Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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And at the end of the day, you trip this point. | |
And at the end of the day, you're going you're going to be right back. | ||
And at the end of the day, you're going you're going to be right back. | ||
And at the end of the day, you're going to be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry for you, Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
unidentified
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You know the rule. | |
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
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Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
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I've never heard of him think what is that. | |
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
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... | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First! | ||
And God first. | ||
God first. | ||
God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. | ||
God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. | ||
God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. God first. | ||
God first. | ||
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 Monday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
And big news. | ||
Or rather, big no news. | ||
No news tonight. | ||
Because the Russian Civil War that was supposed to happen this weekend got cancelled. | ||
I was so excited. | ||
People even got mad at me for being too excited. | ||
They said, you're enjoying this way too much, you're laughing too much, you're smiling too much, this isn't a video game. | ||
Okay, tell that to Modern Warfare 2. | ||
We covered it on Friday and I did a live stream. | ||
I stayed up all night. | ||
All Saturday morning, we were supposed to have a major civil war in Russia. | ||
And it was supposed to be absolutely catastrophic. | ||
But it didn't happen. | ||
It got cancelled at the last minute. | ||
And so our featured story tonight will be talking about what went wrong at the last minute. | ||
The private military company, Wagner Group, Got to the gate of Moscow, the siege was about to begin, and then they cucked. | ||
Then they entered negotiations with the president of Belarus, Lukashenko, who mediated a deal between Wagner and the Russian government. | ||
A deal was struck, and now it's over. | ||
No more hostilities, and both sides are walking away. | ||
And we'll talk about the specifics of the deal and what exactly took place. | ||
But it's pretty lame. | ||
I mean, probably for the best. | ||
Don't get me wrong, I'm glad that this happened. | ||
Like, this is a good thing. | ||
It's probably the best outcome. | ||
I'm glad that there wasn't a civil war. | ||
That would have been bad for everybody. | ||
But a part of me wanted to see what it looked like. | ||
A part of me wanted to see it happen because it would have been cool. | ||
It would have been really cool to witness. | ||
But now I guess we'll never know. | ||
I guess we won't see that. | ||
And the situation is still developing, so something may happen. | ||
We still don't even know precisely what even happened. | ||
We know more now than we did then. | ||
We still don't even know what's going on. | ||
And I feel like we're not really going to know the full story until maybe a year later. | ||
And certainly things can change rapidly in the coming weeks, coming days. | ||
So it's still developing. | ||
And with that being said, we don't even really know the full story here. | ||
Because in a time of war, you've got this trickery that goes on. | ||
You have the fog of war. | ||
And really for the last 60 years, I don't think you can trust anything because of the existence of espionage, high-level government private espionage. | ||
So it's difficult to piece everything together in a few days, but we'll talk about what we've learned and what went down on Saturday, why nothing happened. | ||
We'll talk about the President Putin's response. | ||
We'll talk about Wagner's response and, you know, what's going to happen from here. | ||
That'll be our featured story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about a new audio tape that was revealed as evidence in the federal government's criminal charge against Donald Trump. | ||
And this is about those confidential documents that he was allegedly improperly handling at Mar-a-Lago. | ||
And the tape's pretty bad. | ||
So they published this in the media. | ||
I forget who published it first, but... So he's charged with, I think it's 35 or 36 or 37 counts of improperly handling classified materials. | ||
They say that when he left the White House, He took with him all these classified documents that have national security importance. | ||
So it's not just anything, but it is actually important stuff. | ||
And they say that he did not relinquish them when he was asked for them by the National Archives. | ||
And they say that he was improperly storing them and that he was sharing them around. | ||
And not to a great extent, but that he was showing them around. | ||
So we have seen some evidence today, and we'll talk about the Trump legal team's response, but it's pretty bad. | ||
I mean, it's about as bad as it gets. | ||
It's basically a confession. | ||
He's on audio saying, hey, look at these classified, literally, look at these classified documents about our plan to invade Iran. | ||
And I probably shouldn't be showing this to you because it's classified. | ||
I should have declassified it, but I didn't. | ||
And now I can't. | ||
But isn't this cool? | ||
And anyway, bring us some Diet Cokes. | ||
That's literally... That's the audio. | ||
I'm not even exaggerating. | ||
It's almost like they made it up. | ||
I'm not saying they did, but... | ||
Point is, it couldn't be worse. | ||
He's literally there like, I probably shouldn't be showing this to you because it's classified. | ||
Look at our plans to invade Iran. | ||
I should have declassified it, but now I can't. | ||
So I shouldn't show you this, but isn't it cool? | ||
That's literally the tape. | ||
With that being said though, I talked about this I think last week or two weeks ago. | ||
I've been talking about this ever since the raid on Mar-a-Lago. | ||
Ultimately, it doesn't matter. | ||
And I say that, one, because I'm a Trump partisan. | ||
So I'm, full disclosure, a total Trump loyalist. | ||
Even if it was bad, I would defend it. | ||
Because I believe in Trump as a political force. | ||
And so, despite his imperfections or faults or flaws, he has the political will to achieve The political agenda that I support. | ||
So full disclosure, even if he was just a total dirtbag or something, I would defend for the most part. | ||
Unless it was contravening my agenda, I would support. | ||
But with that being said, so that's one reason I support him, is I will support him really no matter what, within reason. | ||
But objectively speaking, I also support him because this is a clerical error. | ||
Every charge against him has actually not had any substance. | ||
It's really just all about procedural stuff pertaining to paperwork, right? | ||
I mean the charge in Manhattan is about falsified business entries. | ||
Because of a $100,000 payoff? | ||
Then we're talking about billions of dollars that are raised in 16, 18, 20, 22 hundreds of millions for 24. | ||
20, 22, hundreds of millions for 24. | ||
And we're talking about $100,000 payoff that according to New York state law should have been a FEC campaign contribution. | ||
Whatever, man. | ||
Whatever, really? | ||
And there has to be some discretion from a prosecutor and weigh the significance of charging a former president. | ||
Some say, well, we're a nation of laws, not men. | ||
But people voted for this man. | ||
This man has Massive popular political support in the country. | ||
He was a chief law enforcement officer of the country. | ||
We're not talking about treason. | ||
We're not talking about murder or extortion, corruption, embezzlement. | ||
We're talking about he filed the paperwork wrong in both cases. | ||
I mean, that's really what both are. | ||
So I think it's... even with the evidence, it's ridiculous. | ||
But we'll get into that. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Like I said though, kind of lame. | ||
Not what we thought. | ||
Thought I was going to be covering a major Russian Civil War. | ||
A second one. | ||
But that's not going to happen. | ||
Before we get into the show, I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on Cozy. | ||
Get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Check it out! | ||
I got my Cozy plush. | ||
My Cozy Mr. Moon plush. | ||
Did you get yours? | ||
Are these still on sale, by the way? | ||
I don't even remember. | ||
But, uh, I think they are. | ||
Yeah, so if you go to shop.cozy.tv, they're kind of steep. | ||
I don't know, they're 50 bucks. | ||
That's okay. | ||
Well, I mean, look, they're not, they're not cheap to make. | ||
It's in the lifestyle category. | ||
Why is this in the lifestyle? | ||
What does this have to do with lifestyle? | ||
I'm living this lifestyle. | ||
If you go to shop.cozy.tv, you go to the merch section, you click on the business, it's in the lifestyle category. | ||
Check out this great lifestyle product. | ||
That's just funny. | ||
But yeah, my Mr. Moon plushie finally came in. | ||
It's pretty fun. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
We finally have an official mascot. | ||
You know, we had the We had a few unofficial mascots, but this is our official mascot. | ||
He's coming around. | ||
He says, hi, watch Ethan Ralph. | ||
Hi! | ||
Watch Ethan Ralph on Cozy.TV. | ||
Watch Ethan Ralph. | ||
Watch Ethan Ralph. | ||
Watch America First. | ||
Watch Wurzelroot and Beardson Beardly on Cozy.TV. | ||
And he's got, look at this, and he's got the Cozy logo. | ||
This is great. | ||
So follow me here on Cozy.tv slash Nick. | ||
Smash the follow button, get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Pretty fun. | ||
That's pretty fun, right? | ||
We like that. | ||
unidentified
|
This is good stuff. | |
This is official. | ||
unidentified
|
See, now this is an official show. | |
Because we have our own plush. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Cozy.tv slash Nick. | ||
Smash the follow button. | ||
Follow me on Rumble. | ||
I'm live on Rumble every night as well. | ||
Follow me on Telegram. | ||
Link is down below. | ||
And what else? | ||
Fuentes Rally coming up July 16th. | ||
We're all sold out. | ||
Okay, I announced it last week. | ||
We sold out of our tickets. | ||
If you got them, I'll see you in West Palm Beach Sunday, July 16th. | ||
We also put up an RSVP for our sponsor dinner, so if you'd like to sponsor the event, because these things aren't cheap... | ||
You can pay to have dinner with me before the event that weekend. | ||
It's at aff.events slash rally. | ||
It's not cheap though, okay? | ||
You're sponsoring the event. | ||
So I think it's gonna be a thousand bucks. | ||
But you get dinner with me. | ||
It's gonna be a really nice dinner. | ||
I don't know what it'll be yet. | ||
It'll be steak or something nice. | ||
And you get dinner with me. | ||
We hang out. | ||
And then the rally is afterward. | ||
It's a pretty good experience. | ||
But don't I always discourage people from like if you're not if you're not rich don't don't do it and I only say that because it makes me feel bad if people like Scrimp and save and they put together $1,000 to like have dinner with me. | ||
It feels like I'm just taking your money and that's really not what it's for It's really more for people We have money, they want to sponsor our event, you know, and then they get a goodie. | ||
I always feel bad because sometimes the people that go to these, it's like young people that watch the show, and this is just like their discretionary income, and I'm like, no, like save your money. | ||
Now you can do that it's your prerogative, but I always feel a little bit bad when I see that I mean that's not the majority of cases, but In any case, but it is a lot of fun. | ||
I mean the last one we did for the first Fuentes rally It was very small intimate. | ||
It was like 15 people I think and And I got to give the inside scoop on everything, you know, because at these dinners I can say stuff that I can't say in public. | ||
So I get to tell all the inside stories about Ye and about AFPAC and Marjorie and all the things that have been going on over the last five years. | ||
So it's pretty cool. | ||
But anyway, you can RSVP for that. | ||
That's aff.events.rally. | ||
And with that, we'll get into the show. | ||
I apologize I'm so late tonight. | ||
My sleep schedule's off track because I was up all night for the Russia Civil War. | ||
That didn't happen on Saturday. | ||
And anyway, I woke up last night, late, and I worked, like, all day. | ||
I did a bunch of paperwork, I did a bunch of, like, chore type stuff, and ran some errands, and I was so tired. | ||
I thought, you know, I probably should have just pressed ahead but I said I'll take a short nap I'll wake up at 9 or 10 I'll do the show but I woke up like out of it I mean I was out cold so it took me took me a couple hours to work myself up but but I'm here and you know we got a good show also I forgot to announce this I'll be on Fresh and Fit Friday July 7th So you can look forward to that. | ||
Friday, July 7th, I'll be live in studio on Fresh and Fit, just announced this morning. | ||
So be sure to check that out. | ||
What else? | ||
I think that's it. | ||
I almost have to sneeze. | ||
unidentified
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I don't think I do though. | |
Okay. | ||
Yeah, I don't know if you can tell, but I'm tired. | ||
I had a long day. | ||
I had a long weekend. | ||
My sleep's all over the place because of this. | ||
Russia, everything. | ||
unidentified
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But I'm here doing the show now. | |
And we're gonna have a fun show. | ||
I'm hungry, though. | ||
I haven't eaten since this morning. | ||
I had Panera Bread this morning. | ||
Man, what a rip. | ||
I ordered this, like, sandwich. | ||
And they give you a sandwich that's, like, this big. | ||
I ordered a breakfast, like, buffalo avocado chicken sandwich. | ||
First of all, the picture doesn't look like the picture. | ||
It's just like this wet, soggy thing. | ||
It was tasty. | ||
But they give you like this much. | ||
That was my breakfast. | ||
That's what I ate for breakfast. | ||
That's it. | ||
I ate that at like 8 a.m. | ||
I'm starving! | ||
I haven't eaten since 8 a.m. | ||
And before that, I hadn't eaten since 1 a.m. | ||
I had a couple hot dogs. | ||
unidentified
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I'm starving! | |
I should have had something with sugar in it before I started the show, because by the end of this show, I am going to be furious. | ||
I'm just warning you now. | ||
Do not be surprised in the Super Chats. | ||
I am going to be crappy. | ||
I'm going to be pissed. | ||
I should have had a Snickers or something before I started the show, or something with sugar, because I am going to be absolutely furious. | ||
I'm going to be hungry. | ||
I'm tired. | ||
And I'm going to be annoyed because of you. | ||
So that's the worst combination. | ||
Alright, but let's do it. | ||
Let's get into it. | ||
It's our first story. | ||
But we're going to do it anyway. | ||
Our first story is about this Trump indictment. | ||
And this is from the New York Times. | ||
We have a brand new audio recording which basically confirms that he's guilty. | ||
Now here's the thing. | ||
It's two questions, and this isn't a cope. | ||
I'll debate this with anybody. | ||
There's really two fundamental questions here about... I'm talking about these charges. | ||
So if you missed it, two weeks ago Donald Trump was charged by the Department of Justice 30-some counts of improperly handling classified documents. | ||
And this is part of a protracted investigation. | ||
Trump leaves office in January 2021 and there's a dialogue between his legal team and the National Records Administration and the National Archives. | ||
But so, the National Archives, National Records, they're chasing Trump down trying to get all these documents, classified documents, from him that he took from the White House to Mar-a-Lago. | ||
And at first Trump is cooperative, then they say that he began to be uncooperative around June 2022, last summer. | ||
And after the Trump team stopped being cooperative, they went to a judge, they got a warrant, and they called on the FBI to go and raid Mar-a-Lago pre-dawn, unannounced raid. | ||
They sent 50 FBI agents into his house, they locked down the storage room, the bedroom, the office, they took all these boxes out. | ||
And then they, over the course of the last 9 to 11 months, they've been looking into charging him. | ||
He's been a target of an investigation that he shouldn't have had these documents in the first place. | ||
And when he was requested the documents, he obstructed justice. | ||
He refused to go along with National Archives. | ||
And so this brings us to where we are today. | ||
And we have this new evidence, and we'll go through the new evidence from the New York Times here. | ||
But I want to say at the outset, there's really two questions. | ||
And the first question is, did he violate the statute? | ||
There's 30-some counts. | ||
They say that he has classified documents. | ||
Is that true? | ||
Did he violate the statute? | ||
I think the answer is probably yes. | ||
I think, probably, he did violate the statute. | ||
Now, there's all kinds of legal arguments that you can put forward and you can say, well, he had the authority to declassify them, even if he didn't affirmatively say that he was declassifying them. | ||
In other words, by the act of removing them from the White House, they were, in effect, declassified. | ||
Because the President has almost unlimited authority when it comes to these things because he's the Commander-in-Chief. | ||
So being the top law enforcement officer of the country, being the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, it's really his prerogative. | ||
The whole classification schedule. | ||
And so they say that by the simple act of simply taking it out, it was declassified and therefore technically didn't violate the statute. | ||
We could entertain all these legal arguments, but the fact of the matter is, probably he had things he shouldn't have. | ||
And he didn't turn them over. | ||
So that's the first question. | ||
I think anybody would, for the most part, be willing to say that. | ||
Then there's a secondary question, and that is about the discretion of the prosecutor. | ||
Because the prosecutor has discretion to investigate, to file charges, all these things. | ||
And at a high level like that, it is fundamentally different. | ||
There is this fallacy of composition that goes on. | ||
I think that's the right term. | ||
Maybe not. | ||
I guess, without getting into that, it's really it's apples and oranges. | ||
People like to say, well, nobody's above the law. | ||
Okay. | ||
Well, a civilian getting a traffic ticket, getting pulled over for speeding, is totally different than charging a former president or investigating a critical financial institution or these kinds of things. | ||
Now, don't get me wrong. | ||
These powerful people or powerful entities should be held to a high standard. | ||
But it should be weighed at the same time that they have an enormous responsibility. | ||
And so when you take a look at these extremely powerful people and powerful institutions, are we really going to go after them for... If you're managing, for example, the federal bureaucracy of the United States of America, we're going to go after them for a hundred documents? | ||
We're talking about the federal government. | ||
We're talking about the federal bureaucracy. | ||
Which the president is in charge of. | ||
And he's not just running the White House and the administration and the executive branch, but he's also running a campaign. | ||
We're gonna go after him because of a filing error for like a hundred papers. | ||
And that leads me to another point on the same matter, which is not just about The fact that there really is a different standard when you look at these people. | ||
But by the same token, the severity of the crime. | ||
If you're going to charge somebody and it's this significant, it sets a precedent, it has this gravity, it changes, in some sense you could say it changes the course of America because this is the guy that's running for office right now. | ||
Happens to be running for office against the guy that appointed the Attorney General. | ||
The thing that you're going to charge him for Is paperwork? | ||
And again, I'm not saying that a president or a powerful person should never be charged with anything, or should be never charged under any circumstance, but a prosecutor has enormous discretion, the Attorney General has enormous discretion about who to prosecute and for what, and when it gets to that level, At that point, you do have to weigh what is the best outcome for the country. | ||
Because if you're just prosecuting everybody for everything, society starts to break down. | ||
It is true that powerful people do have privilege. | ||
It should be that way. | ||
Because powerful people have responsibility in a way that people at the lower end of the spectrum don't. | ||
If every Starbucks barista and every Every dirtbag in the street, if every low-level person in the society, and I don't mean that to sound nasty, but if every person from the bottom of the pyramid was able to break every law, there would be no order. | ||
It would be total chaos. | ||
Total disorder, and they would abuse it and take total advantage of it, and society would crumble. | ||
But when you get to these higher levels, and you talk about the President, or you talk about the top 50 billionaires, or the CEOs of the Fortune 500 companies, if they exercise some privilege, being people that are the ones that organize the society around us, that they're the responsible parties, if they get off on the paperwork or on the traffic ticket, You know, I think that's actually just what you need to have society function. | ||
Because you're not going to find people to run our society that are efficient and competent and have integrity, but are perfect. | ||
You know, and this, hey, don't do the crime if you can't do the time. | ||
I think that makes sense up to a point. | ||
So, there has to be some discretion. | ||
And that's really the case that I'm making here, is that I'm against that discretionary use of law enforcement in this case. | ||
Now, when it comes to Hillary Clinton, we're talking about a cover-up because probably there is impropriety. | ||
We're not talking about, oh whoops, she accidentally had documents. | ||
We're talking about she had a server in her home. | ||
We're talking about tens of thousands of official communications that were destroyed as part of a cover-up. | ||
Not documents that they were doing a tug-of-war with the National Archives. | ||
Ah, you can't have them. | ||
We're talking about this was a conspiracy. | ||
They set up the email server in her home An endeavor to use that so as outside of the purview of the government. | ||
If they held the private server, as opposed to having the State Department communications on our State Department issued phone, then it's outside the reach of the federal government. | ||
And therefore, the federal government can't see it. | ||
And therefore, they don't know what's going on while she's the Secretary of State and conducting the diplomatic mission of the United States. | ||
And then, when they subpoena her, they destroy it. | ||
Not, you know, they go in and they recover the emails. | ||
They destroy it before Congress can even get to them. | ||
And she wasn't even charged! | ||
So then there's that third layer of, okay, if the prosecutor has discretion and he thinks that this is an appropriate use of his discretionary authority, well then how do you explain the double standard? | ||
How do you explain that nobody else who had the same issue is being charged? | ||
Not Biden, not Clinton, not Obama, not anybody. | ||
And then you add the fact that not only were none of those people charged, but probably, at least in the case of Hillary Clinton, it was worse. | ||
Hillary Clinton did not have the same declassifying power as the President, and she conspired to destroy the evidence. | ||
Which is worse. | ||
And she set out to conceal it from the federal government from the outset by conducting all of her communications on a private server. | ||
So there's a lot of reasons why this just doesn't work. | ||
No one's above the law stuff. | ||
I know that sounds great. | ||
Really doesn't work. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So with that being said, I want to get into it. | ||
These are the latest developments. | ||
This is from the New York Times. | ||
unidentified
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It's this quote. | |
An audio recording of former President Trump in 2021 discussing what he called the highly confidential document about Iran that he acknowledged he could not declassify because he was out of office appears to contradict his recent assertion that the material he was referring to was simply a news clipping. | ||
Portions of a transcript of the two-minute recording of Mr. Trump were cited by federal prosecutors in the indictment of Mr. Trump. | ||
The recording captured his conversation in July 2021 with a publisher and writer working on a memoir by Mr. Trump's final Chief of Staff, Mark Meadows. | ||
In it, Mr. Trump discussed what he described as a secret plan regarding Iran, drawn up by General Mark Milley, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Defense Department. | ||
The audio, which is likely to feature as evidence in Mr. Trump's trial, was played for the first time in public on Monday by CNN and was also obtained by the New York Times. | ||
Last week, in an interview with Fox News, Mr. Trump insisted that he was not presenting classified material in the meeting, which was recorded. | ||
Mr. Trump said he was not referring to secret or highly confidential documents, but rather was talking about newspaper stories. | ||
But the audio recording of the full encounter Suggests that Mr. Trump was referring not to a second-hand account, but to a specific piece of paper or papers in front of him. | ||
And so this is the conversation. | ||
He says, quote, isn't it amazing as he shuffles through what he calls a big pile of papers? | ||
This thing just came up. | ||
This was him. | ||
This was the Defense Department and him. | ||
Wow, a woman in the room can be heard saying. | ||
Mr. Trump says, let's see here, look. | ||
There's a brief pause where he appears to show people in the room something and they start to laugh. | ||
He says, quote, this totally wins my case, you know? | ||
Highly confidential, secret. | ||
This is secret information. | ||
Isn't that incredible? | ||
This was done by the military and given to me. | ||
I think we can probably, right? | ||
I don't know, we'll have to see, you know? | ||
We'll have to try to figure out, declassify it. | ||
See, as president, I could have declassified it, but now I can't. | ||
The woman says, quote, now we have a problem. | ||
Mr. Trump says it's so cool, eventually calling out for someone to bring a Coke to drink. | ||
So, I mean, he's literally in the audio saying, this is secret, isn't this so cool, look at this. | ||
I could have declassified it, but now I can't. | ||
In a statement, Stephen Chung, a spokesman for Mr. Trump, avoided commenting on the bulk of the recording's content. | ||
And instead focused on a quip Mr. Trump made during the meeting about Representative Anthony Weiner's role in the investigation into Hillary Clinton's private email server. | ||
Chung said, quote, the audio tape provides context proving once again that Mr. Trump did nothing wrong at all, adding that he was speaking rhetorically and humorously about Mr. Weiner and accusing the media and Trump haters of taking the bait. | ||
Some of Mr. Trump's lawyers have been aware of the recording since March when one of the aides who attended the meeting, Margo Martin, was asked about it during an appearance before the grand jury. | ||
The full clip undercuts arguments made by some of Mr. Trump's allies that he was simply blustering and exaggerating or mischaracterizing the material he described in the recording. | ||
The indictment charges Mr. Trump with illegally holding on to 31 individual national security documents and with conspiring with one of his personal aides, Walt Nolta, to obstruct the government's repeated efforts to reclaim the records. | ||
So, this is recording. | ||
Like I said, I'm really not interested in the evidence. | ||
Because there's this back and forth. | ||
And the government says, see? | ||
This is proof. | ||
This is proof that Trump was showing people classified documents. | ||
He had them. | ||
He was improperly handling them. | ||
He did not have a security clearance. | ||
He violated the statute. | ||
The lawyer replies and says, nope. | ||
They weren't classified documents. | ||
He was just making a joke. | ||
And this is a question about evidence. | ||
This is what lawyers do. | ||
They're interrogating the evidence. | ||
And honestly, I could see both sides. | ||
Now you could take it literally and you could say, how much worse does it get? | ||
Here he is saying it's classified and he's showing people. | ||
On the contrary, Some people might say that it's much more, oftentimes in life, there is context that is required. | ||
If you recorded every conversation that you ever had, you would probably run into some problems and you would need to show context. | ||
Is an audio recording definitive? | ||
Unless you have video proof that says there's the document, there's a person, there's Trump, I think it's hard to say that it's airtight. | ||
Now some people might say that's a cope or something or that's a stretch. | ||
I don't think it is. | ||
I think that that's actually the purpose of the legal process is because sometimes evidence isn't what it seems. | ||
And so evidence needs to be weighted accordingly and these kinds of considerations Need to be heard. | ||
That's the purpose of a trial, and Trump will have his day in court. | ||
But I'm really not interested in this. | ||
There is a debate about this as evidence, and like I said, the DOJ says we're going to take this according to the transcript. | ||
The Trump legal team says this is out of context. | ||
You need to consider the full context of the conversation, and it's inconclusive. | ||
But I would jump in and say, even if we take it literally, so what? | ||
Really? | ||
We're gonna send? | ||
Because consider, this statute carries a maximum penalty of 10 years per claim. | ||
So they have, what did they say it is? | ||
30 some, 31 individual documents. | ||
So there's 31 separate counts of this Statute. | ||
31 counts. | ||
Each one carrying a maximum penalty of 10 years. | ||
This is supposed to be a 10-year charge? | ||
Like, theoretically, he should go to jail for 10 years for this? | ||
He's the former president. | ||
He's showing a biographer a document. | ||
Here, take a look at this. | ||
That's 10 years in jail for a former president? | ||
Seriously? | ||
Now, granted, he had the power to declassify this. | ||
If he had simply waved his hand and said, I declassify this before he left, oh now it's not a 10-year crime. | ||
Now it's not a 10-year penalty anymore. | ||
If he had simply waved a wand in January 2021 before he left and said, I declassify this, and then this happened, oh well then there would be no charge. | ||
Seriously? | ||
And that's where discretion matters. | ||
Does anybody really think that this is Getting to the spirit of the statute here, the spirit of the law. | ||
It's not like he was giving this to a foreign government. | ||
It's not like he was leaking this to some spy. | ||
It's not like he sold this to America's adversaries or published it on his Twitter. | ||
And this is, again, granting that the recording should be taken at face value, literally. | ||
This is what the federal charge is about? | ||
A former president has never been charged with a federal crime, but he is now for this? | ||
This stuff happens all the time, you can bet. | ||
You think that Obama, you think that Bush, or Biden, or Clinton, or any of these people, you think they don't have these conversations in their parlor, in their mansions? | ||
You think that they don't have keepsakes? | ||
You think that they don't have classified documents? | ||
They've never had these conversations? | ||
It's never happened? | ||
We know that's not the case. | ||
You think other federal officials have never done this? | ||
It's just not that big of a deal. | ||
But the federal charge is a huge deal. | ||
And it would be a huge deal on its own. | ||
But then add to the fact that Donald Trump is the presumptive nominee for the Republican Party, which happens to be the opposition for the sitting president. | ||
So you factor that in as well. | ||
You could argue that if he was just a retired former president, maybe it'd be different. | ||
This is a guy that's still, and not only still a politician, but he's still one of the most popular politicians in America. | ||
Higher favorability rating than all the congressional leadership close to Biden. | ||
So it's just like unconscionable that you would have these prosecutors at every level coming after this guy for this crap. | ||
Like, we're gonna hit you with erroneous business entry, we're gonna make it a felony level because of some convoluted, ridiculous argument. | ||
Seriously? | ||
You filed your paperwork wrong. | ||
We're going to charge you for it. | ||
Well, no one's above the law, says some black public employee. | ||
Really? | ||
And then the DOJ and the FBI months later. | ||
Oh, well, we're going to get you. | ||
We're going to send you up for 300 years in prison, maximum. | ||
Because of this? | ||
Because you showed a piece of paper to a biographer writing about your chief of staff? | ||
Seriously? | ||
It's just not a big deal. | ||
And I don't think anybody should care. | ||
And this is why, when it comes to these things, you just have to ask yourself, like, do we care? | ||
Because I don't really care about most of it. | ||
The only thing that would bother me is if Trump was in private saying something like, I don't really believe in America First. | ||
I don't really believe in what I say I believe in. | ||
That would be a problem for me. | ||
If he went behind the scenes and it turned out that he was a phony or totally corrupt or something like that... | ||
That's just about the only thing that would be a problem for me. | ||
Everything else is just the sausage being made. | ||
And we as a movement have to have a certain stomach for that. | ||
Because if you go up against the system, they are going to attack you. | ||
And if they attack you, they will find something. | ||
They will find something because nobody is perfect. | ||
So they will find something legal. | ||
They will find something professional. | ||
They will find something personal. | ||
Like, do people understand this? | ||
Consider what we're doing, which is we are going up against the regime. | ||
We're pursuing regime change. | ||
We want the entrenched, powerful interests in the country to be dislodged, and we want to replace them with patriots. | ||
They're not gonna let that happen. | ||
They're gonna fight tooth and nail. | ||
They say from our cold dead hands you're gonna take our power and privilege and wealth and probably send us to jail. | ||
And so they then, having access to virtually limitless resources, can marshal lawyers and judges and politicians and you name it. | ||
And this is what they can do. | ||
They apply maximum pressure to a human being, and then they go digging. | ||
They go fishing. | ||
They go looking for civil infractions, criminal infractions. | ||
They look for political FEC infractions. | ||
They look through your personal life. | ||
They go after your marriage. | ||
They go after your kids. | ||
They go after your whole history. | ||
They go after your friends, guilt by association. | ||
They go after your family, your wife, your kids, parents, siblings. | ||
And in the course of that, they're bound to find something. | ||
They're bound to find something legal because there is such a vast and complex legal code that if you are a billionaire running for federal office, you're going to be in trouble. | ||
Because it's a vast, vast, complex code. | ||
So if you have a creative prosecutor that's looking and they want to nail you on something, and they've got the resources and the political support to do it, you think it's going to be hard for them to find something? | ||
And they did. | ||
They've been investigating this man for eight years. | ||
And the accusation was, you were controlled by Russia, you were controlled by Ukraine or extorting Ukraine, you're doing this, that, and the other. | ||
What did they come up with between Roger Stone and Michael Flynn and the former campaign manager, whose name I forget, and Bannon and subpoenaing everybody and all this stuff? | ||
What do they have? | ||
Obstruction? | ||
Contempt? | ||
They got these bullshit, ticky-tack charges about, oh, you misfiled a piece of paperwork? | ||
seriously and in any way not to get back into the question about how severe it is The point is, the guy's basically innocent. | ||
The guy's conduct is basically unimpeachable. | ||
Consider how much effort and how much money has gone into turning over every stone and trying to get this guy in jail or kill this guy or whatever. | ||
And this is what they find. | ||
What they find is nothing. | ||
What they find, they have to stretch and pull this Georgia phone call, the DA in Manhattan, this stuff. | ||
And of course they're going to find something that's their job. | ||
And the same goes, by the way, for Alex Jones. | ||
The same goes for Ricky Vaughn. | ||
The same goes for any of these people that you've seen go down in the past 10 years. | ||
Alex Jones, they got him on defamation. | ||
Really? | ||
He's a journalist. | ||
A journalist can't talk about current events? | ||
He's talking about the parents of the victims of the worst mass shooting in American history, or one of them. | ||
And they go, oh well, by postulating about them, that's defamation. | ||
That's a trillion dollar defamation case. | ||
Really? | ||
You know, but again, it's about getting them. | ||
It's about Alex Jones gotta be got. | ||
Donald Trump has to be got. | ||
Tucker Carlson's gotta be got. | ||
And we're talking about the system that has so many resources, they're gonna find something. | ||
And that's why we have to have special... Excuse me. | ||
We have to have a special consideration for these people, which is to say there has to be a wide latitude for charity and generosity when it comes to these people that you say, we can forgive a lot. | ||
In other words, if you believed or entertained every accusation against Trump, you wouldn't support him anymore. | ||
Because it has been, it has been non-stop and relentless and absurd for a decade. | ||
Nobody could withstand, if you entertained every single, oh his rally size, his crowd size at the inauguration wasn't big enough, oh Fox News and Russia and Sergey Kislyak and the Ukrainian phone call and Kids in cages in shithole countries and they're bringing rapists and Kizra Khan, the gold star family. | ||
You could go through any number. | ||
Oh his divorces, his kids, his business, illegal contractors, blah blah blah. | ||
The guy's a billionaire. | ||
The guy's a billionaire national politician. | ||
Sorry, if you don't like it, that's just how the sausage is made. | ||
He's the only one sticking up for us. | ||
As far as I'm concerned, it's gotta be really bad for me to not support. | ||
Like, for example, Andrew Tate. | ||
I look at a guy like Andrew Tate, and I had a totally different take. | ||
I look at Andrew Tate in the same way. | ||
I would give a lot of latitude because he's pushing a lot of Red Pill-type content. | ||
He's a very important fixture in the last couple years in the media ecosystem. | ||
But what did they get him on? | ||
Well, he's a pimp and he doesn't even lie about it. | ||
He is a straight-up serial pimp and not in a cool way, and not that there is a cool way, but in a gross way. | ||
Pimping out digital prostitutes, creating pornography. | ||
It's gross. | ||
I don't support that. | ||
And it's true, and he says it's true, and he defends it, and I don't support that. | ||
And I think that fundamentally compromises what he's about. | ||
He's not even ashamed of it. | ||
He goes out there and brags about it. | ||
Oh, I was the best. | ||
I made so much money. | ||
So, you know, that's how we have to consider these people like Trump. | ||
Specifically, Trump is, uh, you just gotta support him all the way. | ||
Unless, you know, the only stuff that gives me pause with Trump is the connections with Israel. | ||
That's the only thing, because that's the thing that compromises him. | ||
This other stuff, who gives a shit? | ||
But anyway, so that, those are the charges. | ||
That's my feeling, that's been my feeling for a long, long, long time about Trump and about people like Trump is you just, you gotta just give him a break. | ||
To put it very simply, cut him some slack, give him a break. | ||
Who cares? | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the Russia coup because this is another big story which fell apart. | ||
And so we cover this Friday. | ||
I did a live stream Saturday. | ||
We watched it as it was happening. | ||
And it started and it was over in like 36 hours. | ||
But if you missed it on Friday, the head of the Wagner PMC group, the private military company, declared war on the Russian Ministry of Defense. | ||
So, and I'm not going to talk about the whole situation again, but, you know, if you've been paying attention in Ukraine, Russia has been fighting with their official military, but they've also employed the use of one of the biggest and most important private military companies in the world, the Wagner Group, but they've also employed the use of one of the biggest and most important private military | ||
And Wagner Group's private company, they got about 50,000 soldiers, which have been recruited from Russian prisons, and they've been doing a lot of the fighting, and specifically the heavy, difficult fighting on the front lines, for example, in a city like Bakhmut, which they just won, and which was heavily publicized in a city like Bakhmut, which they just won, and which was heavily publicized for the last And so the head of the Wagner Group, after a power struggle with the president of Russia and with the minister of defense, declared war on the Russian military. | ||
And this is the first thing. | ||
And he said that it wasn't a coup, he wasn't trying to overthrow the government, but he was trying to overthrow the military leadership. | ||
He wanted to take control of the military. | ||
He's the head of this, and his name is Pergozhin, and he's the head of this private military company that's doing some of the fighting and amid a dispute and power struggle and tension with the Minister of Defense that runs the Russian military. | ||
He declared war on the Russian military and sought to depose the Minister of Defense and the generals that had been conducting the war. | ||
He wanted to take over the military and lead it himself. | ||
So he began a march to Moscow on Friday. | ||
He crossed the border from Ukraine into Russia with his soldiers. | ||
They took over a major city called Rostov. | ||
And they took over specifically the Ministry of Defense buildings in Rostov, which implies that the Ministry of Defense either surrendered or they joined up with the Wagner Group. | ||
And the Wagner Group moved very quickly, without any resistance, through the Russian M4 highway. | ||
Traveling north, headed to Moscow, and the goal apparently was to lay siege to the city, and then once they captured Moscow, they wanted to kill the Minister of Defense, kill the generals, take control of the military, and then go back into Ukraine and win the war. | ||
So, Prigozhin said. | ||
And so that's what they were trying to do. | ||
This is what happened on Friday. | ||
We covered it Friday. | ||
And we watched it live on Saturday as they made their way up north through the country. | ||
There were very few casualties. | ||
The Russian military tried to attack their convoy. | ||
And so some Russian air force was shot down. | ||
Some helicopters and I think some airplanes were shot down by the Wagner Group. | ||
But it was minimal. | ||
I believe it was just air force. | ||
There wasn't a lot of shooting. | ||
There wasn't a lot of urban warfare. | ||
And so on Saturday, the Wagner Group arrived in the Moscow Oblast. | ||
They were within striking distance of the city. | ||
And then a deal was brokered between the Wagner Group and the Russian government through the Belarus President Lukashenko. | ||
And so at the last second, the Wagner Group says that they relented. | ||
They said that they didn't want bloodshed. | ||
They didn't want to fight fellow Russians. | ||
So they conceded. | ||
They went through this mediation with Lukashenko, they stopped short of laying siege to the city or any real engagement with the Russian military before the Chechens began fighting them in Rostov, and a deal was brokered. | ||
And the deal is that the Wagner Group will be absolved, they'll be totally exonerated for their rebellion. | ||
And some Wagner group can join the Ministry of Defense, they can sign contracts with the Ministry of Defense and join the Russian military, and those that do not contract with the Russian military will have to leave Russia and they'll have to go to Belarus with Prigozhin. | ||
And I don't really know what the story is there. | ||
Why are they going to Belarus? | ||
For what purpose? | ||
Are they joining the Belarus army? | ||
I don't understand the point of putting them there quite yet, although there are some theories. | ||
But so that was the deal and Putin gave a speech this morning and said that Purgosian is a traitor who sought to divide Russia and put Russians against Russians and played into the hands of the enemy and he was appeared to be very angry and he says that the Wagner group can either contract with the Ministry of Defense. | ||
He's not blaming the soldiers but he's saying the soldiers in the Wagner group have to join the Russian military or they have to be exiled to Belarus or back to Africa. | ||
Because a lot of them are fighting in Africa. | ||
Not that they're black, but they're just fighting in Africa. | ||
And so this is a story from the New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday delivered his first address to Russia after Wagner Chief Pugosian's short-lived uprising ended, vowing to Wagner fighters that he would uphold his side of the deal that was reached to end the mutiny. | ||
Putin thanked Russian citizens and his security forces for opposing the mutiny, He did not mention Purgosian by name, saying that the organizers of the rebellion had betrayed their country. | ||
The Russian leader said that Ukraine and its western backers wanted to see Russians kill each other and for the country to fall into civil war. | ||
He said they wanted Russian soldiers to kill each other so the military personnel and civilians would die so that in the end Russia would lose and our society would split, choke in bloody civil strife. | ||
He said they rubbed their hands, dreaming of taking revenge of their failures at the front and during the so-called counteroffensive, but they miscalculated. | ||
Discussing the Wagner members, Putin said that the overwhelming majority of the fighters and commanders of the mercenary force are Russian patriots. | ||
He thanked the Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko for mediating negotiations to end the crisis. | ||
Putin vowed to uphold the agreement by offering Wagner members the option of signing a contract with the Russian Defense Ministry, going home to their families, or traveling to Belarus. | ||
The exact details of the deal brokered by Lukashenko are not clear. | ||
The Kremlin initially said that the Wagner fighters who didn't take part in the mutiny could sign contracts with the Defense Ministry. | ||
But Putin's comments suggested all members of the mercenary force have that option. | ||
The Kremlin has said that Purgosian will go to Belarus under the agreement. | ||
Purgoshin released an 11-minute audio recording on his telegram, but his whereabouts are unclear. | ||
In the recording, he defended his actions, claiming he was not trying to overthrow the government. | ||
He said his motive was to prevent the destruction of Wagner, saying that the PMC would cease to exist by July 1st due to the Russian Defense Ministry's demand to have all volunteer fighters sign contracts. | ||
He said a Russian missile strike that killed 30 Wagner fighters sparked their march into Russia, But that claim has not been confirmed. | ||
According to Russia Today, multiple reports have said that Purgoshin's fighters shot down a Russian helicopter and airplane during the mutiny, killing 20 Russian airmen, but the figures have not been confirmed by the Russian Defense Ministry. | ||
After launching the insurrection on Friday, the Wagner fighters captured a military base in the city of Rostov-on-Don and were headed toward Moscow on Saturday before turning around after Prigozhin agreed to back down. | ||
So, the whole thing is very bizarre. | ||
And I feel like we don't even know the full story yet. | ||
Because the official story goes something like this. | ||
There was basically a power struggle. | ||
Between Prigozhin, who was operating outside the formal official chain of command of the Russian military, who was fighting on the front line and more successful, and taking the brunt of the casualties, and he was fighting with the Russian Defense Ministry and Generals, which were providing the logistics for the war, and who were apparently withholding ammunition, And we're concerned about Purgosian's political ambitions and his growing power. | ||
And this all came to a head when the Defense Ministry demanded that Wagner turn over all their volunteers to the Russian Defense Ministry. | ||
And I said this on Friday. | ||
I said it is apparent that the precipitating cause of this mutiny was the decision by the Defense Ministry and the support from Putin to To force all of the Wagner volunteers to sign contracts with the Defense Ministry. | ||
In other words, they would have, and Purgosian is right, they would have gotten rid of the Wagner group. | ||
Wagner Group is a private entity of volunteer fighters, and the Defense Ministry said you have to sign them up to contracts with the Russian military. | ||
And that would, in effect, subordinate all of these fighters to the Russian military. | ||
And so, in effect, Purgosian's authority and this entity as a separate private entity would cease to exist. | ||
And that was a very calculated move, it was basically an ultimatum, where Putin and Shoigu said, look, enough messing around, you're out of control, you're a nut job, you work for us, and you have to sign the contract, you have to bend the knee, it's time for you to capitulate, you are going to join the chain of command. | ||
The Wagner Group is part of the military now. | ||
And Purgosian said, in response to this, no, I think the missile strike, probably fake, but who knows? | ||
It sounds like that was just a rationalization. | ||
That created the pretext for the mutiny. | ||
But the real pretext was, he wanted to get a better deal. | ||
And again, the official story, this is with the official facts. | ||
Sounds like perhaps he never intended actually to overthrow the government or overthrow the defense ministry. | ||
It sounds like this was an elaborate protest. | ||
It was an elaborate demonstration. | ||
Because if he really intended to overthrow the government, why would he stop at Moscow? | ||
They encountered no resistance. | ||
They moved quickly through the country. | ||
Moscow was totally unprepared. | ||
The Russian National Guard would have been no match and the Chechens were miles away in Rostov. | ||
So in other words, there was nothing that happened that he didn't anticipate. | ||
It's not like anything went wrong. | ||
He charged through at lightning speed and approached Moscow in a day, apparently exactly as he had planned, with very little intervening factors. | ||
Nothing that he didn't anticipate. | ||
If he arrives in Moscow and then suddenly decides, you know what, never mind. | ||
It's not like he said never mind because he encountered something that he didn't expect. | ||
And if he were to show up just to say never mind, that would seem to suggest that he never intended on overthrowing the government in the first place. | ||
You don't make a decision like that, go that far, and then at the last minute say, you know what, forget it. | ||
He mutinied, he called for the removal of the Russian president, he called for the death of the defense ministry, he killed Russian airmen, stunned the whole world, betrayed his countrymen, they're destroying infrastructure, and then he got where he needed to go and then said, you know, never mind, forget it, I'm good. | ||
I'll see what my options are. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
So according to the official facts, it would seem that the Defense Ministry gave him an ultimatum and said, listen, you're going to join the military. | ||
And he did a wild, dramatic protest to give himself some leverage to save the wagon group and said, you know what? | ||
You're not gonna kill me? | ||
You're not gonna cut off our logistics? | ||
He basically outmaneuvered them, because if the Wagner Group didn't sign the contract with the Ministry of Defense, probably the Ministry of Defense would have undertaken steps to destroy the Wagner Group, because that was an ultimatum. | ||
They said, you gotta join up or else. | ||
And you know what or else means in Russia, with a popular military leader that defies the head of the country, that defies the Tsar. | ||
You know what that means. | ||
That means he was going to get killed, and his convict army was going to get killed. | ||
They were either going to get fed to the Ukrainians, the logistics cut off, shot from the rear, but they were going to die. | ||
And so Prigozhin had two options. | ||
Either die, or join up with the Russian military. | ||
Either be destroyed, dissolved, whatever you want to say, wind up in jail, or dissolve your army. | ||
And Purgosian declared war on the Defense Ministry. | ||
He, you know, declared a preemptive first strike. | ||
Before you can eradicate me, or force me to capitulate, I'm going to charge you the capital. | ||
And that is what it would seem happened to protect himself and to protect his PMC. | ||
Now that's with the official narrative. | ||
On the other hand, if you just look at a map, it's very interesting. | ||
And I'm not going to pull one up right now, but if you look at a map, Prigozhin marches away from the eastern front in the Ukrainian war across into Russia. | ||
So Russia's moving westward into Ukraine, Ukraine's counteroffensive is pushing east against them, and the front is in eastern Ukraine, western Russia. | ||
Purgosian takes his elite fighters, who just got done at Bakhmut and have been licking their wounds for the last month, moves them east into Russia, in one day, moves them north to the capital, east, north, and then Putin sends them west into Belarus. | ||
And it creates, and people have pointed this out, it creates a circle, it creates a crescent. | ||
Moved east from Ukraine into Russia, away from the front lines of the fighting, where all the Ukrainians are, and conducting their counteroffensive. | ||
Moved east, north towards Moscow, and then west to Belarus. | ||
Now, if he's in Belarus, Belarus is 100 kilometers from Kiev, which is the capital of Ukraine. | ||
It's also very far west of the front line. | ||
And so people have pointed out that this little mutiny conveniently has positioned the elite Wagner fighting force a hundred kilometers north of Kiev in a matter of two days. | ||
They got there in two days with this giant spectacle. | ||
Not only that, but because of what happened and the manner in which it happened, it has drawn the Ukrainians east. | ||
The Ukrainians, imagining that a Russian civil war was imminent, imagining that the Russian front line in the east was going to be weakened, have now pressed. | ||
They have now pressed further east. | ||
And so you consider that, regardless of all the details, think about the positioning of these armies. | ||
In a matter of two days, the elite PMC, the elite fighting force that just won Bakhmut, Against all odds, that have been experienced, that have been doing the brunt of the fighting, in two days they have been relocated from the front line where the counter-offensive is happening, to 100 miles, 100 kilometers north of Kiev's capital, in the center of the country, west of the Dnieper River. | ||
And, at the same time, concurrently, the Ukrainian armies have moved further east, away from the capital. | ||
Is that a coincidence? | ||
And the trouble that I'm having is, why would Putin move them to Belarus? | ||
Because if Putin is calling them traitors, if he's saying they're traitors, and they killed Russians, and they tried to divide Russia, why would he put them in neighboring Belarus? | ||
It's not like Belarus is far from Russia. | ||
He put them in exile there. | ||
Why would he put them in exile in Central African Republic, or Syria, or Siberia, or kill them? | ||
He puts him in Belarus? | ||
For what reason? | ||
He lets Wagner join the military, even though they just mutinied. | ||
And then Purgosian, who led the mutiny, and those that are not going to submit themselves to the government, he's going to say, hey, just go to our neighbor. | ||
Just go live next door. | ||
They just marched on the Capitol. | ||
You're going to move them next door? | ||
So I have trouble, and that's the thing, we don't know all the details of the deal, and I have trouble making sense of it without those details. | ||
I don't think there's any deductive way to figure out why they would be moved to Belarus. | ||
It just doesn't really square. | ||
Because if there are these mutinous, rebellious traitors, then there's really two options. | ||
They gotta die, or they gotta submit. | ||
Die, or go to jail, or submit. | ||
And yet Putin is giving them this option. | ||
He's saying, well, you can go home. | ||
You can join the military, or you can just move next door. | ||
And we won't bother you. | ||
You're all exonerated. | ||
You're all traitors, and you killed Russians, and you work with the enemy, and you tried to rip our country apart. | ||
But you know what? | ||
It's fine. | ||
It's really fine. | ||
You know, go home to your family. | ||
Just lay down your arm and go home. | ||
Or, you know, move next door. | ||
Whatever you want to do. | ||
We're not going to come after you. | ||
Don't worry about it. | ||
Or you can come work for me. | ||
Really? | ||
I mean, that doesn't make any sense to me. | ||
And that would seem to suggest, again, if Purgosian didn't move on Moscow, that would suggest he never intended to move on Moscow. | ||
That was never his intention. | ||
And if that was an intention, then what did he hope to achieve here? | ||
What leverage does he have? | ||
You've just made a very powerful enemy in Vladimir Putin. | ||
What do you think is going to happen? | ||
And then you have this deal that doesn't make any sense. | ||
Okay, Purgosian has surrendered. | ||
And time has elapsed, so that means that if you were going to make a move against Prigozhin, you can get into position. | ||
The Russian elite forces, the Kadyrovites, the Chechens can get into position. | ||
You can get the drop on these guys now. | ||
But instead, he's just letting them all go. | ||
So those are two things that don't make sense. | ||
It's a mutiny that didn't actually ever desire to succeed. | ||
At the same time, you've got a president retaliating against rebellious traitors without any real punishment. | ||
And when all is said and done, they relocated their elite fighting force from the front line to the capital. | ||
To the capital of the opposing nation. | ||
A hundred kilometers north of the capital of the opposing country, in the middle of their highly anticipated counteroffensive in the east. | ||
So the whole thing, without making any big claims, because we don't really have concrete information, but I would say with some confidence that the information we have indicates that The mainstream story is not true. | ||
I think we have a high degree of confidence that, based on the available information, it would indicate that there is something else going on that we're not aware of. | ||
That's all I'm going to say, because I don't know. | ||
I honestly don't know. | ||
Is Purgosian going to die in the coming days? | ||
Is he going to be arrested? | ||
Is Shui Gu and the General, are they going to be fired? | ||
Or was this just about relocating Purgosian to have him end the Ukraine war? | ||
And this is just some desperate gambit, because that's what it looks like from where I'm sitting. | ||
I don't know how else you make sense of this. | ||
I mean, on the other hand, you'd say they did go to some pretty great lengths. | ||
I mean, people did die, they tore up roads, like... | ||
But then again, they had to make it look convincing. | ||
Did helicopters crash? | ||
Did planes crash? | ||
We didn't really get confirmation of that. | ||
We've seen wreckage. | ||
Have we seen bodies? | ||
Are there names? | ||
False flags have happened before. | ||
You could do a false flag for an airplane and a helicopter. | ||
You could very easily fake a crashed helicopter and a crashed airplane. | ||
That's not a big deal. | ||
They want to fake wars. | ||
Fake one helicopter going down, one plane going down. | ||
Big whip. | ||
So... I have a feeling we don't know the full story, and we'll figure it out over the coming months that, you know, something else is going on here. | ||
But that's that. | ||
That's the Russian Civil War. | ||
Like I said, I mean, it's good that this turned out to be what it was, but it doesn't make for very good content. | ||
But that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
Let me just get set up here. | ||
Scratch my nose. | ||
Let me get my water. | ||
Let's see. | ||
What do we got? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
No, I don't think so. | ||
Possible, though. | ||
Maybe he was just sharing it. | ||
When you did your expose on Lauren Southern Divorce, the same evening culture war criminal put up a telegram post about his divorce from her since deleted. | ||
Is he the Fed? | ||
unidentified
|
No, I don't think so. | |
Possible, though. | ||
Maybe he was just sharing it. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Jim's tattoos say $5. | ||
How did Jews thousands of years ago know there's a hexagon storm on Saturn? | ||
unidentified
|
Because demons told them. | |
Margaret V Schneider sent $50. | ||
Thank you for everything you do. | ||
You guided me back to the Catholic Church. | ||
Hope you do more talks slash debates on Christianity like you did recently. | ||
Keep being awesome. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot! | ||
I'm glad to hear that. | ||
unidentified
|
Good for you. | |
And I may do that soon. | ||
Sneeko wants me to debate these Muslims. | ||
You know, I'm not a theologian. | ||
I'm really... Politics is my thing. | ||
I'm a baby Christian still, but... I want to learn everything just so I could shut these Muslims' fucking mouths. | ||
unidentified
|
Because they all just come across so slimy. | |
Like, this one guy, Sneeko, did this interview with this... Muslim. | ||
And the whole thing, the guy's just like such a weasel. | ||
They don't even talk about their own religion. | ||
They just attack Christianity. | ||
Christianity is the real faith. | ||
Christianity and its sacred magisterium is the real treasury of revelation and God's wisdom. | ||
And so they don't even talk about their own sad trade post religion. | ||
They just spend all their time attacking Christianity. | ||
I mean, isn't that so rich? | ||
He goes there, and they're sitting on their pillows, and they got their Muslim library, and they talk for an hour and a half, and instead of talking about, you know, Islam, they just spend 90 minutes shitting on Christianity. | ||
And that makes sense, because Their religion is a trading post religion, and they're trading post people. | ||
I mean, even the guy that's there just comes across so insincere. | ||
But that's how they are. | ||
I mean, that religion literally came up in a trading post. | ||
And so these are scammers. | ||
It's a scammer religion. | ||
It's a scammer merchant religion. | ||
They're selling their religion like these Egyptians will try to sell tourist beads at the Great Pyramids. | ||
And so the guy's going around and saying, look, I got a National Geographic magazine for children that says that Christianity is a pagan holiday. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
That's some really rigorous stuff. | ||
Not only that, but at the same time, like I said, not even to talk about Islam, And how ridiculous all that is. | ||
We're going to spend the whole hour and a half just attacking Christianity. | ||
I don't think a real religion, I don't think a real religion does. | ||
The real religion, if that were the real religion, it would just speak about itself, speak for itself, it wouldn't go and talk about the other thing. | ||
They didn't spend the whole hour attacking Judaism. | ||
They didn't spend the whole hour attacking Buddhism. | ||
They didn't spend the whole hour attacking Hinduism. | ||
They spent an hour and a half attacking Christianity with these third grade arguments. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, in the Bible it says this here, and then over here it says this. | |
Yeah, no, I guess Christians didn't notice that. | ||
2,000 years. | ||
They've been printing and reproducing the Bible for 2,000 years. | ||
You're the first one to notice it. | ||
You're the first one to notice it. | ||
All these serious... I mean, you just... And here's the thing. | ||
I mean, Muslims are really into pointing out these so-called contradictions in the Bible. | ||
Muslims are really into that and setting aside how silly that is as a form of as a form of argument. | ||
For a lot of reasons. | ||
Let's just entertain it at the start. | ||
They say, look, this says this, but this says this. | ||
Christianity debunked. | ||
And Sneak goes sitting there and goes, wow! | ||
Well, there it is, just like you said. | ||
And it's like, hang on a minute. | ||
Let's just use some common sense. | ||
Let's say you know nothing about Christianity. | ||
And all these things have explanations, of course. | ||
But let's say you know nothing about Christianity. | ||
And somebody says, oh look, here's a contradiction. | ||
Do you say to yourself, wow, I guess they never noticed that. | ||
An apparent contradiction. | ||
Something that seems on its face contradictory. | ||
I guess they either didn't notice that, don't care about that, unaware of it. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, does that even make sense? | |
Christianity's been around for 2,000 years. | ||
They've reprinted the Bible billions of times. | ||
Some of the most intelligent people in the history of the world have been Christians and Bible scholars. | ||
So, just with common sense, just understanding all of that as basic common sense, do you think that all these people, do you think that these institutions, these doctors, scientists, so on, philosophers, for thousands of years, You think that they didn't know about these things? | ||
You think that they didn't have a way to make sense out of them? | ||
Do you think that if they didn't know about them or make sense out of them, that then they would try to correct those things? | ||
Because at once they say that the Bible has been mistranslated. | ||
They say that the Bible has been mistranslated or corrupted. | ||
Okay, so if the Bible's corrupted and if the Christians are wrong, why wouldn't they just cover those things up? | ||
If there wasn't a good reason for them, if there wasn't a good explanation for those apparent discrepancies, and if you're already accusing them of being corrupt, you know, they've got no hang-ups about reproducing a corrupt text or corrupt translation or something like this, then why wouldn't they just cover it up? | ||
Why wouldn't they just, when they notice it, just change it so that it's consistent? | ||
So that would lead you to believe, again just based on common sense, that Christians are aware of it and have a good reason for that. | ||
That's why it's still in there. | ||
They want to maintain the integrity of the text. | ||
And so therefore, and that's not an argument that those things don't need to be explained. | ||
I mean, again, if you know nothing, and there is an apparent discrepancy, you would want an explanation. | ||
But the discrepancy is not enough on its face to say, oh, there it is! | ||
Like you said, Christianity's not true! | ||
You know? | ||
And that just goes to show, I don't think Sneko's really even interested in this stuff. | ||
I don't think he's even curious. | ||
I think, and we have to get to the bottom line here, we gotta get to the fundamentals, which is these red-pilled people are really not interested all that much in finding God. | ||
They are political people pursuing this lifestyle thing. | ||
And insofar as Islam comports with their political lifestyle agenda, then they like Islam. | ||
Because when you listen to their complaints about Christianity, or the reasons why they like Islam, they don't say things like, I had a religious experience. | ||
They don't say things like, I thought it was more convincing. | ||
You know, Islam's argument for the nature of God is more convincing than the Christian. | ||
They say things like, well, Islam's more based. | ||
Islam's more based, and Christianity's more cringe. | ||
And in Islam, you can have multiple lives. | ||
And in Islam, Muslims are more based than Christians. | ||
And it's like, really? | ||
So because you don't think that Christians are faithful enough to their religion and Muslims are more faithful to their religion, you think the Muslim religion is more true because the people believe it harder. | ||
Really? | ||
So I guess Scientology is really true because, man, against everything they really believe it. | ||
And I guess Heaven's Gate. | ||
Man, those guys... Heaven's Gate must be true because they all killed themselves. | ||
You know, or the Jonestown cult. | ||
Man, those guys were the... that was the truest religion ever because they really believed that they all killed themselves. | ||
There's your fallacy right there. | ||
And it's the same fallacy of, what do they call it, you know, they show the picture of a bomber that comes back from war with bullet holes on it and the engineers have been covering up the parts of the plane where there are bullet holes. | ||
But they didn't understand that the planes that came back with bullet holes, those are the planes that didn't crash. | ||
So those are all the parts of the plane that could be shot and still survive. | ||
The planes that didn't come back were the ones that got shot in the places that cannot afford to be shot. | ||
And what this says is that just because Christianity is under attack and been subverted doesn't mean that Islam is true. | ||
Christianity has been attacked and subverted because it's potent, because it's effective. | ||
So, you know, and aside from that, that's not even an argument about whether the religion is true or not. | ||
You know, to say, oh, well, the people in the church are bad. | ||
Yeah, well, people are bad. | ||
People are imperfect. | ||
People are corrupt. | ||
People are sinners. | ||
So to say, oh, the Christians are sinners, or, oh, the Christians are insincere, their institution is corrupt. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
What are the institutions in Islam? | ||
Saudi Arabia? | ||
Yeah, that's the least corrupt institution ever. | ||
Because the House of Saud, they're super pious. | ||
Same thing with Iran. | ||
You know, all these countries, they totally got their hands clean. | ||
They're totally not corrupt. | ||
You know, unlike the Catholic Church, they have no corruption, and they have no hypocrisy, right? | ||
There's no hypocrisy in Dubai. | ||
No, none! | ||
There is none of it. | ||
Hypocrisy in the United Arab Emirates, an Islamic nation? | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
There's no drinking, there's no sex going on, there's nothing haram in the United Arab Emirates, what are you kidding me? | ||
They're Muslim! | ||
Muslims are so pious! | ||
Give me a break. | ||
And as far as the rest of it goes, you know, once again, to get back to the earlier point about the so-called contradictions, to say, oh, look, an apparent contradiction, boom, roasted, there it is. | ||
It's like, even if you knew nothing, you'd have to entertain the idea there's an explanation. | ||
I'd say, okay, well, what is the explanation? | ||
And then you evaluate it. | ||
Then you say, okay, does that make sense? | ||
And then on top of that, you have to take it in its fullness and say, well, what is the Bible? | ||
Who is the source of the Bible? | ||
What's the author of the Bible? | ||
You know, you can single out, oh, well, if I look at this part, well, I don't like this part. | ||
This part looks a little hokey to me. | ||
You know, we could do that with Islam. | ||
We could do the same thing with Islam and say that Muhammad cut the moon in half. | ||
Yeah, that sounds pretty retarded. | ||
So anyway... You know, to say that... and they always say, well, Islam is internally consistent. | ||
And it's like... so that means it's true. | ||
It's like anyone can come up with something that's internally consistent. | ||
If anything, if it's more accessible, that leads me to believe that its nature is probably less sophisticated. | ||
You know, a child could create a universe which is internally consistent. | ||
And it's not to say that the Bible isn't, but it is to say that maybe there's a barrier to understanding because we're talking about the divine. | ||
If we're talking about the nature of God, yeah, maybe we actually can't grasp it in its fullness. | ||
Maybe there would be some things that are mysterious. | ||
Maybe there'd be some things that actually do challenge the intellect. | ||
unidentified
|
To say like, look, Islam doesn't contradict itself. | |
I'm an 85 year old merchant. | ||
unidentified
|
In a trade post and I can't find one apparent contradiction. | |
I can understand it completely. | ||
It's like, yeah, I don't know, maybe that sounds like a human wrote that then. | ||
You know, go figure. | ||
The Trinity's complex. | ||
The Trinity's hard to explain. | ||
Yeah, it's the nature of God. | ||
Do you think that the omnipotent Omniscient, omnipresent God would be easy to understand? | ||
Our finite, limited intellect would be able to wrap its fully around? | ||
Yeah, that makes sense. | ||
I expect to fully understand God. | ||
That's not ridiculous. | ||
But look at my National Geographic library book. | ||
My National Geographic book says that Christmas is pagan. | ||
There it is. | ||
And look, look at my study Bible. | ||
You know, so, that stuff just infuriates me. | ||
And, you know, for a long time I was nice to Muslims because my main beef was with Jews, but this is really pissing me off. | ||
This fucking snake oil stuff they got going on, selling beads in the desert. | ||
Shucking this heretical religion. | ||
You know, they want to talk about, you know, OH CHRISTMAS IS SATANIC! | ||
You fucking worship a cube. | ||
Really? | ||
Christmas, it's Christ is in the name, genius! | ||
It was the same as Saturnalia! | ||
Saturnalia wasn't on December 25th, dummy! | ||
They moved Christmas to coincide with Saturnalia. | ||
Saturnalia wasn't on December 25th. | ||
That's first of all. | ||
And it's called Christmas. | ||
Christ. | ||
Miss. | ||
Hello? | ||
Anyway, yeah, so now after I got done reading my National Geographic for 12 year olds, proving that Christianity is Saturn worship, I'm gonna go worship the Black Cube in Mecca. | ||
I'm gonna go walk around the Black Cube in Mecca in a country governed by Saudi Arabia, which is controlled by Israel. | ||
Because I'm not, because we're not involved in anything like that. | ||
Right. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Saturn worship. | ||
Go worship your black cube. | ||
Isn't it time for your hajj, Mr. Pious? | ||
Wow, I'm so pious. | ||
I'm, you know, I'm not about that Saturn stuff. | ||
Anyway, let's go walk around that black cube while singing So I'm over it, man | ||
But I gotta prepare some more because, you know, I'm not, I'm not the theology guy, but watching these Muslims makes me want to become the theology guy because it's like, you know, and they're just preying on, uh, they're just preying on ignorance and they're ultimately, they're preying on, um, you know, this, I don't know what you call that in people, but they don't want to know the truth. | ||
They want to be told something that they like. | ||
And, uh, you know, Islam appeals to men's pride. | ||
You know, they say stuff like, well, Islam's badass! | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Monster truck religion. | |
Really? | ||
Statues sent $5. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
Nick is doing God's work. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
unidentified
|
God bless you. | |
That is so true. | ||
That is so true. | ||
Grow, I percent $3. | ||
I did the white boy summer road trip. | ||
I built the cozy platform. | ||
I put on a pack three. | ||
I met Kanye West and Donald Trump and I brought the crown back. - That is so true. | ||
That is so true. | ||
What a life. - 4chan underscore grow, I percent $3. | ||
Half Nick, I just found out my parents are atheists. | ||
I am honestly disgusted. | ||
My parents kept criticizing the Bible and Christianity at dinner because I mentioned something about weed smokers going to. | ||
What is wrong with you? | ||
You know, it's so amazing to me. | ||
People find out, wait a second, God exists? | ||
And then a bad thing happens in their life and they're like, what's going on? | ||
What? | ||
What is wrong with you? | ||
You know, it's so amazing to me. | ||
People find out, wait a second, God exists? | ||
And then a bad thing happens in their life and they're like, what's going on? | ||
What? | ||
Wait a second. | ||
Why did I started watching this show where the guy's a Catholic and I realize my parents are atheists? | ||
Why is God doing this to me? | ||
In many such cases, unfortunately, it's very sad. | ||
You should pray for your parents. | ||
You know, pray for them to convert. | ||
Unfortunately, you know, there are atheists in the world. | ||
There always have been. | ||
There are people that believe in God. | ||
There are people that don't believe in God. | ||
Your parents happen to be the latter. | ||
But don't let it dissuade you from becoming Catholic. | ||
And I would say, you know, don't fight them on that because you're never going to win that argument. | ||
But talk with them about it, pray for them, be diplomatic. | ||
You're never going to argue your parents into converting to a different religion. | ||
It just doesn't work that way. | ||
But if you are patient with them, If you are sincere about your faith, if you just talk about it without getting angry, without getting heated, you know, over time you may be able to soften their hearts, and you gotta pray for them. | ||
You know, this idea, and I've been talking about this a lot lately, this idea that you just say the magic words and convert somebody with the best possible argument ignores the nature of grace, which is that grace comes from God. | ||
And everybody has enough grace to get them to God, but people make choices in their life that harden their hearts from God. | ||
You know, we can't save ourselves. | ||
We can't argue our way to God. | ||
We can't find our way to God on our own. | ||
God, we can only get to something higher by being lifted up from the higher thing. | ||
You know, nothing lower can go to something higher on its own. | ||
so grace has to be extended and grace has to pull somebody and And so, you know, this sort of like, uh, you know, how do I convert so-and-so? | ||
How do I convert so-and-so? | ||
You have the right approach. | ||
Pray. | ||
You know, pray for them. | ||
But ultimately, they have to decide with their own will, uh, to accept Jesus. | ||
PrettyFlyWhiteGuy says, 204... Why am I reading these? | ||
I forgot. | ||
I don't read. | ||
I have TTS. | ||
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3.204. | ||
From your interaction with Trump, did you get a sense of his intelligence? | ||
Uh, I did. | ||
Yeah, he's very sharp. | ||
And more, I would say more than just intelligence, he's very sharp. | ||
He's just got a very high EQ. | ||
Like, this is just a master of people. | ||
That's what you realize about this man. | ||
Is when he was being more friendly, when he was being more unfriendly, this guy is just like a savant animal level like negotiator. | ||
Because when Ye first showed up, when we first showed up, when we first got there, and Ye was kind of being shy, you know, Trump kept it moving. | ||
Very smooth, very friendly, like Just kept it comfortable, kept it flowing. | ||
And when Trump sensed he was in danger, he scared Olive. | ||
Like, I was honestly scared. | ||
And it's weird saying that, but I was literally afraid, like, that he was gonna hit me. | ||
I knew that he wasn't. | ||
I knew that he wasn't gonna hit me. | ||
I knew that he wasn't gonna hit us. | ||
But I had the same sense of, like, unease. | ||
Because he's intimidating. | ||
You know, when he got mad, And he sort of took on this more aggressive tone It was intimidating and that's instinct and his ability to project that to make people to endear people to him and to be friendly, but also to To instill this sort of unease that's instinct and so I would say more than he's a great intellect like just in terms of like I think he's very high IQ and | ||
But more than that, he's got this killer instinct. | ||
And anybody that's talked to him knows that. | ||
Anybody that knows him will pick up on that very quickly. | ||
He's got a killer instinct. | ||
And when I was talking to him, I definitely picked up. | ||
And he's a very sharp guy. | ||
Like, he's clearly extremely high IQ, brilliant. | ||
Like, you take that for granted because he's a billionaire president. | ||
He likes stuff and he knows about stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
And... | |
Yeah, but I think his real superpower is that. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, well thanks for putting the word out. | |
I appreciate you doing that. | ||
Yeah, I'm happy about it too. | ||
Finally going on fresh and fit. | ||
Great exposure and Myron seems to be talking to you in good faith from what I've seen. | ||
I've super chatted them like eight times about having you on. - Hey, well, thanks for putting the word out. | ||
I appreciate you doing that. | ||
Yeah, I'm happy about it too. | ||
I think it's gonna be a good show. - Farid Lukovic sent $100. | ||
I always wanted to ask you this Nick as I've seen most if not all of your debates and interviews. | ||
What are some of your better slash less good debate performances would you say from your own perspective? | ||
And who is the best debater you've clashed with? | ||
Well all the best debates are about Israel. | ||
Only because it's just like such an indefensible issue. | ||
you just it just doesn't work you can't argue your america first and then support this it's just because you're just wrong you know like the facts are so overwhelming it's very hard to overcome that and as far as bad i mean i'm never i don't think i'm the best at debating about god uh because it's just not my expertise so but thank you for the big super chat i'm I appreciate it. | ||
It's just not really... I mean, politics, I really just grasp. | ||
I really understand it. | ||
I really love it. | ||
The theology stuff, I just... it doesn't come to me as easily, and I just don't know as much about it. | ||
I'm not as interested in it. | ||
I know I should be, but, you know, politics is really my passion. | ||
- I'll see you in the next question. - Greasy Groiper sent $3. | ||
Who would win in a fight between Michelle Obama and Madri Taylor Greene? | ||
Big Mike versus Large Marge. | ||
Eddie Van Graham sent $3. | ||
Hype as fuck to hear that you're gonna be on Fresh N' Fit soon. | ||
They cannot stop the consciousness from rising. | ||
No, they cannot. | ||
Eddie Van Graham sent $3. | ||
What's your opinion on Patrick Bet-David? | ||
Seems like a stand-up guy. | ||
He gave Andrew Tate a Bible and a C.S. | ||
Lewis book when he was a recent guest on his show. | ||
I saw that. | ||
Yeah, that was good. | ||
I think he seems like a good guy. | ||
I actually don't think she's a man anymore, because that guy that did the Trayvon documentary, he did a documentary about it and he said that she's a biological woman. | ||
I trust him. | ||
pictures of Michelle pregnant. | ||
I actually don't think she's a man anymore because that guy that did the Trayvon documentary, he did a documentary about it and he said that she's a biological woman. | ||
I trust him. | ||
It is funny though to pretend she's a guy. | ||
Kellett and sent three dollars. | ||
I accidentally revealed my power level and now my co-workers want to talk to me. | ||
I corrected someone who said he liked Kanye. | ||
Then last night I said good night friend to everyone. | ||
So guess they know. | ||
Wow, it's a great story. | ||
DreamGrow I percent $100. | ||
Victor L Sharp 3 is such a failure, imagine using your dad's money and connections to go after streamers and Twitter accounts. | ||
I bet he doesn't even do anything at Quality Snack Foods in Alsop, Illinois. | ||
Hey, well thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
What a freak. | ||
That whole thing is such a freak show, honestly. | ||
Well, and you know what's amazing about it is a year ago, a year plus ago, they made such a big... Do you remember this? | ||
And that's why you just... | ||
You have to trust. | ||
A year and a half ago, they made such a big stink. | ||
Oh, Nick Fuentes reports people on Twitter. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Nick Fuentes supports false copyright flagging on YouTube. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Nick Fuentes is going to get all his groipers doxxed. | ||
He's trying to get his own groipers. | ||
Blah, blah, blah. | ||
All this evidence comes out and it turns out I've never doxxed a single GROYPER. | ||
Instead, they doxxed every GROYPER! | ||
They have doxxed more GROYPERS than anybody. | ||
That was their big complaint. | ||
You remember that stream they did a year and some year and change ago? | ||
My former employees, they go on Kino Casino. | ||
And they say, oh, Nick Fuentes' interns are kept in check because he's trying to dox them. | ||
They themselves were responsible for doxing more people than anybody. | ||
And responsible for banning Twitter accounts, YouTube accounts, you name it. | ||
unidentified
|
And... | |
You know, and so once again, it's just about, they wanna get me. | ||
That's literally, and all of the revelations from Red Pill Gaming have made that clear. | ||
I mean, there's literally a screenshot where Judas says, Nick Fuentes is a demon. | ||
They don't understand it's not about journalism, it's about getting him, it's about exposing him. | ||
And so this is just like a fucking mentally ill, sick individual Who, it's not about principles, it's not about my conduct, it's not about anything. | ||
It's like, I wanna get you! | ||
Based on pure resentment. | ||
It's just like, abject mental illness. | ||
And you see these leaks that came out, I shared some of them on Telegram, we went over them on the stream on Saturday. | ||
These people are like, insane. | ||
You got Victor Sharpe, who's a gay pedophile. | ||
You got Jaden, who's a sugar baby. | ||
I guess that's really the duo. | ||
And just the back and forth, they were behind the Grayzone hit piece. | ||
They're talking to the Justice Department. | ||
They're talking to the FBI. | ||
They're talking to Right Wing Watch. | ||
They're talking to Elise Stefanik's Chief of Staff. | ||
I mean, with no scruples, they're talking to Gabe Hoffman. | ||
Talking to Jews, rhinos, the feds, tattling on social media, the guy's gay, nobody cares, he's a pedophile, they cover it up. | ||
It's just like, you know, but I'm glad it's finally all coming out. | ||
And I hope everybody trusted, I mean everybody watching the show trusted the plan, but you know, People do a lot of damage. | ||
They do a lot of damage to your reputation, and it's very unfortunate because there's really nothing you can do about that. | ||
You know, liars, gossip mongers can go out there, and because I'm famous, because of my name, they can do a stream about me, and people watch it because it's about me. | ||
Nobody would care what they had to say on their own, but they could do a stream, and they could just say anything. | ||
They can make any accusation. | ||
They could say anything. | ||
And just peddle negativity and gossip non-stop. | ||
And there's just nothing you can do about that. | ||
And as a matter of probability, some people are going to watch it, some people are going to believe it, and there's just nothing you can do about it. | ||
And to some extent, even responding to it, you can't even respond to it. | ||
Because responding to it gives it more airtime. | ||
Responding to it, you know, again, statistically, you could respond to it even if your arguments airtight, even if there's no evidence against you. | ||
A portion are going to not like you and believe it. | ||
A portion are going to not support you. | ||
And so even exposing your large audience to defend yourself, you can't even do. | ||
And you just have to tolerate a certain level of malicious gossip. | ||
A certain level of malicious, libel, reputational destruction, harassment, and you know, it's just sick and it's not right. | ||
But for people that actually care for the people that are invested and actually care You know not now you can look and you can see for yourself. | ||
You can see what's really going on but You know, of course a year ago when everybody's fucking taking turns stabbing them stabbing me in the back and they're leaking all my shit I have no way to defend myself. | ||
Really, you know all these people that I trusted for years. | ||
I open my home to them and I trust them with my life, I employ them, and they fucking lie to my face. | ||
And then they take turns stabbing me in the back because I didn't do enough for them. | ||
And I can't trust anybody, they're leaking my group chats, they're leaking everything, every unguarded moment I've had in private. | ||
Now for public consumption, out of context, for people to judge. | ||
And at that time, you know, there's no way to counterattack because it's a sneak attack. | ||
It's a sneaky, cowardly, treacherous surprise attack. | ||
You know, and that's the nature of these things, and it's a big hit, and you know, a lot of people believe this shit, and that's followed me for over a year. | ||
But then of course, a year later, after it marinates a little while, then we start to see the hypocrisy, the double standards. | ||
Then the other receipts from the other side come out. | ||
Then we start to see what's going on, and it's like, oh, okay. | ||
So wait a second, so you're a total fucking hypocrite, and you're doing the same stuff that I was accused of, which I didn't even do, and you're doing it in a worse way, and turns out you have no scruples, and you don't even care, and all that shit was a lie anyway, and you just had an ax to grind, clearly. | ||
But at that point, everybody's moved on, and it becomes so, it becomes so self-referential, and so, um, Arduous that most people don't even give a shit. | ||
So a year ago they do to do the headline. | ||
Oh Nick Fuentes sucks Read all about it well 15 months later Nobody reads about oh, well then this have been this this this this Nick Fuentes exonerated his enemies are total pieces of shit, you know, nobody reads that part That's just how it goes. | ||
I'm not complaining. | ||
I'm just saying it sucks that that's how it is but You know. | ||
I was thinking about it the other day, you know, like my... But this is how it is. | ||
I remember NAFPAC 2. | ||
I never fully trusted my assistant. | ||
I never fully trusted him, and he knew that. | ||
And he would always, like, guilt trip me. | ||
Now I don't fall for this stuff, but you have to learn it. | ||
You have to learn it once. | ||
Unfortunately, you have to learn it once. | ||
And I was also younger, you know, I was... I'm still a young guy, but I was, you know, in my early 20s. | ||
unidentified
|
21, 22. | |
I had no experience doing this stuff. | ||
But I remember at AFPAC 2, my assistant said something to me, and it was totally shady. | ||
And I was like, are you fucking kidding me? | ||
I'm like, you think you're gonna do that? | ||
I see what you're doing, blah blah blah. | ||
And the guy starts crying. | ||
I can't believe you would say that. | ||
You don't trust me. | ||
That hurts my feelings so much. | ||
This is a guy that then stabs me in the back. | ||
This is a guy that then stabs me in the back and lies about it for months. | ||
And constantly trying to work me. | ||
Constantly. | ||
And like, this is a guy I trusted my life with. | ||
And what was my great sin against this person? | ||
That I was too hard on him? | ||
That I didn't give him a raise, and just stabbed me in the back, stabbed me in the back, stabbed me in the back, over a period of years, lying to my face, lying to my face. | ||
And I didn't trust him, and I remember distinctly, and you know, it was the night of AFPAC 2, Paul Gosar invited us to a brunch the next day, I don't know who set it up, but somebody set it up. | ||
And Assistant Kruiper said, well, you can rest in. | ||
I'll go. | ||
And I said, what? | ||
I said, are you kidding me? | ||
You think I'm not going to want to go to brunch with the congressman? | ||
I said, what are you, an idiot? | ||
I said, what kind of sneaky stuff is that? | ||
You're telling me I'm not going to go? | ||
Of course I'm going to go. | ||
That doesn't even make any sense. | ||
What are you trying to pull here? | ||
And he starts crying! | ||
Starts crying! | ||
unidentified
|
Wah, wah, wah. | |
I can't believe you don't trust me. | ||
I can't believe you would suggest that. | ||
No, I wasn't suggesting that at all. | ||
And I said, alright, alright. | ||
Just stop crying. | ||
Like, hey, okay, okay. | ||
Don't cry. | ||
And that happened like a few times. | ||
You know, and so, and it goes all the way around. | ||
Like, you know, even Judas. | ||
Judas promised repeatedly, repeatedly. | ||
You have to understand, we were best friends. | ||
Repeatedly. | ||
Even if you fire me. | ||
Even if I wind up like Patrick, he would say. | ||
I will never do what Patrick did. | ||
I will never betray you. | ||
Even if you decided to fire me. | ||
He literally said, I will never go on the Keno Casino. | ||
And then he just does. | ||
and it's just like you know for whatever reason i don't you know and what's even what's even the charge it's like people just absolutely stab me in the back because that's all that it's just like a total backstab just like you know and what's the excuse even like oh like he was mean to me So now I'm gonna break my word and now everything's fair game or whatever. | ||
It's just so wrong. | ||
Anyway, but now you see what a sordid, ugly situation is going on over there. | ||
Sheesh. | ||
I don't know, for people that are following all that, for a lot of you probably don't even know any of the drama, but for people that are following it, sick. | ||
But, um, anyway. | ||
But now it's all finally coming to light. | ||
And I'm not saying that like, oh poor me. | ||
I'm just saying that's what happens. | ||
I'm just saying that's how it went down. | ||
You know? | ||
A year ago everybody's crying, oh boo hoo, boo hoo. | ||
And just using, literally using everything that they thought they had just to try to hurt me. | ||
For no reason, like they don't even give a fuck about any of this stuff. | ||
Um, did you know he got his money back? | ||
Um, did you know he watched Euphoria? | ||
Um, did you know, did you know, and it's just like, what's, what's everything I can use? | ||
unidentified
|
Ah, ah, ah! | |
Everything I can find to throw at this guy, I will. | ||
unidentified
|
Unreal. | |
Yeah. | ||
You know, and all these idiots go along with it. | ||
They're like, he did that? | ||
That's against my principles. | ||
It's like, bitch, these people don't care. | ||
It's just like with Trump. | ||
It's just like with anything. | ||
You know? | ||
I remember John Doyle, when me and John Doyle met up in June 22, he told me, well, you've been kicked out of all your friendships, blah, blah, blah. | ||
It's like, I'm sorry, don't you support the president? | ||
Isn't this the same question the president just got a week ago? | ||
Didn't Brett Baier just ask him about, oh Pompeo and your press secretary and this one and Haley and Chris Christie and that one and that one and that one? | ||
And the point is, when you're in a high-pressure environment, when you're a political dissident, You're in a maximum pressure situation and yeah, people will betray you. | ||
It's a very common occurrence because it turns out that when the rubber meets the road and it's about people's ass on the line, they will look out for themselves. | ||
It's not a complicated concept. | ||
I'm not saying I'm just like Trump, but Trump is somebody who's under high pressure, and many, many people had betrayed him because that was the easy thing to do, because they were looking out for themselves. | ||
They didn't actually have allegiance to him in the first place, and that's why nobody would second-guess Trump throwing all these people under the bus, because we're there for him, we're not there for them. | ||
And we recognize that all these people rode his coattails into the White House or whatever, and they supported him when it was convenient, and then when the DOJ came down or whatever, they threw him under the bus to save their own skin. | ||
That's it. | ||
Even liberals recognize this. | ||
Even liberals don't accept many of these conservatives that now don't like Trump. | ||
And that's because of the high-pressure environment. | ||
It's the same thing with me. | ||
Nobody was betraying me when I was making much, much, much more money. | ||
Nobody was betraying me when we had it easy. | ||
When I was on DLive and I had payment processing and everything was going great, nobody was betraying me. | ||
Surprise, surprise, people started betraying me when the DOJ investigation started. | ||
When the payment processing stopped and we all got banned from DLive. | ||
Suddenly, then, everybody decided I was always a no-good, nasty, rotten person. | ||
All these things they never cared about in the first place. | ||
You just became excuses to sell me out and, you know, and whatever. | ||
That's how it goes. | ||
But I'm only saying that so you understand that that is just how it happens. | ||
You know, I didn't really care about most of them. | ||
You know, Jada was the only person I actually liked out of that group. | ||
I never really cared for Patrick that much. | ||
I never really cared for my assistant. | ||
Never really cared for the Oath. | ||
I never really cared for any of these people. | ||
I tolerated them. | ||
You know, even the politics team, that John Lezak guy, always came across as a total douchebag. | ||
I mean, there was really no love lost with a lot of these people. | ||
And I was always friendly, I was always polite, but I, you know, I didn't really... You know, but Jada was a genuine friend. | ||
And, you know, so that was personal. | ||
The rest of them, whatever, but that was personal. | ||
unidentified
|
But... | |
You know, but there's no, you know, there's no limits. | ||
You undertake this and that's what happens. | ||
So... You know, but I guess everybody is happy with the moral high ground taking money from a gay pedophile now, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Nick Fortress is terrible. | |
Nick Fortress is terrible. | ||
Thanks Victor Sharpe for the thousand. | ||
Thanks Victor Sharpe for the thousand. | ||
You know, when he liked that picture of two 8-year-olds naked on the beach, that was just a music video. | ||
Oh really? | ||
Okay. | ||
Moral high ground, by the way. | ||
Oh, I got the moral high ground! | ||
Nick is a bad person! | ||
Anyway, the person that gives me all my money is a neurotic freak. | ||
Is a psycho, neurotic, codependent, gay, pedophile freak. | ||
You know, but clearly I'm doing this for the right reasons, not out of base resentment. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
all. | ||
You know, scum. | ||
But whatever. | ||
That's how it is. | ||
We just have to thank the RPG. | ||
We just have to thank the Red-Pilled Gang for red-pilling us on all this stuff. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Well, you know, there were some things that happened between then and now, so. | ||
Edward Saul sent Love you, too. | ||
Glad to hear it. | ||
Good morning. | ||
Natsuk Grecoid sent $5. | ||
Hey nigga, just wanted to say you're the reason my best friend is now red-pilled. | ||
I cannot thank you enough. | ||
Great stream tonight, King. | ||
Keep up the good work. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
Love you too. | ||
Glad to hear it. | ||
Goose sent $25. | ||
See you 7 16ths. | ||
Hey, I'll see you there. | ||
unidentified
|
Farid Lukovic sent $50. | |
You bring a white presenting Jewish woman home and you guys sit down on the couch in the living room to watch a movie. | ||
You choose Puss in Boots again for the 88th time. | ||
While you guys are watching the movie, she peers over to the other couch and there sits the Moon Man plushie and she starts sweating nervously for some reason. | ||
unidentified
|
What's...oh sorry, what's the punchline? | |
What's the punchline? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's another one of these jokes. | ||
Are you from another country? | ||
It sounds like Ferragh Lukovic. | ||
Is this like a Slavic guy who like doesn't understand American humor? | ||
unidentified
|
Because that's what it sounds like. | |
Are you American? | ||
Like what is the sense of humor? | ||
It's just like a, this joke just going nowhere. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
This joke is just like a train that just goes nowhere. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, then what? | |
Why is there a white presenting Jewish girl? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't understand. | |
Yeah, okay, Jews hate Nazis. | ||
unidentified
|
What's the punchline? | |
I don't get it. | ||
Okay, I have joke for you. | ||
So, you bring girl home. | ||
She sees Moon Man. | ||
She starts sweating on her face. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like, what? | |
What the fuck are you talking about? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
unidentified
|
What are you talking about, dude? | |
Crazy. | ||
Some Slavic guy that doesn't speak English. | ||
No, but thanks for the super chat. | ||
I don't know what we're getting out of that joke though. | ||
All right. | ||
Marco sent $10. | ||
Hey Nick, it's my birthday today turning 26 dot just got off work and thought I'd say hey o7. | ||
Hey, happy birthday, man 26, huh? | ||
unidentified
|
That's gonna be me soon I'm gonna turn 25 in two months two months I'm gonna be 25 my life is going by fast Simon Skoula sent $3. | |
Have you tried the Grimace Shake from McDonald's yet? | ||
No, I thought it was only one day. | ||
But my whole, literally my entire TikTok timeline is Grimace. | ||
The whole thing. | ||
Literally. | ||
Not exaggerating. | ||
It's one after the other after the other. | ||
unidentified
|
It's all Grimace content. | |
Simon Skoula sent $3. | ||
Did you ever see Kanye eating fish sticks? | ||
Do not attack. | ||
Do not attack. | ||
That's not true. | ||
I don't know who that is. | ||
Trump is fat incompetent idiot but nothing will make me happier having him back on the resolute desk being a goofball and brazeningly betraying us for the dumbest reasons. | ||
It will always be keck. | ||
That's not true. | ||
Simon Scullis sent $3. | ||
Grace Thorpe is Catholic and only 20. | ||
You should hit her up before Ralph takes her for himself. | ||
I don't know who that is. | ||
But sounds like a whore. | ||
Nathan Sy sent $3. | ||
What do you like about Alexander Hamilton? | ||
unidentified
|
That he's awesome. | |
Polish underscore mail sent $3. | ||
Ever since I was 10, I dreamed of taking over my country with my own mercenary company. | ||
Recent events have been validating and inspirational. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Eeeee. | ||
Eeeeeeeee. - Okay. | ||
You're retarded. | ||
French Catholics sent $3. | ||
Praying for Trump and for yourself. | ||
Much love, Nick. | ||
Everyone is behind you. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, thanks a lot, buddy. | |
Love you too, man. | ||
Matthew Royce sent $10. | ||
The thought of Victor Sharpe spending $5,000 on lawyer fees to investigate things Paul Towne said about Victor's sugar baby and Beardson's live chat is so funny to me. | ||
Like imagine trying to explain that to a lawyer. | ||
unidentified
|
That is so funny, dude. | |
Trailer fucking trash. | ||
unidentified
|
Dude, that stream is goaded. | |
Goaded PaulTown stream. | ||
Trailer fucking trash. | ||
Dude, so good. | ||
unidentified
|
I love PaulTown. | |
He is honestly just one of the greats. | ||
I love these guys, man. | ||
Like, that's what you guys don't realize is that PaulTown and Beardson are fucking internet legends. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
I grew up with these guys it's like you can't you can't make me not like them because they're like that they're like when you're growing up in the neighborhood and there's like an older kid who's like legendary he's like the captain of the football team that's like who they are for me so I can't you know I can never I always have a place in my heart because that's loyalty I'm loyal I'm loyal to a fault that's what people don't realize you know | ||
Cuz that, that to me is the most important thing. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Bob sent $4. | ||
Remember when you used to have a Chicago accent? | ||
I remember when Alex Jones had a Texan accent. | ||
Kinda pretentious to forego the accent, is it not? | ||
Do you think you are too good for your region? | ||
Reno sent $3. | ||
I know we don't always get along. | ||
Bob sent $3. | ||
I would like to incorporate false flags into my daily life in order to advance myself in the social hierarchy, but I don't know how. | ||
On return Groyper sent $10. | ||
I took a religious studies class last semester, the professor was Muslim. | ||
He was pro-theism in general but he liked to talk about how Islam is revolutionary because it was the first religion to refer to itself as a religion. | ||
Unreturned Groi Per sent $3. | ||
Two halves the word Islam literally means religion lol it was built from the ground up specifically to be a new religion and not as a proclamation of truth like Christianity. | ||
It's a giant grift by Muhammad. | ||
Facts. | ||
Bob sent $3. | ||
Why don't you ever use the whiteboard anymore? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Don't like it. | ||
Look, they're wrong. | ||
That's irrelevant. | ||
100%. | ||
Look, they're wrong. | ||
That's irrelevant. | ||
They're wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi! | |
Richard Strocker said $3. | ||
It is so cool of you to allow all the other cozy streamers like Big Tech to rebroadcast your entire show live on CozyTV and the Kik streaming platform simultaneously like he is doing tonight. | ||
What, is he doing that right now? | ||
Bro, seriously? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Yeah, we're gonna have to have a talk then. | ||
Maybe. | ||
I have to say, you know, I watched his stream today, and what he said today was wonderful. | ||
I thought it was so good. | ||
Because I saw a real human being there. | ||
There was some introspection. | ||
He went out and he said, look, I've done some terrible things. | ||
They've done terrible things to me. | ||
He said, but I don't want to fight anymore. | ||
I want to move on with my life. | ||
I want to be productive. | ||
And he said that it was getting to be all negative, all resentment. | ||
I forget the exact quote, but what he said today was actually really nice. | ||
And, you know, I reciprocate that because we have You know, we've done some things to RPG. | ||
It's been... Now, don't get me wrong. | ||
He initiated it. | ||
He did start it. | ||
He started out as, like, a fan, then became a critic, then became this, like... Then joined up with this community of people in the last year that are just, like, obsessed with taking me out. | ||
So, I'm not gonna say that it's totally equal. | ||
Uh, because, you know, I do my own thing. | ||
Then people get obsessed with me and attack me. | ||
Then I attack them back. | ||
Then they say, oh, well, there's equivalency. | ||
No, not really. | ||
There's not really equivalency, you know? | ||
That's always how it goes. | ||
It's like, here I am doing my own thing. | ||
I do a show every night, like I've been doing for six, seven years. | ||
I do an event, blah blah blah. | ||
And then you get these hanger-ons, these bandwagoners, these coattail riders that jump on and they just bring up all this negativity. | ||
We want to dox you. | ||
We want to fuck with you. | ||
We want to sabotage you. | ||
Then you go and fuck with them and then they say, oh, we're feuding now. | ||
It's a feud. | ||
Who can even remember how this started? | ||
Who can even remember how this all started? | ||
It's like, I can. | ||
I did a show and then you started attacking me. | ||
Um, you know. | ||
But at a certain point it became two-sided, and yeah, we've done... We've done things to RPG and self-defense. | ||
You know, but I like what he said, and... You know... He said also that maybe this is his karma. | ||
He said, maybe this is justice. | ||
He goes, because I gave in to negativity. | ||
I joined into this toxic scene. | ||
He goes, and now it's happening to me. | ||
And it's like, yeah, kinda. | ||
I mean, I hate to be that guy to say that, but yeah, kinda. | ||
Like, he joined up with these sick people. | ||
Who are really just disgusting human beings. | ||
Like PPP is a disgusting, slob human being. | ||
Andy Warski is a sicko, retard. | ||
And then you got this Judas Ultros thing, which is just the most bizarre thing you've ever seen. | ||
And then you got these freaks from Kiwi Farms who are trannies. | ||
It's just a sordid, disgusting pile of human garbage. | ||
And he joins up with them. | ||
It's like trash talk me. | ||
And he, in his mind, he's like telling himself, well I'm attacking Nick because of my principles. | ||
I'm attacking Nick because of my principles. | ||
And these people are all attacking me basically because they're nihilists. | ||
You know, and then RPG, I don't know all the lore, but he goes out of line a little bit, and then they start attacking him, and they're all hypocrites, and they're all contradicting themselves. | ||
And he goes, wait a second! | ||
You're doing the same things that you accused me of! | ||
unidentified
|
You're doing the same things you accused them of! | |
And it's like, uh, yeah, hello! | ||
Hello, these people aren't right-wing, they're not Christian. | ||
They don't support anything. | ||
They're just like Medicare. | ||
They're just a bunch of fucking Gen X nihilist freaks. | ||
Which is what that debate was about. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello? | |
I started that back in April. | ||
Of 22 and I said, look, I said, I don't like, I don't think you're funny. | ||
I said, I think you're just like a nihilist. | ||
I think your humor is not good. | ||
I don't think you're actually laughing at Ralph. | ||
I think there's some weird personal thing going on. | ||
And that was all true. | ||
That all turned out to be true. | ||
I said, it's not about rules of the internet. | ||
It's about this weird feud. | ||
You hate this guy for some reason that doesn't even make sense. | ||
And I was right. | ||
And an RPG was wrong about that and he's now realizing that and he's like, hey, what the heck? | ||
Wait a second. | ||
You mean everyone's betraying me now? | ||
It's like oh go figure all these freaks have no loyalty to each other all these people that are literally traitors, you know, like They have no loyalty and all these people that gossip for a living don't actually care about building anything I don't know. | ||
And all these people that are just in this one-sided blood feud have no scruples or principles. | ||
Wow, that's so bizarre. | ||
Who could have predicted that? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Us forever? | ||
So I'm glad that he said that. | ||
It's kind of like, yeah, like, okay, kind of like, kind of a wake-up call there. | ||
So I thought that what he said today was a very nice message, and you know what? | ||
Like, I don't actually think he's a bad content creator. | ||
I watched his stream, and I saw a human being, I saw introspection. | ||
It was actually not bad content, it was actually engaging. | ||
I'm not gonna lie. | ||
Like, out of all those streams that you could watch, his is pretty engaging. | ||
Like, you know, he's not a bad streamer, and, um... | ||
You know, now that he's not relentlessly shitting on me, I don't actually dislike the guy that much, and he's actually kind of funny. | ||
So, like I said on Saturday, I mean, he has given us so much information that will be very helpful. | ||
Well, he's provided it to the public. | ||
And so for that, and because of what he said today, you know, honestly, while saying that he hit first and he's really caused a lot of headache for the last couple years, I forgive him. | ||
I forgive him if he wants to move on, you know, then water to the bridge as far as I'm concerned. | ||
Because that's what it's really about. | ||
I mean, it's about love speech. | ||
You saw with Culture War Criminal, do you know what happened? | ||
I saw him in D.C. | ||
and he's really fucked with me in a lot of ways. | ||
I saw him in DC. | ||
We talked for a minute. | ||
We shook hands. | ||
We said, this is stupid. | ||
Let's just drop it. | ||
We did. | ||
I didn't go back and think of, well, he did this, and he did this, and he did this. | ||
And he didn't go back and think, well, Nick did this, and Nick did this. | ||
And we just said, you know what? | ||
This is just stupid. | ||
Let's just stop. | ||
Like, why are we doing this? | ||
We just shook hands, and that was that. | ||
Now, you know, we're not best good friends now. | ||
Like, I still disagree with him on some stuff. | ||
But it's whatever. | ||
I mean, probably, you know, there's conceivably a time when we might collaborate in the future. | ||
Who knows? | ||
I'm open to that possibility. | ||
But fundamentally, I'm here to do this show. | ||
I'm here to do America first. | ||
You know, people go, well, you're not perfect. | ||
You're not the hero that we want. | ||
You're not the kind of guy that we like. | ||
You're not, you know, we don't like that you did this. | ||
We don't like that you say that. | ||
I don't really give a fuck. | ||
I'm out here pushing my message. | ||
Not to be in these, like, beefs, these weird grudges with freaks that hate me. | ||
So, as far as RPG is concerned, I never really had beef other than he was, like, relentlessly attacking me. | ||
So if he's done doing that, you know, we paid it back a lot. | ||
And, you know, so I forgive him. | ||
Water under the bridge. | ||
I don't see him as an enemy anymore. | ||
I see him in a neutral way. | ||
And I actually, you know, I don't think he's a terrible guy. | ||
I can say that objectively. | ||
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So, so that's that. | |
And I admire the fact that he actually has some introspection to just say like, yeah, you know, I don't want to fight anymore. | ||
This is, this is like obviously not, we're obviously hypocrites here, and this is kind of silly. | ||
It's like, yeah, that's kind of what I've been waiting to hear for a long, long, long time from this freak crowd. | ||
So, uh, I don't know if I give him a cozy channel, but I talked to him. | ||
I probably talked to him And he was right about baked Alaska, you know, he called that I'm sure from the outside looking in RPG thought of himself as someone who's a serious guy who's wants to make a contribution and then he sees this guy baked Alaska is just a shithead and And him being somebody who's invested in the success of America First, and me, was like, hey Nick, I love you, but this Baked Alaska guy's just not serious. | ||
And I was like, oh shut up, you're a retard. | ||
And I'm sure he, I'm sure he felt very resentful. | ||
He's like, you know, here I am, a serious guy with a good work ethic, who has put himself out there, and I'm donating money and blah blah blah, And I'm getting pushed aside for this goof? | ||
Really? | ||
And I'm sure then, in his mind, that was like damning for the whole movement. | ||
He's like, well, this is the kind of movement you have. | ||
People like me are kicked out, but people like him are let in. | ||
The whole thing's corrupt! | ||
And you could see how somebody could feel that way, and that doesn't make it rational, but you could see how, you know, him being personally invested like that, That could become an indictment of the whole thing. | ||
Now, obviously it is, because Baked Alaska was never really part of this. | ||
He always was doing his own thing, as he reminded me often. | ||
Except for when he wanted something from me. | ||
When he wanted something from me, we were all on the same team. | ||
When I asked him for something, well, you know, he's his own man. | ||
He's his own man. | ||
He can do whatever he wants. | ||
I'm much younger than him. | ||
When he wanted to be the director on Cozy, and when he wanted to be flown out for Year 24, when he wanted... | ||
You know, whatever he wanted, well, it's all in the family. | ||
When I would ask him, hey, don't have Judas on the stream. | ||
Hey, don't talk to Milo while he's trying to destroy my life. | ||
Hey, don't do this. | ||
It was always, well, I'm my own man. | ||
I can do whatever I want. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
You know, so that wasn't really true. | ||
Baked Alaska was always doing his own thing. | ||
He always said that. | ||
I always said that. | ||
Um, you know, but I could see how RPG felt very offended by that. | ||
Because he does have a good work ethic, he puts himself out there, he does care about politics, and he's not just obsessed with drama and gossip, he does care about politics. | ||
And so I can actually, in retrospect, I can see where he's coming from. | ||
And I can see how, you know, he puts out a super chat that says, you know, fuck baked. | ||
And I'm like, no, fuck you. | ||
And he's like, wait, but I'm doing all the right things. | ||
And this guy's doing all the wrong things. | ||
That just goes to show your judgment's compromised. | ||
Now, I'm a loyal person. | ||
So I don't just throw people under the bus because someone I don't know says something. | ||
So I'm not going to go back in time and say, oh, I wouldn't have said that. | ||
But I, you know, in retrospect, I can see where he's coming from. | ||
I don't think it justified everything that happened, but you know what? | ||
He went into it, lay down with dogs, he get fleas. | ||
Now he's dealing with this stuff and, you know, I hope it works out for the best for him. | ||
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But he's not my enemy anymore. | |
So... You know. | ||
And I'm glad we're able to squash it a little bit, like I did with CWC. | ||
I know RPG doesn't like CWC, though. | ||
Kind of funny, though. | ||
Lappy online sent $3 GM. | ||
Good morning. | ||
Insurgent honor sent $7. | ||
Saw that guy in Alex Jones Q&A challenge him about hand waving your assertions about the JQ and Alex seemed open to a debate with you about Israel. | ||
Big if true. | ||
I saw that. | ||
I think he's just saying that. | ||
I mean, I would, of course, do the debate, but he hasn't reached out to me. | ||
I think he just said that in the moment to make the question go away. | ||
Because I did a debate with him in December, and then, you know, I've been exiled from InfoWars since, like, July 2021. | ||
They haven't talked to me since that Robert Barnes debate, and their producer hates me. | ||
Their producer, Daria, she's got an ax to grind with me. | ||
So... You know, blame her. | ||
She's best friends with Milo. | ||
I'm sure Milo got her to ban my account on banned video. | ||
Not hard to trace that one back. | ||
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As always, it's a woman alliance with a gay Jew. | |
Let's go. | ||
And Daria was talking trash about me to Alex. | ||
Alex Jones calls me in December after the yay thing and he's all mad and he goes, And what's this? | ||
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We go, my producer Daria says you're asking her if she's Jewish? | |
Now in like 2019, me and Daria had like a back and forth the first time I went on Alex's show. | ||
And she said she, she actually said she hated Kanye and he's a false Christian. | ||
And I said, you know, what are you Jewish or something? | ||
She was a big Owen Benjamin fan. | ||
So that was like three years ago. | ||
That was like years and years and years ago, and it's basically a joke. | ||
I said, Alex, I said, that was a conversation we had three years ago, and that was a joke. | ||
And he's like, oh, I didn't know that. | ||
She just told me. | ||
Go figure. | ||
So once again, I don't even blame Alex anymore. | ||
I think it's just this Daria chick has beef with me. | ||
Yeah, I don't know how I feel about that. | ||
Richard Strucker sent $3. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
America First with Nick Fuentes and Big Tech was a top 5 stream on Kik for some time tonight. | ||
Content is king. | ||
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Yeah, I don't know how I feel about that. | |
Koralik sent $5. | ||
Aideen Ross got a call from his manager on stream where he said celebrities wouldn't work with him because of his interaction with Nazis. | ||
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Yeah, I saw that. | |
Bob sent $23. | ||
They made a documentary? | ||
I haven't seen a documentary. | ||
I don't follow that stuff anymore. | ||
It's just not good to pay attention to. | ||
Love you too, buddy. | ||
Korea FUD sent $3. | ||
Have you seen that documentary theologues did about you and your crew? | ||
Pathetic. | ||
Is that all they got? | ||
They made a documentary? | ||
I haven't seen a documentary. | ||
I don't follow that stuff anymore. | ||
It's just not good to pay attention to. | ||
I've been following the RPG saga for obvious reasons because that's been a lot of fun. | ||
But I just stopped paying attention to all that after the A thing. | ||
It's sort of like, you meet the president and he loves you, you meet your hero and he loves you, and then you're just, you know, I don't really care what other people think anymore. | ||
Honestly though, after that happens, you're kind of like, okay, like, I won. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, my two biggest heroes. | ||
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Three, if you include Andrew Anglin, but I haven't met him. | |
My three biggest heroes all love me. | ||
Like, they all love me, and they all were impressed with me. | ||
It's like, okay, like, why do I care what other people think now? | ||
So John Martin sent $3 sucks that sneaker in that theologian con man decided to declare jihad on Christianity. | ||
The real problem is Jewish power. | ||
This division seems intentional. | ||
We should all be on the same side. | ||
I don't know if it's intentional, but it is that guy is a con man. | ||
And I don't appreciate the attacks on Christianity. | ||
Especially because I feel like Christians are very respectful to Muslims. | ||
We're always bending over backwards to say, oh you know, Muslims are fine, Muslims are great, blah blah blah. | ||
You know, they think Jesus is a prophet. | ||
And then Muslims repay it with this crap. | ||
So you know what? | ||
I'm done with that. | ||
You know, Muslims are heretics. | ||
You know, your religion's a joke. | ||
You have to be Catholic. | ||
And, uh, you know, Sneeko doesn't even know anything about Islam. | ||
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He's gonna go, you know, so the Eucharist is like cannibalism? | |
Uh, okay. | ||
Chucklehead. | ||
And don't get me wrong, I like Sneeko, but I don't appreciate the constant attacks on God. | ||
I don't appreciate the constant attacks on religion. | ||
I've been very respectful to Islam. | ||
I think it's very disrespectful. | ||
It's a great, it's a great disrespect and really does not deserve. | ||
So, um, you know, so I like Sneeko. | ||
He's my friend and everything, but, um, you know, it's on site. | ||
You want to, you want to fucking jihad? | ||
Okay, bring it. | ||
So I'm going to religious boot camp and I'm going to become the number one weapon for Catholicism. | ||
If that's how it's going to be, then we're going to fight Jews and Muslims at the same time. | ||
Because they only want to fight because Muslims and Jews only want to fight Christians. | ||
Muslims and Jews hanging out fighting Christians. | ||
That's okay, we'll fight both. | ||
I am truly sorry, Nick. | ||
This is my apology. | ||
I should never have been like that. | ||
Can you please accept my apology? | ||
Apology accepted. | ||
That's all I wanted to hear. | ||
LappyOnline sent $3. | ||
So happy for Mr. Feeser. | ||
Don't call him that. | ||
Come on now. | ||
He doesn't like that. | ||
InsurgentHonor sent $7. | ||
Nick the Magnanimously Beneficent. | ||
Well, and I mean that. | ||
I really, um... I don't have any ill will. | ||
Even these people who hate, like... You have to understand, RPG has been, like, shitting on me every day for years. | ||
And I know he's just done me a big favor by releasing all this stuff, but I could very easily make him look like an asshole and come on the show and say, ha, you got what you deserved, you idiot, blah blah blah. | ||
I genuinely have no ill will for him. | ||
Like, people have to remind me to care. | ||
But he said this about you, but he said that about you. | ||
I don't wake up every day and think about, oh, this guy said this, oh, that guy said that. | ||
I have so many projects and things going on, I wake up and think about my own life. | ||
I think about my own stuff. | ||
So, you know. | ||
Same thing with CWC, you know. | ||
People go, wait, but he did this, but he did that. | ||
I'm like, okay, okay, you know. | ||
It happened. | ||
It happened in the past. | ||
We want more of it in the future. | ||
Let's just let it go. | ||
You know cuz I'm really not a hateful guy. | ||
I don't wake up every day. | ||
Oh, you know this person You know I have to defend myself I have to fight people that attack me, but it's you know But if it all just disappeared that would be my preference Aftither sent $3. | ||
If you want to dig into Christian apologetics you should check out Sam Shamoon. | ||
He has photographic memory of the Bible and a lot of the Quran too. | ||
Shikuthman refuses to debate him. | ||
I'll check him out. | ||
KoreaFud sent $3. | ||
It's a documentary where they use AI to mimic your voice and mannerisms. | ||
I'm sure someone can post the link. | ||
Crazy they are willing to put so much work and production into attacking you. | ||
I'm not interested in that. | ||
I don't know why anybody would be spreading that. | ||
It is funny. | ||
It is funny, but, you know, we'll be nice to him. | ||
He's being nice to us. | ||
We'll be nice to him. | ||
Alright, let's see. | ||
I think that's everything. | ||
Yep. | ||
Okay! | ||
Alright, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
Look, I'm starving. | ||
I gotta go. | ||
I am so hungry. | ||
So that's gonna be it for me. | ||
Remember to follow me here on Cozy. | ||
Smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Follow me on Rumble and Telegram. | ||
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 everybody that watches the show. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters, in particular, Farid Lukovic and Dream Gruyper. | ||
Special thanks to them. | ||
Thanks to all our Super Chatters and everyone that watches. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
The American people will come first. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. |