
And I'm driving down the street. | ||
And I come to this intersection. | ||
And this guy cuts me off. | ||
Takes a left turn right in front of me. | ||
I veer out of the way. | ||
And I get hit by a semi-truck. | ||
I'm going 45, maybe 50. | ||
He's going 50. | ||
I hit a semi-truck head-on. | ||
Then I get hit by another car. | ||
And it was like a near fatal collision. | ||
The car is destroyed. | ||
It's destroyed basically from top to bottom. | ||
Airbags go off. | ||
The windshield shattered. | ||
The whole deal. | ||
I walk away from the scene. | ||
I'm a little bit... I'm a little stiff. | ||
Maybe you could tell. | ||
I'm a little bruised. | ||
I have a little bruise on my hand. | ||
But generally unharmed. | ||
I have some broken bones. | ||
I'm not going to tell you where. | ||
But I have some broken bones. | ||
I'm a little stiff. | ||
But I'm generally okay. | ||
No bleeding. | ||
No concussion. | ||
Nothing like that. | ||
So I got out of the car. | ||
I laid down on the sidewalk because I was just like in pain. | ||
They threw me in an ambulance. | ||
I went to the doctor. | ||
I went to the hospital. | ||
And so I had to cancel on Thursday. | ||
I was going to come back Monday, maybe Friday, but I had a follow-up today with the doctor, and they were going to tell me if I needed surgery or not, and they told me I don't. | ||
I was probably going to take, if I had to have a surgery, I would have taken a little time off, but they cleared me. | ||
I'm all good. | ||
Just a lot of rest and relaxation, that sort of thing. | ||
But I'm back doing the show, But we're back, okay? | ||
And mentally, I'm okay. | ||
I didn't hit my head. | ||
I didn't become retarded. | ||
Thank God! | ||
That might have been worse than dying. | ||
But anyway, it was a pretty scary event. | ||
I mean, I was just out there. | ||
I was saying to somebody the other day, I drive like a maniac. | ||
You know that. | ||
Well, I mean, not really. | ||
I actually drive really well. | ||
I have to say that. | ||
So, like, you know, they don't kill me next time or something and they say, well, he'd said he'd drive like a maniac. | ||
But I'm just saying I've driven. | ||
Of course, I was on the no fly list for over a year. | ||
So I had to drive thousands of miles across the country in the mountain, in the rain, in the snow, in a blizzard, at night, in the morning, half asleep, while I'm awake, like eating, drinking, drinking like non-alcoholic stuff of course, on my phone, like I mean you name it. | ||
I'm like a pretty, I drive, sometimes I go crazy fast, I get in car chases, I got in a car chase after my last car crash. | ||
She tried to flee the scene. | ||
I had to chase her down. | ||
And this time it's like I'm going the speed limit. | ||
I'm like a block away from my house. | ||
Clear as day. | ||
Boom. | ||
Near fatal. | ||
Boom. | ||
Boom. | ||
Truck. | ||
Car. | ||
Car destroyed. | ||
So it's pretty crazy how that stuff happens. | ||
There's always a roll of the dice. | ||
So I guess you gotta... | ||
So I guess you have to appreciate every day. | ||
I didn't think you had to do that. | ||
I'm thinking like, well, they'll shoot me, you know, they'll cut my head off. | ||
I'm going to get ice cream and it's like some guy cuts me off. | ||
I could have died. | ||
So thank God I'm still alive. | ||
I appreciate everybody's prayers, kind words. | ||
I know people said they're praying rosaries for me and things like that. | ||
I very much appreciate it. | ||
Pretty scary day, but But thank God I'm here. | ||
I'm alive. | ||
I could still do the show and generally unharmed. | ||
Because I was thinking like if it was just a little different, man, I would have either been dead or like crippled or brain exploded. | ||
Because that car is pretty old. | ||
That's like a 20 year old car. | ||
And they say that if the car is older than 10 years, more often than not, the airbag doesn't deploy. | ||
This is a 20-year-old car. | ||
So if the airbag didn't go off, if there was any kind of malfunction, if I just got hit a little differently, I would have been like an omelette. | ||
I would have been a cracked egg, cooking on the pavement. | ||
But, thank God, oh, God, see, so I'm still, I'm a little stiff still. | ||
But thank God I'm still here. | ||
I can still do the show. | ||
So anyway, so I most likely I'll be back tomorrow and Friday. | ||
I don't think there'll be too many interruptions It's a little tough getting dressed. | ||
It's a little tough doing stuff normally, but You know, I'm getting used to it. | ||
I'll be getting better every day. | ||
So I'll admit it was a little bit of a trick getting dressed here getting the shirt on getting the suit on because I'm a little a little banged up but But I'm okay. | ||
So, that's the important thing. | ||
So anyway, so that's why I was gone. | ||
I just wanted to explain that briefly before we dive into the show. | ||
And, um, I don't know if I'll read Super Chats. | ||
I'm gonna try and keep the show short for now. | ||
At least for the next, maybe for this week and next week, I might not do Super Chats. | ||
Only because, you know, I don't want to push myself too much. | ||
I want to be able to heal. | ||
So, we'll see. | ||
Look, I mean, I'm not gonna take a vacation from the work of doing the show. | ||
I might take a vacation from reading your inane comments. | ||
You know, I don't know if I could take that. | ||
I could take a semi-truck. | ||
I could take another car colliding with me. | ||
I could take two car crashes in a week. | ||
You know, there's a lot that a man can take, but Superchats, that's just gonna be That's a little too much so anyway so that that's sort of the plan with the show I like I said I intend to finish the week so probably a show tomorrow probably Friday definitely next week and it should be more or less normal not this Monday but the Monday after I hope you know depending on how quickly I recover | ||
So that's that. | ||
What else? | ||
Remember to follow me here on Cozy. | ||
Smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Also follow me on Rumble. | ||
Live every night on Rumble. | ||
Have all the replays there. | ||
Follow me on Gab Telegram. | ||
True Social. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
Also, hey, I didn't even... By the way, I did a collaboration with Sneeko today. | ||
I didn't even know. | ||
So maybe you missed it, but Sneeko did a big collaboration today with Leafy. | ||
Leafy's like, you guys probably know better than me. | ||
To be honest with you, I don't really know who he is, okay? | ||
I've heard his name a million times, but I was never really into that YouTuber thing like years ago, so I don't really know all the lore there. | ||
It's not really my wheelhouse. | ||
But I've seen some of his stuff. | ||
He was a big YouTuber back in the day. | ||
I guess he just got reinstated on Twitter and he's now did a big deal with Rumble. | ||
I guess they paid him like two million dollars or something. | ||
Anyway, so it's a big deal. | ||
Leafy did a stream with Sneeko this afternoon and everybody was telling me about it and telling me to watch it and I watched the whole thing. | ||
And actually, I'll be doing potentially a stream with Leafy tomorrow. | ||
Sneeko broached it with him and he was like, okay, sure. | ||
But by the end of it, he's like, is this guy a Nazi? | ||
Am I gonna get canceled? | ||
unidentified
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So I don't know. | |
It might happen. | ||
It might not. | ||
But anyway, they finished the stream and Sneeko calls me on FaceTime. | ||
And I, honestly, I didn't know he was streaming. | ||
But he calls me up, we have like a 20 minute conversation. | ||
Unbeknownst to me, he was live streaming it, so... I did a collaboration with Sneeko I didn't even know about. | ||
So, check that out. | ||
I'll probably forward that onto my Telegram after the show. | ||
Because I think the NJF Archive already downloaded it, uploaded it on Telegram. | ||
So I'll forward it so you can see that because I know I've been out of commission a couple days and then potentially I'll be doing a collab with Leafy and Sneeko tomorrow depending on you know again if he'll have me. | ||
So that and then the show and then a show Friday. | ||
What else? | ||
We stopped selling the merch if you didn't get it. | ||
Honestly, I really hate you. | ||
You know because well if you didn't get it, but you wanted it It's always the worst thing because I push whenever we're selling something like a ticket or a merch I tell everybody every day like we forward it to my telegram I put it on the show and I say it's limited time only You got to get it while you can and then invariably the next day everybody goes oh Come on, could you sell that again? | ||
I missed it. | ||
So, the merch sale wrapped up, but we're probably gonna open up the merch store soon with new designs. | ||
I'm thinking maybe a summer release? | ||
We'll see about that. | ||
But the merch store closed. | ||
I think that's all my announcements. | ||
And I think that's everything. | ||
That's everything that's new with me. | ||
That's enough, right? | ||
Two car crew! | ||
What's going on, man? | ||
I mean, these... | ||
Are they sending people? | ||
Are they paying people? | ||
I'm entering... I really... It's kind of scary, because I watched The Aviator on, I think, actually before the car crash, like Wednesday or Tuesday, and I'm entering into, like, my Howard Hughes, like, after he gets in the plane crash and he goes crazy. | ||
I'm sort of entering into that, you know, am I entering into my paranoid... But he was also right, but he was also correct to be paranoid at the same time. | ||
But am I entering like a paranoid, like damaged... Is it time to grow a mustache? | ||
Is it time to never leave my house? | ||
You know, pee in bottles? | ||
Watch the same movie 300 times? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Anyway, I have been watching a lot of TV. | ||
But I'm wondering, are they sending people to crash their car into me? | ||
Or is that God? | ||
Or is that the devil? | ||
unidentified
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Or is it the government? | |
Or is it the Jews? | ||
I already said the devil, but... | ||
But yeah, isn't that weird? | ||
I mean, I'm driving through, car crash, okay. | ||
Nice try. | ||
Nice try, Mossad. | ||
Sloppy job, Mossad, getting another car. | ||
Die, almost. | ||
Almost die, crash again. | ||
I'm staying out of cars for the time being. | ||
Gonna do a little bit of walking, you know, maybe... I don't know how else you get around, though, to be honest. | ||
Maybe I just don't leave. | ||
Maybe I just gotta hunker down like Julian Assange. | ||
Gotta have people bring me stuff or something. | ||
I don't know. | ||
They'll just bomb my house. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Anyway, so this is kind of like a weird month, but that's that. | ||
They're paying people to kill me. | ||
It didn't work yet. | ||
Thank God. | ||
So that's been my week, but we'll dive into the show here. | ||
And our first story is about this Twitter blacklist. | ||
Now maybe this is a controversial take. | ||
I don't know. | ||
You tell me. | ||
Let me know in the superchats what you think about this. | ||
But it's a little bit bizarre, because you've got Elon Musk, who's taken over Twitter, and he's saying that it's all free speech, that it's going to be everything permitted by the law, and they're giving these very specific definitions for hate speech. | ||
They're saying that it's about incitement or they have added something to their TOS about like denying tragic events like the Holocaust. | ||
They've been reinstating people. | ||
They've been doing some positive actions, but they've also been doing a lot of negative actions as well. | ||
It's been a little bit schizophrenic, a little bipolar. | ||
You know, it's one way one day and then the next day it's the opposite. | ||
But Elon Musk takes over, and I think that things on net have been improving, because a lot of good people have been reinstated, like a lot of Groypers, and we've already seen the benefits. | ||
Keith Woods, if you missed this, had a massive tweet, I think on Monday, 11 million impressions, or 11 million views, probably more impressions. | ||
Elon Musk replied to him, it got quote tweeted by Don Jr., by Jordan Peterson, And so that alone is proof that the Twitter that we have under Elon is better on net. | ||
Because that would never happen a year ago. | ||
It just wouldn't. | ||
Groipers wouldn't be there to retweet it or reply. | ||
Keith Woods wouldn't be there to push content like that. | ||
He wouldn't be verified. | ||
It just wouldn't happen. | ||
So, without a doubt, the Elon Musk takeover on net, so far, although, you know, and I'm trying to be even-handed here, Although it's been a little hot and cold, I think overall it's hard to argue that it hasn't been positive. | ||
That in general it hasn't had very positive effects. | ||
And actually Keith did a really good video about this on his YouTube. | ||
And he talks about how there may be a new wave of radicalism coming. | ||
These developments like Andrew Tate surging and Ye 24, the Twitter liberalization, It is creating the same dynamic that we had seven years ago when everybody got red-pilled the first time on poll and on Twitter. | ||
And so I think there's a lot to that. | ||
But here's the rub. | ||
As you know, Ye got banned back in December for... Honestly, it was political. | ||
They say that he got banned for the swastika inside the six-pointed star. | ||
That was their excuse, although I don't think that's the reason. | ||
The real reason is that he was talking about Jews. | ||
He went on Infowars and said he loved Hitler, and he did have a little bit of a personal beef with Elon, so they took him out. | ||
I came back for a day, and again, they had their reason for why they re-banned me. | ||
They reinstated me, then they re-banned me a day later. | ||
Again, they had their reason. | ||
According to people that I've talked to, they say I did a Twitter space, and apparently in the transcript, it says that I, like, declared war on Jews. | ||
Very, very possible that I said it exactly like that. | ||
Probably likely that I said it that way. | ||
Even though I didn't mean it in a literal... I didn't mean like, hey, take a... I meant it like, metaphorically, we're in a spiritual battle. | ||
Christian. | ||
Christian calendar, you know? | ||
That's a line from a yay song. | ||
A Christian movement. | ||
Christian futurism. | ||
We're not trying to harm anybody. | ||
But again, I think that was another pretext. | ||
That's something that they say I got banned for. | ||
Maybe they're right. | ||
Although, more likely than not, just like with Ye, I got banned for what I intended to use the platform for. | ||
Which was to talk about ADL, Israel, Jewish Power, race realism, that sort of thing. | ||
Probably there was massive pressure by ADL, SPLC, these types of groups, to remove me as soon as I got back on the platform. | ||
And I'm sure Twitter capitulated. | ||
So you had those two strikes. | ||
Now, And I'm gonna say this. | ||
In both of those cases, it really could be argued either way. | ||
You could say either me and Ye got banned for what it is theorized that we got banned for, or you could say that there was a political motivation. | ||
Of course, Twitter, as a business, will never come right out and say, uh, we banned them because we are pursuing a political agenda. | ||
I mean, they're not gonna say that. | ||
So we really don't have a way to know. | ||
We can speculate, we can conjecture, and we can make arguments for why based on whether the standard is equally applied to others and other evidence. | ||
We can make arguments for whether Ye and I were banned for the real reason they gave or for some other reason, but we can't really know. | ||
But last week, I think that whole conversation changed. | ||
Because last week, five people were banned, who really had nothing in common with each other, other than that they're all on the SPLC ADL hit list. | ||
And they're all anti- or counter-Jewish, and they all have some sort of white nationalist flavor. | ||
And so last week, Andrew Anglin was banned, Kevin Macdonald was banned, James Edwards was banned, Tom Sunic was banned, and Varg from Europe was banned. | ||
Five people, really with nothing in common, all with very different styles, all from very different backgrounds, from different continents. | ||
James Edwards, for example, runs a long-running talk radio show, and he's from Council of Conservative Citizens, I think it is. | ||
He's an old-school white nationalist type. | ||
Kevin McDonald! | ||
Now, he runs in those same circles, but he wrote a book, Culture of Critique, four-part series, and he's known for his work describing Jewish people as having a Uh, what do they call it, an ethnic strategy or something like that? | ||
Andrew Anglin is a very polemical writer, blogger at Daily Stormer. | ||
So, I mean, these people are all just those three. | ||
Different background, different style, different topics. | ||
But, what all five have in common is that, again, they all populate these lists, these blacklists, hitlists, By these activist groups that we know are involved with the government, that we know are involved with these trust and safety teams on every platform Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and probably still Twitter. | ||
And so if all those five people were banned last week, can you at this point argue that those five, plus me, plus Ye, were all banned in good faith for real violations of the TOS where the standards are evenly applied everywhere? | ||
Because that is an absurd argument. | ||
Kevin Macdonald is maybe the perfect reason why that's not the case. | ||
Kevin Macdonald never got banned on Twitter. | ||
He's flown under the radar for years. | ||
I think he's had an account since 2009 or something like that. | ||
Very long. | ||
And unlike Andrew Anglin, and unlike me, or unlike Ye, he doesn't go on there and talk in sometimes crude or vulgar or informal ways. | ||
He's an academic. | ||
He talks like an academic. | ||
How could you say that he was fairly banned under the new regime | ||
If he was somehow able to skirt through for the last six or seven years under Sagar, or not Sagar, what is it, Parag, Agrawal, whatever the guy's name is, if he was able to skirt by under the last regime on Twitter, Dorsey and the Indian, what then is he posting now, with the new terms of service, or even if they kept the same ones, that he wasn't posting then, | ||
Where he wasn't banned, but is now banned. | ||
Like, there's just no argument for that, other than that he is one of the most well-known, notable critics of Jewish power in America. | ||
Like, it's that simple. | ||
And the same is true of Tom Sunic, and the same is true of, well, to a lesser extent, the others, admittedly. | ||
I think Varg might have been banned for a time, I'm not 100% sure. | ||
And it's the same with me and Anglin and Yang. | ||
But you start to line these various cases up side by side and you start to see you got a big problem here. | ||
Which is that Twitter is, yes, they are using a blacklist from one of these activist groups. | ||
And it's a little bit complicated because on the one hand, a lot of people, and I've seen this, Anglin and Keith Woods and others have come out and said, well this just goes to show that Elon Musk is not following through. | ||
He promised free speech, he's not delivering. | ||
Because it's the same hijinks. | ||
They were notorious, Twitter specifically, although the others did the same thing. | ||
But Twitter as a platform was notorious for these kinds of ban waves, where they take out like five or ten people at once, and they do it at the behest of some group. | ||
And they started doing that, I think it was December 2017? | ||
Might have been 16 even, I don't remember exactly. | ||
I think it was after Charlottesville. | ||
They took out Amron, Jared Taylor, some notable others. | ||
They cracked down all at once. | ||
They did another big crackdown, I believe in Spring 2018 after Christchurch. | ||
And so a lot of people are saying, well, this is like literally not any different than what came before. | ||
This is like December 17 all over again. | ||
It's like April, May 2018 all over again. | ||
It's literally the same. | ||
Kill or ban 10 people from the hit list all at the same time for no reason. | ||
And it's true. | ||
I mean, that is just exactly what has transpired. | ||
I'll say this, though. | ||
Even with those bannings, if you look at it like a tug of war, like we're on one side of the rope and the Jews or the Jewish mafia, the globalists, whatever you want to call it, New World Order, Big Tech, they're not all synonymous, but they're all overlapping, concentric circles. | ||
If they're on one side and we're on the other, certainly Elon has helped pull the middle of the rope. | ||
I don't know, he's pulled our rope further to our side. | ||
Because even though you don't have me, which would be crazy if I were on Twitter, I'd be like unleashed. | ||
Even though you don't have me, even though you don't have Ye, even though you don't have these other guys, although it sucks, and quite frankly these are like the most important people, It's still better than it was. | ||
And quite honestly, it still has the potential to be better. | ||
Because all things considered, bear with me here, it still is relatively early in the game. | ||
This deal only went through in October. | ||
It's May. | ||
It's barely been a year. | ||
This is a huge company. | ||
It's not as big as Meta. | ||
It's not as big as Alphabet. | ||
But it's a very big company. | ||
It's a very important company. | ||
Because Twitter skews older, more educated, more political than the other platforms. | ||
Although it's smaller than the others. | ||
So it's a very critical platform. | ||
Very important in America. | ||
Very important for Newswire, current events. | ||
And so for a hostile takeover like we're seeing to occur at one of these companies, it's a really big deal. | ||
And so if we're here in May, and Andrew Anglin is banned after he was reinstated for months, and I got banned, but Keith Woods gets 11 million impressions on a single tweet talking about hate speech laws, And if all the Groypers came back and if I come back they can juice me and I could get a space up to thousands of viewers. | ||
You know what? | ||
We are better off than we were in December 2021 when everyone got banned for being in my space. | ||
We are better off than we were when everybody had to be on a burner, not just me. | ||
We're better off than we were in 2017 when more people were being banned rather than some people were being reinstated. | ||
So, My take on it is something like this. | ||
I actually think there is still hope. | ||
I think there is still time. | ||
Because the company has got some challenges. | ||
Like the ADL is extremely powerful. | ||
And right now Twitter's an insolvent company. | ||
And that being on Elon Musk's portfolio, like literally threatens to bankrupt him as a guy. | ||
Like if this deal doesn't work out, if Twitter is able to kill Twitter's revenue stream, which they can do in a multitude of ways, This is a giant black hole on Elon Musk's balance sheet that is going to consume his fortune or a great deal of it. | ||
So point being is it's a very very complicated affair here and it still hasn't been a lot of time and I imagine that we clearly are seeing a capitulation and to the extent that we are I imagine that there is a calculation being made that says something like, if we can ban these 10 people, but reinstate almost anybody else, we're ahead. | ||
And maybe we get to the point this year where they re-update the TOS. | ||
I think they've still been waiting to do that. | ||
And they make Twitter a place where people don't get permanently suspended. | ||
And maybe they find a way to monetize the platform with these subscriptions. | ||
And they're trying to find really novel ways to monetize the platform. | ||
Maybe there'll be a day when they can bring those five people back on. | ||
Five or ten people. | ||
And that's how I look at it. | ||
So I, you know, I'm not a fan of it of course. | ||
I wish that I could be on Twitter really like more than anything. | ||
But by the same token I understand that people like me and these others on this list were like the most wanted. | ||
And sometimes that's how you have to look at it. | ||
And here's the thing. | ||
The way that I see it with Elon or even guys like Tucker for that matter or Trump | ||
is it's not you have to be very careful not to purity spiral and what I mean by that is there's a very fine line between people that are trying and succeeding and doing the right thing you know they're doing a good job for the right reasons and people that are like not in it for the right reasons what I mean by that is I said this on the call with Sneko earlier which was streamed | ||
I said that the problem with Tucker isn't that he's a guy that's on our side but doesn't get it right every time or only agrees with us 80% of the way. | ||
I said because if that were the case I would support him. | ||
I said the problem is there's a lot of evidence that he's like a spy. | ||
There's a lot of evidence with the CIA father and with him working with Sidney Blumenthal's kid to get me in trouble. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
And it's constant. | ||
Like more frequently than he was ever supportive of our agenda. | ||
Constant putting down of white identity. | ||
To me I don't identify that as a guy that's with us doing their best. | ||
I identify that as like a nefarious actor who there's this coincidence that we maybe share a lot of views in common but is like clearly on the other team. | ||
Now I don't know about Tucker. | ||
I said that when he got fired. | ||
Like I'm I'm really asking a question here. | ||
Just like I did with J.D. | ||
unidentified
|
Vance. | |
Just like I've done with a lot of people. | ||
And by the way, he attacked me first. | ||
Relevant. | ||
And so there's all the difference in the world between a guy like Tucker, who clearly... There's some problems there that need to be explained. | ||
Versus a guy like Elon Musk. | ||
Where he's really doing some damage. | ||
Like he's really doing a good job. | ||
And it seems more likely than not that he's not a spy. | ||
Why would a spy do this? | ||
Why would a spy buy the platform to amplify these kinds of people? | ||
Now some people could say that he's with the PayPal mafia like Peter Thiel and he's in thick with the Jews like Lex Fridman and the others. | ||
Possible. | ||
And he's done this to elevate the Claremont guys and like the NatCon types. | ||
I think that's plausible. | ||
But I think that when I look at it from the ground level it's like it's making a difference for the good guys. | ||
It's making a difference in the right way. | ||
When I look at Tucker's show I'm like this isn't helping anybody. | ||
Did Tucker's show make Trump more conservative? | ||
Did it make the voters more conservative? | ||
Like, literally, no. | ||
Think about that. | ||
Look at the polling. | ||
As of 2022, the midterms, DeSantis was, like, neck and neck with Trump. | ||
Now, how is that possible in a world where Tucker's, like, the most influential conservative, if he's such a benefit? | ||
I'm not, like, blaming him for that. | ||
But people go, oh my gosh. | ||
It's like, seriously? | ||
Did he convince Trump to be more conservative? | ||
Did he convince DeSantis to be? | ||
Did he move the electorate in a significant way? | ||
Did he help us in the midterms? | ||
Did he stop... | ||
The Steel in 2020? | ||
Like, I just don't see it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
He platformed a lot of Jews. | ||
Like, he platformed, not to be blunt, but he platformed Mensch's mold bug, and he platformed Jewish age pervert, Jewish age pedophile, and all these other types. | ||
Matt Walsh. | ||
Oh, thanks a lot. | ||
But every time that there was an opportunity to platform somebody like me or like whoever else who's actually on the right side of things, it just never happened. | ||
And same thing with the talking points. | ||
I mean, he would go as far as to say that we've got a voting problem, but never that we've got like a race thing going on. | ||
Anyway, not to make it about him, but point is, We've got to look at these things objectively and I tend to see what Elon is doing at Twitter and to some extent what Trump is doing as... I see it as a lot of negative but more positive. | ||
Still a very negative situation. | ||
Like Twitter is still not a great place to be. | ||
Same thing with the Trump campaign. | ||
It's like still not a great... I, you know, I wouldn't write home about it. | ||
But overall, probably better than what we would otherwise have, what we would have before. | ||
And so it's important to kind of parse those things out. | ||
So that's my feelings on Twitter, but I think this proves these actions, these enforcement actions we saw last week, to me that proves beyond a doubt that ADL is still the boss over there. | ||
To a significant extent. | ||
Like, they're still calling them up and saying, you can't have these people on. | ||
And they're even doing it on a country-by-country basis. | ||
Like, all of the patriotic alternative guys in the United Kingdom got banned all of a sudden one night a couple months ago. | ||
And you know that was the UK government calling up Twitter and saying, these guys gotta go. | ||
Like, you know that's what happened. | ||
And I'm sure they're doing the same thing all over Europe and elsewhere. | ||
But as I said, it's a very complex operation and I remain hopeful that it could become much better in the future. | ||
So I'm still holding out hope. | ||
But anyway, that's Twitter. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our featured story here about DeSantis. | ||
This is pretty good stuff. | ||
Like I said, I was about to cover this and then I got in an accident, but in case you missed it, last week Ron DeSantis made another trip to Israel. | ||
Which, fun fact, he's only ever went on foreign trips to Israel. | ||
Literally nowhere else. | ||
Isn't that weird? | ||
He got into Congress, and he literally only made foreign trips to Israel as a congressman in Florida. | ||
I don't know if it was two or four, but he was in Congress for a few terms before he ran for governor in 2018, and I think it was at least two he went to Israel. | ||
One of them, he took credit for pressuring Trump to move the embassy. | ||
Because with the embassy move, every president since I think 1967 has, like technically they're supposed to move the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. | ||
But I think it's every six months or every quarter they sign a waiver that says, we'll do it next time, we'll do it the next quarter. | ||
They have to sign, every president for the last 50 years has had to sign this waiver that says, we'll do it some other time. | ||
And Trump did that. | ||
When Donald Trump got into office in 17, DeSantis makes a trip to Israel and says, like, oh, I know Trump will make good on his promise even though he signed the waiver, but he better get on that. | ||
That was as a congressman. | ||
Okay? | ||
He gets in as governor and the first thing, like, the first thing he does in end of 2018 or beginning of 2019 is he flies to Israel as the governor and signs a bill there outlying BDS, which is Boycott Divest Sanction, on Florida public college campuses. | ||
First thing he does! | ||
So you're in Congress. | ||
This is your political career, by the way. | ||
You're in Congress, you're flying to Israel all the time, and you're even anti-Trump inasmuch as he's not pro-Israel enough. | ||
But that's where you go and fly and do all your business. | ||
You come back here, you get elected to be governor, and the first thing you do when you become governor is go to Israel and sign bills for Florida over there outlawing anti-Israel civilly protected rights in Florida. | ||
Here we are again. | ||
It's 2023. | ||
Ron DeSantis says that he is going to make an announcement about whether or not he'll run at the end of the Florida legislative session, which is coming up this month. | ||
So we'll know very soon. | ||
And all signs, although some say it's contentious inside the DeSantis camp, but all signs are pointing to he's going to run. | ||
We don't know, though. | ||
Now, weeks before his tentative run, what does he do? | ||
Just like what he did in Congress, just like what he did after he got elected governor, right before he runs for president, flies to Israel. | ||
And this time, he's doing a lot. | ||
This is according to Axios. | ||
It says, DeSantis, considered Trump's top rival for the GOP nomination, is expected to announce his presidential exploratory committee in the coming weeks. | ||
Politico reported in October 2022 that Adelson, widow to the late billionaire Sheldon Adelson, told several possible Republican candidates that she plans to stay neutral in the 2024 primary. | ||
DeSantis arrived in Israel on Wednesday as part of a four-leg trip that could help the likely presidential candidate boost his foreign policy credentials. | ||
DeSantis met with Israeli President Isaac Herzog before attending a dinner at the Museum of Tolerance. | ||
Where he was the guest of honor, according to sources in the room. | ||
Guest of honor, a week before he announces, in Israel with the President. | ||
Go figure. | ||
The dinner was hosted by Larry Mitzel, a Denver-based business executive and philanthropist who founded the museum. | ||
So he's a Denver-based businessman, Jew, who's hosting a dinner at the museum that he founded in another country, Israel, for DeSantis. | ||
Business as usual is normal stuff, right? | ||
In 2016, Mitzel was the finance chairman for the Trump campaign in Colorado. | ||
DeSantis sat in between Adelson and Mitzel during the dinner in Jerusalem, which lasted for two hours. | ||
The Adelsons were early backers of DeSantis when he ran for governor in 2018, contributing at least $500,000 to the Friends of Ron DeSantis PAC. | ||
Sheldon and Miriam Adelson were also Trump's biggest donors. | ||
In the 2020 election, $90 million of the more than $200 million they contributed to Republican groups and candidates went to Trump's presidential campaign. | ||
So they gave $100 million in 2016 to Trump and $90 million in 2020. | ||
Neutral in 24, but big supporters of DeSantis hosting this dinner for him. | ||
Trump awarded Miriam Adelson the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2018 and Sheldon Adelson died in 21. | ||
Mitzel, meanwhile, has been one of the biggest donors to Trump and Republican groups in Colorado. | ||
Lee Sampson, another GOP donor, also attended the dinner. | ||
In 2019, Sampson held a fundraiser for Trump at his Beverly Hills home. | ||
DeSantis briefly addressed the attendees of the dinner, but did not speak about his political plans or presidential campaign. | ||
Instead, he focused on the U.S.-Israel relationship, according to sources who attended. | ||
So, nothing to see here. | ||
Just all the American Jewish donors that put up all the money for all the Republicans having a secret dinner in Israel with the next presidential candidate. | ||
Totally normal. | ||
I love when people ask me, they're like, so what? | ||
All the Jews are in on it? | ||
What do they do? | ||
Go to beatings? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, that's sort of exactly what they do. | ||
They do it every Saturday, in fact. | ||
It's called Shabbat. | ||
They do it at CPAC. | ||
They do it in Israel. | ||
They do it in D.C. | ||
That's what they do. | ||
And if you look at all the people that supply, like, a lot of the money, not just to the Republican candidates, but to the whole conservative movement, the investors, the donors, they're all Jewish. | ||
And they're all supporting Republicans because they see Republicans as the ones that will support Israel. | ||
They see the New Left, which is now increasingly becoming a party of brown grievance, including Palestinians, as being hostile to Israel. | ||
So all the South Florida Jews | ||
And all of the Hasidim and the Orthodox Jews and all, a lot of these big executives, these Adelson types, these big money Zionists, they're pouring money, and these entities wouldn't exist, they're pouring money into the conservative political infrastructure and separately, but also of course related, all the Republican candidates, big Republican senators, the presidential candidates, | ||
And, like, a lot of people might say, oh, well, all, like, a lot of the money is coming from Jews. | ||
Like, if you look at the top ten Republican donors, most of them are Jewish. | ||
And a lot of people would say, so what? | ||
Who cares? | ||
They happen to be Jewish because Jews are rich, and they're rich because they're smart, and they're smart because they're educated, and they're educated because of their culture. | ||
And it goes something like that, usually. | ||
But nothing to see here. | ||
Just because they're all Jewish, it doesn't really mean anything. | ||
It's really just selection bias. | ||
Of course they're all going to be Jewish, because rich people give money to campaigns. | ||
They're all rich. | ||
Well, what if I told you that not only do they supply like $200 million every cycle, that's just between Sheldon Adelson and his wife. | ||
That's just technically like a single donor. | ||
Not only does one donor supply that much money in a cycle, but you got three of them, three of the biggest donors, and they're all meeting together in the Jewish country. | ||
They're all meeting together at the museum that they founded where they live in Israel part-time. | ||
With the next candidate for the Republican Party for President. | ||
Like, okay, so then would you say that there's something up? | ||
So nobody thought it was conspicuous when you look at the top 10 Democrat and top 10 Republican donors, and most of them are Jewish. | ||
Even though Jews are 2% of the population, nobody bats an eye. | ||
And they don't bat an eye at the over-representation everywhere else. | ||
What about they're all getting together and they're all hosting a dinner in their own country that isn't America. | ||
Now they're all getting together to supply literally hundreds of millions of dollars to American political races and they're plotting that out in a foreign country, literally the Jewish country. | ||
So, I mean, like, if you were trying to make fun of me, you would say, okay, Nick Fuentes, so what? | ||
You're some kind of anti-Semite? | ||
So what? | ||
You think that the Jews control politics with their money? | ||
What do you think? | ||
They all get together, they all get together on what? | ||
A secret island? | ||
And they get together at a dinner, and they plot it all out? | ||
You think that they invite the presidential candidates? | ||
Because, of course, the politicians don't have any real say. | ||
So you think that all these Jewish donors that put up all the money, you think that they control politics with their money, and they all get together and they host a dinner and they invite all the politicians and they tell them that you better support the Holocaust Museum and the State of Israel or else we're not gonna give you money and not elect you. | ||
You're telling me that's how it works? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yes, that actually, 100% that is exactly, that's like literally what's going on. | ||
Like that's, it happened last week. | ||
And it happens all the time. | ||
And it plays out in D.C. | ||
and L.A. | ||
and South Florida and New York and Israel like all the time for the last 70 years. | ||
Yes. | ||
Even for the last 100 years. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
People go, oh well, you know, I just, I don't know if I buy that. | ||
Okay, well... Numbers, unlike the Jewish media, don't lie. | ||
Okay? | ||
These are the facts. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
Now, get this, it gets better. | ||
So he sits with Miriam Adelson and Lee Sampson and this Mizzel, Mitzel, whatever. | ||
Then he signs another bill. | ||
It says Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed legislation cracking down on hate crimes Thursday morning after a high-profile speech in Israel. | ||
Known as the Public Nuisances Bill, the legislation passed Wednesday by the legislature makes it a felony for hate groups to harass people for their religion or ethnicity. | ||
Florida had the fourth highest number of anti-Semitic incidents last year, according to the ADL, of course. | ||
ADL, which is supported by Israel, they literally, they got convicted in the 1990s of being foreign agents for Israel. | ||
Nobody ever talks about that. | ||
So, I'll say this in a sec. | ||
the sack. | ||
DeSantis is in Israel as part of a trade mission. | ||
Netanyahu says he's a friend of Israel. | ||
We talked about Iran and U.S.-Israel relations. | ||
Okay, so you're in Florida, and these guys are going around like Handsome Truth and these other types, and they're harassing Jewish people. | ||
They're They're, like, yelling at them with their megaphones and putting up flyers and things like that. | ||
ADL, which is a group funded by Israel, and it's a Jewish group, goes out there and every time somebody, like, puts up a flyer, they say, that's an anti-Semitic incident. | ||
So somebody puts up a sign that says, like, hey, the Jews control the media. | ||
They're like, that's an anti-Semitic hate crime. | ||
So, the ADL, which is a Jewish group funded by Israel, like, they are assigned the responsibility of tracking these. | ||
So they come out with their report that says anti-Semitic incidents were up 10 billion percent last year. | ||
According to us, the Jewish, the anti-Jewish hate group that's run by Jews and funded by Israel. | ||
The governor of Florida then flies to Israel, which funds the ADL, and signs legislation for Florida, for America, to address that issue. | ||
And it's like, quite clearly, there's a conflict of interest going on. | ||
If Jews are giving Ron DeSantis money to run, and then Ron DeSantis signs a bill to address a problem presented by the Jewish groups that funded his campaign, and he flies to the Jewish country to sign it to appease them at a dinner with them, it's like, okay, so who's really in control here? | ||
Is it Americans? | ||
Is it voters? | ||
Is it even the politicians? | ||
This is a level of foreign subversion, which is so blatant and so obvious. | ||
And, like, can you even call these people American? | ||
They're like aliens. | ||
Even though they live here, reside here, make their money here, and everything else, if they're starting museums in another country and hosting dinners for our head of state candidate, are you operating on our behalf or their behalf? | ||
I think that's a valid question. | ||
And I think we all know the answer. | ||
And this stuff should be offensive to anybody. | ||
It really doesn't matter if you're right-wing or left-wing. | ||
If you're an American, to the extent that you even believe in the founding mission of this country, you believe that the people of this country are sovereign. | ||
That's the big idea. | ||
Everybody thinks the idea is democracy. | ||
That's not the big idea. | ||
The big idea, which is in the Declaration, is that all men are created equal. | ||
And what that means is that we are all sovereign. | ||
It means that the king can't kill us if he wants to. | ||
It means that because we are equal and because we are created beings, it means that we should be able to live unmolested. | ||
We should be able to live. | ||
We should be able to be free. | ||
We should be able to pursue the things that we want in our lives, our happiness, so it says in the Declaration, with our faculties. | ||
And it proceeds from that. | ||
If God gave us life, and if God gave us a memory, a will, and an understanding, and other faculties, and if we have to toil and eat to live, then it follows that it's our right, it's our prerogative as people to toil and to feed ourselves and to multiply in the way that we'd like. | ||
It would be unjust for arbitrary oppression, arbitrary killing, arbitrary restrictions. | ||
Now, there are restrictions for the public good, but we're talking about does a ruler have the right, arbitrarily, at their whim, at their discretion, to kill, to oppress, to imprison? | ||
And according to the founding documents, the answer is no. | ||
And so it follows then, so the Declaration is in 1776. | ||
The Constitution isn't ratified until 17, I think it's 88 or 1789. | ||
It was a process. | ||
But so the Constitution is ratified and what the Constitution does is it allows the people who are sovereign, who they have a right to live and to be free and they have a right to govern themselves, they delegate their right to govern themselves to a government. | ||
I've talked about this a lot on the show, I know. | ||
But they delegate that sovereignty through this contract, the Constitution, through their elected representatives to a government, a federal government, which is created by the Constitution. | ||
The Constitution is a contract which outlines that government. | ||
And as you know, the Constitution enumerates the powers that the government will have, because it's the sovereign people that give the government its authority, and the Constitution is the contract that binds. | ||
It's the contract that sets the terms for them to delegate that power. | ||
So, to the extent that you believe in that, if you're a real American, Then you understand what a perversity it is for foreigners to be telling us what to do, because that's what this is. | ||
Foreign money, foreign espionage, foreign groups. | ||
They're a spiritually foreign people. | ||
They're not Christian. | ||
They do not... | ||
Believe me, they don't see themselves as like us. | ||
They don't see themselves as spiritual descendants of George Washington or Columbus. | ||
They see themselves as spiritual descendants of Theodore Herzl, or Maimonides, or Judas Iscariot, or Moses, or whatever, or some rabbi. | ||
Now, maybe you could say that's a little bigoted. | ||
Maybe you're right. | ||
But at the bare minimum, without even going there, without even going there, You would say that it is a perversity that there is this manipulation by a foreign regime. | ||
Forget about there and alien people living in our land. | ||
At the minimum, it is a perversity against the founding mission of this country and what this whole country is about. | ||
That a foreign nation and foreign multinational groups, billionaires, would be influencing what goes on at the federal and state level like this. | ||
Like it's not, they're not just controlling the federal government, which they are, and so they're ruling us, like we're not even being ruled by our own despot, we're being ruled by a despot from the Middle East, from people that hate God, from people that hate Jesus. | ||
Forget about, I would rather have a brutal Christian dictator from America than have a, than be ruled by these donors, the donor class, the whatever, And they all hate Jesus and they're all from the Middle East. | ||
Seriously? | ||
It's worse! | ||
And so not only do you have it going on at the federal level, that our federal government answers to a foreign nation, but it's even the states. | ||
Do you know how sick that is? | ||
Because it's also in the founding mission that we have federalism. | ||
And it comes from this idea from Rousseau and from other Enlightenment thinkers that The smaller the government, the more representative it can be. | ||
And therefore, the more responsive it can be to the needs of the people. | ||
The more local, the better. | ||
But Rousseau also says that different states will evolve and devolve over time, and different peoples will call for different kinds of government, and it's just a little complicated. | ||
But we have the Constitution that enumerates the powers for the federal government, and the rest is left up to the states. | ||
So the people could travel within the country between the states and the state not like state as in a synonym for government, but the these United States the states as a was like a province. | ||
That they would have the real power to regulate public life. | ||
That it would be the states, although they can't violate an individual's rights, they could, they would have the jurisdiction in various matters like we've seen recently, like with abortion, which was just overruled, or like with gay marriage until recently, or with marijuana, or a whole host of other things. | ||
Even that is now being compromised, where Ron DeSantis is the governor of a state, And he's flying out to Israel and taking orders from them and banning free speech. | ||
Banning leafleting. | ||
That's First Amendment classic. | ||
First Amendment protected speech. | ||
To put up a flyer? | ||
Banning BDS on a public university? | ||
I mean this country's like built on libraries and public universities. | ||
And they're saying you can't boycott a foreign nation on the public university campus. | ||
He signed that bill in Israel too. | ||
No matter what you believe, whether you're Christian, not Christian, right-wing, left-wing, you cannot argue objectively it is a perversion and is a total betrayal of what this country's about. | ||
We could go further. | ||
I mean, we could go much further. | ||
And the fact that, and this matters as well, this is a Christian nation, and these people are also not Christian. | ||
That's the worst part of all. | ||
Not only are we being co-opted and subverted and controlled, but by the only nation that hates Jesus. | ||
The only nation... Well, I shouldn't say that. | ||
North Korea hates Jesus too. | ||
And, you know, maybe China to some extent, and some of these Central Asian countries. | ||
But certainly... | ||
It is one of the only ones that hates Jesus, that tried to outlaw the gospel a couple weeks ago. | ||
And it just so happens that they're the ones to rob this Christian nation of its freedom and of its sovereignty. | ||
That's the worst part of all. | ||
And when you see stuff like this, I don't know how anybody could deny it. | ||
Because not only do you have DeSantis as the guy that's being groomed to replace Trump, not only is that going on, but at the same time the entire conservative infrastructure that's been built up around him to succeed the Trump movement is the same way. | ||
Claremont, all these intellectuals which are going to comprise a new think tank class at Claremont, they're funded by Israel too. | ||
They're funded by Paul Singer. | ||
And they wrote some big piece about how Netanyahu is like Winston Churchill in a good way. | ||
And the same goes for National Conservatism which had J.D. | ||
Vance and Josh Hawley and Marco Rubio and DeSantis and everybody and it's run by who? | ||
Your Amazonian dual citizen. | ||
To who? | ||
To what country? | ||
Israel. | ||
Fox News, it just fired Tucker. | ||
Owned by the Murdochs. | ||
Rupert Murdoch loves to host Netanyahu in his London condo on every visit. | ||
It's like everywhere you look you see this. | ||
It's undeniable. | ||
And so at this point the only thing is that people know that if they talk about it that they're just gonna get fired, banned from Twitter like we just talked about, bank account frozen, etc, etc. | ||
But at this point it's indisputable. | ||
And that's why the Twitter thing is so important, to sort of tie it in. | ||
People need to know. | ||
And that's, and by the way, this is where everything was going before they started censoring everybody. | ||
That's why they hate America First. | ||
That's why they hate Trump. | ||
Because when Trump said America First, Americanism, not globalism, you know who heard that? | ||
They did. | ||
Because you can't have Americanism and America First with this. | ||
It just doesn't work. | ||
Contradicts itself. | ||
And they know that. | ||
And that's why you see this major scheme to overthrow Trump politically, in the media, destroy his base, everything that you see against me, everything you see against Ye, Sneko, Trump, it's all coming from this. | ||
They do not want America to be a free nation. | ||
That's what it comes down to. | ||
Hundreds of millions of dollars. | ||
You know what you could do with that kind of money? | ||
And people say that it's just not plausible, like they couldn't pull it off. | ||
Of course they can, and they do. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
So that's DeSantis' trip. | ||
I don't know how you ignore that. | ||
It's a pretty big deal. | ||
And we'll keep an eye on that. | ||
But that's gonna do it for me on the show. | ||
Like I said, I'm probably not gonna read Super Chats. | ||
I would like to read them at some point, maybe next week, maybe Friday, if you sent any in. | ||
But I just can't do a really long show. | ||
I'm in a lot of pain. | ||
You know, I'm still a human being. | ||
I gotta recover a little bit, okay? | ||
So that's gonna do it for me on the show tonight. | ||
If you sent in Super Chats, I appreciate it. | ||
I'd really like to try to get to them at some point. | ||
I can't make any promises, but... because I don't know how my condition will be, but... But we'll see about that. | ||
I'll let you know. | ||
But thanks to anybody who did Super Chat. | ||
Thanks everybody for watching. | ||
Remember, as always, smash the follow button here on Cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Follow me on Rumble, Gab, Telegram, 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 the Super Chatters, everybody that watches the show, we love you, and I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | |
It's going to be only America first! | ||
America first! | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America. | ||
America First! |