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And at the end of the day, we'll prove this point. | |
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Taylor. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America. | ||
America first. America first. America first. America first. America | ||
unidentified
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first. America | |
first. America first. America | ||
first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. Thank | ||
you. | ||
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 with you here tonight on Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Big story and big developments tonight in the war in Gaza. | ||
And we'll be talking about that war the whole night tonight. | ||
We've actually been trying to talk about it the last couple nights, but there's been all sorts of other developments happening. | ||
But tonight we're finally going to get to cover what's been going on over there. | ||
And our featured story will be talking all about this major terrorist attack that happened in Iran today at the cemetery where Qasem Soleimani is buried. | ||
It was a pretty serious terrorist attack, killed a hundred people. | ||
Although nobody knows exactly who's responsible. | ||
Automatically the Iranian government blamed the United States and Israel, which would be obvious. | ||
But the United States and Israel maintain that it looks like the work of Sunni terrorists, Sunni Muslim terrorists. | ||
And perhaps there's a plausible explanation for that. | ||
But we'll be talking all about this major terror attack and we'll also talk tonight About the assassination of several key Hamas leaders in Beirut, Lebanon yesterday. | ||
And that was maybe the most aggressive and penetrative strike by Israel inside Lebanon since the war in Gaza began. | ||
Many are saying that this is a major provocation Which could draw Hezbollah into a war with Israel. | ||
And of course, both of these things are happening with the backdrop of, potentially, the reignition of Yemen's civil war, as the United States contemplates bombing Houthi sites inside Yemen, which may provoke an all-out war in the Arabian Peninsula. | ||
So there's developments happening all over the region, And we're gonna cover all of it. | ||
We'll get through all the details of this. | ||
It's gonna be kind of like a news-heavy episode. | ||
Last couple episodes have been kind of fun, I feel like. | ||
We did like a 2024 Outlook stream on Monday. | ||
Yesterday I spent a lot of time talking about my favorite subject, which is Kostin Alomaryu and his Jewish shill network. | ||
But tonight, I think it's really necessary to catch everybody up to speed on the war in Gaza. | ||
And we've been covering this war now for three months. | ||
Nearly three months. | ||
It's day 88. | ||
So, just shy of three months. | ||
Of course, started on October 7th. | ||
And as you know, from the beginning, the biggest concern and the thing that we've been watching for is the widening and escalation of the war. | ||
That the war will not be isolated, or rather the fighting, because the war has already engulfed the entire region. | ||
But the question is whether the fighting will consume the entire region. | ||
Will it become a truly regional war and then a global war? | ||
Or rather a war that involves global powers, a regional war that will draw in Global powers like Russia, China, and the United States into a bigger war. | ||
And it looks like that may be happening, and we've been covering it very closely since it started. | ||
We've talked about the different phases of the war, and specifically how Israel has fought in Gaza, and we've kept, I think, a pretty keen eye on all these other developing theaters of conflict, which, of course, it's not just Gaza, but it's also the West Bank, it's the border with Lebanon, It's Iraq and Syria. | ||
It's Yemen and it's Iran. | ||
And we're finally seeing the intensification of the fighting in several of these theaters. | ||
Specifically, as I said, in Beirut, in Yemen, and in Iran, as of just the last three days. | ||
So, we're gonna get into all that. | ||
It's gonna be a great show. | ||
Like I said, very news-heavy. | ||
Lot, lot of information. | ||
Gotta update everybody on What's happening? | ||
But before we get into all the news, I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on Cozy and Rumble to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Make sure to follow me on both and follow me on Telegram. | ||
And all the links are down below. | ||
Also, I think tomorrow I'll... I know I keep threatening to do this, but trust. | ||
Okay, trust. | ||
I think tomorrow I'm going to do a Rumble exclusive because there was actually an awesome stream today. | ||
This East Orthodox monk, Brother Nathaniel, was a guest on the Alex Jones Show today. | ||
And I don't know what's going on over there at InfoWars, but they've just been bringing in a steady stream of anti-Semites. | ||
Not really, but you know, people that are aware of this Jewish issue. | ||
To go on Alex's show and to just embarrass him on this topic. | ||
So I don't know if that's intentional. | ||
Is that a subversive way of getting the message across? | ||
I'm not really sure what the endgame is there. | ||
Because we all know that Alex doesn't like to talk about the Jews. | ||
He doesn't like to point the finger at Israel. | ||
He says he does, but he really doesn't, and he never talks about it. | ||
And as you know, I was challenged to come on his show a couple months ago, which I then did. | ||
And recently, Stu Peters went on his show and called him out on the same topic. | ||
And now Brother Nathaniel, who's a Jew who converted to Orthodoxy, He was the latest guest today who came on the Alex Jones Show and challenged him on the issue of Jewish power and Israel. | ||
And it was a really remarkable stream. | ||
The clips were incredible. | ||
I haven't watched the whole thing yet. | ||
I saw some of the highlights. | ||
So, I think tomorrow I'm going to do some kind of Rumble exclusive and react to that stream because it was really something. | ||
And like I said, I don't know what's at play there because, and we've talked about it at length, I don't need to re-litigate the whole thing, but we know that Alex Jones clearly has some kind of Zionist benefactor. | ||
And I don't say that, that's not a complete guess. | ||
Okay? | ||
The reason I say that is because obviously the Zionists control America's foreign policy. | ||
It's obvious. | ||
We've been over it at length throughout the history of the show and especially since the war in Gaza. | ||
If you don't know what the score is, you can watch my show last night. | ||
We talked all about the high-pressure campaign against the three gentile presidents of the Ivy League schools because they weren't sufficiently philo-semitic. | ||
But if you watch the show, you understand this. | ||
And he's not a dumb guy. | ||
He's been around for 20 years. | ||
He knows it. | ||
And we know that he is really pulling his punches and some would say even covering for Israel. | ||
Running cover for them and very deliberately and intentionally and knowingly all the time. | ||
And I would imagine that that's because somewhere in that operation There's a critical alliance with some kind of Zionist benefactor. | ||
I don't know if that's a donor, or it's a service provider, or maybe that's just another faction that he doesn't want to piss off, but there is this sort of willful blindness on that topic, and I think that's by design. | ||
But for whatever reason, he keeps bringing on all these people like me, Stu, Nathaniel, who at least in my case and i think in the case of brother nathaniel he knows don't agree with him on this topic you know we're all honest about that subject so i don't know if that's his subversive way of getting it out there | ||
if he bring these people he brings these people on and they go on his show and they say the part that he doesn't want to say maybe that's it because it's getting a This is the third time in like two months that he brings somebody on who he knows is an anti-Semite, quote unquote, to sort of embarrass him on the topic. | ||
And I like Alex. | ||
I think he's a great guy and I like him personally. | ||
I just strongly disagree with him on this and I... | ||
I think that there is some ulterior motive behind it, but I like him. | ||
I mean, I love him as a guy. | ||
I think he's a terrific guy, and I think he's a broadcasting legend. | ||
I just am on the opposite side on this topic. | ||
So it's very peculiar, but I think I'll maybe cover this tomorrow and do a Rumble exclusive. | ||
I say maybe because it's never 100% I know but I'd like to get to it either tomorrow or Friday so be on the lookout for that on Rumble. | ||
I haven't done a Rumble exclusive so far this year and I know everybody be excited for that one so I think I'll do that at some time tomorrow afternoon. | ||
But that's that. | ||
I don't think there's any other big... I don't think there's any other big stories. | ||
We may cover the Epstein stuff tomorrow. | ||
It's been kind of trickling out over the past three or four days. | ||
I know these Jeffrey Epstein documents were ordered to be unsealed and people were saying that that was going to happen like four or five days ago and I know that people have been watching it very closely and I guess that never happened until today and now finally the documents have been released and I haven't had a chance to really sit down and go through all of that so I think we'll cover that either tomorrow or Friday on the show. | ||
So, I said I'm trying to think anything else that happened today. | ||
I know that happened. | ||
I think we'll maybe save that though for tomorrow or Friday once I have a chance to go through all of that. | ||
Pretty interesting stuff, but I don't know. | ||
I mean, to me, I feel like we don't really know the full story. | ||
I know that, of course, Israeli and American intelligence is involved. | ||
Clearly it's some sort of blackmail operation. | ||
But the real particulars of it, I think, remain mysterious. | ||
Some have suggested that maybe that represented some kind of internal battle between the CIA and Israel or different factions within Jewry. | ||
So I'll have to take a close look at that and talk to the experts, but we'll probably save that for later in the week. | ||
So with that, we'll dive into the show here. | ||
Like I said, we'll get into our latest with the war in Gaza. | ||
I can't remember the last time we talked about this. | ||
It must have been last week that I did a whole show about the war in Gaza. | ||
And so it's day 88. | ||
Magical number. | ||
Meme number, as you know. | ||
And the big story about the war in Gaza, which we've been covering, is how this is now intensifying, not in Gaza, but everywhere else in the Middle East. | ||
And so the story goes like this, as you know. | ||
To kind of bring you up to speed, on October 7th there was the major Hamas incursion into Israel from Gaza. | ||
And the Gaza Strip is very small. | ||
If you look at the map of Gaza and compare it to the map of New York City or Chicago or L.A., you get a sense for the scope. | ||
It's a very, very tiny region. | ||
And Hamas is a very insignificant fighting force. | ||
It's only about 25,000 guys, very primitive weapons. | ||
So there was no reason that this should be a really a major conflict. | ||
I should say it should have never expanded beyond a local low-intensity conflict. | ||
And everyone was expecting Israel to respond, but it was difficult for Israel to respond because Israel's army is made up of reservists. | ||
They have a mandatory three-year service in Israel. | ||
Every man and woman in the state of Israel has to have three years of military service And most of their military, which is a reservist military, does not have any combat experience. | ||
So although they are a technologically sophisticated military, they're an inexperienced military and really more like a civilian military. | ||
What's more, Hamas inside of Gaza has been entrenched. | ||
For decades they have been building tunnels a hundred feet below the ground. | ||
They've been stockpiling missiles and cheap defensive weapons that would make a counter-insurgency inside of Gaza very bloody and very costly for Israel. | ||
Because of course Hamas is preparing for that war of the future. | ||
They have been preparing to draw Israel into a counterinsurgency for decades, and they've been preparing to do that not by preparing for a war where they're fighting Israel on a battlefield with tanks and planes, but preparing for a war where they know Israel will invade, they know Israel will besiege the Gaza Strip, and specifically Gaza City, and they've been preparing | ||
With anti-armor and with the tunnels for a protracted counterinsurgency where the goal is really attrition. | ||
To kill as many IDF soldiers as possible and to simply make it a trap. | ||
Make it very difficult for Israel to sustain a prolonged occupation of the Strip. | ||
Because they know they're at a numerical and technological disadvantage. | ||
So that was the outlook from the beginning. | ||
The Hamas militants went into Israel And then very quickly retreated back into Gaza, and they drew Israel into this conflict. | ||
And there was an initial phase of the war where Israel was bombing Gaza for about a month until October 27th. | ||
Israel then began their invasion of the north half of the Gaza Strip. | ||
There was a very short ceasefire at the end of November into December. | ||
The fighting has since been renewed. | ||
Throughout the month of December into January, there's been more bombing and Israel has actually expanded the ground offensive into South Gaza, the southern half of Gaza. | ||
And that brings us up to speed to where we are today in Gaza. | ||
But of course, the story of the war in Gaza is much bigger than that. | ||
Ever since Israel said that they would invade Gaza and potentially annex the territory, or at the minimum, occupy it with the Israeli military, there has been this specter of an overwhelming Iranian response to Israel's actions in Gaza. | ||
And not just from Iran, but from Iran's proxies all across the entire region, which exist in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen. | ||
And so not only did Israel invade Gaza, but Israel also spent actually its most experienced and its most advanced ground forces to its northern border, which it shares with Lebanon. | ||
And they sent their most experienced soldiers to that border on the opposite side of the country to counter the threat from the Iranian proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon. | ||
And so that's one other theater of conflict. | ||
There's the war in Gaza, which has been airstrikes and a significant ground invasion. | ||
I think it was 300,000, 360,000 troops inside of Gaza. | ||
But there's also been a significant Israeli presence on the northern border to counter Hezbollah, and a low-boil, low-intensity, tit-for-tat exchange of fire between Hezbollah and Israel on that northern border. | ||
And the dynamic there is interesting, because Hezbollah is not the official military of Lebanon. | ||
It's a paramilitary group. | ||
It is more powerful than the military of Lebanon and influential in Lebanese politics. | ||
Hezbollah is trained by Iran, and they receive weapons from Iran. | ||
But they will not attack Israel in a real way, because they understand that Lebanese society does not want a war with Israel. | ||
They understand that a ground war between Hezbollah and Israel, it would take place in Lebanon and it would devastate an already very poor country with the struggling economy. | ||
So, Hezbollah has been keeping the conflict with Israel at a very low boil, simmering, but they don't seek a full-on war. | ||
At the same time that that's been happening, Israel, Iran, and the United States have all been fighting in Iraq and Syria. | ||
Iran has militias, and their paramilitary group, the Revolutionary Guard Corps, has been operating inside of Assad's Syria and inside of Iraq. | ||
And these Iranian proxies called the Popular Mobilization Force have been bombing United States bases in Iraq and in Syria. | ||
The United States has been retaliating. | ||
In response to those strikes by attacking Iranian Revolutionary Guard bases inside of Syria and inside of Iraq. | ||
And Israel has been conducting airstrikes inside of Syria and Iraq targeting Iranian military assets in both countries. | ||
So those are two other theaters of the conflict. | ||
The other major theater is in Yemen. | ||
Yemen has been involved in a major civil war for about 15 or 20 years with the Shiite Iranian-backed Houthi movement, although they've been in control of the country for a long time now. | ||
Yemen has been in a very fragile ceasefire with Saudi Arabia. | ||
The United States has formed a coalition with Saudi Arabia to bomb the Houthi movement, and they attempted to prevent the Houthi movement from taking over Yemen. | ||
They weren't successful. | ||
And for about the last two or three years, there's been a delicate ceasefire between Saudi Arabia and the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen. | ||
But the Houthis have said that they will bomb Israel and they will attack any Israeli-linked shipping that goes through the Red Sea as long as Israel continues to bomb Gaza. | ||
And so now the United States has said that they are going to deploy a maritime force in the Red Sea to respond to any Houthi threat against shipping, international shipping, in the Red Sea. | ||
So, So these are the major dimensions. | ||
To sort of bring everybody up to speed, in case you haven't been watching the show, it's our first show of 2024 on the Gaza War. | ||
That is the conflict. | ||
And what we've been watching for and waiting to see is how much the conflict will spill outside of Gaza and become intense and potentially turn into a regional war in these areas. | ||
For example, we've been waiting to see whether Israel will engage Hezbollah in an all-out war. | ||
Will Israel invade Lebanon and attack Hezbollah? | ||
And will there be a full-on Israel-Lebanon war? | ||
That's one case. | ||
Will Iran and the United States engage each other directly in Iraq and Syria? | ||
As the attacks on U.S. | ||
bases escalate and as America's retaliations escalate, will the United States be drawn into potentially attacking Iran directly or beefing up its presence in Iraq and Syria? | ||
And then last but not least, the question is whether this conflict between Yemen and the United States will turn into an all-out war, again, between Yemen and the American-backed Saudi coalition, which would be catastrophic for a number of reasons. | ||
So that's where we are. | ||
And it seems that the conflict is heating up In basically every area, the latest developments from the past several weeks are that Israel has been striking further and further into Lebanon. | ||
Hezbollah doesn't want a war with Israel, but Israel appears to be provoking Hezbollah into attacking them. | ||
And they've been doing that by killing civilians in Lebanon, bombing Lebanon further and further into the interior of the country, further and further north of the shared border with Israel. | ||
And recently striking Hamas terrorists inside of the capital, Beirut, which we'll discuss in detail. | ||
And then there's the front in Iran where there was a major terrorist attack, which we'll talk about as well. | ||
And there's the third area, the third major theater of conflict that's intensifying, which is this U.S. | ||
Force that has been deployed to the Red Sea to respond to the Houthi threat which is disrupting the global shipping lanes. | ||
So we'll talk about all this and first I Want to talk about actually the attack in Lebanon because chronologically that happened I think two or three days ago So this is from the New York Times on | ||
On Sunday, actually on New Year's Eve, Israel targeted three senior Hamas leaders inside of the Lebanese capital, Beirut, and they, I think it was a missile strike inside of a suburb of Beirut, and they killed three Hamas officials. | ||
Lebanon and Hezbollah are not happy about it. | ||
This is the story. | ||
It says, quote, The deputy head of Hamas and two leaders of its armed wing were killed in an explosion in Lebanon on Tuesday that the group described as a Zionist raid. | ||
Hamas' leader, Ismail Haniyeh, said in a televised address that seven members of the group had been killed in the strike in a suburb of Beirut, the Lebanese capital. | ||
The office of Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not immediately comment and a military spokesman declined to discuss the matter during a briefing on Tuesday night, but two senior U.S. | ||
officials confirmed that Israel was responsible for the strike. | ||
One official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal discussions said it was most likely the first of many covert strikes that Israel will carry out against Hamas officials or operatives with any connection to the deadly October 7th assault. | ||
Al Arori, the Hamas leader, was a founder of Hamas' military wing, the Qasim Brigades, and was elected the deputy chairman of the group's political bureau in October 2017. | ||
His official role was head of Hamas in the West Bank and deputy to Haniyeh, but regional security officials said that Al Arori spent much of his time in recent years in Beirut, where he served as an ambassador to Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese armed group. | ||
Hania said two leaders of its armed wings, Samir Findi and Azam al-Akra, were among those killed in the blast, which Lebanon's civil defense agency said occurred just before 6 p.m. local time. | ||
The Hamas leader said the strike violated Lebanon's sovereignty, and Israel, he added, will not succeed in its attempts to break our people's will to persevere. | ||
So on the conflict on Israel's northern border, many have said that it seems that Israel wants a war with Hezbollah. | ||
and And to go back to the very beginning, When Hamas did their attack on Israel, very quickly Hezbollah deployed to Israel's northern border, and Lebanon evacuated that border, and Israel responded by doing the same. | ||
Israel evacuated its civilians along their border with Lebanon, and Israel deployed its force to the northern border. | ||
But from the beginning, Lebanon, or rather Hezbollah, did not commit to an all-out attack on Israel. | ||
There were very minor strikes on Israeli surveillance stations, taking out some of their cameras, taking out some of their radar, but almost no casualties and very minor strikes. | ||
And within three or four weeks of the beginning of the war in Gaza, the leader of Hezbollah came out and said that they would not engage Israel in an all-out war. | ||
And the dynamic of this is simple. | ||
Lebanon does not want a war with Israel. | ||
Their economy is bad, they're a weak country, and they suffered heavily in the previous two Israeli wars in Lebanon in the 1980s and in 2006. | ||
So although Hezbollah, some say, won the war in 2006, it was very brutal for Lebanese society, so it seemed that Hezbollah deployed to Israel's northern border, not in an offensive way, but in more of a defensive way, and potentially to deter Israel from either attacking Lebanon or from engaging in cruelty in Gaza. | ||
But the purpose of it wasn't to attack Israel. | ||
On the other hand, it would seem that Israel has sought a full-on war with Hezbollah from the very beginning. | ||
It would seem that after the attack on October 7th, Israel committed itself not only to eradicate the threat from Hamas in Gaza, But their play was more ambitious than that. | ||
They wanted also to eliminate or mitigate the threat from Hezbollah in the northern border. | ||
And they saw the attack on October 7th as a pretext to do that. | ||
As a pretext not only to retaliate against Gaza, and not only to diminish or degrade Hamas, but also as a pretext to attack all of its enemies. | ||
And probably its biggest enemy, the most preeminent local security threat to Israel, doesn't come from Hamas in Gaza, but it comes from Hezbollah in Lebanon. | ||
So it would seem that Israel, rather than Hezbollah, is the aggressor here. | ||
And we know that because Israel has been striking Hezbollah and striking Lebanon in a far more provocative way than Hezbollah has been attacking Israel. | ||
For example, Israel has been striking not just along the border with Lebanon, but deep into Lebanese territory. | ||
And this latest strike was in Lebanon's capital. | ||
In Beirut, not along the border. | ||
And this also comes amid Israeli demands. | ||
If you've been watching the show, we've covered it. | ||
Israel has been demanding that Hezbollah move its forces north of a river in Lebanon and further away from the border. | ||
It's a totally unreasonable demand. | ||
Hezbollah would never go for that. | ||
And they never go for that because of course Israel is deployed on their border. | ||
So if Hezbollah retreats deeper into Lebanon and the Israeli military remains right on the border, that leaves Lebanon vulnerable to an attack from Israel. | ||
Completely vulnerable to an attack and an offensive where Israel has evacuated their population, basically prepared for war. | ||
So Israel knows that Hezbollah would never assent to these demands, and Israel has actually demanded that the United States and the European Union intervene diplomatically to try to convince Hezbollah to move north of this river and to retreat from the border, something that Israel knows that Hezbollah won't agree to. | ||
So it would seem that this is the prelude to an offensive. | ||
That phase one was to invade northern Gaza, surround Gaza City, neutralize Hamas, and neutralize the threat in the south. | ||
And then it would appear that phase two is to provoke Hezbollah into a war. | ||
To give out an unreasonable demand, to say they have to move north of this river, involve the United States and give the appearance that there was a diplomatic overture. | ||
And then when the unreasonable demand is rejected, and while they're provoking and battering Lebanon with missile strikes and other provocative actions, they can either goad Hezbollah into attacking them, which will give them an immediate precipitating cause to go in, or they'll which will give them an immediate precipitating cause to go in, or That appears to be the case on Israel's northern border, but that's what we're watching for over there. | ||
The other big story from today is that there was a major terrorist attack inside of Iran. | ||
And this is a story also from the New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, a pair of explosions on Wednesday at a memorial for Iran's former top general, Qasem Soleimani, killed at least 103 people and wounded an additional 211, sowing fear in a country where domestic unrest and the prospect of a spiraling regional war have left many on edge. | ||
Iranian officials told state media that a pair of bombs had been placed in bags along the road toward a cemetery in the city of Kerman and exploded as a vast procession of people made their way to commemorate the fourth anniversary of Qasem Soleimani's death. | ||
The architect of the Axis of regional militias backed by Iran's hardline government, he was killed by an American drone strike in 2020. | ||
The attack in Iran on Wednesday led to finger-pointing, confusion, and speculation after no group took responsibility. | ||
Officials in the government blamed the two countries Tehran has long cast as arch-enemies, Israel and the United States. | ||
However, international intelligence experts and analysts said the attack bore the hallmarks of terrorist groups, not of Israel. | ||
Iranian officials said the roadside bombs appeared to have been detonated via remote control. | ||
In late December, Israel assassinated a senior Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander who was in charge of procuring weapons for Hezbollah and Syrian militants. | ||
Then on Tuesday, a senior Hamas official who was a liaison with Iran and Hezbollah was killed in Beirut, Lebanon. | ||
In the aftermath of the attack in Kerman, two people closely affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard and familiar with the internal debates among Iranian decision-makers say the country's military and political leaders quickly decided to hold Israel responsible for the bombings. | ||
The assessment contrasted sharply with the analysis by U.S. | ||
intelligence, according to three American officials. | ||
Early assessments indicate that Israel was not involved. | ||
The bombing, analysts say, bore the hallmarks of Islamist terrorism. | ||
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei issued a statement blaming the attack on Iran's malicious and criminal enemies, though he stopped short of naming any group or country. | ||
He vowed that Iran's enemies should know that the tragedy will have a strong response And the calls for retribution, notwithstanding, two people familiar with Iran's internal discussions said that Ayatollah Khamenei had been more cautious, instructing military commanders to pursue strategic patience and avoid getting Iran into a direct military confrontation with the United States at all costs. instructing military commanders to pursue strategic patience and avoid getting So this is the timeline. | ||
In late December, which we covered on the show, Israel killed an Iranian paramilitary commander in Syria. | ||
Yesterday, Israel assassinated three Hamas leaders in Beirut, Lebanon, who were seen as the liaison between Hamas and Hezbollah, Hezbollah being backed by Iran. | ||
And now today, there was a major terrorist attack inside of Iran, At the cemetery where people were commemorating the assassination of Soleimani, who was the general and the leader of the IRGC and the architect of this Iranian Axis, including the IRGC and the Iranian-backed militants in Syria and Iraq. | ||
What's interesting about the bombing in Iran is the obvious culprit would be Israel. | ||
Obviously! | ||
Because this is Israel's modus operandi. | ||
This is what they do. | ||
They assassinated IRGC leaders in Syria. | ||
They assassinated Hamas leaders in Lebanon. | ||
And this terrorist attack was targeting mourners who are commemorating the loss of the architect of all these groups and the leader of the IRGC inside of Iran. | ||
So it would seem that this terrorist attack, and I think there's maybe two plausible explanations. | ||
The obvious culprit would be that Israel attacked Iran, and they did this to avenge October 7th, and maybe the play is to provoke Iran or its proxies into attacking Israel. | ||
And why would Israel want to provoke Iran? | ||
Why would they want to | ||
strike iran on a very sensitive day and target civilians it would be to create a pressure or an animus for iran or its proxies to lash out against israel the purpose of that would be that israel just like on october 7th could use that as a justification to expand the war they know israel knows that the u.s president joe biden | ||
His main priority is to prevent the war from expanding. | ||
Biden does not want Israel to go to war with Hezbollah. | ||
Biden does not want the United States and Saudi Arabia to go to war against the Houthis in Yemen. | ||
He does not want to go to war against Iran. | ||
But Israel's prime objective is to do all those things. | ||
Israel wants to eliminate Hezbollah, they want to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities, and they want to eradicate the Houthis in Yemen. | ||
So it really concerns the politics within this alliance that Israel has these very ambitious goals to completely remake the region and reset the geopolitical situation among all of its neighbors. | ||
And the United States does not want that because it would come at the cost of great regional instability, more terrorism, increased energy prices, a migrant crisis, and it would embroil the United States in another quagmire, but this time throughout the entire Middle East. | ||
Maybe in a way that is somehow more expansive than our engagement in the region 15 years ago, 20 years ago. | ||
So, Biden has been attempting, as best as he can, to restrain Israel, restrain and limit the number of civilian casualties in Gaza, restrain Israel's provocative actions in Lebanon and Syria, their provocations against Hezbollah and Iran. | ||
On the other hand, Israel has been doing the opposite. | ||
Israel has been trying to provoke all these other countries, because Israel knows that if these other countries hit first, Then Israel is entitled to respond. | ||
And not only that, but it obligates the United States to support them. | ||
So if Israel bombs a bunch of civilians at a cemetery on the fourth anniversary of this Iranian war hero's death at the hands of the United States, And this incenses the Iranian population and Hezbollah does a provocative strike on Israel. | ||
Israel knows this gives them a blank check to bomb the Iranian centrifuges where Israel claims Iran is developing a nuclear arsenal or it gives Israel an excuse So that's one theory. | ||
provocative against Hezbollah and initiate a tit-for-tat escalation that leads to a war. | ||
And they know that if they have that right of reply, that they get to drag the United States along with them and back them up and support them and guarantee their security as they engage all these other enemies in several other theaters of the conflict. | ||
So that's one theory. | ||
Another theory is that potentially this was a false flag of a different variety. - Okay. | ||
That maybe this was a terrorist attack which happened to create that perception. | ||
That maybe there's a Sunni Islamist force that attacked Iran to create the perception that Israel did it. | ||
To create a public response, a public outcry by Muslims worldwide or in Iran and force the hand of Iran and the Iranian Axis of Resistance to attack Israel so that the Axis will finally confront and engage Israel and prevent a slaughter in Gaza or prevent a normalization of ties between Israel and the Arab and Gulf countries. | ||
You know, so maybe it was a setup. | ||
Either way, It would behoove the United States to say that it was Islamists. | ||
I mean, we really can't believe anybody because everybody has skin in the game here. | ||
What I mean by that is the United States would love for that latter explanation, for that alternative explanation to be real. | ||
If it was Islamists in Iran, then the United States can assure Iran that Israel didn't do it and there's no need to strike Israel. | ||
And therefore, Israel is denied that casus belli. | ||
They're denied that pretext to widen the conflict and drag us along with them. | ||
So, of course, no matter who is responsible, whether it's Israel or anybody else, of course, American intelligence would say, well, it definitely wasn't Israel. | ||
Because they don't want the conflict to expand. | ||
Although, it would track with Israel's actions that they are culpable. | ||
Because it would follow a long line of very similar other actions that have been taking place just in the last three weeks. | ||
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Yes. | |
The final theater of conflict is the last one we'll talk about and then we'll probably move on into super chats because we're almost out of time here. | ||
But the last theater of conflict which was popping off this weekend on New Year's Eve was in the Red Sea and I don't have a news article about this but in the past several weeks the Houthi movement which is in control of Yemen has declared that any and all shipping that goes through the Red Sea and then therefore the Suez Canal or the Strait of Tehran they have said is subject to be attacked by the Houthis | ||
Until Israel stops bombing Gaza or allows humanitarian aid to enter the Gaza Strip. | ||
So the Houthis have been attacking international shipping, which has caused a major headache for Europe and for European and American companies. | ||
It's also caused some problems for Egypt, and so that's in a way putting pressure on the West, and even to an extent putting pressure on Egypt to apply pressure to Israel to ascend to the Houthis' demands. | ||
But in response to this, the United States has deployed a maritime force to protect the shipping lanes. | ||
And this Sunday, the United States engaged Houthi boats and killed 10 Houthi militants. | ||
And the Houthis have said that this is not going to make them back down, they're going to continue their attacks on international shipping. | ||
And the United States is now contemplating striking Houthi bases inside of Yemen. | ||
But here's the problem with this. | ||
There has been a very intense conflict between Saudi Arabia and Yemen for like the past 10 years. | ||
And even with United States support, even with U.S. | ||
air support, and with major arms deals with Saudi Arabia, and U.S. | ||
training of the Saudi military, Saudi Arabia was never able to prevail over the Houthis in Yemen. | ||
It was kind of like their Afghanistan. | ||
And basically Saudi Arabia capitulated. | ||
They have allowed the Houthis to remain and they've had this very fragile ceasefire with the Houthis. | ||
And so if the United States engages Yemen, if the United States bombs Yemen, there's a good chance that 1. the Houthis will not stop attacking international shipping and 2. | ||
This would potentially incite the Houthis to begin attacking Saudi Arabia. | ||
And there was a major missile attack against Saudi's oil facilities in their eastern province by the Houthi rebels in 2019. | ||
The Houthis have, like Hezbollah, they have a huge stock of short and medium range missiles which they can use to attack Israel and they can use to attack Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries. | ||
And so if a conflict happens in Yemen, this could embroil the entire Arabian Peninsula in a war. | ||
It would draw in Saudi Arabia. | ||
It would draw in the United States. | ||
Fighting an adversary which a US-Saudi coalition was unable to defeat for the last 10 years. | ||
And that would also compromise international shipping in the Red Sea, which is where 10% of the world's petroleum products flow. | ||
In addition to all kinds of other international trade. | ||
So, when you take all this together, you're seeing the beginnings Of a regional war. | ||
We're talking about not one of these things, but all of these things happening all at the same time. | ||
We're talking about Israel going to war against Hezbollah in Lebanon. | ||
We're talking about U.S. | ||
and Israel missile strikes and air campaigns against the IRGC militants in Syria and Iraq. | ||
We're talking about potentially Israeli and American strikes in Iran targeting their nuclear facilities and we're talking about another Arabian Peninsula war with a Saudi coalition against Yemen that then draws in the Red Sea and compromises all of the global shipping that goes through the Suez Canal. | ||
So then this turns into, I mean, this is literally a war like we have not seen in the Middle East since 1973. | ||
Because you consider, everybody knows that the Middle East has been a hotspot for conflict in the past 10 years. | ||
And maybe at any given time you've had one or two or three wars going on. | ||
The last Israel-Lebanon war was in 2006. | ||
The United States began their drawdown from Iraq in 2011, re-engaged when ISIS emerged, but has had a minimal presence there ever since Trump was elected. | ||
The United States left Afghanistan in 2019. | ||
The war between the Saudis and Yemen ended a couple years ago. | ||
But we're now talking about a war like we have never seen where literally every country is engaged all at the same time. | ||
There's not one country that will not be engaged. | ||
It's gonna be Israel, it's gonna be Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Qatar. | ||
They will all be a giant battlefield. | ||
And worse still, we will be involved. | ||
Israel can't fight all these countries all at the same time. | ||
They're writing checks that we are going to have to cash. | ||
When they threatened Hezbollah and Iran and the Houthis and Iraqis... | ||
They're writing a check that only the United States can and will be expected to cash. | ||
So we will be fighting Iran which is a significant military power. | ||
We will be fighting on multiple very difficult battlefields. | ||
We will be fighting enemies with cheap but very effective defensive technology like new drones that Iran produces and new missiles and loitering munitions that are designed to exact high casualties in a prolonged war of attrition. | ||
And by the way, then you zoom out even further and realize we're being drawn into a regional conflict in the Middle East the likes of which we have never seen or not seen in 50 years. | ||
While at the same time, we're the arsenal of democracy for Ukraine fighting a proxy war over there engaging all the resources that NATO can provide and then some. | ||
And at the same time as that's going on, we're preparing and arming Taiwan for a proxy war against China 100 miles from their shores. | ||
So this is a recipe I hope everybody realizes. | ||
It's not just a massive war that will kill a lot of Americans and cost a lot of money. | ||
We're talking about a war that ends the United States. | ||
And I don't think people realize that. | ||
People understand that there is a risk of escalation where the United States is engaging Iran and multiple enemies in different theaters. | ||
But people don't realize we can't do that, actually. | ||
They don't realize that we are engaged, if we're in the Middle East, we're engaged in three proxy wars. | ||
We're engaged in three world wars. | ||
Which we cannot do. | ||
And then you add to that the risk also of these other fringe conflicts. | ||
We talked last year about a coalition war by the economic community of West Africa against Niger. | ||
And we're talking about Venezuela deploying troops to the border of Guyana because Guyana just discovered oil and now Venezuela wants to seize that region. | ||
We're talking about a war that taxes the United States and overextends the United States military commitment so much that this country will collapse at home. | ||
People think, oh, this is a war over there that will be taxing. | ||
This is a war that will cause American society to collapse. | ||
Because we have committed to arming Ukraine. | ||
We have sent them all of our tanks, missiles, I mean, you name it. | ||
Everything in our stockpile that is disposable to send, we're sending and we cannot replenish it. | ||
We're arming Taiwan for something that will be even more difficult and more brutal and more protracted than our proxy war with Russia. | ||
And in the middle of those things, I mean we're winding down our failed war in Ukraine, which was way too expensive, we're winding up what's going to be a failed war in Taiwan, which will be far more expensive, and we're sandwiching in the middle a total regional conflict with the entire Middle East, the likes of which we've never seen. | ||
And this is happening at the same time that we have a $30 trillion debt, unprecedented trillion dollar deficits, a migrant crisis which is bringing public services in all of our major cities to the brink of collapse without a bailout, still reeling and recovering from the COVID recession which has destroyed commercial real estate and caused all kinds of other problems. | ||
It's like this is the calamity. | ||
This is the big one. | ||
This is the calamity. | ||
When people talk about a point of no return, they talk about this feeling of dread, this calamity that we all understand is inevitable and that we're lurching towards every day, this is it. | ||
We cannot do this. | ||
We can't fight this war. | ||
And you know what? | ||
It's almost unstoppable. | ||
There's like a momentum to it. | ||
It's almost like even though we can see that we're hurtling towards a cliff, even if you slam on the brakes, we're still going off the edge. | ||
Because we've committed that we're going to go to war with China if Taiwan is attacked. | ||
Which it will be within a decade, at the very latest. | ||
And we've committed to defending Israel, who is keen on drawing us in to destroy Iran. | ||
And of course, committed to Ukraine. | ||
I mean, that already happened. | ||
That's ongoing. | ||
And that's not even to mention all these other little things that are going to happen. | ||
The Great General Global Disorder, where Venezuela will attack Guyana, and Azerbaijan will attack Armenia, and attempt to take that corridor, And maybe there'll be conflict between, with Kosovo and Syria, and there'll be conflict potentially between Greece and Turkey. | ||
I mean, there's really, there's no limit to what's possible when the United States chokes like we're about to. | ||
So, the good days are over. | ||
It's over. | ||
There is going to be a global calamity, and it's going to be intense, and it's going to be brutal, and on the other side of it is going to be a completely different world. | ||
Different than the end of World War II, different than the end of the Cold War. | ||
It will be a different world order. | ||
So, the stakes here are very, very, very high. | ||
And you really have to you have to look at the big picture Because of course everything is related to everything else When you talk about these things You know like the the southern border being open and these migrants being here and like that that's part of it, too So Anyway, that's that. | ||
So that's the update. | ||
That's kind of the 2024 outlook. | ||
You know, people have talked about the beginning of the multipolar age, and we're just turning the pages on this every day. | ||
It's new chapters of this multipolar age every day. | ||
Really, the commitment to Ukraine was the beginning of the end, and we could have turned it all around, really. | ||
There was a time where Made an overture to the United States to make a deal. | ||
And the deal was this. | ||
This was all telegraphed by Putin years in advance. | ||
If you know anything about the evolving situation with Ukraine, which goes back 20 years, NATO has been pushing for Ukraine to join NATO since 2007-2008, and then of course there was the Euromaidan coup in 2014, after which Russia seized Crimea and the secessionist war of Luhansk and Donetsk began against the government in Kiev. | ||
But there was also another, but of course the Euromaidan and the secessionist war was principally concerning the westward pivot of the government in Ukraine of Petro Poroshenko, that he wanted Ukraine to join the European Union and NATO | ||
And this would be catastrophic because it moves NATO's jurisdiction right up to Russia's borders, it does involve the naval base at Sevastopol, and maybe more importantly, it allows NATO to deploy missiles in Ukraine. | ||
And this is also something that Trump blundered with. | ||
Trump deployed medium-range ballistic missiles in Ukraine and brought missiles back into Eastern Europe. | ||
And a lot of people don't know this, but Putin made an overture to the West, to Trump, in 2020, and said, let's make a deal. | ||
Let's have mutual weapons inspections. | ||
Let's remove our medium-range missiles from each other's borders. | ||
Let's commit that Ukraine remains neutral. | ||
That's the deal. | ||
And Trump said no. | ||
And Putin reiterated that demand in 2021. | ||
He said the same thing in the fall of 2021. | ||
He said you have to move these missiles away. | ||
And Biden said no. | ||
But it was a good deal. | ||
And that's when Putin began surrounding Ukraine with 200,000 troops. | ||
And it was then in a security conference that Zelensky went out and said that Because the West is not living up to their obligations under the Budapest Memorandum that we're going to acquire a nuclear weapon, which is insane. | ||
And that's when Putin went in. | ||
But that was the hubris of the West. | ||
That was the hubris of the West failing to realize that this is not the same Russia of the year 2000. | ||
If you've been paying attention, Russia Has consolidated. | ||
They are on a much better footing than they were at the beginning of this century. | ||
They have military bases now in Syria. | ||
They are operating in West Africa. | ||
They are now a modern country. | ||
They have sort of rejoined the modern world after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and they want their land back. | ||
Just like after Brest-Litovsk, they want their land back that was stolen from them when they were weak after the fall of the Soviet Union. | ||
And the United States could have allowed for Russia to maintain a reasonable sphere of influence and accommodated this, this inevitable change in the balance of power, It was inevitable that Russia would be relatively more powerful in 2020 than it was in 2000. | ||
That the power differential between the United States and Russia would shrink. | ||
As Russia stabilized, and as their economy recovered, and as their military was rebuilt, of course Russia would not be as weak as they were in the year 2000 in perpetuity. | ||
And so naturally, Russia would want to reassert its historic sphere of influence and to protect its vital strategic interests in the Black Sea and in Ukraine. | ||
But the United States wouldn't let that happen. | ||
And Russia called our bluff. | ||
And Russia engaged us in a war that we would not ever fully commit to and which we couldn't win without fully committing. | ||
And I mean that Russia knew that the United States would never attack Russia over Ukraine, which is not a NATO country. | ||
And Russia knew that they could not defeat Russia without attacking Russia. | ||
They would have to use up all their stockpiles, which we don't even have the industrial base to replenish ever. | ||
So they knew. | ||
And that was the beginning of the end. | ||
I mean, really, you could look at Afghanistan, arguably that was the beginning of the end in some ways. | ||
But I would argue the seeds were there even before that, even before Afghanistan. | ||
So, you know, this is our fault. | ||
We could have done a sort of strategic realignment Like a Nixon era, we could have used diplomacy rather than aggressive threats and missiles. | ||
We could have used diplomacy to rebalance the world order, recognizing that 20 years into the 21st century, China and Russia and Iran are far more powerful than they were at the beginning of the century, and that the United States is actually in a far weaker position. | ||
And we could have used diplomacy to adjust based on this changing reality. | ||
But now we're doomed. | ||
Now we are fucked. | ||
I mean, we are 100% fucked because our economy's weak, our debt is too high, we can't dig our way out of it, we don't have manufacturing, so all this equipment we're using, we don't even make it anymore. | ||
They talked at one point about being able to fight two wars at once. | ||
We can barely fight one. | ||
We have no border. | ||
All these domestic problems are catching up to us. | ||
And our enemies are smart. | ||
They realize it. | ||
Our allies are smart. | ||
They realize it too. | ||
Our allies have been getting the short end of the stick for a long time. | ||
Our enemies have been under the thumb of us for a long time. | ||
And now the reign of the United States is over. | ||
And it can't come soon enough for a lot of these countries. | ||
So... Even our allies are taking what they can get before the inevitable demise. | ||
It's a very bleak picture. | ||
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So... | |
Anyway, so that's that. | ||
That's not a very uplifting message, but we are in a bad spot. | ||
Here's the good news. | ||
The silver lining in all of this is that this is something that is necessary. | ||
We recognize that the American regime is evil. | ||
It's full of atheists. | ||
It's full of Jews. | ||
It is promoting, basically, Satanism. | ||
It is promoting transgenderism, and homosexuality, and feminism, and abortion, and instability, and just abominations all over the world, and we need a radical change. | ||
I mean, we can all recognize that American society is dying because there's a cancer inside of it. | ||
There's a cancer in the center of it, and it is radiating throughout the entire country. | ||
It's poisoning everything. | ||
It's poisoning the children. | ||
It's poisoning the food and water. | ||
It's poisoning the communities. | ||
The rot is touching everything. | ||
And the only way that we're going to remove it is with a tremendously destabilizing event. | ||
It's the only way. | ||
Just like it took World War I and the complete collapse of the Russian military to depose the Tsar, just like it took the breakup of the Soviet Union for Russia to abandon communism, And like everything else throughout history, it does require this historical inflection point. | ||
It requires a big shake-up where the ordinary rules don't apply, where the ordinary is suspended for there to be a radical change. | ||
So, you know, we shouldn't be too broken up about it, but we shouldn't celebrate it either. | ||
This is going to be a time of trial and tumult and suffering, and it's going to be absolutely brutal if it plays out on this timeline. | ||
However, there will be a silver lining, which is that maybe we can get better leadership on the other side of it. | ||
Maybe this is the necessary trauma that will get the United States to heal itself, to revive itself. | ||
This will be the shock to the system that jolts the white race and jolts the sleeping giant, which is America, awake and revives America as a true nation and revives a religious fervor. | ||
Maybe we need that. | ||
Because it seems that it would almost never happen otherwise, unless there was something where the elites are stressed. | ||
You know, where the system is under a tremendous amount of stress. | ||
It seems that's the only way to have any kind of radical change. | ||
So, this is the crucible that we will have to endure. | ||
It's our penance. | ||
And it's the only way I think that the country will transform. | ||
And people call that accelerationism. | ||
I don't call that accelerationism. | ||
I just think that's what's on the menu. | ||
That's just reality. | ||
I think that's just where everything you look at is pointing. | ||
When you look at these problems, the problems are so bad, it's like people just throw up their arms in resignation and say, what the fuck are we going to do? | ||
The debt, the border, these wars that are happening, the corruption. | ||
People throw their arms up and they just say, It's over. | ||
Now, is the arrow pointing towards, like, we're gonna get a handle on any of these things that gradually will reform them or turn them around? | ||
No. | ||
The arrow is clearly pointing towards, like, this just won't work anymore. | ||
It's gonna break. | ||
And then once it breaks, maybe there'll be a mandate to fix it. | ||
It, like, clearly, everyone feels this. | ||
Everyone knows this in their heart. | ||
This is more likely than that, you know, the, the freaking, you know, national populists are gonna gather all the blacks and Hispanics and elect Ron DeSantis to fix it all, that he's gonna pass a better CHIPS Act, and we're gonna build more fa- It's not gonna happen, like, it's not gonna happen. | ||
That's just not gonna happen. | ||
So I think everybody kind of knows this is what's, uh, This is what we're headed for. | ||
And it's not a question of, you know, working towards that end. | ||
It's working with the forces of history, working with what we've got. | ||
And this is where it's headed, but the silver lining is that maybe we can take advantage. | ||
It's an opportunity. | ||
It's a risk and it's an opportunity. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
That's my outlook. | ||
That's my other outlook for 2024 and beyond. | ||
But it's going to be exciting. | ||
It's going to be an exciting year. | ||
I just hope I don't get blown up or killed or whatever. | ||
You know, knock on wood, pray for me please, because it's not the most unlikely thing that would happen. | ||
I hope I can see the end of it. | ||
I don't want to be one of these idiots that just gets blown up or whatever. | ||
You know or get sent over to Iran. | ||
I don't want to fight Iranians. | ||
Oh You know, I'd be over there. | ||
I'd be like I'd be surrendering I'd be like, hey, let me join you guys now kidding. | ||
I wouldn't do that. | ||
I don't want to go to jail, but I Want to live to be on the other side I want to hail the new Caesar the coming of the new Caesar of America and All right, but that's that. | ||
Okay, let's move on. | ||
Let's take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
Thoughts? | ||
Yeah, it's a very ugly picture. | ||
The world is coming apart. | ||
Maybe Trump can bring us back from the break. | ||
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Because that'll be critical. | |
Okay, let's take a look. | ||
Let me get set up here. | ||
We'll see what we got. | ||
These super chats aren't clearing. | ||
I need them to clear. | ||
Okay, there we go. | ||
unidentified
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Alright. | |
Reality person sent $10. | ||
Trade offer. | ||
Women can hold any political office but cannot vote. | ||
Or women can vote but cannot hold any political office. | ||
Thanks for the show, man. | ||
No, dude. | ||
They should have neither. - Cannon Lord sent $3. | ||
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I'd go with the mid skin fade, two inches left on the top. - For me, you think I should get that haircut? | |
Yeah, maybe. | ||
My hair is out of control, dude. | ||
It's too long. | ||
And I never know what to do with it. | ||
I don't know what I look at this. | ||
It's just... My hair is crazy. | ||
It's like wavy. | ||
I don't know what to do with it. | ||
Seagull sent $3, didn't get a chance to use my call in for the charity stream, was just gonna say I have been watching since YouTube days and I hope to catch you at FPAC. | ||
Hey, well thanks buddy! | ||
Yeah, maybe I'll see you at FPAC. | ||
Some Eva sent $5, there was no mass rape on October 7th. | ||
No forensic evidence, nobody claiming to have gotten raped, and no video footage of rape. | ||
Yet it's still taken for granted that it happened. | ||
Sadly, questioning the official Israeli narrative is akin to a Nudah Shoah. | ||
Oy vey, it's a Nudah Shoah, yeah, nice. | ||
Yeah, that's true, that was fake. | ||
Andrew Ness sent $5. | ||
I mentioned Christopher Ballin yesterday. | ||
He was the first guy talking about Israeli involvement in 9-11 and the war on terror. | ||
Way better than Ryan Dawson. | ||
Really amazing lectures on Rumble. | ||
But I haven't seen anything new from him since 2018. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, yeah, maybe I'll check him out. | |
I don't really know anything about him. | ||
Only Jesus sent $10. | ||
We love Brother Nathaniel. | ||
Yeah, he's pretty great. | ||
Thrax sent $5. | ||
Brother Nathaniel is great. | ||
Straight from the horse's mouth on so much of our talking points. | ||
Not just Jewish power, but Christian theology and Christ as the fulfillment of the Old Testament prophecies. | ||
Yeah, you know, I think he got banned from stuff because I remember him being a lot bigger like two or three years ago. | ||
But yeah, I was always a fan. | ||
When I really first started getting red-pilled, I watched some of his stuff. | ||
Thrax sent $3. | ||
They really can't handle allot. | ||
Nice callback. | ||
Labcraft sent $5. | ||
I was surprised to hear you're not in favor of nuclear energy. | ||
The technology behind it is futuristic and they look awesome. | ||
I don't trust all that. | ||
It feels like it's gonna put nuclear bombs all over the country. | ||
But admittedly, I don't know anything about the tech. | ||
TheRumbling sent $3. | ||
Did you always suspect Bath? | ||
Or was there a time you thought he was just a zany guy? | ||
Well, I never thought he was funny. | ||
I always thought that his bit was really cringe. | ||
And I always suspected that he was older. | ||
But I didn't really start to suspect him until he started bad-jacketing me during Grouper Leadership Summit. | ||
And then I kind of forgot about him, and then he really went in on me when all that drama was happening a couple years ago. | ||
And that's when I said, all right, fuckface, like, game on. | ||
Like, time for you to fucking go. | ||
Because, you know, when all that drama was going on, everybody thought I was finished. | ||
When there was a big mutiny by all these stupid imbeciles that used to work for me, and, you know, where the fuck are they now? | ||
And they said, oh, yeah, we're the ones that make America first work! | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
You know, when they all thought they were gonna bring me down, all these pissant losers thought they were gonna take me out. | ||
Everybody went in on me. | ||
They smelled blood in the water. | ||
Everybody wanted to get their licks in. | ||
And Bronze Age Pervert was one of them, amplifying all that shit. | ||
And I said, you know what? | ||
Every one of these people that tried to fuck with me, I'm gonna go on the attack and I'm gonna fuck with all them. | ||
And so I did some digging and I found out that he was this, like, crazy Jew-Zionist. | ||
That's when I really found out what was up. | ||
And then I started pressing it and that's why I'll never let it go. | ||
You can't let shit like that go. | ||
If somebody thinks you're about to die and they go in to kill you... | ||
When your back is against a wall like that, you have to, like, take the spear and shove it in their fucking face and push them until they're off the cliff, like. | ||
So I will never let that go. | ||
I will never let go of naming him as a Jew-Zionist. | ||
He can never be given any quarter because he, from the beginning, from the very beginning in 2019, tried to take me out and abort the Groyper mission because he's a Jew. | ||
And nobody can forget that. | ||
unidentified
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So... That's how I feel about it. | |
Hey, thank you for the super chat. | ||
- Hey, thank you for the super chat. - Thanks for the fact. thank you for the super chat. - Thanks for the Thanks for the fact. | ||
That'd be something if he came around, wouldn't it be? | ||
1888, you're shaping American politics. | ||
What's destiny's legacy? | ||
unidentified
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Praying he comes around. - That'd be something if he came around, wouldn't it be? | |
But yeah, it's true. - Chad Champion sent $3. | ||
Maybe you should just do a kick gambling deal, but politics related, you could definitely start parlays on events. | ||
Plus 100 if Iran is nuked by Israel minus 300 if China and Russia join the war. | ||
Nah, I don't believe in gambling. | ||
I would never do that. | ||
Magnus sent $3, where I'll take yesterday when you said you're against nuclear. | ||
I think you went a little too far when you referred to it as Judean physics. | ||
Did I say that? | ||
I don't think I did. | ||
Uh, yeah, no, I'm against nuclear. | ||
unidentified
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I like oil. | |
Yeah, I agree. | ||
Bad Champion sent $5, what's her take on the Epstein flight list thing? | ||
I think it's Megasuce and all info from the case is gonna be massively regulated. | ||
I think Epstein names are gonna be used by rival factions in the elite like a suicide bomb. | ||
Yeah, I agree. | ||
I'll probably cover it tomorrow or Friday. | ||
Ricky Schiffer sent $3, America is not a young land, it is old and dirty, and evil. | ||
Before the settlers, before the Indians, the evil was there, waiting. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, that's a great quote, it's true. | |
San sent $10, for your chocolate chocolate chip ice cream. | ||
unidentified
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Thanks. | |
Ricky Schiffer sent $3, correction, there is no present. | ||
Like energy, information is conserved. | ||
There is only the past. | ||
And possibly a future. | ||
Read a science book. | ||
I recommend Black Hole Wars by Leonard Susskind. | ||
unidentified
|
Sounds gay. | |
Sounds like a gay science book, and you're wrong about that. | ||
A bro said, uh, energy's concern... the law of thermodynamics says that energy is concern... Blow it out your ass, fag nerd. | ||
Science is gay and for fucking's sake, that's... | ||
House AF sent $3, 1. | ||
My supremely venerated Nick, I am confounded by your eloquence and intelligence. | ||
You evince a colossal erudition of English, and a sapient acuity into sundry topics. | ||
You enthrall me with your wit. | ||
House AF sent $3, too. | ||
And edify me with your wisdom. | ||
You are a peerless exemplar of a scholar and a gentleman. | ||
I laud you for your feats and goals, and wish you well in your ventures. | ||
You have my respect and esteem, nigga. | ||
Wow, thank you. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, that's a great post. | |
Dude, I explained it all. | ||
You're the absolute WORST! | ||
I explained it yesterday. | ||
This is what they're all going with now. | ||
Tucker, Chris Rufo, Abe Foxman. | ||
of op going with the alt-sog thing while appealing to WNs. | ||
Is he going to be a face fag or something? | ||
Dude, I explained it all. | ||
You're the absolute worst! | ||
I explained it yesterday. | ||
This is what they're all going with now. | ||
Tucker, Chris Rufo, Abe Foxman, they sent out the bat signal and they said, we need to race cuck because white identity will exclude Jews and the anti-white stuff is harming Jews. | ||
because Because they recognize that because of this war in Israel, the more that there is DEI stuff, the more it's going to hurt Jews. | ||
And if white identity takes off, that doesn't mean DEI goes away, it just means that there's a battle. | ||
And so the DEI people continue to hurt Jews and hurt Jewish power and undermine Israel. | ||
So they want to roll all that back and go back to a race-blind society where the left ignores Israel and the Jews. | ||
That's what this is about. | ||
They want to reframe the left. | ||
It's really about the left. | ||
They think that it's more viable for the right to push the left to embrace race blindness. | ||
They think it's more viable for the right to get the left to roll back A couple of updates to away from DEI and anti-white and roll it back to good old race blindness from, you know, Crash from 15 years ago, that movie. | ||
They think that's more viable than for white identity to take off and protect Jews. | ||
You know, because me and Keith have been having this dialogue and Keith has been saying it also that You know, the Zionists really have nowhere to go. | ||
That there's this generational problem that the left hates Israel, and the left is hegemonic, and that's a big problem. | ||
You know, the old guard left, the old guard right love Israel, but the younger generation doesn't give a shit about Israel. | ||
And Costano Amariu is looking at these Gentiles and saying, you know, look at my Nazi's dog. | ||
White identity is never going to take off, and you're never going to care about Israel. | ||
So they think that Israel's security lies in this multiracial populism and this colorblind meritocracy idea where we're gonna get basically we're gonna get the left to take one step back. | ||
And they think that's the most viable way to get the left off of Israel's back. | ||
Because the DEI stuff is making the left hate Israel and that's a problem because the left runs America. | ||
So it's really coming from these guys like Bill Ackman. | ||
Pay close attention how Bill Ackman moves. | ||
Bill Ackman has said, whoa, all of a sudden I hate DEI. | ||
Why? | ||
Because DEI is making everyone hate the Jews. | ||
And Bill Ackman is like a left-wing Jew who funds Harvard. | ||
So he was like, well I didn't care about DEI when it was picking on white people, but now I can see that DEI has metastasized and Jews aren't a part of it. | ||
So now Bill Ackman is saying, you know what? | ||
This is a real problem. | ||
We need like A tepid commitment to free speech and race blindness and go back to, like, MLK. | ||
And this is, like, this is coming from right-wing Jewry. | ||
It's coming from Abe Foxman. | ||
It's coming from the ZOA. | ||
It's coming from Bill Ackman. | ||
It's coming from the constellation of Jewish-funded conservative groups. | ||
Follow the conversation. | ||
It's all out there. | ||
Tucker's pushing it. | ||
And this is for the benefit of the State of Israel. | ||
It's for the benefit of the Zionist subversion of the right. | ||
You're not gonna hear this anywhere else, by the way. | ||
Only I'm saying this. | ||
Saint Sugar the Conspiracy Cat official fan club sent $25. | ||
AJ, Tucker, etc. | ||
are all doing it intentionally. | ||
Remember my super chat last week during the 12 hours Christmas live chat near the end? | ||
Give the microphone to PPL like you and have plausible deniability when you do your thing. | ||
White hat agent style. | ||
Ask him next time. | ||
Follow me on Rumble for all the answers. | ||
Same name. | ||
You're totally wrong about that. | ||
Because he has no rebuttal. | ||
$10, Brother Nathaniel, rich and powerful Jews use their fortune and influence for their ethnic interests. | ||
Alex Jones, so do you believe in magic and what do you think about Hitler? | ||
Because he has no rebuttal. | ||
That's all he can offer. | ||
*phone rings* Gross! | ||
Miles McGee sent $20, "Hey Nick, I watch clips of your show every night with my girlfriend. | ||
She especially finds your disdain for women entertaining, as do I." Okay, gross, thank you for that. | ||
John Richards sent $10, "Christ is King." Love you Nick. | ||
Can you tell me the reason why you feel that Protestants like myself are enemies just to acknowledge no hierarchy among men and put Jesus first by sticking to scripture? | ||
Old Irish wars shouldn't affect moving forward as Christians now together. | ||
Truce. | ||
Victory hand. | ||
Ha ha! | ||
Nope! | ||
No, bitch. | ||
No. | ||
Because, listen. | ||
You know, that's great and everything, but shut up, okay? | ||
No offense. | ||
This is a Catholic movement. | ||
And you guys are wrong. | ||
So, I mean, we're not going to get anywhere by making compromises with people that are wrong and saying, well, let's just defer these disagreements until later. | ||
That's how we got here. | ||
That's the basis of liberalism. | ||
That's how liberalism started, at least according to some of the Straussians. | ||
That there were these religious wars between Catholics and Protestants, and they made this decision, and they called it national sovereignty, and they said, we're not going to kill each other forever over these religious differences. | ||
You could be Protestant, you could be Catholic, we'll all leave each other alone. | ||
And then people started to say, why even be Christian at all? | ||
Why even fight over any differences? | ||
Let's all just agree to disagree. | ||
And this is how you get nihilism, this is how you get the roots of the modern age. | ||
And so, absolutely not. | ||
And I love how you slipped that shit in there. | ||
You're the... Listen, I don't come on the show every day and say, you know, bash Protestants. | ||
I'm Catholic. | ||
You know I'm Catholic. | ||
This is a Catholic movement. | ||
You know it's Catholic. | ||
But you can never let that go. | ||
You know, there are plenty of Protestants in here, and they know the score, and they know how it is, and they don't pick the fight. | ||
But people like you come in here, you just can't accept it, can you? | ||
You just can't accept that this is a Catholic movement or that I'm Catholic. | ||
You gotta come in here and say, hey man, lay off, you know, shoes brother, but you know, just because we think the Bible's, listen, we know what you believe, we disagree, you're wrong. | ||
So I love they slipped that in there, oh just because we stick to scripture. | ||
I love when they say that Catholics stick to scripture too. | ||
But you know who created the Bible? | ||
Catholics! | ||
We're sticking to scripture! | ||
Who created scripture? | ||
Catholics! | ||
Who created the Bible? | ||
Catholics. | ||
Jesus didn't leave a Bible. | ||
Catholics created the Bible. | ||
Jesus created a church. | ||
And here's your problem, pal. | ||
Who says what's scriptural and what isn't? | ||
Put together with their discernment, guided by the Holy Spirit, the scripture. | ||
That's where scripture... | ||
Who says... | ||
And here's your problem, pal. | ||
Who says what's scriptural and what isn't? | ||
What about the apocrypha? | ||
Who's going to determine which apocryphal texts are actually scripture and which ones aren't? | ||
Who determines the biblical canon? | ||
You talk about scripture. | ||
What scripture, my friend? | ||
There's a lot of scripture. | ||
What's canon and what isn't? | ||
What's legitimate and what isn't legitimate? | ||
Who says? | ||
Who determines that? | ||
You? | ||
Any individual? | ||
Okay, well I disagree. | ||
You think there's 66 books? | ||
I think there's more. | ||
So when we disagree, who determines who's right and wrong? | ||
That's a big problem. | ||
When we disagree about the doctrine, as all the Protestants do, you got Presbyterians and Lutherans and Seventh-day Adventists and Pentecostals and Charismatics and Mormons who believe there's other books, who comes along and says, and says otherwise? | ||
You're telling me that, you know, maybe the, uh, you know, this sect of independent Baptists, you know, this church does it right and everyone else is going to hell? | ||
I mean, that doesn't even make any sense. | ||
Oh, because of Scripture? | ||
Okay, well, you know, do you think Jesus never anticipated people disagreeing? | ||
Never anticipated disagreement even about what constitutes scripture or what constitutes a translation or a correct interpretation. | ||
I mean, you can't even agree about which books are correct. | ||
You can't even agree about which books are actually inspired, let alone what they mean, let alone what if we're going to use the Septuagint or the Masoretic text. | ||
So, you got a big problem there. | ||
This Bible alone stuff, this faith alone stuff, you got a big problem with all that. | ||
And we don't believe in that. | ||
So, no. | ||
There's going to be no truce. | ||
I mean, I'm not going to go out of my way to attack Protestants. | ||
Okay? | ||
And obviously, I have less of a problem with Protestants than I do with Jews or Muslims. | ||
And I have less of a problem with East Orthodox than I do with Protestants. | ||
This is a Catholic movement, and, you know, like I said, it's a political movement, so I try to be as ecumenical as possible to everybody, even Muslims, you know, and even some Jews who support us, because it's, you know, fundamentally it's a political movement, inspired by Catholicism, of course, but, you know, but the Catholic doctrine is central To our politics. | ||
It is central. | ||
This individualism stuff, this, you know, Protestant stuff, this private relationship and all that? | ||
It's just not a part of it. | ||
And who opened the door for all these problems? | ||
Who opened the doors for the Jews to walk back into the UK? | ||
To walk back into England in the first place? | ||
Catholics have been fighting this battle for a long time. | ||
You guys came around 500 years ago and opened up the floodgates. | ||
To these people and you know, take a look at all these Christian Zionists. | ||
Sorry, are any of them super Catholic? | ||
I'm pretty sure they're all evangelicals. | ||
So, and that doesn't mean I hate you guys. | ||
I mean, I love Christians. | ||
I love all people that believe in Jesus and all of that, but no, we have severe doctrinal differences. | ||
I don't believe there's salvation outside the Catholic Church, and I think you're wrong. | ||
And Catholic doctrine specifically says not to embrace this, you know, Bringing all the religions together, this universalism stuff, that's the beginning of the end. | ||
Once you start to make compromises with one, I mean, what's the difference between, let's say, Muslims that insinuate, well, we believe Jesus was a prophet, we gotta draw some lines somewhere. | ||
And the Catholic Church is pretty clear about where we're gonna draw them. | ||
unidentified
|
So... Sorry. | |
I love you too, buddy. | ||
I love you too, but I don't, and you know, but Protestants always, it's a big part of them being Southerners too. | ||
Southerners and Protestants, they have this passive-aggressive way. | ||
Why do you feel like Protestants like me are enemies? | ||
Just because we believe, just because we stick to scripture. | ||
Like what, what a feminine thing to say. | ||
Why do you think I am an enemy just because I stick to scripture? | ||
Listen, one, I don't see you as an enemy. | ||
We love everybody and I love Christians, but it's that, you know, we don't even disagree because you stick to scripture, we stick to scripture. | ||
We believe you have a problem that you don't submit to the real church. | ||
It's got nothing to do. | ||
Yeah, us Catholics are like, yeah, we don't care. | ||
What do you think we do in Mass every Sunday, pal? | ||
It's called, we use the Bible as a worship book. | ||
So... | ||
I can't stand when Protestants come around and they say stuff like, you know, oh, well, you're not biblical and blah blah blah. | ||
Give me a break with that. | ||
Ricky Schiffer sent $3. | ||
unidentified
|
A nuclear power plant should be designated... He does his passive-aggressive thing and then says, hey, truce, man. | |
No, no truce. | ||
Listen, I accept you, but you have to accept that I'm Catholic and it's a Catholic movement. | ||
Okay, this Protestant theology, it just isn't serious. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
That's your problem, not mine. | ||
And what are we going to do with all the nuclear waste? | ||
A nuclear power plant should be designated to every major city, which generate a wireless energy transfer to the infrastructure where vehicles and buildings affixed with Tesla coils can receive it. | ||
And what are we going to do with all the nuclear waste? | ||
What are we going to do with all this radioactive material that's created by the nuclear power plants? | ||
I suppose we could blast it off into space. | ||
I don't know, but that seems like maybe asking for trouble. | ||
Rip scrotum grow I percent four dollars. | ||
2020 started out with Kobe Bryant's helicopter crash. | ||
2024 started out with the Japanese airplane crash. | ||
Are we getting lockdowns or something again? | ||
Zero. | ||
I think you're reading too much into that. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know how I feel about all that. | ||
I wasn't one of the hosts. | ||
I think it was a caller who said that. | ||
I'm a little freaky. | ||
Red Scare Girls has the hots for you and feels like she's cheating on her boyfriend for you. | ||
What da? | ||
I'd maybe there's something there, Nick. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, love, love, love, love you. - Uh, yeah, I saw that. | |
I don't know. | ||
I don't know how I feel about all that. | ||
I wasn't one of the hosts. | ||
I think it was a caller who said that. | ||
But a little freaky. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't like being sexualized like that. - Ricky Schiffer sent $3. | |
No country would attack America. | ||
Because to do so would be to declare war on all of the world leaders who have investments in our free market economy. | ||
Our military is a mercenary. | ||
unidentified
|
Huh? | |
Goomba Growiper sent $10, from one blue-eyed white Italian Catholic to another. | ||
Thank you for everything you do. | ||
God bless you and the Growipers. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
God bless. | ||
Totally normal one, by the way. | ||
Hey, I'm blue-eyed white Italian Catholic too. | ||
You are? | ||
Another blue-eyed white Italian Catholic? | ||
My man! | ||
My man! | ||
Let's go! | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm so full of... I'm so full of anger. | |
Hey, God bless. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Goomba Groyper had to remind me he's Italian. | ||
How about Spocone Groyper? | ||
Does that work better? | ||
That's mean. | ||
That's mean. | ||
Thank you, though. | ||
Jimmy Stakes sent $5. | ||
Took your advice and after one meeting I am working for a campaign and will be elected as a precinct committee man. | ||
Just show up to the local county Republican board meeting. | ||
There you go. | ||
Glad to hear it, man. | ||
Nice work. | ||
Ruler14 sent $3. | ||
Hey Nick, I finally got a chance to talk to my friends about white identity in the JQ. | ||
They were receptive but very apathetic, and don't see a way to change the system. | ||
How do I respond to this? | ||
Never talk again. | ||
Just shut up forever. | ||
Mhoplite sent $100. | ||
No message. | ||
Hey! | ||
I'm Mhoplite. | ||
Thank you so much, man. | ||
Our sponsor of the show, Sponsor, I'm Hoplite. | ||
Thanks for the big super chat, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
07's for our guy, our Greek guy. | ||
Greek guy. - Nicker sent $3. | ||
Hey Nick, started watching you when you join up with Kanye, but saw the clip of you dating someone on a stream called Kami. | ||
unidentified
|
Was that before you were a Christian? - Well, clearly you didn't see that stream because I was trying to convert him to Christianity and it wasn't a date, but that's a fun call back. - Simon Skula sent $5. | |
Have you seen Saltburn? | ||
- Yeah, I watched it last week. | ||
It was okay. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
The cinematography was good, the score was good, or the soundtrack. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I thought it was implausible. | ||
Little bit implausible. | ||
Suspension of disbelief didn't really work. | ||
It's like this nerdy kid is seducing the whole family. | ||
It doesn't really make a lot of sense. | ||
It was okay. | ||
I thought it was kind of boring too. | ||
unidentified
|
Kind of slow. | |
Yeah, maybe. | ||
I think though that it would be better for them to wait for U.S. | ||
Iran's clock is also running short. | ||
They're Iran by the same people who ran them 25 to 30 years ago and the youth is becoming increasingly anti-government due to economic pressure. | ||
It seems like if they're to make a move, it will have to be soon. - Yeah, maybe. | ||
unidentified
|
I think though that it would be better for them to wait for US support for Israel to wane. - Ricky Schiffer sent $3. | |
You're right about nuclear energy putting bombs all over the country, though. | ||
However, it will also employ a lot of smart scientists. | ||
Yeah, admittedly, I don't really know enough about nuclear energy. | ||
I'm not a science guy. | ||
Mhoplite sent $100. | ||
Fuck Kostin Alomariu. | ||
100%, yep. | ||
Freaking Jew. | ||
But hey, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Another one! | ||
I'm Hoplite. | ||
Thank you very much, buddy. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
General Zoomer sent $4. | ||
Hey! | ||
Hey! | ||
Smile. | ||
Hi. | ||
Kawakapedka sent $3. | ||
Great show tonight. | ||
Very informative. | ||
Sleeve McDigal and I are now playing Call of War. | ||
Game is so awesome. | ||
In other news, Boogaloo Woogaloo's $3 Super Chats are the backbone of America First. | ||
JJJJJJJJ. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
- Good Tonnet sent $5. | ||
The last Shah named the Jews to a Mike Wallace shortly before the revolution. | ||
Reagan's presidential campaign made a secret deal with Iranian leaders to delay the release of hostages until after the election. - True. | ||
- Anglo Zoomer sent $3. | ||
Prats are Jews. - True. - Good Tonnet sent $5. | ||
Martin Luther's Protestantism against real church corruption caused the church to correct itself during the counter-reformation. | ||
A new emphasis on common people and authentic spiritual experience. | ||
Martin Luther is in hell for leading people away from the Catholic Church. | ||
The Earth's crust is very deep. | ||
Nuclear is the future but we should probably fix the diversity problem first. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Sounds like a recipe for disaster. | ||
That seems like messing with forces of God. | ||
Splitting atoms for energy. | ||
But maybe I'm just a... Maybe I'm just like an anti-technology Luddite bonehead imbecile. | ||
unidentified
|
Splitting atoms! | |
We can't do that! | ||
You know, so I don't know. | ||
I'm pro-science. | ||
Actually, I'm pro-science, but I just... I don't know anything about science. | ||
I'm more of a humanities guy. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm more of a... more of a liberal arts guy. | |
The science stuff admittedly befuddles me. | ||
I'm not... I don't really understand scientific concepts. | ||
I was into it when I was a kid, but now I just have, honestly, like, no interest in it at all. | ||
unidentified
|
And I was terrible in high school at science. | |
So, you know, I need a science advisor. | ||
Fortunately, we actually have a lot of STEM groipers. | ||
We have a ton of, like, chemist, engineer, physics, tech groipers. | ||
I don't know anything about that stuff. | ||
I'm more of, like, a philosopher. | ||
I'm more of, like, a philosopher brain. | ||
Or a watching TikTok brain. | ||
So, something like that. | ||
So, you know, leave the... I'll leave the nuclear to Rick. | ||
Is that his name? | ||
Ricky Schiffer. | ||
Yeah, this guy seems like a very smart Super Chatter. | ||
And I was kidding earlier. | ||
I'm actually gonna read that book. | ||
Well, I'll buy it on Amazon. | ||
I'll probably stay on my shelf for an eternity, but I'll actually look into that book. | ||
You seem like, obviously, a smart guy, so maybe I'll make an attempt to educate myself for once. | ||
But okay! | ||
You can handle the nuclear. | ||
That's gonna do it for me. | ||
That's our last Super Chat. | ||
I'm done. | ||
Remember to follow me here on Rumble and Cozy to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday. | ||
Big special thanks to our top Super Chatter tonight, I'm Hoplite. | ||
Special thanks to him. | ||
Oh and we got, okay, of course. | ||
One more. | ||
Can you guess who it is at 2 a.m. | ||
at the end of the show? | ||
Take a wild guess. | ||
John Dave Irving sent $109, bad take on nuclear. | ||
Oil is why we are tied to the Middle East. | ||
Three Mile Island was a setup, valves turned, pneumatic gauges hooked up to water, etc. | ||
and it only released a cat scan of radiation at the boundary. | ||
Coal releases 9x radiation. | ||
Nuclear waste oh no it is radioactive for millions of years but only 2x background radiation after tilde 100 year science advisor confirmed. | ||
Okay, well, Science Advisor approves. | ||
Well, I want to hear the other side, though, okay? | ||
I want to hear both sides. | ||
Let's bring in the other Science Advisor, and me, knowing nothing, I will sort of sit behind the desk, and then I will decide. | ||
So, John Dave Irving. | ||
Nuclear waste is only two times background radiation after 100 years. | ||
Well, what's your rebuttal? | ||
I will have the other Science Advisor, and I will listen intently. | ||
I will say, hmm. | ||
And then I will make a decision. | ||
And that's how it will work in the future country. | ||
So special thanks to John Dave Irving and I'm Hoplite. | ||
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. | ||
First! |