All Episodes
March 7, 2024 - America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes
01:44:36
HALEY DROPS OUT: EMPEROR Trump WINS GOP Nomination For President | America First Ep. 1303HALEY DROPS OUT: EMPEROR Trump WINS GOP Nomination For President | America First Ep. 1303
Participants
Main voices
n
nick fuentes
01:21:11
s
streamlabs matthew tts
08:02
Appearances
Clips
a
alex jones
00:22
| Copy link to current segment

Speaker Time Text
unidentified
We will make America great again.
I love you.
I love you.
I love you!
Mr. President-elect. Mr. President-elect.
Mr. President-elect.
Let's get right.
Let's get right. Let's get right. Let's get right. Let's get
right. Let's get right.
Thank you.
Let's get right. Let's get right. Let's get right. Let's get right. Let's get right.
Thank you.
Monster.
I pray the Lord my soul to keep.
Lord save these people.
Let us sleep.
Let it stay in one day.
Jesus save us from L.A.
LA Monster.
I am lime lighten.
Blueprint, five mics.
Go get his Rhyme-Lite.
Should've been signed twice.
Most imitated.
Grammy nominated.
Hotel accommodated.
Cheerleader prom dated.
Barbershop player hated.
Mom and Pop, who plays it?
Felt like it rained till the roof caved in.
Two words, shot town crazy.
Crazy.
So I live by two words.
Fuck you, pay me.
Screams, teases, saves.
You know how the game be.
I can't let them change me.
Cause on Judgment Day...
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
It's going to be only America first.
America first.
The American people will come first once again.
With respect, the respect that we deserve.
From this day forward, it's going to be only America.
alex jones
America first. America first. America first. America first. America
unidentified
first. America
first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first. America first.
Thank you.
Good evening everybody.
nick fuentes
You're watching America First.
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
We have a great show for you tonight.
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday.
We have a lot to talk about tonight.
Lots to get into.
Big show!
Big featured story.
Huge development.
Which we had all been expecting after the results of Super Tuesday last night.
Actually been expecting it since New Hampshire in February.
Nikki Haley has dropped out of the race.
She's cooked.
And now the god-emperor of mankind moves a step closer to reclaiming the throne.
Trump is now the presumptive nominee.
He's gotten the endorsement from the RNC, Mitch McConnell.
Notably though, not Nikki Haley.
Not yet, at least.
So, we'll talk all about that.
She dropped after she lost 14 states yesterday.
Yesterday instead of doing the show I did a Super Tuesday primary election coverage It was pretty uneventful because we all knew what was going to happen it was nearly a perfect sweep for Trump 14 out of 15 and The big question which wasn't answered until this morning was whether that would force Haley out of the race and eventually it did so So we'll cover all that.
There's not too much to say about it.
I'll just talk a little bit in general about the state of the race.
We'll also be talking tonight about President Trump's comments about Israel today.
Very disappointing, not surprising, but very sad.
He said that Israel needs to finish the job against Hamas, which is one of the first times he's weighed in on the conflict since it started.
I mean, he's talked about it a little bit, but not a lot.
And this war has been going on for how many months now?
Five months?
And he hasn't really said much of anything about it.
No, almost longer, right?
No, about, yeah, a little more than five months.
But today, he gave full support for the imminent invasion of Rafah from Israel, and that is specifically, I think, what he was referring to.
And we touched on this, I think, on Monday or last week, but the last major battle in the Gaza campaign will be in the southern city of Rafah.
And the entire international community, including and specifically, especially, Israel's Arab neighbors are warning Israel not to go in, because this may be the most casualties, the most bloody, and probably will drive a significant number of Palestinian refugees out of the Gaza Strip forever, many of them into the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt.
So the entire world has been warning Israel and discouraging Israel from going in.
Netanyahu has made it clear that he is fully prepared to do it anyway.
And today Trump said they have to finish the job.
Israel has to finish the job.
I think the implication is he's giving full support not just to Netanyahu and this sustained campaign, but specifically this final major push Which is universally condemned on the entire planet.
Which sucks, but I think that's the price for him to return to the White House.
I think that's been the basis of his support maybe from the very beginning.
The very beginning.
So, we'll talk about all that.
Should be a pretty good show.
Kind of a mundane Wednesday, though.
Pretty lame.
The Nikki Haley thing just doesn't hit because, to me, she lost in New Hampshire.
Realistically, this race has been over for a year.
Like, just a little bit under a year.
At the minimum.
Or, I should say, at the most.
And I'll get into my thoughts on why that is.
I talked a little bit about that on Telegram today.
But it just doesn't hit the same because it was never a real challenge and certainly it was never even a serious candidacy since she was defeated in New Hampshire by double digits.
So this, as far as I'm concerned, was waiting for the other shoe to drop.
And now it did.
So, big whip.
But we'll talk about all that.
I'm really hungry.
I'm like kind of out of it because I'm starving.
I don't know what's been going on.
I've been having these stomach issues lately, like almost throwing up but not quite, but now I'm hungry.
unidentified
I didn't even eat anything.
nick fuentes
I barely ate anything today and then I took a nap and I woke up and I had this terrible stomach ache and now I'm starving.
So I need to eat something.
I'm gonna, by the end of the show, I'm gonna be pissed.
I'm gonna be royally pissed off.
So...
I already have a taste for McDonald's or something but yeah I'm really famished right now stomach's growling but that's okay okay but we're just gonna do it I'm gonna fly through it and I'll eat at the end of the show but anyway 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 whenever I go live
Make sure to smash the follow button and make sure to follow me on Telegram as well.
And like the video.
Make sure you like the video too.
Leave a comment if you can.
That's about it.
Okay.
So last night we did our major Super Tuesday coverage.
Pretty uneventful night.
And I did my Monday show yesterday morning and I wasn't even sure if I was going to do Super Tuesday because, look, it's been over, man.
Trump was going to be the nominee ever since those charges came out in Manhattan.
It was a done deal.
It wasn't going to be DeSantis.
It wasn't going to be Haley.
And, like I said, it's been over for a minute.
It's been over, really, for all that time.
It was certainly over after Iowa.
It was certainly, certainly over after New Hampshire.
It was most certainly, absolutely over after South Carolina.
Like, what were we waiting for?
For her to lose in 15, literally 20 more states?
She gets killed in New Hampshire, loses her home state by double digits, then we had to wait for her to lose 20 more states?
Michigan, Idaho, South Dakota, Missouri, and then 14 states on Super Tuesday.
Seriously?
Now we're good.
Now she's out.
Okay, great.
But we did the coverage last night and not a lot of people I mean it was decent viewership But nothing compared to New Hampshire and Iowa just because I don't think anyone really cares for that reason And it was a short stream too because nothing even happened.
It's like they called every state for Trump.
Trump gave a speech and End of the story.
End of night.
So, that was Super Tuesday.
Really disappointing.
I thought it was going to be a contentious primary season.
I thought DeSantis was going to give Trump a little more trouble, but that is really the story tonight.
So, the big development this morning, of course, is that Nikki Haley has finally dropped out, which has unofficially ended the Republican primary.
There are now no significant challengers within the Republican primary against Trump, so he has become the presumptive nominee.
He's nearly clinched the nomination outright.
He has about, I think, just under a thousand delegates out of the necessary 1,200 and, I'm sorry, I think it's 1,151 that he needs, or 1,215 I think it is.
Yeah, 1,215 I think is what he needs to win.
It's 1,151 so far.
So he's just under 1,000.
Needs 1,215 to win.
I mean, he's almost formally got it.
He's almost formally got the delegates.
All that would remain is for the convention to take place.
With Haley out of the race, though, he is presumptively going to be the nominee for the Republicans.
For the third time in the third cycle, And this caps off a pretty short primary season.
DeSantis announced last May.
It is now over in March.
I know that Trump announced at the end of 2022, but the next candidate didn't announce until quite a bit later.
So the primary hasn't even really been a competition for even a year before it has now been almost officially declared over.
So very short-lived, very non-competitive.
Trump didn't attend one of the debates.
He hardly won any of the races.
Didn't even come close to losing most of them.
So it was a nothing, and to me the big story is not so much about Nikki Haley in these past couple weeks, but really the whole thing.
And to talk a little bit about the 2024 election to date, I think that's maybe the interesting thing to talk about tonight.
It started out very badly, in my opinion.
And I'm not the only one that felt this way.
If you rewind to January 6, 2021, Donald Trump is a lame-duck president.
He's impeached a second time.
Mitch McConnell, the then Senate Majority Leader, is holding the impeachment over his head to assure a quiet and peaceful transition.
Trump is censored on all social media.
And he leaves office on January 20, 2021, a greatly, severely diminished figure.
Tucker Carlson hates him.
Fox News hates him.
He also becomes significantly less famous and less relevant for almost a year, two years after that.
He was brought back into the fold by Kevin McCarthy to campaign in the midterms with a pretty humiliating defeat in the 2022 midterms.
About a year and a half later, November 2022, there is this hugely anticipated red wave election.
It doesn't materialize at all.
Republicans barely win a majority.
They don't win the Senate.
A lot of people lay the blame at the feet of Donald Trump.
They say that it was his fault because he made the midterm cycle about election fraud in 2020.
And his name itself had become a liability in the party.
And so, you could say that November to December 2022, that was maybe the lowest point for Trump in the post-presidency.
He had, like I said, been censored on all social media and therefore lost a significant platform.
Many were questioning if his brand was even still viable in the GOP.
Some were saying it was completely toxic.
That was the high watermark for alternatives like Ron DeSantis mainly, but even other people as well like Tucker Carlson or maybe Nikki Haley at one time.
A lot of people said that the Republican base was looking for Trumpism without Trump, without the name, without the toxic political baggage, without all of the fallout and aftermath from January 6th.
But of course something happened just before the midterms which prefigured the next inflection point.
Of course in August 2022 there was the massive raid at Mar-a-Lago.
And the raid of Mar-a-Lago in August 2022 gave Trump a temporary boost in the early polls for the Republican primary for 2024, created this rally-around-the-flag effect, and that built the case for the eventual DOJ charge in the documents case.
But that was... that heralded the second win that Trump got later.
But it's easy to forget where Trump was in that stretch.
2021, he leaves office significantly diminished.
Lost his platform, I think lost a lot of the prestige, lost this facade of invulnerability or that mirage, that illusion of invincibility that he had.
Many of his allies had abandoned him, mounting legal criminal problems.
And then in 2022 it was really a decisive political defeat in the midterms.
And I think his great mistake is that he owned the midterms.
Republicans were not going to win.
He got involved and they were able to scapegoat him for their loss.
That was Ronda McDaniel.
The Republicans lost in 18, 20, 22.
But they foisted the blame for that onto Trump and they said his fixation with 2020 and his demand that people out of loyalty talk about that on the campaign trail, which was seen as highly contentious.
November 2022 he's blamed for this red wave that never arrived.
He gives this announcement speech a few weeks later at Mar-a-Lago, which was, I was extremely critical of it.
I thought it was low energy.
I thought it was maybe one of the worst speeches he had given in his political career.
And I remember in January 2023, I talked to people that were in the know.
They said they couldn't raise any money for him.
All the big money backers like Ken Griffin from Wall Street and the Jewish lobby like Sheldon Adelson's estate and many others had flipped to DeSantis.
DeSantis was exploding in the polls at one point.
It was neck and neck.
He was separated from Trump by single digits.
So, you have to keep in mind that there were two very distinct periods in this election and people forget that.
I think people don't realize because we're so thoroughly over the hump, so to speak.
We're so thoroughly on the other side of that inflection point.
And that inflection point that I'm referring to is the unsealing of the charges in Manhattan last March.
In the spring of 2023.
And that was not the follow-up to the raid at Mar-a-Lago, but of course it's part of the gauntlet, the legal gauntlet, the lawfare that they've been waging against him since he, before he got in office the first time, but which had since intensified after he left office in 2021.
There was that echo of Mar-a-Lago, of course far more significant, far more severe.
It was the first time a former president had ever been charged.
And a huge deal.
And after that, it was over.
Arguably, that was the beginning of the end of the primary for everybody else.
If there was ever a chance, if there ever really was, and that is an open-ended question, I don't think it's actually cut and dry, if there was a viable alternative, but after March, there wasn't.
After the Manhattan Charges came out there, just, it was never going to be a race.
It was never going to be a contest.
Then, of course, you have the Manhattan charges, you have the DOJ charges, the Fulton County charges, the whole spade of them.
And then, of course, Ron DeSantis announces in May it was a complete disaster.
He announces on X with Elon Musk and David Sachs.
There's all kinds of technical difficulties.
And his campaign is a disaster for two months.
I mean, it's a disaster throughout the month of May, June, July.
And I don't remember the first piece, but it started to be written in July 2023 that it was a failure to launch.
That his polling numbers were declining, not getting better.
That becoming a national figure was going poorly for him.
He was introducing himself to a national audience and people didn't like him.
Literally, he came across as weird and cold and out of touch.
And it reminded people what Trump had, because he lacked it.
For all the people, if there ever was an outcry for a Trumpism without Trump, DeSantis, lacking what Trump had, reminded everybody what they took for granted in Trump.
They said, oh, that is, you know, that's what Trumpism without the Trump looks like.
Now we remember why we like Trump, and not just the Trumpism.
Because Ron DeSantis showed it to us because he lacked that critical ingredient.
The Charisma X Factor.
Whatever intangible you want to describe it as, but he didn't have it.
And so...
There was a distinct period between, I would say, the release of the Manhattan charges, the unsealing of those charges with the DA there, which was a corporate FEC matter, and the failure to launch, and the widespread recognition that that is what had happened by July.
It was that four-month period that is where the race was decided.
Everything since then was really merely a formality.
Trump never attended one of the debates, like I said.
DeSantis never recovered in the polling.
Haley never came close, not nationally.
Nobody was ever doing good in the polling at that point in any of the battleground states.
There was really no surprises.
And so by January, there had been 5 or 6 debates, or whatever it was.
Almost the entire field had dropped out.
And just as the polls and all the conventional wisdom and all the unconventional wisdom had suggested, yeah, as prophesied, Trump won in a landslide in Iowa.
As predicted, and DeSantis dropped out because that's where he spent all his money.
And so he had no better shot of winning in the middle of January this year than he did, arguably, in May of last year when he announced.
It was just something that needed to actualize and come to fruition, but there was no surprise.
And then, two weeks later, Trump dominated in New Hampshire and completely destroyed Nikki Haley, as the polls predicted, as the conventional and unconventional wisdom
Suggested as prophesized he won in New Hampshire and at that point Haley's campaign was effectively over because like DeSantis in Iowa New Hampshire was for Haley a must-win state that was the only state where she even had a chance at winning not even her home state of South Carolina, which was actually to her advantage within the early battleground tier of states And so it was over for her just the same.
It was over for her in New Hampshire just as it was over for her in March when the Manhattan charges were unsealed.
And just like it was a matter of time for DeSantis to drop out a few days after Iowa, a year after he announced, it was just a matter of time for Nikki Haley to drop out weeks after she lost New Hampshire, a year after the Manhattan charges dropped.
But this raises an interesting question.
Which is when you map it out in this way and you can see that there's two distinct periods that sort of overlap.
You could say arguably that it's... I'm saying arguably a lot.
A lot of this stuff is sort of up to interpretation.
There's this distinct period of January 2021.
to let's say May 2023 when DeSantis announces and you could say that that is the period of time when it was conceivable it might have even been plausible that DeSantis could have usurped Trump starting with Trump leaving office badly damaged in many ways And the valley of November 2022, a year and a half later, when he had been blamed for losing the midterms.
DeSantis had never been higher in the polls.
Trump gave a horrible announcement speech that seemed to reveal all of his weaknesses, which is that he had recapitulated to the establishment position on many things, that he had lost his energy.
He really is old, like his age is showing.
And then all the way right up until DeSantis aborted launch after Trump had Had everybody circle the wagons around him after the Manhattan Charges.
That was one distinct period.
And the other distinct period started with maybe Mar-a-Lago, maybe it was the Manhattan Charges, but it was the beginning of people rallying around the flag and Trump resuming and reclaiming his position as the uncontested, dominant leader of the party.
Where it's not even a question that he's going to be the guy.
And that has everything to do with him Becoming bigger than himself, in a sense.
People identifying him with the problems that are happening in the country.
And I've said this before, Trump has become the most important figure in America because his personhood is where personal politics and ideological or idealistic politics now intersect.
What happens to him, specifically his personal fate, is now the same.
As the fate of political opposition in the United States of America.
If he goes to jail, well, his life sucks.
His movement is over.
He is no longer the leader of it.
At the same time, it also means that there can be no opposition possible in America.
If Trump couldn't do it with his unique position in popular culture and with the resources he had, And taking advantage of that time with internet being as free as it was and all the unique factors that went into it, if that movement couldn't produce a true reform or a true introspection on the part of the elite, then nothing can.
If he is the most viable, if he is the leader of the opposition, and he gets defeated for nothing other than being the opposition, then there can be no opposition.
And so the idealistic vision of change in the simplest form, I'm not even talking about right-wing, left-wing, but in the simplest form, the idea of political change dies with Trump's movement, with him going to jail.
So, these things become one and the same.
They become inextricably bound up together, and that happened when...
He was charged on this B.S.
conspiracy felony, the secondary felony charge that he got in Manhattan.
It was totally cooked by this liberal district attorney.
And when he was charged, and by the way, that was the first time that any president had ever been charged.
The precedent that that set, the fact that it was so ridiculous, but also set the precedent that they had really broken a rule that you're not supposed to charge former presidents because there's some... there's supposed to be some decorum or some degree of sanctity for that office and even people that have formerly held it.
When they did that, They set Trump up for this destiny that I've described.
When they did that, people were forced to identify Trump with opposition.
Maybe they don't even like Trump.
Maybe they weren't even enthusiastic.
Maybe they were starting to see the flaws.
Of the man.
Which is that he's getting old.
He doesn't have as much energy as he did before.
His positions are weaker than they were before.
He has been assimilated into the same political establishment he once fought.
So people saw the limits of Trump the man.
But when they charged him with this nonsense and broke the precedent and they basically said that if you take up political opposition we will bury you People were then forced, if they support the idea that there can be political opposition, they were forced to support him.
Evading that.
Defeating that charge.
Beating the weaponization of law enforcement against him.
And so even if Trump was weak as a man, it became more important than what Trump would do as a guy.
It was about him winning the election so that he could beat the rigged, unfair system, which is now mask off, drop the facade, and is conspired against the number one opposition movement in the country.
And to me, that is really the significance of 2024.
That is why Trump has now won the nomination.
That is why now I think he is winning in the polls.
That's one of the primary reasons.
So, in a sense, it is fundamentally different this time than it was in 2020.
It is fundamentally different this time than it was in 2016.
Because it's no longer, in this case, about Trump and his politics.
This time it's about what Trump represents.
And I think that's why he has a real chance of winning and why there is real organic enthusiasm and popular support.
It's because he is once again embodying the ideal that he did in 2016.
Or embodying an ideal in the same way that he did in 2016.
It wasn't about, we want Trump because he's going to govern the country better, because I don't even think that's a good argument.
He is demonstrably not very good at governing.
He's demonstrably held back by the sabotage, by the deep state, by his naive loyalty to his family who sabotage him at every turn and other associates that are close to him.
There are a lot of reasons why Trump is not the best administrator, governor, president who presides.
You know, that's where that comes from.
But we voted for him in 2016 because he represented American revanchism, to put it very simply.
He represented, by building a wall between America and Mexico, distinction.
Identity by way of distinction.
This is America.
That is Mexico.
This is us.
They are them.
Why?
Well, we will create distinction by building a wall, and in doing so we affirm our identity.
We affirm what we are.
We affirm what we are not.
That's what that was about.
And there were all kinds of other ideas in there.
Populism, America First, and it all went together, but they were all vague expressions of something similar, which was American revival and a repudiation of the elites.
In some sense, it wasn't even, and people talked about this, Hillary Clinton was so unpopular, maybe that was the critical variable.
It was more about a rejection of The status quo, the stable state, the system, than it was a vote in favor of, a vote for, this reality TV show nativist becoming the president.
Some might argue this.
And then in 2020, when it became a referendum on Trump and his record as president, I think it was, and I think he won in 2020, but I think it was a little bit less popular.
dollar.
And if it became an argument about who's going to be a better president, It wasn't so much in favor of Biden, but it was against this cowboy thing, and it was in favor of institutions again.
We want stability.
We want the system back.
We want to not be in this culture war anymore.
We want to not have our cities being burned to the ground in a pandemic.
Even if it was not completely related, it was a vote against the chaos of the previous four years.
Now in 2024, It's another time where Trump embodies opposition.
He embodies something more than, I'm gonna make your life in some ways marginally better.
And so, if you look at the race that way, it's not about Trump's appeal to the voters, it is about how these events have driven politics.
And maybe more than any other time in recent memory, it is being driven by events that directly affect the candidates.
Trump didn't start to win because he won the argument, you know, or he persuaded everybody, or something like that.
On a deep level, Trump started to win because he got charged!
If you go back and look, that is what did it.
That's what did it in August 2022.
That is what did it in March 2023.
It is because of circumstance.
In January 2023, he could not raise money.
And they tried.
They were calling people on the campaign.
No one wanted to pony up.
It was looking like the end.
Of Trump.
And that maybe it would be competitive and maybe he could pull it out, but people were very bearish on the prospect that Trump would have any chance at holding office ever again.
Then he got charged and everything changed.
And that tells you that it's not about, for Trump, the message.
It's about what he now represents.
And the simplest form of what that is, which is opposition.
The idea that there can or would be dissent in the United States against this clearly incompetent, aging, unpopular system embodied by Biden.
And in very much the same way, Biden embodies what the system represents.
It's old.
It's out of touch.
It's obviously the people that are Apparently running it, nominally running it, or not actually running it, you know that's another critical thing about Biden, is that like everything else he is just a front man for a very complex, opaque, obfuscated system that is working behind the scenes that we couldn't even begin to understand that if we talked about it we'd be censored from explaining how it works
And it's a system that is old and does not have the popular mandate.
So it's a very weird and bizarre election for that reason.
Because some people say, oh well this is about who do you like less.
It's voting against Biden or against Trump.
Or some people say we want options other than Trump or Biden.
No, people don't.
Because it's not about, this election is not about Who is running?
I don't think there's ever been a case, at least in my lifetime, like this where the two candidates fully embody things and forces that are so fundamental about our society.
Maybe not since 2016, because 2016 was very similar in that way.
With Clinton being, like, the ultimate criminal.
Being, like, the ultimate representation of elite arrogance.
This idea that they're gonna laugh in your face and fucking lie to you and commit crimes and complete double standards.
They get away with everything.
They rig the election.
They rig the primary against, like, a populist socialist who embodied what the left was about at that time.
Would have been the natural evolution of the Obama era.
So she represented something similar but different than what Biden represents now.
Biden doesn't represent arrogance in the same way.
I think the elite learned their lesson and it turned from arrogance into a very a very serious confrontation of the threat that they faced.
I think after Trump won, they took it seriously and they got deadly serious.
And rather than an arrogance or an aloofness, which is maybe naive and maybe a source of vulnerability, they stopped being aloof and arrogant and they took it very seriously.
And so then it turned into outright oppression.
Censorship, the activation of the DOJ, the surveillance state, all these things, and now it represents something more fundamental, which is Now it's about, it's not about the elite, you know.
Oh, well they're just kind of arrogant and out of touch.
Now it's like they're oppressing us.
Like they are trying to disenfranchise us and make it so that opposition is impossible.
They recognize that there is a popular mandate against their rule and now they are, in a deadly and ruthless way, eliminating it.
Eliminating the resistance.
So, to me, that's how you kind of paint the story In broad strokes.
Like DeSantis used to say, we're painting in bold colors.
If I'm painting a picture for you of this narrative and How that's shaped the contours of these different cycles and popular support for candidates within and between the different parties.
I would say that's the big story because I legitimately believe that it was not so open and shut at one time and that's a theory we can never test because of course Trump did get charged and that did make him win so we don't know if he would have won otherwise.
I think he probably would have but People need to remember.
The benefit of me doing the show for so long and covering it every day is I was there for the dog days of the dark Joe Biden winter from January 6th.
Until the charges last March.
And it sucked.
Like, there was a real question as to whether Trump would ever succeed.
Now, it seems like he's got the same momentum, maybe even more momentum than ever before.
Like, he seems as though he were the Teflon, invulnerable guy that he was in 2016 for different reasons today, maybe even more so.
It was not like that for a long time.
It was brutal.
In the first term, when he was being sabotaged and persecuted and failing, and it was even more brutal when they were rounding up his supporters and arresting them and he was dying in the polls and dying on the vine without a platform, and it seemed that America had maybe fully moved on, even within the GOP.
Then he got charged and the narrative flipped overnight and now people talk about it as though none of these people ever stood a chance.
It wasn't so in December 2022.
It just wasn't that way.
So, and we have to carefully reflect on the lessons of all of that.
I would say the other thing is this, if the charges made Trump win the primary, what has made him popular in the general election polling is October 7th.
Because there's this related but distinct question, which is, okay, one, will Trump win the GOP nomination?
Will DeSantis be competitive?
Do GOP voters have an appetite for Trumpism without Trump?
Do they see him as a toxic brand and a liability or do they see him as somebody who despite his faults and flaws is the standard bearer for this political revolution?
That's question number one and that was answered by the charges.
The charges Made all those questions irrelevant and they made him the nominee and the leader of the party and reaffirmed that he's the leader of this movement.
That's question number one.
Question number two, which is related but fundamentally different, is can he hold office?
Will they let him?
Will they rig the ballot in November?
If he's the nominee, will they seat him?
Will there be some shenanigans like there was in 2020?
Will they kill him?
Will they take him out?
I hope not.
You know, I know it's a touchy subject.
It's like, I don't want the Secret Service to show up, but a lot of people speculate that, you know, there might be some conspiracy that that, just like they charged him, maybe they try some extra legal thing like that.
I hope not.
But many people have speculated that they could JFK him.
That's a related question.
And so, in the same way that the charges in Manhattan answered or made irrelevant the first set of questions, and now he's the presumptive nominee, in some ways these questions pertaining to topic number two are becoming irrelevant.
Because now he's leading in the polls by a lot in literally every swing state.
He's leading nationally.
It didn't look like this in 2016 and 2020, in case you're wondering.
Because that's what you might look at.
He won in 16 by a hair.
He lost in 2020 by a little bit more than he won by in 16.
And so you might look at 16 and 20 and say, what did the polling look like then?
The answer is not like this.
He was never leading In every single swing state.
He was never leading in Maine in 16 or 20.
He was never leading in Michigan by 5 or 7 in 16 or 20 like he is now.
Let alone in all the swing states at the same time.
It just didn't happen.
He never had a sustained lead over Hillary Clinton in 16 or Biden in 2020.
Never.
But he has held a sustained lead in the average since October.
For five months now.
And that just didn't happen.
So, that demonstrates that there is significant popular support.
It seems that he has been able to come back into the fold in many ways.
The Jews are supporting him, the RNC is now supporting him, Mitch McConnell is now supporting him.
There's this acceptance.
At one time, there was a very serious concerted effort to ban him from society, to completely exile him after the 6th.
You know, Tucker and Mitch McConnell, they would have been glad to never deal with Trump ever again, and it was looking like that was a potential reality.
Now, they're reluctantly accepting that they will not only have to allow him to exist, but they have to support him in an election, in a general election.
Then this one's more open-ended.
But when did this change?
If Trump became viable as the leader of the movement and the party after the charges because of the effect of the charges, then he became viable for the general election and decoupled from Biden in the polling and had this massive lead and was able to seal the deal in the primary and get critical support from the institutions after October 7th.
And what I'm trying to say here is that it would seem that, as I said on Thursday or Friday last week, the rightward shift in Israeli society is creating a rightward shift in American society.
Why?
Because the Republican Party is a vessel for the right wing of Israel.
Sheldon Adelson made it that way.
Leo Strauss and Wolfowitz and all these guys made it that way.
Over the last 40 years since the Reagan Revolution, the GOP has been eaten from the inside out by termites, by neocon termites.
And one time the GOP stood for other things.
Now it stands for Israel.
That has been a gradual process.
that has taken place over four decades through infiltration and subversion by neocon Jews and Zionist money that is supported by the state of Israel, so it's state-sponsored, but it also has local support from Jews that are born in America, or descended from Jews that were born but it also has local support from Jews that are born in
And they have taken over, and specifically over the past 15 years, Sheldon Adelson and his money has transformed the GOP and consolidated their advantage within the GOP.
George W. Bush was the most pro-Israel president in history at his time.
And then the Jews further facilitated this.
Michelle Nadelson's money.
And they turned the GOP into a cutout for the state of Israel.
Where they would uncritically, unconditionally do everything that Israel wanted.
And not just Israel, but the Israeli right.
The Israeli right wing.
They would take it further than even Democrat politicians that support Israel.
So the American Right, specifically the American Republican Party, became inextricably connected to the Israeli Right.
Not just Israel itself, but the Israeli Right and American Zionists who support the Israeli Right in America.
Okay, so that's something to keep in mind here.
So when we see that the Republican Party and its candidate for president has now become viable in the general election, and that started to happen after October 7th, we can see very clearly that maybe that is a result of the influence of Israel.
That Israel has cleared the way for their guy now to win.
And to put it plainly, Israel was attacked on October 7th.
They're not getting the kind of support that they want from Joe Biden.
Joe Biden has been very unfriendly towards Israel and the Israeli right.
He has been in favor of the same policies as his predecessor, his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama, trying to rebuild the Iran nuclear deal.
He's declining to support Netanyahu and his bid to transform Israeli society with his judicial reform and to evade prosecution from his own government.
So Biden, just like Obama, was very unfriendly towards Israel.
When Israel was attacked, that became untenable and unacceptable.
So then Trump becomes super popular the next day and starts to blow up in the polls and now it seems like it's inevitable that he'll win.
And to me it seems clear that his path was cleared and all the obstacles were pushed aside by a very powerful and motivated Zionist right that has been emboldened by October 7th to make sure that the next American president unconditionally supports their vision.
Because less than a year from now, a new president will be seated.
And mark my words, less than a year from now, all of this conflict will still be going on.
So the point is, it's imminent, it's urgent.
All of this stuff is happening in real time.
A new president will be inaugurated next January.
That's less than a year from now.
So if this campaign in Gaza is still going on Netanyahu says they'll be there for 10 years.
They'll assuredly still be occupying Gaza on January 20th, 2025 when we have a new president.
They will most assuredly still be fighting the axis of resistance backed by Iran in Yemen, Lebanon, in Iraq, and Syria on January 20th, 2025.
And if Trump is the president and sworn in on that day they will have a leader in the White House and a Secretary of Defense and a Secretary of State that are far more sympathetic specifically to the Prime Minister of Israel Netanyahu and his specific aims in this specific war which will still be happening less than a year from today.
And I don't think that all of that is a coincidence.
But this tells us what's driving political life in America.
And it's just as interesting what is, as what isn't.
What is driving the contours of the electorate and the political conversation in America, the actions of the federal law enforcement and intelligence community, and foreign influence from Israel.
If I could tell you the two or three most impactful things in this election, it would be those.
It would be that there is a concerted effort by the IC and federal law enforcement to get Trump, so that's a small group of institutional actors, deep state actors in the security state, Their moves have caused what has happened.
I would say number two is the influence exerted by the Israeli right after October 7th.
Again, it's a small group of people lobbying American society within powerful institutions on behalf of a foreign special interest.
That's the number two biggest determinant.
And then maybe three would be the acquisition of Twitter by Elon Musk.
And that's something else which is highly influenced by these other factors.
Because of course Twitter changed after October 7th and Elon Musk in some ways represents perhaps a subversion because look at PayPal Mafia, they're totally linked up with Israel and the security state.
And so if the three biggest drivers of political change in America really all come from the same place, what does that tell you about American political life?
If Elon Musk, being a spook, okay, he makes rockets for SpaceX, he made PayPal with Peter Thiel and basically the US government and the big banks, okay?
He got financing for Twitter from the big banks.
This guy is thoroughly involved in that network.
He's in Israel and Netanyahu.
If Elon Musk, the DOJ, And a guy like Bill Ackman, if they're the ones driving the conversation, then this pulls the curtains aside and reveals that we don't live in a democracy.
Ideas don't change elections.
It's not votes, persuasion, arguments, public debates.
You know, all this stuff that we think politics is, it isn't.
Politics is not.
An 18-year-old college Republican and an 18-year-old college Democrat going on a TikTok battle and debating about, you know, will Trump have a better economy than Biden?
That is not politics, contrary to popular belief.
Politics is not Kevin McCarthy getting overthrown.
Politics is not Fox News telling you, you know, about Hunter Biden's laptop and whatever.
Politics is the intelligence communities of various nations working in extremely convoluted, incomprehensibly complex ways, using extremely sophisticated systems to influence the electorate.
That's how American politics works.
That's what American politics is.
And we know that because We can map the election in a very scientific way, and we can look at the independent and dependent variables, and then we can analyze, you know, what are the independent variables.
It's not what we think.
It's not what you or I think.
It's not the arguments that were made, or the speeches that were given, or the policies that were advocated.
No, it was almost everything else.
It was the Astronomical influence of big tech firms, which are very much related to the Intel and security framework of different states, like TikTok.
You are an idiot if you think that TikTok and ByteDance aren't involved in the Chinese security or intelligence apparatus.
And the same is true of Google and Twitter and Neta with the American intelligence security apparatus.
So, So, to me, that's the big takeaway about what has happened.
Don't kid yourself with these big narratives about, well, the silent majority woke up this year.
It's like, no, it didn't.
Well, maybe it did, but they were reacting rather than acting.
They were reacting to events.
And so, the upshot of all of this is to think about how can we create political change?
Well, it turns out that political change is not directly downstream from what ordinary people think is political activism.
It's not, it doesn't come directly from people working on a campaign or telling people what they think, like I'm doing right now.
It comes from a wedding of circumstance, like events unfolding in history that are kind of uncontrollable and unpredictable, and the people that are in the right place at the right time Who are clever, who can steer them to the best of their ability with some humble understanding of intended and unintended consequences.
And so how do we create political change?
It's about getting the right people in the right place to wait for the right time.
How do you get them there?
You gotta do a show like this and tell them the right ideas.
And then you gotta get the smartest people to know the right ideas and network them.
And you have to carefully cultivate their careers and watch them over time.
Through a system of patronage and mentorship and then over over a generation or two those people in the positions to not control or initiate but to guide the unfolding of events.
Some of them they can't control, but in a way that maybe benefits us in the future, and I think that's kind of.
Roughly where I am in my political understanding over the years.
And by the way, this is exactly what our adversaries do.
This is precisely what our adversaries do.
This is what they write about.
And if you follow, how did Israel take control of the GOP?
That's how they did it.
These well-meaning Jews didn't go into the political public arena and say, hey guys, we should give all our money to Israel.
It didn't work.
It didn't happen that way, actually.
They didn't say, hey, let's get all the Jews to volunteer for all the campaigns and march in the streets and tell everybody what our views are.
unidentified
No.
nick fuentes
They moved in silence and they quietly got to where the smart people are made disciples out of them, and then carefully cultivated their careers like the Sith.
And then you got Paul Wolfowitz in the Bush administration.
And the rest is history.
This is how these things happen.
And that's like the level of seriousness that we need to treat the subject.
But, you know, you can look at it everywhere.
You can look at the texture of politics anywhere.
And you can begin, if you're perceptive, to draw these conclusions.
You can start to realize that politics isn't what it seems to be from the outside looking in.
That is maybe the fundamental responsibility.
Realization that a person can have is that you watching politics from outside are not understanding politics as it works inside Because You know the people that work in politics and make make politics happen.
They're not people like you the live ordinary lives And are sort of have a passing interest in politics and are really an amateur and novice.
Don't really have a deep or really sophisticated understanding, but just are passionate and have these vague partisan feelings.
That's not who's in politics.
So consequently, there's an asymmetry there.
There's a fundamental misunderstanding.
People watch politics, they get into it, and they think everyone that's in it is like me.
Someone who was watching it enthusiastically passionately from the sidelines, but not really knowing much about it and You know and the rest so But the more that you look at politics the more you realize that it doesn't Things don't happen the way you would expect them to if it worked the way that most people assume it does so
So that's my takeaway, because I've been watching this cycle from beginning until now, you know, from the very, very beginning, because I, you know, I started my show in 17, just after 2016, and 2020 was ridiculous.
But this one I watched from the Trump exile until now, and you could see, wait a second, it almost never mattered what Trump said in the speeches.
That has not been the independent variable that has created this range of different outcomes in the polling.
Right?
I mean, Trump didn't change.
The speech that he gave last night on Super Tuesday is not different from the speech he gave in Mar-a-Lago in the same place November 2022 after he got slaughtered in the midterms.
That didn't change.
And DeSantis has always been a weird dork and, you know, by the time he announced it was already over.
So his performance had nothing to do with it at all.
It was things that were totally outside of anybody's control.
It was in the hands of the DOJ.
They decided.
Just like, just like, just like James Comey put out that press release and that letter a few weeks before the November election in 2016.
Creating suspicion about Hillary Clinton's email and creating in the minds of many voters a false equivalency between maybe the Billy Bush and Russiagate and the Hillary email thing?
Like, you know, was that not in a way determinative that James Comey, the head of the FBI, put out that letter on a very pressing matter weeks before the election?
And did they not do the exact same thing with the Hunter Biden laptop weeks before the election in 2020?
Another discretionary decision by the FBI, by federal law enforcement?
Isn't that crazy?
How the FBI has a not insignificant hand weeks before the last three elections?
Oh yeah, 2016, they put out a letter and damn Hillary Clinton and basically call her a criminal.
Weeks before 2020, they tell Twitter and Facebook to suppress the Hunter Biden laptop.
2024, they charge Trump and oops, inadvertently create this huge effect where now Trump is the presumptive nominee, defeats DeSantis, maybe even defeats Biden, activates his base.
And maybe it's reductive to put it so simply, but, like, that is something to pay attention to.
And also, the social media landscape.
In 2016, you had a free and open internet.
In 2020, it was the opposite.
In 2024, it's the opposite again!
unidentified
Flip, flop, flip, flop.
nick fuentes
FBI damns Clinton, then Trump, then Biden.
Free speech favors Trump, then Biden, then Trump.
Arguably, Israel favors Trump.
I mean, arguably, they favored Trump in 2020, but favors Trump again now, but with vigor, you know, now with a renewed urgency.
But you can see that the actions of federal law enforcement, these decisions that are happening in mainstream media, and the influence of foreign countries, Those three things are huge determinants of what happens and their fingerprints are all over it.
Law enforcement, media, intelligence.
That's who runs the country.
That's what it is.
Whoever controls the levers of the means of communication, Whoever controls the secret police or the spy agency, which is basically one and the same with federal law enforcement, that's who's really in control of the contemporary human organization.
And that's why people that have these outdated, this kind of anachronistic thinking, they're like, we gotta put on a uniform and march in the streets!
It's like, hey, it's not the 1930s.
We have atomic bombs, we have computers, we have cell phones.
That means something.
It's a different, it is a different collective consciousness.
It's a different level of technological development, which begets a different economic structure, which creates a different political mode.
And they are all intimately related to each other.
And if you want to understand modern political life, you have to understand the modern technology, which has created the modern capital markets, which has created the modern incomprehensibly complex Secret political system.
Shadow political system.
So... And I feel like I'm, you know, when I was younger I remember campaigning, and I, don't get me wrong, I still love Trump, and I, you know, there's something to be said about the power of belief.
I think that's what Dune 2 is about, not to tie it into some stupid movie because that, you know, won't really stand the test of time.
But there is something to be said.
This is why I've always supported Trump in spite of this.
There is such a thing as people power.
There is a power in true faith, in true belief.
So while Trump May not be initiating everything that's happening.
It doesn't mean that the faith that people have in him isn't real.
Maybe Trump isn't real, but the faith in him is.
And there's power in that.
And maybe Trump doesn't necessarily mean everything that he says.
Maybe it doesn't translate into policy.
But people believing in that message, and the fact that that message resonates, and the power within, that is real.
And so even if you don't believe in Trump like he's going to be the best administrator, maybe he's backed by Israel, you can believe in Trump as a, you know, you don't want to say like messianic or anything like that, but He is tapping into something that is real.
Even if he's not real, he's tapping into something that is real, and he's activating something that will have real implications.
So, even if he's not the man actualizing by the process of him getting elected, he may inadvertently actualize something that will be real.
Like me, for example.
If Trump never ran, I would never exist, and I'm a real entity.
I'm tapping into something fundamental.
And I'm just a small part of the ripple effect that Trump created.
So do you understand what I'm saying?
Even if he faithlessly said, America first.
And even if that never happened, and even if it fell on deaf ears, a young man, a young gifted man heard it and took it to heart and then acted in the world.
And if many people are doing that, we don't even fully understand the implications of the true belief in Trump and what he unlocked by saying these things, you know.
And so that's why, like I said, it's about forces outside of our control and putting the right people to steer them.
So, it's not, contrary to what people think, it's not a black pill.
It's sort of like, you go through this phase where you're like, we need to elect Trump so we can fix things, to like, Trump can't fix anything, no one can fix anything, it doesn't matter.
To like, well, actually it does matter because that's how I got into politics, and if a hundred people like me were running the government, then we could change things.
So it's kind of like, You go from white pill to black pill to white pill, but it's just a different understanding of how.
These things happen.
You realize voting for Trump doesn't matter because Trump is going to fix America, necessarily.
But if Trump gets elected, there are going to be a million 18-year-olds who believe in American revanchism, who are going to go to work in the White House, and they're going to be adults in 30 years with political careers.
And, you know, so it's a story of generations.
The world is a story of generations, not static cross-sections that you could take at any given moment in time.
unidentified
So...
nick fuentes
So that's my take on what's been going on with Trump.
And like I said, it is what it is.
Israel cleared the path.
He got charged.
It all fell into place.
In a way that I think will ultimately benefit us.
So I support Trump.
I think it's a great development that he is going to be the nominee.
I still believe.
I still believe in him.
Still going to vote for him.
And hopefully these events on October 7th may get a better domestic political situation here.
And ultimately sow the seeds of the demise of that relationship.
At least I would hope so.
Because I know the people that Trump would bring into the White House, they don't believe in Israel like his son-in-law does.
So, he may believe in Israel, but his staff doesn't, and his staff are going to be around in 50 years.
So, anyway.
But we're out of time.
That's that.
I want to move on.
We're gonna take a look at our Super Chat, see what you guys have to say.
Kind of a weird take tonight.
Let me know what you guys think of all that.
Maybe a little abstract.
Tell me if you think that's great or if that's, you know, just totally gibberish.
But I'm gonna pull up our Super Chat, see what you guys have to say about all this.
and I'm hungry so I'm gonna try and get out of here pretty quickly cuz I'm I'm hungry Jack tonight listen up Jack I gotta eat a sandwich okay Wisconsin Catholics sent $3.
streamlabs matthew tts
I agree with your comment yesterday about unions.
I support the white working class but unions, while they have some benefits, have caused more harm than good.
Good jobs W Liberal Politics L. God bless.
nick fuentes
W, thank you man.
Yeah, unions... suck.
streamlabs matthew tts
True.
True.
Hinsdale Gene Pool, if only.
unidentified
No.
streamlabs matthew tts
I can't disrespect the ancestors like that, but... Yeah.
No, no, no.
There's life.
Even if you're ugly, you can still live a good life.
nick fuentes
like heron puss in hell and becoming a mutated lying clown shit hile hinsdale gene pool true hinsdale gene pool if only no i can't disrespect the ancestors like that but yeah no no no there's life even if you're ugly you can still live a good life i'm here to tell you you can still live a good you know the bible almost tells us like blessed are You know, blessed are these ugly losers.
And I say that partly sarcastic, but partly it's also true.
You know, because what do they say?
They say that if you're rich, it's gonna be tough for you to get into heaven.
That's also true if you have a hot wife and beautiful kids, and the kids are rich and beautiful, like,
Something to be said about this and it's not to say that it's bad to be good it's not to say that it's bad to be good-looking or rich but there is something to be said that it's it's easier to I think to be worldly to be good-looking you have a different temptation so ugly people ugly people will inherit good news for all of us right good news for all of us bottom bottom feeder depth groveler M sent $3.
Do you ever attend different rites?
Because we're closer.
All those beautiful people, they're being given to worldliness.
So there you go.
streamlabs matthew tts
I'm sent $3.
Do you ever attend different rites?
I went to a Byzantine mass with my friend and I liked how they do communion, but I didn't like how they sing all the readings.
nick fuentes
No, I don't.
I stick with... I stick with the normal, normal chat, Catholic Mass.
streamlabs matthew tts
Deleted.
Sent $3.
The horror.
unidentified
Thank you for that.
streamlabs matthew tts
Groy Perspool sent $5.
Regarding Myra Flores, she's a self-important, overly sassy never-submitter that will balloon up two months into her first pregnancy and never recover.
And you really want to go to Spanish Catholic Mass?
Yikes.
nick fuentes
Okay, you're just triggered.
You obviously don't get it.
unidentified
Okay, I think I'll do that.
streamlabs matthew tts
I think I'll eat it now!
Money, you flatfoot stole my lollipop.
You can eat whatever you want, as long as you keep your caloric intake to a six-hour window.
So you could eat ice cream every single day for 25% of the day.
unidentified
Okay, I think I'll do that.
nick fuentes
I think I'll eat it now.
One of you flatfoot stole my lollipop.
I wish, dude.
I love, I'm a glutton.
That's my sin.
Well, I'm not really a glutton, but I just love delicious food.
I love... Because I don't eat too much, but I just love the simple pleasure of, like, ice cream and a cheeseburger.
What could be better than this?
I'm a very simple man.
Well, I'm actually extremely complex, but the things that I like?
Very simple.
Cheeseburger and fries.
I'm happy as a fucking clam.
Ice cream with a hot cookie on it.
Scratch that.
Reverse it.
Strike that.
Reverse it.
No, a hot cookie with ice cream on it.
And everybody wants to cut my head off.
You fucking pussy.
You eat McDonald's all day and eat ice cream.
Fuck you.
Go to the gym.
It's like, you know what?
You fucking faggot.
These people, they don't understand.
Every, every one of you, you're out there, you're cooming, dumping coom, and disgusting sluts, and drinking alcohol, living normal lives, being stupid, being fucking stupid.
I want to enjoy a cheeseburger.
People go, yeah, fairy godparents, you're giving me the fucking Mr. Crocker treatment, because I want to enjoy a little McDonald's once in a while.
It's, it honestly makes me sick.
You people are sick.
Sadistic.
They hate to see a king eat.
They hate to see a king eat.
They see me with a big bucket of fried chicken and a biscuit and they just hate to see that.
They hate to see me just devour.
That's why they countersignal.
On a deep level it's very feminine.
What's a woman want to take food out of your mouth?
Don't eat!
They hate to see a king eat!
But I'm eating good, that's why I show it off as often as possible.
Imagine eating this good.
unidentified
Let's go.
streamlabs matthew tts
Epical Doge sent $3.
Watching old Trump highlight reels and getting radicalized.
Ill die for you Trump. - Let's go. - Epical Doge sent $3.
Also what if you named the monkey Michael?
- Okay, thanks for that. - Libertarian Control Act sent $10.
Why are the biggest renos in Congress or ex-military?
Mitch McConnell, Tony Gonzalez, Dan Crenshaw, Don Bacon, etc.
At this point, being a veteran makes me less inclined to vote for the candidate.
The war hero mystic is long gone.
unidentified
But self-selection.
nick fuentes
I mean, whoever joins the military is an institutionalist.
If you join the military after the Vietnam War, you have to really, like, be huffing American propaganda.
You know, I'm thinking, like, I'm serving my country!
When you go and, like, bomb Serbia, like, what does that have to do with our country?
unidentified
Well, I have to go fight Iraq.
Why?
I have to go fight Afghanistan.
Why?
What did Afghanistan ever do to us?
nick fuentes
So, if you were volunteering for the military after the Vietnam War, you're kind of like an institutionalist.
unidentified
You're like, the military is Fighting for our freedom!
nick fuentes
And so then they go and serve in Congress and they're like, I still believe in the Constitution!
I believe in our founding ideals!
We're the greatest country ever!
So, yeah, it kind of says something.
If you're joining up with the military, you're kind of a believer.
You're a believer.
streamlabs matthew tts
I don't know, because I would probably be on drugs.
To tell you the truth, I would either be a criminal or I'd be on drugs.
I would be in a ditch somewhere.
nick fuentes
suit in another timeline where do you think your unique capacity to see connections would lend itself best i don't know because i'm i would probably be on drugs to tell you the truth i would either be a criminal or i'd be on drugs i would be in a ditch somewhere because i have a very i think i have a good mind but i also have no discipline I have no self-control.
I have these obsessive tendencies and big appetite and I think that would lend itself to me being a complete degenerate or a drug addict.
unidentified
It wouldn't lead to anything good, I'll tell you that much.
Maybe I'd be an entrepreneur though.
nick fuentes
I mean I would either be like an entre... I'd either be like an entrepreneur with varying levels of success or I would be a complete like drug head degenerate.
unidentified
But nothing in between.
Because I don't think I could ever hold down a real job.
I don't think I could ever do that.
nick fuentes
Because I'm extremely stubborn and defiant.
No self-control, extremely obsessive, anti-social.
unidentified
I would not be able to, I don't think I'd be able to get along.
nick fuentes
I mean, I don't want to say never, but I haven't so far, and I think it would be extremely difficult for me to ever live a normal life because of my personality flaws.
So that would either lend itself to extremes, you know, an extreme Disfunctional life on a bad side or on a good side.
I'd be very productive and innovative or very Degenerate and unstable So I think it would be I would probably go very badly for me because I mean again not to knock my ancestors but my ancestors are very much the same way like I'm very much like my mom's side and they were a lot of them were drug addicts and Bank robbers and Criminals, they used to steal.
unidentified
Because they were drug addicts, they would have to steal to feed their drug habit.
nick fuentes
And a lot of them were very intelligent, but... They had these problems.
unidentified
So... I'm a big believer in genetic determinism, so it'd be something like that.
streamlabs matthew tts
Catholic Colin sent $10, you mentioned needing a place for propaganda a while back, and I had an idea for that.
There's 40 PDFs slash books in this folder so far, EMJ, David Irving, Henry Ford, St.
John Chrysostom, and more.
God bless you, man.
nick fuentes
Well, post it on Telegram.
unidentified
Don't post it on Google Docs.
You're going to dox me.
nick fuentes
Oh, here, I got a Google Drive link.
Everybody click it and dox your Gmail.
Post it on Telegram so that people can view it without giving you their Google Gmail account.
unidentified
I don't trust... I'm not clicking on that.
streamlabs matthew tts
I respect the hustle, but that's pretty sus.
unidentified
I did.
I loved it.
streamlabs matthew tts
- Respect to hustle, but that's pretty sus. - Josh the remover sent $3.
unidentified
Have you seen Dune part two yet? - I did, I loved it.
streamlabs matthew tts
I thought it was great. - Andrew Phelps sent $10.
You don't have to be black to be a real nigga.
So you shouldn't be offended by what that guy was saying to Kanye.
nick fuentes
No, but he meant it like that.
That's what he meant it.
When he said real nigga, he mean real black people.
As in not white people.
unidentified
Because that guy was like on the civil rights bullshit.
He thought he was like Malcolm X.
You thought he was Colin Kaepernick, you know.
That's what he meant.
streamlabs matthew tts
Chris Ladd sent $3.
Streets saying Cheezer x Nick x Sneeko stream coming up?
What's the word?
nick fuentes
The Streets are saying maybe Friday.
Cheezer collaboration.
I don't know about Sneeko.
unidentified
I think he's been trying to avoid me lately, which is fine.
You know, he's trying to do his thing, but I think it might just be me and Cheezer.
streamlabs matthew tts
Therodsofar97 sent $3.
Sunroof by NickyEure and Daisy.
unidentified
I don't know what that is, but thank you.
streamlabs matthew tts
Let's go.
Thank you, man.
I'll be seeing you soon, by the way.
unidentified
Let's go.
nick fuentes
Base number?
streamlabs matthew tts
- We'll see you soon by the way. - Joseph sent $14.
Thank you, Nick.
We will all be Nickers together.
07RKD4NJF. - Let's go.
unidentified
Base number, base number 1492.
streamlabs matthew tts
Thank you though, W. - Harold Flight sent $3.
Don't care if you think it's low IQ.
The Hebrew voice acting is hilarious.
And that mustache is starting to take shape.
Very paper.
nick fuentes
You think I should grow it out?
unidentified
I don't know.
I don't know if I should.
I've honestly just gotten lazy.
I think I'm gonna shave tomorrow or something, but... Yeah, I love the Jewish voice.
It's so stupid, but it's funny.
streamlabs matthew tts
Binion sent $10.
You said you feel like you couldn't reach your full potential because you didn't go to college.
How come?
I learned more from literal YouTube videos and Wikipedia articles than I ever learned in school.
nick fuentes
College sounds like an absolute waste of time, even more with the required extra courses. - Because I feel like, I feel like that I could have really become a true polymath if I went to college, but I just didn't have the discipline.
If you go to a real academy, you learn math, you learn Greek, and Latin, and Hebrew, and German, and French, and you learn the Western Canon.
I feel like I... Yeah, I mean, there's sort of two schools of thought on this.
One school of thought is you learn efficiently.
Like, modern technology means you can learn efficiently.
Like, if I want to start a business, I could go online and Google how to start a business, and watch all the YouTube videos on how to start a business.
And if I want to know about Israel, I could go on Wikipedia and read the whole history of Israel.
And I could read a hundred books about Israel.
And that's kind of like the efficient learning idea, and like, you know, learning hacks with technology.
The other idea is that to really be educated, you need a holistic education.
Which means, in order to make good decisions in business, you should know, like, how to do calculus.
Even if you don't need to know calculus to run a business, knowing calculus is good for you.
Knowing Ancient Greek is good for you.
Having read the Aeneid is good for you.
And so, you know, on one hand, I agree with you that, yeah, you can learn what you need to learn through the Internet.
If you're an autodidact, it's never been a better time to be alive.
But at the same time, I feel like I never got that holistic, classic education, classical education, because I didn't have a mentor and go to college and do all that.
And so now I just feel like a less serious intellectual, you know, and I understand that.
I feel that deeply.
You know, because you look at Google, there's a great table.
If you Google presidents on Wikipedia and the languages they spoke, it's like the first 15 presidents all spoke English, Greek, Hebrew, Latin, and almost all of them spoke an additional language like Spanish, Arabic, German, Dutch, French, You know, it's like Ben Franklin spoke five languages.
They all spoke three, four, five languages.
Then you look at our presidents today, they only speak English.
Obama spoke Indonesian when he was a kid.
And you look at our intellectuals now, it's like they don't speak... They're not reading stuff in their original language.
unidentified
They don't speak other languages.
They don't know how to do math.
nick fuentes
You know?
Goethe wrote Faust, and he wrote a theory of colors, and he wrote about plants, and he wrote about philosophy, and he wrote poetry, and this was the pinnacle of modern development.
And how do we get that back?
unidentified
We have to have a mind towards that, as opposed to this like, you know, I'll just Google how to start, I'll just Google how did you drop shipping on Amazon, but you're a complete fucking retard otherwise.
I'll just Google, and I'll have a Google PhD.
nick fuentes
Like no, we need, we need people that actually love the truth.
unidentified
You know?
streamlabs matthew tts
They treat me like I'm black.
Go use that bathroom.
How Rumble won't even announce that the boogeyman Nicholas J. Fuentes is streaming for Super Tuesday.
They treat you like a living, breathing holocaust.
Better not mention his name.
He who shall not be named.
Will ATL East you have his grow-ipers, Nick?
unidentified
They treat me like I'm black.
nick fuentes
Go use that bathroom, come in through the back door, drink out of a different water fountain.
unidentified
They treat me like I'm black.
nick fuentes
I'm the Negro of Rumble.
There is a white section and there is a groyper section.
unidentified
You know, it's like the Green Book.
nick fuentes
We're like the Green Book and I'm like Don Shirley.
unidentified
But I'm not gay like Don Shirley.
But I'm like the Don Shirley.
nick fuentes
John Miller's giving Don Shirley because he plays the piano and he's black.
But I'm like the Don Shirley and I don't know, we gotta find some mainstream.
Maybe Candace Owens can be my Italian chauffeur.
unidentified
Where I'm like, I will not be eating fried chicken.
nick fuentes
And she's like, come on, eat the fried- I fucking hate that movie, I think it's so fucking stupid, but I've watched the entire thing multiple times in TikTok clips.
unidentified
But I'm watching TikTok, it's just the fucking green book.
nick fuentes
Every other month, I watch the entirety of the green book in TikTok.
And I watch, um, uh, you know, shoot the gun in the parking lot, cause the flash is cash at the bar and all that shit.
unidentified
Anyway.
nick fuentes
But, uh, Yeah, but I'm like the Negro in that movie where they're like, well, you can play in the restaurant, but you can't eat in the dining room.
You know, Arwen from Suite Life of Zack and Cody's like, well, you can play in the dining room, but we'll bring you dinner to your dressing room.
That's me.
unidentified
That's Rumble.
nick fuentes
Rumble is like, you can stream on our website, but take a check mark to your dressing room.
And we're not going to tweet about you.
unidentified
I'm not good enough to tweet about!
I'm not good enough to have a checkmark!
nick fuentes
That's when I jump on the table and monkey out!
That's when I jump on the table and say, Y'ALL NIGGAS CAN'T CONTROL ME!
Y'ALL NIGGAS CAN'T CONTROL ME!
unidentified
So... That's how I feel every day.
nick fuentes
Every day in my life, I'm the N. I'm the N-word.
unidentified
Now I know how it feels.
streamlabs matthew tts
Hey, just moral support.
Nice.
Boost?
Besides super chats, how else can we support you and the cause in general?
unidentified
Keep up the good work. - Hey, just moral support.
nick fuentes
From someone like, yes, that's moral support.
streamlabs matthew tts
- Blacks murder sent $5.
NC governor candidate Mark Robinson has already submitted to Jews.
He was in Israel last week as three of his last eight Instagram posts are about Israel and the Holocaust SMH. - Boost.
Awesome. - Kelleton sent $3.
I used to love washing my hands, but then I looked in the mirror and saw the reflection of a person very earnestly rubbing his hands.
Then I realized why they put hand-washing signs everywhere you go.
nick fuentes
Employees must... Employees must hand rub every employee in America for 50 years.
Before they return to their work.
unidentified
Before you do your work, you must rub your hands.
nick fuentes
Every employee must do this before you return to work.
And we wonder why everything's so fucked up.
We're all Jews now.
Every dishwasher, every server... Every mobbed up politician and pundit.
You know, they gotta go into the bathroom.
Employees only bathroom.
And then they go back and do their work.
Do their evil designs.
streamlabs matthew tts
Chad Champion sent $3.
The coming admin fight is kinda like Captain America.
We gotta whisper RKD4NJF to identify each other like Hail Hydra.
nick fuentes
That's cringe.
That's cringe actually.
streamlabs matthew tts
Greekoid sent three dollars.
Half Bronze Age warriors rape weak bitches like you who show up with no receipts.
This is called a Bronze Age rape, my nigga.
Ayo, get out the car, homie.
Get out the car, my nigga.
This is a Bronze Age rape.
nick fuentes
Classic hit.
streamlabs matthew tts
Greekoid sent three dollars.
Two hams.
Ayo, drop them drawers, nigga.
This is a Bronze Age rape in this bitch, my nigga.
Get on your knees, bitch, nigga.
This is a Bronze Age rape, bitch.
I don't read niggas.
Can't read niggas.
This is a Bronze Age rape, nigga.
NJF.
nick fuentes
One of the greatest hits of all time.
Goated Twitter space.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm pretty good.
streamlabs matthew tts
You should and you can.
nick fuentes
They don't check.
They don't care.
That's a life hack.
streamlabs matthew tts
PrettyFlyWhiteGuy sent $3.
$322.
Did you have a favorite superhero growing up?
Mine was always Superman.
nick fuentes
Not until later.
I was really into Star Wars for my early childhood, but I was really into Iron Man, like, from 11 years old on.
After Iron Man 2 came out... Iron Man 2 came out... I have literally thought about Iron Man 2 every week for the past 15 years of my life.
Like, no joke.
It just lives in my head, rent-free.
Every week I think about Iron Man 2 at least once.
I think about... The main things I think about are when Mickey Rourke says, if you can make God bleed, people cease to believe in him.
Like that.
I don't know why, but that scene just echoes in my head.
That one.
And the scene when he is driving down PCH and stops to get strawberries.
There's something so Kino about that scene He's in the Audi which they were promoting for that movie as product placement But he's driving in the Audi convertible and he stops on PCH and buys a basket of strawberries For some reason I think about that every day and I also think about when he created the new element Not only when he when he got the
uh diorama and saw you know that oh all the benches are neutrons and he you know he did the thing and he was like and they invented the element and then when he pointed the laser at the triangle and it got in the triangle and they're like congratulations i'm making a new element i think about those three scenes probably once a week every week for my entire life i don't know why totally i'm sure it's just because i it was impressionable when i was young
But yeah, so it's definitely Iron Man Love that movie I Love that scene when he flies in at the beginning.
I thought that was sick.
I Love the scene when he does the laser The one and done and the final scene Great movie The idea that he was like dying, he had to replace the core.
I thought it was so Keno.
streamlabs matthew tts
You know, I've never had the McRib, I never had interest in it, but McRib and Shamrock Shake sounds really good.
nick fuentes
month along with the shamrock shake will you be ordering them both at the same time or is the barbecue sauce combined with the shamrock shake too sugary you know i've never had the mcrib i never had interest in it but mcrib and shamrock shake sounds really good on an unrelated note i'm gonna open door dash Nah, I'm kidding.
That'd be kind of sick, though.
unidentified
Is it back?
streamlabs matthew tts
Let me check.
That's 100% real.
It's not back yet, is it?
No, McRib.
I see more and more the media saying Trump is leading.
I think the Zionists and the media are easing up on Trump because of the attack on Israel.
You can see the shift of the Jews towards the right.
nick fuentes
That's 100% real.
It's not back yet, is it?
No McRib yet, boo.
unidentified
Damn.
nick fuentes
I love McDonald's.
unidentified
Ha!
McDonald's is my favorite restaurant.
nick fuentes
My first love, bruh.
Yeah, I love it.
Sue me.
We got a problem with that?
But that's not grilled chicken and rice!
streamlabs matthew tts
Boy, Noah sent $3.
Thoughts on Oppenheimer?
Love you.
nick fuentes
Loved Oppenheimer.
One of my favorite movies, actually.
Love Robert Downey Jr.
unidentified
in that.
streamlabs matthew tts
He's great.
Malabar Growiper sent $15.
Brilliant monologue tonight.
Thank you. 07.
nick fuentes
Thank you!
I appreciate it.
My hair is far off.
streamlabs matthew tts
I mean, I will say, for the sake of my political future, yeah, I think it's a God-given right.
But... Yeah, I don't know.
big on authoritarianism, which generally seems to be generally against gun rights.
I don't think I've ever heard you bring it up.
RKD for NJF and praise Christ.
nick fuentes
I mean, I will say for the sake of my political future.
Yeah, I think it's a God given right.
But.
I don't know.
I don't know if I view that.
I don't know if I'm with that 100 percent.
streamlabs matthew tts
Really?
unidentified
Yikes!
streamlabs matthew tts
Well yeah, because he got outed as a pedophile.
- I appreciate you now that his channel is collapsing.
- Really? - Down 20K subscribers in 30 days.
nick fuentes
- Yikes.
- Ouch.
streamlabs matthew tts
- Well, yeah, 'cause he got outed as a pedophile. - Naming Dem softly sent $3.
I feel like you finally are calling out the Jews.
Plaza keep it up.
nick fuentes
- Okay, that's bait.
streamlabs matthew tts
- Rape caveat.
Caviar sent $5.
Incredible monologue.
Thank you for all that you do.
I pray you reach the powerful people who can steer this country back to the true and living God.
07. Me too, man.
nick fuentes
I hope so.
streamlabs matthew tts
Yeah, I didn't like it.
Season 3 was not bad.
My favorite out of the new stuff is Andor and Mandalorian Season 3.
Did you say you didn't like it?
That was the best Star Wars I've seen since the originals DBH. - Yeah, I didn't like it.
nick fuentes
Season three was not bad.
My favorite out of the new stuff is Andor and Mandalorian season three.
Everything else I hated.
I hated Mandalorian season one.
Mandalorian season 2 was okay, but the only stuff that I would say I actually enjoyed a little bit was Mandalorian season 3 and Andor.
I thought that was maybe the best stuff so far.
Hated Ahsoka, hated Obi-Wan.
Didn't love the first two Mandalorian seasons.
What else did they make?
Boba Fett absolutely was the worst.
So... Hated the sequel trilogy.
Rogue One was okay.
Solo wasn't terrible.
Some people hate it.
I thought it wasn't bad.
streamlabs matthew tts
Well, yeah, if you're infiltrating, for sure.
You gotta... It's just about being pro-social.
because you will have to work with them in politics.
Very simple, but many in the alt-right can't wrap their heads around diplomacy.
nick fuentes
It's like they're monkeys or something. - Well, yeah, if you're infiltrating, for sure.
You gotta, it's just about being pro-social.
streamlabs matthew tts
It's that simple. - ColaGrow, I percent $10.
I saw that.
Was that like Vietnamese TV?
UPPER PARTY PATRIARCH.
Nick Fuentes.
nick fuentes
STANDING COMMITTEE MEMBER.
Imagine.
What was that, like Vietnamese TV?
Upper party patriarch, Nick Fuenta, standing committee member.
streamlabs matthew tts
Imagine, that'll be the day. - Really cool dude sent $10.
Chuck Johnson said they're turning elections into a month long event and promoting the use of mail-in ballots to prevent interference from foreign intelligence.
What do you make of someone who is very smart on some stuff and then says some of the most retarded shit you've ever heard in your life?
nick fuentes
I consider it.
If someone smart says something that I think is dumb I reconsider my position.
unidentified
Nothing wrong with that.
streamlabs matthew tts
True.
Khaki shorts enthusiasts sent $3, saw that Biden is trying to win over Nikki Haley primary voters.
If Trump loses, it'll be because white boomer suburbanites who saw yuck for democracy.
nick fuentes
True.
streamlabs matthew tts
Anglo Zoomer sent $15, love you Nick.
nick fuentes
Love you too, buddy.
streamlabs matthew tts
Navigated Heron 1626 sent $5, during Reagan's NH.
Bush's rule, a prominent Republican figure, Larry King, ran an occultist-slash-satanic child prostitution-slash-drug ring for rich and powerful, including Bush Sr.
blackmail ring for Zionist-slash-mafia agents?
Is Larry King the O.G.
Epstein?
nick fuentes
I never heard that about Larry King.
I'll have to look into that.
streamlabs matthew tts
John McCain sent $3.
I find your views on our boys in blue to be abhorrent.
Remember why you have the freedom of speech and who is protecting and serving those rights and recant that statement immediately.
Rapist Werewolf sent $3.
I slept in and missed the show but am sure it was Keno as always.
Will do better next time.
True.
I had a turtwig.
What does turtwig evolve into?
- True. - True.
- Morne sent $5.
You seem like a Charizard nigga.
Me?
I'm a Blastoise guy myself. - I had a turtwig.
nick fuentes
What does turtwig evolve into?
streamlabs matthew tts
But I was a turtwig guy. - Catholic Collins sent $3.
How do I put it on Telegram?
Didn't even know how to make the Google Drive folder until today.
There's almost 70 PDFs in there now.
I posted it on X2 but maybe I should use Dropbox?
nick fuentes
No, use Telegram.
Use Telegram that way you can't see everybody's information.
You just start a Telegram channel and upload the PDFs just like you do on Google Drive.
It's pretty easy.
Fed.
But if you do that, let me know because I'd love to look at that.
Okay, all right, that's our last super chat.
unidentified
I'm tired.
nick fuentes
I'm hungry.
That's gonna do it for me.
As always, thanks for watching.
Remember to follow me on RumbleCozy and Telegram.
Smash the follow button!
All the links are down below.
I'm on the air Monday through Friday.
As always, thanks for watching.
Thanks to our Super Chatters, everyone that watches the show.
We love you.
I'll see you tomorrow.
Until then, have a great rest of your evening.
unidentified
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo!
It's going to be only America first!
America first!
The American people will come first once again.
Export Selection