Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of it. | |
I've never heard of him. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
And its consequences have been a disaster for the... They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
- The nation will be our freedom. - They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position view America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
We're gonna smash your brain in with the Bible, idiots. | |
We're going to smash your brain in with the Bible, idiot. | ||
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
See? | ||
Just eat a big mac and see if it's bitch. | ||
St. Louis can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
No money has to stop your life. | ||
It's not a last of life. | ||
St. Louis can move a country in a peaceful place. | ||
You know this has to stop your life. | ||
Not a last of life. | ||
You're like, we're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
I'm sipping wine, having some pasta, having some pizza. | ||
Oh, I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm not normal. | ||
I'm a virgin. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
Thank you. | ||
. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
but the classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of it. | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
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. America first. America first. | ||
America first. | ||
America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. | ||
Thank you. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back here with you tonight on Monday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Big news! | ||
A couple of big stories coming at us from the weekend and our featured story will be talking all about the what everybody's talking about which is Alex Jones being unbanned on Twitter or now X and it seems that this was a decision that was a long time coming And there's been an evolution here over the past year. | ||
It's been just about one year since Elon Musk acquired Twitter, actually a little bit longer. | ||
And if you remember, a year ago he said specifically that Alex Jones would not be brought back. | ||
And he said prior to the acquisition that there would be a general amnesty. | ||
He said that anyone who said things that were not against the law would be permitted to remain on Twitter. | ||
In spite of this, he said that Alex Jones would remain banned, even though he hasn't said anything against the law. | ||
And Musk singled out Alex Jones because he said that Alex Jones lied about the deaths of children. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what Elon Musk said at that time. | |
And there was a list published by the ADL. | ||
They said there were six people that shouldn't be brought back. | ||
I was one of them. | ||
Alex Jones was another. | ||
Several of the people on that list were restored. | ||
Donald Trump, Andrew Tate, me briefly. | ||
But it seems that Alex Jones, for some reason, maybe the reason he articulated, remained banned. | ||
But this weekend, the big news is that him and all of his, all related accounts, have been restored. | ||
So Alex Jones is back, the official InfoWars Twitter is back, and Owen Troyer is back. | ||
And not only did Elon unsuspend their accounts, but he also did a Twitter space with Alex Jones and Vivek and Mario Newfall. | ||
So, we'll talk about the unsuspension, we'll talk about the Twitter space and what that means. | ||
And I don't know, I feel like we've talked so much about Elon Musk and censorship. | ||
What more is there really to say at this point? | ||
So I don't know that we'll spend too much time on that, but we'll talk a little bit about that and my feelings on it. | ||
Of course, I remain banned on Twitter. | ||
I'm the most banned person. | ||
And look, I'm just gonna say this, okay? | ||
I like Alex Jones. | ||
unidentified
|
I like him. | |
I like him as a guy. | ||
unidentified
|
I actually love him. | |
I think that he's a stand-up guy. | ||
I think he's funny. | ||
I think he's a legendary broadcaster. | ||
You know, I think everyone knows I really like him. | ||
I don't know if he reciprocates that. | ||
I don't know if he's my biggest fan. | ||
But that's okay. | ||
And we disagree. | ||
Of course, he believes or He talks about a, I don't know if he believes it, but he talks about a generic global conspiracy. | ||
That there is an international, intercontinental, supra-governmental conspiracy, but he thinks It's China, or it's the eugenicists, or it's the depopulation agenda, whatever. | ||
It's a mad scientist, literally. | ||
This is what he says. | ||
I think it's the Jews. | ||
I think it's the Jews, maybe to some extent it's other occultists or masons, although that's really derivative from Jews. | ||
And I think that Jews are acting as agents of the devil. | ||
That's what I believe. | ||
So we fundamentally disagree. | ||
He's a libertarian. | ||
I'm a reactionary. | ||
We disagree on that as well. | ||
But you know, what's funny is I debated him on his show recently. | ||
He challenged me, threw the gauntlet down for a big debate. | ||
I called him the next day. | ||
I said, I'm there. | ||
Let's do it. | ||
And I flew down and we did this debate. | ||
and uh you know the format was sort of interesting he was like leaving his desk all the time i don't know what that's about But during the debate, he basically said, it was kind of this testy moment, it was almost like a pissing contest sort of thing, he said, because I'm insisting that look, it's not about the World Economic Forum, I think a lot of that is a diversion, and he said, well, the ADL doesn't care about you, they care about me. | ||
When the ADL gets together, they don't give a shit about you, they only care about me, because I'm telling the truth and all this. | ||
And so now you're wrong. | ||
So now that's obviously wrong because can you imagine a timeline where Nick Fuentes not only gets unbanned on Twitter, but then he does a Twitter space with Elon Musk after he appears on an interview with Tucker Carlson? | ||
Following a business deal with Steven Crowder and the Mug Club? | ||
Because somehow I don't think that's going to happen anytime soon. | ||
And I think that has everything to do with the fact that I talk about the Jews and Israel rather than the chi-coms and the generic conspiracy. | ||
I'm just going to put that out there. | ||
And that's not a diss, okay? | ||
Because the last time that I kind of made fun of what happened on my show, after that debate, I did a little rant about it. | ||
He texts me these voice memos and he's like, you know, you said the show was all lads. | ||
It wasn't all lads! | ||
I'm like, dude, it was a joke. | ||
It's okay. | ||
It was just kidding. | ||
I, you know, I get it. | ||
You got to pay the bills. | ||
It is what it is. | ||
So it's not a diss, okay? | ||
I'm not dissing him. | ||
I like him. | ||
And I know he's under enormous pressure. | ||
I'm not trying to... And I've been one of the most outspoken defenders of Alex Jones, actually. | ||
So I'm not trying to minimize the pressure he's under at all. | ||
All I'm saying is, you know, there was a moment during the debate where he kind of squared up and said, well, listen here, son, the ADL doesn't care about you. | ||
Yeah, well, that's not true after, that's really not true after yesterday, I don't think. | ||
Because now, now it's your turn to be on Twitter, and it's my turn to not be on Twitter. | ||
Because he got banned in 18, I got banned in 21, and he was sort of insinuating throughout that period where he was banned and I wasn't, that I was like a fad because of that. | ||
unidentified
|
Well now it's my turn! | |
Now I'm more banned than you. | ||
You're on Twitter. | ||
You're all in with Elon Musk. | ||
You think they'd let me get close to Elon Musk? | ||
No shot. | ||
Why do you think that is? | ||
Because I'm talking about the big diversion? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Quite the opposite. | ||
Anyway, so I just want to put that out there. | ||
Yeah, so I think actually now I have a little bit more clout. | ||
I think I'm a little more clouted up, a little more cred. | ||
Because I'm the banned man. | ||
I'm the one who has not been brought back. | ||
There's a few others and honestly I feel like if Jared Taylor, I don't know if he has appealed, but I feel like if he did he would have a shot at getting back because I think that they seem to be taking it easier on white nationalists more so than anti-semites, so-called. | ||
But anyway, we'll get into all that. | ||
We'll get into that. | ||
But that's going to be our main story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about University of Pennsylvania and their president, whose name is... What is her name again? | ||
McGill? | ||
Her name was McGill. | ||
Elizabeth McGill. | ||
And we covered this on Friday or Thursday, and I've been covering it over the course of the war in Gaza. | ||
And the way I've characterized it is that these three Ivy League universities, Columbia, Harvard, and UPenn, they are the American front of the Gaza War. | ||
I've explained that at length. | ||
And there has been this high-pressure campaign by the Jewish Mafia to, for some reason, destroy these three universities. | ||
They say that these three Out of the eight Ivies, Columbia, Harvard, UPenn, they say for some odd reason it's those three that are facilitating anti-Semitism on their campus. | ||
They're tolerating pro-Palestinian activism or protests. | ||
They have not condemned anti-Semitism strongly enough. | ||
And so there have been some huge moves where the alumni are threatening to withhold donations from the colleges in perpetuity. | ||
Congress called two out of those three before them for a hearing, including, in addition, the president of MIT. | ||
They're facing calls for boycotts and all sorts of pressure. | ||
And finally, the Jews succeeded and they got the president of University of Pennsylvania removed. | ||
So Elizabeth Gill This is all an anti-Semitism row. | ||
And not only that, but the chairman of the University of Pennsylvania board stepped down as well. | ||
And this is all an anti-Semitism row. | ||
It's all over the perception of anti-Semitism. | ||
unidentified
|
and then we'll see you next time. | |
And the interesting thing is every one of these universities has condemned anti-semitism repeatedly, and they have all taken action. | ||
They've all taken steps to bar certain pro-Palestine groups, or restrict certain types of organizing. | ||
They've all done different things, but they've all addressed it, and they've all addressed it not only with public statements, but also they've changed policy as well. | ||
So I don't really quite understand, but I did some digging and I found out some really interesting things about the whole story, and we'll get into that. | ||
And wouldn't you guess, the Jewish Mafia, their hands are all over this. | ||
And I know you get tired of hearing me say this, but I'm telling you, the more you dig, the more you find. | ||
When it comes to the Jews, you think you're going to debunk it. | ||
You think you're going to find out how Nick Fuentes is crazy. | ||
You think that if you look into it, you're going to find all the facts that are easily available that'll show that I really am an idiot and I just don't know what I'm talking about. | ||
I'm just a hateful racist and whatever. | ||
But it's the opposite. | ||
The more you dig, the more you try to debunk me, the more you prove me right. | ||
And I have people talking to me every day, over years, ever since I started doing this. | ||
And it's always the same thing. | ||
Some people say what a friend of mine said, well, I actually started watching you by hate watching you because I was aware about crime and so on, but I thought you were anti-Israel and an anti-Semite. | ||
So I always hate watching you, but you're kind of funny. | ||
And that person realized I was right about the Jews. | ||
And then, there was another high-profile person, I don't want to say who it is, but somebody recently who seems sort of red-pilled hit me up the other day and said, when you said the Jews shouldn't be in government because they're more loyal to Israel, I thought you were crazy. | ||
I thought you were a racist. | ||
Now, I totally get it, and I agree. | ||
He goes, and it must have been so hard for you to be called those things and gas it like that for so long. | ||
I said, yeah, yeah, it does. | ||
It did, it does, and it will in the future continue to suck. | ||
But this story is unbelievable, and I guess I'll spoil it right out of the gate, and we'll elaborate. | ||
I'll go to some announcements first, though. | ||
So, They started this campaign after the Hamas attack on October 7th to boycott these schools and you know who was leading the charge? | ||
Specifically against UPenn? | ||
Ronald Lauder. | ||
Okay, the famous Ronald Lauder who is a billionaire who made his fortune in cosmetics. | ||
You've probably heard of him. | ||
He's a Jew. | ||
He also happens to be the president of the World Jewish Congress. | ||
The World Jewish Congress. | ||
Where all the Jewish federations and all the Jewish groups in the world are constituent members. | ||
The chairman of the board of the executive committee is David Rothschild. | ||
Okay? | ||
unidentified
|
So, Israel's under attack. | |
There's some 18-year-olds protesting on the East Coast in Philadelphia and Boston about this. | ||
And Ronald Lauder, the cosmetics billionaire, the president of the World Jewish Congress, initiates a campaign to destroy the university because, like, they didn't crack down hard enough on these teenagers. | ||
And they succeeded. | ||
They revoked hundreds of millions of dollars worth of donations, they got a congressional committee to hold the hearing, and they dragged the presidents before the hearing, and then they got the media to hit them and call them anti-semitic. | ||
Now that the president of University of Pennsylvania has been fired, you know who they're replacing her with? | ||
The president of the North American Jewish Federations. | ||
That's the interim replacement for McGill. | ||
And now the number of Ivy League schools that have a Jewish president goes from five to six. | ||
Because McGill was one of the only non-Jewish presidents out of three, three out of the eight, in the Ivy Leagues that are not Jewish. | ||
You know who the other two are? | ||
Take a wild guess. | ||
We said it's Columbia, Harvard, and UPenn that have been under siege? | ||
Guess the three out of the eight that have non-Jewish presidents. | ||
Take a stab in the dark. | ||
Cornell? | ||
No. | ||
Dartmouth? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Yale? | ||
Nope. | ||
Princeton? | ||
Nope. | ||
Harvard, Columbia, UPenn. | ||
Go figure. | ||
So, the head of the World Jewish Congress says there will be no anti-Semitism in the Ivy Leagues, initiates a high-pressure campaign against the only three non-Jewish presidents of the Ivy Leagues. | ||
One of them gets removed, they get one scalp, and who do they replace her with? | ||
The lieutenant, the chair of the North American Jewish Federations. | ||
So King Jew put out the hit, and now Lieutenant Jew comes in and fills the role. | ||
And it's all about anti-Semitism. | ||
Nice. | ||
So anyway, that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to go through the usual stuff and then we'll get on it because I really want to talk about it. | ||
It's pretty spectacular. | ||
But before we do, I want to remind you to follow me here on Rumble and on Cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Smash the follow button. | ||
I swear to you, I was planning on doing a Rumble stream today, even though I didn't sleep last night. | ||
I was gonna do a Rumble Stream at like noon. | ||
It was the one day in like two weeks that I was actually ready to go. | ||
I had my coffee. | ||
I had a glass of Coke. | ||
I had lunch. | ||
I was feeling good. | ||
I was feeling high. | ||
When I drink a Coke and a coffee and I get a little protein in me, I'm like... It's like the Limitless pill. | ||
It's like the Infinity Gauntlet. | ||
I'm like charged up. | ||
So I was ready. | ||
I was wired. | ||
The banter was on point, and the group chat, I was dialed in. | ||
I was in the zone. | ||
And I'm all ready to go live, and then... Rumble was down for six hours. | ||
Okay? | ||
So that's my life. | ||
You know, that's... And that's my life. | ||
As, uh... You know, my great-grandma had an expression she used to say to my great-uncle. | ||
She said that, uh... If he started selling hats, people would start to be born without heads. | ||
Sometimes that's how it feels with me. | ||
unidentified
|
The one day! | |
Because every other day, I crash at like 9 or 8am. | ||
I wake up at 4pm, 5pm. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm like, damn it! | |
I don't have enough time to do a stream. | ||
unidentified
|
The one day that I'm, I got all my, I went out, I got gas, I checked my P.O. | |
box, I put air in my tires, I was really, I was really dialed in. | ||
I'm a little ADHD. | ||
I was having one of these manic bursts of inspiration. | ||
And the one day, and we had all this content, and then rumbles down for six hours. | ||
Siri, oh, unprecedented DDoS attack. | ||
Just my luck. | ||
So we'll do it tomorrow. | ||
So tomorrow I'll do a stream and I'm gonna review the Tucker Carlson-Alex Jones interview. | ||
We'll go over the new Tucker Carlson network. | ||
Which is strange. | ||
And I'm trying not to be negative to Tucker Carlson because I want to heal that relationship. | ||
He was negative towards me. | ||
I've been negative towards him. | ||
So I'm really making an effort to sort of build that bridge a little bit. | ||
Because I was fine with him until he tried this hit piece on me in February with the Grey Zone. | ||
That was bullshit. | ||
So I got a little negative towards him and anyway So this is another Another thing that's not a diss. | ||
Okay, but this there's like eight shows on his network and they're all Tucker Carlson So it's he's doing eight shows It's the Tucker Carlson Network with Tucker Carlson Interviews, Tucker Carlson Uncensored, Tucker Carlson Face Off, Tucker Carlson Deal or No Deal, Tucker Carlson Wheel of Fortune, Tucker Carlson 24, Tucker Carlson Shorts. | ||
It's like, is he hosting all these shows? | ||
What is this? | ||
So I was a little confused by that. | ||
That's just a, this is a riff, okay? | ||
Everybody takes it so seriously. | ||
I do like a riff about Alex Jones and then he calls me the next day and he's like, it wasn't that many commercials! | ||
unidentified
|
I'm like, alright, I'm kidding. | |
Sheesh. | ||
you know people people don't like me I'm I guess I'm a little prickly but anyway so look it's not a diss it's just I'm riffing a little bit but it does this Tucker Carlson Network with like a hundred titular shows I don't know what that's gonna be anyway So I want to react to his interview with Alex. | ||
I want to react to that and the Twitter space. | ||
I want to listen to the Twitter space with Musk and Jones. | ||
Also want to react to the Destiny divorce. | ||
He did, hey and you know credit, credit to the GOAT, he did a divorce tell-all today. | ||
Got pretty big viewership, got 25,000 views. | ||
So, you know, the goat gets divorced. | ||
Just fuel for another stream. | ||
Just fuel to triple his viewership, you know? | ||
Gotta respect the hustle. | ||
But there was something so amusing about he does... This is a guy who is divorced two times and a deadbeat dad before he turned 35. | ||
He sucks dick on the regular and he jumps on stream to give other people relationship advice. | ||
And there's something about he's so brazenly shameless. | ||
There's no shame there. | ||
There's no shame at all. | ||
He's not embarrassed. | ||
And I almost think that that's a product of him having no self-awareness. | ||
How are you 34 years old? | ||
You have two failed marriages. | ||
You got a kid that you totally abandoned. | ||
Your second marriage is crumbling in public, you got cucked, it didn't work out, she went with the other guy, and he goes on a stream to give other people advice! | ||
In other words, I'm a serial loser at relationships. | ||
Ask me anything. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
I get it. | ||
What did you learn? | ||
I suppose that's valuable. | ||
It's just funny though, I tuned in for maybe five minutes and he's on there dispensing advice. | ||
I'm like, what? | ||
Who would listen to this guy? | ||
Who would listen to this guy for advice? | ||
I mean, if you want to get cucked and lose two wives, well then I'm sure that's useful. | ||
Anyway, so we'll we'll react to that as well and I'm doing that tomorrow. | ||
Okay tomorrow on rumble if it's up But we'll see. | ||
If the site is up, there will be a stream. | ||
If the site is being DDoSed in an unprecedented attack, I will not be doing a stream. | ||
So, I'll let you know. | ||
I'm a little disappointed. | ||
That's okay. | ||
Anyway, I want to move on. | ||
Then, then I go to bed anyway. | ||
It's like, you know, three or four o'clock. | ||
It's clear. | ||
Rumble's not coming back. | ||
I went to sleep and then somebody's car alarm woke me up like two hours later God is always humbling Honestly, I do feel that about my life. | ||
I feel like if I wasn't being humbled constantly by circumstance, I would be the ultimate villain. | ||
It wouldn't be fair. | ||
I would take over the world. | ||
And billions would die. | ||
If I was completely unencumbered, like if I didn't have a deviated septum and if I wasn't short and if I wasn't like an ectomorph and if I could keep a normal schedule and all this, if I were really unencumbered and I could run, billions would die. | ||
I mean it would be planet doom. | ||
So I think all these encumberments are there to say, hey, you may be handsome, you may be a genius, you may be this unstoppable force of will, but you're still mortal, still a human being. | ||
God is saying, hey, little bro, you're still ashes to ashes, pal. | ||
I'm like, yeah, all right. | ||
All right, yeah. | ||
Monday again, back to work. | ||
Off I go. | ||
You sent me out into the world once again. | ||
Your strongest soldier. | ||
Your strongest soldier. | ||
But I'm here, you know. | ||
I forgot to take my allergy medicine, so I'm congested and I'm tired, okay? | ||
I'm real tired. | ||
My plans didn't work out today with the stream, but that's okay. | ||
So anyway, anyway, enough complaining, but yeah, it's like, bruh. | ||
Give me a break. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Anyway, I want to move on. | ||
Let's get into the news. | ||
Our first story, we'll get into this University of Pennsylvania thing. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
Tell me... Tell me I'm not crazy, please. | ||
I feel so crazy. | ||
Because this is my life. | ||
You watch this show, and then you go and get to live your normal life, okay? | ||
With normal people. | ||
You get to go to work, you get to go to school, and nobody, like, hates you and wants you to die, like, for no reason. | ||
Like, you don't have tons of people that hate you and want you to die because they heard about what you believe about politics. | ||
But this is my life, okay? | ||
And for the last, and I love it, but for the past seven, nearly seven years, I have insisted to my own detriment that there is a Jewish conspiracy. | ||
You're not allowed to say that, okay? | ||
But that's really what it is. | ||
I'm like, there is a Jewish conspiracy. | ||
There is a conspiracy. | ||
It is Jewish in nature. | ||
That's who's doing it. | ||
That's who it's for. | ||
And that's really the basis of the show, or one of the tenets, one of the key tenets of the show. | ||
And for this, I have been banned from all social media, I have been banned from all banks, I have been banned from payment processing, probably never be able to hold a job, never be able to get a degree. | ||
You know, people can't be friends with me, people can't do business with me, people can't have me on their shows, I can't go to CPAC, I got disavowed by the Speaker of the House and the Prime Minister of Israel, and I got subpoenaed by Congress, and I got put on a no-fly... All these things have happened because I just said there's a Jewish conspiracy. | ||
Okay. | ||
Now, on the one hand, maybe I deserve all that, because I'm a crazy, hateful racist, and I'm bigoted against Jewish people because I'm superstitious and backwards and prejudicial, and so basically I have all that coming to me on some level, and people just treat me that way because my views are reprehensible. | ||
On the other hand, I'm right. | ||
Okay, on the other hand, I'm completely correct. | ||
Okay, I came correct. | ||
I'm fine. | ||
Okay, I'm actually a nice person, I'm polite, and I just happen to believe the thing that's true, and they're retaliating against me for saying it because they don't want people to know. | ||
Well, when I see a story like this, I basically find it impossible not to believe it's the latter. | ||
And I already sort of introduced it, but We'll give you the general background here. | ||
So, as you know, Hamas attacked Israel on October 7th. | ||
Who could forget? | ||
They say about 9-11, never forget. | ||
But this, as they say, was the equivalent of 15 9-11s. | ||
So, you can never, ever, ever, ever, EVER forget about the Hamas Ever, ever, ever forget about the... You know, if 9-11 was never forget, then this is never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever forget about, you know, the Hamas attack. | ||
Which, by the way, most of the people that were killed by that attack were killed by Israel. | ||
If you look at the aftermath of the Hamas attack, It's like blown out buildings, cars that have been incinerated. | ||
It's not funny, it's obviously horrible. | ||
But we're supposed to believe that like a thousand guys with AK-47s invaded the most heavily fortified, heavily surveilled border in the world in a sneak attack that they had been planning for two years. | ||
And they did that kind of damage? | ||
I don't think an AK-47 causes a car to be burned down to its frame. | ||
I don't think that AK-47s do that, unless that's changed. | ||
And what a lot of people believe is that not only is the death count inflated, but that actually Israel killed their own people. | ||
That as they repelled Hamas, they indiscriminately killed civilians caught in the crossfire, or their own military, which some say is part of their doctrine. | ||
If an Israeli soldier is taken hostage, Israel will go out of their way to kill the hostage. | ||
Because it's better for the hostage to be dead, according to Israel, than for the hostage to give up Israel's secrets or to be used as a bartering tool for a prisoner swap. | ||
So it would track. | ||
And anyway, that's one hypothesis about this attack that we can never, ever, ever hear the end of. | ||
It's like, you know, there's a lot about it that doesn't add up, which we've talked about. | ||
How did they not know about it? | ||
Why did they not prepare for it? | ||
Why did they not respond more quickly as it happened? | ||
How did this small army inflict so many casualties? | ||
And the nature of the damage is not really consistent with the munitions that were used. | ||
Anyway. | ||
That's really neither here nor there. | ||
But there was this big attack on October 7th. | ||
And here in America, there were a lot of pro-Palestine leftists on university campuses that were protesting in support of Palestine, specifically at Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia. | ||
Ever since then, there's been this high-pressure campaign to destroy the administrations of these colleges. | ||
There's been this chorus coming largely from Jews and Zionist Jews that say that these three administrations are not taking anti-semitism seriously. | ||
But this has been sort of strange to me because all three universities have condemned anti-semitism repeatedly since the attack. | ||
They have all clarified that insofar as there are Palestinian activists on campus, that doesn't represent the views of the college. | ||
They have also even taken steps to restrict or ban certain pro-Palestine groups from the campus. | ||
So between the public statements clarifying that that's not their stance and some of the policies they've undertaken, I don't know why it's been so persistent. | ||
And the boycott is pretty severe. | ||
It's being led by some very high-powered billionaires like Ronald Lauder and like Bill Ackman. | ||
These are Jews with billions of dollars. | ||
They're alumni of Harvard or UPenn or Columbia. | ||
And they've said that they will withhold hundreds of millions of dollars in gifts to the universities as long as the current administrations remain in place. | ||
In addition to that, we covered last week the U.S. | ||
Congress called two of those presidents, in addition to the president of MIT, to a hearing to interrogate them about whether they're anti-Semitic. | ||
Well, the big development today is that that campaign has been successful, and this Jewish campaign to remove those presidents got its first scalp, and the president of University of Pennsylvania was forced to step down after all this pressure and comments that she made at the hearing. | ||
And I'm going to read this article and wait until you hear why they consider UPenn anti-Semitic and wait until you hear why this president was forced to resign, what her actual comments were during the hearing. | ||
Because that's really... They say that UPenn is anti-Semitic because of, like, two specific things. | ||
And they say that she was forced to step down because of one specific exchange at the hearing. | ||
And wait until you hear what it is. | ||
And then wait until you hear who's on what side here of this campaign. | ||
So this is from New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, The President of the University of Pennsylvania, Elizabeth McGill, resigned on Saturday, four days after she appeared before Congress, and appeared to evade the question of whether students who called for the genocide of Jews should be punished. | ||
And again, that's, I think, an interesting way to phrase that. | ||
It says, support for Ms. | ||
McGill, already shaken in recent months over her approach to a Palestinian literary conference, and the university's initial response to the Hamas attack on Israel, unraveled after her testimony. | ||
Influential graduates questioned her leadership, wealthy contributors moved to withdraw donations, and public officials besieged the university to oust its president. | ||
By Saturday, a day before Penn's Board of Trustees was expected to meet, Ms. | ||
McGill said that she would quit. | ||
Scott Bach, the board's chairman, said in an email to the Penn community that Ms. | ||
McGill had voluntarily tendered her resignation. | ||
Less than an hour later, Mr. Bach announced that he, too, had resigned, deepening the turmoil at one of the nation's most prestigious universities. | ||
Ms. | ||
McGill is the first university president to step down in connection with the uproar that has engulfed campuses since the Hamas attack. | ||
Other presidents remained under pressure. | ||
On Friday, more than 70 members of Congress called for the firing of Ms. | ||
McGill and two presidents who appeared alongside her in Washington on Tuesday, and they are Claudine Gay of Harvard and Sally Kornbluth of MIT. | ||
Mr. Bach said that Ms. | ||
McGill, who became Penn's president last year, would remain as the university's leader until an interim president is chosen. | ||
She will also stay at Penn as a faculty member in the law school. | ||
Mr. Bach's resignation took effect immediately, and the vice chair of Penn's board, Julie Platt, assumed his post on an interim basis. | ||
Ms. | ||
Platt, who chairs the Jewish Federations of North America's board, is not expected to lead the Penn board permanently. | ||
Okay? | ||
We'll go on and then I'll put it all together. | ||
But just so you know, the President and the Chair of the Board have resigned, and the replacement for the Chair of the Board happens to be the President of the Jewish Federations of North America, Julie Platt. | ||
What a coincidence. | ||
The President and the Chair are overthrown in a row over anti-Semitism. | ||
Led by, we'll see it later in the article, and whose replacement? | ||
The chair of the North American Jewish Federations. | ||
Nice. | ||
The article goes on and talks about the hearing. | ||
It says, at the hearing, Representative Elise Stefanik said that students had chanted support for intifada, an Arabic word that means uprising, and that many Jews hear as a call for violence against them. | ||
Ms. | ||
Stefanik said, calling for the genocide of Jews, does that constitute bullying or harassment? | ||
unidentified
|
Ms. | |
McGill replied, if it is directed and severe, pervasive, it is harassment. | ||
unidentified
|
Ms. | |
Stefanik responded, so the answer is yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Ms. | |
McGill said, well, it is a context-dependent decision, Congresswoman. | ||
Ms. | ||
Stefanik exclaimed, that's your testimony today? | ||
Calling for the genocide of Jews is depending upon the context? | ||
And of course, there have been two intifadas, two major intifadas in Palestine, although they've called other things intifadas over a century. | ||
And the Intifada, the first one, involved protests and civil disobedience and there was violence too. | ||
But it means to resist the Israeli occupation. | ||
It's hardly saying that they want a genocide for all Jews. | ||
Contrary to what Jews feel about it, that's not what that means. | ||
That's not historically what that means. | ||
That's not the etymology of the word. | ||
It's Arabic for uprising, not Arabic for genocide. | ||
And it has taken many forms over the years in many places. | ||
But you see how this works. | ||
They grill her and they say, hey, so Intifada, yeah, that's like calling for genocide against Jews. | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
And she goes, well, it kind of depends on the context. | ||
Does it mean genocide against the Jews or does it mean uprising? | ||
And that's all it takes. | ||
30-second soundbite, and Stefanik goes, What? | ||
unidentified
|
You think that genocide against Jews is context-dependent? | |
Well, everything's really context-dependent. | ||
Seriously? | ||
But this is the quote that got her fired. | ||
Because she said that when you use the term Intifada, well, that's context-dependent. | ||
It is! | ||
It is context-dependent. | ||
But that was the cause. | ||
The article goes on, it says, after Ms. | ||
McGill's appearance, Mr. Bach said in an email on Saturday, it became clear that her position was no longer tenable, and she and I concurrently decided it was her time to exit. | ||
He also defended her. | ||
He said, worn down by months of relentless external attacks, she was not herself, over-prepared, over-lawyered, given the hostile forum and high stakes, she provided a legalistic answer to a moral question, and that was wrong. | ||
They also sought to use Ms. | ||
dreadful 30-second bite in what was more than five hours of testimony. | ||
Ms. McGill's critics, who broadly welcomed her resignation, gave her no such respite. | ||
They also sought to use Ms. McGill's resignation to pressure Harvard and MIT to act after Dr. Gay and Dr. Kornbluth offered similar testimony. | ||
One down, two to go, said Ms. Stefanik. | ||
Over the summer, donors asked McGill to cancel a planned Palestinian literary conference on campus. | ||
Which, by the way, this was before October 7th. | ||
This was in September. | ||
And it was a bunch of Palestinian people that got together to share poetry. | ||
Okay? | ||
But this is how it started. | ||
It says, over the summer, donors asked her to cancel a Palestinian literary conference. | ||
But Ms. | ||
McGill, citing free speech, said it would go on as planned in September. | ||
Less than two weeks after the conference, Hamas attacked Israel, and some of the university's largest benefactors, led by Mark Rowan, the head of Apollo Global Management, were furious with what they said was Ms. | ||
McGill's tepid approach to condemning the attacks. | ||
He called for donors to pull their money from Penn. | ||
Major contributors soon joined in, including Ronald Lauder, the cosmetics billionaire, and the former Utah Governor John Huntsman Jr. | ||
and his family. | ||
The criticism of Ms. McGill intensified after Tuesday's hearing within the Penn community and beyond. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Ross Stevens, a hedge fund manager, began the process of withdrawing a donation valued at $100 million and said he would not reconsider until Penn had new leadership. | ||
Okay? | ||
So there's eight Ivy League schools, and all of their presidents are Jewish except for three. | ||
Ivy League universities, these are the most elite universities in the country. | ||
They're the most highly selective. | ||
And of course, everyone that goes to an Ivy League school has a far easier time. | ||
In fact, they're poached for positions on Wall Street, and in Hollywood, and on Capitol Hill, and in the most prestigious law firms. | ||
You name it. | ||
Everyone knows this. | ||
And five out of eight of them are controlled by Jews. | ||
And these are the names. | ||
Brown University, the president is Christian Paxson, or rather Christina Paxson, who's Jewish. | ||
Cornell is Martha Pollack, who's Jewish. | ||
Dartmouth is Cyan Beilock, who's Jewish. | ||
Princeton is Christopher Einsgruber, who's Jewish. | ||
And Yale is Peter Salovey, who's Jewish. | ||
The only three heads of the Ivy Leagues that are not Jewish Are Columbia with Manoush Shafik, Harvard which is Claudine Gay, and UPenn which is Elizabeth McGill. | ||
But that wasn't always true. | ||
Harvard had a Jewish president up until last year. | ||
So did UPenn. | ||
And I believe so did Columbia. | ||
It was the case that two or three years ago, seven out of eight were controlled by Jews, and the only one that wasn't was at Dartmouth. | ||
But the president of Dartmouth got replaced by a Jewish president, and the presidents of Harvard, Columbia, and UPenn got replaced by Gentiles. | ||
So that is the situation at the Ivy Leagues. | ||
And if you notice, the three schools that are under siege, it's out of the Ivies, it's Harvard, Columbia, and UPenn. | ||
Coincidentally, all the schools that have non-Jewish presidents. | ||
And who's leading the charge to get to get McGill and Claudine Gay and Mnuchin? | ||
Who's leading the charge to get all those people banned? | ||
Well, it's all Jewish billionaires, like Bill Ackman, who's a Harvard alum, and Ronald Lauder, who is a UPenn alum. | ||
And as I said earlier, Ronald Lauder isn't just a Jewish alumni of University of Pennsylvania, or Jewish alumnus. | ||
And he's not just a billionaire, but he's also the president of the World Jewish Congress, which presides over all the Jewish groups and all the Jewish federations in the world. | ||
And like I said, it's chaired by David Rothschild. | ||
So Israel's under attack. | ||
Most of the Ivy Leagues are controlled by Jews. | ||
The three that aren't entertain some Palestinian identity or some Palestinian activism. | ||
Well, that's no good. | ||
So the president of the World Jewish Congress overthrows the president of UPenn, at least, and he's trying to go after the other two. | ||
And he does that with hundreds of millions of dollars and with very influential alumni speaking out and with 70 members of Congress who have organized a hearing and written a letter and so on. | ||
And when they finally replace Elizabeth McGill, one out of the three Gentile presidents of an Ivy League school, they replace her With the chair of the North American Jewish Federations, Julie Platt, a Jewish Zionist. | ||
And you tell me there's not a Jewish conspiracy? | ||
Seriously? | ||
Jews are 2% of the population. | ||
How did they come to constitute 87.5% of the Ivy Leagues? | ||
Or in the case of how it's been for the last couple years, what would that be? | ||
63% roughly, 2% of the population, but they're 5 out of 8 of the Ivy Leagues. | ||
Now 6 out of 8. | ||
How does it get to be this way? | ||
Not only that, but apparently the Jews who are in... because this is what they say. | ||
We all understand. | ||
I think no one would even argue at this point that there is a disproportionate number of Jews. | ||
And it's not just that they're rich, although they are disproportionately richer. | ||
It's that they're disproportionately more powerful. | ||
Big difference. | ||
And you look at all the powerful people that are causing misery in America. | ||
And you'll find that like half or in some cases more than half or a lot more than half are Jewish. | ||
Like 9 out of 10 of the biggest contributors to the Democratic Party are Jewish. | ||
9 out of 10. | ||
90% of the biggest givers to the Democrats are Jewish. | ||
2% of the population, 90%. | ||
unidentified
|
That's power. | |
And it's a wide swath of the powerful. | ||
And it's wildly disproportionate. | ||
Same thing with the Ivy Leagues. | ||
You mean to tell me that at one time, not too long ago, two years ago, it was 7 out of 8 of the presidents were Jewish? | ||
I understand maybe it's 2 or 3. | ||
They're very legalistic. | ||
They're very scholarly. | ||
But 7 out of 8? | ||
And they're 2% of the population? | ||
And they run the schools. | ||
Okay? | ||
And then when you go to Hollywood, it's three of the big talent agencies. | ||
It's CAA, and it's William Morris, and it's UTA. | ||
All run by Jews. | ||
And when you go to the NBA, half the teams and the commissioner, all Jewish. | ||
And when you go to the Federal Reserve, the chair for the Federal Reserve for the last 40 years, with the exception of Jerome Powell, all Jewish. | ||
Larry Fink at BlackRock, which manages 40-30 trillion dollars in assets, Jewish. | ||
You look at the Biden administration, you look at his cabinet, and I don't know the figures at this point, but, you know, almost everyone in that cabinet is either Jewish or married to someone Jewish. | ||
All of Joe Biden's kids and grandkids are married to Jews. | ||
Donald Trump's kids are married to a Jew. | ||
Donald Trump delegated, of course, to Jared Kushner. | ||
It goes on and on and on and on and on like this. | ||
And everyone knows that. | ||
And some people get annoyed by this. | ||
They say, oh well that's really not productive or that's really not helpful. | ||
But it's conspicuous because if we want to understand why things are the way they are in the country, we need to know who's responsible so we can hold them accountable. | ||
Obviously. | ||
You and I aren't fundamentally responsible for everything that goes on because lately The individual doesn't have a ton of decision-making power. | ||
It's the biggest firms. | ||
It's the biggest banks. | ||
It's the bureaucrats. | ||
They really wield the discretion to make the big decisions for the country. | ||
So we have to assess who got us here. | ||
And it's almost difficult to avoid noticing the pattern that so many of them are Jewish. | ||
And like I said, it's 50% or sometimes close to 100% And that would be conspicuous enough, but then you consider they're 2% of the population. | ||
Well, people say then, well, even if that's the case, even if it's disproportionate, it's completely arbitrary. | ||
It could just as easily be anybody else, any other group. | ||
Or they say that it's benign. | ||
Even if it's less than arbitrary, well, Jews don't always agree with each other. | ||
There's left-wing Jews or right-wing Jews, or just like anybody else. | ||
Some people say, well, they deserve to be in those roles through merit. | ||
They earned it. | ||
They were 2% of the population. | ||
They became 90% of these elite positions through sheer hard work and determination. | ||
Okay. | ||
But the biggest thing is that they say that there is no conspiracy. | ||
That even though there's all these people at the top, they're not all working together. | ||
But obviously, we have seen over the years so, so many cases where they do. | ||
Where they do all the time. | ||
Like, for example, Jeffrey Epstein. | ||
Jeffrey Epstein and Jelaine Maxwell and her father. | ||
And they're rolling with some of the biggest pro-Israel think tanks and some of the biggest pro-Israel funds and all the Zionists. | ||
They've got connections to the Liberty. | ||
They've got connections to the Kennedy assassination. | ||
They've got connections to the Zionist independence. | ||
It's all over. | ||
And Jeffrey Epstein, or rather Harvey Weinstein. | ||
Harvey Weinstein in Hollywood. | ||
Everyone thinks, oh, he's some big liberal media Jew. | ||
Well, Harvey Weinstein, in between raping women and everything that he's doing, he hired Black Cube, an Israeli Mossad intelligence firm, to spy on his accusers. | ||
And then he sees something like this, where there's a World Jewish Congress made up of constituent other Jewish groups, And it's billionaires mobilized against the only non-Jewish universities to punish them for not being against anti-Semitism enough. | ||
And then when they get their scalp using Congress and billions of dollars, they replace it with one of their own people. | ||
They replace it with the chair of the Jewish Federation of North America. | ||
You can't. | ||
There's just no argument anymore. | ||
You can't argue that the elite isn't Jewish because they are. | ||
You can't argue that it's benign because we're over there in the Middle East right now getting blown up and losing credibility on the world stage for them. | ||
So it's not benign. | ||
It's conspiratorial because we can see that they're working together across different domains and across countries and across coasts. | ||
It's Wall Street, it's the East Coast, it's academia, it's in Congress, so there's a sort of intersectional or interdisciplinary conspiracy happening. | ||
What is the argument anymore against this? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
Where does Klaus Schwab enter into all this? | ||
Where does World Economic Forum and Bilderberg and whatever else, where does that come in? | ||
They talk about the problem is these liberal white men. | ||
Really? | ||
I don't see a lot of ribble...ribble...liberal white men. | ||
I see a lot of Jews. | ||
I see a lot of Jews whenever this stuff happens. | ||
They say it's self-hating liberal whites. | ||
It's the chi-coms. | ||
It's the mad scientists. | ||
It's really Nazis. | ||
Where? | ||
Where do you see that? | ||
Israel's under attack and they've mobilized our Air Force. | ||
They've mobilized our Navy. | ||
They've mobilized our President to come visit them. | ||
They've mobilized the Saudis. | ||
And when there is any dissent anywhere in America, they mobilize the billionaires and the Congress and the World Jewish Congress and all of it. | ||
I don't understand what the argument is against that. | ||
It's such a clear, cut and dry example. | ||
And the whole year is filled with them. | ||
How is this the subject of every dispute now? | ||
Right now, one of the most important institutions in the world, which is the Ivy Leagues, it's a war over anti-Semitism. | ||
And what's the war over? | ||
Because they had a Palestinian poetry fest. | ||
Seriously? | ||
Ronald Lauder is going to get a scalp from the administration at UPenn because they had Palestinian poetry reading? | ||
But they can do that. | ||
That's their flex. | ||
This is one of the most powerful institutions in the world brought to its knees and pressured by Jewish money and a Jewish-backed Congress and so on. | ||
And how about Twitter with Elon Musk? | ||
What's Elon Musk in the middle of right now? | ||
An anti-Semitism controversy. | ||
Because the richest man in the world, and one of the most important platforms in the world, is being bent over the barrel by the ADL, a Jewish censorship group. | ||
And Netanyahu, who keeps threatening to kill him every time they hang out. | ||
And how about the former president and Kanye West last year? | ||
They encouraged Donald Trump to drop out of the race because he had dinner with an anti-Semite. | ||
Kanye West, the biggest recording artist of the 21st century, they said his career was over. | ||
His label dropped him, they won't publish his album or distribute his new music because of an anti-Semitism controversy. | ||
So, in other words, who's in the right here? | ||
Is it our President Donald Trump? | ||
Is it our great artist, Ye? | ||
Is it our great entrepreneur, great industry titan, Elon Musk? | ||
Is it a guy like me? | ||
Or is it them? | ||
Are we all wrong? | ||
Are we all hateful bigots? | ||
Are we all dumb, or just blinded by hatred, or irrational? | ||
And they're all just enforcing what logically tracks with liberalism? | ||
Or are we all right? | ||
We're all right and we're all smart enough to see it and people are smart enough to call it out because it's obvious and it's in your face and they are panicking and flailing about, struggling to maintain the illusion that they're not in control. | ||
Because that's what I see. | ||
I don't see chi-coms. | ||
I don't see self-hating white liberals. | ||
I mean, I see them. | ||
But that's not the source. | ||
I see behind them. | ||
And it's a yarmulke. | ||
It's a dreidel. | ||
In all these cases. | ||
What other war was like this? | ||
Russia and Ukraine wasn't even like this. | ||
Armenia, Azerbaijan wasn't like this. | ||
Nothing is like this. | ||
No other group has that kind of influence. | ||
So anyway, that's you Penn. | ||
I want to get on into the Alex Jones story, our featured story, and this is sort of tracks with that. | ||
So Alex Jones was unbanned on Twitter, and he had a space with Elon Musk yesterday as well, and you know what? |