Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | |
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the fullness of a real Christian. | ||
That'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 have to want it more than we do. | ||
We have to want it more than we do. | ||
We have to want it more than we do. | ||
Bye. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
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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. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America. | ||
America first. America first. America first. America first. America | ||
unidentified
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first. America | |
first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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 Wednesday. | ||
unidentified
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Is it Wednesday? | |
It is. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
And actually... | ||
It's really my preference tonight. | ||
We're going to be talking all about international affairs today. | ||
Yesterday I put out a little poll on Telegram. | ||
I said, should I cover Congress? | ||
Should I cover the latest in Gaza and Central America? | ||
And everybody wanted to hear about Congress. | ||
So this is the show that I want to do. | ||
So tonight, our featured story, we're talking all about the re-election of Nayib Bukele in El Salvador. | ||
Huge landslide victory. | ||
He won by 85%, which is unheard of in a democracy. | ||
Usually. | ||
And this is attributed to his tough on crime policies. | ||
El Salvador used to be the country with the highest murder rate in the world by far, with over a hundred murders per 100,000 people, which is astronomical. | ||
And since he was elected, I think in 2019, that number has been brought down to seven Per 100,000, so a huge decrease. | ||
And that's because he has effectively taken over the government as a dictator, rounded up all the criminals, over 70,000 people, and thrown them in jail, where many of them have died. | ||
And many people, including those in our own government, have said that that is a human rights violation, that this is against the law, and it's anti-democratic. | ||
But it works! | ||
It worked, and now the country is safe. | ||
So, you be the judge. | ||
So we'll talk all about him and the election, and we'll also talk about his connections with Israel because it's sort of peculiar. | ||
Bukele is ethnically Palestinian. | ||
His parents are from Bethlehem. | ||
They were Palestinian Christians, although his father converted to Islam. | ||
But despite being a Palestinian, he's a pro-Israel president and considered a, quote, friend of Israel by the Foreign Ministry of Israel. | ||
And there's some other connections as well. | ||
So I want to talk a little bit about that and explore that angle. | ||
Because as I mentioned last night, when you survey all these different right-wing movements around the entire world, although mainly in the West, there is this weird connection Weird connection with the Israeli right, and that is the political right wing in the state of Israel, the Likud party. | ||
And wouldn't you know, Bukele, when he was the lowly mayor of the capital city, San Salvador, actually took a trip, paid for by Israel, to Israel, where he met with the mayor Of, I think it was Bethlehem or Jerusalem, who is a member of the Likud party. | ||
And it's that element which tends to crop up in all these right-wing regimes, whether it's the Bolsonaro regime in Brazil, the Malay government in Argentina, Orban government in Hungary, And of course, famously, the Trump administration here in the United States. | ||
Although there's others as well. | ||
I'm not going to name every single one. | ||
So, I'd also like to talk about that strange Israel connection and what that means because I know a lot of people have been supportive of these right-wing governments and these right-wing movements in these countries and some of them tend to hand wave away or dismiss any allegations that these leaders are shills or part of an international Zionist network. | ||
And so I want to, I mean, firstly tonight acknowledge that that is real. | ||
It does exist. | ||
But then there's a little bit more of a complicated discussion about whether that is disqualifying for them. | ||
And I have Maybe a more nuanced, I hate that when people say that, but I do have maybe a more nuanced take on this than other people. | ||
I think that in the United States we have to be wary of it. | ||
It's maybe good for the people of El Salvador, maybe even good for the people of Argentina, but as Americans we should not support this. | ||
And I'll elaborate on why that is. | ||
So, we'll talk all about that. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about a breakthrough in Middle East diplomacy. | ||
It looks like, perhaps, a coherent Biden doctrine is beginning to emerge, at least that's what the New York Times and others have been saying, where it appears that normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia, when this war is finished, may be conditioned on Palestinian statehood. | ||
Which would be an historic breakthrough if that were to occur. | ||
And I think the Biden administration knows that Netanyahu has been stringing them along. | ||
Possibly Saudi Arabia is facing pressure from their own people. | ||
But now the Saudi government has issued an ultimatum and said that they will never normalize ties with Israel unless there is a Palestinian state. | ||
And the White House is now saying that we, the United States, are endorsing the creation of a Palestinian state, which would be a radical change to American doctrine. | ||
They've also suggested that maybe that may be the first step to any kind of peace, even between Israel and Palestine, rather than the last step. | ||
So we'll talk about what that means specifically and why this is so significant, but looks good. | ||
Looks like maybe finally there will be some pushback against Israel. | ||
So we'll talk about that, too. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
I'm excited. | ||
A lot of news. | ||
Before we get into it, I want to remind you to smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live on Rumble and Cozy. | ||
Make sure you're following me on both. | ||
That's it. | ||
I guess other than that, that's about it. | ||
Oh! | ||
Also, of course, Tomorrow I will be streaming on Rumble the Tucker Carlson Vladimir Putin interview. | ||
I'm sure you've all heard about it. | ||
Pretty big deal. | ||
And you know what? | ||
Kudos to Tucker for doing this. | ||
I think it's a long time coming. | ||
I wish he had done it earlier, but maybe this is the best possible time to do it before the election. | ||
That's why the Western media has been panicking about it. | ||
So tomorrow, I think they said it comes out at six o'clock, excuse me, six o'clock Eastern Time. | ||
So whenever that gets published, I will be live reacting to it here on Rumble, exclusively on Rumble. | ||
So make sure to tune in tomorrow evening, early in the evening. | ||
Normally I'm live like tonight at like 3 a.m., but tomorrow I will be live early, 6 p.m. | ||
Eastern Time, And I heard it's two hours, so it should be a pretty big interview. | ||
Should be a lot of good content. | ||
So, tomorrow evening, 6 o'clock Eastern, on the Rumble channel, live reacting to the Tucker-Putin interview. | ||
It's gonna be, I think, maybe the most interesting interview that he's done so far. | ||
And, it's funny, I'm always asking Keith in the group chat, Keith Woods that is, I'm always like, hey, what do you think about Tucker? | ||
Is he a CIA agent? | ||
Is he a shill? | ||
Because, you know, I've been very suspect of him for a long time. | ||
And Keith always gives me, you know, some nonsense. | ||
Never gives me a straight answer on this. | ||
And then this interview comes out and he goes, oh, so I guess Tucker's not a CIA shill. | ||
But I think the angle with this Is that Tucker, like many of the Zionists and the CIA, I think there's a faction that wants the war with Ukraine to begin to wind down so that we can focus on China. | ||
So I don't think that this interview necessarily means he's not a shill. | ||
Let's not forget Oliver Stone. | ||
Conducted a series of interviews with Putin, and Oliver Stone is no dissident, contrary to what many people assume. | ||
And you can do a cursory look at his filmography. | ||
It's a little sus. | ||
We could do a show, maybe I'll talk about that more tomorrow. | ||
So I don't, I don't think, look just because he interviewed Putin that doesn't mean that he's not a spy. | ||
It doesn't mean that he's not a shill. | ||
There's still, there's still an angle there. | ||
I mean it's, I'm glad that he's doing it for my own reasons, some of which I imagine we'll get into tomorrow night. | ||
I support Russia because I want Russia to diminish America. | ||
I want Russia to exert pressure on America So that there will be a calamity in this country. | ||
So that there can be true regime change in the United States. | ||
That's why I support Russia. | ||
And that is the same reason why I support China. | ||
But that's very different from what a lot of the Zionists are now saying, which is that we need to wind down our war with Russia because we need to use Russia to play off of China, and that it will allow us to focus more on China. | ||
And that's not why I support an end to this war at all. | ||
It's actually the complete opposite. | ||
They want to do it because strategically it is what makes sense for the United States and arguably the most coherent doctrine for Washington, if you support Washington and NATO, would have been for us to probably sunset the aid last year and enter into some kind of negotiation with Putin. | ||
But this open-ended commitment It's not good for anybody. | ||
It's not good for us. | ||
It's not good for NATO. | ||
So, I don't think that calling for the end for the war in Ukraine is even necessarily the dissident position anymore. | ||
I think that's just, anyone who articulates that, that's actually just what's best for Washington. | ||
At this point. | ||
It's sort of like when Jon Stewart went out on Stephen Colbert two years after the pandemic ended and endorsed the lab leak theory. | ||
Sometimes they go out there and they need to legitimize a pivot on something that they were strongly in favor of. | ||
Like some of the pandemic era things or like China. | ||
So I think that is possibly what that is. | ||
More on that tomorrow. | ||
We'll cover all that tomorrow. | ||
With that, we will dive into the show. | ||
I'm trying to think, did anything else happen? | ||
Oh! | ||
One other thing. | ||
What's going on with Jack Posobiec? | ||
This chair is really bothering me. | ||
Somebody pointed out it's squeaking and now I can't not hear it. | ||
Is it really bad? | ||
can you hear that it's definitely like the microphones definitely picking it up | ||
The other one I just broke though I'm even worried to sit on it because I took the other chair on Monday I was just like banging it into the ground and just like you know because I hate that other chair this other chair I've had for a hundred years and it sucks but this one sucks worse I bought this at like OfficeMax and it's not comfortable And it just sucks. | ||
So maybe I'll just get a stool. | ||
Maybe I just need like a three-legged, just like the most basic stool, because it's just getting ridiculous. | ||
Anyway, so what's going on with Jack Posobiec? | ||
So this guy's like a Nazi now? | ||
Because I saw he posted that meme of how the whole world is black and like Europe and America are white and it says like this is a real genocide and it's talking about, I mean, and understand to put it in those terms is extremely explicit. | ||
It's extremely on the nose. | ||
Because some conservatives will go out and they'll say, there's this great replacement where the Democrats are importing more obedient, loyal, brown voters. | ||
But they'll usually follow it up with something where they'll say, but it's not about race. | ||
It's not because they're brown or black. | ||
It's because they'll vote Democrat or, you know, some other such nonsense. | ||
They'll say something like, they're not culturally American. | ||
And They have really no problem with the demographic transformation of Earth into this giant like black slum and they on some level don't even care if that happens to America as long as all the black and brown people are like super conservative or something whatever that even means anymore. | ||
So to put it in those terms and say it's black and white That the whole planet's gonna be filled with black people? | ||
Basically. | ||
And we're just this tiny besieged minority of whites here in Europe and North America? | ||
You might as well just post Madison Grant. | ||
Because that was the thesis of his book, The Great American Racialist, a hundred years ago. | ||
He said that it was the global tide of color against white world supremacy. | ||
And by the way, that's what it is. | ||
I mean, that is exactly what it is. | ||
And it's hell. | ||
Like, we live in hell that that's happening. | ||
And it's getting worse. | ||
The continent of Africa, all these people, they talk about the depopulation agenda. | ||
The population of Africa is exploding. | ||
Congo, Tanzania, Nigeria, All these countries are going to have a population explosion. | ||
There's going to be like 5 billion Africans by the end of the century. | ||
And they're going to be pouring in to Europe and North America and this is going to absolutely suck. | ||
They're going to turn the whole planet into Africa. | ||
You are going to be chased by cannibals. | ||
We're not even talking about gangbangers. | ||
We're not even talking about the blacks you're used to, which already are troublesome, okay? | ||
Quarrelsome. | ||
We're not talking about black people who are sometimes endearing with their funny antics and their music, but may rob you at gunpoint. | ||
We're talking about black as night Africans With body paint from head to toe, running after you to eat you because they're cannibals, because they think there's nuggets of gold in your head. | ||
Like, we're talking about a level of N, of black N-word that you are not used to, that you have never encountered. | ||
We're not talking 85 IQ American blacks, we're talking 65 IQ. | ||
West African blacks. | ||
Central African blacks. | ||
These people have never seen a two-story building In their life. | ||
They're not illiterate. | ||
They don't have a written language at all. | ||
So it's just another level. | ||
This is advanced darkness. | ||
This is advanced darkness. | ||
This is a level of civilizational darkness you've never heard of. | ||
You've never even seen. | ||
They will make BLM look like Isaac Newton by comparison. | ||
They will make you long to live in an all-African-American neighborhood. | ||
You'll live among the blacks now and breathe a sigh of relief. | ||
You'd be like, wow, this is so different. | ||
These people will be breaking into the electrical transformers to harvest the oil to cook food, to cook fecal matter, to eat. | ||
They will be breaking into your house, stripping the copper wire and And I don't even know, I mean doing like magic with it, like attempting alchemy. | ||
Not even selling it, but using alchemy. | ||
Or attempting it. | ||
So anyway. | ||
People are not prepared for this. | ||
This is like World War Z. Ever see the Brad Pitt zombie movie when they're climbing on top of each other to get into Israel? | ||
It's gonna be like that. | ||
And anyway, so that's correct. | ||
The Madison Grant hypothesis was correct about all these other people rising up and whites getting crushed. | ||
But Jack Posobiec posted this and then he posted the Gad Saad poll. | ||
This Jew from Canada posted this poll and said, what's the biggest threat to the West? | ||
Zionism or Islam? | ||
And Zionism won, by far. | ||
And Posobiec posted the poll with no caption. | ||
And I was like, okay, I see what you're putting down. | ||
Is Posobiec sending a little telegraph to the Groypers? | ||
Little... | ||
A little coded- a not-so-subtle coded message saying, hey guys, I know I just look like a turning point shill, but I'm cool. | ||
Like, I know that there's a rising tide of color against white world supremacy. | ||
I know that Jews are the problem. | ||
Bro said, I've read Jews are the problem. | ||
It's on my nightstand. | ||
So I don't know, but I don't trust it right away. | ||
You know, it's gonna take a little bit more than that to What's his endgame? | ||
or rather to convince us, I should say, that he's cool. | ||
But I was posting that on my Telegram. | ||
I'm like, what's his endgame? | ||
What did he mean by this? | ||
Like, what's going on? | ||
So that would be very interesting. | ||
Charlie Kirk, as we know, has become a white supremacist, and that's a huge victory. | ||
But he remains a Jew-lover. | ||
He remains a Jew-lover. | ||
I don't use language like that, you know. | ||
But he is an Israel shill. | ||
Like Charlie Kirk, Has become white nationalist, hardcore, but it remains a shill to the Jews in Israel. | ||
And I've said that for a long time. | ||
But if Pesobic is coming out swinging on both fronts, it's like, hey, if Turning Point would just stop banning Gropers from their conferences, maybe we could work together. | ||
If they would just stop bad-mouthing me and just Reintegrate the Gropers into the machine, that would be a win for everybody. | ||
Because honestly, the Turning Point USA philosophy is dead. | ||
Like, we killed it. | ||
I killed it. | ||
No Generation Z white male is going out there and saying, socialism sucks! | ||
Big government sucks! | ||
They're going out there and they're saying, Other stuff. | ||
They're going out there and they're saying Israel sucks. | ||
They're saying that the Sanhedrin sucks. | ||
They're saying Zionism sucks. | ||
Totally different ballgame. | ||
And we obviously possess the ascendant philosophy. | ||
Like, you can take the Groypers out of the party, but you can't take the Groyper ideology out of The people. | ||
I mean, we're still... Generation Z is effectively, there is no other right-wing among us other than some version of National Socialist, Sympathetic, Right-Wing Authoritarian, Catholic, or even Evangelical Christian Nationalist. | ||
It's what it is. | ||
So I think there's some surrender on their part. | ||
I think they've realized That libertarian Zionist thing. | ||
It's just not winning anybody. | ||
It's dying. | ||
So, you know, we'll keep an eye on that. | ||
Maybe in the future there will be some. | ||
Rehabilitation. | ||
I think it's time. | ||
It's been a long time, a long time coming and I think the time will soon arrive, the hour will arrive when Nick Fuentes is rehabilitated. | ||
That's a conversation which needs to start because here we are all these years after the Groyper War and half of these guys sound just like me. | ||
Half of these right-wing, con-inc, e-celebs sound just like me. | ||
They're saying the same stuff that I got canceled for. | ||
So at what time does that conversation begin when they say, uh, why is Nick Fuentes cancelled again? | ||
We cancelled him six years ago when they were promoting gay marriage and mass migration and stapling green cards to diplomas. | ||
And you look around today and they're all white nationalists, effectively. | ||
They're bringing on Steve Saylor. | ||
So when does that conversation happen? | ||
When they look around and say, we don't even know why he's canceled anymore. | ||
We agree with him on everything at this point. | ||
Soon. | ||
Soon, I think. | ||
But we'll see. | ||
We'll keep an eye on that. | ||
Anyway, I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our first story. | ||
We're going to talk about Bukele, the president of El Salvador. | ||
Sort of an interesting story. | ||
You may know this, maybe not, but El Salvador is one of the most violent countries in the world, or at least it was. | ||
It had the highest murder rate by far in the entire world, over 100 murders per 100,000 people. | ||
And it was also actually a huge source of immigration into the United States. | ||
If you've been following the immigration story in the past one or two years, most of the immigration has come from Venezuela in South America. | ||
But under the Trump administration, it was all coming from the Northern Triangle countries, which are Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. | ||
So, El Salvador, because of the immense violence, was driving a lot of the illegal immigration into the United States. | ||
But in 2019 they elected this president who's actually ethnically Palestinian, named Naib Bukele, and he got into office and changed everything. | ||
He threw everybody in jail, became a right-wing dictator, and they solved all the crime. | ||
Now the murder rate has collapsed to 7 per 100,000. | ||
seven per 100,000 so more than 100 per 100,000 down to seven per 100,000 And this week he was reelected in a landslide with 85% of the vote and his party won 58 out of 60 seats in the national legislature. | ||
So that's a huge mandate for him. | ||
He effectively became a right-wing dictator in all but name. | ||
I mean he is still technically called the president. | ||
It is still technically a democracy. | ||
But over the past five years he has overseen a process which has transferred power in the legislature and the courts and in law enforcement into his hands alone. | ||
He solved all the problems. | ||
And then with their most recent election, nearly everybody in the country voted for him. | ||
And there was a huge demonstration outside the presidential palace tonight where he gave a speech and it's the kind of image which we're not used to seeing in the 21st century in this part of the world. | ||
So it basically proves that this stuff works. | ||
But this is a story, this is from I think this is from NBC. | ||
It says, quote, El Salvador's Bitcoin-friendly and tough-on-crime Nayib Bukele was re-elected as president in a landslide on Sunday. | ||
According to preliminary results released by the Central American country's Supreme Electoral Court, Bukele received 83% of the vote out of 70% of the ballots counted. | ||
His New Ideas party is on track to win at least 58 out of the 60 seats in the National Assembly. | ||
In a post on X, Bukele hailed the result as the record of the entire democratic history of the world, meaning higher percentage than any democratic leader ever. | ||
Which is probably true. | ||
Officials from the opposition, ARENA, and FMLN parties said on Sunday that the vote has been marred by a series of anomalies. | ||
A parliament member from the left-wing FMLN party alleged that polling stations were controlled by loyalists in complicity with the Supreme Electoral Tribunal and the Attorney General's office. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Elections never get stolen! | ||
That sounds like COPE to me. | ||
That sounds like an insurrection. | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
I thought the election was totally legitimate. | ||
I think it's perfectly fine. | ||
The opposition has also criticized Bukele for seeking a second term, given that the nation's constitution prohibits immediate re-election. | ||
Nevertheless, El Salvador's court ruled in 2021 that Bukele could run again. | ||
Responding to criticism, he jokingly changed the name of his profile on Twitter in 2021 to Coolest Dictator in the World. | ||
First elected in 2019, Bukele unleashed a crackdown on violent crime and made El Salvador the first country in the world that accepts Bitcoin as legal tender. | ||
Between 2015 and 2022, the homicide rate per 100,000 dropped from 107 murders to 7.8, according to official data. | ||
At the same time, human rights groups have warned that Bukele's iron fist approach leads to abuses, including arbitrary arrests and the mistreatment of detainees. | ||
So this is a pretty incredible development because lately a lot of people have realized that this whole system that we have isn't working. | ||
Liberalism, democracy. | ||
At one time, after the end of the Cold War, we thought that this was the perfect system or the most perfect system that had ever been discovered. | ||
But we've been realizing over the past 30 years that whether it's better or worse, it's broken. | ||
It's not working. | ||
Because everything seems to be getting worse. | ||
The crime is worse. | ||
It's more violent. | ||
There's more war. | ||
There's a drug problem, a suicide problem, a school shooting problem. | ||
There is the problem of low fertility rates, which is symptomatic of a far bigger problem, which is that men and women don't get married anymore. | ||
And you can blame that on feminism or education, a lot of things. | ||
But suffice to say, the country is not reproducing itself. | ||
And killing itself. | ||
And those things are intimately connected. | ||
And that would tell you that the country is dying. | ||
Largely due to, not historical events, but probably because of our system. | ||
And it seems that with every election, whether it's a national election or even local elections, the government is not able to effectively or rapidly respond to problems. | ||
And people even point to the little things like potholes or roads all the way up to the bigger things like the problems they have in San Francisco with homelessness or a drug epidemic or things like that. | ||
And so lately, especially on the right, there has been this realization that maybe it would be better to have a more authoritarian form of government like a monarchy or like a dictatorship Something with transparency and accountability, and something that has the freedom to act decisively and swiftly. | ||
And people have also pointed out that the reason we can't solve these problems is because of the pressures within the system. | ||
How can democratically elected leaders make long-term, unpopular, but maybe necessary decisions if they're constantly concerned about getting re-elected? | ||
Take an issue like the national debt. | ||
For the United States to bring down the national debt or the deficits, we would need to think 50 years into the future. | ||
And we may even need to initiate a recession. | ||
We may even need to cause a recession or a depression and institute austerity in the meantime to get things on track. | ||
How could a politician that is worried about election every other year How could they even begin to think about a problem that is decades in the making and would require decades to solve? | ||
How could they enact policies that would cause unpopular outcomes or pain for a short-term or a medium-term or, God forbid, a long-term? | ||
It would be totally impossible. | ||
And then there's the question of money. | ||
How can leaders who then have to fundraise hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars every other year or every two, four, or six years for re-election, how can they truly remain independent from the private elements or even foreign governments That they are tasked with regulating or interacting with on the national stage or international stage. | ||
It's impossible. | ||
If a foreign regime can come in and pay a congressman $50,000 and buy their vote on billions or tens of billions or hundreds of billions of dollars in government disbursements, it's impossible for the government to be independent from foreign nations. | ||
Similarly, If one of the big tech companies, which has hundreds of billions of dollars in cash, if they can pay a congressman the same rate to get favorable tax or regulatory treatment in the legislature, it's impossible for the politicians to be independent from the private elements within our own country. | ||
So these are just some of the concerns And some of the realizations people have been having about our system over the past few decades. | ||
And the main problems are that the government cannot make long-term plans, cannot do anything unpopular, and so that makes them beholden to the media, fundamentally. | ||
And the politicians cannot be independent or make independent decisions. | ||
Because they are captured by money that they're required to raise for the campaigns. | ||
To sum it up, those are really the big problems. | ||
Add to that, maybe a separate but related issue, which is that the people have no way of holding the politicians accountable. | ||
Because it is by the nature of this system, it is so complex and so opaque, and so many of the decisions we don't even know who makes them, and in many cases it's people that aren't even elected in the private or public sector. | ||
Whether it's the Federal Reserve or the Federal Bureaucracy or even these huge corporations that are protected and enabled by the government, they are the ones that are truly running the society and we'll never know their names and we'll never know which desk is responsible for the decisions that actually matter. | ||
So how then, if the wrong decisions are being made, can those people be replaced? | ||
So people start to find authoritarianism attractive. | ||
It would seem to solve all those problems. | ||
A dictator who has ultimate power would be independent from private interests or foreign interests. | ||
A dictator wouldn't have to worry about re-election, couldn't be captured by money, and a dictator would be accountable. | ||
Everybody would know where the decisions are coming from. | ||
They don't have that problem in Russia. | ||
They don't have that problem in China. | ||
In Russia, they know exactly who to blame. | ||
In China, they know exactly who to blame. | ||
It's ten people. | ||
It's Xi and it's the Standing Committee. | ||
And that's it. | ||
But we have been told over the past so many years as this idea has become more attractive that that's not who we are. | ||
That the country is democratic. | ||
The country is liberal. | ||
It always will be. | ||
And that's the only way. | ||
And we're in a spiritual, moral war against right-wing autocrats like Putin and Xi. | ||
Or even the Ayatollah in Iran. | ||
And we have to reassert democracy and liberalism in the world. | ||
Never mind, of course, the obvious hypocrisy. | ||
And I've talked about this on my show, the war in Ukraine is fundamentally about this, at least that's the narrative they have tried to spin up in order to create a pretext for support. | ||
They say that it's not really a war about a borderland, which is what Ukraine is, it's a war about Ideology. | ||
It's a moral struggle between a dictator and a free nation. | ||
And the same is true of China and Taiwan, or Iran and Israel. | ||
But there's a major hypocrisy because most of our allies, or not most of them, but many of them, are dictatorships. | ||
Turkey is a NATO member. | ||
Not exactly a democracy. | ||
Saudi Arabia is one of our closest allies. | ||
Perhaps the only remaining absolute monarchy in the world. | ||
And those are just two very strong examples. | ||
If Turkey were attacked by a foreign state, we would have to go to war to defend that dictatorship. | ||
So people have also pointed out the hypocrisy of that argument. | ||
So when Bukele wins in El Salvador, Many people paid attention and they saw that he did all the things that our government would admonish. | ||
He replaced the Supreme Court so that the Supreme Court would make favorable decisions about his ability to seek re-election. | ||
He brought the military into the legislature to intimidate the lawmakers into voting for extraordinary security powers. | ||
He used the security state to round up and arrest tens of thousands of people and detain them without trial. | ||
All the things that we're told are Hitlerian. | ||
It's like the Nazis. | ||
It's like Hitler. | ||
That's what a dictator would do. | ||
That's not who we are. | ||
That's against a democracy. | ||
He did all those things to a nation that was in crisis. | ||
And five years after he was elected, it worked. | ||
Everything that he did worked. | ||
El Salvador did not turn into a dystopian, dictatorship, totalitarian regime. | ||
It did not turn into a disturbing cult of personality. | ||
There were not truly any severe human rights violations or restriction on civil liberties. | ||
If anything, it was the opposite. | ||
By rounding up all the criminals and taking them off the street, people have more freedom in the country. | ||
They're free from the fear of being murdered or kidnapped or otherwise abused by gang members that ran the country. | ||
So if anything, people are better off. | ||
And it speaks to the fact that they're better off, that the murder rate has dropped so precipitously. | ||
It's a completely different country. | ||
It's transformed. | ||
And that is reflected in this landslide re-election where 85% of the vote went his way and nearly the entire legislature was taken over by his party. | ||
That's some mandate! | ||
And isn't that... Isn't that the strongest rebuke of democracy possible? | ||
That this guy was elected, claimed extraordinary powers, took over the other organs of government and usurped their authority, and the people wanted more because it worked? | ||
What does that say about our system? | ||
Where people look at the dysfunction and somehow say that's a good thing. | ||
People look at the gridlock and the circus and the dysfunction and they have this weird Misplaced sense of pride in this. | ||
They look at it and say, well, hey, it ain't perfect, but that's our system. | ||
Hey, that's American Tomahawk. | ||
Wouldn't trade it for anything in the world. | ||
Really? | ||
I would. | ||
Well, what would you trade it for? | ||
I'll give you three examples off the top of my head. | ||
Russia, Saudi Arabia, El Salvador. | ||
So easy. | ||
So easy, I didn't even need to think about it. | ||
Well, it's not perfect, but it's the most perfect system so far discovered. | ||
Really? | ||
Is that why in all of our great cities there's either people leaving their car windows open so the criminals won't break the windows? | ||
Or in a city like Chicago, people have to drive around carrying firearms because they'll get shot at any time of the day? | ||
These are our great cities, by the way. | ||
If foreigners or tourists Our investors come to visit the United States. | ||
Where do you think they go? | ||
They don't come to the small town. | ||
They come to our great world cities with their great ports and transportation and where the population and culture and business is. | ||
They go to Los Angeles and New York or Miami and Chicago or San Francisco and Dallas. | ||
And these countries are all a dump. | ||
They're dirty and disgusting and violent. | ||
With unbelievable corruption. | ||
They all have black mayors who are retarded. | ||
I mean you look at some of these mayors it's just like embarrassing. | ||
I mean they're like literally retarded. | ||
Like the mayor in New York or this mayor in Chicago. | ||
Mayor in Chicago had to take time off because he was having panic attacks. | ||
We're not a serious place. | ||
They're housing migrants at the airports. | ||
Thousands of them. | ||
Dirty, smelly migrants that our government won't even let us deport. | ||
And people look at this dysfunction, whether it's the filth, the violence, the corruption, The lack of productivity, this disastrous economy that we have, and they say something like, well, but that's the price of freedom. | ||
I don't feel very free at all. | ||
Not even just as a political dissident, but even as an American, I don't feel free, and I don't feel like we live a dignified life here. | ||
I feel like it's very undignified, especially if you don't have money, to suffer the indignity of Going to a fast food restaurant these days or traveling coach on a commercial, excuse me, on a commercial flight at an airport. | ||
Or taking an Uber or going to any downtown in a major city. | ||
Or being subjected when you go places to retards and masks or gay pride flags that represent anal sex with poo. | ||
There's nothing dignified about this. | ||
Disgusting women with tattoos and muffin top bellies hanging out over their pants. | ||
What's dignified about this? | ||
Everything is an assault. | ||
If you're not getting assaulted by a black or a homeless person, you're getting assaulted visually by filth and ugliness and decay. | ||
And people say, this is better. | ||
It's not better. | ||
And what was demonstrated in El Salvador Is that what is required to solve deep-seated problems which are caused by fundamentally a misallocation of power Is extraordinary power vested in the hands of the right political will. | ||
That's the only solution. | ||
El Salvador was taken over by gangs. | ||
Gangs that were trained in the United States. | ||
Many of their criminals emigrated to the United States where they learned gang warfare in cities like Los Angeles and they came back Tattooed and committing atrocities and these gangs through fear and intimidation and corruption ran the country and the power was vested in their hands and they abused it. | ||
So a popular leader rose up and took the power back took extraordinary power from the government and wielded the power of the state which can marshal the resources of the nation to crush all of its competitors And to transform the nation with a strong hand. | ||
And people say the risk of doing something like this is, well, what if you put the power in the wrong hands? | ||
Or what if those hands never relinquished the power? | ||
Or abused the power? | ||
But at a certain point, it becomes clear that any order is better than disorder. | ||
At a certain point, people come to that conclusion. | ||
That any exercise of order from a state with the force of law is preferable to chaos, is preferable to disorder, when there is no nucleus, when there is no central power. | ||
And that's what happened in El Salvador. | ||
They had a murder rate of 107+, and the only thing that could defeat the gangs was the state. | ||
The state is the only institution, theoretically, that had the power to bring them to heel. | ||
All it needed was the political will exercised by an effective and competent leader. | ||
But it had to be in the hands of one person alone, a true leader. | ||
And he solved it. | ||
Rounded them all up, threw them in jail, and probably some innocent people died. | ||
And probably some innocent people were caught up in it. | ||
And the criminals were deprived of their human rights. | ||
But what the result has been is that for the majority, for the multitude, their standard of living and their quality of life and their freedom has been elevated. | ||
And probably the loss of life This way is less than if the former situation had continued. | ||
And as Bukele himself has said, they have prioritized the rights of law-abiding people over criminals. | ||
Maybe they've had to infringe upon the criminals' rights, but that's better than the previous arrangement where the criminals were killing innocent people. | ||
And all of the people in El Salvador went out and voted for this again. | ||
I think that says that this experiment has worked. | ||
And maybe we need something like that in the United States because one might ask who or what will challenge the institutions in this country? | ||
Who will challenge the gangs in our country, the corporations in our country, the unelected bureaucrats? | ||
What Bukele showed is that it's actually quite a simple process. | ||
We know what the problems are, and we know who's causing them. | ||
unidentified
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And what Bukele did was just simply arrest them. | |
Got the money, got the mandate, and then he got the military to go in and arrest those people. | ||
Now they're in jail. | ||
Now they can't cause problems anymore. | ||
Go figure. | ||
If Donald Trump were elected in the United States, he could do the same thing with criminals, with illegal immigrants, with bureaucrats. | ||
You look at some of the big problems in the United States, for example, pornography. | ||
Donald Trump could get an office. | ||
He could use his mandate to force Congress to pass the necessary law. | ||
He could arrest all the pornographers and throw them in jail. | ||
The people that run OnlyFans, the people that run Pornhub, he can throw them in jail. | ||
He can close the border by building a giant structure. | ||
He could marshal the resources to build a force to deport everybody here that is working or living in the United States illegally. | ||
He can fire 50,000 bureaucrats working in the executive branch and replace them with loyalists. | ||
He could go after the biggest corporations in America that are pushing DEI or any other kind of filth. | ||
We can do what we want. | ||
That's the biggest lie. | ||
I think that's maybe the biggest lie that we've been told and this is why they fear collective action. | ||
There is no reason that we can't make the society the way that we want it to be. | ||
It doesn't have to be this way. | ||
The people don't need to be fat. | ||
We don't need to have a collapsing fertility rate. | ||
We don't need to suffer feminism. | ||
We don't need to suffer pornography. | ||
We don't need to have criminals running around and the borders open. | ||
It's the 21st century. | ||
We have the manpower and the technology and we have the knowledge to solve all of it. | ||
It's just a question of political will. | ||
It's a question of getting the right person in power and then it's that person's responsibility to wield it effectively with the right personnel to solve it and then do it. | ||
It's that easy! | ||
So, this whole situation, I think, shows us that if a country like El Salvador can clean up their streets, we can too. | ||
If a country like El Salvador, which is synonymous with violence, can nearly eliminate murder in their country, can't the United States? | ||
And how did they do it? | ||
They elected some dictator who is forward-thinking, a millennial, he's interested in Bitcoin, We don't have anybody like that in our country. | ||
We can't get somebody like that a mandate in the United States. | ||
They're doing the same thing in Saudi Arabia with Mohammed bin Salman. | ||
Those leaders are the future. | ||
Bukele, Mohammed bin Salman, these guys are the future. | ||
We need a leader like that in the United States. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
So, that's Bukele. | ||
But I want to talk a little bit about his connection with Israel because there is a little bit of a conspicuous thing here, which is that Bukele, who is great, like many of the other right-wing leaders in the world, is a shill for Israel. | ||
And this is just a little blurb here. | ||
It says, quote, upon his election as president in 2019, Bukele was referred to as a friend of Israel by the Israeli press. | ||
He was also described as a partner for cooperation by the Israeli ambassador to El Salvador in 2015. | ||
Shortly after taking office, he struck a multi-million dollar medical deal with the Israeli nonprofit Jerusalem Foundation. | ||
Which saw El Salvador receive $3 million for its military and police. | ||
In 2018, Bukele, at the time mayor of San Salvador, visited Israel on an Israeli government-sponsored trip, during which he met the mayors of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem and prayed on the Western Wall. | ||
Bukele, who is a confessing Christian, is also proud of his wife's Jewish roots. | ||
While meeting the mayor of Jerusalem in Israel's capital last year, Bukele proudly revealed that his wife's grandfather was a Sephardic Jew. | ||
So I saw this and here's the thing. | ||
So we can say on the one hand that the Bukele model should be emulated. | ||
We need a dictator. | ||
We need a dictator to crush these other forces. | ||
We need a dictator to set things right, even if just for a limited time. | ||
It is also true that he is part of, probably, an Israeli network. | ||
Because behind all of these right-wing forces, there seem to be Likud agents and Israel trips and Jewish wives or friends or backers. | ||
Bolsonaro, who's another South American right-wing leader, his son was best friends with Netanyahu's son. | ||
And Bolsonaro, contrary to many of his left-wing predecessors or his left-wing successor, was pro-Israel. | ||
Same thing in Argentina. | ||
Millet broke with his predecessor. | ||
And has been a total supporter of Israel in their war with Hamas. | ||
He visited Israel this week and cried at the Wailing Wall. | ||
He also not only visited Israel, but also visited the Chabad World Headquarters in Brooklyn, New York, as well. | ||
And he has a personal rabbi. | ||
And now you have Bukele in El Salvador, who is the latest right-wing leader. | ||
Or not the latest, I should say. | ||
His election this year is the latest. | ||
But Bukele, like Bolsonaro and like Malay, represents a right-wing nationalist regime that, unlike its former left-wing governments, is very pro-Israel and has deep connections to the Israeli right-wing. | ||
And I would say that in all these cases, this is not a coincidence. | ||
Not in South and Central America, where there's actually been a long-standing relationship with the right-wing movements in these countries and Israel. | ||
But also in Europe, in Southeast and Western Europe, where the right-wing parties there, like Vox in Spain, or National Front in France, or the Geert Wilders party in Netherlands, or Maloney in Italy, even the AfD in Germany is sympathetic to Israel. | ||
They have that same relationship over there. | ||
Clearly, there is something going on, which is that all these movements Have some kind of connection with Israel. | ||
They all have a connection with the Israeli right. | ||
They're probably receiving some form of financial support or the Jews in Israel are brokering some sort of support from the right wing in the United States. | ||
So it goes something like this. | ||
A right-wing government in El Salvador builds an embassy for Israel in its capital and votes with them in the United Nations and does whatever. | ||
In exchange, the Israeli right, which is prominent in the United States, organizes some advocacy for Bukele on American social media. | ||
The Israeli or Zionist Jews, which control the American right, are then able to offer huge support to Bukele. | ||
And it would seem like that is the relationship. | ||
It's really maybe better said that it is a bilateral relationship between that country and Israel. | ||
But it also looks like it's really a deal that they're striking with the Jews in the United States that just happens to run through Israel. | ||
That Malay and Bolsonaro and Bukele can get support from Bannon and from the right-wing infrastructure in America But they do that by offering support to Israel. | ||
And that's really how the Jews traffic. | ||
Jews invented international trade with King Solomon, and they've been running it ever since. | ||
And that's the basis of it, is that the Jews, being in all countries, everywhere in the world, they can negotiate these kinds of multi-party transnational deals. | ||
That's how it's always worked with them. | ||
That's how we got in World War I. | ||
That was how the Rothschilds revolutionized banking. | ||
It's because they've got their brothers and cousins in every capital in the world. | ||
So, Bukele, Bolsonaro, and Millet say that they will support Israel and in exchange Israel will call their Jews in America and they'll dispatch Tucker Carlson to give an interview or they'll do some kind of press tour or social media campaign on Twitter or Facebook for these third world countries and their populist movements. | ||
It would seem that it's something like that. | ||
And I would say that for that reason, probably Bukele is good for El Salvador. | ||
I would argue that maybe Millet is even good for Argentina. | ||
But they should not be supported in the United States. | ||
Because if we seek to displace the pro-Zionist movement in America, we cannot support them and their proxies. | ||
And I said this the other day, how can we have a right-wing movement in America that puts America first if it's led by Jews who put Israel first? | ||
That's impossible for that to work. | ||
So then therefore, why would we be supporting their people that are on some kind of quid pro quo arrangement through Israel? | ||
I understand why Argentinians would support Malay. | ||
I understand why Salvadorians would support Bukele. | ||
I would understand why Brazilians support Bolsonaro. | ||
And if I were one of them, I would support those regimes too. | ||
As an American, I don't support that. | ||
As an American, I don't support the Zionist-backed regimes in these countries. | ||
I will not tweet favorably about them. | ||
In exchange for their recognition of Israel, I'm not going to be a part of that matrix. | ||
And so that's a very important thing, is for Americans to realize that a game is being run on us. | ||
Americans are the most valuable, important people in the world. | ||
And the rest of the world cares very deeply what Americans think. | ||
Because what Americans think is what drives the American market, which is the biggest in the world, and it's what drives the American government, which is most powerful in the world. | ||
So that's why there's a constant psychological operation on the American people more than anybody else. | ||
Nobody gives a shit what Brazilians think. | ||
Nobody cares what... No offense. | ||
Nobody cares what people in El Salvador think. | ||
How much money does your average person in El Salvador have? | ||
And what can their government do? | ||
So that's why there's not a big operation to convince them to support various things. | ||
Because what are they going to do about it? | ||
But everybody cares a lot what America as a whole thinks. | ||
And that's why they're always trying to get us to think different things or get us to support different things. | ||
But it's never as innocent as it seems. | ||
These leaders are not being promoted in right-wing spaces because they're doing something good, although they may be. | ||
They are being promoted because that's a form of advertisement. | ||
It's a form of marketing. | ||
Tucker Carlson didn't go and interview Millet because Millet is based. | ||
Millet got welcomed to Davos by Klaus Schwab. | ||
And I don't think that Klaus Schwab is necessarily evil, but he's certainly not on our side. | ||
And he says, oh, I can't wait to meet Javier Millet. | ||
Go figure. | ||
How does that work? | ||
How does it work that Davos, according to Bannon, is the seat of globalism and the seat of the decentralized global elite that wants mass migration and has no particular race or ethnicity, but then at the same time they're going to go and support Malay, and when Malay goes to Davos, he gets a red carpet welcome from Klaus Schwab. | ||
How does that all work? | ||
So we have to recognize that you can support those leaders if you're in those countries, but not if you're an American. | ||
If you're an American, we have to take our own side. | ||
I'm not on Millais' side. | ||
I'm not on Bolsonaro's side. | ||
I'm on my side. | ||
I'm on America's side. | ||
I'm not on the side of Israel. | ||
I'm not on the side of Netanyahu. | ||
I'm not on the side of Viktor Orban. | ||
I don't even know who Viktor Orban is. | ||
I've never been to Hungary. | ||
I don't know if I'll ever go to Hungary. | ||
I don't care about Hungary. | ||
I care about America. | ||
I mean, the guy was a pig farmer. | ||
The guy was a pig farmer, and if I went over to Hungary and said, fuck Israel, he would throw me in jail! | ||
So fuck him, and his stupid party, and his pig farm. | ||
I don't care, you know, he went into college, and I've said positive things about him before, but that Hungarian embassy, there's a lot of nasty stuff coming out of there, and it all comes from Israel. | ||
So, Americans need to get smart and stop being so stupid and gullible. | ||
We have to be very selfish and take our own side. | ||
I don't support foreign leaders over foreign countries supporting yet a third foreign country in Israel. | ||
Malay is based! | ||
Malay is a retard, okay? | ||
That whole look is very third world. | ||
All these people are not cool, okay? | ||
Brazil and Argentina are 20 years behind the United States. | ||
His haircut's ridiculous. | ||
He looks ridiculous. | ||
He's a jamoke. | ||
And if he were in America, he would be laughed out of politics. | ||
And he only eats pastries, cool. | ||
If they like him in Argentina, good for them. | ||
Why do we care? | ||
We should care about the United States first. | ||
And then, once we have a favorable government here, then we can have good relations with other states. | ||
And we could look at other states and, you know, I just said some very positive things about Bukele and all that, but he's a patriot for El Salvador. | ||
He's making a deal with Israel for El Salvador. | ||
Good for him. | ||
But we have a very different arrangement with Israel than they do over there. | ||
Because it's not Salvadorians that have their aircraft carriers in the Mediterranean. | ||
It's not Salvadorians that get kicked out of politics because they say that we don't want to confront Iran in a war. | ||
And so on and so forth. | ||
So, that's why in the United States we need a movement that is jealously guarding our attention and our support at all times. | ||
It has to be only America First. | ||
Not this transnational populist alliance and they're all in bed with Israel. | ||
I don't know why we would support that. | ||
And if Malay is trying to gain the affection of Washington, he can get in line with all the other globalists. | ||
I don't know why we would think that would be something that we should support. | ||
He's going to rub shoulders with Bill Clinton and the IMF and Klaus Schwab and then Netanyahu? | ||
That makes him as establishment as it gets. | ||
And in that way, I'm more favorable towards Russia and China. | ||
At least they're presenting a challenge. | ||
At least they're pressuring the Israel lobby in the United States rather than trying to kiss its ass. | ||
So... | ||
It's gotta be America first. | ||
I like Bukele. | ||
I think he's doing good stuff. | ||
I would even say Malay. | ||
The shock therapy? | ||
It's probably necessary. | ||
But he is an agent of our evil American government. | ||
He is an agent of Israel trying to receive favors. | ||
And for that reason, I don't support him. | ||
I don't see him as any different than anybody else in politics. | ||
So that's that's my view on Bukele. | ||
That's why I said it's a little bit complex. | ||
It's not as it's not as cut and dry as he's a good leader or he's a Zionist shill. | ||
He's both of those things and good for him. | ||
We should emulate some of it but we should take our own side and we should be very wary of these people that are promoting Obscure leaders from foreign countries and telling us to support them because to me, I think that's coming from the Israeli right and I think that we are part of that barter. | ||
Our support for these people, Tucker Carlson interviewing him and all this traction he's been getting in the United States seems to be the payoff for his support for Israel. | ||
I don't want to be a part of that. | ||
Obviously nothing good comes of that. | ||
Nothing good shows up to American nationalists wearing a yarmulke and crying at the wailing wall. | ||
I don't care what it is. | ||
And even Trump for that matter. | ||
I mean Trump has received a lot of skepticism and I'm skeptical too. | ||
I would say and I've said before that I have my reasons why Trump is an exception. | ||
But generally speaking nothing good ever comes of that. | ||
So, that's that. | ||
And it looks like we're out of time here as well. | ||
I was planning on covering the war in Gaza, but... I've already been going for like an hour and fifteen. | ||
So, I think we're just gonna move on, take a look at the Super Chats, see what you guys have to say. | ||
So let me get set up here And I'll take a look Probably not a lot of Super Chats tonight because we started super late. | ||
But remember, tomorrow, if you're about to tune out, because sometimes people don't always stay for the Super Chats, if you're about to tune out, remember tomorrow, 6 p.m. | ||
Eastern Time, Rumble only, we're watching the Tucker Carlson-Putin interview. | ||
Okay? | ||
Just so you know. | ||
Alright. | ||
So let's take a look We'll see, what do you have to say? | ||
Thoughts? | ||
Thoughts on Bukele? | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
Ugh, burp. | ||
CopyGoIps sent $3. | ||
I'm sorry for cringe chat yesterday, but how much would I have to send for you to not gatekeep it? | ||
Million dollars. | ||
Money Mo sent $3, the one thing you can almost always take as true is the opposite of whatever a Jew says. | ||
If Ben Shapiro told me that Israel is fighting the devil, then I'm on the side of the devil. | ||
Yeah, pretty good heuristic generally. | ||
I don't know about that one in particular. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
No, I don't think he will. | ||
thoughts on canary mission doxing one of the larger anti-zionist accounts on x this is right after elon stated he'd ban anyone caught doxing do you think he will do anything time for the show yeah i saw that no i don't think he will i i basically lost confidence in elon because it's been uh it's been over a year since he took over and things are getting worse now | ||
They were getting better for a long time, now things are bad. | ||
Anybody that's posting criticism of Jews and Israel is getting totally... I mean, I of course have not been allowed back, but even people that have are getting totally de-boosted. | ||
Like, they are playing with the algorithm and they're shadow banning people. | ||
And he's not making good on any of his promises. | ||
What happened to suing the ADL or releasing their communications or banning the ADL? | ||
What happened to only banning illegal speech? | ||
So he just says these things and it just isn't true. | ||
Like he keeps saying we're gonna allow all lawful speech but then they don't. | ||
I mean they changed their policy just after New Year's and they said that They're committed not only to, what did they say? | ||
They invented this new phrase, but they said something like diversity of information or something like that, but also they're going to police hate and antisemitism. | ||
So they basically recapitulated to the Jews, and they basically said that once again, we have this special interest in curbing antisemitism, which is, I mean, not only does it go against what Elon said from the beginning, but even what he's been saying recently where he says, You know, it's all lawful speech and there will be no permanent suspensions. | ||
None of that is true. | ||
So he just says this stuff. | ||
Well, we're gonna sue the ADL. | ||
Doesn't. | ||
Well, it's all lawful speech. | ||
Isn't. | ||
There's no manipulation of the algorithm. | ||
Is. | ||
All day. | ||
I mean, guys like Andrew Torba. | ||
Andrew Torba's engagement has gone down 95% in like a month. | ||
And I'm sure it went down 90% the month before that. | ||
Now you think that's because the content got 90% worse? | ||
It's because they're playing games. | ||
They're playing games. | ||
They go in there, and depending on the words you use, if you talk about the subjects that we need to talk about, they will play with your engagement. | ||
Same thing with Keith. | ||
Keith was at one time one of the biggest accounts on Twitter, and he still is because I think he's very diligent and, you know, he's very on top of it, but I mean, but his engagement too, it goes up and down, and it's obviously algorithmic manipulation. | ||
And he promotes not only that, so with people like us, he's playing games. | ||
And sometimes a tweet will break out, but most of the time you're just suppressed. | ||
But then he's constantly promoting these Zionist Jews like Ashley St. | ||
Clair and End Wokeness and DC Drano and these others. | ||
I mean, these guys are all Jews. | ||
These guys are all pro-Israel Jews that took the trip and they've been deeply part of this propaganda tour in Israel. | ||
unidentified
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So... | |
Yeah, I think it's not good right now. | ||
Right now, Twitter is not in a good place. | ||
I hope it gets better, but I don't think he's going to ban anybody. | ||
He said, well, Doxing is against the rules. | ||
My ass. | ||
They're not banning anybody. | ||
Chicago Landgroper sent $15. | ||
United Center will go crazy, but I want nothing to do with the carjacking animals who make their way in. | ||
All Ye had to do was post some scribbles on Instagram and we're back in album mode. | ||
Let's freaking go. | ||
Yeah, I don't know if I'm gonna go because I got to do this stream tomorrow and You know that that'll I mean I There there may be some kind of fuckery going on over there where if I go they're gonna try and keep me out or whatever because Milo's over there and I know that they are trying to distance themselves from me because | ||
They posted the apology and all this. | ||
They're trying to get away from the anti-semitism stuff. | ||
So, you know, on the offhand chance that something like that happens, or that he's like three hours late or whatever, I just don't want to go and be a part of that at this time. | ||
You know, not that I don't love him as a guy, but obviously his team is full of, just like with Trump, the team is full of parasites who have it out for me. | ||
So, on the offhand chance that there's some kind of funny business like that, I just don't want to subject myself to that. | ||
So, I'm probably going to skip it. | ||
Pretty Fly White Guy sent $3.307. | ||
Prats need to understand that the church precedes the Bible. | ||
The epistles of Paul are obvious evidence of this. | ||
Very true. | ||
McMahon sent $30, baddest shotties in the game ranking, 1. | ||
Dasha, red scare, 2. | ||
Annie, red scare, 3. | ||
Debra Lee, ick she's Jewish, but still would. | ||
And so is Anna, but still would, 4. | ||
That girl with the Spanish flag in her ex bio, the one you used to simp for in reply to before you got banned. | ||
No e-girls by the way, 5. | ||
Anna Perez, Honestly, I don't know what any of them look like off the top of my head. | ||
I'd have to Google all of them. | ||
unidentified
|
But I really have no interest in doing that. | |
So. | ||
Banana Bits sent $3. | ||
High grade from China. | ||
No black or Jew here. | ||
Rumble block. | ||
Cozy good. | ||
Please visit. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I would love to visit China, to be honest. | ||
Match sent $100. $100 monthly for Nick. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, thank you very much. | |
100 a month! | ||
It's catching on! | ||
Everyone's doing it! | ||
It's time for you to take the... take the plunge. | ||
100 a month for Nick. | ||
Started by Ed E. Gruyper. | ||
And we love that. | ||
Are you part of the 100 a month club? | ||
We gotta do that. | ||
We gotta... We're rolling out subscriptions pretty soon. | ||
unidentified
|
Hopefully. | |
Fingers crossed. | ||
It's always some bullshit. | ||
Did you know, by the way, that I got more money frozen by a government? | ||
I don't want to get into the details until it's resolved but I got another I got 70 grand frozen in a bank account by a state government for some bullshit so so it's you can never the money thing you can never fucking count on but hopefully we'll have subs soon and maybe we'll do something special we'll do a hundred a month club like we'll do a some kind of benefit like a voice call or something like that Yeah, can you believe it? | ||
And can you imagine? | ||
Years ago, everybody got on my case because they're like, yeah, the government froze half a million dollars, but they only froze it for six months. | ||
It's like, will you kill yourself? | ||
Like, seriously? | ||
Yeah, they put you on no-fly list, but only for a year. | ||
Are you fucking kidding me? | ||
The shit that I've had to go through and put up with, and people go, oh, big deal. | ||
So what? | ||
You only got subpoenaed half a million dollars stolen, $30,000 stolen. | ||
By a company kicked off every platform, put on the no-fly list, but it's only for a year. | ||
Really? | ||
So... Yeah, so that's another thing, but I mean it should be resolved hopefully soon, but... Yeah, can you believe that? | ||
ProtestantGroper sent $10. | ||
You can't seem to catch a break with these thoughts. | ||
Remember when that one broad stalked you home and chat was being retarded trying to tell you about your car? | ||
Good times! | ||
Vaguely. | ||
What was that? | ||
What was that in California? | ||
What was her name? | ||
BlondeGroper? | ||
Ed Byrne sent $5. | ||
Do you think Netanyahu has engaged Hezbollah to ensure the Sandman option is active? | ||
It puts the U.S. | ||
in an impossible position and is forced to defend Israel. | ||
Israel's geography is impossible to defend. | ||
Dumb question. | ||
The way you asked it is dumb. | ||
Noticer Gavin sent $5.07. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Beer Bro Productions sent $100. | ||
No message. | ||
I love you so much. | ||
Hey, thank you for the big super chat! | ||
Love you too, buddy. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Love the no message chats. | ||
Beer Bro Productions. | ||
Beer Bro. | ||
Bros of Beer Bro? | ||
- Doge shit poster 69 cent, $3. | ||
Nigga, it's Thursday now. - Oh, shut up. - Doge shit poster 69 cent, $3. | ||
Why lie? | ||
Why are you capping like that? | ||
You don't know any girls. | ||
You're a fucking loser. | ||
You are a rizzless incel and you made that up. | ||
So now a bunch of girls in Japan think you are Zac Efron lol. | ||
Smiley face. | ||
You don't know any Japanese girls. | ||
Why lie? | ||
Why are you capping like that? | ||
You don't know any girls. | ||
You're a fucking loser. | ||
You are a riskless incel. | ||
And you made that up. | ||
Then you woke up. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Then you woke up. | ||
Bro said, so I'm in Japan? | ||
And I know all these girls? | ||
Okay, I'm gonna stop you right there. | ||
This never happened. | ||
That's totally fake. | ||
I told a bunch of Japanese girls, nigga, you don't know any girls. | ||
Yeah, they were ladyboys. | ||
Cause you're gay. | ||
And you're in a brothel. | ||
Cause that's who you are. | ||
That's what you're about. | ||
Freak. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You weren't in Japan. | ||
unidentified
|
You were in freaking Thailand. | |
And they were guys. | ||
Because you're a freak. | ||
I live in Japan. | ||
I told a bunch of Japanese girls. | ||
On what planet, dude? | ||
Post eyes. | ||
Post your Japanese eyes. | ||
I don't believe you. | ||
You're not Japanese. | ||
GrowUpperMan sent $3. | ||
Hey, knock knock. | ||
GrowUpperMan sent $3. | ||
unidentified
|
Nick. | |
Grow upper man sent $3, knicker. | ||
Doge shit poster 69 sent $3, when the chair is squeaking, don't come around peeking, smiley face. | ||
Typhlosion sent $3. | ||
Thomas Rousseau encourages his guys in Patriot Front to spray paint graffiti which is vandalism and a crime. | ||
Seems pretty wignut like 1980s skinheads. | ||
Glad to have a smart leader like you. | ||
I'm still gonna do that stream, by the way. | ||
Maybe Friday, okay? | ||
I've just been busy. | ||
Tomorrow's Tucker, maybe Friday. | ||
Slurper sent $10. | ||
Chainlink. | ||
Telegram! | ||
Telegram! | ||
Remember that? | ||
Telegram! | ||
Was that the same guy, by the way? | ||
Was that the hillbilly from Atlanta? | ||
unidentified
|
Telegram! | |
Chainlink! | ||
I got some link. | ||
I got a stack. | ||
I got a suicide stack. | ||
Chainlink said, what, 18 today? | ||
Bitcoin breached 44. | ||
44. What happened to Monero? | ||
unidentified
|
Ugh. | |
you Back down to 121. | ||
Fuckin' really? | ||
What should I do with my Monero? | ||
should I sell yeah Monero They killed me with Monero. | ||
I had quite a bit of Monero. | ||
unidentified
|
I still do. | |
And they delisted it on Binance and it just lost 40% of its value. | ||
I was about to sell it too. | ||
unidentified
|
Unreal. | |
Should I sell it? | ||
Should I sell my Monero? | ||
Dump it, says somebody. | ||
Yeah, I think I'm gonna dump it. | ||
unidentified
|
It's time. | |
I'm not long. | ||
I mean, I already... I have a lot of crypto and I don't need to be totally invested in fucking Manero. | ||
I just wish I had sold it a week ago. | ||
I was planning to. | ||
unidentified
|
Terrible. | |
Yeah, yeah, but everything else, you know, my chain links doing good my linkys My linkys are good So anyway, yeah | ||
We'll see what happens to that. | ||
Yeah, I've heard about that. | ||
Yeah, I've heard about that. I've heard about that. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know if I believe in that. - I don't know. | |
Yeah. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't follow all that politics up there. | ||
unidentified
|
But yeah, that's how it is. | |
Like everywhere. | ||
Dude, shut up. | ||
Mary Field sent $10. | ||
Remember that woman who crashed into your car in April? | ||
Was she Italian? | ||
I think that was meant to be. | ||
She sounded like she would make a great wife. | ||
What better way to meet? | ||
Imagine when she looks you up after exchanging info and learned all about Nicholas J. Fuentes and became red-pilled. - Dude, shut up. | ||
Some of you people, if you think this much about women, you're just a fucking loser, honestly. | ||
Some people, like, put out all this ceaseless content about women and I look at it, I don't even necessarily have a response to the things they're saying in itself. | ||
I'm just like, do you really think that much about this all day? | ||
Like, John Doyle's always posting this shit about, he posted this essay about like, we cannot denigrate Taylor Swift because we gotta get white women to vote for Trump or something. | ||
And it's like, you really sat there and you've been cooking this up, you're thinking about Beauty and the Beast and Taylor Swift. | ||
Your brain has been colonized by your fucking mother. | ||
Dude, your brain has been colonized by vagina. | ||
So, whenever people come at me with that stuff, I'm just like, huh? | ||
Like that guy earlier when he's saying, oh, look, I'm gonna rank the Red Scare Girls. | ||
I'm like, I literally don't even know what they look like. | ||
I'm just like, huh? | ||
Like me, I wake up, I think about business. | ||
I think about money. | ||
I think about America. | ||
I think about stuff. | ||
I want to be like Elon. | ||
I want to be like Kanye. | ||
I want to be like Trump. | ||
That's what I think about. | ||
I'm like, I want to be like Oppenheimer. | ||
Or Christopher Nolan. | ||
I don't wake up and think like, fucking you faggots think about Girls? | ||
Cute girls? | ||
Shut the fuck up, you fucking faggot. | ||
Lollipop Casey sent $3. | ||
I love love love you so so much. | ||
You don't deserve what they're doing to you. | ||
Love is sent from Lollipop Casey, Lollipop. | ||
Don't say that like that. | ||
You're right though, I don't deserve this. | ||
Thank you for the nice message, but don't make it sound like that. | ||
You're making it sound weird. | ||
You're coming on too strong. | ||
But hey, thanks, I appreciate it. | ||
You're right, I don't deserve it. | ||
I'm a good guy. | ||
Didn't do nothing. | ||
Yeah, well that's just, all these non-Americans are just not cool. | ||
That's the thing, like, on some level I kind of respect non-Americans less because they're not in the greatest country in the world, so they're just... | ||
Impaired because of that their consciousness is different. | ||
You didn't grow up in the seat of the world Empire So you're different that also goes to like hill people You know like rural people rural people are the same way they just don't know anything You know These people that live in the hinterlands of America everything hits them like five years later Same thing with every other country in the world if you're in a city and you're an American You know everything. | ||
You're the smartest person in the world. | ||
You're on average. | ||
Albert Castro sent $8. | ||
You can always use truth social frown. | ||
Yeah, if they pay me. | ||
If they get me something. | ||
Noah Cuxin sent $3. | ||
$3 every two weeks club. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no. | |
Nothing special for you. | ||
Sloppy Zog sent $10. | ||
Yo! | ||
What's your thoughts on sleep paralysis? | ||
Anything more than just waking up during REM? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't... I've never experienced that. | ||
Yeah, I slept. | ||
I slept this evening, so... Okay, thanks for that. | ||
Okay! | ||
Alright! | ||
I think it's our last Super Chat. | ||
Nigga's retarded. | ||
That's gonna do it for me tonight. | ||
Remember, tomorrow I'll be back at 6 o'clock Eastern Time on Rumble to watch and review the Tucker-Putin interview. | ||
So tune in tomorrow early. | ||
Rumble only. | ||
It's Rumble exclusive and I'll post about it on Telegram as well, so I'll remind you. | ||
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. | ||
As always, thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
In particular, special thanks to Match and Beer Bro. | ||
Big thanks to them. | ||
Thanks to all our Super Chatters and everybody that watches. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. |