Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord save these people, they are sweet. | ||
They let it sink in one day. | ||
Jesus save us from L.A. | ||
LA Monster. | ||
Let's go. | ||
I am limelighter. | ||
I am limelighter. | ||
Blueprint vibe mic. | ||
Go get his rhyme light. | ||
Should've been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated. | ||
Grammy nominated. | ||
Hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader prom dated. | ||
Barbershop player hated. | ||
Mom and pop booth lazy. | ||
Felt like it rained to the roof caked in. | ||
Two words. | ||
Goddamn crazy. | ||
Crazy. | ||
So I live by two words. | ||
Fuck you. | ||
Pay me. | ||
Pay me. | ||
Squeeze me. | ||
Tease me. | ||
Save me. | ||
You know how the game be. | ||
I can't let him change me. | ||
Cause | ||
I'm just busy. | ||
Sorry to keep you waiting, complicated business. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
Because it's the outsiders who change the world. | ||
And who make a real and lasting difference. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing worth doing ever came easy. | |
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
unidentified
|
We must always remember that we share one home. | |
And one glorious destiny. | ||
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
unidentified
|
We all salute the same great American flag. | |
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
I am officially running for president of the United States. | ||
We need a leader. | ||
I will be the greatest jobs president that God ever created. | ||
It can be wonderful if you have smart people, but we have people that are stupid. | ||
The American dream is dead. | ||
Dead. | ||
But if I get elected president, I will bring it back. | ||
Bigger and better and stronger than ever before. | ||
The American dream. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
unidentified
|
We are home! | |
And nobody builds walls better than me, believe me. | ||
Bigger and better and stronger than ever before. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. | |
We will make America great again. | ||
America great again. | ||
unidentified
|
America great again. - First time! | |
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump were all cut from the same cloth. | ||
And that cloth is very, very large. | ||
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
Be yourself. | ||
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
It feels so right. | ||
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
It feels so right. | ||
It's a deal. | ||
I put together some real, some real. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go Gigger, go home. | ||
Go Gigger, go home. | ||
Hey, jump on. | ||
I'm going to see you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm Donald Ack. | |
It's a special one. | ||
Listen, are you begging her? | ||
Huh? | ||
Are you? | ||
You don't. | ||
You just met. | ||
We're going to get this. | ||
No. | ||
Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
He was. | ||
He was. | ||
The Donald is here. | ||
He was. | ||
Everything's set for tonight, Mr. Trump. . | ||
I wonder what Trump's game is this time. | ||
Crop's got a new game. | ||
Crop's got a new deal. | ||
What's your game, Donald? | ||
Heard about Crop's new deal? | ||
What? | ||
Crop has a new game. | ||
What is it? | ||
My new game is Trump. | ||
The game. | ||
Trump. The game. | ||
This sounds like political presidential. . | ||
You've said, though, that if you did run for president, you believe you'd win. | ||
I like that. | ||
I would say that I would have a hell of a chance of winning. | ||
I'd never run into losing in my life. | ||
I don't know how your audience feels, but I think people are tired of seeing the United States ripped off. | ||
That's the guy on fire, right? | ||
Okay, kids, make it fast. | ||
I've got to play. | ||
Can you create a magazine? | ||
Mr. Trump, do you do that? | ||
Scabby. | ||
Excuse me, personally. personally. | ||
Now the ball is good. | ||
Their male modeling would be what it is today. | ||
Model it. | ||
I'm a great company. | ||
I give you money. | ||
I think you want to call a fight before the title comes. | ||
You've got to be worth some money. | ||
That's right. | ||
You can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
They say, can we really go back? | ||
And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right wing or left wing, the answer is no. | ||
We're never going back. | ||
unidentified
|
It's gone. | |
It's gone. | ||
All of that is gone. | ||
But I would call myself something like a Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now, and Jesus Christ is our future after we die on Earth. | ||
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth. | |
We love everybody. | ||
And we want people that give birth, really, more than anybody. | ||
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't believe in the real value of life. | ||
unidentified
|
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | |
The mission is to create a Christian, The only way we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
unidentified
|
The only way. | |
The way that we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
The only way. | ||
We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny. | ||
Then nothing can stop us and nothing will. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Years from now, some of them may look back and ask themselves whether they've made the right choice. | ||
unidentified
|
Whether they've made the most of the opportunities they've been given. | |
Together, we have the same mission. | ||
Over the course of your life, you will find that things are not always fair. | ||
You will find that things happen to you that you do not deserve and that are not always warranted. | ||
But you have to put your head down and fight, fight, fight. | ||
Never, ever, ever give up. | ||
Don't give in. | ||
Don't back down. | ||
And never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | |
And the more righteous your fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked our Creator four times. | ||
unidentified
|
Because in America, we don't worship government, we worship God. | |
It is why our currency proudly declares, in God we trust. | ||
And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure That began with deep faith, big dreams, and humble beginnings. | ||
unidentified
|
The next generation of American leaders never, ever give up. | |
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
Never quit. | ||
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible, that it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | |
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
You must keep pushing forward. | |
And always have the courage to be yourself. | ||
unidentified
|
America is better when people put their faith into action. | |
Pray to God and follow his teachings. | ||
Today, each of you begins a new chapter as well. | ||
When your story goes from here, it will be defined by your vision, your perseverance, and your grit. | ||
You will build a future where we have the courage to chase our dreams no matter what the cynics and the doubters have to say. | ||
You will have the confidence to speak the hopes in your hearts and to express the love that stirs your souls. | ||
As long as you have pride in your beliefs, courage in your convictions, and faith in God, Then you will not fail. | ||
As long as America remains true to its values, loyal to its citizens, and devoted to its creator, then our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
May God bless the United States of America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you and God bless America. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
Thank you. | ||
We are going to make our country great again. | ||
We are going to make our country great again. | ||
We are going to make our country great again. | ||
We are going to make our country great again. | ||
I don't care if I ever come down. | ||
I don't care if I ever come down. | ||
I don't care if I ever come down. | ||
69 I Now it's time for new believable people. | ||
And we must do it. | ||
If we don't control insiders, this will be over and over. | ||
To lead it by an A. Big, fat, love, find common ground. | ||
To halt the spread of lies. | ||
And we must do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Big, fat, love, find common ground. | |
To hold the spread of lies. | ||
And any. | ||
America first. | ||
unidentified
|
America first. | |
Non-fatal. | ||
We want to build a much better. | ||
unidentified
|
Believable. | |
People. | ||
And we must do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Non-fatal. | |
Communication. | ||
Very much higher. | ||
America first. | ||
To lead by an aid. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
More of. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
America first. | ||
Love the flow. | ||
69. | ||
Now it's time for new. | ||
Believable. | ||
People. | ||
And we must do it. | ||
If we don't control. | ||
Insiders. | ||
This will be over and over. | ||
To lead by an aid. | ||
Big. | ||
Fat. | ||
Love. | ||
Find common ground. | ||
To hold the spread of lies. | ||
And we must do it. | ||
Big. | ||
Fat. | ||
Love. | ||
Find common ground. | ||
To hold the spread of lies. | ||
And aid. | ||
America first. | ||
unidentified
|
America first. | |
Non-non. | ||
We want to build a much better, believable people, and we must do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Non-fatal communication very much higher. | |
America first to lead by an A. | ||
unidentified
|
Insiders fighting for insiders. | |
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
More of. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
America first. | ||
Love the flow. | ||
President Obama will go down as perhaps the worst president in the history of the United States. - Yes. | ||
At real Donald Trump. | ||
Well, at real Donald Trump. | ||
At least I will go down as a president. | ||
Now America is once again Our movement is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
Our movement is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
I love this country. | ||
It's payback time. | ||
It's payback time. | ||
unidentified
|
We're gonna take our country back from these people. | |
He will never be president. | ||
I will move to Spain or somewhere. | ||
We're going to win at so many levels. | ||
We're going to win, win, win. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
I love you. | ||
I I love you! | ||
Mr. President-elect. Mr. President-elect. | ||
Mr. President-elect. | ||
Mr. President-elect. | ||
Millions of people trying to get on the scene. | ||
And everyone's selling their souls. | ||
Everyone's selling their- Everyone's saying they won't, but they still fucking get our souls. | ||
L.A. | ||
Monster. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord save these people. | ||
They are sweet. | ||
They let it sink in. | ||
One day streets gonna save us from L.A. | ||
From L.A. Monster. | ||
I am my life. | ||
Blueprint 5 mic. | ||
Go get his Rhyme-Lite. | ||
Should've been signed twice. | ||
Most imitated. | ||
Grammy nominated. | ||
Hotel accommodated. | ||
Cheerleader prompted. | ||
Garbage shop player hated. | ||
Mom and Pop, who slaved it? | ||
Felt like it rained to the roof, K-Gang. | ||
Two words, shot town crazy. | ||
Crazy, so I live by two words. | ||
Fuck you, pay me. | ||
Pay me, win me. | ||
Jesus, save me. | ||
You know how the game be. | ||
I can't let him change me. | ||
Don't judge me. | ||
Don't judge me. | ||
Don't judge me. | ||
Don't judge me. | ||
Sorry to keep you waiting, complicated business. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. - Because it's the outsiders who change the world. | ||
And he'll make a real and lasting difference. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing worth doing ever came easy. | |
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
unidentified
|
We must always remember that we share one home. | |
And one glorious destiny. | ||
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
unidentified
|
We all salute the same great American flag. | |
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
I am officially running for president of the United States. | |
We need a leader. | ||
I will be the greatest jobs president that God ever created. | ||
It can be wonderful if you have smart people, but we have people that are stupid. | ||
The American dream is dead. | ||
But if I get elected president, I will bring it back. | ||
Bigger and better and stronger than ever before. | ||
The American dream. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
unidentified
|
We are home. | |
We are home. | ||
And nobody builds walls better than me, believe me. | ||
Bigger and better and stronger than ever before. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
unidentified
|
We will make America great again. | |
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
unidentified
|
We will make America great again. | |
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump were all cut from the same cloth. | ||
And that cloth is very, very large. | ||
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
It's wrong, isn't it? | |
It feels so right. | ||
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
It feels so right. | ||
It's a deal. | ||
I put together some wheels and some wheels. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go! | ||
Go big or go home. | ||
Don't hold you to trouble. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman who looks like that has to have a special set. | ||
It's the dining room. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Douglas. | ||
Oh, you look great. | ||
Oh, fuck. | ||
I'm Donald Lantz. | ||
That's right. | ||
Listen, are you begging him? | ||
Are you? | ||
Are you doing this? | ||
Are you just mad? | ||
Are you going to get this? | ||
No. | ||
Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
He was. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Listen, this sounds like political presidential talk. | ||
You said, though, that if you did run for president, you'd believe you'd win. | ||
I like that. | ||
I would say that I would have a hell of a chance of winning. | ||
I wouldn't go on to lose. | ||
I've never gone on to lose in my life. | ||
I don't know how your audience feels, but I think people are tired of seeing the United States ripped off. | ||
That's the guy. | ||
All right. | ||
Touch me. | ||
Okay, kids, make it fast. | ||
I've got a plane to do it. | ||
She's creating a magazine. | ||
Mr. Trump, you can do it. | ||
Scam cheese. | ||
Scam cheese. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
First of all. | ||
Down the wall. | ||
Your male modeling would be what it is today. | ||
You can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
They say, can we really go back? | ||
And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right what you're left with, the answer is no. | ||
We're never going back. | ||
unidentified
|
It's done. | |
It's gone. | ||
All of that is gone. | ||
But I would call myself something like the Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
And Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | ||
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. . | |
We love everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
And we want people that can burn, really, more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't believe in a real helicopter. | ||
unidentified
|
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | |
The mission is to create a Christian, The only way we're gonna make this happen is with the fullness of a real question. | ||
unidentified
|
The only way. | |
that we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
It's the only way we have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny. | ||
Then nothing can stop us and nothing will. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Hello. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Whether they've made the most of the opportunities they've been given. | ||
Together, we have the same mission. | ||
Over the course of your life, you will find that things are not always fair. | ||
You will find that things happen to you that you do not deserve and that are not always warranted. | ||
But you have to put your head down and fight, fight, fight. | ||
Never, ever, ever give up. | ||
Don't give in, don't back down, and never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | |
And the more righteous your fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked our creator four times. | ||
unidentified
|
Because in America, we don't worship government, we worship God. | |
It is why our currency proudly declares, in God we trust. | ||
And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure That began with deep faith, big dreams, and humble beginnings. | ||
unidentified
|
The next generation of American leaders never, ever give up. | |
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
Never quit. | ||
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible, that it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | |
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
You must keep pushing forward. | |
And always have the courage to be yourself. | ||
unidentified
|
America is better when people put their faith into action. | |
Pray to God and follow his teachings. | ||
Today, each of you begins a new chapter as well. | ||
When your story goes from here, it will be defined by your vision, your perseverance, and your grit. | ||
You will build a future where we have the courage to chase our dreams no matter what the cynics and the doubters have to say. | ||
You will have the confidence to speak the hopes in your hearts and to express the love that stirs your souls. | ||
As long as you have pride in your beliefs, courage in your convictions, and faith in God, Then you will not fail. | ||
As long as America remains true to its values, loyal to its citizens, and devoted to its creator, then our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
May God bless the United States of America and America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you and God bless America. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
Thank you. | ||
We are going to make our country great again. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'm so sorry. | ||
I've been I don't care if I ever come down. | ||
I don't care if I ever come down. | ||
I don't care if I ever come down. | ||
I don't care if I ever come down. | ||
And we must do it, if we don't control insiders. | ||
This will be over and over, to lead it by. | ||
And any big, fat, love, find common ground, to halt the spread of lies. | ||
And we must do it big, fat, love, find common ground to hold the spread of lies. | ||
And any. | ||
America first. | ||
unidentified
|
America first. | |
Non-fatal. | ||
We want to build a much better believable people. | ||
unidentified
|
And we must do it non-fatal. | |
Communication very much higher. | ||
America first! | ||
To lead it by an A. Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
More of. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
America first. | ||
Love the flow. | ||
69. Night. | ||
Now it's time for new believable people. | ||
And we must do it. | ||
unidentified
|
If we don't control insiders, this will be over and over. | |
To lead it by an A. Big, fat, love, find common ground. | ||
To halt the spread of lies. | ||
And we must do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Big, fat, love, find common ground. | |
To hold the spread of lies. | ||
And it. | ||
unidentified
|
America first. | |
America first. | ||
Non-fatal. | ||
We want to build a much better, believable people. | ||
unidentified
|
And we must do it non-fatal. | |
Communication very much higher. | ||
America First! | ||
To lead it by an inning. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
More of Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
Time to stop. | ||
Insiders fighting for insiders. | ||
America first. | ||
Love the flow. | ||
President Obama will go down as perhaps the worst president in the history of the United States. - Yes. | ||
At real Donald Trump. | ||
Well, at real Donald Trump. | ||
At least I will go down as a president. | ||
Now America is once again... | ||
at a moment of reckoning. | ||
Our movement is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
I love this country. | ||
It's payback time. | ||
I love this country. | ||
It's payback time. | ||
We're going to take our country back from these people. | ||
He will never die. | ||
I will move to Spain or somewhere. | ||
We're gonna win at so many levels! | ||
We're gonna win, win, win! | ||
We will make America great again! | ||
I love you! | ||
Mr. President-elect. | ||
You're out of my league, all the things I believe. | ||
You were just the right guy, and you were more than just a dream. | ||
You were out of my league, got my heart beat racing. | ||
If I die, don't wake me. | ||
You were just the right guy, and you were more than just a dream. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
L.A. Monde. | ||
I pray the Lord my soul to keep. | ||
Lord, save these people. | ||
They must be. | ||
They let it stay in one day streets. | ||
Lord, save us from L.A. Moms. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Let's go. Let's go. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Let's go. Let's go. | ||
nominated hotel accommodated cheerleader prom dated barbershop player hated mom and pop plays it feel like it rained to the roof came down two words goddamn crazy so i live by two words fuck you pay me pay me queen you know how to game these i can't let them change me | ||
cause i'm judging | ||
The End | ||
The End | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
Because it's the outsiders who change the world. | ||
It'll make a real and lasting difference. | ||
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Nothing worth doing ever came easy. | |
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
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We must always remember that we share one home. | |
And one glorious destiny. | ||
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
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We all salute the same great American flag. | |
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
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I am officially running for president of the United States. | |
We need a leader. | ||
I will be the greatest jobs president that God ever created. | ||
It can be wonderful if you have smart people. | ||
But we have people that are stupid. | ||
The American dream is dead. | ||
But if I get elected president, I will bring it back. | ||
Bigger and better and stronger than ever before. | ||
The American dream. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
And we will make America great again. | ||
We will make America great again. | ||
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Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, will be our credo in America. | |
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 | ||
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First. America | |
First. America | ||
First. America First. America | ||
First. America First. America First. America First. America First. America First. America First. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Tuesday. | ||
And we have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Huge news tonight out of Iowa and the Middle East. | ||
Our featured story will be following up on our coverage of the Iowa Caucus Monday night. | ||
Talking a little bit about the results. | ||
Landslide victory for Trump. | ||
And a huge night, huge night for Trump, huge night for America First. | ||
We had over 14,000 live viewers peaked at 14, little over 14,000 live viewers Monday night and our coverage of the Iowa caucus and a big night for Trump. | ||
He carried 98 out of 99 counties. | ||
Biggest margin of victory ever in the history of the Iowa caucus. | ||
And I think the margin was 30%, which is almost twice as much as the previous record. | ||
So we'll talk about all the latest out of Iowa. | ||
We'll also talk about New Hampshire. | ||
And it's actually pretty impressive. | ||
There's a new poll out for New Hampshire, the first one since the Iowa caucus on Monday, which shows Trump with 50 points in New Hampshire, Ron DeSantis with only 6. | ||
And Nikki Haley, I think she had 30 or 20 there. | ||
But either way, she's way behind and New Hampshire's next week. | ||
So, we'll talk all about the Iowa caucus. | ||
We'll get into all that stuff and what it means for the race and where we are. | ||
Honestly, I think, and almost everyone agrees, that after the performance in Iowa, it's done. | ||
The primary's done. | ||
It's over. | ||
And I wish that Trump had done a little bit better. | ||
I know a lot of people have been playing up what a huge sweep it was and I think it was a big deal but you have to consider that Trump at one time was the most popular Republican president I mean the most popular president in modern history in general. | ||
So for him to have a 90% approval rating within the party but win only half And Iowa's tricky and there's history there. | ||
There's some complicating factors there, but I feel like maybe could have done a little better. | ||
That's just me. | ||
But we'll talk about it. | ||
We'll also talk tonight about the latest developments in the war in Gaza. | ||
Although, of course, these developments are not happening anywhere near Gaza. | ||
They're happening in other theaters in the conflict. | ||
Two big stories. | ||
One is that the United States has now struck the Houthi movement in Yemen for the third time. | ||
They hit the Houthis on Thursday, Friday, and then again yesterday. | ||
And Iran is also Now getting involved directly in the conflict, as we know their proxies have been doing most of the fighting. | ||
Hezbollah, Popular Immobilization Force, the Houthis. | ||
But now Iran is striking directly. | ||
They launched three airstrikes yesterday in Pakistan, Iraq, and Syria. | ||
And everybody believes that the motivation behind the three strikes was the terrorist attack in Kerman a couple weeks ago. | ||
Major terrorist attack at the mausoleum of Qasem Soleimani, which the United States blamed on ISIS militants, specifically ISIS-K in Afghanistan. | ||
And so Israel in the... We'll get into all the details because it's a little bit complex, but they apparently struck targets Inside Syria, Iraq, and Pakistan. | ||
Specifically, though, they struck ISIS in Syria, they struck Erbil, which is the capital of the Kurdish region of Iraq, in Iraq, and they struck Balochistan inside Pakistan. | ||
And the reason this is significant is because Iran is allied with Syria, allied with Iraq, has a tenuous alliance with Pakistan. | ||
So Iran isn't hitting these countries, it's hitting these breakaway movements or Islamist radicals inside the countries. | ||
Which said another way, all these three groups are supported by Israel. | ||
ISIS in Syria was created by and backed by Israel. | ||
The Kurds in Iraq, Syria, Turkey are backed by the United States and Israel. | ||
And Balochistan, the group there, which I think it's Josh Al-Aden is the group, although I have it on my notes, Balochistan is a secessionist movement inside of both Iran and Pakistan, and the group that Iran struck yesterday, they have accused of being backed by Israel. | ||
So it's interesting that there's a little bit of a mirror effect going on. | ||
The United States and Israel are attacking the Iranian-backed groups, if you've been paying attention over the last 90 to 100 days. | ||
The United States and Israel have struck Hezbollah, Movement backed by Iran in Lebanon. | ||
They've struck the Popular Mobilization Force militia in Iraq backed by Iran. | ||
They've struck the Houthis in Yemen, a militia backed by Iran. | ||
Now Iran is striking ISIS in Syria backed by Israel. | ||
Striking the Kurds in Iraq, backed by Israel. | ||
Striking Jashal Aden in Pakistan, backed by Israel. | ||
So, Iran is now getting involved directly, and this is just now a full-blown regional conflict, and even drawing Pakistan in. | ||
Historically, Pakistan hasn't been too involved. | ||
But now they're in it. | ||
So we'll talk about all those developments and analyze them a little bit. | ||
So it should be a good show. | ||
Apologies the show's a little bit late. | ||
I know yesterday I said that I would go live about 10 p.m. | ||
So we're just just shy of 10 hours past that. | ||
Actually closer to 10 a.m. | ||
I think at this point. | ||
But tomorrow, hey, but tonight for sure. | ||
Wednesday night, but seriously, listen. | ||
I was gonna go live at 10, but a friend of mine was in town because he was at the Iowa caucus. | ||
So I went, I got dinner with a friend of mine who's very involved in politics, and I ate a huge dinner. | ||
I ate a lot of pasta and dessert and coffee, and then I went home and I just fell right asleep. | ||
I just knocked right out. | ||
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And sometimes that happens. | |
But there shouldn't be anything like that tonight. | ||
Tonight, 10 o'clock for sure. | ||
Okay, trust. | ||
Trust the plan. | ||
It should be safely between 10 and 11 p.m. | ||
Central Time. | ||
Sometimes these things pop up. | ||
I had to go out, had to get a little dinner, and then... I can't help that. | ||
I ate all this food and then I just crashed. | ||
But trust. | ||
Tonight for sure. | ||
Before we get into the news, I want to remind you to smash the follow button on Rumble and Cozy to get a push notification when I go live. | ||
It's so important that you follow me because, I mean, I go live really any hour of the day. | ||
I've gone live basically every hour. | ||
Sometimes I go live in the middle of the night, sometimes it's the evening, sometimes it's the morning. | ||
You really never know. | ||
So you gotta make sure you follow me on Rumble and Cozy and Telegram, and the link for that is below in the description. | ||
Also, remember next week, I think it, I don't know the time, but next week is a New Hampshire primary. | ||
So, yesterday, Monday night, we had the coverage of the Iowa Caucus. | ||
It was an all-night event. | ||
Big viewership. | ||
We had a lot of fun. | ||
We did Super Chats, watched some old Trump stuff. | ||
We did a live election results coverage and analysis. | ||
We'll be doing it all over again next Tuesday. | ||
This coming Tuesday. | ||
So, that's Tuesday the 23rd? | ||
is a New Hampshire primary so make sure to tune in early in the evening on Tuesday night because I'll be here very early in the evening. | ||
We're going to be doing all night coverage and this is going to be a big one. | ||
We're going to get into it tonight. | ||
Really all eyes are on New Hampshire after Iowa. | ||
This is going to be probably the second most important one. | ||
Third most important will be South Carolina which is end of February. | ||
I think February 26th. | ||
But this is a big one, okay? | ||
This one is really for all the marbles here. | ||
I mean, Iowa, in my opinion, was pretty definitive. | ||
And the polling after Iowa is... it says as much. | ||
It says this is open and shut. | ||
But, I mean, Hampshire's gonna be a real test. | ||
So, Tuesday, tune in very early. | ||
I'm thinking like 6 or 7 o'clock Central Time. | ||
So make sure to tune in early when you hear about the New Hampshire primary because we'll be here covering it Okay with that. | ||
I think that's excuse me. | ||
I think that's all of our announcements So we'll dive into the show here and we'll get into the was there anything else. | ||
I'm trying to think oh You know what I think I'll cover this tomorrow But, you know, with the Iowa... So, there was something really big I wanted to talk about, but I didn't get a chance to. | ||
Of course, last night, Monday night, was the Iowa caucus. | ||
And I didn't get a chance to do this, but Bill Ackman, the Jewish billionaire who has been behind this high-pressure campaign against Harvard, which we've covered for months now, he just pledged $1 million to a Democrat presidential candidate named Dean Phillips, who's a Jew, And of course, they're not really holding a real primary on the Democrat side. | ||
Joe Biden's the incumbent. | ||
That's typically how it works. | ||
They're not going to hold a real contest. | ||
They have a sitting president running. | ||
But nevertheless, Bill Ackman has donated money to this Long shot, never going to win, Democrat presidential candidate who is a Jew. | ||
And what's amazing is, of course, Bill Ackman has said that his reason for going after Harvard and these other schools is because of cancel culture and DEI, which is diversity, equity, inclusion, among other things. | ||
We know the real reason he's gone after these schools is because they don't support Israel. | ||
Rather, they don't support Israel enough. | ||
They all support Israel, just not enough, according to prominent Zionist Jews. | ||
But he's dressed it up and said, well, I'm not punishing Harvard on behalf of Israel. | ||
No, I'm going after Harvard for ideological reasons. | ||
Well, wouldn't you know, this Democrat candidate that he backed is like the biggest DEI congressman in Congress. | ||
And I think we'll go over this tomorrow. | ||
We'll go through all of his voting record in the House, but it's just so perfect. | ||
And I've been saying this for a long time. | ||
And I say it all the time now. | ||
But when it comes to these Jews, you keep digging and there's just more of it. | ||
You never stop finding more of it. | ||
You never stop finding more of Jews and their ethnic interest being the engine of politics. | ||
That's what I mean. | ||
You attempt to understand our very complex, very large political system, And you keep finding Jews inside of it and you keep realizing that their ethnic self-interest is what is driving the trends. | ||
It's what's driving the big decisions. | ||
And maybe it comes as a surprise to a lot of people, but it's the facts. | ||
That's where the evidence will always lead you. | ||
If you are perceptive, if you're willing to go there, if you're open-minded enough, that is where you will always land. | ||
And even if you think it's minimal, it's not. | ||
That's why it's always helpful to point out who's Jewish and who supports Israel. | ||
Because once you sort of plot all of those people on a map, It starts to paint a picture. | ||
You may look at a guy like Jake Tapper and say, Oh, he's Jewish? | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
Well, but I'm sure that's not a big deal. | ||
And you'll find a thousand people like that. | ||
And if you hand wave that away and say, Oh, I'm sure that's not a big deal. | ||
Oh, I didn't know that, but I'm sure that doesn't really matter. | ||
But you take them all together and you start penciling them in where they are and what they're about and what they want and what they say. | ||
It paints a picture. | ||
And so you zoom in on one dot and you might say, I don't see it. | ||
But when you zoom out and when you put all the dots on a map, then you see it. | ||
And I heard something today. | ||
A friend of mine texted me. | ||
I can't, I'm not at liberty to say specifically what it was, but it's one of these Jews that we know is a Jew and we know is like anonymous and kind of quietly supports Israel. | ||
And this person said something really shocking to somebody behind the scenes. | ||
And maybe that doesn't sound like anything because I'm not giving any details, but maybe at some point this person will come forward and we'll talk about it, but it's amazing that everywhere you look, there they are. | ||
There they are! | ||
And they have one overriding objective, and that is to protect Israel and their Jewish interests. | ||
So, we'll get to the Bill Ackman story probably tomorrow. | ||
I was going to cover that last night, but Iowa Caucus, and then tonight. | ||
I mean, there's all this stuff going on in Gaza, which we've got to catch up on, and then the results. | ||
So, with that out of the way, we'll dive in. | ||
We'll cover... I mean, we're really behind. | ||
We never covered the Houthi strikes. | ||
We didn't cover Bill Ackman. | ||
I'll get to that stuff tomorrow. | ||
But tonight, our news is about the Iowa Caucus. | ||
We'll start with that. | ||
So I covered it Monday night. | ||
We had a huge stream. | ||
I was live for like six hours. | ||
We had over 14,000 viewers. | ||
And the stream is almost at 200,000 views. | ||
So it was a huge stream. | ||
And thanks everybody that tuned in. | ||
I imagine it was most of you that are watching now. | ||
And I'm sure everybody knows at this point that Donald Trump won the Iowa caucus, which is a huge deal. | ||
He not only won, but it was a landslide. | ||
Certified landslide he won more than 50% of the vote. | ||
So that means he got more than everybody else put together and He had a 30 point advantage over the runner-up So Donald Trump placed 1st, Ron DeSantis 2nd, and Nikki Haley trailing him by just 1 or 2% in 3rd, and then Vivek finished in 4th place with 7%. | ||
So Donald Trump dominated the field, got more than everybody put together, got 30 points more than the runner-up, and he won! | ||
He carried 98 out of 99 counties. | ||
And it's actually funny, the one county that he didn't win, He lost by one vote. | ||
So he won 98 out of 99, and the one that he didn't win, I think Nikki Haley pulled it out. | ||
She won literally by a single vote. | ||
One county by one vote. | ||
And as many experts have said, this is the biggest blowout ever in the history of the Iowa caucus. | ||
I believe they've been doing it since 1976. | ||
Around that time. | ||
So there's not extremely long history here, but in the 50 years of doing the Iowa caucus, this is the biggest win by any candidate ever, by far. | ||
And so that was really the headline of the night. | ||
Other big developments, Vivek dropped out of the race after he performed. | ||
I don't want to say he underperformed, but everybody was Trying to speak into existence a surprise third place finish for him. | ||
I know that he and many other people suggested that maybe the polling was underestimating his support and that he would he would place third or he would get in double digits but he performed about exactly as the polling predicted he got roughly seven percent and based on those results he pulled out of the race last night immediately endorsed Donald Trump and then actually appeared with Trump today at a rally in New Hampshire where he embraced him and | ||
Maybe there's a suggestion that he'll be in the Trump cabinet if Trump gets elected. | ||
So that was the other big story. | ||
And then I would say the other big takeaway is about DeSantis, who finished in second place and he actually outperformed his polling by about four or five points and will remain in the race until New Hampshire. | ||
And I actually heard an anonymous source who was on the ground in Iowa that they're not getting out until at least South Carolina or maybe even Super Tuesday. | ||
I don't know how reliable that is because he's gonna get killed in New Hampshire, but that's what I heard. | ||
And at the minimum he's gonna make it through to next week, which is a pretty big deal. | ||
But I'll go over, this is an article, this is from the New York Times, or rather I think this is NPR hitting all the highlights here. | ||
It says, quote, Trump cemented his status as a frontrunner of the Republican Party with 51% of the vote. | ||
Trump likely received strong support from key voting blocs in the caucus, which would be white evangelicals and very conservative voters. | ||
Trump's margin was the largest ever in an Iowa caucus, surpassing the previous record of 12.8 points for Bob Dole in 1988. | ||
His win comes despite mounting legal challenges on charges such as conspiracy to overturn the 2020 election. | ||
Trump garnered at least 20 out of 40 delegates, while his nearest challenger, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, took 8, followed by Nikki Haley at 7. | ||
DeSantis received more than 21% of the vote, while Haley finished closely behind him with roughly 21% as well. | ||
Vivek Ramaswamy got only approximately 8% of the vote and gained three delegates. | ||
Following his underwhelming finish, Ramaswamy announced he was ending his presidential campaign and endorsed his rival Trump, who he had previously called the best president of this century. | ||
This year's Iowa caucus is said to have been the coldest on record amid low temperatures and winter storms. | ||
Edison Research estimated a turnout at 115,000 on Monday night, down from nearly 190,000 in 2016. | ||
Monday night down from nearly 190,000 in 2016 and it was also lower than the 121,000 who showed up in 2012 and 119,000 in 2008. | ||
So aside from the placement of the candidates the turnout was another big story to It's the lowest it's been in this century. | ||
And a lot of that you can chalk up to the bad weather. | ||
It's like 20 below zero in Iowa. | ||
It's like, it's been 30 below zero in Chicago with the wind chills, so... | ||
It's been extremely cold. | ||
People say it's cold. | ||
I don't think they realize it's like painfully cold. | ||
So maybe that's a reason for the depressed turnout. | ||
It was also a smaller field and I would say that there is some semblance of an effect that Trump is effectively an incumbent. | ||
He's not, but since he is a former president in a very unusual field, He's being treated like one and so maybe that's why the turnout wasn't as high. | ||
It's not like this is a truly open primary. | ||
Trump is coming in with an extremely strong advantage and so that combined with the weather and a smaller field compared to 2008, 12, 16, maybe that's why the turnout was lower. | ||
Although some people are saying that's a sign that there's maybe a shortage of enthusiasm. | ||
And I don't know how much I buy into that. | ||
Over the years, they've always tried to make this case that the bigger the turnout in the primary, the bigger the turnout will be in the general. | ||
I don't know if there is a clear connection that has been established there historically. | ||
It's an interesting indicator. | ||
It's one variable among many other things, so it's something that we can take note of, but I don't know that that's anything definitive. | ||
The big story tonight to me is not really about the turnout, it's about the placement. | ||
And the race started out a little bit bigger, although all the oxygen in the room has been sucked out basically by Trump ever since the raid in Mar-a-Lago, and then really when the charges came down in Manhattan. | ||
I would say that the Republican primary might have been competitive at one point in time, although we can't really know for sure. | ||
And I would say it like this. | ||
In 2022, there seemed to be more of an appetite for a non-Trump candidate to run in this primary, and maybe even to win. | ||
There was a lot of generic polling that suggested that maybe there would be more support for a generic Republican than for Trump. | ||
And when Ron DeSantis won in the midterms in 2022, he carried the state of Florida by over 20 points. | ||
He carried Miami-Dade, which is a very liberal city. | ||
And maybe that was when consideration for a non-Trump candidate was at an all-time high. | ||
Consideration, curiosity, appetite. | ||
Maybe that was the high watermark of this idea that the Republican constituency wanted someone other than Trump. | ||
It was around November or December 2022. | ||
If that would have lasted into 2024 is an open-ended question. | ||
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it. | |
But as it happened in reality is that the raid at Mar-a-Lago in August of 2022 and then the subsequent charges filed against Trump in Manhattan in early 2023 basically eliminated any chance for any other candidate. | ||
After the raid in Mar-a-Lago, I think that was the first indication that there would be this circling wagon effect because there was a huge rally for Trump around that time. | ||
Voters rallied around him and he surged in the polling several months before the midterms. | ||
And then once those charges were filed in Manhattan in early 2023, after the midterms and before DeSantis announced, It seemed that the race completely changed and support for Trump skyrocketed. | ||
And the reason I say it this way is because I don't know to what extent the charges are what did it. | ||
Or was it just... | ||
The race really getting started. | ||
Because there's really two explanations. | ||
And one explanation is that Trump getting charged has created enormous sympathy and enormous enthusiasm for him. | ||
People want revenge. | ||
People feel that they have been treated unjustly, vicariously through Trump. | ||
And so there's this rallying around the flag effect that Trump has been attacked, he's under siege, so the voters are circling the wagons and they're supporting him because he has been made the subject of the election. | ||
Because whoever wins will have the power to pardon or jail him. | ||
So that's one theory. | ||
The other theory is that maybe a non-Trump candidate would never have a chance. | ||
And that it was the race actually starting that forced people to support Trump. | ||
Maybe once they saw what they really had, maybe they liked the idea of having a choice, But once they saw who the choices were, which was DeSantis, and once they saw what the stakes were in the election, they went back home to where they always would have been regardless of whether there were charges or not. | ||
It's hard to say because we don't have, you know, we have no way of knowing what would have happened if there were no charges, but... | ||
Regardless, that is what happened. | ||
And so, anyway, around about that time, we knew, I think, that Trump would be the nominee. | ||
That's when the polling completely took off, when the gap between Trump and DeSantis just exploded. | ||
And so, we knew going into Iowa that Trump would win. | ||
Trump was polling at more than 50% in the average, in every poll, consistently. | ||
So, there's really no surprises. | ||
Trump has this dominant commanding lead. | ||
I would say in terms of surprises, DeSantis had a little bit of a better showing because the thing is, going into Iowa, everybody thought DeSantis was basically done. | ||
He had spent over $200 million, which is kind of ridiculous to think about. | ||
Donald Trump won, or rather, I think he spent something like $70 million at this point in time? | ||
Maybe a little bit more? | ||
In 2016. | ||
Ron DeSantis has spent over 200, I think 250 million dollars. | ||
And almost all of it in Iowa. | ||
He's put a little money in South Carolina. | ||
He's put a little money in Texas. | ||
A little money in New Hampshire and other places. | ||
But he's poured most of the money in Iowa. | ||
And we were going into this thinking that he would not even finish in second place. | ||
And you have to consider that at one point in time, he was trailing Donald Trump nationally by 10 or 15 points. | ||
Some were saying months ago that he would beat Trump in Iowa. | ||
He lost by 30 points. | ||
He barely got second place. | ||
But there was a time not too long ago when his supporters were saying he might actually beat Trump. | ||
And he was fighting for his life for second after spending a quarter of a billion dollars in the state. | ||
And he toured all the counties. | ||
He did the full 99 county tour. | ||
He did all these events. | ||
Like I said, spent a fortune. | ||
And that's where he put most of his resources. | ||
So not only did he spend a fortune, but he spent almost all of his fortune in that one state. | ||
And that's the state that's the most favorable to him. | ||
Even more so than Florida. | ||
He was polling better in Iowa than in Florida or any of the other early states. | ||
I think maybe Florida he was polling a little bit better. | ||
But this was probably the state where he could have had the strongest impact because this is his constituency. | ||
It's very conservative voters, it's evangelicals, it's people that are supposed to eat up His pitch to the Republican voters, which is that he's going to get the job done and be a culture warrior even more so than Trump. | ||
Because that is the pitch. | ||
What is he going to sell to a Republican base that is in love with Trump? | ||
It's that he's slightly more conservative than Trump, and he's going to get it done better than Trump. | ||
And so there's maybe nowhere else in the country where he's got a better chance, considering that Trump didn't even win the Iowa caucus in 2016. | ||
So this was really make or break for him. | ||
And for all the aforementioned reasons, favorable constituency, had very good polling at one point, spent all his money here, toured the entire state, and he was fighting for his life to come in second. | ||
And what's funny is that the surprise is that he didn't absolutely get crushed. | ||
His supporters are saying it is such a victory that they outperformed their polling by about 4 points. | ||
The polling had him at 16, he won 20. | ||
So they say that's the big victory. | ||
He only lost by 30, instead of 35. | ||
And the state where he spent all the money. | ||
And they're saying, well at least he came in second. | ||
Fighting for his life to beat somebody that up until four months ago was not even competitive. | ||
And he barely beat her by a percentage. | ||
By 1%. | ||
So his camp is saying, well, what a win. | ||
We outperformed our polling by 4. | ||
We lost only by 30. | ||
And we barely beat somebody that spent less than half as much money and wasn't even competitive by a percentage point. | ||
That's what they're saying. | ||
And here's the thing. | ||
So he came in second place in Iowa. | ||
In New Hampshire, the poll that came out today There was a new poll for New Hampshire that was just published, I think this morning or yesterday, has him at 6. | ||
Okay? | ||
6% for New Hampshire. | ||
In Nevada, they're saying that Trump is leading by 60. | ||
Trump doesn't have 60. | ||
He's leading by 60 in Nevada, which is the state after New Hampshire. | ||
And then in South Carolina, DeSantis is in third place. | ||
I think with like 10. | ||
Those are the first four states. | ||
And then you have Idaho and Michigan where he's not he's not doing better there. | ||
And then you have Super Tuesday in March where I believe Florida's voting and he's not even winning his home state. | ||
So at a certain point you have to ask yourself, how does this guy or anybody win the race? | ||
If he's not going to win Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina, Michigan, Idaho, or any state on Super Tuesday, I mean literally won't carry a single one, How's he going to win? | ||
Because by Super Tuesday, it's something like 1,100 out of the 2,300 delegates will have been allocated. | ||
And he's not going to win a majority of any of them. | ||
And he's not going to win a majority of them in any of the other states. | ||
It's done. | ||
If he couldn't win Iowa, and if he's not going to win the next six, and if he won't win any of them on Super Tuesday, he's not going to win anything. | ||
As far as Nikki Haley is concerned, she had a surprisingly good showing because at one time her polling was at 3, 2, 3, 4 percent in Iowa, so she got 20 percent of the vote. | ||
And she wasn't expecting to do well because she's not that conservative. | ||
She's not conservative. | ||
She's not very Christian. | ||
The Trump base doesn't like her. | ||
She's playing for New Hampshire where she's got 30 percent. | ||
So she performed surprisingly well, but she didn't win. | ||
Her plan is to do well in New Hampshire. | ||
She wants to consolidate support from Chris Christie, who actually had 10 in New Hampshire. | ||
And she thinks that if she has a strong second-place finish, if she's within striking distance of Trump in New Hampshire, she thinks that will propel her into a better finish in South Carolina. | ||
But from there, I don't know where she goes because she's not going to win South Carolina either. | ||
They don't even like her in South Carolina. | ||
That's her home state, if you don't know that. | ||
So, New Hampshire is one of the most liberal states out of the early primary states. | ||
That's the only state where she really has a chance to even do well. | ||
And then South Carolina, which is her home state and very symbolic for that reason, they hate her there. | ||
She's doing better in New Hampshire than her home state, which comes later. | ||
So it's the same question. | ||
If she can't win Iowa, if she can't even beat DeSantis in Iowa, if she can't win New Hampshire, she can't even get within single digits of Trump in New Hampshire, if she's going to have the same problem in South Carolina, her home state, if she's not polling well in any of the Super Tuesday states, Again, where are the delegates going to come from? | ||
And, you know, there's this idea, I don't know, that maybe Haley and DeSantis will consolidate their support at the convention, and I don't ever believe in any of that hokey stuff, but even if they did, Trump is going to get more than half the delegates in literally every state. | ||
So even if all the candidates running against him put all their delegates together and even if they all dropped out in support of one person tomorrow, that person still would lose. | ||
Like 60-40 or 70-30 in every single state. | ||
So it's done. | ||
I mean, the primary is basically over. | ||
It seems. | ||
What happens next is they go to New Hampshire, where again, Haley is polling at about 30, DeSantis is at 6, and Trump is at 50. | ||
So it's going to be a repeat. | ||
A little support is going to shift from DeSantis to Haley, but it's going to be a repeat of Iowa. | ||
Trump is going to totally dominate in New Hampshire. | ||
And at that point, I don't know if DeSantis drops out. | ||
Does he go on to Nevada? | ||
Because here's the schedule for DeSantis. | ||
He's going to come in third in New Hampshire. | ||
He may not even get double digits. | ||
The same thing will happen in Nevada. | ||
He may get second in Nevada, but he's going to get nothing. | ||
And then he's going to come third in South Carolina. | ||
And then he's going to lose his home state. | ||
So where do you go from there? | ||
He's a quarter of a billion dollars in and I mean he's not even gonna come close to winning a single race. | ||
And I don't think there's any pathway after that. | ||
So I think there's a good chance that he maybe drops out after New Hampshire. | ||
Maybe he's stubborn and hangs on until South Carolina or Super Tuesday. | ||
I don't see how he hangs on after that. | ||
And so what that tells us is that this whole thing is basically over by March. | ||
It does not really go on much longer than that. | ||
They were supposed to have a debate in New Hampshire. | ||
It got canceled. | ||
And so, this thing is done. | ||
Trump's the nominee. | ||
So, I mean, we'll cover New Hampshire. | ||
Presumably, we'll be covering Nevada. | ||
And South Carolina, assuming Haley at least stays in the race, and maybe there'll be a surprise in the meantime. | ||
We'll have to look at the polling. | ||
I'm sure there'll be some more polls that'll come out for New Hampshire and South Carolina in the next few weeks. | ||
But, it's a done deal. | ||
Trump is gonna win. | ||
So, huge victory for him. | ||
It's great news. | ||
And here's the thing, I want to say one other thing about Trump, you know, We've been going very hard on Israel for the past year, past year and a half. | ||
And a lot of people point out the obvious, which is that Donald Trump is a huge supporter of Israel. | ||
And a lot of people say, well, why do you support Trump? | ||
You are harshly critical of Israel, but you are hugely supportive of Trump and Trump likes Israel and supports Israel. | ||
So how do you square that? | ||
And I actually talked to Jake Shields about this the other day. | ||
He was texting me saying, you know, what do you make of that? | ||
And other people too, even Lucas Gage asked me on something some time ago about the same question. | ||
And I think he asked a friend of mine on a Twitter space about it too. | ||
And here's what I always say about Trump. | ||
One, and this is point number one, which is maybe the easiest, you know, we could get into some complex stuff, but I'll just say this to begin with. | ||
The Israel lobby backed everybody else this year. | ||
Ron DeSantis, before he announced in May of last year, flew to Israel and had dinner with Miriam Adelson. | ||
And if you don't know, Miriam Adelson is the widow of Sheldon Adelson, who is one of the single biggest donors in the history of American politics. | ||
He gave something like half of a trillion dollars, okay? | ||
Half of a trillion dollars to the GOP in the last 15 years. | ||
From 2010 onward he spent hundreds of billions of dollars every cycle to reshape the GOP into a pro-Israel party. | ||
That's why so much of the GOP is like crazy pro-Israel in the last 15 years because there is this glut of money. | ||
Sheldon Adelson made his money in casino gambling in Macau and other places so there's a Chinese connection there as well. | ||
He's from like Massachusetts. | ||
And there was a big... He died, I think, one or two years ago. | ||
Time Magazine did a huge profile on him when he died. | ||
Everybody should go and read it. | ||
And it talked about how he was a single-issue voter. | ||
He lived and died for Israel. | ||
When he died, they shipped his body to Israel on a private jet, and his body was greeted on the tarmac by the Prime Minister of Israel, Bibi Netanyahu, and he was buried in Israel. | ||
And so that's what he was about. | ||
He spent $100 billion in 2016 for the Republicans. | ||
He spent $100 billion in 2018. | ||
He spent $100 billion in 2020. | ||
Okay? | ||
This is a single-issue voter. | ||
Or, I'm sorry, $100 billion. | ||
$100 million. | ||
I'm dang... Okay. | ||
It's early in the morning, okay? | ||
He spent... | ||
$100,000,000 and it was a half of a billion dollars of the past. | ||
Not half a trillion, half a billion. | ||
When I was saying that I was like, that can't be quite right. | ||
Half of a billion dollars over the last 10 years. | ||
$100,000,000 in 16, 18, 20. | ||
$100,000,000 and not $100,000,000,000. | ||
$100 million in 16, 18, 20. $100 million. | ||
Not $100 billion. | ||
That would be crazy. | ||
That doesn't even make any sense. | ||
$100 million in 16, 18, 20. | ||
$100,000,000 in every cycle. | ||
That's a bad mistake, but you get the point. | ||
It's a lot of money at that point, but it does matter. | ||
He spent $100,000,000 in 2016, $100,000,000 in 2018, $100,000,000 in 2020. | ||
million in 16, 100 million in 18, 100 million in 2020. | ||
This is Shel Nadelson. | ||
Since he died, his wife, Miriam Nadelson, has managed his estate, and she continues the giving. | ||
And And understand that when we talk about the Israel lobby, Adelson is a huge part of it. | ||
Monumental part of the Israel lobby. | ||
And he initially didn't support Trump, but he wound up giving money to Trump in 2016, and to the Republicans in 2018, and to Trump again in 2020. | ||
But last year, Ron DeSantis flew to Israel. | ||
He did a three-city trip before he announced. | ||
He visited Israel, London, and South Korea. | ||
And when in Israel, guess who he had dinner with? | ||
Miriam Adelson, as well as two other big Zionist Jewish donors. | ||
And so when you look at This interregnum period between Trump 2020 and Trump 2024, basically the entire GOP establishment was looking to overthrow Trump. | ||
In 2020 they had to support him because he was the incumbent. | ||
There was no primary. | ||
And they had to support him because he was going to cut taxes and he was going to support Israel, more so than Biden. | ||
So they reluctantly supported him in 2016, although some didn't. | ||
They basically universally supported him in 2020, reluctantly. | ||
But when he left office, they immediately flipped. | ||
And so Wall Street, led by Ken Griffin, threw their support behind DeSantis, publicly. | ||
They went and talked to the press and said, we're gonna support DeSantis, Trump is too controversial, Wall Street's behind DeSantis, and so did the Israel lobby. | ||
And when they thought DeSantis was going to be the guy to challenge Trump, they were giving him all the money. | ||
When it was clear that DeSantis was not performing well, he was actually just crashing in the polls, they all flipped their support to Haley. | ||
And so now the Israel lobby and Ken Griffin and Wall Street is behind Haley. | ||
So that's number one. | ||
People say, you know, how do you support Trump when he supports Israel? | ||
Well, take a look at the money. | ||
Because the Israel lobby supports DeSantis and Haley. | ||
Point number two, take a look at the rhetoric. | ||
When Donald Trump is asked about Israel, specifically during the Gaza War, what did he say? | ||
He said Hezbollah is smart and he said that Netanyahu is a traitor and didn't protect their people. | ||
That's not how an Israel shill talks. | ||
When he was asked in 2016 what he would do about Israel-Palestine, he said he would make a deal that works for both countries. | ||
At his first press conference with a foreign head of state when he was elected in January or February 2017, He had his first joint press conference with Netanyahu. | ||
And what did he say? | ||
He turned to Netanyahu and looked at him and pointed and said, you need to take it easy on those settlements in the West Bank. | ||
The second thing that he did, maybe not the second thing, but among the first things that he did in 2017, in April, he ended America's support for regime change in Syria. | ||
Because between 2011 and 2017, the Obama administration supported overthrowing Assad in the Syrian Civil War. | ||
Of course, that was completely consistent with Israel's long-standing objective of destabilizing Syria. | ||
They wanted to first overthrow Saddam, and then they wanted to destabilize Syria. | ||
So, they overthrew Saddam in 2003. | ||
In 2011, Obama began the withdrawal. | ||
And then the Syrian Civil War started, and we began to intervene, along with Turkey and Saudi Arabia and others, to support a moderate opposition, the Kurds, ISIS. | ||
And one of the first things Trump did in April 17 was to, and this was when Tillerson was Secretary of State, Nikki Haley actually was the UN Ambassador, they ended the policy of regime change and said that they would prioritize defeating ISIS, which they did in several months. | ||
So when you look at the rhetoric, the rhetoric of Trump is not the rhetoric of somebody that is completely in the pocket of Israel. | ||
Listen to Nikki Haley if you want to understand what someone who is in the pocket of Israel sounds like. | ||
When she gets asked about Israel and Gaza, she doesn't say Hezbollah is smart and Netanyahu didn't protect Israel. | ||
She says, we need to do three things. | ||
We need to give Israel what it wants, when it wants it, no questions asked. | ||
Israel doesn't need America. | ||
America needs Israel. | ||
That's what someone who's in the pocket of Israel says. | ||
And maybe you think the distinction is subtle, but it's really not. | ||
And then thirdly, I would say the foreign policy in general. | ||
Say what you want about Trump and his support for Israel, let's break it down by what he actually did. | ||
What were the big concessions that Trump granted to Israel? | ||
One, he moved the U.S. | ||
Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, which is really not a big deal. | ||
Want to know why? | ||
Because we already have a consulate in Jerusalem. | ||
And that is the capital of Israel. | ||
So, you know, I mean we can say that that was something, but I mean really that's a formal move. | ||
It's not substantial. | ||
Because you can say, well, you know, Jerusalem's contested and East Jerusalem's contested. | ||
That's true. | ||
But America already has diplomatic buildings in Jerusalem. | ||
We conduct business in Jerusalem. | ||
And, by the way, the United States has said we have promised that we would recognize Israel, or rather Jerusalem, as the capital of Israel for 50 years. | ||
Every president promises to do it. | ||
Every president, they have to do it by law. | ||
But every president signs a memorandum every six months to defer that. | ||
That's what every president has done, I think, since the 67 war. | ||
There's a legal obligation that we have to move the embassy but every six months the president signs a waiver that says we're going to defer that until later. | ||
Every president does it. | ||
So this is something that was basically a legal and a political reality and Trump just did it. | ||
And so this was something that was a change in name only. | ||
It's like they just put embassy on the title of the building in Jerusalem. | ||
And I'm not trying to downplay it. | ||
All I'm saying is George W. Bush invaded Iraq. | ||
Trump moved the embassy. | ||
Like, let's put things in perspective. | ||
That's one. | ||
What else did he do for Israel? | ||
He recognized the Iranian Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist group. | ||
Okay, so what? | ||
The State Department terror list is not... I mean, that doesn't really mean anything at all. | ||
Iran was already under a sanctions regime. | ||
We call the IRGC terrorists Big Whip. | ||
These groups get taken... put on and taken off all the time. | ||
Now they're gonna put the Houthis on a terror watch list tomorrow. | ||
Whoa! | ||
Like, we're bombing them! | ||
We're bombing them right now. | ||
We've been bombing them for seven years. | ||
We bombed them with Saudi Arabia for seven years, between 2015 and 2022, and I think Trump took them off to make a ceasefire deal with them and Saudi Arabia. | ||
We're putting them back on. | ||
We called the Uyghur Muslims terrorists until 2020, when we decided we're going to war with China. | ||
Before that, the East Turkestan revolutionaries were terrorists, according to the State Department. | ||
Now they're not. | ||
Okay, so what? | ||
What else did Trump do? | ||
He recognized Israel's sovereignty over the Golan Heights. | ||
Again, big whiff. | ||
They have had sovereignty over the Golan. | ||
It's disputed by Syria. | ||
But you know what? | ||
Like 20% of Syria's territory is disputed right now. | ||
They're in the middle of a civil war. | ||
They're a failed state. | ||
Now, would I do these things? | ||
I wouldn't. | ||
But when we talk about the Trump relationship with Israel, we have to talk specifically About that relationship. | ||
We have to get into the details. | ||
And when you look at the money, the rhetoric, the policy, what this tells us is that Trump seems to have a provisional, contingent relationship with the Israel lobby. | ||
Which is that the Israel lobby is a political reality on the Republican side. | ||
They provide huge money. | ||
And it seems like it's almost a necessity that The President isn't opposed to the Israel Lobby. | ||
And I would say that Trump's relationship with the Israel Lobby is the same kind of tenuous, provisional relationship that he has with all the other donors. | ||
Which is, it's a deal. | ||
He's not a puppet. | ||
It's a trade. | ||
He got $100 million in 2016. | ||
He got $100 million in 2018. | ||
He got $100 million in 2020. | ||
And in exchange, all he had to do to keep Israel happy was a lot of formal stuff. | ||
We're gonna say Golan is Israel's. | ||
We're gonna say Jerusalem's the capital. | ||
We're gonna say the IRGC are terrorists. | ||
What else did he really do? | ||
Abraham Accords? | ||
But all those states had already normalized ties. | ||
What did he have to do to get the Gulf states to agree? | ||
Bahrain? | ||
And who else was a part of it? | ||
Emirates? | ||
What did he have to do to get Morocco and Sudan to agree? | ||
Nothing really all that material. | ||
And you compare that to a real president who's in the pocket of Israel. | ||
George W. Bush went to war in Iraq. | ||
Okay? | ||
War in Iraq. | ||
War in Afghanistan. | ||
What did Obama do? | ||
Bomb Pakistan. | ||
Overthrew Gaddafi. | ||
Attempted to overthrow Assad. | ||
Bombed Yemen. | ||
And Trump, what is the legacy of Trump? | ||
Trump negotiated the Abraham Accords, Trump allowed Assad to remain in power, defeated ISIS, initiated the withdrawal from Iraq, initiated the withdrawal from Afghanistan, initiated the withdrawal from Syria. | ||
So to me, I think that's an acceptable policy. | ||
So that's how I, you know, everybody always likes to say, well you're an anti-Semite, well how do you support Trump? | ||
And they think that's like checkmate. | ||
And if you're an idiot, it's a checkmate. | ||
You know, because nominally, there might seem to be a contradiction, but when you look at it closely, it's not there. | ||
So... | ||
If he had went to war with Iran, that would be a different story. | ||
If he had completed the overthrow of Assad, it would be a different story. | ||
But, none of that happened. | ||
Actually, the opposite happened. | ||
He wanted the troops out. | ||
Israel does not want the troops out. | ||
Israel wants American troops in Iraq and Syria being bombed by Iran. | ||
That's why we're there right now. | ||
So we can be bombed by Iran, so that Israel can push us into a war with Iran. | ||
And Trump was trying to end that arrangement. | ||
So that's my position on that whole idea, that story. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our other story, and we'll keep this one short because we're running out of time here a little bit. | ||
But the other big story from the past couple days is this war in Gaza. | ||
Maybe we'll talk a little bit more about it tomorrow. | ||
But the two big stories out of the war in Gaza, it's actually more fitting to say it's like a regional war now. | ||
Because of course, the fighting is no longer contained just in Gaza. | ||
It's happening on seven, now eight fronts. | ||
There is fighting happening in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, Iraq, Iran, now Pakistan. | ||
Arguably even Egypt because there was a story, and I don't know if this is confirmed, that there was some assault on Israel from the border crossing with Egypt. | ||
So maybe even Egypt. | ||
So that's nine fronts. | ||
Ten if you include the West, which is arguably part of it. | ||
So this is a full-blown regional war. | ||
Everybody's involved. | ||
And the war has actually just turned 100 days old. | ||
Netanyahu gave a big speech a couple days ago because it's the 100th day of fighting since October 7th. | ||
So we're 100 days in. | ||
This war has consumed the entire Middle East. | ||
It's escalating on every front. | ||
What happened last week is that the United States began bombing the Houthis. | ||
So we'll talk about that first. | ||
And just briefly to go over the Developments from last week as you know the Houthi movement, which is a Shiite group and they basically control Yemen Everybody talks about them like they're comparable to Hezbollah and in a certain sense they are But they do control Yemen. | ||
They control the capital, Sanaa. | ||
They control the western part of the country, which is where the population lives. | ||
So the Houthis control Yemen. | ||
There's been a civil war going on in Yemen for like 20 years, and they fought Saudi Arabia for 7 out of the last 10 years. | ||
And they recently signed a ceasefire with Saudi Arabia. | ||
Saudi Arabia, backed by the United States, could not defeat the Houthis. | ||
So Saudi Arabia was bombing Yemen. | ||
The United States was giving them support under the pretext that Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula was operating in Yemen. | ||
That's how we justify it legally. | ||
And despite Saudi Arabia having these huge arms deals with the United States and having one of the most well-funded militaries in the world, they couldn't defeat Yemen. | ||
Which is not a big country, and not a big fighting force, and not well-equipped. | ||
So they had bombed the Houthis in Yemen for like seven years, couldn't defeat them. | ||
Eventually they had this humiliating ceasefire agreement. | ||
There's been a tenuous peace since 2022. | ||
And so the Houthis are a Shiite group, or a derivative of Shiite Islam. | ||
They're backed and funded and supplied and trained by Iran as part of this Proxy network across the whole Middle East and Yemen sits right on the coast of the Red Sea and the Al-Mandeb Strait, which is the entrance from the Arabian Sea into the Red Sea, ultimately into the Suez Canal. | ||
So they control or rather they sit right on the border of the entrance to the Suez Canal on the side near the Arabian Sea in the Indian Ocean. | ||
So the Houthi movement has said that since the war in Gaza broke out that they will attack any Israeli-linked shipping inside the Red Sea unless Israel agrees to a ceasefire. | ||
So in the past three or four weeks they have ramped up these attacks. | ||
They've been attacking, and I mean a lot of ships, although they said that they'll attack any ship, but they've specifically been targeting ships that are headed towards or going from Israel. | ||
And this affects not only Israel, but all of global shipping. | ||
Because even companies or countries with shipping that is not linked to Israel, they're now avoiding the Red Sea and the Suez Canal. | ||
So they're instead going around the entire continent of Africa, which is increasing shipping times and shipping costs and disrupts the supply chain. | ||
So this is very disruptive to global trade. | ||
The Houthis say they will target Israeli shipping, which scares off all shipping, although they say they reserve the right to attack any shipping in the Red Sea until there's a ceasefire. | ||
And this is designed to put pressure on the United States because the United States is the guarantor of the global shipping routes. | ||
They're the guarantor of the international freedom of navigation and protecting these international waterways and of course Europe and the United States are most affected by this. | ||
If the Houthis are blowing up ships in the Red Sea and ships Start to avoid the Red Sea, which means avoiding the Suez Canal. | ||
Then they gotta circumnavigate Africa. | ||
They gotta go near the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa. | ||
And like I said, that's a big supply chain disruption. | ||
And the Houthis know, by the way, that there's really nothing the United States can do about it. | ||
Because what has happened in the past 7 or 8 years is that these developments in missile and drone technology really favor the defensive side. | ||
It's mobile, it's hard to detect. | ||
So the United States can bomb Yemen all they want. | ||
By the time the bombs are falling from the sky, the Houthis have moved the platforms from which they launched the missiles. | ||
So the United States doesn't have surveillance in Yemen. | ||
They don't have a ton of intelligence there. | ||
So they don't really know where these military positions are. | ||
So they can't effectively destroy these things. | ||
Also, they're cheap. | ||
They're cheap, they're mobile, they're light. | ||
And so the Houthis are really not affected. | ||
So much by what the United States is doing. | ||
Short of the United States really going in, in a major ground war, really using a lot of assets there, they can't do much about the Houthis attacking the ships. | ||
And as long as the Houthis are attacking the ships, this is painful for Europe and the United States economically. | ||
It's also humiliating. | ||
There's another factor as well. | ||
So when Saudi Arabia was at war with Yemen and they were losing, the Houthis were striking into Saudi Arabia. | ||
Most notably, they were bombing Saudi Arabia's oil refineries in Saudi Arabia's eastern province and destabilizing Saudi Arabia and attacking their civilian infrastructure, which is something that Saudi Arabia desperately doesn't want. | ||
They want to maintain peace with Yemen. | ||
And so the United States knows, and the Houthis know, that not only can the Houthis attack with relative impunity, with their missiles and with their anti-ship stuff, but they also know that Saudi Arabia does not want to be dragged into the conflict. | ||
The Houthis reserve the right to begin bombing Saudi Arabia again. | ||
And begin bombing those oil refineries, which, if they're attacking the ships and that increases shipping costs, if they're attacking Saudi Arabia's oil, or attacking Saudi Arabia at all, which is one of the world's largest oil producers, that's going to jack up energy, which is something that the United States definitely doesn't want, for obvious reasons. | ||
Inflation has been high. | ||
They have had to raise interest rates to 25-year highs in order to combat that and it was largely driven by increases in petroleum because of the war in Ukraine and supply chain disruptions during COVID. | ||
So there's not only an effect on energy but there's also a geopolitical effect on Saudi Arabia. | ||
So that's the situation. | ||
So the Houthis have been bombing the ships. | ||
The United States deployed its naval assets along with the UK and Australia to the Red Sea in order to deter the attacks, but the Houthis have been undeterred. | ||
So the United States on Thursday and Friday launched missile and airstrikes against Yemen, attacking I think 26 of their facilities on Thursday, came back and destroyed more of their facilities on Friday, and the Houthis have kept attacking. | ||
The United States bombed Yemen again yesterday, but really with no effect. | ||
And this is a story from the New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, The U.S. | ||
military said Tuesday that it launched more strikes against the Houthis in Yemen as tensions in the region escalate. | ||
U.S. | ||
Central Command claimed that it hit Houthi anti-ship missiles at 4.15 a.m. | ||
Yemen time. | ||
U.S. | ||
forces struck and destroyed four Houthi anti-ship ballistic missiles prepared to launch from Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen. | ||
But they got tons of these things. | ||
They have tons of missiles. | ||
So, they destroyed four missiles. | ||
Big whip. | ||
Later in the day, however, the Houthis were able to target another ship, a Greek-owned ship, in the Red Sea, despite the strikes. | ||
CENTCOM said the MV Zografia, the Greek ship, reported that they were struck but seaworthy and were continuing their Red Sea transit. | ||
No injuries were reported. | ||
So the United States bombed the Houthis on Thursday, bombed them on Friday, bombed them yesterday. | ||
And the Houthis attacked another ship right after all these strikes. | ||
So the United States has not in any meaningful way eliminated or diminished the Houthis' ability to carry out these strikes. | ||
And the Houthis know that, and Iran knows that. | ||
And they also know that the United States can't escalate too much. | ||
Because the more they escalate, the Houthis can always expand the war. | ||
And they also know that the United States desperately doesn't want another war in Yemen. | ||
Saudi Arabia and the United States could not defeat Yemen for seven years. | ||
They certainly can't defeat them now. | ||
So there's a limit to how much can be done here, and the Houthis know that. | ||
So this is one of the several ways that Iran, using its proxies, is putting pressure on the United States. | ||
And the demands, which are notable, the Houthis say they will continue to attack shipping, and they're basically unstoppable until there's a ceasefire. | ||
So that puts pressure on Biden to urge Netanyahu to stop the bombing in Gaza. | ||
But the article goes on it says the Houthis have made it clear they will not stop attacks on Israeli-linked commercial shipping until the U.S.-backed Israeli slaughter in Gaza ends. | ||
But the U.S. | ||
has shown no interest in pressuring the Israelis to lift the siege and escalations continue all over the region as a result. | ||
The strikes on Tuesday marked the third time the U.S. | ||
bombed Yemen since Friday when the U.S. | ||
was joined by the U.K. | ||
in striking dozens of Houthi sites. | ||
As a result, the Houthis are now targeting American and British shipping, and more shipping companies are suspending transits through the Red Sea, including the British oil giant Shell. | ||
So it's kind of funny. | ||
You know, the Houthis say, well, we're going to bomb Israel's shipping. | ||
And we say, well, we'll bomb you. | ||
And it doesn't work. | ||
And they say, OK, well, we'll bomb you, too, then. | ||
And it just gets worse. | ||
So there's no winning in this one. | ||
This theater is a checkmate for Iran. | ||
Or rather, for us. | ||
Iran has put us in checkmate in this part of the conflict. | ||
I'm sorry, I just read that. | ||
U.S. | ||
officials have acknowledged that the strikes on Yemen did not hamper the Houthis' defensive and offensive capabilities. | ||
The Houthis endured a brutal U.S.-backed, Saudi-led bombing campaign and blockade from 2015 to 2022, and only became a more formidable fighting force during that time. | ||
A fragile ceasefire between the Saudis and Houthis has held relatively well since April 2022, And Riyadh is distancing itself from the current U.S. | ||
anti-Houthi operations. | ||
Saudi Arabia doesn't even support this. | ||
From the beginning, they said that they don't want airstrikes, they don't want missile strikes in Yemen. | ||
The U.S.-backed Saudi war on the Houthis killed 377,000 people from 2015 to 2022, according to the U.N. | ||
More than half died of starvation and disease caused by the siege. | ||
So that is the theater in Yemen. | ||
But then there was also an even bigger situation that is happening now with Iran. | ||
So, you know, we've been following all the different theaters of the conflict. | ||
That's Yemen. | ||
Haven't talked about Lebanon in a week. | ||
Nothing new there. | ||
But the next part of the story concerns the front in Iran. | ||
Of course, two weeks ago, there was a major terrorist attack in Iran. | ||
It killed, I think, 51 people, injured many more, and this was on the anniversary of Qasem Soleimani's death, and it was at the mausoleum of Qasem Soleimani. | ||
Soleimani was the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. | ||
And he built this entire Iranian-backed network of proxies in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen. | ||
He was the architect of this Iranian Axis that is fighting Israel today. | ||
He was killed by the United States three years ago and, like I said, two weeks ago his mausoleum was bombed on the anniversary of his killing. | ||
Many people immediately blamed Israel, Iran included. | ||
And to put Iran in a tough spot because the necessary response is to retaliate. | ||
That would be like if in the United States somebody attacked the JFK tombstone in his cemetery. | ||
That would be like if somebody attacked Arlington National Cemetery. | ||
Of course we would have to bomb whoever was responsible. | ||
But Iran does not want to be drawn into a war with Israel. | ||
That's what Israel wants. | ||
This is obviously a very tense time, and so if Iran retaliated against Israel, then they might incur the wrath of the United States. | ||
And there might be retaliation from the United States against Iran, which they definitely don't want. | ||
So Iran was put in a tough situation. | ||
So, Iranian society blamed Israel, some members of the Iranian government seemed to blame Israel, but yet they couldn't really retaliate directly against Israel. | ||
The United States said that ISIS was responsible for the attack. | ||
ISIS-Khorasan, which operates in Afghanistan, and apparently they've launched attacks in Iran in years past, the United States said it was them, and they didn't do it to frame Israel. | ||
They did it because they just don't like Soleimani. | ||
They just don't like Iran. | ||
Which I find hard to believe, and I think is probably not the case. | ||
So, yesterday Iran struck three targets as their retaliation for the terrorist attack. | ||
They bombed ISIS in Syria, they bombed the Kurds in Kurdish Iraq, or Iraqi Kurdistan, and they bombed Balochistan in Pakistan. | ||
So, three different sites in three different countries. | ||
And like I said, what's notable is that All three countries are aligned with Iran. | ||
Iran backs the Assad regime in Syria. | ||
Iran supports the Popular Mobilization Forces in Iraq, which is part of the security umbrella of the Iraqi government. | ||
And Iran is allied with Pakistan and they've supported each other in wars since the creation of the Pakistani state and since the creation of the Islamic Republic of Iran. | ||
So they have been allies, although there's been tensions, but they've been allies for a long time. | ||
What's notable is that Iran attacked these non-state groups in all three countries. | ||
They attacked ISIS in Syria. | ||
And ISIS is an opponent of the Iranian-backed Assad regime in Syria. | ||
And ISIS still controls territory in Syria. | ||
So Iran bombed ISIS in Syria. | ||
Inside of Iraq, they attacked the capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region of Iraq, which is called Erbil. | ||
And the Kurds are They have problems with the Iraqi government. | ||
They have problems with the Turkish government and the Syrian government. | ||
The Kurds are backed by Israel and the United States and all the neocons. | ||
And the Kurdish part of Iraq is semi-autonomous. | ||
It's not fully under the control of the government in Baghdad. | ||
And Iran attacked Balochistan. | ||
A lot of people don't know. | ||
Balochistan is, the Balochis are an ethnic people, and they're cross-border. | ||
They're inside Iran. | ||
They're inside Pakistan. | ||
And there's a terrorist group inside of Iran that advocates for the rights of the Balochis people inside of Iran, and they want a Balochis state or they want autonomy. | ||
And so this is another group that has fought Iran and which Iran accuses Pakistan of harboring over the years. | ||
And so in every case, Iran is attacking these non-state actors, all of whom are accused of being supported by Israel. | ||
Israel has been blamed for supporting ISIS in Syria, the Kurds in Iraq, and they've also been blamed for supporting this other group. | ||
In Belochistan to destabilize Iran. | ||
So it's very clear Iran is sending a clear message. | ||
This is a retaliation against Israel, but they can't attack Israel directly. | ||
So just like Israel is attacking Iran indirectly by going after the Houthis and going after Hezbollah and going after the Iranian militias in Iraq and Syria, now Iran is going after Israel's proxies in all these regions. | ||
And if it was an ISIS affiliate that bombed Iran, probably it came from Israel. | ||
Now Iran is bombing ISIS and Balochistan and the Kurds, but in reality they're backing these, or rather Iran is attacking these groups that are unofficially backed by Israel. | ||
So this is a story, this is from the New York Times, it says quote, Iran hit its neighbors Pakistan and Iraq with missile strikes on Tuesday prompting strong denunciations from both countries and raising fears that upheaval in the Middle East could spiral out of control. | ||
Since the war in Gaza began in October, Iran has used its proxy forces against Israel and its allies. | ||
But on Tuesday it said its latest missile strikes have been in response to terrorist attacks within its borders. | ||
The missile strikes nevertheless raised tensions in a region where conflict has now touched at least five nations. | ||
The missile strike in Pakistan, a nuclear-armed state, hit a remote mountainous region on Tuesday. | ||
The strike in Iraq, which has close political and military ties with Iran, hit the Kurdistan capital, Erbil, around midnight Tuesday and involved ballistic missiles and drones. | ||
Iraqi government officials said it killed four civilians. | ||
In both cases, Iranian officials said they were going after terrorists. | ||
They were accused of being behind recent attacks on its territory that have badly shaken Iranians. | ||
This month, suicide bombers killed 84 people at a memorial procession for a revered Iranian military leader. | ||
And in December, an attack on a police station killed at least 11 officers. | ||
The Iraqi and Pakistani governments rejected Iran's justifications. | ||
In addition to hitting Pakistan and Iraq, Iran in recent days also struck Syria. | ||
The Islamic State, which claimed responsibility for the attack on the Iranian procession, has a presence in Idlib province. | ||
So far there has been no public objection from the Syrian government, which is closely allied with Iran. | ||
So, this morning the Iranian foreign minister said that in Erbil they bombed a Mossad building. | ||
So, in Iraqi Kurdistan, in Erbil, where they attacked, Iran said they were really targeting a Mossad outpost, and they also said that they attacked the Iranian part of Balochistan, and they accused the group of being supported by Israel. | ||
I think they're called Josh al-Adl or something like that. | ||
Al-Adl. | ||
Let me see if I can pull it up. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Josh Al-Adl is the group in Balochistan. | ||
And Iran said that they're backed by Israel. | ||
So think about it! | ||
So, Iran attacks Israel-backed ISIS in Idlib, Syria. | ||
They backed a Mossad plant inside Iraqi Kurdistan in Iraq. | ||
They bomb Israel-backed Josh al-Adl in Balochistan, and actually say they bombed it within their territory, although Pakistan says it's in their territory. | ||
But this is the first time that Iran has gotten involved directly. | ||
So far, Hamas attacked Israel, Hezbollah and Israel have traded fire on Israel's border. | ||
The Iranian-backed militias, Popular Mobilization Front, and Iraq and Syria has attacked American bases in Israel. | ||
And the Iranian-backed Houthis have attacked shipping in the Red Sea. | ||
But so far, Iran has not been directly involved. | ||
They've not directly struck anybody. | ||
And I said two weeks ago this is a major escalation. | ||
Since Iran was attacked by probably Israeli-backed terrorists, Two weeks ago, they've been formulating their response and now Iran is directly engaged in all these fronts. | ||
So, Israel and the United States are bombing Iran and Iraq and Syria. | ||
Now Iran is bombing Israel and American-backed groups in Iraq and Syria. | ||
And even Pakistan, which the United States is a close ally of Pakistan too. | ||
Although not so much lately. | ||
So this is a huge escalation and I'm sure the United States and Israel are taking note. | ||
Although I don't know that this is doing Iran any favors because here's the other thing about this. | ||
The United States in recent weeks has been bombing Iraq and so has Israel. | ||
And Iraq several years ago voted To push the United States out of their country. | ||
I think there's about 2,500 U.S. | ||
military personnel still in the country. | ||
And several years ago they held a vote and said that they seek the withdrawal of foreign troops, which means Americans. | ||
And after the United States killed a leader of one of the popular mobilization force groups a couple weeks ago, The Iraqi parliament said, for real this time, now we're going to force the withdrawal of the United States, which would be good for Iran, bad for Israel. | ||
So Iraq is in the process of forcing the withdrawal of the United States, but now that Iran has bombed Iraq, which Iraq claims is a violation of their sovereignty, now this complicates that. | ||
So Iraq is going to basically become Potentially the center of a proxy war between the United States and Iran. | ||
If the United States is killing Iranian backed officials or even Iranians themselves in Iraq and Iran is bombing the Kurds in Iraq. | ||
And same thing with Pakistan. | ||
Because Pakistan is China's Israel. | ||
To give you some context. | ||
Iran's key ally if things turn into a regional war will be Russia and China. | ||
China gets their oil from Iran. | ||
The United States has tried to bankrupt Iran and cripple Iran with sanctions and mainly by sanctioning their oil. | ||
But China gets their oil from Iran. | ||
Whatever the West won't buy, China buys. | ||
So that's allowed Iran to basically nullify the sanctions. | ||
But Pakistan is one of China's closest allies and vice versa. | ||
So Iran has upset Iraq and they've upset Pakistan. | ||
So I don't know that this is maybe the smartest move. | ||
I don't know that that was the best thing for them to do. | ||
So China has now spoken out and said that they've urged mediation and they want a peaceful resolution to this. | ||
The Iranian diplomat was summoned in Islamabad to explain it to Pakistan. | ||
So this is complicating everything, really, more so for Iran than anybody else. | ||
I don't know if this was the best move. | ||
Assad wouldn't say anything, but Iraq doesn't like it, Pakistan doesn't like it, you know, and Iran needs all the allies it can get, and they especially can't compromise their relationship with China. | ||
Although, the thing is about Pakistan is they're accused by everybody of harboring terrorists. | ||
China accuses Pakistan of harboring Uighur terrorists, Iran accuses Pakistan of harboring These Balochi separatists. | ||
The United States accuses Pakistan of harboring terrorists. | ||
Everybody does, so maybe it won't be too much of a rift, but this is clearly an indirect signal and retaliation against Israel for the terrorist attack in... I forget the name of it. | ||
I said it earlier. | ||
Erman or something like that in Iran. | ||
Kerman. | ||
Not Erman, Kerman. | ||
So that's that. | ||
But that's our update on the war in Gaza. | ||
It continues to escalate. | ||
I hope people can follow this. | ||
I know it just gets more complicated every day with all these different groups. | ||
Pakistan is technically in a whole different region. | ||
So it's a whole different geopolitics. | ||
But that's the latest. | ||
So we'll probably cover this throughout the week. | ||
There'll be... I'm sure something will happen tomorrow. | ||
But that's that. | ||
So we're gonna move on. | ||
We'll get into our Super Chats. | ||
See what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
Let me get set up here. | ||
And we'll see. | ||
Probably not a ton of Super Chats at this very late hour, which is good for me. | ||
Not good for my money, but good for my mental well-being. | ||
Alright, so let's take a look. | ||
See what we got here. | ||
And then I gotta eat something. | ||
I'm starving. | ||
Maybe get some coffee. | ||
Alright, let's take a look. | ||
unidentified
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Wait. | |
Okay. | ||
Johnny Bravo 7 sent $3. | ||
Elect Trump, deport all illegals, and all else can be figured out after. | ||
Great stream tonight! | ||
True! | ||
Thank you. | ||
Snake using a real snake sent $3. | ||
Teenage Jutin Ninja Turtles. | ||
Hebrews in a hat shell. | ||
Kabbalah. | ||
unidentified
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Nice. | |
You thought you cooked with that? | ||
Snake using a real snake sent $3. | ||
Ben Shapiro says that they should all be Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. | ||
Another one. | ||
Another one for good measure. | ||
Sam Bonilla sent $10. | ||
Trump completely ignoring GOP debates is the toppest of cakes. | ||
He knows his worth and that no one can stop him. | ||
Thanks for all the content, Nick. | ||
Much love. | ||
It's the toppest of keks. | ||
That's funny. | ||
unidentified
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The toppest of keks. | |
Top Keck? | ||
unidentified
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That's good. | |
Nerd. | ||
Erm, why is everyone focused on video games instead of... Why does everyone resemble Nietzsche's Last Man? | ||
They care more about video games! | ||
unidentified
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and last man many are intelligent but directed towards speedrunning Mario or something instead of focusing on invention slash discovery nerd and why they're unfocused on video games instead of why is everyone resemble Nietzsche's last man they care more about video games dude shut the fuck up nerd what if you listen when you say Nietzschean last man you sound like an idiot I I just want you to know that. | |
Maybe you think it makes you sound smart, it makes you sound dumb. | ||
Because that is the most trite, overused crap ever. | ||
I sound like Nietzsche's last man. | ||
It's like I'm the same level as 1984. | ||
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It's like when you say, 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual. | |
It's like same level of assininity. | ||
And this take about intelligent guys are spending more time on video games and discovery. | ||
People have been saying that for 10 years. | ||
Okay, not a hot take. | ||
You want to know why? | ||
Because society is rigged. | ||
That's why. | ||
Because video games are an escape. | ||
I imagine that more men would seek discovery if the system wasn't rigged. | ||
If white men could get into Harvard for being smart instead of for being black, maybe they'd care more. | ||
If white men could get scouted and make a fortune, being scientists and discoverers instead of being underemployed and cheated out of the value of your money, Then maybe they'd be interested. | ||
But the system doesn't care about intelligent people. | ||
The system doesn't care about intelligent white people. | ||
It's not looking for them. | ||
It's looking for compliant middle managers. | ||
And so as a result, the geniuses are on 4chan. | ||
The geniuses are playing video games. | ||
The geniuses are tinkering with computers. | ||
They're not going to Harvard. | ||
They're not joining the military. | ||
I mean, what genius would go and fight in the military now? | ||
A genius can see the writing on the wall. | ||
A genius can see that these wars aren't for us and that the system hates whites. | ||
Geniuses have no time for diversity training. | ||
So they say, fuck that mess, I'm gonna play Minecraft for a thousand hours. | ||
Geniuses can see that Harvard is a joke and rigged. | ||
So they say, fuck that, I'm gonna... I'm gonna find the fastest way to complete Mario 64 or whatever. | ||
They check out. | ||
They're checked out. | ||
So that's why. | ||
But, I mean, we should be like China. | ||
We should have standardized testing at 16 years old, or younger, and the highest scoring people should basically be groomed and filtered so that we can get the most out of our human capital | ||
the most valuable thing that any country has is its human capital is its intelligent people and the only way to make the most out of that is to have a very good system in place to find them and train them and pour resources into them so that that they can be the next generation of elites. | ||
You need to create an ecosystem where they can talk to each other and they can collaborate and they can have the resources they need and they could get mentorship and then they can be transitioned into running the society. | ||
And China does that very well and other countries do it well, but we don't. | ||
You know, how do we do college admissions? | ||
You write an essay about how black you are. | ||
You write a college essay about how, you know, how I was raised by a single mother in the Bronx. | ||
It's like, shut up. | ||
You know, we should have geniuses going to the best schools. | ||
And we should have the money being poured into The program's for them. | ||
We need more scientists, fewer lawyers. | ||
We need more scientists, more engineers, fewer lawyers, fewer liberal arts degrees. | ||
Although we should have philosophers too, don't get me wrong, but we should really invest in our people. | ||
Dave the Dingus sent $3. | ||
You have long fingers. | ||
I'll still keep watching the show though. | ||
Boomer the Zoomer sent $3. | ||
Hi Nick, long time no super chat. | ||
I'm Boston Groyper, but I've been noticing how many college guys support Trump and it's white-pilling. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
Yes, very white-pilling. | ||
Boston, yeah, good times. | ||
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I used to live in Boston at one time. | |
I do not con-sent $20. | ||
Sticking up your hand for the Fuhrer. | ||
You're so airy and you're so uber-mench. | ||
I just want to be your Hamler. | ||
Get out of the basement. | ||
Here's your arm tattoo. | ||
Nice job. | ||
Thank you. | ||
My own world sent $3. | ||
Adam King is the gift that keeps on giving. | ||
Also hilarious to watch him shoot off his Twitter distress beacon in every direction for someone to help. | ||
Sorry Lil Nigga. | ||
No one is coming. | ||
That's pretty funny. | ||
Yeah, he's been having a hard time. | ||
Poor guy. | ||
Poor guy got outsmarted by a guy once. | ||
And now he's self-destructing. | ||
They can't handle it. | ||
Albert Castro sent $8, Ramaswamy's speech was great. | ||
Which one? | ||
Today or yesterday? | ||
Boss Lurker sent $10, it's not difficult to see why so-called secret books about Jesus were left out of the Bible, they are very stupid books. | ||
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John are not boring old standbys, they are by far the best books about Jesus. | ||
Best show in the world, thanks. | ||
Those are the only ones that were referenced by the Church Fathers. | ||
The Church Fathers didn't mention any of the Apocrypha, and a lot of the Gnostic Gospels that he was talking about came after Nicaea. | ||
So, I mean, anybody that makes that argument is just not serious. | ||
There's a lot of, like, alternative history about, like, the Dead Sea Scrolls and this other stuff, but none of that is legitimate. | ||
None of that is taken seriously. | ||
Pretty Fly White Guy sent $3, 295. | ||
Thanks for the show. | ||
Hey, thank you for the super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. - Aaron Burke sent $3. | ||
Did you see for Napoleon they cut out the best parts of the film, as they cut 90 minutes out of the cinema version. | ||
A good chunk of the Battle of Austerlitz. | ||
Jews in Hollywood definitely involved. | ||
No, I didn't see that. | ||
Really dumb question. | ||
Completely different situation. | ||
This isn't Europe, and that means something. | ||
Really dumb question. | ||
Completely different situation. | ||
This isn't Europe, and that means something. | ||
This isn't the 20th century. | ||
That means something, too. | ||
This is not the 20th century technologically, and it's not the 20th century, the age of ideology. | ||
I hate when people ask stupid questions like that. | ||
When they say, What the fuck does that even mean, you dumb idiot? | ||
That's just a stupid rhetorical question. | ||
*phone rings* Anybody who knows me, no, I'm not... Unfortunately, I'm just like this, okay? | ||
I'm not trying to be like... I couldn't be nice to you if I tried. | ||
more insulting super chatters is cringe elitist attitude looking down on people who support you. | ||
Okay? | ||
It's clear you're trying to be like your daddy Richard Spencer. | ||
Anybody who knows me, no, I'm not, unfortunately, I'm just like this, okay? | ||
I'm not, I'm not trying to be like, I couldn't, I couldn't be nice to you if I tried, okay? | ||
And, um, elitism isn't cringe. | ||
It's actually a good thing. | ||
If you think elitism is cringe, then you should go support the trannies and the blacks. | ||
You know? | ||
If you're some elitist, then go hang with the scrum. | ||
Go hang with the scrum of all the new arrivals. | ||
You know? | ||
I hate elitism! | ||
Okay, so what do you like, Bud Light and immigrants? | ||
Real mad at the people hanging out with refugees and Bud Light drinkers and football watchers and people who find commercials laugh out loud funny. | ||
So, it's got nothing to do with Richard Spencer, although I admire Richard Spencer for that reason. | ||
But that's a nice bait attempt. | ||
Kelly Johnson sent $20, new female fan here. | ||
Your courage and honesty are admirable. | ||
Keep it up. | ||
I love the idea of Trump and he is, by far, the only option for presidency but what are your thoughts on Zionist contributing to a majority of his success in the casino business and the executive office? | ||
I battle with this. | ||
Seems there's no escaping Zionism. | ||
Your thoughts? | ||
Well, hey, thanks for the super chat. | ||
Female fan, huh? | ||
unidentified
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I don't have many female fans. | |
Probably because I hate women. | ||
No, but I don't really. | ||
I love women. | ||
I love everybody, really. | ||
But hey, thanks for the super chat. | ||
Welcome aboard, young lady. | ||
Welcome aboard, lass. | ||
The girls' viewing party's over there. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
But, well, I basically answered that in great detail. | ||
So I don't need to go into the whole thing. | ||
But basically, I think that his agreement with the Zionists is provisional as opposed to Servile. | ||
That's how I see it. | ||
A bee sent $10. | ||
The intro was so awesome. | ||
Thanks for the free show. | ||
You do this every night and we love you. | ||
Thanks. | ||
I'm trying to get on time. | ||
I really struggle with punctuality, okay? | ||
I'm good at a lot of things. | ||
Well, I'm good at some things. | ||
Punctuality, my weakest point. | ||
But I'm trying, okay? | ||
- Okay. - Tricky cents, $7, for an ad blocker that still works on YouTube. | ||
Look up, Damper Monkey ad block script Reddit. | ||
It's a Chrome extension you put script into to bypass most of the paywalls/popups when reading articles, download toggle JavaScript. - I'm not doing all that. - 07. - I mean, I appreciate the suggestion, but I'm not doing all that. | ||
Sophia D sent $5. | ||
Good morning, Nicholas. | ||
Long time supporter. | ||
Over the years, I became highly attracted to you and have a lot to talk about. | ||
Would you be down to meet up for a coffee in Chicago? | ||
All the best. | ||
I'm busy that day. | ||
But hey, I appreciate the super chat. | ||
But gee, you know, now that I think about it, I think I'm really busy that day. | ||
So maybe another time. | ||
unidentified
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Let's go. | |
Listen, I can't be doing this, like, dating your fans thing. | ||
I'm sure you're a very nice person and I appreciate it. | ||
But I can't, you know, for security reasons, I can't just be meeting up with anybody. | ||
What if you're trying to kill me? | ||
What if you're trying to honeypot me? | ||
What if I go and meet up with you and you try to seduce me and then, you know, you take pictures of my butt or something? | ||
Like, we can't be doing that. | ||
So, you know, in good time I'll be looking for a wife, but I can't be soliciting offers like this. | ||
But I'm sure you're nice. | ||
I appreciate the gesture. | ||
Richie S sent $10, not sure if you got my second chat. | ||
My friend was the one in the MAGA hat behind Baked Alaska at Capitol. | ||
They thought he was you. | ||
No knocked him at 2am I feel like you both got screwed because of the mixup. | ||
Been watching since 2k16 love ya. | ||
So awesome. | ||
Keep it up big guy. | ||
Well I haven't been doing, I've only been doing the show since 2017 but if you've been watching for a long time thank you man I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, I did see that chat. | ||
I think I read it last week, but I definitely got screwed because of your friend. | ||
It's not his fault, but yeah, I did get screwed by that in a big way, but that's okay. | ||
Okay, all right. | ||
That's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for me. | ||
I'm starving. | ||
I gotta eat some breakfast. | ||
I'm gonna have some pasta and coffee. | ||
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But that's the show. | |
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. | ||
Remember to tune in on Tuesday for our coverage of the New Hampshire Primary around 7 o'clock Central. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your day. | ||
...will be our credo! | ||
unidentified
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It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
He's going to be only America first. |