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unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first.? | ||
you | ||
you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you | ||
you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you you Thank you. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back here with you tonight on Tuesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Big, important show. | ||
And there's not a lot going on, but it's gonna be a big show. | ||
And our featured story tonight we're talking about Ron DeSantis, uh, Cuck Desaioshill, as I like to call him, and his recent remarks yesterday that the 2020 election wasn't stolen. | ||
Can you believe this? | ||
Our featured story we'll be talking about how Ron DeSantis, number two in the polls for the Republican nomination, In an interview yesterday said that there was no fraud that changed the outcome of the last presidential election. | ||
A totally treasonous remark and a betrayal of America and Trump himself and the base and the truth and God. | ||
And this guy should be arrested for this immediately. | ||
And the Trump and Reich, this guy's going down in a big way. | ||
And he may have just ended his own political career. | ||
His prospects and his chance at winning the nomination are dead after such a ridiculous remark. | ||
So we'll talk about that tonight. | ||
That'll be our main story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about Victoria Nuland, the Deputy and the Secretary of State. | ||
She went over and visited Niger and the new military government there, the coup government, and she has been universally mocked and ridiculed by the world because the coup government will not let her visit the government in exile and the since overthrown president whom she wanted to meet. | ||
And she went over there and warned the coup government not to embrace the Russian Wagner Group, the PMC led by Purgosian, and they just laughed in her face. | ||
And she was expelled from the country. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Like I said, kind of a slow day though. | ||
Not a lot of news going on. | ||
We're still waiting on this major coalition war in Africa to break out. | ||
And it's looking like everybody's taking a side. | ||
And if Victoria Nuland is involved, you know that NATO will most likely be involved. | ||
It seems that she will probably be coordinating involvement from France and the United States on the side of the economic community of West Africa. | ||
And they'll be going in against, perhaps, not just the Niger government, but also the other coup governments in the Sahel, which would be Burkina Faso, Mali, and Guinea. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Before we get into the news, I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on Cozy. | ||
Get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Cozy.tv slash Nick. | ||
Follow me on Rumble as well. | ||
I'm back on Rumble as of yesterday. | ||
So follow me on Rumble. | ||
I'll be live-streaming the show every night on Rumble and on Cozy, so follow me on both platforms. | ||
Follow me on Telegram. | ||
Link is down below. | ||
t.me slash NickJFuentes to get notified about everything that I'm up to, every update. | ||
My Twitter account got banned today! | ||
unidentified
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Damn it! | |
I'm so pissed! | ||
I thought maybe there was a chance, maybe I could get back on Twitter permanently. | ||
Maybe I could slide under the radar and have a Twitter account. | ||
But no! | ||
Nope! | ||
My new Twitter account, it lasted four days. | ||
I got 12,000 followers in four days without even promoting it. | ||
Yeah! | ||
It got banned today before I even woke up. | ||
They banned me while I was sleeping, sons of bitches. | ||
So, my new account is gone. | ||
The content gone. | ||
Twitter space is gone. | ||
I'm back to my hole. | ||
Congratulations! | ||
I'm now banished back to the dark corners of the internet. | ||
And I hate that, but I was expecting it, you know. | ||
I said it in my last space. | ||
I said, I don't have much longer, I know. | ||
And it was fun while it lasted. | ||
But the Apple account, the Apple brand is finished. | ||
Done. | ||
The Jews have taken another Twitter account from me. | ||
Damn! | ||
I hate it! | ||
I want to be on Twitter so bad. | ||
I love Twitter. | ||
X, as they're now calling it. | ||
I love, but it'll always be Twitter to me. | ||
I love Twitter. | ||
It's my favorite platform. | ||
I like it more than real life. | ||
I'd rather be alive on Twitter than in real life. | ||
But I'm not allowed. | ||
And before anybody says, well, you shouldn't have posted about Auschwitz, and well, you shouldn't have talked about the Jews, you know, everybody gets real clever. | ||
Everybody wants to tell me what I did wrong. | ||
But I got banned for ban evasion. | ||
unidentified
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So it's not even what I said. | |
They banned me for who I am. | ||
As always, when I got banned the first time they said, well you got banned for repeated violations. | ||
Even though my account was in good standing. | ||
This was back in July 21. | ||
And then I got reinstated and re-banned in January of this year. | ||
And once again they didn't even give me a reason. | ||
They didn't give me a reason. | ||
I appealed. | ||
I appealed. | ||
After months, they said, well, it was because of hateful conduct or something. | ||
Okay. | ||
And now they just get me for ban evasion every time. | ||
And it's so over. | ||
What will I do? | ||
This sucks. | ||
I have no account, but I must post. | ||
I have no Twitter, and yet I must tweet. | ||
This really sucks. | ||
So anyway, I'm banned on Twitter. | ||
It's a crying shame. | ||
I'm the only cool thing on that whole fucking website. | ||
Sorry for the language. | ||
Anytime... I'm really mad. | ||
Anytime I go on that platform, I'm the only thing that's even happening. | ||
Everybody else is just posting garbage. | ||
Everybody else is just not even saying anything. | ||
The content isn't even funny. | ||
And all these brands, that's just it. | ||
They're just brands now. | ||
They're like McDonald's, but they're just pushing... It's a flea market for ebooks and t-shirts and other assorted garbage. | ||
There's nothing funny going on there anymore. | ||
But that's okay. | ||
Anyway, so follow me on Telegram because you can't get me on Twitter anymore. | ||
Maybe I'll make a new one. | ||
Maybe not. | ||
I don't know, but I'm pissed. | ||
I'm like just separated from society. | ||
I realize that. | ||
It's man against society. | ||
Soy-ciety. | ||
Goy-ciety. | ||
It's man against a goy-ciety. | ||
A soy-ciety. | ||
It's me against the whole world. | ||
I'm outside the club. | ||
unidentified
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I can't even get in the club. | |
I've been removed by the state. | ||
I've been removed by the sovereign Jewish activist class that runs the world. | ||
And it's such a sad state of affairs. | ||
Sometimes I watch television, and I watch sympathetic characters on television, and I wish I could be like them. | ||
I wish I could. | ||
Be among them again. | ||
I wish I could go in the public and enjoy. | ||
But I can't. | ||
I'm an outcast. | ||
I'm a pariah. | ||
I'm outside. | ||
I've been ostracized. | ||
I've been exiled. | ||
This is maybe the worst part of the punishment. | ||
And all because I'm not totally politically correct. | ||
Give me a break. | ||
All I am is just a simple conservative And I can't even go in the public square. | ||
I'm mocked, ridiculed, attacked, lied about, smeared. | ||
Terrible. | ||
And I can't even have a Twitter account. | ||
Anyway, but enough about me. | ||
So it's a very sad state of affairs, but I do it because it's the right thing to do. | ||
I don't even do it for you. | ||
I don't even know you. | ||
Okay, and I probably wouldn't even like you. | ||
I'd pretend to like you, but probably I'd be very impatient with most of you. | ||
I'd meet you, because I don't really, I'm a very anti-social person, but I do it because it's a right thing to do. | ||
And in some sense, I'm doing it for you in an indirect way. | ||
unidentified
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But anyway, so that's my plight. | |
No Twitter account, no nothing. | ||
They just call me a racist. | ||
They just banned me. | ||
Everybody gets mad at me. | ||
Everywhere I go, everyone's mean to me. | ||
But that's okay. | ||
Anyway, we're gonna move on. | ||
We're gonna dive into the show. | ||
I want my Twitter back! | ||
We're gonna dive into the show and we'll talk about this Niger situation. | ||
When the war breaks out, I promise I'll do a full show about it. | ||
I haven't really done a monologue yet about the coup in Niger and this emerging Looks like it's going to be a major interstate conflict. | ||
It's going to be a major coalition war. | ||
As I said moments ago, it's shaping up to be, at the minimum, a regional conflict. | ||
And all of the states in the Sahel region and all the states in West Africa are being drawn into it. | ||
There's been a series of coups in the last three or four years in this African sphere of influence in West Africa. | ||
They've happened in the nation of Guinea, which is on the coast, with the Atlantic Ocean. | ||
It's happened in Mali, as well as Burkina Faso. | ||
And now Niger's been the latest, and this has been a developing situation in the last month. | ||
And so it looks like it's those coup governments which has overthrown French-backed governments in many cases with the help of the Russian government and with specifically the help of the private military company the Wagner Group | ||
It'll be those four states or three of them maybe without Guinea against this economic community of West Africa which is basically all the other West African countries led primarily by Nigeria but it also includes Togo and Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone and Benin and | ||
Several others it's I think it's about 10 or 20 nations in this West African community But the largest and most powerful state and the state which will be contributing apparently at least half of the invading force of 25,000 is Nigeria And so it'll be at least a regional conflict. | ||
It'll be these West African states against at least Niger, but maybe these other coup governments will be drawn in and those are Burkina Faso, Mali, potentially Guinea. | ||
And then there's the involvement of global powers. | ||
Then there may be Russian involvement on the side of the coup government and Niger and then potentially involvement from NATO with at the minimum probably France and then maybe the United States getting involved on behalf of Nigeria and this economic community of West Africa and like I said I haven't done a full in-depth show but that that's the basic situation of course it's a lot more complex and there's much more detail | ||
But the big story today is that the famous American diplomat, or I should say infamous in the world, the infamous American diplomat Victoria Nuland paid a visit to the coup government in Niger, and she specifically warned the coup government against bringing the Russian private military group Wagner into this conflict | ||
she also tried to meet with the ousted government which was backed by France and the United States and the coup government wouldn't let her meet them which is a major humiliation and this is a story it's from Russia Today it says quote a senior U.S. | ||
diplomat said that coup leaders in Niger refused to allow her to meet Monday with the West African country's democratically elected president, whom she described as under virtual house arrest. | ||
Acting Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland also described the mutinous officers as unreceptive to U.S. | ||
pressure to return the country to civilian rule. | ||
She said, quote, they were quite firm about how they want to proceed and it is not in support of the Constitution of Niger. | ||
She characterized the conversations as extremely frank and at times quite difficult. | ||
She spoke after a two-hour meeting in Niger's capital, Niamey, with some leaders of the military takeover of a country that has been a vital counterterrorism partner of the United States. | ||
And speaking to Junta leaders, Newland said she made absolutely clear the kinds of support that we will legally have to cut off if democracy is not restored. | ||
If the United States determines that democratically elected government has been toppled by unconstitutional means, federal law requires a cutoff of most American assistance, particularly military aid. | ||
The meeting was with General Moussa Salou Barmou, a U.S.-trained officer and three of the colonels involved in the takeover. | ||
The coup's top leader, former presidential guard head Chiani, did not meet with the Americans. | ||
And so, the United States has sent their delegation, they're trying to negotiate, but it looks like there's going to be a war. | ||
It looks like the coup government is not going to negotiate. | ||
And they're clearly going to bring in the Russians. | ||
When the coup happened, it was actually kind of interesting, they're all waving Russian flags in the streets and in the Capitol, they're all waving Russian flags, and this has been a site Which has been happening across West Africa. | ||
The same thing was reported after the coup in Burkina Faso a couple of years ago. | ||
And the same situation was happening in Mali and in Guinea. | ||
And you hear a lot of this anti-colonial rhetoric from the Russian state which Many right-wing people in America are critical of this. | ||
Whenever you hear Vladimir Putin give a speech about the global state of affairs and the global balance of power, He speaks in what would appear to be these left-wing terms. | ||
He talks about racism and colonialism and in some cases white supremacy. | ||
But of course it makes sense in the context of a global assault against Western influence. | ||
A global assault by Russia against American influence in the world. | ||
And so in this Ideological battle, Russia has to take the side of the indigenous, has to take the side of the nativists or the anti-colonialists in these countries. | ||
Because, of course, where the West influences a continent like Africa, it's in a way that many people call it neo-colonial, neo-imperial. | ||
And so where there is any kind of political resistance to Western influence in these countries, it takes the shape of an anti-colonial and therefore, typically, an anti-white strain. | ||
That's the only rallying point against the Western influence. | ||
How do you depose the French-backed governments, for example, in West Africa, which is within the French sphere of influence? | ||
It has to be anti-colonial. | ||
And if it's anti-colonial you have to talk about racism and you have to talk about the old days of European colonialism and you have to talk about necessarily white supremacy. | ||
Not that I necessarily support all that, not that I really believe in that rhetoric, but strictly from an analytical point of view, it becomes a geopolitical necessity. | ||
If Russia wants to fight American and French influence in Africa, well, there's really one avenue to do that, and that's to say that Russia is going to liberate these countries from so-called neo-colonial, neo-imperialist influence, And so it has a certain color you know that that kind of rhetoric has it's going to take a certain direction for that reason. | ||
And so anyway, with all these different coups that have been happening, you see the Russian flags, and that's because it is the Wagner Group and it is, to some extent, the Russian state that is coordinating arms trafficking in these regions. | ||
They're selling light arms to these groups. | ||
And they're also helping them deal with their security problems in these states. | ||
In West Africa in particular, they have a big problem with To this day, ISIS and radical Islam, and there's been a lot of regional instability. | ||
These states are literally breaking apart because of violence from these non-state groups, which are violent and basically lawless. | ||
I mean, there are entire parts of the entire continent, but specifically in this region, in these states, where the government doesn't even control these areas. | ||
The government of Nigeria, the government of Niger, in Chad, in Mali, they still don't have, their centralized states still to this day don't have the ability to project power across their entire jurisdiction, within their borders, which is a pretty outrageous situation. within their borders, which is a pretty outrageous situation. | ||
But it's allowing for states like Russia and to some extent China to get involved and insert themselves. | ||
And anyway, the way to look at the conflict in Niger is not that this is another tribal dispute. | ||
This is another place where the global chessboard, the global great power struggle is playing out in, In some ways, this is an extension of what's happening in Ukraine. | ||
You know, you can really, when you look at it, view Syria, Ukraine, West Africa, North Africa, they're all connected. | ||
They're all extremely interlinked. | ||
And so Russia, you could see it this way, is making a play against Niger, which is really a play against France, Which is a play against NATO. | ||
France is exporting cheap energy, which increasingly they'll be getting from West Africa. | ||
They get their uranium from Niger. | ||
They're also building a gas pipeline through Niger that comes from Nigeria through Niger into Algeria, which is a very important state in relation to France. | ||
And so, like with everything else in the world, you can't view this situation in isolation. | ||
It's not what they say it's about. | ||
Of course, every state is interlinked economically and diplomatically, and so this is actually just another battlefield for the Russia-NATO conflict. | ||
And I guess the scary thing about this is that this is really becoming a global war. | ||
You're starting to see how, in exactly the same way that this played out between Germany and Great Britain a hundred years ago, this is now playing out with the Russia-China alliance against the West today, where you're seeing these regional flashpoints They're popping off and they're becoming a battleground between the great powers. | ||
And so we're now in a shocking way finding ourselves in some cases directly or indirectly at war with the Russia-China coalition on three continents. | ||
There is a scenario where in five to ten years we will be directly at war with China And indirectly at war with China and Russia in almost every continent in the world. | ||
Where we'll be directly competing with China and Africa and maybe fighting them in Africa. | ||
We'll be fighting them in Ukraine. | ||
We'll be fighting them potentially in the Middle East, in Lebanon and Syria. | ||
We may be fighting them in Taiwan. | ||
We may be still fighting them in Ukraine. | ||
And a lot of people may wonder, Is it really possible that we would go towards a nuclear war? | ||
Is it really possible that we could blunder into a war with China? | ||
Because many people think it's common sense that a war with China, or Russia for that matter, would be catastrophic. | ||
A war with both would be apocalyptic. | ||
And necessarily, May lead to a nuclear Armageddon. | ||
So how could our leaders blunder into such a situation? | ||
It's unthinkable. | ||
It should be something that's off the table and something that both sides would desperately seek to avoid. | ||
But you're starting to see in this decade, in the 2020s, we're laying the groundwork for that. | ||
We're laying the foundations in the same way that you saw the beginnings of the world wars In the first two decades of the 20th century, I feel like in exactly the same way we're seeing the groundwork being laid for a confrontation between the Asiatic coalition, which is Russia-China against America, and to some extent continental Europe, in the 2020s. | ||
In exactly the same way. | ||
And that's a very scary proposition. | ||
The Ukraine situation was bad enough nine years ago, and now we're directly at war. | ||
But that's no longer the only battlefield. | ||
The battlefield is now, like I said, in Syria, and the battle may be in Niger, and pretty soon the battle will be in Taiwan. | ||
And I don't think it'll be very long before the battle will be in this hemisphere, in the Western Hemisphere, where you're going to see the usual suspects come into play, which will be Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Haiti. | ||
It's not hard to see a scenario like the old Cold War, where all those Cold War divisions are going to be reasserted and those dividing lines will be sharpened again. | ||
And that's a very terrifying proposition. | ||
Because that would be a truly global conflict. | ||
And by the way, it's one that we would lose. | ||
It's one that we really don't have the manpower and we really don't have the industrial base to fight. | ||
And something like that would assuredly be the end of Western civilization. | ||
If you thought it was bad before, you thought like last night's show was a black pill, we talked about the under-17 cohort in America which is now 47% white, now imagine a war with the Russia-China coalition on four continents. | ||
and a battle over the Pacific and a battle over Eastern Europe and a battle in Africa and the Middle East. | ||
This is scary stuff. | ||
So we ought to think very, very carefully about how we move. | ||
Of course we won't! | ||
I mean, the diplomats and the leadership in the United States are not going to do that. | ||
But we should be thinking very carefully about how the world order is rapidly changing at a breakneck speed ever since this war in Ukraine broke out a year and a half ago. | ||
And we should be very thoughtful and prudent About how this is playing out, and we need to be very quick about how we analyze the situation because of course it's evolving so quickly. | ||
The Russia, or rather the Iran-Saudi Arabia truce that was brokered, how these votes are going down in the United Nations, and which nations are abstaining from the sanctions, and You can see that the dynamic has almost completely shifted in such a short amount of time. | ||
Trends that have been going on for three decades are hastening to their logical conclusion, which is you're seeing the dollar being ditched in balance of payments and international trade. | ||
You're seeing old alliances where they were drifting apart. | ||
Are now totally going neutral. | ||
I'm talking about Saudi Arabia, states like France, Germany's being ripped apart. | ||
History is happening very, very rapidly now. | ||
This is one of those periods in time where they say that history happens very slowly and then all at once. | ||
You know, they say that sometimes nothing happens in a century, but then a century happens in a decade. | ||
I'm butchering it, but I'm sure you've heard that expression. | ||
We're living through that moment right now. | ||
And with this new conflict in Africa, I don't know that the stakes are that high necessarily in this instance. | ||
But it is worthy of consideration that we're now opening up a third front where we're confronting Russia in a way where it hasn't been like that since the 80s. | ||
I mean, it hasn't been like this since the Cold War, which is unprecedented. | ||
The Cold War ended, that chapter closed. | ||
It was a period of uncontested American dominance. | ||
And now for the first time in four decades we will be confronting Russia directly or indirectly on three continents all at the same time. | ||
In this ongoing Syrian conflict, although that's winding down, in Ukraine and in Niger. | ||
And that should give the decision makers in Washington a lot of pause because even if it's not this one or Ukraine or Syria, it's obviously foreshadowing what is to come in a much bigger way with China and with them together. | ||
So again, we will do a full breakdown of the Niger situation. | ||
I'm thinking Actually, I'm about to take off so maybe tomorrow or at some point in the future whenever the war pops off I'm not sure But at this point in time, I just want to say, that's the way that you've got to be thinking about this. | ||
It's not necessarily about this specific, the specifics about this situation, but about the fact that this is an earthquake. | ||
And what happens in an earthquake is seismic shifts. | ||
Tectonic plates are moving underneath the surface. | ||
You notice the shaking. | ||
You may notice You know, if the Niger situation is maybe a three on the Richter scale, or who knows how big it's going to be, remember that this reflects tectonic plate movements. | ||
Major things are happening beneath the surface. | ||
Four states have undergone anti-French coups with Russian involvement, and we're now confronting them in a coalition interstate conflict at the same time that we're at war with them in Ukraine, at the same time that we're now Arming Taiwan like never before and changing our policy towards them. | ||
It seems for the first time in 50 years we're totally upending the American doctrine towards Taiwan. | ||
And Beijing is now with Moscow in an unbreakable friendship. | ||
Like, it cannot be understated. | ||
The degree to which things are changing and how rapidly they are and I feel like nobody's even talking about it nobody's even Some people are but few people are tying all the pieces together and I said it when the Ukraine conflict broke out I said this is This is the beginning of the end for the unipolar moment, and it's going to be a different world order on the other side of it. | ||
It may seem like there's not a lot of action happening in Ukraine, but it has changed everything. | ||
The United States moved heaven and earth to get Russia to back down without bombing their airports, without bombing their cities, or launching nukes at them. | ||
We have done everything in our power to restrain Russia. | ||
And it hasn't worked. | ||
And in the course of doing that, we have upended 30 years of precedent. | ||
And so it'll be a very interesting decade, I think, on every one of these continents. | ||
When you look at the Middle East, when you look at Africa, Asia, Europe, it's never going to be the same. | ||
And they're all being influenced in their own way. | ||
You see the strategic autonomy happening in Europe. | ||
You see the resource wars. | ||
And the return of surrogate warfare, proxy warfare in Africa. | ||
You see Israel more belligerent than they've been in a few decades. | ||
And then, of course, this situation in Taiwan. | ||
It may be the first time in five centuries that China, you know, or the Orient, as a civilization, has asserted itself against Europe. | ||
It's... I mean, this is really historical stuff, so... or historic stuff. | ||
But anyway, so that's my take on Niger. | ||
Less to do about Victoria Nuland, more about the situation as a whole. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the DeSantis story. | ||
And you know, it's not so much about what he said. | ||
But that is the update. | ||
The big story, and this is the shot heard around the world, is that yesterday Ron DeSantis officially addressed the 2020 election fraud claims. | ||
And he is of the position that there was no voter fraud. | ||
And that it didn't impact the 2020 election and that Trump legitimately lost. | ||
That's his take. | ||
And this is the story. | ||
It's his quote. | ||
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Sunday rejected Donald Trump's claim that he was the true winner of the 2020 presidential election and his most forceful comments to date on the matter. | ||
He told an NBC News correspondent, Dasha Burns, quote, whoever puts their hand on the Bible and January 20th every four years is the winner. | ||
He continued to discuss all the ways he believed the previous presidential election was not perfect. | ||
But pressured further, he clearly stated that Trump lost. | ||
Burns pressed him. | ||
She said, but respectfully, you did not clearly answer the question. | ||
And if you can't give a yes or no on whether or not he lost, DeSantis interjected, no, of course he lost. | ||
Joe Biden is the president. | ||
So DeSantis says Trump laws, Biden's a president, there's no fraud, Biden's a legitimate winner, 80 million votes, totally free and clear. | ||
It says DeSantis' comments come just days after Trump pleaded not guilty to charges that he broke the law by trying to overturn the 2020 election. | ||
At a campaign stop in Iowa on Friday, DeSantis also strongly dismissed claims that the election was stolen, saying they didn't prove to be true. | ||
Still, DeSantis made sure to point out in the interview that he saw a number of problems with the election, including MEDA CEO Mark Zuckerberg's grants for election administration, the widespread availability of mail-in ballots, state laws that allow third parties to collect and return voters' ballots, and how social media outlets de-emphasized a story about the laptop of President Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden. | ||
He said, I think what people in the media and elsewhere they want to act like somehow this was like the perfect election. | ||
I don't think it was a good run election. | ||
This is your genius by the way. | ||
It wasn't a good run election. | ||
It wasn't run good. | ||
They didn't run that one good. | ||
Like what are you a fucking idiot? | ||
That's like his big claim to fame is that he's smart. | ||
That he's like a policy wonk. | ||
It wasn't a good run election. | ||
They didn't run that one good. | ||
Okay. | ||
I know that's like... I know I'm nitpicking, but give me a break. | ||
That's... I get it. | ||
Maybe he's tired. | ||
Maybe he's fatigued. | ||
Maybe we could cut him some slack, but that just sounds really stupid. | ||
He says, but I also think Republicans didn't fight back. | ||
You have to fight back when that's happening. | ||
He refused to lean into attacking Trump over his legal troubles, insisting that it's not really about Donald Trump, and emphasizing his opposition to a justice system that is not fair if it is weaponized. | ||
And you know, the whole thing is wrong. | ||
This just proves that DeSantis is a spy. | ||
And it proves what I have said for a long time, which is that DeSantis You can't even evaluate him on what he says or what he thinks or his policies because he is not who he says he is. | ||
There was an argument at one point in time that DeSantis was Trumpism without Trump. | ||
He was all of the positives of Trump without the negatives. | ||
He was virtually the same agenda and the same message, but without the drama, And what's more, he was a good governor. | ||
And by a governor, I don't mean a capital G like a good governor of Florida, meaning he was a good leader, he was a good administrator, that he would be a more competent executive as the president that Donald Trump was. | ||
That was the case. | ||
I never agreed with that independently, but that was always the case. | ||
That was the argument that was made for DeSantis against Trump, is that he doesn't have the downsides, All the upsides and maybe the advantage is that at the end of the day he will do just very simply a better job. | ||
He'll be more competent in the position. | ||
He'll get more done. | ||
And so there was this pragmatism argument. | ||
He's more electable because he doesn't have the drama and the baggage. | ||
And once in office, he will do more damage. | ||
He'll be a better fighter. | ||
He may not be as bombastic. | ||
He may not be as entertaining or interesting. | ||
But he's gonna be the guy that gets the job done. | ||
He's gonna get us across the finish line and win. | ||
And then once he gets the job, he's gonna do a really good job. | ||
So went the argument. | ||
But you can't even evaluate him on that. | ||
You can't even address that. | ||
Because when he says something like this, when he says it's not about Trump, and he says the election wasn't rigged, and he says things like... You know, what was the comment specifically? | ||
He said, of course he lost. | ||
The election claims did not prove to be true. | ||
Yes, they absolutely did. | ||
Because what were the... let's just start with that for openers. | ||
He said the election fraud claims did not prove to be true. | ||
Well, what were the claims? | ||
I believe the first time that any... any acknowledgement of potential fraud was made was in June of 2020. | ||
When Donald Trump said that as a result of the COVID lockdown, he said that there would be extensive abuse with mail-in ballots. | ||
He said that people would be voting absentee because the COVID restrictions inevitably would not allow people to go and vote at the polls in person. | ||
There were bans on large gatherings and restrictions on when people could leave their homes. | ||
Curfews were put in place and that sort of thing. | ||
Schools were dismissed and places of business were shut down. | ||
And so he forecasted, rightly, that the COVID lockdown would have an impact on election turnout. | ||
And what all the states began to do shortly after the initial wave of lockdowns in the middle of March was to change how the elections would be conducted. | ||
They changed the administration of the elections to make the voting more accessible for people that would not be showing up to vote in person. | ||
They expanded the absentee voting. | ||
And so it was as early as June 2020 that Trump made specific claims. | ||
When we talk about theories and claims about election fraud, the first time that a specific theory about the manner of election fraud and the object of election fraud was made was in June 2020 by the President. | ||
And he said, specifically, It would be the absentee, the early voting, the mail-in voting. | ||
That would be the vulnerability for widespread abuse, and it would be enabled by the COVID lockdown restrictions on gatherings and on a sort of public setting. | ||
And so when we look at that election claim, that turned out to be absolutely true. | ||
And I've said it many times on the show, the only data point that you need to look at, which is just unexplainable, is that early voting in 2016 was 35%. | ||
35% of the votes cast were cast early. | ||
In other words, not on election day, not at the ballot box. | ||
votes cast were cast early. | ||
In other words, not on election day, not at the ballot box. | ||
35%, which is, of course, the minority, were cast early, meaning they were either mailed in by legitimate absentees, or they were in-person early voting, which is where somebody will request a ballot, fill it out at home, and then they which is where somebody will request a ballot, fill it out at home, and then they will deliver it to a drop box before the election, or they may That's what constitutes early voting. | ||
And of course, in many states, to vote early, you have to request a ballot. | ||
You would have to go, it was an active process, And you would have to go, and it varies state by state, because all the states conduct their own elections, and you would have to request a ballot, and then fill it out, and there were specific instructions to return it. | ||
All those rules were completely changed in 2020, and they made it so that everyone was automatically registered as an absentee. | ||
So everyone automatically was shipped a ballot, which they could then sign, vote, and drop off in a 24-hour drop box, or in a ballot box, or delivered on Election Day. | ||
Every voter. | ||
And as a consequence in 2020 the percentage of voters that voted absentee or voted early doubled and went more than 70% 35% and it gradually increased from the 90s where they started to implement this no excuse in-person absentee voting in certain states It has gradually increased from the mid to late 90s slowly but surely to 35% in 2016 and then doubled in four years. | ||
And we had the highest turnout ever. | ||
And Biden and Trump were the two highest vote-getters in the history of presidential politics, respectively. | ||
Biden and Trump, number one and number two. | ||
150 million votes. | ||
For two people that are considered the most polarizing, maybe the most unpopular politicians, contemporary political history that's the only that is one of the only data points you need to look at to see that clearly there is an anomaly going on here If it were a normal election where it was, let's say it was 40% early voting, I would say, yeah, you can't really claim election fraud. | ||
Maybe if Trump and Biden had slightly more votes than the previous election, or the Democrat vote getter, which in this case would be Biden compared to Clinton, if it was a slightly higher vote get, I would say, yeah, it's a stretch to say there was voter fraud. | ||
But the margin of victory In the states the five or six states that determine the outcome of the election was so slim and the number of votes was so much greater than it was the previous year and this is of course accounted for the fact that it was far more convenient and accessible for people to vote by mail and that was the majority of the votes and that does happen to be obviously vulnerable to fraud because there's no there's no chain | ||
If you go and vote in person, you go one man, one signature, one ballot, one vote. | ||
I go in, I request my ballot, I fill it out, I sign it, I submit it, and that's how it goes. | ||
Otherwise, if it goes and it happens through the mail, then the state puts the ballot in an envelope, they ship it to the voter, and then it disappears. | ||
You might as well throw it into a black hole. | ||
It goes into a whirlpool. | ||
The state packages up the ballot and puts it in the mailbox, and then it's gone. | ||
And as far as the state is concerned, then it shows up in a box somewhere. | ||
They ship out 200 million ballots, or however many there are, On a state-by-state basis, the state will ship out hundreds of millions of ballots, and they're just gone! | ||
And then they come back, and they're collected, and then they count them. | ||
And so again, it's a totally different election. | ||
One election, you have the vast majority of voters are voting on election day in person. | ||
They go in, they request their ballot, beep boop, they fill it out, they print it, they sign it, they drop it in the box, it's counted. | ||
And so there's a chain of custody where the ballot is given, supervised by the state. | ||
It is filled out, supervised by the state. | ||
It is received from the voter, supervised by the state. | ||
It is counted, supervised by the state. | ||
And so from reception all the way to from the time the voter receives the ballot until they submit the ballot, there is a clear chain of custody. | ||
It is happening with supervision. | ||
It is happening in a way that can be in a controlled environment. | ||
When 70%, then when it flips, 70% vote in person and then 70% vote absentee, then it's the opposite. | ||
Now, most of the voters, again, the state is shipping them out and then receiving them and counting them. | ||
And as a consequence, whoa, we got way more votes this time. | ||
And wow, now there's all these anomalies. | ||
And I'll give you a perfect example. | ||
Here's the other data point that I like to throw out, which I think is just unexplainable. | ||
In 2020, States like Pennsylvania, Arizona, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, they had a slim margin of victory for Joe Biden. | ||
The three closest margins in the 2020 election were Arizona, Wisconsin, and Georgia. | ||
Each Less than 1% margin between Trump and Biden, and they all went blue. | ||
Arizona, Wisconsin, and Georgia, Biden won all three by less than 1%. | ||
You compare that to Florida, which is another swing state. | ||
Trump won Florida by 3 points. | ||
Okay? | ||
So Wisconsin, Georgia, Arizona went Biden by less than one. | ||
Florida went Trump by three. | ||
So there's a three to four percent gap between those three states and Florida. | ||
But yet in 2022, which is a midterm election, Florida, in two statewide contests, went 20 points for the Republican. | ||
Rubio and DeSantis, Senator and Governor, won by 20 points in Florida. | ||
But in Wisconsin, Georgia, and Arizona, Democrats won statewide races in all three of those states in the midterms by 1% or more. | ||
So, what happened between 2020 and 2022? | ||
In 2020, the margin between Florida and these three states, which are red states. | ||
Wisconsin's a very red state. | ||
Arizona's a very red state. | ||
Georgia's a very red state. | ||
Increasingly, they're battlegrounds, but there's a strong red base in all three states. | ||
Just like with Florida. | ||
In 2020, there's a three to four point gap between them. | ||
Two years later, 20-25 point gap in the statewide race in Florida and the statewide races in those three states. | ||
unidentified
|
20-25. | |
So, what happened there? | ||
Did Florida become 20% more Republican? | ||
And how did that happen? | ||
Did Florida in two years become 20% more Republican? | ||
And you can't say that it was the good governance of Ron DeSantis because both statewide officials won by the same margin. | ||
Both DeSantis and Rubio won by 20 points. | ||
It was uniform. | ||
So it's not like you can say the administration of DeSantis was just so excellent Because why would Rubio then have a comparable outcome? | ||
Rubio had nothing to do with it. | ||
The variable is that after the 2020 election, Ron DeSantis, to his credit, passed voter reform and reversed the COVID-era rules. | ||
And he said that in order to get an absentee ballot to vote early, you have to request it. | ||
You don't automatically get registered as an absentee. | ||
You have to request an absentee ballot and you need to submit all your personal information. | ||
And the only way that you can drop off a ballot early is inside of a office that is supervised by the county during business hours. | ||
So I think it's from 9 to 5 or 8 to 6, whatever it is. | ||
Only in offices supervised by the county during business hours could you submit your ballot that you requested by submitting all your personal information. | ||
That's the variable. | ||
So is it more likely that in 2016 to 2020 a bunch more people just voted and all these six states or five states that Trump won that Biden flipped just became way more Democrat? | ||
Is it more likely that between 2020 and 2022 Florida just legitimately went 20 points more red? | ||
Or is it more likely that the anomaly is this automatic registration of absentees? | ||
Which is what changed from 16 to 20 nationwide and from 20 to 22 in Florida. | ||
I think that's plain as day and that's Again, that was the claim of election fraud in June 2020 and that was reiterated in the fall of 2020 in October, September, November by the President, by me, by Darren Beattie, by Alex Jones, by many people. | ||
They called it the Red Mirage. | ||
Many people talked about it and it turned out to be true regardless of what people like Sidney Powell and Lin Wood said about the voting machines and Dominion and all this. | ||
Regardless of all that, the central claim about the voter fraud was that it would be the mail-in ballots that would be subject to security vulnerability because it's breaking the chain of custody. | ||
So that's the first part. | ||
So he's just wrong. | ||
But then he goes on and says that it has nothing to do with Donald Trump and that's where You realize this guy is a shill. | ||
Because of course it has everything to do with Donald Trump. | ||
It of course has to do with Donald Trump. | ||
The investigation, and the indictment, and all this talk of voter fraud, and the voter fraud itself, and the whole 2020 election, it's all personal. | ||
It's all personal and political, and the two are inseparable against the leader, Donald Trump. | ||
That's what the whole situation is about. | ||
And maybe more than that, It's about this. | ||
In 2016, Trump had all the institutions of power against him, but he prevailed because more people voted for him. | ||
In 2016, Trump was opposed by business, finance, academia, the media, social media, the entertainment industry. | ||
He was opposed by all of the powerful institutions, the bureaucracy, the federal law enforcement, etc. | ||
And if it were up to any of them, he would have lost. | ||
Hillary Clinton outraised him. | ||
She outspent him. | ||
The media did 95% negative coverage. | ||
Almost universally, the universities and the tenured professors were against him on the college campuses. | ||
Social media censored his supporters and favored his opponents. | ||
If you look at the breakdown of whom Finance employees voted for and gave money to in that election. | ||
Overwhelmingly, they gave money to and supported Hillary Clinton. | ||
So, if any of the powerful institutions had it their way, Clinton would have won. | ||
The only reason Donald Trump prevailed is because he got more votes. | ||
And that's a one thing. | ||
That the people still have control over. | ||
And Michael Moore talked about this. | ||
There was a great talk that Michael Moore did shortly before the election and he was actually criticizing Trump but many people repurposed it and it's actually pretty good. | ||
It's like he lionized Trump. | ||
He said that this is the one way that the people could get back at the system. | ||
The white working class, the unions, The one way that they could get back at the system that screwed them through free trade and immigration and the bank bailouts and everything, the one way they could get back at the political establishment was their vote, which was unalienable and couldn't be taken away from them, and they all had one. | ||
And they could use that to say fuck you to the system, and they did, and that's how Trump prevailed. | ||
And there was a very good, I think it was a speech or an article that Darren Beattie wrote in 2016. | ||
He said that the election of Trump was a stress test for our political system. | ||
Because Trump was a true dissident. | ||
He was a true dissenting voice. | ||
And he was against the powerful political class. | ||
And he was able to upend it. | ||
He was able to democratically get elected. | ||
And there was, in the truest sense of the word, a peaceful transfer of power. | ||
It wasn't just a passing of the baton from one deep state puppet to another. | ||
It was a meaningful transfer of power because Bush, Obama, Clinton, Bush Sr. | ||
They all really are opposed to Trump's agenda and yet they transferred power to him. | ||
And so Beatty said that was proof that our system works because the people voted for change. | ||
They voted for something new. | ||
They voted against the system. | ||
And he became the president. | ||
And so it was, in a true sense, a peaceful transfer of power from the elites To the changemaker that was elected by the people. | ||
Now, if you understand 2016 in that way, you look at 2020 and realize that 2020 was the inversion of 2016. | ||
It was the revenge of the powerful interests. | ||
It was the revenge of the American regime. | ||
where the federal law enforcement and the money and the media and social media and the political establishment, all in their own way, conspired to overthrow Trump. | ||
And DeSantis points out all these facets of their conspiracy, where they buried the Hunter Biden story. | ||
And that was social media and that was law enforcement. | ||
There were the investigations against Trump which were political which is law enforcement. | ||
There was the impeachment and the obstruction in Congress which was the political establishment. | ||
There was a negative coverage in the press which is the media. | ||
There was a censorship of him and his opponents which was social media. | ||
And then, when all is said and done, there was this grand conspiracy of the COVID pandemic and its influence on the administration of these elections and early voting, which is what did him in. | ||
And so you look at 2020 as a counter-coup. | ||
as a counter coup, 2020 was their way of undoing the coup in 2016. | ||
And it was an overthrow of the president. | ||
And in a way, it was an overthrow of the people. | ||
It was like the people put him in office, and the regime overthrew him, and thereby overthrew the people. | ||
And so when DeSantis says, it's not about Trump, now that the regime is basically trying to make it illegal for him to run again, They're trying to lock him up, and they're pulling out every tool in their arsenal to prevent him from succeeding in getting back into office. | ||
You realize that all of this, everything that's happened, it absolutely is about him. | ||
They're making it illegal to be against them. | ||
They're making it illegal to be effectively against them. | ||
They're saying in this latest indictment about January 6th that the reason that Trump committed a conspiracy is because people told him that he lost, but he persisted in telling people that he didn't anyway, even though he was told. | ||
So they said that's a lie. | ||
So in other words, if I get in an argument with a liberal and I say, hey, you know, God is real, and then they say, no he isn't, and then I say, well you're a liar because I told you. | ||
Now you go to jail. | ||
It's like they have effectively criminalized dissent. | ||
They've effectively, by doing that, criminalized saying or thinking an alternative viewpoint, or acting on it. | ||
If they say that a liberal telling you something persistently, and if you don't believe them, means you're a liar, then that means we can't disagree with liberals. | ||
If they say that A liberal telling you something and you disagreeing is a lie, which then constitutes a criminal conspiracy? | ||
That means it's a conspiracy to try to be an elected representative if you disagree with the consensus, if you disagree with the liberal agenda. | ||
And this is only coming down because Trump did it. | ||
You're not allowed to be Trump. | ||
You're not allowed to oppose the power. | ||
You're not allowed to win. | ||
You're not allowed to contest the results if you lose or if they cheat or they rig it. | ||
You can't attack the media or call out their bias. | ||
You can't attack social media and call out the censorship. | ||
You can't attack the administration by the state. | ||
Otherwise, it's a crime scene. | ||
So it is about Trump. | ||
It's been about Trump since the beginning. | ||
And what Trump represents, which is deeper than that, is a real battle between the people, and a specific part of the people, and the government. | ||
And when I say government, I mean the regime. | ||
I mean not just the federal government, but I mean the entire power structure. | ||
And when DeSantis goes out there and says it's not about Trump, and federal law enforcement's being politicized, and blah blah blah, you realize that he is not Trumpism without Trump. | ||
He is a compromise between Trump... | ||
Or Trump supporters and the regime. | ||
The regime is extending a hand through DeSantis and offering a compromise and saying, look, we can't tolerate a guy that attacks the media. | ||
We can't tolerate a guy that doesn't concede an election. | ||
We can't tolerate a guy that wants to build a wall. | ||
And we can't tolerate somebody who is not in bed with the political system. | ||
But here's what we can do. | ||
And DeSantis is their outstretched hand. | ||
Saying, here's what we can do. | ||
We can go against woke. | ||
We can moderate wokeness. | ||
And we can have a fiscal conservative agenda. | ||
And we can have a restrained hegemonic foreign policy. | ||
And we can have whatever DeSantis represents. | ||
But that's as good as we can do. | ||
And to the extent that people at some point were taking him up on that, or saw value in that proposition, they were shaking hands with the establishment. | ||
And saying, alright, you have a deal. | ||
Saying, alright, I relent. | ||
I give up. | ||
It's not worth all the fighting. | ||
I'm in this attrition battle. | ||
I've had enough of all this headache and drama and suffering and negativity with Trump. | ||
And I don't want to fight anymore. | ||
Alright, let's have DeSantis. | ||
But of course, DeSantis is just an appendage of the system. | ||
If he's the outstretched hand, the intention there is to bring you back into the fold. | ||
It's to bring you back to the negotiating table of Slavery Incorporated. | ||
You know, Donald Trump said, let's flip the table over. | ||
Fuck you! | ||
Like, I'm not gonna play by your rules, and I'm gonna attack the media, and I'm gonna say the things you're not supposed to say. | ||
You don't like how the table's set? | ||
Flip the table over. | ||
Burn Washington down, metaphorically. | ||
Let's make a real change. | ||
And the regime is reaching out to the Trump supporters and saying, aren't you guys tired of your war against us? | ||
It's been seven years, eight years of war. | ||
Aren't you tired of it? | ||
Aren't you tired of all the casualties and collateral damage? | ||
How about you sit back down? | ||
How about you take a seat right here and let's hash this out? | ||
We'll give you Ron DeSantis. | ||
He's Trumpism without Trump, okay? | ||
Not attacking our media, not attacking the Republican Party establishment, not gonna upset the apple cart with NAFTA, or NATO, or the border, or anything like that. | ||
Do we have a deal? | ||
And of course, if you shake hands, then you're back on the hamster wheel. | ||
And you're back in Republican politics. | ||
You're right back there, Republicans or Democrats, fighting until the end of time. | ||
While America becomes majority non-white, while we're raped to death by the globalists, while our wealth is sucked out of our country through a straw by the Jews, that's what DeSantis represents. | ||
And so people have to recognize that We have to recognize the nature of what we're really doing here and what is the nature of the struggle. | ||
Trump is against the system. | ||
So we support Trump. | ||
It is about him. | ||
It is about him as a guy. | ||
He is the shield. | ||
He is the sword. | ||
He is the leader. | ||
He is the head of the snake, so to speak. | ||
And so the movement lives and dies by him. | ||
If he's not around, if he's not in the picture, there's no movement because there's no other leader. | ||
So he's become a symbol. | ||
But also, at the same time, more than a symbol. | ||
He's combining the two things into one, leading the charge, and so his personal freedom, like we said before, and success are bound up with the success and the freedom of the movement and the country. | ||
It is about whether he crosses the finish line against all these people trying to stop him, as a will, from getting in there and quite literally taking America and making it great again, like he said he would do. | ||
So, this little statement that DeSantis made, it just proved that he's against us, because All you have to do, I mean, just read the rest of the statement. | ||
I mean, he acknowledges all the problems from 2020. | ||
He just won't say it's rigged. | ||
How is it not rigged? | ||
Zuckerberg gave $300 million for get out the vote in these blue districts. | ||
The media was 95% negative. | ||
Social media buried the story about Hunter Biden's laptop. | ||
They had the mail-in voter fraud. | ||
I mean, we don't have, we don't have elections anymore. | ||
They just changed that. | ||
In the last four years, they just changed that. | ||
We will never have another dissident elected ever again if it's not for Trump winning in 24. | ||
Because who in this new environment, in an environment where Trump already existed and the system has been Trump-proofed, who then could go forward in the future and beat the media and social media and Zuckerberg and finance and the Republican Party establishment and This grand conspiracy that was put together to take him out. | ||
So that's the situation, but I want to move on. | ||
I want to take a look at our Super Chats and see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
So let me see what you all feel about this. | ||
What do you think about DeSantis and Niger and everything. | ||
Let me get my water, and then we'll take a look here. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
Okay. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Whoops, well... - Frank Buter sent one to the next Okay. | ||
Dude put his phone number in a super chat. | ||
What are you thinking, man? | ||
You can't do that. | ||
with 34k subs and often feature right wing political streams on the side. | ||
Dude, dude put his phone number in a super chat. | ||
What are you thinking, man? | ||
You can't do that. | ||
unidentified
|
You can't do that. | |
Oh my gosh. | ||
I try to make it easy on people. | ||
unidentified
|
I try to protect people, then people put their fucking phone number in a super chat. | |
What's wrong with you? | ||
What are you thinking? | ||
unidentified
|
That's crazy. | |
and see. | ||
Hang on. | ||
So like a piece of plastic? | ||
I love that. | ||
unidentified
|
Ew. | |
Yeah, that's great. | ||
Anyway, we're off to a really bad start here at the Super Chats, huh? | ||
We read these every- you do realize that every night I present these on the screen and read them aloud. | ||
Like that's- you put it in a box and it is displayed on the screen and read aloud and someone is like, let me put my phone number in there. | ||
Let me put my name and phone number in there like that's a good idea. | ||
What are you thinking dude? | ||
Maybe there's a chance he won't read this one That's crazy He says, hi, I run a history YouTube channel with 34,000 subs and feature right-wing political streamers. | ||
I'd love to switch gears to focus on politics and make a real difference on Cozy or wherever I'd be useful. | ||
What do you say? | ||
Well, hey, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Why don't you get in touch with me? | ||
Send me an email. | ||
It's on my Telegram. | ||
But I'm not gonna text you, okay? | ||
I'm not gonna give you my number. | ||
But why don't you shoot me an email and we'll talk. | ||
To be honest with you, I don't think it's a good idea. | ||
I don't think you really want all the smoke. | ||
Clearly, I don't think you want all the smoke. | ||
I don't think you... I don't think you're gonna be able to handle that. | ||
If you don't have the wherewithal to not put your phone number in a super chat, I mean, I don't know how well you're gonna do. | ||
unidentified
|
As a dissident live streamer, excuse me. | |
So... But shoot me an email, we'll talk about it, okay? | ||
David sent $10. | ||
Now we see why they're pushing so hard for DeSantis laws. | ||
If he is flat-out denying the obvious fraud of 2020, there is no way he will make even a whimper when they inevitably steal it in 24. | ||
At least Trump will call it bullshit as he's carted away. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Because he's not a revolutionary. | ||
He's not a... He is part of the system. | ||
Erica sent $700. | ||
For America. | ||
Hey! | ||
Thank you for... Whoa! | ||
Thanks for the big super chat! | ||
A lot of big superchats tonight. | ||
Thank you very much, I appreciate it. | ||
Shoutout to Erica. | ||
Let's get some 07s in the chat. | ||
God bless you, I really appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
Hang on, I gotta send a text real quick. | |
This nigga dude Oh man Okay. | ||
Anyway, thank you very much Erica for America. | ||
I appreciate it, buddy. | ||
Or, uh, ma'am. | ||
Ma'am. | ||
Big shoutout. | ||
I gotta speed through these, okay? | ||
Tim Drake sent $3. | ||
I'm seeing Adam Sosnick as Sam Harris and Andy Cohen's clone baby while Catalina is stuck with freezing her dried up eggs. | ||
The debate was like watching them all pull a murder on the Orient Express. | ||
I don't really understand the reference there, but I'll take your word for it. | ||
Whoa! | ||
Let's go! | ||
Hey, thanks a lot! | ||
You didn't have to do that, Spinachbrah! | ||
Keep your, keep your money. | ||
I mean, I'm gonna keep this, but hey, keep your money, man. | ||
It's yours. | ||
You're working all day posting that great content on the timeline. | ||
That's yours to keep. | ||
But I really appreciate it. | ||
Thank you very much, Spinachbrah. | ||
Give it 07 and follow him on Twitter. | ||
Great account and a loyal guy. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
But keep your Twitter bucks. | ||
You earned it. | ||
Extended metaphor. | ||
$3. | ||
A state that's following someone other than Christ is like having a Sith Lord as Chancellor. | ||
The regime is the Republic and the neocons are the separatists, but the AF Empire is on the horizon. | ||
Extended metaphor. | ||
Very good. | ||
Dante's sent $3. | ||
Gnosticism is the root of modernity. | ||
You gotta separate yourself from grifter clowns like the obvious fake Christian Muslim. | ||
Just gonna bring negativity to the whole mission. | ||
Yeah, thanks for the advice. | ||
Dante's sent $3. | ||
I know it brings in revenue, but don't fall into promoting the filthy fakes. | ||
I've lived in that world, and I ended up despising it. | ||
Jesus is king. | ||
Well, it's got nothing to do with revenue, so you don't know what you're talking about. | ||
I love when people insinuate, well I know you're only doing it for the money, that's a little insulting. | ||
It's got nothing to do with revenue. | ||
Uh, but hey, thanks for, you know, see this is where things always start to go south, you know. | ||
Somebody starts to super chat the show, they say, hey, I love what you're doing, I really support you, blah blah blah, and then, you know, they get a little comfortable and then they start telling me how to run the show and then it's like, okay, yeah, I think, uh, I don't think so, but I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Hey, thank you for the, and no message, even better, thank you for the big super chat, I appreciate it. | ||
Dante's sent $3. | ||
Most of my libtard peers at Harvard auto-designate me as the main character in debates because they all parrot lib thoughts that they've been ingrained with. | ||
I get it. | ||
It's empowering to wield the truth. | ||
Yeah, we're exactly the same, I guess, in that regard. | ||
Jim's tattoos sent $5. | ||
America first. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
Nick is that nigga. | ||
Romans. | ||
Great. | ||
Very concise. | ||
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3.222. | ||
Holy moly, Mike Pence just dropped the Pence energy plan. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
Is that a joke? | ||
I don't know what you mean by that. | ||
Zoomer underscore guy sent $100. | ||
Less than three. | ||
Hey, thank you very much, Zoomer guy. | ||
Appreciate the big super chat. | ||
Hope everything's going well, buddy. | ||
We love you. | ||
07's a Zoomer guy. | ||
Thank you very much for the big super chat. | ||
Oh, huh. | ||
That's very funny. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
Oh, hi. | ||
That's very funny. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Hello Psyche sent $5. | ||
Nick, I appreciate you. | ||
You've made me think more profound in my life and find a concrete passion. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
Question, if vaccines are bad, why did Israel do such a large vaccine rate over 70%? | ||
Because I think that, I mean, every nation in the world did a vaccine push. | ||
So I don't think that, you know, when Alex Jones and like you say that, if Israel is bad, why did they get vaccinated? | ||
It presupposes that, like, everything is the design of the Jews, and everything is a monolithic conspiracy, which is not what I've ever claimed. | ||
You know, so it's sort of a non-starter. | ||
It's like, if Israel is bad, then why did they do something that was self-destructive? | ||
It's like, well, I don't know what one has to do with the other. | ||
It's a non sequitur. | ||
You know, I mean, what does that have to do with all the evidence that Israel was involved or had prior knowledge of 9-11? | ||
What does it have to do with the fact that they lied us into the war in Iraq? | ||
What does it have to do with the fact that they control our elections through lobbying? | ||
You say, well, but they vaccinated themselves! | ||
So did Russia, so did China, so did we. | ||
I mean, so what? | ||
You're gonna have to give me an argument. | ||
It's not really enough to say, well, Israel vaccinated, so... | ||
That means they don't influence our elections? | ||
I don't see the connection. | ||
Pragmatic Culture sent $50. | ||
Prudence is the virtue that disposes practical reason to discern our true good in every circumstance and choose the right means of achieving it. | ||
The Catechism. | ||
May Saint Joseph increase your already great prudence. | ||
Nick. | ||
Amen. | ||
Thank you very much, man. | ||
I appreciate the super chat and I appreciate the prayers. | ||
dialectic sent three dollars nick you got an af bingo card and then an entire fortnite museum what next a candlelit dinner guys just come right out and say how much you love nick fuentes wow i don't think they love me anglo zoomer sent 10 Although, that wouldn't really be like Libya, though. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Because, you know, Libya's not really famous for NATO being fended off by Russia. | ||
nations have famously incompetent armies. | ||
Wagner will put them to shame. | ||
The door to Africa is painted with a giant Z and the West can't open it. | ||
Anyways, love you, King. | ||
Love you too, buddy. | ||
Although that wouldn't really be like Libya though, because, you know, Libya is not really famous for NATO being fended off by Russia. | ||
It's kind of the opposite. | ||
12k followers in 4 days by the way. | ||
Shut IT down they said. | ||
That's not really like Libya. | ||
It'd really be more like Syria, where they tried to overthrow, but then Russia came in and shored them up. | ||
Frizz sent $10. | ||
12K followers in four days, by the way. | ||
Shut IT down, they said. | ||
Apple will always have a place in my heart. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, well, I appreciate it. | |
It was a good account. | ||
unidentified
|
Another one just doxxes himself. | |
- I spent $10. | ||
In taking over my local college Republicans and holy shit bro, I gotta build it up from scratch. | ||
The social media, the members, the connections, all gone since last semester. | ||
unidentified
|
Pray for Fresno. - Another one, just doxes himself. | |
What does the matter with you? - Too easy, sent $20. | ||
Have you heard about the Chinese Biolabs found in California, paid by taxpayer dollars? | ||
No, but sounds retarded. | ||
Groip TF sent $5. | ||
Did you see that Liberty Hangout became DeSantis Shills and is constantly slandering Trump? | ||
Not surprising. | ||
Aren't they married to or dating Caitlyn Bennett or something? | ||
It's a story often told. | ||
The e-girls are going crazy. | ||
Listen, if you support an e-girl, just give it a year or two and she will flip and become a feminist. | ||
It happens all the time. | ||
In fact, we're witnessing it with several. | ||
So, that's no surprise to me at all, actually. | ||
Chad Champion sent $3 Gen X boomers millennials are literally the coomer generation middle-aged men more than zoomers are so addicted to pussy those red pill guys are sick the older gens couldn't handle sexual revolution True Chad Champion sent $3 Yeah, maybe we'll get her on the team. | ||
Seriously? | ||
who was doxing Jade and cause of the Floyd tweet is so vindicated. | ||
Do you still have that website up about her? | ||
Cozy and bite when? | ||
No, I think I took it down. | ||
Yeah, maybe we'll get her on the team. | ||
Real Paisan sent $10. | ||
What's your favorite breakfast food? | ||
Are you a Beck or SEC kind of guy? | ||
unidentified
|
Seriously? | |
I don't know what that means. | ||
John Doe sent... | ||
What kind of breakfast food do you like? | ||
Yeah, thank you for telling me. | ||
I saw that. | ||
I always called him out. | ||
He was never a real nigga. | ||
band in quotes since nothing was being done about it. | ||
Yeah, I thank you for telling me I saw that. | ||
Protestant grow I percent $10. | ||
Renry Harry Potter ass nigga really turned into an a log. | ||
Never seen so many real niggas turn into snakes so fast. | ||
He was, I always called him out. | ||
He was never real nigga. | ||
Dude, he rage quit helping America first because he got made fun of for liking Harry Potter. | ||
He's a mentally sick person. | ||
He's like a mentally unwell retard who had a total breakdown because people made fun of him for watching Harry Potter. | ||
I was constantly attacking him on the show because I knew that's how that was gonna go. | ||
SSQQQ sent $3. | ||
Blame France for the West African power vacuum. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
In Europe France is all about independence from the US, but in the rest of the world it recedes for nothing in return. | ||
What's Macron plan? | ||
About what? | ||
OpticsRespector sent $10. | ||
A protracted regional conflict in West Africa is likely to drive mass migration into the United States and Europe just like destabilization in Latin America and the Levant. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
They'll march through Libya and go into Europe. | ||
And we'll be letting them in as refugees. | ||
Get ready for all these Nigerian refugees. | ||
Anonymous sent $3. | ||
Do you have any books you'd recommend on deindustrialization in the West? | ||
Nope. | ||
unidentified
|
Nope. | |
And you should read books. | ||
Dude, stop asking for book recommendations. | ||
Listen, if you can't find your own books, then you shouldn't be reading them. | ||
Mano sent $3. | ||
You think the J's are going to move the argument too? | ||
The reason why you want us in power is because we are good at it. | ||
That's why you get a J lawyer or a J CPA. | ||
We can work for your interests. | ||
I don't know if they're going to say that. | ||
Francois Avajac sent $10. | ||
Thoughts on possible Hinkle versus Wood's debate re-Africa? | ||
Would you consider Hinkle directionally correct enough to disregard his framing-slash-worldview? | ||
Yours and Keith's perspective on this, between NATO-tard and third-worldist, are sorely needed these days. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
We're not between those things. | ||
We're separate. | ||
We're taking our own side. | ||
We're not NATO. | ||
We're not Third World. | ||
This is called taking your own side. | ||
I'm not... Listen, as much as I support the Russian war effort, I'm not for Russia. | ||
I'm for Americans. | ||
I'm for our struggle. | ||
And insofar as Russia supports that, I support Russia. | ||
But I don't support everything Russia does because it's Russia. | ||
For example, I don't support the EFF in South Africa because Russia supports it. | ||
They're talking about killing whites. | ||
So I don't support that because it's about the workers or because Russia supports it. | ||
I'm against that as a white person. | ||
So... No, it's not between. | ||
It's called taking your own side. | ||
And I'm definitely in agreement with Keith on that. | ||
BananaBus sent $25. | ||
The taits found Muhammad when they went to prison. | ||
They quickly found the shekel when they needed keep from going back. | ||
Jesus would have helped them avoid both. | ||
Cowards. | ||
Wow, good point. | ||
BooglyWoogly sent $5. | ||
Been thinking about this recently. | ||
Was FDR right for the oil embargo of Japan? | ||
Was Hitler wrong to ally with them and declare war with the US over them? | ||
The Japanese weren't exactly pro-white. | ||
The Japanese weren't pro-white? | ||
I don't think that's... I think that's kind of an anachronistic way to think about it actually. | ||
Boo sent $3. | ||
Anyone claiming I represent AF for some shit is retarded. | ||
I live with my mom like just let me fuck around on the internet. | ||
Stop acting like I'm some important person. | ||
Hey, love you too, buddy. | ||
No, no, he's terrible. | ||
He'll betray Trump worse than Pence. | ||
He wouldn't even go on the ticket, I don't think. | ||
- You do any gaming streams? | ||
Love you big guy. | ||
- Hey, I love you too, buddy. - Boogly Woogly sent $5. | ||
Thoughts on Glenn Youngkin for VP? | ||
Basically just to have VA in play. | ||
- No, no, he's terrible. | ||
He'll betray Trump worse than Pence. | ||
He wouldn't even go on the ticket, I don't think. - I don't agree with everything you do. - I don't care. - Joseph Suleiman sent $50. | ||
Why do you complain about the election fraud when you know that Zionists run the elections and the media that reports it? | ||
How do you not expect election fraud? | ||
All roads lead to Zionism and have you re. | ||
unidentified
|
That's just a totally ridiculous statement. | |
Lil Asher sent $3. | ||
Walked into the bathroom at work today and the Hispanics threw their poopy toilet paper in the trash can. | ||
Nick, you gotta save America. | ||
Maybe, actually. | ||
Oh, and then it's a creeper emoji. | ||
at the Holocaust Museum on Fortnite? | ||
- Maybe, actually. | ||
- Creeper sent $3. | ||
Nice show you got here. | ||
Would be sssshame if something happened to it. - Oh, and then it's a creeper emoji. | ||
That's good. - Stunky one sent $3. | ||
Nice tie tonight. | ||
Very handsome as always. | ||
I like smart water too. | ||
Cool. | ||
Great show tonight. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Smile. | ||
Listen, I gotta fly- I apologize if I'm being brief, but I gotta fly through these. | ||
RogueLazer sent $3. | ||
Hi Nick, I support you and trust you are not reading this publicly. | ||
I live at 308 Negra Arroyo Lane, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87104. | ||
John James sent $3. | ||
If not for you, we would just have are these Christian YouTubers. | ||
I was watching one of their streams tonight, and they were defending Juneteenth against Vivek saying it was stupid. | ||
They all suck. | ||
They were against...oh, Vivek said it was stupid? | ||
Yeah, I mean, these Christians aren't fighters. | ||
They're liberals. | ||
And here's the thing, just because they're Christian or even Catholic doesn't mean they're not liberals. | ||
And at the end of the day, if you're not on this side of the red pill, it honestly doesn't even really matter how you dress it up or what you want to call it. | ||
If you're not willing to confront Jewish power or white genocide, You know, you could be Catholic, Muslim, white, brown, red, yellow, it doesn't matter. | ||
And that's kind of what they are. | ||
They're shills that practice our religion. | ||
And they happen to be, in many cases, ignorant. | ||
In some cases, they're straight up shills. | ||
But don't consider necessarily that all of our co-religionists are allies. | ||
unidentified
|
Ari sent $10. | |
That was funny when Michael Sartain tried to psychoanalyze you, implying you're coping from the trauma of rejection from Daily Wire. | ||
that are actually confronting these things because that's what separates. - Ari sent $10. | ||
That was funny when Michael Sartain tried to psychoanalyze you implying you're coping from the trauma of rejection from Daily Wire. | ||
Nigga really thought you were going to break down in tears and have a mea culpa moment that everyone was going to hug. - 'Cause they're not listening. | ||
You know, I mean I've said for years how I got from that to where I am today. | ||
And none of it had to do with anything personal and it was all totally logical. | ||
You know, but I've had for years people explain to me why I believe the things I do. | ||
When I explain them every night on my show! | ||
You know, it's like, answer my argument. | ||
If you could convince me, I mean, I'm not, like, there's nothing in my DNA that says I have to have these political views. | ||
If you can convince me, you know, then if you could convince me that it's right, then I'll go with you. | ||
But instead they want to psychoanalyze me and say, well, the reason you think That Jews run the media is because of a job offer or something. | ||
It's like, that would be news to me. | ||
It's like, and people don't even know that story. | ||
People don't even know the whole story. | ||
I tell people how the transformation happened. | ||
And the evidence and the thought process that I went through to get here. | ||
And the books I've read, and so on. | ||
And the most they could come up with, I mean, Sartain was like mentored by Destiny before his appearance, and we confronted Destiny on the JQ and the Jewish influence, and he had nothing! | ||
His argument was something like, well, people do things. | ||
His argument was like, yeah, Jews are disproportionately represented, but that's just because. | ||
And it doesn't matter. | ||
People just do stuff. | ||
I'm sorry, but that's not a satisfying counter-argument. | ||
It's not even a counter-argument. | ||
It's not even a theory or a hypothesis. | ||
It's just this reflexive defense of the status quo. | ||
So, yeah, I find that so amusing. | ||
You think he's from there? | ||
You think he's from there? | ||
unidentified
|
I think he might be right, yeah. | |
He's going to be making a trip back to fight for his homeland, I think. | ||
But thanks a lot, Poo Poo King. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Uh, not really, no. | ||
Although, there is a connection, but it's not all because of that. | ||
You're triggering me by saying that. | ||
with toppling Gaddafi? | ||
Uh, not really, no. | ||
John Andrews sent $3. | ||
Although, there is a connection, but it's not all because of that. | ||
Africa for the Africans. | ||
You're triggering me by saying that. | ||
You don't even know why. | ||
Lil Asher sent $3. | ||
Do you think that people with lower IQs can be desensitized to violence easier? | ||
Ari sent $5. | ||
What was it like post-show after the SOS cast? | ||
You mentioned having a friendly interaction with Sartain. | ||
Did the bitch and the baldy even shake your hand afterwards or say anything? | ||
No, they made it weird, like security made it so that they wouldn't let me get up until he left. | ||
They had security escort him out, and then once he was out, security escorted me from the stage to the dressing room. | ||
And then they waited until everybody was clear of the premises and then they escorted me to my car because I guess they were worried about a fight or something. | ||
But yeah, I mean, so when the Jewish guy left, me and Sartain shook hands and we had a brief chat. | ||
We exchanged numbers. | ||
It was very amicable, but it was brief. | ||
Joseph Suleiman sent $100. | ||
Have you read Henry Ford's book, The International Jew? | ||
The World's Foremost Problem? | ||
No, I haven't read that, but thank you very much for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
And we have a lot of super chats on Cozy. | ||
Okay. | ||
Smithstonians went to India to visit family when I was a kid. | ||
30 minutes before we landed Delhi, the plane started to get musty. | ||
Okay, that's from yesterday. | ||
If you see this, your epic says, hey, hey. | ||
If you see this, your epic says, hey, I used up all my super chat money to sue the people in the archive chat for calling me that one retarded super chatter. | ||
Nothing happened and the lawyers sent my dad a bill. | ||
I hope everyone is happy with the choices they made. | ||
Did you see that video I tagged doing where the lady complained that her son got pickles on his burger? | ||
No. | ||
Rabbabyant says, oh seven a big Nick. | ||
I'm a true Nick head. | ||
Number one, Nick head. | ||
Okay. | ||
Uh, and then we got a couple more... Yeah, that was shitty, but... Honestly, that kind of stuff doesn't faze me. | ||
I mean, I'm not a very prideful person, but, uh... You know, people are rude. | ||
People are disrespectful. | ||
Got that? | ||
Lowell WTF. | ||
- Yeah, that was shitty, but honestly, that kind of stuff doesn't faze me. | ||
I mean, I'm not a very prideful person, but, you know, people are rude, people are disrespectful. | ||
It goes with the territory. - Line Rider sent $3. | ||
Some niggas were in so early on AF Coin and decided to sell at a loss. | ||
These FUDs are going to experience some real FOMO. | ||
Well, I don't, you know, they're already on FOMO. | ||
You know, I mean, these are people that they were on borrowed time anyway, but. | ||
Okay, that's our last super chat. | ||
That's going to do it for me tonight. | ||
As always, remember to follow me here on CozyStreet. | ||
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 our Super Chatters. | ||
In particular, special thanks to Erica, Joseph Suleiman, and Spinach Bra. | ||
Special thanks to them. | ||
Thanks to all our Super Chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you, and I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America. | ||
America First! |