Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
The human generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human. | ||
Americanism not global. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position would view America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | |
Sipping wine, having some pasta, having some pizza. | ||
Oh, I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm, well, I'm not normal. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a big, I'm working. | |
I'm original, all right? | ||
I'm an original. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved this point. | ||
I feel like a Nero on Casino. | ||
Where they got the signing for the casino. | ||
Where they got the signing for the casino. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Goldberg. | ||
Where they got the signing for the casino. | ||
I feel like a Nero on Casino. | ||
Where they got the signing for the casino. | ||
Where they got the signing for the casino. | ||
Americanism, not not glory! | ||
Globalism will be our credo. - Yeah. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day... | ||
The American people will come first. | ||
The American people will come first. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Big, huge day. | ||
2024 Republican presidential primary has officially begun. | ||
As you know, Ron DeSantis announced, posted an announcement video, and hosted a Twitter space with Elon Musk and David Sachs. | ||
So we talked about this all last night. | ||
I gave you a little preview of what we were going to see tonight. | ||
And I did a stream earlier this evening covering the Twitter space. | ||
We listened to it live and I gave a quick reaction on it earlier, but we're gonna go into it in detail. | ||
And I already gave my thoughts on this a little bit, but I'll just restate it. | ||
I think it was an interesting concept. | ||
Novel, innovative, new idea. | ||
They accomplished what they set out to, which is to generate a lot of buzz and get a lot of eyeballs on DeSantis. | ||
They succeeded in that regard. | ||
Saw was a total flop. | ||
It was boring, it was low energy, and although it was innovative and interesting, it didn't work. | ||
Not every idea which is innovative and different is always an improvement. | ||
And I'll get more into detail on this later. | ||
Specifically, I want to get into the structure of it and judging what we saw this evening, it gives us a really good idea of what this campaign is going to be about and how Ron DeSantis will be a foil for Trump and what he's going to be saying out there on the campaign trail when he starts to stump later this week in Iowa and New Hampshire in the early battleground states. | ||
But, specifically this last night, the reason why it's a winner is because, comparatively, he got way more views, way more eyeballs than he would if he just gave a speech. | ||
But it almost doesn't even matter because a speech would have been better. | ||
So, fewer people would have seen it, I think, ultimately. | ||
But what they did see here was not good. | ||
It was first of all on a technical level, which I've talked about a lot before, which is to say that Donald Trump being a, not an architect, but being a real estate developer, being a Hollywood celebrity, being involved in all kinds of projects, he has a sense for presentation. | ||
He has a sense for practical matters. | ||
When you're a real estate developer, You have to think of everything. | ||
Design, salesmanship, it involves borrowing. | ||
There are so many facets to it. | ||
And so Trump is a guy, above all else, who is an extremely competent executive. | ||
He is somebody who can see through a very large, very complex project that takes years. | ||
That's a skill. | ||
He knows what needs to be there. | ||
He's thinking about, and he said this in his first announcement speech in 2016, he's thinking about the crowd size, he's thinking about the temperature of the room, he's thinking about the presentation, the backdrop. | ||
He used to say in 2016 that the media wouldn't show his crowds, No other politician would think of it like that, but he would say, why doesn't the media zoom in on the logistics and the practical matter of running the campaign? | ||
The visual, the venue, the atmosphere, the experience. | ||
Now here's what I'm getting at. | ||
Donald Trump understands that when you go in for something extremely important, like an announcement, that's a first impression. | ||
Introducing yourself as a candidate It's like a job interview. | ||
You're demonstrating in that first introduction your competence, believe it or not. | ||
If you can't put together a rally, how can you put together a campaign? | ||
How can you run the White House? | ||
How can you accomplish what you set out to accomplish? | ||
Now, Trump wouldn't be so, so critical, but I'm sure there are a lot of young people on the DeSantis team who are very ambitious and very fast-paced, and they're very interested in the next thing, the newest technology. | ||
And they said, what if we did a space with Elon Musk? | ||
What if we did a Twitter space? | ||
And they go, yeah, that's a great idea. | ||
And they don't tell you who's going to host this. | ||
And so on and so on. | ||
All the reasons why it was a technical disaster. | ||
Like, for example, they didn't start on time, and then the servers were overwhelmed because they didn't control the servers, and the people that did didn't anticipate the traffic, and it wasn't under their control, and it had never been done before, and they were unable to test it. | ||
Like, there's all these things, because he's a policy wonk. | ||
Donald Trump is a builder. | ||
Donald Trump has built buildings. | ||
He's produced a television show. | ||
So he's brought a product to market. | ||
When you build a skyscraper in New York City, it's got to be up to code. | ||
You have to secure the air rights. | ||
It has to attract buzz. | ||
There's a lot that goes into it, and if you don't do those things, then you fail, and you lose money, and you're a joke. | ||
And so for 40 years, Trump has delivered product to the market. | ||
Buildings. | ||
Hotels. | ||
A television show. | ||
He's been in movies. | ||
Clearly, he's a lawyer. | ||
Or, I don't know if he was actually a lawyer. | ||
Lawyer Lee. | ||
He was in the Navy. | ||
But this is not somebody who has ever had that level of responsibility. | ||
You run a campaign. | ||
You talk a lot. | ||
You write a lot. | ||
But you're not actually delivering anything. | ||
And that's where, honestly, Donald Trump has a real edge in government. | ||
DeSantis would probably have the edge in government because he's been a legislator, he's been a governor, he understands the procedural rules, he understands the law, but that doesn't give him any advantage in planning an event, visuals, salesmanship, that sort of thing, which Trump excels at. | ||
I've been thinking about it all day today, and it's so emblematic of the difference between Trump and everybody else. | ||
DeSantis and his team, I'm sure they thought this was the best idea ever, and optically it was a disaster. | ||
All anybody's going to think about is that for 30 minutes, it didn't work. | ||
And a lot of people would say, well hey, cut him some slack, technical difficulties, because of a very sloppy technical breakdown. | ||
That's something that a guy like Trump would never allow. | ||
When Trump announced the first time, he did it at his skyscraper, on his home turf. | ||
He gave a speech. | ||
He set it up in the lobby of his hotel. | ||
And in 2022, he did the same thing, but at Mar-a-Lago. | ||
Keep it simple. | ||
Keep it conventional. | ||
Safe. | ||
And it was a home run. | ||
Now, I didn't like the speech, but that's the speech. | ||
I mean, the speech is gonna be, maybe it's gonna be good or bad, but on a technical level, it was a success. | ||
You can't knock the production. | ||
unidentified
|
This was not good. | |
Because DeSantis, in this raid party, such a high approval rating, and being the ex-president, the leader of this unprecedented movement, everybody understands that this is gonna be a real uphill battle for DeSantis. | ||
And it doesn't signal anything good when his introduction on the national stage, his first outing, on a technical level is so bad. | ||
And then the products suck. | ||
Long awaited, too much fanfare, all the money realigned behind him, all these political mercenaries are behind him. | ||
And he comes out 30 minutes late after a big technical disaster. | ||
They hid the Twitter space. | ||
It was getting too much viewership on Elon Musk's Twitter and the website was crashing. | ||
So they had to have David Sachs host it and hide it on his very charismatic, uninspired, lame, scripted discussion? | ||
Not even a speech, a discussion where you can't see his face. | ||
There's no crowd. | ||
There's no fans. | ||
Where's the energy here? | ||
Where's the excitement? | ||
This is supposed to be... You're going up against a movement. | ||
You're going up against a guy that summoned 500,000 people to the Capitol at the election, that they were literally hanging from the rooftop with Trump flags, and the guy that's gonna beat him, he's in a three-way call with a bunch of Asperger's tech guys, and they're having some gay conversation about education policy and Chevron deference. | ||
Really? | ||
And you know I have my, I've been very critical of Trump. | ||
Now I support Trump, and I will never support DeSantis, so I guess I'm a little biased, but I'm objective. | ||
I call it like I see it. | ||
If I thought DeSantis had a great launch, I would say that. | ||
I thought Trump, I think it was a competent production, but I didn't like it at all. | ||
This was, and we'll get into the entire thing because there's a lot of clues about where this race is going to go. | ||
But before we get into the news, I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on Cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Follow me on Rumble as well. | ||
We're live on Rumble every night. | ||
We have all the replays on Rumble as well. | ||
Follow me on Gab Telegram and True Social. | ||
Links are all down below. | ||
Today we covered the DeSantis space live and so I hope you enjoyed the coverage. | ||
But we'll get into it tonight. | ||
I talked a lot earlier today about the slogans, because we heard some of the slogans for the first time, but I really want to get into this discussion that he had with Musk and this David Sachs. | ||
So first I'll read you this article. | ||
This is from Associated on Wednesday with firm words. | ||
But a disastrous Twitter announcement that did little to counter criticism that the 44-year-old Republican may not be ready to take on former President Trump. | ||
While he tried to project confidence, DeSantis' unusual decision to announce his campaign in an online conversation with Elon Musk ultimately backfired. | ||
He said on the glitchy stream racing through his conservative accomplishments, quote, American decline is not inevitable. | ||
It is a choice. | ||
And we should choose a new direction, a path that will lead to American revitalization. | ||
I am running for president of the United States to lead our great American comeback. | ||
So, those critics in both parties delighted in the rocky start debate. | ||
DeSantis' announcement marks a new chapter in his extraordinary rise from little-known congressman to two-term governor to a leading figure in the nation's bitter fights over race, gender, abortion, and other divisive issues. | ||
DeSantis' path to the Republican nomination will not be easy. | ||
He enters the race looking up at Trump in early polls while facing serious questions about his far-right policy system. | ||
He has generated significant interest among GOP primary voters by casting himself as a younger and more electable version of the 76-year-old former president. | ||
He did not mention Trump even once in the discussion but said he was ready to fight. | ||
He said, buckle up when I get in there because the status quo is not acceptable. | ||
So, like I said, isn't it a good idea to have this audio-only conversation? | ||
So bad. | ||
You have to understand, and here's the thing, like, Trump just gets it. | ||
Like, on a very deep level, he just gets it. | ||
Now, if you don't get it, you won't know what that means. | ||
If you do get it, you know what I mean. | ||
He gets it. | ||
And Trump has one of these older guys who's like a handyman or it's like any movie you watch. | ||
You know my favorite movies, my favorite movie genre is like an old white guy who could just do anything. | ||
You know like when I watch Breaking Bad and you have Mike and he's just got an answer for everything because he's been around, he's done it all. | ||
And I like 24 with Jack Bauer. | ||
And I like movies with Russell Crowe or Liam Neeson. | ||
And I like that genre. | ||
I think everybody likes that genre. | ||
That's why these shows are so popular. | ||
Breaking Bad, House of Cards. | ||
People like to see an unstoppable white guy get out of every problem. | ||
We love that. | ||
America loves that. | ||
And as I said earlier, he just understands, for example, the optics. | ||
And this is why he paints a beautiful picture every time he does a rally. | ||
He does it at an airport. | ||
The Trump jet flies in with his name on it. | ||
It pulls up to a red carpet flanked with American flags. | ||
He walks out, cranes holding giant flags. | ||
It's a painting. | ||
It's a masterpiece. | ||
And he understands little things. | ||
Like when he goes out there at a rally, he'll turn his back to the cameras and he'll gesture towards the people that are seated behind him. | ||
He does it throughout the speech. | ||
And he says, I haven't forgotten about you. | ||
You have the best seat. | ||
He showed up to the rally that they see his face. | ||
He's thinking about all the ticket holders, or all the attendees that drove out, or flew out, or waited in line, and he's thinking about the people that are seated, even though he can't see them, he's thinking about the fact that there's people seated behind them. | ||
And he's cognizant and conscientious of the fact that they can't... | ||
That he'll point, gesture, that they might catch his gaze, that they could take a picture. | ||
He gets that, and he does that for them. | ||
And that's a little detail, that's a little thing, that says so much about who this man is. | ||
And I'm not trying to sound like a cultist or something. | ||
What I'm saying is, that is something that you'd love situational awareness That you can only develop over decades of experience doing things. | ||
When I say it means a lot, I mean that it represents his character as a person. | ||
It doesn't mean he's a good person. | ||
It means that he's situationally aware. | ||
He's got a game sense. | ||
He's got a sense of the game he's playing. | ||
When he goes to, you don't see him like these other politicians in a button-down shirt with the sleeves rolled up. | ||
Every event he goes to, it's a navy blue suit and a red tie. | ||
Do you ever see him in anything else? | ||
Maybe a black suit? | ||
Maybe a blue tie? | ||
But that's the uniform. | ||
It's a long coat. | ||
He gestures to the audience behind him. | ||
He's very aware of how it's gonna look, the photos that'll be used, the stream. | ||
He's aware of it all. | ||
Because he's been there. | ||
He's done that. | ||
This isn't his first rodeo. | ||
And I'm not just talking about him being a politician. | ||
I mean, he's been doing press conferences for 50 years. | ||
That's what makes him a good politician. | ||
He was a good businessman. | ||
Now, it doesn't make him a good executive in a governing role, but it does make him a great campaigner. | ||
DeSantis doesn't understand these things. | ||
Now, you go in there to the Twitter space and what do you see? | ||
You see Ron DeSantis' profile picture? | ||
You hear his voice? | ||
Now think of it. | ||
There's still 30% of the electorate doesn't know what to make of him. | ||
So, he's been the most anticipated, long-awaited, the hype has been building. | ||
And, to his credit, they came up with an interesting idea that would generate a lot of buzz and bring in a lot of eyeballs. | ||
And this was the moment to... He doesn't have a dynamic voice. | ||
No charisma. | ||
Now that, that really is a problem when you're doing a voice-only stream. | ||
If you don't have a dynamic vocal pattern, if you don't have a dynamic speaking ability, you're really handicapped. | ||
When you're on an audio-only stream, hello? | ||
Even if you're the worst speaker in the world, if you're giving a production, they can edit it to make it sound better than it was. | ||
If they have visuals. | ||
If they have you in a suit in front of a podium with your supporters. | ||
Guess what? | ||
You do a rally, you can bring in a hundred of your closest friends and family and put them behind you. | ||
You don't even have to do it live! | ||
You could pre-record it! | ||
And you can tell the people behind you it's like that. | ||
It doesn't matter if you're a good speaker or not. | ||
You could do different takes. | ||
You could fake a live stream. | ||
You could pre-record it and edit it all together. | ||
And you could look and sound amazing. | ||
When you're doing a voice-only stream you can't look good because they can't see you and therefore there's no presence. | ||
And if you're a bad public speech reduction in front of 800,000 people was he was 30 minutes late, it was sloppy, technical difficulties, and then he gave a 90-minute boring-as-fuck panel presentation. | ||
That was the introduction. | ||
No music. | ||
No cheering. | ||
Think about that as well. | ||
I always say we ape because we're like monkeys. | ||
Monkeys imitate. | ||
Human beings are imitation machines. | ||
That's what a meme is. | ||
That's what mimetics is. | ||
To mime. | ||
To imitate. | ||
When we see a rally with 10,000 people, we see the 10,000 people like Trump. | ||
That makes us like Trump more. | ||
The rally is to hear the crowd. | ||
Hear the music. | ||
The fanfare. | ||
To hear the opener. | ||
You have an opener go in and say, Like when Trump announced in 2016 he had his beautiful daughter go up. | ||
She's well-spoken. | ||
Introducing him. | ||
And another autistic Jew tech guy saying, okay, well, let's get started. | ||
You have to unmute your mic. | ||
I think you have to unmute your mic. | ||
Can you hear me? | ||
Okay. | ||
Elon, mute yourself. | ||
We have an echo. | ||
Okay, everybody. | ||
Well, let's get started. | ||
No music. | ||
No crowd. | ||
No ambient noise. | ||
What? | ||
I know I'm going on and on and on and on, but you know what? | ||
These things are really important. | ||
They're really important to me. | ||
They're important to me because, by the way, I've done events. | ||
So, I'm not Trump-level, yet. | ||
But being a person that has done events, and being a student of both Donald Trump and Yankees, I need to ask. | ||
I understand what I'm going for. | ||
That's why I care about details. | ||
About the events that I put on. | ||
And that's why I think about these things. | ||
Even if I'm not the master, it's sort of like learning a language. | ||
Like maybe you can't speak the language proficiently, but you can understand it. | ||
You can read it. | ||
That's how I feel about these things. | ||
Good way. | ||
There's no visual. | ||
There's no social proof. | ||
There's no ambient noise. | ||
There's no demonstration of support or even technical competence. | ||
There's this silence. | ||
It's low energy. | ||
Then you have this effect of, when Trump goes out there, people, we all know, like, would die for Trump. | ||
We know that people call into Rush Limbaugh and they cry. | ||
They're brought to tears. | ||
People are so jazzed up about this politician that they're fucking breaking windows. | ||
And they're breaking stuff, and they're fighting cops. | ||
Like, do you understand that, like, 500,000 people showed up to Washington, D.C. | ||
to throw down with the military for the president? | ||
Think about that. | ||
500,000 against the cops, and they broke windows, and they paraded with flags, and they endured tear gas. | ||
They literally put balaclava over their face and pushed through a wall of tear gas and beat up cops And then they broke windows and ran through the halls of Congress with flags. | ||
Freaking TED Talk, a Twitter space. | ||
Twitter space is like the new Tech Talk. | ||
Twitter space, podcast, you know, this new format, it's like the new, it's like the new TED Talk. | ||
And you know what it's synonymous with? | ||
Hot air. | ||
It's synonymous with a bunch of boring idiots jerking themselves off about House of Personality in front of an audience of midwits. | ||
I mean, that's what a Twitter space is and that's what we got. | ||
So, it leaned into all of his weaknesses. | ||
That's what you don't want to do. | ||
When you're doing something like this, And you're acutely aware of the fact that DeSantis has a lot of problems. | ||
Like he's not charismatic. | ||
He's not sociable. | ||
You know those are his weaknesses going in. | ||
Why do you set him up in a format? | ||
Why do you set him up in a medium where all of that is going to be painfully obvious? | ||
Because that's what it was. | ||
Painfully obvious that he's a boring nerd. | ||
With no charisma. | ||
I mean that's what it did was just highlight that. | ||
They put him in a phone and something like this. | ||
Terrible. | ||
That's my review of it. | ||
That's my brain as an event planner. | ||
That's my brain because when Trump first ran in 2016, these are the things that I analyzed. | ||
Like when I tried to understand the Trump movement in 2016, And this effect that he had, which was this imperviousness, his facial expressions, his rhetoric, his approach when he went into a hostile interview, his dress, his everything. | ||
And I came away realizing that he just brought a whole new level. | ||
Of negotiating skill and production competence and laughing and cavorting with the common people in jeans. | ||
And Trump came out there with a completely stoic expression in the suit. | ||
He dressed for the job he wanted. | ||
He looked the part. | ||
And he was playful and he was fun, but he wasn't silly. | ||
He didn't lower himself to that level. | ||
And he said, no, you need to be a leader. | ||
You need to be tough. | ||
Not angry, not hateful, but stoic. | ||
Resolute, strong, professional. | ||
Maybe sacrificing positivity for reality. | ||
For a little dose of the truth. | ||
But not too much. | ||
Not in a way, but in a very calculated way. | ||
They're rapists. | ||
Some are good people. | ||
Very calculated. | ||
Very precise. | ||
And so there's a strategic intelligence there. | ||
That's why nobody can beat him. | ||
That's why he's still number one. | ||
Because he has this killer instinct, this killer strategic instinct, that no other candidate has. | ||
He has always had that. | ||
And I would challenge you, go on! | ||
And he goes in, and he goes, try getting it out. | ||
You don't even know what you're talking about. | ||
Just rips her a new asshole. | ||
With a stern demeanor. | ||
I mean, you don't see that from politicians. | ||
He goes on Stephen Colbert, and Stephen Colbert's making fun of him, and he's got this riz, like he just plays it off. | ||
Colbert's a comedian, sidesteps it with what you could describe, it's nothing other than just pure charisma and charm. | ||
Just like he's been in that situation before. | ||
These other guys don't have a clue when it comes to that intelligence. | ||
Now, DeSantis is a policy wonk. | ||
He understands law and policy far better than Trump. | ||
But he doesn't have what was said. | ||
We got a really good preview of what the campaign's gonna be. | ||
This was the structure of it. | ||
So DeSantis, and here's the other thing. | ||
It was all scripted. | ||
The entire thing, by the way, was scripted. | ||
It was about 90 minutes. | ||
DeSantis gave an opening statement that was scripted. | ||
He gave a quick little... It was like his announcement. | ||
He kind of took that and expanded on that for, I don't know, about five minutes. | ||
So he gave a real rough five-minute outline of, this is what the campaign's gonna be about. | ||
These are the slogans. | ||
These are the policies. | ||
These are the big ideas. | ||
So there was that, and that was, it was literally him reading from a script. | ||
Painfully obvious he was reading it, which is bad. | ||
Then, instead of having a conversational flow, which following conversation like a podcast, they brought up about four or five pre-screened people to ask questions, and they're all people that DeSantis knows. | ||
They're all people that have worked for DeSantis. | ||
They're all people that already support DeSantis. | ||
So it's very robotic, very boring, very mundane. | ||
And like I said, even with this format, which is bad, you can't see them, you can't see a crowd, you can't hear a crowd, there's no flags, there's no visual, like, really, really, really, really bad stuff. | ||
Even still, it was even worse than it could have otherwise been. | ||
Because instead of even playing into the strength of them, it was all scripted. | ||
So you basically have like some, like a scripted voice memo. | ||
That's your campaign launch. | ||
And we'll get into it. | ||
So, in his opening statement he talked about a few key issues, and he gave us some slogans. | ||
And I wrote some notes down in real time. | ||
The slogans which he's going with are, there's three specific... Okay? | ||
So he's just straight-up copying Trump. | ||
Straight-up plagiarism. | ||
Although worse. | ||
Much worse. | ||
The second slogan he says, decline is a choice, success is attainable, freedom is worth fighting for. | ||
That's the second slogan. | ||
Decline is a choice, success is attainable, freedom is worth fighting for. | ||
On an American revitalization. | ||
I don't like any of these slogans. | ||
I think they're all very weak. | ||
Great American Comeback. | ||
I don't like anything that says great if it's not talking about greatness. | ||
When Trump says, Make America Great Again, in this context, when you call a country great, what that's referring to is greatness or excellence. | ||
It's a constant striving for perfection. | ||
And this is a very ancient idea. | ||
It's a very fundamental idea. | ||
When Trump says, make America great again, he's saying restore the greatness of America. | ||
What is greatness? | ||
It means excellence in all things. | ||
It means power. | ||
When you say great American comeback, it's a different great. | ||
Saying a great comeback is it's really a useless modifier. | ||
It's like saying good. | ||
If I say like this is a great bagel, it means this is a good bagel. | ||
It means like this tastes really good. | ||
If I say wow that was a that was a great snow cone, That means it was a great American country. | ||
The great American this, the great American that. | ||
Although it sounds the same, think about it. | ||
Although it sounds like the same thing, it's not. | ||
Trump says, make America great. | ||
When you think about a great country, you don't think about a good country. | ||
You think about a country that possesses greatness. | ||
It possesses equality. | ||
It's greatness. | ||
When you say a great comeback, you mean like a pretty good comeback. | ||
So really what you're saying is an American comeback. | ||
And what you're saying is America is gonna comeback. | ||
I don't like comeback at all. | ||
I don't like that. | ||
Like, that sounds like basketball. | ||
You know, so-and-so's gonna make a comeback after they sprain their ankle. | ||
It's like America's dying! | ||
America's a nation! | ||
America's not a college athlete. | ||
America's a nation. | ||
It's about our civilization. | ||
Our civilization is dying. | ||
It is being killed. | ||
It is killing itself. | ||
We are going to lose. | ||
It takes everything out of it. | ||
What's great about Make America Great Again is that it alludes to American greatness and the superiority and the exceptionalism of our civilization, and it also is action-oriented. | ||
It's not, it's not, uh, Make America Great Again. | ||
Who? | ||
Who are you telling that to? | ||
It's an action. | ||
Make America Great Again. | ||
It's an imperative. | ||
It's spoken as an imperative, as a declarative. | ||
It's an action statement. | ||
Great American Comeback is a noun. | ||
It's a comeback that is great and American. | ||
Make America Great Again is a call to action. | ||
It says let's It's like grammatically perfect. | ||
Whereas Great American Comeback is like, this is a Great American mug. | ||
We made a Great American desk. | ||
I'm wearing a Great American necktie, manufactured in America. | ||
A Great American what? | ||
It's like... So although it appears similar, it's not. | ||
It fucking sucks. | ||
But this is a thing that a consultant would never understand because there's an art form. | ||
It's not focus group tested. | ||
It's not... | ||
They didn't come up with it through an algorithm or through chat GPT. | ||
It's there's something artistic. | ||
It just hits you and you know and you have to have that. | ||
It's like Trump. | ||
It's like the name Trump. | ||
You ever see that movie The Founder? | ||
It's about Ray Kroc and how he made McDonald's the number one restaurant in the world. | ||
They had a restaurant called McDonald's and some guy named Ray Kroc came in and kind of stole it. | ||
I'm summarizing the movie. | ||
And so at the very end, Ray Kroc goes up to the guy, the McDonald brother, and he goes, uh, he's, the McDonald guy says, you know, why didn't you start your own restaurant? | ||
Why'd you have to take our restaurant? | ||
Why'd you have to, what is it about McDonald's? | ||
And Ray Kroc didn't even understand that. | ||
And I, it's the same thing with MAGA. | ||
It's like Trump just, it's, it's the name Trump. | ||
It's the name. | ||
He knows that the name has power. | ||
That's why he puts his name on everything. | ||
Because Trump is a perfect word. | ||
Just like Trump Tower. | ||
Just like Matt. | ||
You hear it. | ||
He hears what works. | ||
He's an artist. | ||
He's like Hitler. | ||
It's like Hitler drawing the swastika. | ||
It's like Ray Kroc taking the name McDonald's. | ||
It's like Kanye getting the drums from Timbaland on Stronger. | ||
That's what they have in common. | ||
Comeback. | ||
Fart. | ||
Then the second slogan. | ||
Decline is a choice. | ||
Success is attainable. | ||
Freedom is worth fighting for. | ||
I talked about this earlier. | ||
Every component of this is garbage. | ||
Decline is a choice. | ||
I don't like decline. | ||
Because decline is such a... it's a very weak word. | ||
When you say something that is going down, Something that is falling. | ||
Something that is sloping downward. | ||
So when you say, like, decline, it's like America is sloping downward. | ||
I like suicide. | ||
I like suicide of a superpower. | ||
That's a Buchanan book. | ||
Suicide of a superpower. | ||
You want to know why? | ||
Because when you think of suicide, first of all, it's a beautiful word. | ||
Second of all, blood. | ||
You think about somebody slitting their wrist and their vital bright red fluid comes spurting out violently. | ||
You think about a person jumping in front of a train or hanging themselves. | ||
You think about a hanged man. | ||
And it's such a poetic, it's such a visual, because someone was so full of despair, they were driven to take their own life. | ||
A murder! | ||
A murder of oneself! | ||
This is powerful! | ||
Suicidal nation! | ||
unidentified
|
Versus like, well, our nation's in decline. | |
We have a declining country. | ||
It sounds like a quarterly report for an insurance company. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, sales have been declining considerably. | |
Sales of the McDouble have been declining over... This corporate, very weak, diluted decline is a choice. | ||
I mean, not even say, it's like our country is committing suicide, and we're letting it happen, and we have to reverse it! | ||
We must! | ||
For our children! | ||
How could our children forgive us if we didn't do everything to reverse? | ||
Decline is a choice. | ||
Then they say success is attainable. | ||
Again, not greatness, not excellence, not, God forbid, superiority, chauvinism, jingoism, anything like that, nativism. | ||
Success is attainable. | ||
Again, success. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
People go to the lake. | ||
People go to the lake and then go to a Mexican weekend with the boys. | ||
Another successful weekend. | ||
What a success. | ||
So, again, we're not talking about our civilization. | ||
We're not talking about greatness, excellence. | ||
Well, success. | ||
And again, not success is inevitable. | ||
Not success is our destiny. | ||
Something within our grasp. | ||
Because when you say within our grasp, it evokes an image of extending outward. | ||
A reaching out. | ||
The Sistine Chapel. | ||
Reaching. | ||
You know, you think of Browning. | ||
But should our reach exceed its grasp, for what is there a heaven? | ||
It evokes a reaching out. | ||
Which is what? | ||
Attain? | ||
Who says attain? | ||
Who even says that? | ||
We could attain that? | ||
What are we talking about? | ||
Like a level of funding and a 401k? | ||
Well, it's attainable. | ||
Retirement at 55 is attainable. | ||
Again, this guy's corporate. | ||
Freedom is worth fighting for. | ||
Now here we are back to square one with this freedom business. | ||
Freedom is worth fighting for. | ||
It's not even saying like, let's go die for freedom. | ||
So, now it presupposes that something is worth fighting for if you're campaigning on it. | ||
Do you know how stupid that sounds? | ||
You're running a campaign. | ||
You're telling people, go out and go to war for me to become the leader of America. | ||
It goes without saying that the basis of your campaign is worth fighting for. | ||
If it wasn't worth fighting for, you wouldn't be. | ||
It's like answering a question that was never asked, which is, is freedom worth fighting for? | ||
If you're being asked that, you should just drop out. | ||
Is it really worth it? | ||
Yeah, it is worth fighting for. | ||
It sounds so, like, on the back foot. | ||
This is worth fighting for. | ||
Okay. | ||
So this sucks. | ||
Then it says American Revival. | ||
Re this, re that. | ||
I think you'd find more creative ways. | ||
And even if a re works, I like, like, resurrection. | ||
Beautiful. | ||
I like revive. | ||
Or something like that. | ||
But you get into these long words and they all mean something similar. | ||
Revitalize. | ||
To bring life back into Vida. | ||
About a revitalization. | ||
It's not really like that though. | ||
I mean, is that what we're doing? | ||
Is like bringing life back into our country? | ||
Revitalizing? | ||
When I think about revitalization, I think about like a reclamation project of like urban development. | ||
We revitalized the pavilion at Epcot. | ||
You know, like, we revitalized. | ||
It's like, it doesn't, it's like, again, it's not McDonald's, it's not Trump, it's not, it doesn't have that. | ||
American revi, you could say it a million ways. | ||
American revitalization, American comeback, American renewal, American moment, American this, that, and the other. | ||
It doesn't, it doesn't work. | ||
It's too long, it's too clunky, it's too, like, REVITALIZE AMERICA! | ||
Really? | ||
That's... Make America Great Again. | ||
What did he say? | ||
He said, I will take America and make it great again. | ||
That's like, you know how powerful that is? | ||
Read between the fucking lines. | ||
He said that in his, I couldn't believe it. | ||
He said that in his announcement speech in 16, 15. | ||
He said, I will take this country and literally make it great. | ||
He said literally, which I love. | ||
Cause he didn't mean like, we'll literally, I will literally take this country and make it great again. | ||
So awesome. | ||
So he said, I alone can fix it. | ||
I alone so good. | ||
And so this was evocative about not about freedom. | ||
It's not about you. | ||
It's about this leader. | ||
It's about this movement with a leader. | ||
This guy is a shepherd. | ||
And he has, he's going to take on this responsibility and lead the country to greatness! | ||
He will lead, and the whole speech was about victory, winning, leader, being a doer, being a builder, being the responsible party. | ||
That's what was evoked by Make America Great Again. | ||
This great leader will lead this country to greatness and victory again. | ||
Make America great again. | ||
Fuck yeah! | ||
Give me the hat, sign me up, and the will to do it. | ||
But that's what Trump presented himself as. | ||
I'm a builder. | ||
I'm famous. | ||
I'm a billionaire. | ||
I'm powerful. | ||
I have money. | ||
I'm independent. | ||
I will lead the charge against the elite. | ||
And even if it was a lost cause, people were like, fuck yeah, let's go. | ||
Trump 2016. | ||
Well, America First presupposes that there are other nations, and that there's a prioritization that's happening, and that America is not being put first over the interests of, say, other nations by its own government. | ||
America First is, again, a declaration. | ||
It's, again, an imperative. | ||
Amer- And so there's this conscientiousness in that slogan about how the country's been infiltrated, about how it's corrupt, about how the government is serving the interest of other nations because it's compromised by them. | ||
And so it's anti-corruption, it's nationalist. | ||
So, Trump is telling us what his campaign is about with these slogans. | ||
Nationalism? | ||
It's not about our nation, or the people in it, or the people in the movement, or the leader that will lead the movement in his competence. | ||
What is it about? | ||
Success, which is really a synonym for prosperity. | ||
It's about prosperity, it's about freedom, and some vague sense of renewal. | ||
And all of this really doesn't mean anything. | ||
What does that really mean? | ||
Prosperity. | ||
You know, success. | ||
Success is attainable. | ||
Well, I'll deliver prosperity in our time. | ||
Okay, everybody promises prosperity. | ||
Freedom. | ||
Again, what does that really mean? | ||
What does freedom in a practical sense mean? | ||
Freedom to do what? | ||
Not get a vaccine? | ||
Oh, Grant, that's a big one. | ||
But that was a couple years ago, and that was kind of an anomaly. | ||
And renewal. | ||
Again, what does that even really mean? | ||
When Trump comes forward and says, we will crush our enemies, we will have victory, we will beat our enemies, our people will be taken care of by our government, this resonates with the real problems going on, because those are the real problems. | ||
We're losing. | ||
We're being put last. | ||
We're not being prioritized. | ||
Our country... I would say five or six big categories, and they were the border, crime, the economy, the military, social issues, and the administrative state. | ||
Those are the big categories that he talked about. | ||
On the border, he talked about drug cartels. | ||
He talked a little bit about sovereignty and immigration. | ||
He didn't say anything about demographics, didn't say anything about immigration. | ||
He said that we have to have a border and they're bringing drugs in. | ||
And it's like, here's the thing. | ||
Our country's being invaded and border security is really a law enforcement issue. | ||
The problem is not entirely about border security, but it also comes through the Port of Los Angeles. | ||
You understand? | ||
So, the interdiction of drugs really has nothing to do with the invasion of our country. | ||
You understand? | ||
But when you wrap it up in a border issue, what you're really doing is making the border issue a crime issue rather than a demographics issue. | ||
The reason we need to secure our border, yes, it's a matter of law enforcement. | ||
Fentanyl and the drugs, you know, they may come across the border in a variety of ways. | ||
But the chief problem we're having is that we need to construct a physical barrier that prevents human beings from crossing. | ||
Because that's what is happening hundreds of thousands of times every single day. | ||
So when he says, well, we need a border to have an aid, he doesn't talk about the volume of immigration, he doesn't talk about, he doesn't even say the word immigration. | ||
He says border. | ||
Not immigration, border. | ||
What we're really talking about is a national security slash law enforcement issue. | ||
Securing the border by building a border wall or a border fence, deploying guards, interdicting drugs. | ||
Again. | ||
What about the people that remain illegal? | ||
Did he talk about any of the people that are here illegally? | ||
Or did he say border security? | ||
And this is a very sneaky, sneaky thing. | ||
Republicans have been doing this forever. | ||
Republicans have always talked about the border. | ||
They almost never talk about immigration. | ||
Going back to Reagan, Reagan said we'll secure the border and in exchange we'll give an amnesty to the illegals already. | ||
Trump was different because he came in and said we're being invaded. | ||
He said we need to deport a lot of people. | ||
He said we need to verify. | ||
We need a deal that is going to drastically reduce immigration. | ||
He proposed Trump came in and was a true immigration restrictionist. | ||
There's a big difference between an immigration restrictionist or a nativist and a border hawk. | ||
Somebody who's in favor of border security. | ||
based as opposed to migration is one of the biggest sources of migration so trump came in and was a true immigration restrictionist there's a big difference between an immigration restrictionist or a nativist and a border hawk somebody who's in favor of border security those are two very different things so when de santis comes out and says well forever | ||
the difference is that trump came in and said we were going to deport millions of people. | ||
All these other politicians, they say like, well, we have to shut down the border and then we'll figure out what to do afterward. | ||
Do you know what that really means? | ||
It means they want to secure the border and then basically grant de facto residency to every illegal here. | ||
That's what they really mean. | ||
When they say for some form of amnesty for every illegal immigrant here, certainly the young ones. | ||
So I wouldn't read too much into that when he says, you know, we need a border wall. | ||
And then when he ties in the fentanyl, that's when you know he doesn't give a shit about immigration. | ||
Then he talked about crime. | ||
He said law and order must be maintained. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
He's talking about rioting. | ||
Here's another chaos. | ||
unidentified
|
Guess what? | |
It's not just a rioting issue. | ||
The BLM rioting was years ago. | ||
That's in the back. | ||
That's in the rear view mirror. | ||
Yeah, I understand. | ||
There were some riots in Chicago. | ||
They called them the Teen Takeover. | ||
The problem is not riots. | ||
That's not the entire problem. | ||
The problem is persistent black crime, gang crime, it's shootings, it's homelessness. | ||
Homelessness is a major part of it because it used to be illegal to reside in the public space on a sidewalk in a park. | ||
So the real crime problem, when we talk about crime in our cities, what we're really talking about is this problem of black predation. | ||
We're talking about vehicle theft. | ||
We're talking about... When he goes out there and says this vague stuff about law and order, law and order, I mean, what does that really mean? | ||
What's the policy? | ||
When he says it's about rioting, that makes me think that we're talking about BLM. | ||
But BLM happened years ago. | ||
We're in the post-George Floyd world. | ||
Different situation. | ||
Then he got into the economy. | ||
He said, we have to stop this borrow print. | ||
Sounds like standard fiscal conservatism. | ||
Then he said something really bizarre about the military. | ||
He said, we need to restore respect for our institutions and refocus on the core mission of the military, which is very weird. | ||
He said that people are losing respect for the institutions and now they're not signing up for the military. | ||
And you know what's really weird? | ||
I've heard the same. | ||
They say that the real problem is that people don't respect our country and as a consequence now they're not volunteering for the military. | ||
Which it's like the military is working for Israel. | ||
The military is spreading gay marriage and feminism. | ||
You're telling me that the problem with the country is that people are not signing up for the military enough? | ||
The problem with them realizing the entire government is corrupt? | ||
The problem is that If they don't trust the government, then they won't sign up for the military. | ||
Really? | ||
DeSantis is talking about recruitment numbers. | ||
Recruitment numbers? | ||
He says the military's turned into a social experiment. | ||
We need to refocus on the core mission. | ||
What's the core mission? | ||
Fighting Russia? | ||
Fighting R. And it's interesting that he uses the same rhetoric about trust in our institutions as the left. | ||
The left says it's a crisis that we have lost trust in our institutions. | ||
And what that means is that the government is not able to lead because the people don't see it as legitimate. | ||
And that's apropos. | ||
The government should not have legitimacy because it is violating their representation, they lie. | ||
So when somebody says, we've lost faith in our institutions, yeah, that's true. | ||
But that needs to be followed up with the conversation about how we got here, which is that the institutions forfeited their credibility. | ||
They forfeited their legitimacy with their corruption, their deception, and so the people have every right to reject. | ||
For the expedient purpose of driving up recruitment numbers for the military. | ||
Without saying anything about what that mission for the military should be. | ||
So, it's very interesting that he was able to say all that without really even talking about any real social issues. | ||
That's really fascinating. | ||
Without really even naming them. | ||
Without talking about the scourge of transgenderism and homosexuality or anti-white policies or anything of that nature. | ||
He talked about CRT. | ||
And he talked about wokeism, but dingelized, but not like what they're being sexualized about, which is trannyism. | ||
And then lastly, he talked about the executive branch and he said we need to reinvigorate our constitutional system and reconstitutionalize the executive branch. | ||
unidentified
|
Really interesting plank there. | |
And what that sounds like is he wants to break up the administrative state. | ||
So that was the main policy plank. | ||
Now, what did we not hear? | ||
Those are the things that we heard about. | ||
Border security, law and order, fiscal conservatism, increasing recruitment for the military, merit over identity politics, and reconstitutionalizing the executive branch. | ||
Those are the big policy statements. | ||
What did he not talk about? | ||
Nothing about manufacturing? | ||
Nothing about industry? | ||
He didn't say anything about Russia or Ukraine? | ||
He didn't say anything about foreign wars in the Middle East? | ||
He didn't say one thing about big tech? | ||
Didn't talk about healthcare? | ||
Didn't talk about election integrity? | ||
Didn't talk about homosexuals or transsexuals? | ||
So, OBO, Jeb Bush, This is like a watered-down, diluted Trump. | ||
This is Trumpism without Trump. | ||
I mean, that's... And we all anticipated that that's what it would be, and that's what it is. | ||
I didn't hear one thing in this space that I said, wow, he's speaking about the real problems here. | ||
It was all vague, way too obscure. | ||
Not talking about anything that I think would be perceived as controversial for that purpose. | ||
This is a campaign that is not about winning. | ||
It's not about a reactionary takeover or anything like that. | ||
This is about not losing the 2024 election, literally. | ||
Because in a lot of ways, he doesn't even differ from Trump. | ||
Like, there's a lot of overlap. | ||
But the DeSantis philosophy is, we can't lose! | ||
We can't lose! | ||
That's not provocative or controversial, so that we don't lose! | ||
They're not playing to win. | ||
They're not making bold pronouncements. | ||
They're not creating a vision. | ||
They're not making bold policy statements. | ||
They're not imagining a different future. | ||
What they're doing Is creating a mathematically perfect platform so as to offend the least number of voters. | ||
It's like they beat. | ||
They will mathematically win the next election. | ||
They will not lose. | ||
And this is what it spit out. | ||
A gay nerd that is totally inoffensive talking in an inoffensive way with corporate lingo about issues that don't really matter. | ||
Now Trump won in 2016 because he activated a constituency that never voted before. | ||
Because he turned out whites. | ||
He turned out whites that voted for Obama or never voted. | ||
He turned out blue collar union voters in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin. | ||
He turned out coal miners. | ||
That's how Trump won. | ||
He didn't run by playing not to lose by trying to offend the least number of independents or women or liberals or blacks. | ||
Or Hispanics for that matter. | ||
That's how he won. | ||
That's how he flipped three states that hadn't been won in 30 years. | ||
DeSantis comes out. | ||
He's not going to turn out the white working class. | ||
He's not going to turn out people that had never voted or people that voted for Obama. | ||
He's not going to turn out blacks and Hispanics. | ||
He's going to turn out Republican loyalists. | ||
He's going to turn out the same people that vote in every election that lost in 22, that didn't win in 08, That's what he's gonna turn out, is the reliable 25% of conservatives. | ||
25% of the American electorate, which is politically conservative. | ||
And we've been there, we've done that, we've lost many times with that kind of mentality. | ||
The only way to win an election, it's not to play it safe, it's not for enthusiastic and excited about, something that makes sense and resonates and is compelling, something that answers where people are, And is competent, and gets buzz, and earned media, and then all those good things that Trump knows how to do. | ||
This isn't it. | ||
So, this race is already, or some other way, Trump is the nominee. | ||
Like, I would take it to the bank that Trump is going to be the nominee. | ||
After this sorry display. | ||
Because it just shows that DeSantis has all of the fatal problems that we knew he did from the start. | ||
So anyway, that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get on into our Super Chats. | ||
Because I'm running out of steam here. | ||
Have I really? | ||
Oh my god. | ||
It says I've been live for 3 hours and 45 minutes. | ||
Is that right? | ||
When did I go live? | ||
Why does it say three hours? | ||
Oh, because I started the lobby. | ||
The lobby was running for like two hours. | ||
Okay, I was gonna say, I'm like, what the heck? | ||
Anyway, alright, so we're gonna move on. | ||
I want to take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this pushing. | ||
unidentified
|
It's just like falling all over the place. | |
Alright, but let's take a look. | ||
Send in your Super Chats. | ||
And I'll read the ones from earlier as well. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Okay. | ||
Let me get set up here. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Really? | ||
I didn't know Trent Horn's dad was Jewish, but that would make a lot of sense. | ||
Because, of course, all Jews are extremely touchy about that. | ||
But yeah, I saw that video, super cringe. | ||
He should tell his wife to stop making videos. | ||
I don't see how that's traditional at all. | ||
But it doesn't offend me. | ||
That's pretty funny. | ||
To a point, fucking blanks. | ||
But then when it comes to nice people and shit, and whatever, Hulk Hogan. | ||
- That's pretty funny. - Richard Percival sent $5. | ||
Ron cucked during his presidential announcement, LaMau. | ||
- Totally dead. - Spence sent $3. | ||
Ron DeSantis is 100x better than Ron DeSantis. | ||
Agreed. | ||
Your system before it goes live like that. | ||
Do you think DeSantis did this Twitter thing to dunk on Trump for not using it? | ||
He should have just safely gone on TV. | ||
He did it because he thought it would generate buzz, and it did. | ||
But it just, it was a bad idea. | ||
Yeah, more people watched it, but it sucked. | ||
So it doesn't matter how many people watch it. | ||
You do something good first. | ||
You don't want to What cost are you gonna get more eyeballs? | ||
I'm sure if DeSantis The Unknown Soldier sent $3. | ||
Okay, I said Fragility of Freedom. | ||
Now we're on to the next alliterative slogan. | ||
Gotta make sure I say them all. | ||
The teacher is listening very closely. | ||
Literally. | ||
Fragility of Freedom. | ||
Enthusiastic Executive. | ||
That was the other one I heard. | ||
Jared Leto sent $3. | ||
Pedro Gonzalez, known meatball Ron Schill, is co- He's always sucked for a long time. | ||
Chuggers sent $5. | ||
Great state of Iowa? | ||
You sure about that? | ||
For real, Iowa's boring. | ||
RamenoodleSoup sent $3. | ||
I noticed there are long pauses after DeSantis finishes answering a question. | ||
Many teleconference meetings tells me the participants aren't paying attention. | ||
Sleepy Ron. | ||
unidentified
|
100%. | |
Yeah, it's 100% on the money. | ||
Spence sent $3. | ||
Saving DeSantis in his primary in 2018 is like North Korean propaganda. | ||
unidentified
|
It is. | |
In a good way. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
unidentified
|
I love it. | |
Chuggers sent $5. | ||
Well gosh darn. | ||
Ron DeSantis is gonna bring back sanity? | ||
Those liberals lost their darn sanity. | ||
Lock in my vote for Ron DeSanity. | ||
I tell you what. | ||
I'm starting to think those liberals have lost their damn minds. | ||
They think there's more than two genders. | ||
Dude, that's just like lowest common denominator shit. | ||
It's like, you know, liberals are crazy. | ||
It's like, yeah, okay, welcome to 2023. | ||
Like, where have you been? | ||
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3. | ||
unidentified
|
$189. | |
Love that Trump calls him Rob. | ||
Yeah, pretty funny. | ||
unidentified
|
DeSantis. | |
Justin sent $3. | ||
I kind of like Ron. | ||
Black kids are smarter under me. | ||
How about that first question? | ||
It was all pandering to blacks. | ||
Gotta love it. | ||
Did you like that? | ||
Did it work on you? | ||
Are you pro-DeSantis now? | ||
unidentified
|
Holla! | |
What up, my man? | ||
We love Justin. | ||
America primarily is attainable. | ||
and three dollars. | ||
America first is attainable. | ||
America primarily is attainable. | ||
Preferential treatment for America is attainable. | ||
Eight dollars. | ||
DeSantis I apologize for that. | ||
This. | ||
Trump mugs him mercilessly instantly. | ||
Mexicans and women ratioed within seconds. | ||
Giant black penis. | ||
Keck is back, and he is working his meme magic. - It is meme magic, certainly. | ||
I apologize for that. - Jim's statues sent $5. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel Ron DeSantis. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's gay. - This, so much this. - Lovable Guy sent $3. | ||
Blumpism without dollars. | ||
Mom, can I get Make America Great Again? | ||
We have Make America Great Again at home. | ||
Make America Great Again at home. | ||
The Great American Comeback. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Boogly Woogly sent $7. | ||
Did you see Matt Walsh say diversity is inherently anti-ware? | ||
Why are they saying this now? | ||
Is this only possible when a Democrat is President? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know why they suddenly flipped on that. | ||
But do you remember Matt Walsh years ago was the... I mean, I call... In 2019, when the El Paso shooting happened, he was like, this white piece of shit needs to get the electric chair. | ||
Literally. | ||
This white piece of shit needs to get the death penalty. | ||
No mercy on him. | ||
unidentified
|
Blah, blah. | |
He was posturing for all of his black friends. | ||
And now he's like, diversity's code for anti-white. | ||
It's like, bro, that's an alt-right talking point from like eight years ago. | ||
So I don't know what changed. | ||
Someone sent out a memo. | ||
Apparently that's okay now. | ||
That's gonna be epic. | ||
X Hinkle IRL meetup. | ||
Riz will be off the charts. - That's gonna be epic. | ||
I can't wait. - Fishoto sent $10. | ||
Nick, thanks for fire content lately. | ||
AF flame, but the Xercus Nico Leafy streams also. | ||
Serious stuff ahead, but the fun streams are important too. | ||
- Yeah, I'm having a lot of fun. | ||
Having fun with my bros. | ||
No, it's not. | ||
It's great, the great American this, the great American outdoors, the great American, great American bagel. | ||
Great American is like a prefix on its own. | ||
And it does nothing. | ||
It does nothing for the slogan. | ||
That's the point I'm getting across. | ||
JJ Dasher sent $250. | ||
Smile, you're gonna love JL if you know what I mean. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, you're bad. | |
He's clearly struggling. | ||
Clearly having a hard time after his little episode earlier this year. | ||
And yeah, judging by his history... | ||
He'll have a lot of opportunities to play politics in jail. | ||
You know, I'm sure there's gonna be a lot of inmates that he can play house of cards with, so it sounds like he'll be as happy as a fucking clown. | ||
Really big super chat, big shout out, I appreciate that, thank you so much. | ||
I don't know what those guys were thinking, what a stupid decision. | ||
But, that's that crew I guess. | ||
Chad Champion sent $3. | ||
Study release says Florida is unsafe for minorities. | ||
I almost was on the DeSantis train for a second. | ||
Yeah, then he clarified and said, no, no, it totally is. | ||
And we're like, oh, never mind. | ||
AngloZoomer sent $5. | ||
Meatballer. | ||
Right? | ||
Yeah, no, the me meeting with Trump turned the Jews against Trump. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
Alright, alright, alright. | ||
Let's cool it with that straight up racism, alright? | ||
adamant to voice aid to blacks when the majority in Florida is a bunch of retard monkeys slinging their dick everywhere by the book. | ||
Alright, alright, alright. | ||
Let's cool it with that straight up racism, alright? | ||
We're not about that. | ||
Alright, that's our last super chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight on our very... Alright, I'm ready to go. | ||
But that's gonna do it for me. | ||
As always, remember to follow me here on Cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Follow me on Rumble, where I stream every night as well. | ||
Follow me on Gap Telegram, true social links are down below. | ||
I'm on the air every 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. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America First! |