Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
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We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiots. | |
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Sit. | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
Stranger, you can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
The money has to stop the line. | ||
It's not a last of life. | ||
Stranger, you can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
You're nothing, that's not the line. | ||
It's not a last of life. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not money. | |
Sipping wine, having some pasta, having some pizza. | ||
Oh, I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm, well, I'm not normal. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm expensive. | |
I'm working. | ||
I'm original. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
unidentified
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I love you. | |
Thank you. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day... 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 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 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 | ||
So, 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 Tuesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show! | ||
Our featured story tonight, we're talking about the imminent government shutdown, and this has been brewing for a long time. | ||
We've talked about it a little bit in passing over the last couple weeks, but we're reaching a deadline here. | ||
September 30th is the deadline for Congress to pass a stopgap measure that will fund the government while they weigh in on 12 separate appropriations bills. | ||
And I'll explain all the complexity later. | ||
But the big story is that the shutdown will come not from regular House Republicans, but specifically a coalition of 15 Freedom Caucus members, including Matt Gaetz, who seems to be leading the charge. | ||
And it seems like he's going to lead the Republicans in the House into a situation where they cannot pass any appropriations bill and will have a major government shutdown. | ||
The alternative is that the Speaker, Kevin McCarthy, will have to side with the Democrats to pass a bill with no preconditions. | ||
They're calling it a clean CR, a clean continuing resolution that makes no changes to anything. | ||
And they'll have to caucus with the Democrats in order to get the government funded, which would be a pretty big catastrophe PR-wise for McCarthy. | ||
So we'll talk all about that tonight. | ||
It's kind of a complex situation, but it's really more of the same. | ||
It's sort of the same thing that happened earlier in the year. | ||
So we'll see what the outcome's gonna be, but it looks like finally they're putting the screws to McCarthy, so that's the good news. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about new charges against Ray Epps, who has been accused by Revolver and Fox News of being a FBI agent undercover on January 6th. | ||
For years, they said that he was an unindicted or unidentified co-conspirator in the riot. | ||
And many people said it was peculiar that he seemed to encourage or have foreknowledge of the events of January 6th, but yet he was never charged. | ||
And some say that he was even mentioned in some of the complaints against Capitol defendants, although he was never identified by name and never charged. | ||
Well, today it kind of puts a hole in some of these conspiracy theories because he was charged for disorderly conduct. | ||
And although he never entered the Capitol or committed any other crime, I think it's the first case of somebody who got charged basically for doing nothing. | ||
And so we'll talk about his case. | ||
I've said for a long time that I'm skeptical that he's an FBI asset. | ||
I really am. | ||
unidentified
|
And... | |
I think it's possible he is, and I think it's likely, well it's confirmed, that there were federal informants there at the Capitol. | ||
And you know, they're all over the Proud Boys, they're all over the Three Percenters, the Oath Keepers. | ||
Enrique Tarrio, who was just charged and sentenced recently, 22 years, he was an informant years ago, but nevertheless, he had been an informant 10 years ago. | ||
But in this case, I'm not 100% convinced. | ||
And I also don't think that that narrative is super helpful either. | ||
So I want to get into that as well. | ||
I know I talked about it at some point last year because basically it wasn't 24 hours after January 6th had resolved before people started up with this narrative about feds and federal involvement and so on. | ||
And I remember the day after January 6th, I flew back home to Chicago and when the plane landed, of course, all the planes in and out of D.C. that day and the day before was a lot of Trump supporters, a lot of people who were there for the rally on the ellipse. | ||
And I remember getting up to get my bag out of the overhead bin and everything and there were these boomers in front of me and behind me and they're talking amongst each other about what happened and they said, well I heard it was Antifa, I heard that there were People in all black, and they were the ones instigating the violence. | ||
And I had like this Larry David moment, I'm like, no! | ||
I said, no! | ||
People of the Plain, no, we, not we meaning like me, but we meaning like we Trump supporters, that was a Trump supporter phenomenon. | ||
I said, and politically, we should own that, in the sense that And I've talked about it before, the contextualization of January 6th, and Vivek has been the only one I've heard ever since give a little bit of a hearing to this idea. | ||
I said, the people have been in revolt for a long time. | ||
They stole the election. | ||
They didn't listen. | ||
They robbed us of the vote. | ||
Then they robbed us of the process to rectify that. | ||
I said, and people there had enough. | ||
I said, and we should be proud that America can still do that. | ||
That, like, Americans still have that in them. | ||
And, of course, I didn't go inside, but I was in that crowd at the Ellipse, and I was on the Capitol Complex, or just outside of it, and I said, we should feel To some extent pleased that America's still capable of producing something like this, although it turned out to be catastrophic in many ways. | ||
And, you know, they didn't like that. | ||
But anyway, so I want to get into that a little bit. | ||
I don't know that this Fed narrative is always the best thing. | ||
I feel like, you know, it... | ||
In a lot of cases there's truth to it, but by the same token it also can get a little bit destructive in my opinion. | ||
Now they just say everything's a fad. | ||
If you are not a Fox News guy, you're a fad. | ||
You know? | ||
And I've been critical of groups like Patriot Front, and like these new guys, this Blood Tribe group, and some others. | ||
But it gets to a certain point where you've got guys that are literally, or probably I should say, on the payroll of the government, and they're accusing anybody further to the right of Sean Hannity of being a fed. | ||
Or anybody who's not obese is a fed. | ||
Anybody who's taking action is a fed. | ||
And again, it's not like there's no truth to that, but I think we're pushing it a little bit. | ||
So anyway, so we'll get into all that. | ||
Before we do though, I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on Cozy. | ||
Get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Follow me on Rumble as well. | ||
All my replays are on Rumble throughout the year. | ||
And follow me on Telegram. | ||
Links are down below for that as well. | ||
I think that's everything too. | ||
I don't think we have any announcements or no no stories again today you know yesterday I went off again about these people that I encounter but nothing really going on today kind of a slow day I've been reading the new Elon Musk biography like I told you when I went to Barnes & Noble the other day I encountered this NPC | ||
Talking to me some blue dot on the Grand Theft Auto map, but I got the Elon Musk biography So I've been reading that but not too much else going on kind of a slow day the other thing Yeah, you know what it is. | ||
The one thing that did happen today is I I'm preparing for the show And that's why I was a little bit late. | ||
I was gonna be here ten o'clock sharp, but then I got totally sidetracked and Because I go on Unz Review and I'm scrolling through the articles and I see Jim Goad who is sort of like one of my old enemies. | ||
He wrote an article about this Oliver Anthony thing. | ||
Yeah, we're doing this again. | ||
No, but not really. | ||
So he does this article about Oliver Anthony and all this. | ||
And basically the whole article is just a screed against me. | ||
Because him and I had beef years ago. | ||
And I guess he never let it go. | ||
So I skimmed his article and it's just loaded up with these implicit references to me and my show and what I've been saying about poor people and so on. | ||
And sure enough I do command find on my computer and there's like 20 mentions of my name in the comments. | ||
Everybody else, so it's not just me, everybody recognized it was basically the piece was a subtweet about me. | ||
And I know none of you know who this guy is. | ||
He's like a total failure and loser. | ||
He was a popular writer, I think, at one point. | ||
And there are some prominent people that are fans of his. | ||
Tucker Carlson's a fan, and Jared Taylor, and I think Brimelow likes him. | ||
But and this is the only thing I'm gonna say because I know we're kind of dwelling on the subject a lot but I think it's a really important point to make and you know I seem to be the only one saying this I don't know that there are any other people that have been as strong in their condemnation of this culture as me since this stupid song came out and started this debate really I think I started the debate though and anyway So the article is doing the usual stuff. | ||
It says, oh, you know, the poor white people, we can't blame them because they are victims. | ||
The poor white people who we would be snobby towards, white trash, as they're called, he says, well, they're victims of circumstance and poverty made them that way. | ||
And we are just too sheltered and insulated, you know, the so-called White snobs who look down on the wignats or skinheads or whoever, oh well we just don't get it and we all need to be on the same page and it's holding us back because we've been divided and only white people hate their own unlike any other group and blah blah blah. | ||
And it's like case in fucking point, look at the author of the article. | ||
The guy is literally a spiteful mutant. | ||
Like, he looks like one. | ||
And if you know anything about this writer, who I did an episode of The Weekly Sweat with Beardson, and we had this guy on and we roasted him, the writer here, Jim Goad, and we found out that the guy's like a freak. | ||
He was married to some stripper, and then they had an ugly divorce, and he beat the shit out of her, and he married some Jew, and he went to jail for beating her up, and he told the cops he liked it, and then it comes out that he had sex with some black guy when he was a kid, and | ||
And the guy's like a militant atheist, and he's one of these Gen X punk rockers, these insufferable Gen X punk rockers that still, in their 60s, can't get over how fucking cool they are with their converse and jeans. | ||
It's like you're 60 years old! | ||
And they still think they're cool because they use profanity or because they have sex. | ||
Really? | ||
They STILL can't get over how COOL they are. | ||
They're not like their fuddy-duddy parents. | ||
They swear. | ||
They're edgy. | ||
These guys are out there, they don't give a flip about the rules. | ||
They're wearing jeans. | ||
And anyway, like I said, case in point, and I said it on Telegram before I started the show, here's a perfect example of a guy who I believe has money, I don't know though. | ||
But he probably could have money, even if he doesn't. | ||
Obviously gifted, obviously a good writer and intelligent, connected, had opportunities, and yet unlike many other people, clearly succumbed to circumstance rather than overcoming it. | ||
And what I mean by that is, there are many examples. | ||
You look at some of the most successful people in the world today. | ||
Some of the most successful white men. | ||
And probably the majority of them have a story about how they came from poverty, parents were abusive, they underwent some hardship. | ||
That is probably true of at least half or maybe the majority. | ||
It's a good percentage. | ||
When you go and you read into any of the most successful people or you watch 60 Minutes about them or whatever, it's always a story like that. | ||
It's always, you know, they're battling demons from childhood and the dark shadow. | ||
How about this fighter that just won the championship recently, this UFC fighter Strickland, and his background and everything? | ||
You know, so there's many stories like this. | ||
And what all the successful people have in common, whether they started rich or poor, whether they had good parents or bad parents, is they didn't accept their lot, and they took their ability, and they worked hard, and they raised the bar up. | ||
They overcame what should have been their destiny. | ||
And then you look at a guy like this, who again is clearly above average intelligence, although I think that's about it, is above average, with an aptitude for writing. | ||
I think that's, I think he thinks he's a lot more intelligent than he really is, clearly above average, not really exceeding that, but with an aptitude for writing. | ||
And here's a guy who, the little I know about his background, maybe could have had some degree of mainstream success or something. | ||
And although he wants to write and say that we should feel pity or sympathy, | ||
For the plight of the rural whites or Appalachian whites or so-called white trash or something, because they were destined for this by circumstance, by the system, by the economy, here's a guy that, for no reason other than his own bad decisions, wound up a resentful, seething old guy that nobody's ever heard of. | ||
Here's a guy who's 60, other people that are 60, are millionaires, famous, they have leveraged the time that they have had on the earth, their talents, their network, the most booming economy in the history of the world, and they made something of themselves. | ||
And here's a guy that despite having the ingredients, and despite even having a start, you could see self-sabotage and blew it up, and would be, and by the way, | ||
found himself more content on the outside looking in at his destination his destined destination his arrival point which is born a loser die a loser and more content with that so that he can snicker and sneer from the bottom of the ladder and that's the mentality which is so poisonous that i'm talking about | ||
I don't want people that lose in life and then say, well, it's a tough racket. | ||
It's a cold world out there. | ||
We want people that are going to win no matter what or fail trying. | ||
And I have so much more respect for a person that fails trying than someone that never tried at all or somebody that was constantly feeling sorry for themselves or justifying or excusing bad decisions or mediocrity. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
And so it was pretty incredible because like I said I read this article and I think he was expressing a lot of the sentiment that I hear from people that are critical of me and what I've been saying. | ||
And unlike the many people that have been critical that are anonymous or you know we don't know who they are, this guy by giving a voice to it also provided a face to it. | ||
And is the crystal clear example of what I'm talking about. | ||
Where is that resentment? | ||
Where is that critique coming from? | ||
It's coming from spiteful, resentful losers. | ||
And they're not losers because they don't have. | ||
They're not losers because they're genetically weak. | ||
You know, because they're dumb necessarily or weak or small or something. | ||
They're losers because in their mind they're content with the loss. | ||
And there's almost this sense of relief that they get to say, ah, yeah, well, I didn't quite cut it, but that's because the system's rigged. | ||
So I don't have those pressures of having gone through trial. | ||
I don't have the pressures of being successful, because I'm perfectly content to not have, but excuse it and compensate for it by saying, well, but because it wasn't fair. | ||
And here's the big picture. | ||
Whites are being genocided on a global scale. | ||
That's the big picture for those that are keeping score at home. | ||
It's that whites are being genocided everywhere they exist. | ||
Everywhere where whites have settlements, permanent settlements, they are being infiltrated by nefarious actors, Jews, or treacherous whites, and being allowed then to be invaded by non-whites with a higher birth rate and more barbarous and bold and being allowed then to be invaded by non-whites with a higher birth rate And in one century, we are going to be a small minority of the global population and within all of our own countries. | ||
And we will be subject to apartheid, second-class status everywhere we exist. | ||
That's what's going on. | ||
And here's the point. | ||
If whites are going to survive as a diminished and smaller and fledgling group, which is, that's the bright side of our fate in this century, of our possible fortunes in the next 100 years. | ||
If we're going to have that, it's going to be comprised of leaders within our race who refuse to lose, who refuse to take no for an answer and say that we will survive by any means, whatever we have to do. | ||
Failure is not an option. | ||
And it is so poisonous to our prospects of achieving even that grim scenario when you have white people saying, it's okay if we lose because the world isn't fair. | ||
It's okay. | ||
We can be content and we should excuse and we should be pitiable towards losers because the world's not fair or because of the economy or because of the rich or because life's not fair. | ||
It's not fair. | ||
And we were set up to fail. | ||
And we are screwed in many ways. | ||
And everything arrayed against us appears to be insurmountable. | ||
I don't know about you, but nevertheless, defeat is not an option. | ||
And we need imaginative, ambitious people that have that kind of indomitable will. | ||
And anything other than that is a cancer that has to be destroyed. | ||
Anything other than that is just straight poison in our veins. | ||
To get an ounce of that in your head, that we can look at ourselves as victims and feel pity, and start to feel sorry for ourselves and let the standards drop and say, throw our arms up in resignation and say, so what if we're a bunch of beer guzzling You know, we're wearing ratty clothes and we're illiterate and stupid and docile. | ||
So what? | ||
We can't blame ourselves. | ||
It wasn't our fault. | ||
It was our parents. | ||
It was the government. | ||
It was the economy. | ||
You start to get an ounce of that in your head and it's going to prevent us from having any kind of success with what we're up against. | ||
I just don't... I've always said that. | ||
I just don't even want to hear that. | ||
Whenever anybody starts to make excuses for our people as a group and people start to black pill and they start to say things like, you know, are we going to win? | ||
Is it even possible? | ||
Oh, it's not worth it. | ||
You know, this sort of thing. | ||
I just can't hear that. | ||
You can't wake up every day and face the odds that we're facing with any kind of self-pity in your system like that. | ||
And I'll also add, by the way, it sounds just like the black people. | ||
And you know, you look at black people in the society today and it goes without saying, we're not talking about all black people. | ||
We're talking about a culture. | ||
Which is very prevalent among blacks today and many blacks are into this. | ||
You look around at blacks in America today and what are they synonymous with? | ||
Like it or don't like it, they're synonymous with indolence, laziness, they don't work hard, they don't do things right, they have no respect for standards, they're not polite, they're inconsiderate, they're indecent. | ||
Like, that is the stereotype of black people. | ||
And that is true. | ||
And black people should want to improve. | ||
They should want to improve their image. | ||
They should want to improve their lot. | ||
But when black people are confronted with these stereotypes or generalizations, they get defensive. | ||
And they say things like, oh, well, that's because of slavery. | ||
Well, that's because of Jim Crow. | ||
Well, that's because of redlining. | ||
It's because I'm black, ain't it? | ||
It's because I got a last name or I got a name. | ||
It's how I'm black. | ||
And then this sort of thing. | ||
And we, you know, a lot of like white nationalist types or white supremacist types rightly ridicule that and say, oh, he good boy. | ||
He didn't do nothing wrong. | ||
He was getting his life back on track. | ||
We rightly ridicule that mentality and say it's your fault. | ||
Black outcomes is a consequence of black behavior. | ||
But there are many so-called white nationalists that will turn on a dime, and with no sense of irony at all, look at the plight of whites when criticized, holes in their shirts, and the same sorts of things. | ||
That's why you call it wigger. | ||
And they'll say, well, but our jobs were offshored. | ||
We were born poor. | ||
We don't know any better. | ||
With no sense of irony. | ||
And that's a problem. | ||
And it makes me embarrassed. | ||
Because you look at Jews, and Jews are like, look at them over the last century. | ||
And I, you know, I have to be honest, it's admirable. | ||
As much as I think it's dishonorable, and I think that they worship the devil and so on. | ||
When you look at groups like the Mossad, and you look at Israel, look at the odds they were up against. | ||
And they did it! | ||
And they were a smaller fraction. | ||
But they went out there and they said, we will do whatever it takes. | ||
We will lie, cheat, steal, kill, terrorism. | ||
I'm not saying we should do that sort of thing. | ||
But I'm saying they have this mentality of the survival of our people is non-negotiable. | ||
It's for our people. | ||
And then I look at the sorry state of whites and you got this song going on and I make these comments where it's like, yeah, that's kind of, we want to be like Trump, not like this guy. | ||
And people go, oh, you just hate, oh, it's because you just hate whites. | ||
You're self-hating. | ||
Oh, you think you're better than us, huh? | ||
And I'm like, oh my gosh. | ||
I'm hearing black people. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Like, I mean, that's what black people say. | ||
Am I going insane? | ||
I make this criticism when I hear these whites say, he thinks he's better than us. | ||
You know, you hate white people. | ||
You just hate us, huh? | ||
Well, we are like this for a reason and that's white culture. | ||
We like our beer. | ||
We like our, you know, we like sagging our pants. | ||
I'm like, okay, you know what you sound like right now? | ||
So I'm gonna beat it out of white people. | ||
I'm going to metaphorically beat it out of them. | ||
We got to get that out. | ||
No matter who you are, where you come from, you gotta be better. | ||
You have to be better. | ||
You have to overcome your circumstance. | ||
Rich, poor, in the middle. | ||
You have to be better than where you started. | ||
You can't make excuses for yourself. | ||
You gotta be clean. | ||
You gotta be educated, intelligent. | ||
You gotta be sharp. | ||
You gotta be successful. | ||
And if you're not, then it should not be for lack of trying. | ||
Uh, and there's no excuse for any, any white man in the country does not have an excuse. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I don't want to see another video of white people getting beat up by black people. | ||
I don't want to see any more of that. | ||
There's no excuse. | ||
I don't want to hear people, well, and don't get me wrong, it's not to say that we're disadvantaged. | ||
We are. | ||
It's not that I don't acknowledge that. | ||
But, We're white. | ||
We're supposed to overcome that. | ||
You can't simultaneously claim the heritage of your ancestors, which includes Columbus and Napoleon and Julius Caesar and so on, and at the same time be and settle for mediocrity. | ||
You can't do it. | ||
So anyway. | ||
So I saw that article. | ||
It was too perfect. | ||
Like I said, that's why, because I wanted to be on time again. | ||
I was here at 10. | ||
I was here like 1040 tonight. | ||
But I saw this article. | ||
I got totally sidetracked. | ||
I lost my mind reading that. | ||
And of course, he won't even say my name. | ||
He's gonna, you know, imply That he's attacking me, which is really noble. | ||
But it's this insufferable boomer mind poison. | ||
We have to be like the generations before the boomers. | ||
No excuses, be a man. | ||
It sounds like millennials, Gen Xers, boomers, they all sound the same. | ||
It's like, well, but my parents, but the economy. | ||
And Zoomers have to be different. | ||
Generation Z has to say to themselves, be a man. | ||
Take care of business. | ||
Anyway, so that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our first story tonight. | ||
We're going to talk about Ray Epps. | ||
And the development today is that Ray Epps, who has been roundly condemned as a potential FBI informant at the January 6th riot, he was finally charged by the federal government for disorderly conduct. | ||
And this is a story from BBC. | ||
It says, quote, A former Trump supporter who was accused of being a federal agent by online conspiracy theorist after he attended the Capitol riot has been charged with disorderly conduct. | ||
Ray Epps was pictured outside Congress on January 6th, but said he did not go in. | ||
He was captured on several videos around the time of the unrest. | ||
In one from the night of January 5th, he was seen shouting and urging people to enter the Capitol building. | ||
The following day during the riot itself, Mr. Epps, a former U.S. | ||
Marine from Arizona, was seen on another video whispering into the ear of a man who then charged at police lines. | ||
In the days after the riot, conspiracy theorists began to circulate online that Mr. Epps was secretly working for the FBI. | ||
The theories fed into a wider belief, lacking evidence but common in right-wing circles, that government agents instigated the riot. | ||
The rumors started on alternative news outlets and fringe social media accounts and were referenced on mainstream channels such as Fox News, including by former presenter Tucker Carlson. | ||
In interviews, Mr. Epps, a former member of the Oath Keepers militia, which had a sizable presence at the riot, denied the allegations. | ||
He said he has no ties to law enforcement agencies and that he did not enter the Capitol building. | ||
He said he was trying to calm down rather than egg on the man who charged police lines. | ||
He also said that he got carried away with his mistaken belief that widespread fraud swayed the election and his support for Mr. Trump. | ||
In April, the FBI released a statement to CBS News' 60 Minutes program that said Ray Epps has never been an FBI source or an FBI employee. | ||
In July, Mr. Epps sued Fox News over the rumors accusing the network of defamation and claiming he had to close his business and move to Utah due to threats and harassment. | ||
that he had received because of the conspiracy theories, the lawsuit alleges Fox told a fantastical story and made Mr. Epps a scapegoat. | ||
So about Ray Epps, I've talked about this before. | ||
I think I said this last year, that I'm not really convinced that he was an FBI informant. | ||
And I believe that there were federal law enforcement that day, and I think they did instigate. | ||
And I almost would say that I'm certain that that's the case. | ||
One, because I believe I saw one of them. | ||
I know that I saw at least one. | ||
People have called them, uh... | ||
I forget the, they call him the something commander, but there was a guy on the media tower, because this was a few weeks before the inauguration, so they had set up a tower for the video cameras for the inauguration, and there was a guy who had somehow scaled that and gotten on top of it, and he was directing everybody to go into the Capitol, which I thought was very suspicious. | ||
And I remember seeing it that day, and I remember even that day thinking, this is weird. | ||
And he was never identified. | ||
He was never doxxed. | ||
We still don't know his identity, as far as I know. | ||
At the same time, there was also a huge presence from those militia groups, the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, Three Percenters, and all three of them have been infiltrated, and it's well known, by law enforcement for years. | ||
Because all three of those groups they attract and they invite law enforcement. | ||
The Oath Keepers are all former military law enforcement and there's a sizable membership of the other two that are former veterans or rather veterans or former law enforcement and it's well known that FBI has people in all those groups. | ||
So between the guy that was on the tower and these three militias that are totally infiltrated, and they were all there at the Capitol, in addition to other things, I've seen other videos. | ||
There was a video of a guy who broke a window into the building, and then he saw that he was being videotaped by somebody, and then he totally freaked out and made it look like it was the other guy. | ||
There was some guy telling him not to, and it's like this guy, when he realized he was being recorded, and he flipped and said, "Oh, it was that guy." And it was a very, I don't know if you saw that, but that was circulating a little while ago. | ||
To me, that was very obvious that that was some instigator. | ||
So anyway, I think there was definitely an element of that there. | ||
I think that it would be impossible for there not to be that presence there at the Capitol. | ||
But at the same time, I don't think that Ray Apps was necessarily one of them. | ||
I haven't really seen any evidence. | ||
And people say, well, he hasn't been charged! | ||
It's like, well, you can look online at the more than 1,000 defendants who have been charged in relation to the Capitol, and almost every single one of them, I think it is every single one of them, they were all charged because they trespassed and they were inside the building. | ||
They engaged with cops or media. | ||
They beat up police officers, assaulted police officers, beat up film crew, or destroyed their equipment. | ||
Or it was people that were members of a militia. | ||
So, like, Enrique Tarrio wasn't even in the city that day, but he got charged, and that's because he's a leader of the Proud Boys. | ||
So, to my knowledge, every single person out of the 1,000 plus that got charged, or nearly all of them, was charged because they were in the building, Assaulted somebody or vandalized something or they were a member or leading a member of or leading a militia group. | ||
Rehabs was none of those things. | ||
As far as I know, he was not any of those. | ||
He wasn't in the building, wasn't a member of a group, and he didn't engage in a violent way with people or property. | ||
And I think that's why he wasn't charged. | ||
That seems to be the only evidence That he's a Fed, but he's been raised up as like the number one scapegoat of the whole thing. | ||
And I would also say, aside from my skepticism that Ray Epps is a Fed, I also don't love the narrative that January 6th was Feds. | ||
I know that Revolver pushes that very strongly, and generally speaking I like Revolver and I like the people there. | ||
But that's their big thing. | ||
They've been fixated on that for years and I think that it's... I think they've done some good journalism surrounding January 6th. | ||
But I think the Ray Epps thing is amiss, and I think it's because it sort of downplays what was really going on that day. | ||
It sort of strips January 6th of the necessary context. | ||
Because the way that I look at January 6th, as somebody who was there, and as somebody who was at all of the preceding Stop the Steal rallies, January 6th was a culmination of five years, six years, | ||
Since Donald Trump started running, everybody who has been a Trump supporter since the beginning or around the beginning understands what I'm talking about, which is the fact that we have been systematically screwed out of democracy or out of our representation. | ||
Trump came down, his message, his delivery, his presentation became wildly popular, and although he received this mandate to govern, he was systematically screwed during the selection process. | ||
And he was screwed once he was in the position to govern the country. | ||
He was screwed repeatedly during the election with the spying from the FISA court, and he was screwed by the media, and he was screwed by the party, and with the Billy Bush tape, and with all this stuff. | ||
Then he gets elected, and then he gets screwed over when he's in office. | ||
He gets screwed by Congressional Republicans, gets screwed over with the COVID pandemic, with the, you know, all the stuff we've been talking about all year. | ||
Then he gets obviously cheated out of the election, which although we've sort of accepted it now, we've accepted that Joe Biden is the president and that it was a failure and everything, at that time people were losing their minds. | ||
It was outrageous. | ||
Like, we had finally gotten a president that represents the people, finally a president who's going to end the wars and bring the manufacturing back and close the borders, and he's still getting resistance from within. | ||
Which just went to demonstrate that we have no control over our country and people were furious. | ||
And then they throw him out with this bullshit mail-in ballots and everything that happened there. | ||
And there's a process to rectify that. | ||
Everybody saw what was going on, which is that the mail-in ballots were coming in and they were, in a mathematically impossible way, stacked for Biden. | ||
There was a data-driven mathematical analysis of the ballots that were being entered, the so-called mail-in ballots that were being counted a week or two weeks after Election Day, and it found that it was statistically anomalous that so many consecutive votes, or such a high percentage of a given batch, went for Biden. | ||
So we saw it happen in real time and it didn't take a mathematician or a statistician to figure that out. | ||
They were covering up the windows of the buildings where they were counting the ballots. | ||
They were caught on a video camera pulling a suitcase out from under the table. | ||
And as we all saw, they stopped the count in the middle of the night and resumed the next morning at 4 a.m. | ||
or 3 a.m. | ||
And all of a sudden, these margins disappeared. | ||
So, then we undertook this process to rectify it the constitutional way, and we were totally shut out by Republican representatives in five Republican-controlled state legislatures. | ||
That was the backdrop for January 6th. | ||
And finally Trump called people to the Capitol and it was really the point of no return. | ||
If the situation wasn't clarified there, Joe Biden would be the president and everything that would come to pass would happen as it has. | ||
And I'm a believer that although it was maybe exacerbated by federal law enforcement and there might have been something fishy, a part of me kind of likes to believe that the people went to the Capitol and flipped out. | ||
A part of me likes that. | ||
A part of me likes the idea that that happened. | ||
And I don't necessarily endorse beating up cops or vandalism or things like that when they call it intimidation or terrorism or something. | ||
But when I was there I saw hundreds of thousands of people surrounding the Capitol. | ||
I had never seen that many people in one place before. | ||
Normally you only ever see that in other countries. | ||
Normally you would see that in Venezuela. | ||
When they have some massive protest a few years ago like when they were going to overthrow Maduro. | ||
Or you see it in other countries where they're going to take down a dictator. | ||
And so to see hundreds of thousands of red hats and American flags and patriots surrounding the building. | ||
And yeah, they were unruly and they couldn't be controlled by the cops, especially after what we had been subjected to the previous year with BLM. | ||
For me, I was kind of like, okay, this is actually refreshing. | ||
It's actually nice to see that the people cannot be pushed around indefinitely. | ||
That, like, there's a limit to how much people will take before they pull up, before they just show up. | ||
And say, this is bullshit. | ||
Like, you need to make this right. | ||
Because I think I and a lot of other people have been under the impression, and this is the most hopeless aspect of the problem, which is that the complacency runs so deep that we can never mobilize people. | ||
We can never catalyze people to action. | ||
And so to see everybody there for a moment made me think that maybe that wasn't the case. | ||
And I actually felt good about that. | ||
And like I said, January 6th has its place in this broader narrative. | ||
The context for January 6 gives it its significance and rather than run from that or be afraid of that or try to come up with this convoluted conspiracy theory about | ||
Oh well it was supposed to just be a what a peaceful protest but then some instigators broke in and they got everybody else to go in and to me it just it takes it and puts that in this weird and obfuscates it in this weird way puts it in a totally weird place. | ||
Like what what's the narrative about that? | ||
What's the story with that? | ||
That they wanted January 6th to happen? | ||
I mean, I suppose I can understand the idea that they... it was a setup, it was a trap, so that they could decapitate Trump and everything, but they didn't even really need that, did they? | ||
I think that whether they had that or not, they still would have had a mandate to go after Trump. | ||
Most of these charges have nothing to do with January 6th. | ||
There's been four major rounds of charges, and only one of them has to do specifically with the violence of January 6th, and only some of it within there. | ||
You know, because the federal charges about January 6th talk about an effort to defraud the people, and in some ways may have happened regardless of the violence, regardless of what happened that day. | ||
And I understand that they were able to go after the Proud Boys and other groups. | ||
I mean, I don't know. | ||
Did they think that was worth it? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I feel like it's just a little bit, whether true or false, whether partially true or mostly true, I feel like it's very convoluted. | ||
And I think it deprives January 6th of its significance. | ||
I feel like we should be building on it rather than scuttling it in this weird way that, by the way, nobody even, I don't even think anybody believes that. | ||
I don't even think, I think that most Republicans don't even really care about January 6th. | ||
I don't think that they need a story to explain it. | ||
I think Trump supporters support Trump no matter what. | ||
And the left is never going to be convinced that it was set up and they control the media anyway. | ||
So I don't know how helpful that whole narrative really is. | ||
I feel like it's a better story. | ||
That was 1776 energy, and I think that really brings home for a lot of people the significance of the struggle that we're in, which is that it is like 1776. | ||
It is like the Civil War. | ||
Like, there was a siege on the Capitol, in a certain sense. | ||
Not like a military siege, not like an invasion, but it was like a genuine political riot. | ||
Which is representative of massive, widespread dissatisfaction about the election. | ||
When you scuttle the January 6th narrative, it basically says, like, no one cared about the stolen election. | ||
Nobody cared. | ||
Because nobody talks about Stop the Steal, and nobody talks about all the rallies that were held in the state capitals leading up to that. | ||
And if you scuttle January 6th, it's like... | ||
People went there to surrender? | ||
People showed up to watch the President surrender and say, oh well, guess we're gonna go home and lose. | ||
Like, democracy's not legit, the Constitution's BS, the government's illegitimate, oh whatever, guess we'll just go home then. | ||
Oh no, but now they're blaming us for something we didn't do! | ||
We were gonna surrender! | ||
To me, it totally diminishes everything that happened. | ||
And I've said this for a long time. | ||
It's important that Trump brings up 2020 because everything changed after 2020. | ||
It is not meaningfully the same place. | ||
It's not meaningfully the same strategic landscape. | ||
In 2016, when it was arguably A more conventional election, all we had to do was go out and vote and we could reasonably be assured that there wouldn't be such a level of fraud that Trump or any Republican could not win. | ||
After 2020, that's not the case. | ||
Like, everybody is saying about 24, we know it's going to be rigged already. | ||
They just announced today in Pennsylvania, they're automatically registering people to vote with their driver's license at the DMV. | ||
And I think they're entitled to absentee early voting. | ||
So, the game's already rigged, and if you don't talk about that, and if people aren't serious about it, and if there's not this social proof that people were aware and pissed off enough about it back then that they went to the Capitol, I mean, how can you even talk about winning 2024? | ||
The only time anyone cared about voter fraud, it was just a big hoax. | ||
It was just a big Fed op. | ||
I don't think January 6th was a Fed op. | ||
I think there were Feds there, but I don't think that it was a Fed op. | ||
I think that people were pissed. | ||
The election was rigged. | ||
And, you know, it might have been exacerbated by an element there. | ||
Like I said, I saw some of it, I think. | ||
But to take that mythology away is a mistake. | ||
We need it there for 2024, because we're going to be up against the same thing. | ||
And so what's the story going to be in 2024? | ||
If we lose in 2024, are we going to say, ah, shucks, oh, well, we don't want to repeat it January 6th. | ||
Let's all go home and just forget about it. | ||
You know, or even in the lead up to that, are we going to say, oh, we just have to go out and vote and not worry about it? | ||
So I don't like this whole, the whole Ray Epps thing has always been a crock of shit in my opinion. | ||
And again, it's not to say that there wasn't some level of that there. | ||
But again, it takes away what's going on. | ||
You know, in the same vein, Donald Trump, you could say in a similar way that Donald Trump is an op. | ||
Because look who supported Trump to get in the White House. | ||
The Israelis. | ||
There was a big article that came out recently, I think in The Nation or Salon or something, and it talked about the Israeli involvement in Trump's election in the first place. | ||
It was called Russian hacking. | ||
It was really Israeli hacking. | ||
And Sheldon Adelson gave him $100 million, and there was all kinds of stuff going on there, shady business. | ||
And with the same logic, we could easily dismiss the Trump Revolution and say, oh, that was an op by the Israelis. | ||
On the other hand, you could say that while there was an element there, nevertheless, it captured the imagination of Americans, and that's the important narrative, is that a self-made billionaire developer rose up from outside the political class, betrayed the elite class, And seized power in America with the support of the historic nation because they wanted to make their country great. | ||
It was a revanchist movement. | ||
Or you could say, oh, this guy was an Israeli op to defeat the new anti-Semites in the Democratic Party led by Obama and it was about sanctioning Iran and this sort of stuff. | ||
Just like with January 6th. | ||
We could say it was an op and it was a trap and they wanted to decapitate the leadership. | ||
Or you could say it was our 1776 moment and people rose up and there was a real backlash to the fact that we have been politically crushed and silenced. | ||
And the regime took it seriously because, in a sense, it represented a serious threat to their power. | ||
It wasn't a serious threat because people were trying to storm and occupy the government, but it represented that because it showed that people were ready to do that. | ||
People were willing to rise up in a certain sense. | ||
Maybe not militarily, but people had had enough. | ||
unidentified
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So... | |
So I've never been a fan of this stuff where everything's just spy games and we gotta be cynical. | ||
We need stories and mythology. | ||
And these things are also directionally true, even if, like I said, there's an aspect of truth to what these cynics say. | ||
These people that, you know, everything's a spy, everything's an op, everything's this or that. | ||
At the same time, equally true, there's something going on in the spirit of the people. | ||
So, anyway, so that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our featured story, which is about the government shutdown. | ||
And this is something which, like I said, we've actually been talking about for a few weeks on the show, although... | ||
We haven't really talked about the government shutdown itself. | ||
We've more been just talking about Kevin McCarthy and this beef that he has with the House Freedom Caucus. | ||
So the story today is that five members of the Freedom Caucus scuttled an appropriations bill Which they were trying to bring to the floor. | ||
They didn't even get it put to a vote because five Republicans went against the Republican Party and prevented even a procedural vote that would bring it to the floor. | ||
And this is part of this ongoing battle over this government shutdown that's supposed to happen on September 30th. | ||
And the background is this. | ||
The Congress needs to pass 12 appropriations bills to fund the government, but they don't agree on what's going to be in these appropriations bills. | ||
They still need to negotiate. | ||
But the deadline is September 30th. | ||
They're not going to pass all these 12 bills by September 30th, so they need to pass a stopgap measure that will fund the government for another month, which will give them time to negotiate on these other bills. | ||
So they need to pass a temporary bill that will give them a month's worth of funding, and it'll bring them to October 30th, And in the meantime, they're going to figure out how to pass all these other bills that will fund the government. | ||
And it's going to be a showdown as it always is. | ||
And Kevin McCarthy is working with the GOP to pass a stopgap bill called a continuing resolution that will include some provisions on immigration, and it's going to have 8% cuts across the board to everything other than the VA and the military. | ||
And that's going to get shot down by the Democrats in the Senate, but Kevin McCarthy wants this It's called the continuing resolution he wants the CR to pass so they can begin a negotiation and then they can compromise with the Democrats and pass something before the 30th to avert a government shutdown. | ||
His critics within the Republican Party say that that's not good enough because of course this stopgap bill that they're going to put forward is going to be the starting point for negotiations. | ||
So, The bill that Kevin McCarthy wants to pass is going to have some provisions on border security, but no E-Verify and nothing really serious, and it's going to have 8% cuts to everything other than VA and military. | ||
But that is not going to be the final bill. | ||
That is going to go to the Senate and then it's going to go into a conference and they're going to negotiate on what the actual bill is going to be and so the spending cuts are going to be less and the provisions on border security, abortion, transsexual, there's some stuff on that too. | ||
All of that is going to be negotiated down. | ||
So the Freedom Caucus, 15 members of it, are saying, well that's not good enough. | ||
Not only is an 8% cut not good enough, and not only is the border security not good enough, because it's bad as it is, but it's going to be worse, but also, they say, we don't even know altogether what the spending is going to look like. | ||
We don't know what the total amount of spending is going to be in the stopgap measure or in these 12 appropriations bills. | ||
And they said that's a problem because the Biden administration is running these massive deficits, record deficits, trillions of dollars. | ||
And they're saying that just like with the last battle over the debt ceiling, they're saying that if we don't have any serious compromise using our leverage as the House, that we're basically going to enable the administration to do everything that it's doing, all that we're basically going to enable the administration to do everything that it's doing, all these bad policies, spend all the money that they're spending, and we might as well be a Democratic House is basically the argument that McCarthy's | ||
and we might as well be a democratic house is basically the argument that McCarthy's effectively working with Biden to fund his government and fund his regime and all the things we talk about on the show that he's doing, we're just facilitating that. | ||
That's the argument. | ||
So, they went forward today and they're basically shutting down the House and sending a message to McCarthy that they, like these 5 members, between 5 and 15 members, they alone will be able to grind the whole process to a halt. | ||
And there will be no continuing resolution, there will be no appropriations on these other 12 bills, unless Kevin McCarthy appeases them, or McCarthy caucuses with the Democrats to pass all this stuff. | ||
In which case, McCarthy is going to look like a sellout, like he's working with the Democrats and it's just a big uni party, and then they're going to do a motion to vacate and force a vote on whether he should remain as Speaker. | ||
So that's a political play here, and this is a story from Axios. | ||
It says, quote, House Republicans are once again scrambling to salvage a desperate effort to temporarily stave off a government shutdown. | ||
With federal funding set to run out on September 30th, the House polled a planned Tuesday vote to advance a spending bill that would keep the government funded for another 30 days and give lawmakers more time to negotiate. | ||
More than a dozen Republicans, mostly hardliners, plan to vote against the stopgap bill, which would cut most non-defense discretionary spending by 8% and institute some Trump-era border policies. | ||
The House is still scheduled to vote on Tuesday to advance a bill to fund the Department of Defense, which was similarly polled last week. | ||
And that's the bill that failed today by 5 votes. | ||
Several House Republicans emerging from a closed-door conference meeting on Tuesday morning predicted that the short-term funding bill will be tweaked to pacify conservative holdouts. | ||
Representative Scott Perry, one of the conservatives who negotiated the bill, said it was just a proposal and of course it would be subject to change. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Several right-wing Freedom Caucus members, including Perry, floated a bill to cut spending to 2022 levels, which is similar to the proposal being drafted by the conservative Republican Study Committee. | ||
The bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, meanwhile, is discussing a short-term spending bill that could bypass conservatives by garnering Democrat votes, according to two members of the group. | ||
One Problem Solvers member told Axios that the bill would be rolled out when the failure of the proposed Republican bill is imminent. | ||
There's now two negotiations happening. | ||
There's a negotiation happening between McCarthy and the Democrats, and there's a negotiation happening within the Republican Party between McCarthy and these 15 members of the Freedom Caucus. | ||
McCarthy wants to take a lame bill to the Democrats and say, you know, here's our negotiating position. | ||
We want an 8% cut and we want some border security. | ||
And the Democrats are going to say, no way! | ||
No chance. | ||
No border security and no 8% cuts. | ||
And McCarthy's going to say, oh, okay. | ||
How about no cuts and nothing? | ||
He's going to come back and say, oh, okay. | ||
Well, we are going to send a proposal back, and what we want is no cuts and no border security. | ||
And the Democrats are going to say, okay, deal. | ||
Because that's exactly what happened with the debt ceiling. | ||
There was a similar situation, you might remember back in May or June, where this government was going to reach the debt ceiling, which is the limit set on how much the government can borrow in total. | ||
And the government would need to borrow, even though the money was already appropriated, they need to borrow it in order to spend it. | ||
So back in May and June, the deadline was that the government would run out of money that they could borrow. | ||
And if they couldn't borrow any more money, then they couldn't spend any more money, and so the government would default. | ||
And they would literally not be able to put checks out, so they couldn't pay Social Security, couldn't pay federal workers, like, it would be this big catastrophe. | ||
And Republicans controlling the House, Which, if you don't know, the House, being one chamber of the Congress, controls the purse strings. | ||
They, under Article 1 of the Constitution, have the authority to control the appropriations process. | ||
So Republicans have a lot of leverage here. | ||
They have a lot of say. | ||
The appropriations bills have to originate there, and they have to approve them, and Republicans control the chamber. | ||
So, Republicans have leverage in that situation to say, look, we're not going to raise the debt ceiling. | ||
We're not going to let you borrow more money until you cut spending, until you give a commitment to not appropriate any more money and we could get the borrowing and the spending under control. | ||
That was the idea. | ||
And so, like we always do, the Republican Party pushed right up until the deadline, and then at the last minute, gave up. | ||
And they basically said, we will raise the debt ceiling indefinitely with no preconditions. | ||
There was a paltry cut in spending that really means nothing. | ||
And in exchange, they raised the debt ceiling until Joe Biden may no longer even be the president. | ||
They suspended the debt ceiling until January 2025. | ||
And so all the very conservative members of the Republican conference Hey, what the F? | ||
Why do we even win elections? | ||
Why do we have a majority? | ||
Why do we pick McCarthy as our leader if he is not going to use our leverage to negotiate anything that we want? | ||
Specifically, they said McCarthy made a commitment when he was elected speaker within the Republican conference. | ||
He said that he would hold Biden accountable and they would do specific things and cut spending. | ||
So they said, here's a perfect example of six months after McCarthy has chosen a speaker, well into this session of the Congress, they completely capitulated and folded when they had all the leverage and got nothing in return. | ||
So this is a reprise of that same battle. | ||
It's not procedurally the same thing. | ||
This doesn't concern the debt ceiling. | ||
This is about appropriations. | ||
And so the government effectively needs to appropriate a budget. | ||
We know we never have a budget anymore, so we have these bills that, you know, in other words, it used to be the case that there was an actual budgetary process and the government would, the executive branch would lay out a budget and it would be revised and there would be a negotiation with Congress and they would fund it. | ||
Now they just kind of fund things as they go along and although a budget is proposed, it's never actually voted on and So instead you just get all the spending of the government gets combined into these massive appropriations bills that are just sort of passed as needed. | ||
As the money runs out, another one is passed to appropriate more money. | ||
And then when we reach the limit of how much we could borrow to fund those appropriations, we just raise the debt ceiling. | ||
And so the spending is just out of control. | ||
And the process is out of control. | ||
Anyway, so this time it concerns this appropriations process where we need to pass 12 bills to fund the government, but we don't have enough time, so we need to pass a short-term continuing resolution to negotiate the bigger appropriations bills, and McCarthy is prepared to go to the Democrats With nothing, again. | ||
But this time, unlike last time, the Freedom Caucus within the Republican Party is saying no. | ||
No, we will not let McCarthy go to the Senate with these paltry demands. | ||
We will not let him go to the Senate asking for an 8% non-defense discretionary, non-military, non-VA spending cuts. | ||
We'll not let him go there with border security with no E-Verify. | ||
We want a bill that actually has teeth. | ||
We want a bill that's actually going to do something. | ||
And maybe it'll be negotiated. | ||
It probably will. | ||
But let's ask for more. | ||
Let's try and get something out of this. | ||
The Republicans won an election. | ||
We won the House. | ||
We should get something, too. | ||
But now what's happening is McCarthy's being forced into this Catch-22 situation. | ||
He doesn't want to pass a bill with more stuff in it. | ||
Because he doesn't want to fight. | ||
He doesn't want to fight the Senate. | ||
He doesn't want to fight Joe Biden. | ||
He doesn't want a government shutdown. | ||
But, if he doesn't accept the Freedom Caucus's demands, the only way to avoid a government shutdown is to go and work with the Democrats. | ||
And that's this Problem Solvers Caucus. | ||
There's a caucus in the House which is saying if the 15 members of the Freedom Caucus don't vote, and they deny the Republicans the ability to pass the stopgap measure, they say, well, we'll find the support from the Democrats. | ||
If 15 Republicans abstain from voting for a CR because it's not strong enough, they're saying, we'll get Democrats to vote for it. | ||
We'll get 15 Democrats to replace them. | ||
And in order to do that, we will take everything that we want out of the bill. | ||
That's what they want to do. | ||
So McCarthy is saying, if you don't accept my shitty bill, we'll get an even shittier bill with the Democrats. | ||
If you don't accept what I'm demanding, if that's not enough, then we'll pass a bill that has no demands at all, and we'll get the Democrats to vote for it. | ||
And I know it's like, you know, it's a little bit convoluted. | ||
I don't know if I'm doing a great job explaining it, But this is the problem. | ||
And this is what I say every time there's an election. | ||
This is why I tell people don't vote for Republicans. | ||
Unless they're solid. | ||
Unless they're fighters like Gates and Rosendale and the others. | ||
Don't vote for them. | ||
Because it's not worth it. | ||
You see what everyone else is up to. | ||
Let's entertain a hypothetical scenario here. | ||
Let's say these 15 members Refuse to vote for anything. | ||
Let's say they just don't they want a government shutdown. | ||
They refuse to negotiate So what's the alternative scenario? | ||
Kevin McCarthy is going to caucus with the Democrats and the only way the Democrats are going to pass a bill is if the resolution has no concessions to Republicans So there will be a vote down party lines where every single Republican in the House, except for 15, every single one of them, | ||
is going to vote for a bill with the Democrats that will do nothing for Republicans, it will fund 100% of what Joe Biden's government wants. | ||
It will fund 100% what's going on. | ||
There is no victory, no concession, no nothing for Republicans. | ||
That is a likely scenario at this point. | ||
And so if that happens, what's the argument for why we should elect Republicans? | ||
How insane is that? | ||
We have the majority! | ||
Republicans have the majority, and we have the speakership, and we have the purse strings. | ||
And yet, Kevin McCarthy, rather than make real demands and real concessions, He's going to cut off a small block of his own party and replace it with a kingmaker block of 10 or 11 Democrats to pass a bill that does nothing. | ||
Why elect Republicans? | ||
If 200 of them are going to vote for an appropriations bill that does nothing, why would you vote for any of those people? | ||
As far as I'm concerned, the 15 that are protesting are the only ones worth voting for. | ||
Because those are the 15, they're the only ones that are saying, hey, we're in Congress, let's try and get something. | ||
Let's try and have a political victory for the right wing. | ||
For our constituents, that is. | ||
They're the only ones that are saying we should have a bill that actually extracts concessions. | ||
Literally every other member, including McCarthy, and they made McCarthy the leader, says, rather than rock the boat too much, we'll just be Democrats. | ||
We'll effectively bolster the Democrats by 200 votes. | ||
Like, that's effectively what they're doing. | ||
They're saying we'll take 15 Democrats and add 200 Republican votes to a clean resolution that gives the Democrats everything they want and there's no concessions for us at all. | ||
But every election cycle we're told you have to vote Republican otherwise the Democrats are going to get in. | ||
It's like they might as well be in no matter what. | ||
Republican, Democrat, it doesn't matter. | ||
Unless you're one of these 15 people. | ||
Because like it's been demonstrated throughout this year, it's been almost one year since Republicans won the House. | ||
This is the second opportunity where we have leverage to get something. | ||
We've done nothing else. | ||
There's been no release of the Capitol footage, no impeachment of Biden, no defunding of federal government salaries, no spending cuts, no border security, no nothing has gone on outside of these two opportunities where we could have gotten something done. | ||
And the first time, we got no concessions. | ||
And the second time, they're like, militating to get no concessions. | ||
They're like, we will work with the Democrats to avoid getting concessions for our own party. | ||
Like, at this point, you have to ask yourself, what do we have to lose? | ||
If that's how it is with Republicans, what do we have to lose by not voting for them? | ||
Seriously. | ||
The only answer is to vote for the most conservative people in a given primary and only vote in the general for people that are very conservative. | ||
Otherwise, you get what you get. | ||
You get what you get when you vote for Kevin McCarthy. | ||
Which is, they're all on the same team, more of the same. | ||
You know, they don't want the things that we want. | ||
They tell us they want the same things when they want our vote, and then we give it to them, and then they remind us that they do not, in fact, want those things. | ||
They do not want to be the Congress that impeaches Joe Biden. | ||
They do not want to be the Congress that shuts down the government to cut spending. | ||
They do not want to be the government that does any of the things they promised to do. | ||
That's what they then say a year later. | ||
And it's what they're saying now. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
That's what's going on in the House. | ||
It's a mess. | ||
And I hope they shut down the government. | ||
And I hope Kevin McCarthy caucuses with the Democrats. | ||
At least then, people can see what's really going on in D.C. | ||
Let Kevin McCarthy make a deal with the Democrats. | ||
And pass a clean CR. | ||
And get nothing. | ||
And then let Matt Gaetz do the motion to vacate. | ||
And like, let's do it. | ||
Let's go, man. | ||
It's go time. | ||
What are we waiting for? | ||
Donald Trump was overthrown three years ago with a fake election. | ||
It was seven years ago when he won and was supposed to revolutionize politics. | ||
What are we waiting for? | ||
We're gonna do this again? | ||
Forever? | ||
That's what it feels like. | ||
16, 18, 20, 22, 24. | ||
When is it time to make a change? | ||
When is it time to try something different? | ||
When is it time to do a prolonged government shutdown until the other side blinks first? | ||
I don't know what people expect to happen. | ||
Like, when are reforms going to happen? | ||
And how are they going to happen if no one is ever willing to fight? | ||
Right? | ||
Like, everybody always says, well, you gotta pick your battles. | ||
And, you know, I remember I would talk to GOSAR staff. | ||
And they would say that kind of stuff. | ||
Well, we gotta live to fight another day. | ||
It's like, but you're not fighting! | ||
You're not fighting! | ||
You're living, but you're not fighting. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
We could almost as better if people die on some level. | ||
And I don't mean literally. | ||
I mean, it's better that you have people fight and sustain casualties, like people lose an election or they get canceled. | ||
It's almost better that people lose. | ||
This sort of, like, living and fighting in perpetuity? | ||
Yeah, there's no losing, but there's also no winning. | ||
Because there's no real fighting. | ||
If you're just slinking along every day, they say, well, we live to fight another day. | ||
Well, there's been a lot of living. | ||
A lot of living and hanging on and pretending like we're fighting. | ||
And although you've been fighting for so long, no one ever goes down, and no one ever advances. | ||
No one ever gets taken out, and no one ever takes the hill. | ||
So, it doesn't really sound like fighting. | ||
You know, that would be like if I was in a fist fight with somebody for 72 hours. | ||
You'd be like, okay, how is this person not knocked out or dead yet? | ||
Or how is someone not won? | ||
Oh, maybe it's because they're not actually fighting. | ||
If you get in a fight, people get hit. | ||
People get hit. | ||
It ends fast. | ||
Someone goes down. | ||
Somebody's up. | ||
That's it. | ||
But if you're just fighting, living and fighting and living and fighting, it's like, OK, well, no one's getting hit and no one's hitting and no one's winning and no one's losing. | ||
So it's not really fighting. | ||
And that's really the problem here. | ||
It's that it just goes on and on. | ||
They fight to win re-election. | ||
Ugh, we got it! | ||
Okay. | ||
And then they're in and oh well, hey, we don't control all of the government. | ||
So we can't, our hands are tied. | ||
Well hey, we gotta win this next election though. | ||
And it just... And it just goes and goes and goes. | ||
I've been watching this stuff closely since 2012 for 11 years. | ||
And what's the big victory that Congress has literally ever won in 11 years? | ||
Think about it. | ||
Republicans won the House in 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, lost it in 2018, lost it in 2020, won it in 2022. | ||
2014, 2016, lost it in 18, lost it in 20, won it in 22. | ||
So how many years did they, I don't know, I didn't do the math real quick in my head, but if that's 14 years and we didn't have the house for four of them, then we had the house for 10 years. | ||
And what did we do with it? | ||
Did we repeal and replace Obamacare? | ||
No. | ||
Did we build a wall? | ||
No. | ||
Did we outlaw abortion at the federal level? | ||
No. | ||
Did we do a gay marriage? | ||
No. | ||
In fact, we protected it. | ||
Did we ever cut government spending? | ||
No. | ||
We didn't cut any kind of spending. | ||
Not military, not non-defense discretionary, not entitlements, nothing. | ||
Did we defund any salaries? | ||
Did we defund Planned Parenthood? | ||
Did we impeach anybody? | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Did we end any of the wars? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
So, 14 years, 14 years, 10 out of 14 were Republicans. | ||
14 years 10 out of 14 were Republicans nothing and for those years we had the House and Senate And two of them we had the House, Senate, and White House. | ||
Nothing. | ||
Zero. | ||
None of it. | ||
Even the most basic stuff. | ||
And people go, oh, but we can't shut down the government! | ||
Like, why not? | ||
Let's just try something new. | ||
What if we just shut down the government for a year? | ||
Yeah, I know, that's totally unrealistic. | ||
But what if we did? | ||
Like, what would happen? | ||
Let's just try it. | ||
Because, you know, 10 years is a pretty long time for nothing to happen, you know? | ||
They say that they're in favor of incremental reform, but it doesn't even move in increments. | ||
It moves in millimeters, or a smaller measurement even. | ||
Incremental reform. | ||
Oh, you know, we gotta live to fight another day. | ||
Again, where's the fight? | ||
Where's the win? | ||
Where's the loss? | ||
All those people just get elected and re-elected for 14 years and nothing changes. | ||
It doesn't get better or worse. | ||
It just stays on the same trajectory. | ||
So, that's what people are fed up with. | ||
And Trump came and went. | ||
And I know he's still in it for 24, but it's like, let's say he loses in 24. | ||
It's like he came and went. | ||
And nothing even changed. | ||
Like, they didn't even pass anything in the House. | ||
What was Trump's legislative achievement? | ||
The tax cut? | ||
Which expires? | ||
And it was only for corporations? | ||
That's all I could think of. | ||
So, it's just sad. | ||
But, uh, you know, good thing somebody's fighting. | ||
I'm glad Mac Ates is doing it. | ||
Lord knows, uh, Monkey, Marjorie Green isn't gonna do it. | ||
Dumb fucking Monkey's not gonna do anything. | ||
She's gonna do more pull-ups and have sex with more freaks, but no, uh, but not gonna fight. | ||
No, she's done doing that. | ||
She wants to be taken seriously by pedophiles. | ||
So anyway, but that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
We'll take a look at our Super Chat, see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
I'm not very optimistic about that process, but let's see what you guys have to say about all that. | ||
let me get set up here and we'll see what you have to say. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Zerkin sent $3. | ||
In ancient Germanic tribes, when a man was accused of rape, he would need to tie one hand behind his back and fight her to the death because a man was considered twice as strong. | ||
Hence the expression. | ||
Is that true? | ||
unidentified
|
That doesn't sound right to me. | |
Gulliman Groeper sent $3. | ||
Totally agree. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
Loyalty is the number one virtue. | ||
I will be forever loyal to you in this movement because this movement helped me revert back to the one true faith. | ||
Without loyalty we will not achieve success. | ||
Hey thanks buddy, I appreciate it. | ||
Totally agree. | ||
Sterling Stegix I sent $3. | ||
Hi. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
Lazy Grow I percent $3. | ||
I'm a fan. | ||
Love, love SpeechGroiper. | ||
Hey, glad to hear it, buddy. | ||
Congratulations. | ||
Stick with it, though, too. | ||
unidentified
|
You gotta see it through to the finish. | |
doing a good job i'm a fan love love speech lazy grow i percent three dollars i went to my second or shit class today i want to thank you for convincing me to become catholic hey glad to hear it buddy congratulations stick with it though too you gotta see it through to the finish we want everybody to get confirmed on eastern but uh good for you man Glad to hear it. | ||
- I hear it. - Cameron sent $3. | ||
Mary is the perfect woman and Protestants will have to answer for their blatant disrespect of his mother. | ||
You hear me Protestant grow hyper? - Absolutely. | ||
- Diet soda lover sent $10. | ||
I found the TikTok account of that 30 years old guy from Texas you talked about two Fridays ago who documents his life of walking his dog, sitting at a desk, and grocery shopping like right after you talked about it and it was so funny. | ||
Well and it's listen the problem isn't even that he does all that but he he is like promoting that. | ||
It's the most wicked thing I have ever seen in my life because he's going out there in his mission And the guy has like no chin. | ||
And his wife is not hot at all. | ||
He's like the perfect picture of mediocrity. | ||
And his message, because he has a message. | ||
It's not enough that he's like... It'd be one thing if he was just filming his life. | ||
Okay, fine. | ||
He's a mediocre guy. | ||
He's filming his mediocre little life. | ||
Okay. | ||
But he's got a message. | ||
It's insidious. | ||
His insidious design. | ||
Because on some level I wouldn't even care. | ||
Most people don't have an exciting life. | ||
It's fine. | ||
It's relatable. | ||
And honestly, he's a responsible adult. | ||
Good for him. | ||
But what makes this so wicked and evil and sinister is that it's part of this campaign that he's promoting. | ||
He's got this idea in his head where he goes and says that there is a problem on TikTok where people promote a glamorous lifestyle and riches and fast cars and things and so his campaign is normalize the norm. | ||
He says, I want to normalize being normal. | ||
So every TikTok starts out. | ||
This is a day in my normal life. | ||
Here's me. | ||
I'm a normal 28 year old guy living my normal life. | ||
And then he shows this pathetic hollow existence and then ends it by saying, this is perfectly okay. | ||
And he gives out stickers. | ||
He gives out stickers. | ||
He has a logo. | ||
It says normalize the norm and he sends them out. | ||
So I guess people sign up with their email or something. | ||
And he sends them a packet of stickers that say normalize the norm. | ||
So they're like promoting! | ||
They're like wearing it as a label. | ||
Hi, I'm normal. | ||
Hi, I'm mediocrity. | ||
I'm mediocrity and I'm okay with that. | ||
I'm a mediocrity. | ||
I'm a normal mediocrity. | ||
unidentified
|
Not too hot, not too cold. | |
Not too rich, not too poor, not too tall, not too short. | ||
I'm a mediocrity, and that's okay, and I'm proud of that, and I identify as that. | ||
And it's like, this is just like a disease, man. | ||
This is sick. | ||
And don't get me wrong. | ||
Listen, and don't get me wrong. | ||
With some people, with most people, that is what their life is going to be, and that's fine. | ||
But he's like turning this into a tribe. | ||
He's like turning this into an identity. | ||
His identity is being mediocre. | ||
Like, most people are mediocre. | ||
And it is what it is. | ||
But he has made it his identity. | ||
He's made it a tribe of the mediocrities. | ||
That's how they identify one another. | ||
They identify as that together. | ||
You know, it's one thing to be mediocre and you're like, well, I'm Italian, or I'm a mechanic, I'm a southerner, I play a banjo, I like a certain kind of music, or something like that, and you just happen to be in mediocrity, but he's like, no, mediocrity itself is my identity. | ||
I live a vapid, hollow existence. | ||
My wife isn't hot. | ||
My dog is gay as fuck. | ||
My house is retarded. | ||
I live in Texas. | ||
My job is meaningless and creates no value in the economy. | ||
I eat shit for dinner. | ||
I eat shit for lunch. | ||
I go to Chili's on the weekend. | ||
I drink beer with Birkenstocks on the weekend with my fucking in-laws on a shitty boat on a shitty, smelly lake. | ||
And that's who I am. | ||
unidentified
|
And I don't know, I'm... | |
I know I'm just like a sick human being I know on some level it's me I'm the problem but there's something that's so like I don't know maybe it's like maybe I just resent the fact some would say this about me I don't know if it's true but some would say that I resent the fact that they have this they have an existence that isn't self-conscious | ||
They have this sort of blissful... I don't want to say it's ignorance, because they're not exactly ignorant. | ||
It's just that they don't care. | ||
They're earnestly living, and they're simple, and they know it, but they don't care. | ||
They're vulgar, and they know it, but they don't care. | ||
I guess it's the not caring which is the problem. | ||
That's where the matrix thing comes from. | ||
It's not even so, because of course to be blue-pilled is a choice. | ||
It's not that everyone takes a blue pill. | ||
It's that people are shown that their reality is bullshit and they choose to take the blue pill. | ||
They choose that because they don't care. | ||
That's, maybe that's my problem with it. | ||
That's the difference. | ||
You know, because when he says that, it's almost like he's acknowledging, like, my life is bullshit. | ||
But I don't care. | ||
I like my bullshit life. | ||
I like my holographic meatloaf. | ||
It's something like that. | ||
And I guess I would hate it less. | ||
I just hate the culture so much. | ||
It's not even so much the guy that I hate. | ||
It's this culture where everything is so, like, depressing. | ||
And I know it's all relative, of course. | ||
But it's like the houses that people live in, the cities they live in, the workplace, the food, the clothing. | ||
It's like soul-crushing. | ||
He's wearing a backwards baseball cap drinking beer. | ||
I'm like, you know, and some people would say, that's life, man. | ||
That's simplicity and it's comfort and it's... But a part of me is like, can't we do better than that? | ||
Can't we do better than Birkenstocks? | ||
Can't we do better than that gay? | ||
That dog is so fucking gay. | ||
That's the gayest dog I've ever seen in my life. | ||
You know? | ||
unidentified
|
And I'm not one of these guys that's like, oh, we're going to have a German Shepherd to be a tough guy. | |
But his dog is like the gayest dog I've ever seen, ever. | ||
And his wife is like a real piece of work. | ||
She's wearing yoga pants and she just looks ridiculous. | ||
And I'm like, if that were my life, I could deal with like an uneventful quiet life, but not like that. | ||
If I lived in like a cottage, and the house was made out of real materials, and I went to work in like a trade or something, and the food was good, like I wasn't going to Chili's as a treat, you know, maybe I'd be okay with that and if it's because that's what i'm saying like the whole life is just so there's such a lack of beauty or substance | ||
i don't mean to be like some trad tharp or some like soy facing you know you look at a guy in a cubicle you know chug face cringe then you look at like a peasant on a in a cottage on a farm you know this is awesome you know but but it is true to some extent like it's such a depressing environment like i see this guy and he goes to work and he heats up like three buffalo wings | ||
he gets these like he'll get buffalo wings from the store and then reheat them in a plastic container at work for lunch and i'm like this is like prison like we live in hell we live in prison man he will get the saddest saddest | ||
Slice of pizza in the whole world and heat it up in the microwave and eat it at his desk and his job is like determining compensation packages for employees at an insurance company and it's like if that if that was my life and then I came home and my wife was ugly and I had to watch Netflix in my like In this new construction, these like shitty houses they make and with my gay dog in Texas. | ||
It just sounds like a nightmare. | ||
Like in some, in some ways I would rather be a slave. | ||
I would rather be an African slave working the field because at least they're outside. | ||
unidentified
|
At least they're outside. | |
I would rather be, I would rather be a black slave in the field. | ||
And people go, no you wouldn't. | ||
No you wouldn't because then you're property and then You know, you're in shackles and you have no freedom. | ||
It's like, but at least I'm outside. | ||
Fresh air. | ||
The sun beating down. | ||
You know, and yeah, I have no freedom. | ||
But at least I get a lunch break and I could sit outside and I could eat real food from the ground. | ||
Real food. | ||
And I could go to bed. | ||
And, you know, So there is something to that. | ||
There is something to... It's not just about the economic class. | ||
It's about the quality of life. | ||
It's about the atmosphere. | ||
so you know and the guy he's just like he has this like vacant stare he has no chin he has like no chin he looks like i can't even do it because i have such a i have such a strong chin he has like no chin and he's like an average looking guy | ||
he's pretty tall though and it's like this is your this is your life that's life i guess sheesh yeah it's just like - Okay. | ||
terrifying Anyway *clap* Because I feel like life as a low, as a person in a low economic class could be better. | ||
That's what I want to improve. | ||
On the contrary, I don't hate the poor and I don't even hate poverty. | ||
What I hate is this soul-crushing environment. | ||
I want to improve society so that even the life of the working middle and poor classes can be dignified and fulfilling and meaningful. | ||
I feel like it's so... the terrifying aspect is it's not even like what they're doing. | ||
It's like what they're surrounded by all the time. | ||
It's not good. | ||
Maybe that's, maybe I'm privileged for saying that, but that's how I feel about it. | ||
Like an Amazon warehouse, you know, like I recognize that someone has to do that job. | ||
I recognize that, you know, people are gonna work there, but it's like they put the toilet in such a way where it hurts your bones if you're on it for more than 10 minutes. | ||
We could do better, you know, we could do better than like the lowest cost materials and They treat people like they're, uh, like they're machines, you know? | ||
Like we're part of the factory. | ||
And you go home and you don't really leave the factory. | ||
Even the housing is made like that. | ||
The housing is made like, uh, like a cubby to stow the workers when they're done. | ||
And the restaurants, too. | ||
Chili's? | ||
Fuck you. | ||
I would rather die than eat at Chili's. | ||
I would rather die than eat at a Chili's. | ||
Don't take me up on that. | ||
That's probably not true. | ||
If someone put a gun to my head and said, you know, Unlimited apps are your life. | ||
I probably say all right fine bring on the unlimited appetizers, you know, but Bring on the $5 appetizers But the point stands, like, I will never willingly go to Chili's. | ||
You will have to coerce me to go to Chili's. | ||
You have to bring serious coercion, not like... I mean, you could probably beat me up a little bit, where I would choose, like, a mild beating over Chili's. | ||
If someone said, like, go to Chili's or a punch in the stomach, I'd say punch in the stomach. | ||
If someone said, like, I'll cut you or Chili's, I'd say, okay, fine, take me to Chili's, you know, but... | ||
But he's like, one of his TikToks, he was like filming his weekend with his bros. | ||
Ugh! | ||
And all his guy friends, they're wearing like shorts and the ugliest shirts and just like your classic chud shit. | ||
And they're doing their thing or whatever. | ||
And he has this shot. | ||
He sets up the camera in such a way where the shot, where it's like the chili sign and the three bros with their backwards hats walking into the entrance. | ||
And then the next shot, cheers! | ||
We got beer-a-chillies! | ||
And I'm like, oh my gosh, nuke this country today. | ||
Nuke this country now. | ||
Because this should not exist. | ||
This is a nightmare. | ||
The three, the three bros, the three wife guys. | ||
Hey dudes, wanna go to Chili's? | ||
Oh, you know it. | ||
What are you gonna get? | ||
Country fried steak? | ||
I don't even know what they fucking eat there. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, I'm gonna get the, uh, ribeye. | |
The Chili's ribeye? | ||
I'm gonna get the, uh, Chicken Alfredo. | ||
Why don't you, uh, kill yourself instead? | ||
Or, in Minecraft, in Fortnite. | ||
That's a joke. | ||
I'm, I disavow that. | ||
Go to Chili's. | ||
Chili's on Saturday. | ||
Yeah, let me get a $20 pasta dish from a fast casual chain. | ||
What are we doing? | ||
What are we doing with that? | ||
What the fuck is that? | ||
Shorts? | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Man, I just can't even before the bodybuilders go and take out the power grid. | ||
They got to take out Chili's first You know and Bronze Age pervert goes out and says Oh Legion of naked bodybuilders were seen outside of the destroyed power grid. | ||
It's like One day, you know one day. | ||
I hope to see like Chili's burn to the ground all over like like a fight club Project Mayhem, but instead of bringing down all the bank Instead of bringing down all the financial skyscrapers. | ||
It's like I Met you at a very strange time in my life and then the song plays and then Chili's Everywhere across the country every Chili's location every Applebee's Every TGI Friday's is raised to the ground They all collapse like like 9-11 No, it's a joke. | ||
Of course. | ||
We don't want to see anything like that Wouldn't that be funny? | ||
I'm looking at, uh... Who's the girl these days? | ||
I'm looking at, uh... There isn't really a girl of the movement. | ||
I guess it'd be Cathy Xu still. | ||
No, I'm looking at Britney from Politically Provoked. | ||
I met you at a very strange time in my life. | ||
And then the Pixies start playing and every Chili's in America is rubble. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway... | |
So that's that, guys. | ||
Fuck chilies. | ||
And anybody who eats there, do not eat at Chili's, ever. | ||
Or Applebee's, or any of that. | ||
Go ahead, you're already paying the money. | ||
Go to a real restaurant. | ||
No more of these yuppie American places. | ||
I see all... and not just the fast casual. | ||
I'm talking about there's so many of these like American bar... it's like a pub style restaurant and all the appetizers are $22 and it's like the most mediocre food you've ever had. | ||
I'm so sick of all that shit. | ||
unidentified
|
You got to get rid of all that stuff. | |
Anyway... | ||
We gotta ban that. | ||
- I'm gonna ban that. - Groepchock sent $10. | ||
Red pilling others is a lot like evangelizing people to Catholicism. | ||
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink. | ||
Plant the seed and let Christ work out the rest. | ||
God bless you, Nick. | ||
- Very true, you're right about that. | ||
Jay Malarkey sent $100. | ||
Women shouldn't have to work, but they work harder than blacks. | ||
Had forced layover in Chicago. | ||
O'Hare, what a mess. | ||
Missed flight and not a white person in sight. | ||
Peas. | ||
Aware of shirts for women, in general, but wanted to buy your Trump shirts. | ||
They fit men, and maybe obese women, and can't pay with card. | ||
Let me pay with super chats, okay? | ||
Deviate. | ||
Hey, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
They work harder than well. | ||
unidentified
|
That's true. | |
I mean I mean... You know, it depends though, because women... Women excel in very specific areas. | ||
Like, they're good taskmasters, but that's it. | ||
Like, they can be assistants and customer service. | ||
They're good at those kinds of things. | ||
Anything where it's like a simple, repeatable task. | ||
Anything customer relations. | ||
Busy work. | ||
They're good at things like that, because you went to school with these types. | ||
They... | ||
Have color-coded notes. | ||
They don't know what they mean, but they're color-coded. | ||
That is a good symbol of what women are capable of in the workforce. | ||
You know, they would be in physics class, I remember, and they'd have their binder color-coded and their notes in different colored pens and highlighter, but they don't know anything about physics. | ||
So, you know, they're good at that sort of thing. | ||
But male blacks can do things that women can't. | ||
Depends on the woman though. | ||
Like a Chinese woman, yeah, they'll outclass. | ||
unidentified
|
But the lower you go, the less that's the case. | |
Trump shirts for women? | ||
Well we're discontinuing those anyway and uh no we're not we don't take a super chat as a form of payment you gotta do crypto. | ||
Sorry that's uh comes with the cost of being banned from the banking system so I appreciate the super chat but that's not really how it works. | ||
Yeah, maybe I'll react to that in a stream or something. | ||
I've been meaning to do a casual stream, so maybe I'll react to that. | ||
But yeah, I mean, I feel like for all black people that's a default position. | ||
Indistinguishable mannerisms being twins. | ||
Holla. | ||
unidentified
|
Holla! | |
Yeah, maybe I'll react to that in a stream or something. | ||
I've been meaning to do a casual stream, so maybe I'll react to that. | ||
But yeah, I mean, I feel like for all black people, that's a default position. | ||
All black conservatives say it's culture, so that doesn't surprise me at all. | ||
Elijah sent $15. | ||
I like Russell Brandt. | ||
If you pay attention to him you can tell hes quite intelligent. | ||
I see him as a gateway, a bridge connecting us to people we wouldn't normally agree with. | ||
Hes part of a pipeline, watching him is how I got to you watching you. | ||
Yeah, I agree that he's intelligent, for sure. | ||
And I think he's part of a pipeline, but like I said, I just... It is hard for me to digest the gimmick of being a truth teller and there are certain things that are never brought up. | ||
It's just hard for me to digest that. | ||
As someone that is on the end of the pipeline, I can't get into it. | ||
unidentified
|
So... That's my point. | |
Oh, I did my whole show about that. | ||
I'll probably cover it tomorrow. | ||
This is trite, but what else is going on? | ||
What do you think of the Ray Epps situation and the Kinnick fixation on him? | ||
unidentified
|
- Well, I did my whole show about that. - Richard Percival sent $5. | |
Any thoughts on the escalation in the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict? | ||
Do you think Russia will get involved? - I'll probably cover it tomorrow. | ||
I don't really have strong feelings about it to tell you the truth because, and I'm not Armenian. | ||
I'm not a Ziri. | ||
I mean I have feelings about it to the extent that Armenia is Christian and Azerbaijan has the support of NATO and Israel But I don't You know, I don't feel very strongly about it outside of that And I don't know if Russia will get involved. | ||
I think it remains to be seen I what will happen. | ||
I think it's kind of unpredictable right now and how far the Azeris are going to take it. | ||
But we'll see and what the Armenian response will be. | ||
So but I think I'll cover it in much greater detail tomorrow or the next day. | ||
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent $3, 239. | ||
Louis CK early life check. | ||
Yeah, he's Jewish. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep, yep. | |
I see what's been going on. | ||
Have you seen what's been happening in Armenia? | ||
Karabakh is going to be fully occupied by Azerbaijan now because Armenia betrayed Russia and elected an anti-Russian government after they lost in 2020. | ||
Yep. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
I see what's been going on. | ||
I'll probably cover it tomorrow, though. | ||
Chad Champion sent $3. | ||
What's her opinion on Aideen Ross, Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un doing a stream together? | ||
Apparently it'll happen within a couple of days. | ||
Yeah, I saw that just before I went live. | ||
I don't know if that's true or not. | ||
It seems far-fetched, but who knows? | ||
Hey, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
$0.075. | ||
God bless you, Nick. | ||
I hope you are doing well spiritually, physically, and mentally. | ||
Thank you for being the figure that represents us, truly a voice for the people. | ||
Always praying for you, brother. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Pinesapp sent Yeah, I don't know, man. | ||
It's just such an insufferable part of the culture. | ||
It seems like they lack all self-awareness. | ||
like they were 18 when I used to go to shows and they never grew out of resenting their parents. | ||
Love you, King. | ||
Love you too, buddy. | ||
Yeah, I don't know, man. | ||
It's just such an insufferable part of the culture. | ||
It seems like they lack all self-awareness there. | ||
Everything that they do is totally dated and yet they still think it's cool and edgy. | ||
And they just, at least boomers have the self-awareness to say, oh, I know I'm an old dork and that kind of thing. | ||
Like boomers know that they're not cool. | ||
You know, boomers in, or maybe people even a little older than boomers, aged a little bit more gracefully. | ||
3. | ||
Whereas Gen X still think they're really cool. | ||
Gen X still think that punk rock is, like, in. | ||
You know? | ||
And it's like, punk rock hasn't been in for 30 years, you know? | ||
20 or 30 years. | ||
unidentified
|
So... Like, they haven't changed anything. | |
They still think tattoos and sex, drugs and rock and roll and... | ||
flipping off the man and that they and they haven't changed how they behave either it's like you're you're 60 you're 60 and you think you're like a skateboarder or something it's like you have arthritis dude so yeah they And it's not all Gen Xers, it's the subset. | ||
Just like the boomers had the hippies, Gen Xers have the punk rockers, and they're just the most insufferable subset of any generation, I feel like. | ||
I hate it. | ||
Like, I look at this picture of Jim Goat in that article, and it's like, do you think you're cool or something? | ||
You're 62. | ||
Cool beanie. | ||
You're an old fucking man. | ||
And that, and it is what it is. | ||
You know, people get old, but act your age. | ||
He can be cool and old, but nobody... No old person that's cool is trying to look like they're 23, you know? | ||
So. Eddie Van Graham sent $3. | ||
Do you think it is possible for Trump to win in a landslide if he articulated the Jewish question correctly and righteously? | ||
No. | ||
Jared sent $3. | ||
I can't wait to buy a ticket for Oliver Anthony to show up at your event. | ||
I know he will be excited to meet his number one fan. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Hope to see him at AFPAC. | ||
The only problem is there's going to be a dress code, so I don't know if that's going to be prohibitive for him. | ||
Okay, but he's not connected to Soros. | ||
I wish more people looked into Vivek's history and ties with the Jews. | ||
A Hindu in the Jewish skull and bones at Yale and connected to Soros. | ||
He reminds me of Obama, a new face saying the right things. | ||
Okay, but he's not connected to Soros. | ||
He got a scholarship from George Soros's brother and has no connection with Soros. | ||
And when you say he's saying the right things, what the fuck are you talking about? | ||
He said on interview that it was reprehensible that someone had an Israel lapel pin on their lapel during a presidential debate. | ||
He stood there and challenged Nikki Haley that we should give Israel foreign aid. | ||
He said that Israel should not be our North Star, America should be our North Star. | ||
So what are those right things you're referring to? | ||
You know, whenever... Here's the thing about this kind of shit. | ||
You have to look at what they're saying, okay? | ||
Like, it's not just necessarily the associations or these kinds of things. | ||
Of course you have to look at those things. | ||
But you have to take it with what they're saying. | ||
For how it's part of some other agenda. | ||
What part of the ulterior motive is there for this guy to come in and to disrupt DeSantis and to challenge the Israel lobby and to challenge some of these other ideas? | ||
What's the agenda there? | ||
You know, with a guy like Bronze Age Pervert, I can articulate it very clearly. | ||
He is a Zionist, Straussian, immigrant Jew who's connected to Jensa and to Bill Kristol and Harvey Mansfield, Bill Kristol's mentor, and all of his mentors are Jewish Zionists. | ||
And his message never criticizes Israel. | ||
It never criticizes the role of Israel. | ||
It never criticizes Judaism outright. | ||
It rejects Catholicism and ridicules Catholicism. | ||
They create this idea that at the center of the power structure is a conspiracy led by a cathedral rather than a synagogue. | ||
I mean, I could go on and on. | ||
So you've got the connections and you've got the message, and you could see that he is a guy with these connections pushing this agenda, pushing this subversive agenda. | ||
With Vivek, you're saying, well, he was in Skull and Bones at Yale, which is like, okay, that's a little fishy, but I don't know if that's really rock solid. | ||
And then he got a scholarship. | ||
That's not really the kill shot that you think it is. | ||
And then you look at the message, and the message is, if anything, more critical of Israel than any other candidate, including Trump. | ||
So how does that behoove the Zionist group? | ||
The Zionists have their candidates. | ||
We know who they are. | ||
They're wearing their flag as a lapel pinner. | ||
It's on their campaign website. | ||
It's Hutchinson. | ||
It's Mike Pence. | ||
It's Nikki Haley. | ||
It's Ron DeSantis. | ||
You can sit there and say that all you want. | ||
Ron DeSantis went to Israel to dine with Miriam Adelson before he announced. | ||
And he announced it with David Sachs. | ||
And he passed laws in Florida banning anti-Semitism. | ||
And you're gonna say, no, the guy is the one who's stealing Ron DeSantis' support, who took a scholarship 20 years ago from Soros' brother to go to law school, and he's critical of Israel, or foreign aid to Israel. | ||
So, like, and that's not me, by the way, defending Vivek 100%, but this is just stupid. | ||
This is just bad thinking. | ||
And, you know, that's just retarded. | ||
It has to make sense. | ||
Yeah, I'm just against that. | ||
fascists sent $50. | ||
Oliver Anthony's second concert after going viral was five minutes from my house. | ||
Was invited by a family member. | ||
Local musician gone famous. | ||
Concert goers fit your exact description. | ||
Everyone was trailer trash. | ||
Goim wigger hell. | ||
They had beer, cigarettes, flip-flops, cargo shorts, cheap sunglasses, tattoos, tobacco, act. | ||
Yeah, I'm just against that. | ||
I like I'm I'm against tattoos. | ||
I'm against flip flops. | ||
I don't think it's ever acceptable to wear flip-flops. | ||
I think that shows how far we have fallen as a culture. | ||
That people think it's appropriate to wear flip-flops anywhere other than the beach or the pool. | ||
It's never called for. | ||
You can't put on a pair of socks and shoes when you leave the house. | ||
I think that's outrageous. | ||
And the tattoo thing as well. | ||
Tattoos in a different time. | ||
We're for scoundrels or indigenous people or the military. | ||
Now you see everybody getting them. | ||
I think tattoos are disgusting. | ||
I think they're gross. | ||
I think it's low class. | ||
There's no, there's no reason for it. | ||
Cigarettes a little different. | ||
Beer can be different. | ||
I think cheap beer is kind of gay. | ||
It's one thing if it's like, uh, like it is in Europe. | ||
Um, the cargo shorts, it's another one. | ||
Yeah, I, I'm against shorts, especially cargo shorts. | ||
Chief Sunglasses, eh? | ||
Eh, whatever, maybe. | ||
But... Yeah, I am totally against that. | ||
That's the kind of scene I'm talking about. | ||
It's like... There's just no reason for any of that, in my opinion. | ||
unidentified
|
In my personal opinion. | |
Whoa. | ||
You cracked the case. | ||
Why does Joe Biden, a Catholic, have a personal rabbi? - You cracked the case. | ||
unidentified
|
I think something's going on. - Boogly Woogly sent $3. | |
Hey thanks buddy, I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, I think we've been over that. | ||
Hey, thanks buddy, I appreciate it. | ||
Thanks. | ||
I'm not talking about Brazil. | ||
I'm talking about America. | ||
and it was very clearly something the media wanted. | ||
They were ready for it and capitalized. | ||
Anti-democratic, dangerous. | ||
unidentified
|
One leader got 17 years in jail already. - I don't know what that has to do with America. | |
I'm not talking about Brazil, I'm talking about America. | ||
And where's the evidence about raps? | ||
I doubt those, uh... Well, one, I've seen Strickland and he doesn't seem like really our crowd, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
up strickland's story to make your point about overcoming circumstances many based americans in the ufc with large followings dana close with trump as well possible collab i don't know i doubt those uh well one i've seen strickland and he doesn't seem like really our crowd you know he seems more like a libertarian um and the rest of them i mean i i don't think any of them want to associate with me, with my whole baggage and everything. | |
So, I don't think so. | ||
unidentified
|
But who knows? | |
Maybe. | ||
Stephen Ignoramus sent $250. | ||
Been watching since Stop the Steal. | ||
Just tossing in a little back pay. | ||
More to come. | ||
Planning to be at the next donor dinner, whenever that is. | ||
I saw Oliver Anthony play a music festival on Sunday. | ||
It was about as expected. | ||
We need white excellence, not whatever you call that. | ||
Thanks for doing what you do, Nick. | ||
God bless. | ||
Christ is King. | ||
Hey, thank you very much for the big super chat. | ||
I really appreciate you coming in with that message, because it's like... | ||
Here's a rich guy with money who says here's a big super chat and I'll be a donor and he's agreeing with me. | ||
That is a total vindication of my strategy. | ||
That is a total vindication of my message and what I'm promoting. | ||
To hear that. | ||
I appreciate the cavalry coming in here. | ||
Because I've been saying this and I'm like, where are all the, like, civilized people that want to live in a real civilization? | ||
Where are the rich people that want to live in a rich society where people dress nice and it's classy? | ||
Like, I mean, I don't find... I don't find that scene charming. | ||
Some people think it's very charming. | ||
I don't. | ||
The sights, the sounds, the smells. | ||
I mean, I didn't grow up in that. | ||
It's not my scene. | ||
And I don't think there's anything objectively good about it. | ||
I think people retreat to that because it's where they feel comfortable and it's familiar. | ||
But I don't think there's anything to be proud of with that sort of thing. | ||
When people are dressed like that and they go out in the mud and go, woo! | ||
Woo! | ||
You know, with beer and everything. | ||
And it's like, you know, I have no affinity for that. | ||
And you can call that a snobbish well, I think that that's I Think snobbery is a good thing. | ||
I think that snobbishness is standards It's giving like when people say you're a Karen and I'm I defend Karen's Karen's are the enforcers of standards We would have no standards if it wasn't for Karen's There's nobody would care if nobody said anything when these standards fell Then they would fall. | ||
You know, if you went to a restaurant or whatever, and there was no person there, whether it be a white woman or whoever, to say, hey, I'm paying for this, I expect a certain level of service, I expect this, this, and this, well, then you're gonna get less. | ||
It's oppositional. | ||
And of course people say, oh, you're a Karen. | ||
And what they mean is if you care about standards, You're a shrill. | ||
You're a snob. | ||
You're a hard-on. | ||
And I feel the same way about stuff like this. | ||
People say, oh, it's snobbish. | ||
It's elitist. | ||
Yeah, I like elites. | ||
You don't want to be in an elite thing? | ||
You know, you don't want to be elite? | ||
Oh, you're a snob. | ||
So what do you like? | ||
Filth? | ||
You like filth and dirt and... I don't know why we would like those things. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I will. | ||
I will take the elite option over the, uh, what there is. | ||
You know, whatever there is out there. | ||
So I don't think it's a bad thing. | ||
But thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
I'm glad my message resonates with you. | ||
That's what it's all about, man. | ||
Oliver Anthony Music Festival. | ||
Yeah, I can imagine it in my head right now. | ||
And, uh, yeah, we could do better, I think, as a people. | ||
Line Rider sent $10. | ||
The Fed narrative is just conceding that J6 was an unforgivable attack on democracy. | ||
All it did was detract from Stop the Steal. | ||
Oh, you guys are right, it was bad. | ||
But that's not us, it was Feds. | ||
It's like when Khan Incorporated says Nazis were actually leftists. | ||
Yeah, well said. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Exactly. | ||
It concedes the whole thing. | ||
It says, you're right, it was like 9-11, but it was the government, not us! | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Yeah, there's that. | ||
He's not even trying to stop it at the border. | ||
He's letting that community exist. | ||
And, you know, I don't think Huffines really stood a chance even at doing what you say. | ||
said, Natar is a new 200K population migrant camp 40 miles outside Houston. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Yeah, there's that. | ||
He's not even trying to stop it at the border. | ||
He's letting that community exist. | ||
And, you know, I don't think Huffines really stood a chance even at doing what you say. | ||
But still, the point remains. | ||
Farid Lukovic sent $20. | ||
Great show Nick! | ||
Question. | ||
Why would Jews champion white genocide when they themselves are white presenting and most black and brown people group Jews and whites together? | ||
Wouldn't Jews be next on the chopping block? | ||
Is it part of some apocalyptic Jewish prophecy? | ||
Look, the problem with white genocide, one, is that the white fertility rate is dropping. | ||
Okay, so the whites are going away regardless. | ||
The secondary aspect is the immigration that's being brought in. | ||
The goal with bringing in the immigrants is to dilute the share of the country that is white. | ||
It's not what do you say they're up on the chopping block. | ||
The thing is, is that whites are disappearing because they're they're diminishing. | ||
It's not like blacks are coming in and killing all like large numbers of white people. | ||
Yes, blacks are killing a disproportionate like the interracial crime rate is disproportionate in the sense that more blacks kill whites than whites kill blacks. | ||
But what you're maybe not understanding is that what makes it a genocide is the fact that whites are sort of organically going away. | ||
Or maybe not organically, but you understand. | ||
It's the fact that they're not being born. | ||
It's that year over year, fewer white people are being born. | ||
And maybe that would be fine because whites would still be 100% of a smaller country. | ||
The problem is that the country continues to grow as white people, as the white population is reduced every year. | ||
And who's making up the difference is immigrants. | ||
So that really has no effect on the Jews. | ||
Because as long as the Jews maintain a strong fertility rate, they remain the same percentage of the population and they maintain their position. | ||
And they remain in the richest zip codes, in gated communities, and in luxury condominiums and so on. | ||
And so their quality of life really isn't affected at all. | ||
And they can all, even though they're white presenting, they have carefully ingratiated themselves inside the left and have maintained, and this is what we always talk about, this two-faced position. | ||
Where they're white when they need to be and they're not white when they need to be. | ||
Okay. | ||
When they want to degrade and ridicule white people, they do it as whites, and they say, oh, as a white person, I hate white people. | ||
Speaking as a white person, I'm an idiot, and we're the worst, and blah, blah, blah. | ||
But on Rosh Hashanah, they're all Jewish, and on Holocaust Remembrance Day, they're all Jewish, and when an anti-Semitic incident happens, remember, they're Jewish. | ||
So, this is all, like, basic stuff. | ||
This is, like, 101. | ||
So the goal of the white genocide is to dilute the proportion of whites in the country because that makes the country safer for Jews. | ||
And the Jews aren't worried about sporadic black predation. | ||
They are worried about organized systematic white violence like the Holocaust. | ||
That's what they're more worried about. | ||
They can tolerate some ragtag Flash mob, criminal activity from the underclass. | ||
They cannot tolerate organized white society where they're highly aware of subversion, infiltration, corruption. | ||
You know, when you look at these boomers that are following state politics and You know, they have a strong opinion about who the governor is. | ||
They're always white people. | ||
You ever notice that? | ||
You ever notice that the people in your community that have a strong opinion about state government and state politics and vote in the midterms are all, like, white people? | ||
They're, like, white guys? | ||
They're white boomers? | ||
That's the red pill. | ||
So, um... So, no, not necessarily. | ||
Not in the way that you think. | ||
Jews have never been next on the chopping block. | ||
Jews have always thrived when foreigners have come into Western places. | ||
Like, Jews thrived in the Ottoman Empire. | ||
Jews thrived in Spain under the occupation of Muslims. | ||
So, you know, I think they expect to thrive when non-whites take over America as well. | ||
They already are. | ||
Chad Master Manhanson sent $30. | ||
Hey there, thanks for everything you do. | ||
Can I get an unban? | ||
I honestly have no idea what I did. | ||
Oh really? | ||
Miss chatting and spend all my money on Joe the Boomer. | ||
Here's a Mickey D meals worth of moolah. | ||
Cheers! | ||
Hey, thanks a lot for the super chat. | ||
That's funny. | ||
People never know what they did. | ||
Whenever people ask to get unbanned, it's always such a mystery. | ||
I genuinely have no idea. | ||
You also sent the Super Chat five times, so I'm gonna refund four of those. | ||
I genuinely... I hate when people say that. | ||
I genuinely have... Whenever you say, like, I genuinely have no idea, whenever you, like... I don't know what it is, but I hear that construction all the time. | ||
People say, no, I genuinely don't... I don't know, it just makes you sound dumb. | ||
unidentified
|
No offense. | |
You know what I'm talking about? | ||
Maybe this is just a really idiosyncratic thing. | ||
It almost just sounds like defensive. | ||
And I don't like it. | ||
unidentified
|
But fine, I'll unban you. | |
I don't know if you have any idea what I'm talking about, but... No, I genuinely don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't like the way that sounds. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Okay, so thanks for that. | ||
Jorge Floyd sent $3. | ||
They are putting normies in the TikToks that are turning the freaking dogs gay. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
That's a stupid question. | ||
I support what works, okay? | ||
I love when people say stuff like, do you support the free market? | ||
It's like, what does that mean? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
The free market isn't real, okay? | ||
Porn, fast food, social media. | ||
How do we mitigate that? | ||
That's a stupid question. | ||
I support what works, okay? | ||
I love when people say stuff like, do you support the free market? | ||
It's like, what does that mean? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
There's no, the free market isn't real, okay? | ||
There's no such thing as a free market at all, okay? | ||
The situation that goes on, that prevails in the country at any given time is a result of an incentive system that has been directly or indirectly, knowingly or unknowingly created by systems that human beings designed. | ||
So when people say things like the free market, I don't know what that means. | ||
That's not real. | ||
There is no such thing as a free market, okay? | ||
There is a world that humans live in and it has come about You know, and again, with consequences that are intended or unintended, but it's a system. | ||
And the system is really, the contours of it are made by the incentives and disincentives within it. | ||
So, you know, when you say porn, fast food, social media, how do we mitigate that? | ||
Make it illegal. | ||
Free market, make it illegal. | ||
Make pornography illegal. | ||
And like I said, incentives and disincentives. | ||
Right now, you know, people want to look at pornography and masturbate to it and so people can make a lot of money making it. | ||
And it wasn't always that way. | ||
There was a Supreme Court decision that said that pornography is First Amendment protected. | ||
And there's all kinds of other things that facilitate that. | ||
So the way that you mitigate that is you make it illegal. | ||
So then it becomes very difficult to procure and it becomes impossible to buy with a credit card. | ||
And then it becomes a lot less lucrative to produce and so people stop making it and then there's less of it. | ||
And then fewer people watch it. | ||
Same thing with fast food. | ||
Regulate it. | ||
You need to straight up regulate it. | ||
There's this new Dunkin Donuts drink and it has 200 grams of sugar. | ||
It's like the munchkin pumpkin swirl at Dunkin Donuts. | ||
I saw some TikTok about it. | ||
It has 180 grams of sugar. | ||
There's no coffee in it. | ||
It's all just like syrup and other goofy stuff. | ||
And you just need to ban things like that. | ||
No drink should have that. | ||
I don't care. | ||
It just shouldn't have that. | ||
And if it does, it should be smaller. | ||
That stuff just needs to be regulated. | ||
They need to put a tax on it so you get less of it. | ||
Maybe don't make it impossible to get, but you make it more expensive. | ||
Like they do it in Europe. | ||
In Europe, they told the soda companies that if a soda has too much sugar, like, we will tax it and make it more expensive per unit. | ||
So you know what they did? | ||
They took the sugar out. | ||
They made it flavored up to a certain point by sugar, and then the rest is different sweeteners. | ||
And so as a consequence, the soda's a lot less sugary there. | ||
Like, that's what you do. | ||
It's just simple. | ||
So no, but it's not like a question of do I support free markets? | ||
Like is there any situation where you'd say I support the free market even if everyone's hooked on drugs, porn, and social media? | ||
Like no, no. | ||
So you know you support the public good and you do what's necessary with the system we have to get the outcome that is best. | ||
But I don't like that question. | ||
Okay, well, next time, you need to be banned now. | ||
Now that you said it like that, that's just rude. | ||
Super chat like four times, well keep it. | ||
It kept saying field required on the amount area, but whatever finally saw success on the last one anyway, God bless, unban me. - Okay, well next time you need to be banned now. | ||
Now that you said it like that, that's just rude. | ||
Okay, you fucked up and then, oh, unban me. | ||
No, I want to ban you! | ||
Thanks, man. | ||
Keep the money. | ||
Don't refund. | ||
I honestly don't know what happened. | ||
Cheers. | ||
Well, I already refunded it. | ||
Unban me. | ||
What am I? | ||
What, do I work for you? | ||
Don't tell me what to do. | ||
unidentified
|
Jews stay killing Christ's sex. | |
Okay. | ||
Thank you. | ||
True. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
and Breedy into all others spread diversity. | ||
Five types of non-dischargeable debt university, alimony, child support, court fines and tax stats. | ||
Facts dollar is cum. | ||
Jews use women to gain power in debt men. - Thank you. | ||
True, thank you for that. - Zoomed underscore Buffon sent $14. | ||
Had my second Russia class today. | ||
Why were you so handsome in LA? | ||
unidentified
|
HH. - Where did I see you in LA? | |
I don't know who that is, but thanks. | ||
I'm glad to hear you're in RCIA. | ||
I was like, who are you? | ||
Who is this? | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Computer Zoomer sent $5. | ||
In Minnesota, Democrats have been able to pass abortion rights, gun control, and voter registration laws while having a majority of one in the Senate. | ||
Only Republicans cuck with a majority. | ||
Every time. | ||
Seriously? | ||
Capital Grill? | ||
I mean... I don't know. | ||
I feel like if you're gonna spend that kind of money, why would you go to a chain? | ||
But I would take a fancy restaurant over that, for sure. | ||
Alex K. sent $10. | ||
Your take on meager lives and the loser mentality is spot on. | ||
My great-grandfather sent all his children to private Catholic schools on one salary working at the steel mills in Southside Chicago. | ||
Always dignified, always wore a suit outside work. | ||
I mean the economics of that may not work anymore like I don't think you could do that on a single income anymore but the part about wearing a suit outside work that's what I'm talking about like even though you're poor you can still have nice things and take care of them and be presentable it's a total defeat to say I'm gonna live in a pigsty and dress like a slob and be a slob and you know because that that's That's how we do it! | ||
You know, like, no, we don't have to be that way. | ||
We can be better. | ||
- So, I agree. - Kelcorp said $5. | ||
Brittany was fantasizing about incest recently. | ||
Her Jewish woman brain can't contain herself. - Yeah, I saw that. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I'm not sick. | |
Do I look sick? | ||
I'm just tired. | ||
I don't know. | ||
You appear to be under the weather. | ||
Perhaps you contracted the Jew flu. | ||
Don't worry. | ||
Mama girl, I per will nurse you back to health. | ||
Thanks. | ||
No, I'm not sick. | ||
Do I look sick? | ||
I'm just tired. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I'm just tired of it all. | ||
Jews stay killing Christ sent $3. | ||
Fight Club? | ||
My Dream Job Is Selling Soap Outside Fake Holocaust Museums. | ||
unidentified
|
Produced From Fat Vi- Let's not. | |
Okay. | ||
Disavow. | ||
Can we not do that please? | ||
What is wrong with you? | ||
Disavow. | ||
What is wrong with you? | ||
Virginian Sent $3. | ||
Yo. | ||
07 Nick God Bless. | ||
Thanks buddy. | ||
unidentified
|
God Bless. | |
I hate that so much! | ||
Yeah, we fancy. | ||
Like, that's literally, you're a wigger. | ||
You are a wigger. | ||
You are what that word means. | ||
We fancy. | ||
Yeah, we fancy. | ||
We fancy like Applebee's. | ||
It's like Applebee's isn't fancy, podunk. | ||
And they're like, yeah, we know. | ||
Fancy like Applebee's. | ||
Fuck you, man. | ||
I hate that. | ||
That kind of thing. | ||
But they love their Applebee's. | ||
- On return, Groeper sent $7. | ||
Turkey officially stated they will go to war with Iran and Armenia if Iran gets involved. | ||
Do you think things could escalate to NATO involvement? - No, I don't think so. | ||
Pete sent $100. | ||
Gen X are fake rebels. | ||
There's nothing gayer than punk, and any other black t-shirt subculture for that matter. | ||
Hey, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
They are fake rebels. | ||
Well, you know, because they were rebelling in like, what, the 70s, 80s, and 90s? | ||
So they were rebelling against the dying gasp of a civilized order. | ||
I mean, I know things were degenerate back then, but the leadership was On its way out, it was a leadership from a different era. | ||
So their rebellion was like sex, drugs, and rock and roll. | ||
But that's what's in control right now. | ||
It's people that did that and support that. | ||
So that's no longer punk. | ||
That's no longer a rebellion. | ||
It's not a rebellion to do drugs. | ||
Everybody does drugs. | ||
It's not a rebellion to be promiscuous. | ||
Everybody's promiscuous. | ||
And you know what? | ||
Promiscuity is gay. | ||
That's what we realized. | ||
That's what we collectively realized in the last 10 years is that The most promiscuous people in the world are faggots. | ||
The most promiscuous people in the world are literally gay dick suckers and trannies. | ||
You know, so all these pug people were like, fuck you dad, I'm gonna, you know, I'm gonna have sex with a stripper, I'm gonna marry a stripper because I don't care about social norms and marriage or whatever. | ||
And then, you know, an average gay man, like literally any gay man was like, Was like, I'll raise you a thousand bodies. | ||
I was like, Beth, I'll raise you 1,000 bodies, you know. | ||
Your average like punk rock guy, your average punk rocker was like, fuck you dad, I'll have sex with a bunch of women, like seven. | ||
I'll have sex with like ten women. | ||
And then literally any gay man was like, oh really? | ||
I've had sex with a thousand men. | ||
I've had sex with ten thousand other people. | ||
And trannies came along and said, well, I'm in a polycule and I cut my dick off and I'm into everything and anything you can imagine. | ||
I'm into the sickest, most perverse things. | ||
So, clearly that's not, uh, clearly that's not really anything anymore. | ||
To be punk rock, it's not edgy, and it's not even extreme. | ||
Like, you know, a punk rocker goes out today and does what a punk rocker did back then, and it's mild. | ||
Any of it. | ||
Drug, sex, any of it. | ||
Swearing. | ||
Drag queens are more offensive than punk rockers. | ||
Drag queens blaspheme Jesus Christ. | ||
And a punk rocker is like, whoa, even that's like too far. | ||
Hey, come on, man. | ||
You know? | ||
unidentified
|
So... Yeah. | |
It's a joke. | ||
It's a total dead end. | ||
unidentified
|
That whole thing. | |
And you're right, it is gay. | ||
Because that's... Honestly, all those behaviors are gay. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay? | |
It makes you gay. | ||
These people going out and doing that stuff. | ||
It's just straight up gay. | ||
Nothing gayer than that. | ||
Natsuk Greek - Oh, that's okay, thanks. - Farid Lukovic said, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, Seraphim Rose? | ||
$20. | ||
If Vivek was a white Catholic, would you go for him over Trump? | ||
No, I'm 100% Trump all the way. | ||
Paseos sent $10. | ||
There's a short book called God's Revelation to the Human Heart. | ||
Can I mail a copy to you? | ||
The author of the book also wrote Nihilism, the root of the revolution of the modern age. | ||
Keith Woods reviewed the latter, and both books are excellent. | ||
Seraphim Rose, you think I don't know who that is? | ||
unidentified
|
Isn't that who wrote that about nihilism, or? | |
Or am I thinking of a different book? | ||
Bro's like, oh, uh, there's this author named Seraphim Rose. | ||
You ever heard of him? | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
Oh, who's that? | ||
I didn't get red-pilled seven years ago. | ||
Uh, yeah, sure. | ||
Yeah, why not? | ||
I'm not Orthodox, though, just so you know. | ||
Just a heads up, I will never be Eastern Orthodox. | ||
unidentified
|
But, sure. | |
Who? | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
Do you think these motherfuckers need to apologize on their knees right now and apologize? | ||
I do. | ||
Who? | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
Homophobia sent $5. | ||
I know not to vote for Vivek not because of the content of his character, but because of the color of his skin. | ||
Very good. | ||
unidentified
|
Well done. | |
Okay. | ||
Got it. | ||
Got it. | ||
Totally understand. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Yeah, I don't think that's true. | ||
Got it. | ||
unidentified
|
Got it. | |
Totally understand. | ||
Soyaak Party sent $3. | ||
Your BG is from the 2014 Celebrate Israel Parade. | ||
It's usually all white to honor tomorrow's 50th Celebrate Israel Parade. | ||
Our lights are shining in blue and white. | ||
Empire State Building on Twitter. | ||
Yeah, I don't think that's true. | ||
I think you're just wrong about that. | ||
Christo underscore fascist sent $3. | ||
What are your eschatological beliefs? | ||
Catholic Church doesn't seem to have a clear position. | ||
I personally think all Bible prophecy was fulfilled by 70 AD and we are in the kingdom of heaven. | ||
That's what, that is what Catholics believe. | ||
Catholics believe that like the mark of the beast was Nero and so what we're called, I think it's millenarians, so we think that Like you say we're in the age of the church and I tend to agree but I don't know I don't have very strong feelings on it because I feel like it's something that we can't know so it doesn't really change. | ||
I don't like people that are fixated on the end of the world because You know, whenever the end of the world comes, it really doesn't matter because we're all going to die eventually. | ||
So, you know, whether you die today, tomorrow, and whether that coincides with when everyone else dies, it almost doesn't even matter. | ||
The point is that the Lord will return, and we're not going to know when, and we don't want to be caught off guard. | ||
You know, that's the parable, right? | ||
So I almost don't even like the apocalyptic stuff that I think a lot of Catholics indulge in. | ||
Whenever people say stuff like, well, I think we're in the end times, I cringe because I'm like, well, we're all in the end times because we all have to die. | ||
You know, I mean, if somebody said the end times is in 50 years, you know, it's like, well, you could die any day within those 50 years. | ||
Someone says the end times is upon us in five years the world's gonna end. | ||
It's like you could easily die within five years. | ||
So what difference does it make if the whole world ends or if you just die? | ||
One of those will happen within your lifetime. | ||
One of those things will happen within 70 years, 80 years or whatever, you know? | ||
So I'm not preoccupied with it at all for that reason. | ||
I think it's almost like a distraction because we can't we can't alter it. | ||
We can't change it It's all got to end at some point and it's gonna end for us before or during that so You know So that's why I think it's interesting to read about and everything but there's no urgency there's no there's no like | ||
I don't feel any desire to get to the bottom of it, because it's like... I would almost be disturbed. | ||
I kind of want it to be a surprise. | ||
Would you want to know when the world is going to end? | ||
Because that would just freak me out. | ||
Like that movie Knowing with Nicolas Cage. | ||
That movie freaks me out. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't want to know. | |
But let it surprise me. | ||
If the world is going to end, I'm going to hedge my bets here and say, if the world... I don't want to die suddenly. | ||
But if the world ends, I kind of want it to be like, oh, it's ending tomorrow. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'm like, okay, well, now I don't have to freak out about it. | |
Because if the world were ending, I wouldn't be able to stop thinking about it. | ||
I wouldn't be able to get out of bed. | ||
You know? | ||
So let it be revealed like the day before, so then I don't have to be anxious for a long time. | ||
I'll just be like, oh, damn. | ||
Well, guess it's tomorrow. | ||
Time to go get my favorite food and go to confession, you know? | ||
Anyway. | ||
It's apparent there is a big overreaching donor slash group promoting different factions but the same message. | ||
You agreeing with TRS on Oliver Anthony and the Karen question reveals this to me. | ||
Why? | ||
Because TRS and I agree on Oliver Anthony? | ||
I wouldn't know what Oliver Anthony or what TRS's take on Oliver Anthony is because I've never listened to a single one of their podcasts. | ||
Nor do I think anybody else does either. | ||
I've also hated poor people forever, so I don't think that's like a big coincidence. | ||
Because they have no political agency, so Jews will remain in control of the system. | ||
Because they have no political agency. | ||
So Jews will remain in control of the system. | ||
And they'll be able to protect themselves like they do now. | ||
So... I mean, at the end of the day, they control the media, Hollywood, the government, finance. | ||
So what do you mean by that? | ||
They're gonna kill them and take their property? | ||
The Jews are gonna get Securitron robots to hit them with an anti-material laser and vaporize their entire existence before they think about it in the future because they control capital. | ||
So, you just clearly don't really understand how any of this works. | ||
I don't know why that's bad, I think that's a reasonable thing to say. | ||
where Doyle said ban porn, or at least put some kind of age restriction on it. | ||
unidentified
|
Fucking hell. - I don't know why that's bad. | |
I think that's a reasonable thing to say. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm in favor of banning it, but I mean, that is how it starts is by age restricting it. - Dimitom Dresant $5. | |
Thanks for the late night content, helps me get through my econ homework. | ||
Keep up the good work O7. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks buddy. | |
Chad Master Manhanson sent $30. | ||
Thanks for what you do. | ||
I didn't mean to come across so Gibbs me dat. | ||
unidentified
|
Nah you're good. | |
Evarist Galwa sent $3. | ||
Didn't you say that Israeli Orthodox Jews wanted to get control over the Middle East to build the Third Temple and bring on the end times? | ||
Did you change your mind or something? | ||
Uh, no, I still believe that. | ||
But that's Jews, not Catholics. | ||
I'm saying that is, that is what they want to do. | ||
And they talk about it openly, they say that, because they believe they're Antichrist, er, well, it's our Antichrist, their Messiah. | ||
They believe that their Messiah hasn't come yet, so they're waiting for a, the so-called conquering Messiah, a political leader who is Jewish, who will come out of Israel, will emerge and they will rebuild the third temple and then it'll be I think like a thousand years of like Jewish-led utopia. | ||
That's what they believe. | ||
That's not what I believe. | ||
I don't, I think that that is the opinion of some fanatical Jews. | ||
I don't necessarily think that's how the world will end. | ||
John Andrews sent three dollars. | ||
I I love the old punk rockers in black, three-quarters length cargo shorts, and long, finched-at-length hair but they are obviously bald. | ||
They are committed to nothing in their lives but a crappy aesthetic. | ||
True. | ||
And then we have Hankozy, MilkteaGroiper at the Super Chat. | ||
Okay, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
Jeez, long show tonight. | ||
That's gonna do it for me. | ||
As always, remember to follow me here on Cozy, get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Also, 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. | ||
As always, thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
In particular, special thanks to our top Super Chatters, Steven, Pete, and... | ||
I think that's everybody. | ||
So special thanks to them. | ||
Thanks to all our Super Chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
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 today forward, it's going to be only America. | ||
America First! |