Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can kick that yay button. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
That's what they have. | ||
And then nowadays, I am so upset that the things we did and the things we fought for and the boys that died for it, it's all gone down the drain. | ||
Our country's gone to hell in a handbasket. | ||
We haven't got the country we had when I was raised. | ||
Not at all. | ||
Nobody will have the fun I have. | ||
Nobody will have the opportunity I have. | ||
It's just not the same. | ||
Jesus is the way and the life and the King of Israel. | ||
We just leave with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around here. | ||
It's drag queens in schools. | ||
It's 18-year-olds joining OnlyFans. | ||
The future is so bleak. | ||
unidentified
|
But... | |
That has changed the calculation. | ||
unidentified
|
God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the, you know, richest person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
I think they've been extremely unfair to you. | ||
Who is they, though? | ||
We can't tell you who they is, can we? | ||
There is no future if we do nothing now. | ||
There is nothing to lose. | ||
People that are scrambling, trying to protect their ever-shrinking share of what they have are foolish. | ||
It's all going. | ||
It's all going away. | ||
This country is being ripped apart and raped and looted. | ||
We're being slowly poisoned and, in some cases, quickly murdered and assassinated. | ||
And we're killing ourselves every day, inadvertently, with the kinds of things that we eat and breathe and drink and see. | ||
People have got to start to radically begin to obey their conscience and tell the truth and do the right thing. | ||
People have got to start to get courageous. | ||
And this is the time for everybody to turn and look to God and to pray and to ask for strength and to ask for wisdom to get through this time and to transform and sanctify this country. | ||
And the alternative is that there will be no country. | ||
Is it really only as big as low gas prices? | ||
Is it really only so big as bringing inflation and gas prices and the corporate tax rate back down? | ||
It's not about waiting for someone to come in and change the policy and make it better. | ||
It's a personal decision that we all have to make to become soldiers of Christ. | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden looming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Greupel Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and of course defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who through an increasing amount of activism are really going to ensure the future and the success. | ||
America is a nation of believers, dreamers, and strivers that is being led by a group of censors, critics, and cynics. | ||
These interests have rigged our political and economic system for their exclusive benefit. | ||
unidentified
|
But believe me, it's for their benefit. | |
My message is that things have to change. | ||
And they have to change right now. | ||
My sole and exclusive mission is to go to work for you. | ||
It's time to deliver a victory for the American people. | ||
We don't win anymore, but we are going to start winning again. | ||
So to every parent who dreams for their child. | ||
And every child who dreams for their futures. | ||
unidentified
|
I say these words to you tonight. | |
I am with you, I will fight for you, and I will win for you. | ||
unidentified
|
Saying to me is like, this is probably pretty cool for you. | |
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
Pick up and turn around. | ||
Can's on the ground. | ||
Pick up and turn around. | ||
You can't go out. | ||
I feel different for that seminar. | ||
I like fun. | ||
I just have a no-no-no. | ||
I feel different for that seminar. | ||
I'm on this of the morning. | ||
I love you. | ||
I feel different for that seminar. | ||
I'm on this way. | ||
Nothing can join me till something's in. | ||
I'll be so lonely. | ||
I'm on this way. | ||
Nothing can join me till something's in. | ||
I'll be so lonely. | ||
I will fight for you with every breath in my body. | ||
And I will never, ever let you down. | ||
A new droiper war. | ||
Yeah, nigga this war. | ||
unidentified
|
Nigga this war. | |
I'm chucking bodies on the floor. | ||
I'm with it all. | ||
I took to my demons and I see the writings on the wall. | ||
Niggas is dying when it's on work. | ||
I get excited for them cocks. | ||
And no one ain't crying when he gone. | ||
Cause Brody was fighting for the cold. | ||
I do this shit for my brothers though. | ||
We do this shit for each other stuff. | ||
The courageous fallen. | ||
The anguished fallen. | ||
Their lives have meaning because we the living refuse to forget them. | ||
And as we ride to certain death, we trust our successors to do the same for us. | ||
Because my soldiers do not buckle or yield when faced with the cruelty of this world! | ||
My soldiers push forward! | ||
My soldiers scream out! | ||
My soldiers reach! | ||
I can't see a damn thing, thank God. | ||
I can't see a damn thing, thank God. | ||
They like Steve. | ||
They can't see me. | ||
They won't beat me. | ||
I'm in that guinea. | ||
You can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
They say, can we really go back? | ||
And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right? | ||
unidentified
|
when you're left wing? | |
The answer is no, we're never going back. | ||
It's gone. | ||
unidentified
|
It's gone. | |
All of that is gone. | ||
But I would call myself something like a Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
And Jesus Christ is our future after we die. | ||
on earth. | ||
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | |
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | ||
We love everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
And we want people that can burn really more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't believe in the real world. | ||
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 gonna do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
unidentified
|
The only way that we're gonna make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | |
It's the only way. | ||
We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because if there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny, then nothing can stop us and nothing will. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Buy, and more importantly, hire Americans. | ||
But in June of 2024, during the All In podcast hosted by his donor, David Sachs, he committed that he would not only expand work visas, but he would staple green cards to them. | ||
I cannot support this. | ||
And I will not encourage my followers to turn out in November to vote for this or campaign for this. | ||
It is not an unreasonable demand to say that we will not vote for a candidate that promises to import more legal immigrants. | ||
And it is not unreasonable because for the first time in 20 years, it is the majority opinion that there are too many legal immigrants coming into the country. | ||
Ask yourself this. | ||
If not Donald Trump, if not now, then when? | ||
So they may say mass deportations. | ||
They may say illegal immigration. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
And Americans need to get used to saying that. | ||
Native Americans never get what they ask for because they're always telling themselves and negotiating with themselves. | ||
We need to hear the words, immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
No more. | ||
Not since he announced his re-election campaign in November 2022 have I told anybody to vote for Trump. | ||
When pushed for details on the policy, clearly. | ||
They're repeating the same script as every other Republican, and they show that they're really not serious about mass deportations. | ||
For that reason, I actually don't believe that illegal immigration will fall to historic lows. | ||
And this is your America First policy. | ||
We need the people. | ||
We need limitless green cards. | ||
And by the way, once they come in, you can't deport them. | ||
So people, when confronted with this reality, first they said it was a throwaway remark. | ||
They said he didn't really mean it. | ||
Well, he's doubled down on it many times. | ||
He doubled down on it in June, August, last week. | ||
Now they say, well, so what? | ||
Even if he means it, he said it last time. | ||
No, he didn't. | ||
Last time he was against H-1B visas. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, you thought you were going to tap the screen? | |
To pressure Trump, except one problem. | ||
Elon owns the platform. | ||
But now the check marks are being removed, which means people are being de-amplified. | ||
And it's being manipulated. | ||
unidentified
|
They're manipulating the conversation. | |
And Elon retweeted today, or reposted, Trump saying in June, staple the green cards to the diplomas. | ||
And that's a reminder, hey, this is what we got. | ||
This is the deal. | ||
I put in 277. I bought the platform for you. | ||
I made Trump win. | ||
And now Trump's gonna deliver. | ||
And if you're against it, well, there goes your checkmark. | ||
If you voted for him, you are a sucker. | ||
I expect apologies. | ||
I want apology forms. | ||
I want you to- I'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Groyper War II. Years | |
from now, some of them may look back and ask themselves whether they've made the right choice, whether they've made the most of the opportunities they've been given. | ||
Together, we have the same mission. | ||
Over the course of your life, you will find that things are not always fair. | ||
You will find that things happen to you that you do not deserve and that are not always warranted. | ||
But you have to put your head down and fight, fight, fight. | ||
unidentified
|
Never, ever, ever give up. | |
Don't give in. | ||
Don't back down. | ||
And never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | ||
And the more righteous you fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts. | ||
Are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked Our Creator four times. | ||
Because in America, we don't worship government. | ||
We worship God. | ||
It is why our currency proudly declares, in God we trust. | ||
And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure that began with deep faith, big dreams, and humble Beginnings. | ||
The next generation of American leaders. | ||
Never, ever give up. | ||
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
Never quit. | ||
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible, that it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider the more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong. | ||
The more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
You must keep pushing forward. | |
And always have the courage to be yourself. | ||
America is better when people put their faith into action. | ||
Pray to God and follow His teachings. | ||
Today, each of you begins a new chapter as well. | ||
When your story goes from here, it will be defined by your vision, your perseverance, and your grit. | ||
You will build a future where we have the courage to chase our dreams no matter what the cynics and the doubters have to say. | ||
You will have the confidence to speak the hopes in your hearts. | ||
And to express the love that stirs your souls. | ||
As long as you have pride in your beliefs, courage in your convictions, and faith in God, then you will not fail. | ||
As long as America remains true to its values, loyal to its citizens, and devoted to its creator, then our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. | |
May God bless the United States of America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say, you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you, and God bless America. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you so much, everybody. | |
Can I just say, are you trusting Brian? | ||
Yes. | ||
Our movement is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
The Washington establishment and the financial and media corporations that fund it exist for only one reason, to protect and enrich itself. | ||
The establishment has trillions of dollars at stake in this election. | ||
For those who control the levers of power in Washington and for the global special interest, they partner with these people that don't have your good in mind. | ||
Our campaign represents a true existential threat. | ||
like they haven't seen before. | ||
This is not simply another four-year election. | ||
This is a crossroads in the history of our civilization that will determine whether or not we, the people, reclaim control over our government. | ||
The political establishment that is trying to stop us is the same group responsible for our disastrous trade deals, massive illegal immigration. | ||
And economic and foreign policies that have bled our country dry. | ||
The political establishment has brought about the destruction of our factories and our jobs as they flee to Mexico, China, and other countries all around the world. | ||
It's a global power structure that is responsible for the economic decisions that have robbed our working class, stripped our country of its wealth. | ||
and put that money into the pockets of a handful of large corporations and political entities This is a struggle for the survival of our nation And this will be our last chance to save it. | ||
This election will determine whether we're a free nation or whether we have only the illusion of democracy, but are in fact controlled by a small handful of global special interests rigging the system, and our system is rigged. | ||
This is reality. | ||
You know it, they know it, I know it, and pretty much the whole world knows it. | ||
The thing that said take a look what happened These are people who work hard, but no longer have a voice Your voice | ||
unidentified
|
They've been put on notice if you fuck around with us if you do something bad to us We are going to do things to you that have never been done before Don't sit yet, get it like this. | |
Socialists, globalists, Marxists, communists who are attacking our civilization have no idea of the sleeping giant they have awoken. | ||
They cannot even begin to imagine the brave and righteous spirit they've unleashed in men and women. | ||
But they're going to find out the hard way. | ||
They will find out like never before. | ||
This nation We | ||
will not surrender our culture. | ||
We will not surrender our faith. | ||
We will not We want our country to be respected. | ||
We want our country to be respected. | ||
The time for action has come. | ||
As long as we are led by politicians who will not put America first, then we can be assured that other nations will not treat America with respect, the respect that then we can be assured that other nations will not treat America | ||
We want our country to be respected. | ||
impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
unidentified
|
We must always remember that we share one home and one glorious destiny. | |
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
We all salute the same great American flag. | ||
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you winning, son? | |
Are you winning? | ||
I wish that you cocaine-y patients. | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden, booming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Greupel Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and, of course, defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that. | ||
unidentified
|
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump, we're all cut from the same cloth, and that cloth is very, very large. | |
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
Hey, sir. | ||
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
It feels so right. | ||
It's a deal. | ||
I put together some impressive deals. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go gig or go home. | ||
Donald Trump. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman that looks like that has to have a special scent. | ||
It's the Donald. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Donald. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
You look great. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm Donald. | ||
This is my fault. | ||
Listen, are you Maggie in here? | ||
Huh? | ||
Are you? | ||
No. | ||
You just mad. | ||
I'm going to see you. | ||
No. | ||
Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
What are you, what? | ||
The Donald is here. | ||
It's the fire. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Everything's set for tonight, Mr. Trump. | ||
I wonder what Trump's game is this time. | ||
Trump's got a new day. | ||
Trump's got a new deal. | ||
What's your game, though? | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
What? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
Trump is coming. | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
That's right. | ||
Trump has a new game. | ||
What is it? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
My new game is Trump the game. | ||
Trump the game. | ||
This sounds like political presidential. | ||
You said, though, that if you did run for president, you believe you'd win. | ||
I like that. | ||
I would say that I would have a hell of a chance of winning. | ||
I'm never going to lose. | ||
I've never gone into losing my life. | ||
I don't know how your audience does, but I think people are tired of seeing the United States ripped off. | ||
I don't know how your audience does. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First. | ||
America First. America First. | ||
you you you We're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back here with you tonight on Tuesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Our featured story tonight, we're talking all about the DeepSeek AI supercomputer. | ||
Well, it's actually a program. | ||
It's actually a... | ||
You know, this technology stuff is not going to... | ||
B, it's not my wheelhouse. | ||
Let's just put it that way. | ||
We're going to be working on the vocabulary together. | ||
But tonight we're talking all about the brand new Chinese AI. Suppose it's a system. | ||
It's called the system. | ||
It is the DeepSeek R1 AI. And it came out last week. | ||
It was released by China for free. | ||
And it has caused the entire stock market to crash. | ||
We were supposed to talk about it last night. | ||
We ran out of time. | ||
But tonight we'll be talking all about it. | ||
I'm sure you've heard about it. | ||
I'm sure you've heard about the stock market crash, specifically some of these major tech companies led by NVIDIA, which manufactures the chips and graphics cards that power the data centers that create the AI. And basically, the Chinese AI... It's better. | ||
It's better in every way. | ||
They give the various AI models a test. | ||
And these are reasoning tests. | ||
Math problems, science problems, very high-level problems to determine the accuracy, efficiency of the program. | ||
And what we found in the past week is that DeepSeek performs better. | ||
Then any of the American AI models like ChatGPT, like Claude, any of the major American ChatGPT, the brand new Chinese DeepSeek R1 is outperforming them. | ||
It's not only outperforming them and getting a better score, but it's doing so with significantly less resources. | ||
It takes less energy, which means therefore costs less money. | ||
And they built it for cheaper, with far fewer personnel, and they made it free. | ||
So it's literally better in every way. | ||
ChatGPT, for example, if you want to use the best model, costs a lot of money every month. | ||
They spent billions of dollars on it, employed hundreds, thousands of personnel to build it. | ||
Far smaller group. | ||
I think they spent $100 million on it. | ||
And it's free for everybody to use. | ||
In the past week, it has sailed to the top of the Apple App Store. | ||
It is one of the top downloaded apps in the country. | ||
And it shows that maybe all of this investment going into AI is a bubble. | ||
And we've talked about this extensively over the past year, and we talked about it a little bit last night. | ||
Artificial intelligence is effectively our national strategy. | ||
They are heralding AI as a panacea for all of our problems. | ||
They believe that by creating the superior AI and in order to do that, by building the biggest supercomputer with the most chips and the most computing power, they believe we will create a machine that will literally solve all of our problems they believe we will create a machine that will literally solve all of our problems and We're going all in on accelerating the rate of development of artificial intelligence. | ||
And so this is driving, like we talked about yesterday, Energy policy, immigration policy, labor policy, foreign policy. | ||
Probably this is single-handedly or significantly responsible, if not single-handedly or mostly responsible for getting Trump elected. | ||
All this investment, all this money, data centers, nuclear reactors coming back online. | ||
And it seems like maybe they just don't know what they're doing with it. | ||
China's doing it better. | ||
So this is a major problem. | ||
It is a major geopolitical problem. | ||
And it shows that maybe we're headed down the wrong pathway or with the wrong people. | ||
So we're going to talk all about that. | ||
And I want to make it clear, I am not the expert on artificial intelligence. | ||
I'm not the expert on computers. | ||
What we are going to talk about tonight is not necessarily why it is better or what makes it better. | ||
I'm not a specialist in that area. | ||
I want to talk about the geopolitical significance of China creating superior tech products because this is the second one, arguably the second one, maybe the second consumer-facing tech product in one of these advanced areas where China has simply beaten us, the first being TikTok. | ||
As software, TikTok is better. | ||
Than its competitors. | ||
As software DeepSeek R1 is better objectively than its competitors. | ||
They're winning. | ||
So we'll talk all about that. | ||
We're also going to talk tonight about the three anti-trans executive orders passed by Trump. | ||
This is good stuff, you guys. | ||
This is good stuff. | ||
I cannot hate on Trump for this. | ||
And we'll get into... | ||
Why? | ||
I will still criticize Trump, but I can't critique him on this. | ||
This is good stuff, you guys. | ||
And it keeps getting better. | ||
So on day one, Trump signs an executive order that says there's two genders, male and female. | ||
And all the trannies are coping and they're saying, oh, well, that means everyone's a female because in the earliest stage of development, shut the fuck up. | ||
Transgender isn't real. | ||
That's what it means. | ||
They're all coping. | ||
Oh, actually, you know, they have the Wojak man. | ||
unidentified
|
Actually, I guess they own themselves. | |
It means we're all girls. | ||
Ha ha, no faggot. | ||
It means transgenders are not real. | ||
Transgenders, not real. | ||
Male and female, God created them. | ||
And that's it. | ||
Shut the fuck up. | ||
So day one, God created them, male and female. | ||
Day two. | ||
Trump kicked him out of the military and rehired the chuds. | ||
The chuds got fired for not taking the vax. | ||
The trannies got fired. | ||
They're out. | ||
And the chuds are back in. | ||
Today, and I was like, I didn't even cover it because it's like, whatever. | ||
Whatever. | ||
Honestly, I prefer them in the military. | ||
You want to know why? | ||
Because when you're in the military, look, someone's going to have to get Hit with the artillery. | ||
You know what I'm saying? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
They're saying we're going to put feminists, transgenders, and these other people in the military to die for Israel. | ||
It's like, okay, suits me. | ||
Knock yourself out. | ||
They're like, we will die for Israel. | ||
It's our right to die for Israel. | ||
If you say so, I'm good. | ||
I'm good. | ||
Bone spurs. | ||
I have bone spurs. | ||
I'm going to sit this one out. | ||
You want to go die for Ukraine? | ||
You want to go die for Iran? | ||
Hey, knock yourself out or die for Israel. | ||
So I was like, whatever. | ||
But then today, Trump passed a third executive order banning transgender surgery for minors. | ||
This is good stuff, guys. | ||
I didn't expect that it would be this aggressive on these issues. | ||
So three major anti-transgender executive orders, it seems like that's just done. | ||
A hard line has been drawn, although it could be better, but it's pretty good. | ||
It's good to see. | ||
So we'll talk about the executive orders, exciting stuff. | ||
I do love the Cope, though. | ||
They're so... | ||
Yeah, did you see that? | ||
I mean, they actually said that. | ||
unidentified
|
They said, well, actually, it's dumb because I guess it makes us all girls. | |
Shut up. | ||
Shut up. | ||
41% silence. | ||
No, it doesn't. | ||
So we're going to talk about all that. | ||
Those will be our big stories for the night before we get into the news. | ||
I want to remind you to smash the follow button on Rumble. | ||
Smash the like button. | ||
Leave a comment down below. | ||
Let me know what you think about the show tonight. | ||
What else? | ||
I have to say, before we get into the big news, a couple of things. | ||
First of all, big major announcement, first time announcement. | ||
I will be on a Twitter space on Thursday at 7 o'clock Central with Charlotte Fang, the CEO of Remelia Corporation. | ||
We went back and forth. | ||
We got into it. | ||
And this started over a beef that I have with apparently Vitalik. | ||
I don't even know how to pronounce that. | ||
From Ethereum. | ||
So the founder of Ethereum came at me. | ||
And look, I didn't attack anybody. | ||
I just revealed some of the connections. | ||
And so the founder of Ethereum attacked me. | ||
I ratioed him. | ||
I brought in Charlotte Fang, the CEO of Emilia. | ||
And then we got into it. | ||
But, you know, it's going to be a good civil conversation. | ||
So it's going to be Thursday, 7 o'clock Central, on X Spaces. | ||
Hosted by Adrian Dittman, otherwise known as Elon Musk. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
I don't think it is him. | ||
But we're going to be doing it in a couple of days, so make sure to tune in. | ||
I'll make a post about it on X, but it should be interesting. | ||
For people that are in the know, this Milady thing is pretty big in the crypto space, and it's pretty big in this alt tech or little tech scene. | ||
And pretty important. | ||
So this will be maybe my first big conversation with somebody from that area. | ||
I've been hypercritical of all of them. | ||
People like Lomez and Curtis Yarvin and others. | ||
And they won't talk to me. | ||
And I just want to know what they're about. | ||
It would actually be helpful to talk to them because then we could press them on. | ||
The problems that we have with them. | ||
Because I think it's pretty transparent and I think it's pretty obvious what the issue is. | ||
But you start to talk to these people and they run away. | ||
So this will be the first big conversation with somebody from that sphere. | ||
So it should be interesting. | ||
So that's Thursday at 7. And then the other thing I wanted to talk about is just Trump in general. | ||
I have to say it's been extremely aggressive this past week. | ||
Far more aggressive than I thought. | ||
And for what it's worth, these are all executive orders. | ||
And we know the problem with executive orders, which is that as easily as they can be created, they can be taken away. | ||
And we saw that in practice with the Biden administration. | ||
And I've given this example many times. | ||
So when Trump was inaugurated last week, he signed all these executive orders closing the border. | ||
Everybody said... | ||
Hip, hip, hooray. | ||
This is the best thing ever. | ||
And it's good. | ||
And they will be effective. | ||
It will seal the border. | ||
But every executive order that he signed pertaining to the border, for the most part, on Monday, last week, they were executive orders that he had signed in his first term. | ||
And he had to re-sign them because they were undone in the first week of Biden's administration. | ||
So Trump did them, Biden took them away, Trump redid them, and surely a future Democratic administration will take them away. | ||
And many of them were repeats. | ||
Withdrawing from the World Health Organization, withdrawing from the Paris Climate Accords, migrant protection protocols, removing transgenders from the military. | ||
These are all things that were done in the first term, every single one. | ||
Repealed under Biden. | ||
And then redone under Trump. | ||
So you could see why, although they are good, and although I support them, they are not a substitute for legislation. | ||
They're not a substitute for lasting reform. | ||
You want to create lasting reform? | ||
Create a federal department. | ||
Create a government agency. | ||
The Democrats know this. | ||
They created the New Deal. | ||
They created Social Security. | ||
They created the federal bureaucracy. | ||
And that's why they have institutional power. | ||
Executive orders don't have the same effect. | ||
So it's not to say that they're bad. | ||
It's just to say, if we want lasting reform, it really needs to be institutionalized at a deep level. | ||
And this is something where I feel like the MAGA base has been taken for a ride. | ||
The things that are institutionalized are the things that are in the interest of other countries. | ||
Moving the embassy. | ||
When you build a physical building, it never gets unbuilt. | ||
The embassy is built. | ||
It never goes down. | ||
We change the recognition of the capital to Jerusalem. | ||
A future president will never undo that. | ||
See the difference? | ||
If Trump had built a wall, it would have remained in place and it could have never been unbuilt. | ||
No president would unbuild or destroy a wall. | ||
It just would not play. | ||
Instead, we got executive orders. | ||
Israel got a physical building. | ||
They moved the building. | ||
They built a building and they changed the recognition. | ||
And that was never undone and it will not be undone. | ||
See the difference? | ||
Now, So, but I'm giving Trump credit. | ||
I think that this administration, we've had one week of it, and I have been pleasantly surprised with the pace. | ||
It has been aggressive, and it has been bold. | ||
They have done bold things that I didn't believe they would do. | ||
Pardoning every January Sixer, I did not believe Trump would do that, but he did it. | ||
I thought that he would cave to the political pressure. | ||
Or pressure internally from his own team. | ||
And I'm sure he faced some. | ||
And Republicans have criticized him for it. | ||
And it cost him political capital. | ||
But he did it. | ||
He did it the first day when it would have actually been maybe more costly politically. | ||
Although I think he was able to slip it in when everybody was paused. | ||
I think he was able to get that one by the goalie. | ||
While everybody was high on the inauguration ceremony. | ||
But it was bold, it was risky, and it was rewarding his base. | ||
And I was surprised at that. | ||
I was surprised at birthright citizenship on the first day. | ||
I've been surprised with the implementation of tariffs, swift increase in deportations. | ||
It's been good stuff. | ||
And here is what I'm going to set out for you. | ||
This is extremely concrete, and this is something that is objective and you can look out for. | ||
Here is where the rubber is going to meet the road, and I've been saying this. . | ||
There are a couple of things coming up now. | ||
February 4th, it's just been announced, Trump will be meeting with Netanyahu in Washington. | ||
This is the first visit from a foreign leader of his presidency. | ||
Very predictable. | ||
I believe in the first term, it was the same. | ||
Netanyahu came to the White House. | ||
Held a press conference with Trump and it was the first foreign visit, if I'm not mistaken. | ||
That trip and other things pertaining to the Middle East, that will be a major test about what we are getting. | ||
And it looks like there's some storm clouds. | ||
It looks like there is a battle that is on the way. | ||
And you can already see this with some of the DOD appointments. | ||
These people like... | ||
Michael D'Amino, who we talked about last week, who has replaced Brian Hook at the Department of Defense as a Middle East policy advisor to Pete Hegseth, to the administration. | ||
And D'Amino has been opposed to war with Iran, Abraham Accords, the war with the Houthi rebels in Yemen. | ||
And there has been a quiet but intense tug of war behind the scenes on his appointment, him and other people in the Department of Defense. | ||
And all the usual suspects, Rupert Murdoch and Mark Levin and others, are putting a lot of pressure on the administration to fire Domino. | ||
And other people like Tucker Carlson and Kurt Mills, who comes from the Koch brother, American restraint scene, American conservatism. | ||
They are American conservative. | ||
They are supporting Domeno. | ||
And so it seems like there is a battle underway in the administration over the exact thing that I said would be a critical juncture. | ||
And that is whether we're going to have a hawkish stance towards Iran. | ||
Because we stand at a crossroads right now. | ||
After October 7th, after the Gaza War, With these two fragile ceasefire deals in place in Gaza and in Lebanon, and with Israel's expansion and now to the West Bank in Janine, there is a question. | ||
Will the war deepen and expand and continue? | ||
Will Netanyahu, in order to remain in power, fabricate a justification to continue the fighting in South Lebanon, Gaza, and create a provocation to attack Iran with airstrikes? | ||
Will it be supported by Trump? | ||
Or will Trump lead the way and meet with the Iranian president and create a diplomatic solution to the regional struggle between Iran and Israel? | ||
That is the crossroads. | ||
Will Israel lead? | ||
Will Netanyahu lead? | ||
Will the tail wag the dog? | ||
Or will Trump and America lead? | ||
With a diplomatic effort. | ||
Because those are the only two options. | ||
Israel and Iran are headed towards an inexorable confrontation. | ||
They're already in it. | ||
The Iranian president is a moderate. | ||
Pazeshkian has said that he is willing to negotiate with the United States about the nuclear program. | ||
Iran stands right now as a, they are on the brink. | ||
They are on a threshold of acquiring a nuclear arsenal. | ||
And it's defensive. | ||
Israel has provoked them repeatedly and is attacking all of their proxies. | ||
And so Iran is at the point where they're facing down regime change from Israel and the United States. | ||
They don't have a bomb. | ||
If they develop one, that might be the last thing standing in the way of regime change in Iran. | ||
So it's either they will be destroyed and the Ayatollah and the Islamic regime overthrown, or they will create a new Iranian nuclear deal in the form of the JCPOA as the successor to the JCPOA in 2015. And again, it's either going to be led by Netanyahu provoking a war, or it will be led by Trump containing and restraining Israel and pursuing diplomacy independently with Iran. | ||
That is one of the major, major, major critical junctures. | ||
And it's like I said throughout the election, that was one of the big areas of contention. | ||
That is one of the big risks of Trump being elected with the support of the Israel lobby. | ||
That he would be led by the nose, by Netanyahu, by Adelson, by the usual suspects, into regime change, a confrontation, either willingly or unwillingly. | ||
So February 4th, that is the first meeting between Trump and Netanyahu. | ||
That will give us an idea of where things are headed. | ||
It's not looking great, though. | ||
There's things on both sides that can make you optimistic or pessimistic. | ||
On the one side, you have some good personnel being hired in the DOD. You have Trump, according to some sources, saying that he wants to withdraw Americans from Syria. | ||
And he tried to do that in the first term. | ||
On the other hand, you have Pete Hegseth with a DOD security official with a KIPA. You have Marco Rubio saying that the Taliban is holding Americans hostage. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
We're going to bomb them. | ||
And so there are some reasons to be concerned. | ||
Trump said in the transition period that they're considering striking Iran and they won't rule it out. | ||
So we'll have to see February 4th. | ||
Another issue is this agenda bill in Congress. | ||
There was a retreat held in Miami over the weekend where Republicans convened to talk about the budget reconciliation process. | ||
Each year, there is one bill. | ||
Well, technically three, but usually they package it as one. | ||
There is one bill which the Senate can pass with a simple majority. | ||
Using the budget reconciliation progress, this is a provision that came into effect in the 1970s. | ||
It says a bill that increases revenue, decreases spending, or affects the debt ceiling. | ||
A bill that does any one of those three things can bypass the filibuster in the Senate. | ||
Normally, in order to force cloture and end the filibuster in the Senate, you need a supermajority of 60 votes. | ||
Almost nothing can pass the Senate without 60 votes, except for since 10 years ago, cabinet appointments and one time a year budget reconciliation. | ||
The Senate and the House passed identical budget bills out there. | ||
That's why they call it reconciliation, because they reconcile between the two chambers. | ||
And that sort of a bill can pass the Senate. | ||
You get one per year. | ||
In 2017, Trump used budget reconciliation to pass... | ||
And Obamacare repel. | ||
But it failed. | ||
In 2018, Trump used budget reconciliation to pass the Paul Ryan corporate tax cut. | ||
And that succeeded. | ||
Then we lost the House and we were unable to pass significant legislation in 19 and 2020. In 2021, Biden used... | ||
2021 and 2022, Biden used it for Inflation Reduction Act. | ||
And for another one of his major pieces of legislation. | ||
So we're looking in 2020, understand how important this is. | ||
In 2025 and 2026, we have two guaranteed opportunities because then it's the midterms and we may lose the House. | ||
We have two guaranteed opportunities with control of the House and Senate to pass two major bills, two major spending bills. | ||
To get something through with a simple majority in the Senate. | ||
And Republicans convened this weekend to talk about what's going to be in it. | ||
And Trump had a lot of demands. | ||
And Republicans seem like they're reluctant to agree to give him everything. | ||
They have a razor-thin majority. | ||
Two votes in the House. | ||
Three, technically four in the Senate. | ||
And that is coming down the pike over the next couple of months. | ||
That will be the next major area where the rubber meets the road. | ||
It's easy to pass executive orders, and it's easy because they're unilateral. | ||
Trump can pass them, and the next president can undo them. | ||
But what's really going to matter, the issues where you will get resistance are in the realm of foreign policy with our closest ally, Israel, and in Congress. | ||
We're going to have to negotiate with these pieces of shit senators like Murkowski and Collins and Mitch McConnell over whether we can do mass deportations, whether Congress will strip the illegals of birthright citizenship, among many, many other things. | ||
And then a third area, which does not have a concrete date, but the question of legal immigration. | ||
Trump is in talks with Modi for him to visit the United States. | ||
And apparently there are negotiations happening behind the scenes. | ||
Trump is deporting 18,000 Indians in exchange for America protecting avenues for Indians to immigrate to the United States legally. | ||
Student visas, work visas, not a good deal. | ||
That will be another issue which will be coming up later. | ||
But those to me are some of the big issues that I talked about throughout the campaign. | ||
And if there are positive developments, I will be very pleasantly surprised. | ||
Those are areas where if Trump succeeds and stands up to the pressure from Israel, from Republicans, if he uses the bully pulpit, if they're organized, then I will consider this administration a surprising, remarkable success. | ||
But I am concerned about the pressure coming on those issues. | ||
So that's sort of my view right now, that day over day, because like I said, things are going pretty well. | ||
These executive orders are very ambitious and bold and aggressive, and they're more organized and a lot better than what I anticipated, especially considering the first administration was so was such a disaster, especially in the beginning. | ||
And I assumed that given the team that they had – Which is this Jason Miller and Susie Wiles and other people. | ||
I thought it was going to be the first two years, three years all over again from the first administration. | ||
But to their credit, they've been doing a good job. | ||
And we have to be, I said at the beginning of the year, I would be fair and objective. | ||
And I think they're doing a good job so far. | ||
But they haven't hit the real resistance yet. | ||
That will be the test. | ||
And if they stand up to the pressure, then I'll say, you know what? | ||
Trump was a success. | ||
But the devil's in the details, and it comes down to those forks in the road. | ||
This is the easy stuff. | ||
These are the layups. | ||
And they're still good. | ||
They're still surprisingly good, but these are the layups. | ||
I mean, leaving the WHO, leaving the Paris Climate Accords, I mean, really, it's good stuff, but it's a layup. | ||
January 6th, sirs, birthright citizenship. | ||
Okay, that's better. | ||
I mean, these are still layups, but that's better. | ||
That's significant. | ||
Now, if he can go through Congress and get some... | ||
Solid legislation. | ||
If he can corral Republicans to get Tulsi Gabbard in, I will be surprised. | ||
If he's able to go and use budget reconciliation to do something significant on immigration, that will be impressive. | ||
If he is able to make a diplomatic solution with Iran, that will be remarkable. | ||
If he can avoid a war with Iran and stave off this. | ||
Regional war that Netanyahu is trying to start. | ||
If Netanyahu goes to jail in this term, that will be truly remarkable. | ||
And I have no problem saying it if that happens. | ||
But I am concerned that that will not be the case. | ||
But anyway, so that's that. | ||
I do want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our news for the day. | ||
We'll start with these tranny executive orders. | ||
You love to see it. | ||
You really love to see it. | ||
So Trump has signed three executive orders. | ||
Again, something where I'm actually a little bit surprised. | ||
Trump has signed three executive orders, each one better than the last, on the transgender issue. | ||
On inauguration day, he signed an executive order saying that there are men and women. | ||
And so all of the... | ||
Third gender bathrooms and other things in the federal government, that is all gone now. | ||
The government says there's men and women, which is pretty basic. | ||
But you know what? | ||
With the way things are going, I'll take that as a win. | ||
Because that is where the federal government was headed. | ||
Civil protections for transgenders, which means that it will eventually apply to businesses and federal contractors. | ||
And if the government is doing it, the government being the biggest employer, the biggest spender, That means that is how society will work outside of like Oklahoma and like, you know, North Dakota, right? | ||
So it is a big deal. | ||
The next executive order, Trump kicked the trannies out of the military. | ||
And I said, like I told you earlier, I don't really care who's in the military because... | ||
They're fighting for Israel and Ukraine and like Slavery Incorporated anyway. | ||
So, I mean, what difference does it make? | ||
I'm not going to join the military. | ||
The one thing is the reason why we want people looking like us in the military is if they ever use the military to oppress us. | ||
That's the only concern. | ||
You don't want some transgender drone operator going rogue against QAnon or whatever. | ||
And then the third executive order today, which is, in my opinion, the best one so far, Trump has banned transgender surgery for minors. | ||
And this is truly righteous and just. | ||
This is one of those things where this may be one of the only legitimate reasons to vote Republican. | ||
That we got Supreme Court justices on the bench to repeal Roe v. | ||
Wade. | ||
That we have an executive order that will undoubtedly save children, save their lives from being irreparably, irreversibly ruined by these surgeries. | ||
That is something that concretely every day will save a multitude of lives. | ||
And that is one reason. | ||
If people said I'm voting Republican for that reason, I cannot argue. | ||
Against that. | ||
I can understand. | ||
If you're someone saying, well, my taxes, well, my crypto, well, my whatever, I think that's very cynical. | ||
I think that's a little bit self-centered. | ||
But if you vote Republican because you want to save children, I don't think there's anything, I don't think anyone can take that from you. | ||
I think that's the strongest argument. | ||
And Republicans don't like to make it because increasingly they're trying to appeal to freaks and secularists and atheists. | ||
But I love to see that. | ||
So that was really something. | ||
And this is a story. | ||
This is from the New York Times. | ||
They hate it. | ||
And they're freaked out by this. | ||
It says, quote, And many Democrats believe the strategy helped him win. | ||
But in the first eight days of his term, President Trump has signed three executive orders limiting transgender rights. | ||
The breadth of the areas they cover and starkness of language that appear to impugn the character of anyone whose gender identity does not match the sex on their birth certificate. | ||
Is that what we're calling them now? | ||
Have stunned even transgender people who had been bracing. | ||
I love that. | ||
I love the way they say that. | ||
People whose gender identity does not match the sex on their birth certificate. | ||
I love how they say it like it's completely arbitrary. | ||
Like it's some mix-up. | ||
Like you go to McDonald's and say you want cheese on your burger and the burger you got doesn't match what it says on the receipt. | ||
Oh, hey, excuse me. | ||
I said I wanted no cheese, and it says so on the receipt, but this burger has cheese. | ||
You know, like there was just some, oh, whoops. | ||
Well, we thought you said something else. | ||
So when someone is born, they're a male or a female. | ||
They're a boy or a girl. | ||
And that's what they are. | ||
And then they grow up and they say, I don't know, I feel like a girl now. | ||
I don't know, I feel like a boy. | ||
And now we say, oh, well, I guess they made a mistake when you were born. | ||
I guess they didn't know that you feel like the other gender 15 or 30 years down the line. | ||
Whoops, there must have been some mix-up. | ||
And they always say that. | ||
They say gender is more than what's between your legs. | ||
It's like, really? | ||
So what is it? | ||
I know this is like basic stuff, but it really is just like so out there. | ||
And it's insane that it got this far. | ||
Anyway, so that's what these people whose gender identity doesn't match what's on their birth certificate, as if like what's on the birth certificate is just like chosen at random. | ||
Anyway. | ||
That's what they're calling them in the New York Times. | ||
In his first gender-related order, Mr. Trump instructed government agencies to ensure that federally funded institutions recognize people as girls, boys, men, or women based solely on immutable biological classification. | ||
I love it. | ||
And one day we will say the same thing about race. | ||
Immutable biological classification. | ||
You have to waft it. | ||
You have to waft it. | ||
Don't put your nose right on top of it. | ||
You have to waft it. | ||
This is just, this is delicious. | ||
You love to, I have a deviated septum. | ||
But you just, you love to breathe in. | ||
You know, I kind of, morning in America, wake up and smell the coffee. | ||
This is good stuff. | ||
When I hear those words, immutable biological classification, welcome to my worldview. | ||
Immutable biological classifications. | ||
Man, woman, white, black, young, old, weak, strong, intelligent, stupid, rich, lithium mines. | ||
Podcaster, writer, cobalt mines. | ||
Sentenced to prison forever. | ||
Exiled to another country. | ||
Not productive. | ||
This is... | ||
Can we make everything like this? | ||
Can we just make that? | ||
Instead of make America great again, can we just make the slogan immutable biological classification? | ||
Anyway, no, I'm kidding. | ||
That's a joke, of course. | ||
I'm not totally there. | ||
I'm just leaning into it for comedic purposes. | ||
I'm Catholic, so we have souls. | ||
I'm just playing it up a little bit. | ||
It included a specific provision. | ||
Requiring the Bureau of Prisons to house transgender women in prisons designated for men and to stop providing prisoners with medical treatments related to gender transitions. | ||
On Monday, Mr. Trump directed the Pentagon to reevaluate whether transgender troops should be permitted to serve in the military. | ||
And on Tuesday evening, he issued an order taking steps to end gender transition medical treatments for anyone under the age of 19. Directing agencies to curtail puberty-suppressing medication, hormone therapy, and surgery. | ||
And that's the best one. | ||
As far as I'm concerned, that's the most important one. | ||
Court challenges of the first two orders are already underway, and trans advocates said on Tuesday evening they would challenge the order on medical treatment as well. | ||
A lawyer with the ACLU said we will not allow this dangerous, sweeping, and unconstitutional order to stand. | ||
Transgender people account for less than 1% of the adult population, according to an estimate from the Williams Institute at UCLA. Polling shows that Americans have mixed views on the inclusion of transgender girls and women in sports and whether minors should be allowed to obtain medical treatment to transition. | ||
So this is great. | ||
And I've said it before. | ||
It's really very simple. | ||
It's all or nothing. | ||
You either believe that sex is biological or you believe that it is constructed. | ||
Saying that there are men and women and nothing else is a statement that comes with a lot of implications, which many people are maybe not fully prepared to accept. | ||
It comes with implications not only for gender and for how society should be organized around gender. | ||
And by the way, that doesn't just exclude transgenders. | ||
It also includes males and females. | ||
It also has implications for sexuality itself. | ||
To say there are men and women the way that God created them is to basically support biological sex essentialism, which also would tend to support sexual essentialism, which is that if men and women are distinct and distinguished from one another by their sexual reproductive faculties, | ||
then they also must be distinct and distinguished in their roles in society and their roles in family formation. then they also must be distinct and distinguished in their If you say that men and women are men and women by the fact that they take the active and passive role, that they are fertilizing and that they have eggs. | ||
That one has testosterone and one has estrogen, that one is strong and one is nurturing, then congratulations. | ||
You have implied, you have taken it to its logical conclusion to not only abrogate the existence of transgenders and transgenderism, but also to abrogate homosexuality, also to support biological gender roles. | ||
If what is essential to who we are as human beings is our sexual characteristics, then so are our social functions. | ||
If a woman has to carry a child for nine months because that is her sexual function, then she cannot be in the military. | ||
Then she cannot necessarily be in the workforce and maybe ought not be in college because those are her prime childbearing years. | ||
Understand? | ||
So people say all the time, There's men and women. | ||
It's men and women. | ||
There's two genders, male and female, and men and women are different. | ||
Well, not so fast. | ||
Because you can't say that men and women are what they are because of their sexual role. | ||
You cannot say that men and women are distinct from one another and then say that men and women should have the same role in society. | ||
How does that work? | ||
How does that even make sense? | ||
If men and women are meaningfully distinct, But we have the same expectations. | ||
They have the same role. | ||
We treat them with equality. | ||
Then how meaningful are the differences? | ||
Equal means the same. | ||
Equal means identical, identity. | ||
But there is no identity between men and women other than their humanness. | ||
So if they're different, then they must be different in other things too. | ||
And if the difference is based on sexuality, well then... | ||
All of socialization is based on sexuality. | ||
So they must have different social roles. | ||
They must have different societal roles. | ||
They must be meaningfully different. | ||
And if there is something good about biological essentialism, immutable biological classification characteristics, if there is something good about it, It is good because it is true. | ||
Initially, the opposition to transgenderism started because people would not carry on with the delusion that a man changes his haircut and becomes a woman. | ||
People could not be party to the indignity of having to call men, women, and women, men. | ||
That we would have to participate in a lie, in an obvious delusion. | ||
It is undignified and offends the conscience of normal people. | ||
Forget about even religious or moral people, but even just normal people. | ||
If it is good, it is good because it is true. | ||
And the truth is that men are men and women are women. | ||
And the same is true, by the way, of those... | ||
And I guess that's where, you know, there are limits to how much I like this, because one of my critiques of conservatism, for as long as I've been doing the show, and it's not even original, many people have said this over the generations of intellectual development in conservatism. | ||
People have started to notice that the purpose of conservatism is not actually to oppose liberalism. | ||
It's not an opposition to liberalism, actually. | ||
It doesn't meaningfully fight it. | ||
It actually isn't opposite to it. | ||
It's actually to moderate liberalism, which is a difference. | ||
So the police are there to oppose crime. | ||
They're there to kill criminals. | ||
They're law enforcers. | ||
They're set against lawbreakers. | ||
And they're constantly in a tension. | ||
But the purpose, it seems, of Republicans and conservatives is not to oppose Democrats and liberals. | ||
It is something like to moderate their excesses. | ||
And in a sense, that makes Republicans and conservatives liberals themselves, but just less radical. | ||
They might be the lower bound of liberalism, but they're not actually fundamentally different. | ||
They're not fundamentally resisting or in opposition. | ||
And so enter the transgender discourse. | ||
I always thought that transgenderism, or I should say conservatives opposing transgenderism, was a way of circumscribing The liberal advances on social issues. | ||
Over the past 20 or 30 years, feminism, race mixing, homosexuality, casual sex, pornography, prostitution, drugs, all of these things have become commonplace. | ||
They've all become normalized. | ||
They've all become totally accepted. | ||
Acceptance of homosexuality is probably at an all-time high a couple years ago. | ||
It seems to be receding a little bit, though. | ||
Acceptance of race mixing is at an all-time high. | ||
Casual sex and pornography hookups are rampant. | ||
We have probably a more immoral and licentious society with sex than we ever have. | ||
And it seems like curtailing transgenderism in these moderate ways It's the most that Republicans are willing to do to push back against these things. | ||
And that's where it's not like I oppose them, but I just don't think they go far enough. | ||
It's good, and it's a start, but I think that it only has value if we keep pushing. | ||
In other words, if Republicans are here to say, all right, guys, time out. | ||
It's gone a little too far. | ||
We have to stop chemically castrating or surgically castrating children. | ||
And society goes, yeah, all right, that's probably a good idea. | ||
And Republicans go, all right, now, hey, timeout's over. | ||
Now you be on your way. | ||
And society goes, all right, okay, now we get to be feminist. | ||
Now we get to race doesn't matter. | ||
Marriage doesn't matter. | ||
Nothing matters. | ||
Now we get to have fun again. | ||
If that's how it goes, then you can see how this is happening. | ||
This is a form of corralling traditional people into thinking that we have had a victory. | ||
This is imposing a speed limit on liberalism rather than rolling it back, rather than turning it back and moving in the opposite direction towards a moral society. | ||
And that's why we have to get into first principles like saying there are men and women. | ||
And it's important that you start there, but it has to go further to say, okay, there are men and women. | ||
Well, what's a man and what's a woman? | ||
Well, a man and a woman, they embody the active and passive principle, and they embody that in their sexual role, in their sexual faculty. | ||
And those things are determinative. | ||
It's about contingency. | ||
The man is independent, the female is dependent. | ||
The man is not contingent, the female is contingent. | ||
The man is going to be the master of... | ||
The universe and the woman is the universe itself. | ||
The man is act. | ||
The woman is potential. | ||
The man is out fighting and innovating and inventing and thinking. | ||
And certain women can do that. | ||
I'm sure there are small numbers of women that will do that and can do that. | ||
But most of them should be having the kids. | ||
And the roles should be conducive towards family formation. | ||
Men and women... | ||
Who are defined by their sexual faculty become fertile after they hit puberty, in their adolescence. | ||
That is when they should be getting married. | ||
That is when the children are the healthiest. | ||
That is when you have the best chance of having children. | ||
That is when the women are the most beautiful. | ||
That is when the men are the most strong and the most sexually active. | ||
That is when they should be getting married. | ||
Now, if we have a society where men and women are being told about this, there's this age of consent, and men and women have to be going out and getting sexual experience first, and pornography is available to men when they're very young, and if there are these pressures for men and women to go to college, all men and women to have a... | ||
22-year education, regardless of their aptitude, regardless of their IQ, and for women to be participating in that as well, it's creating the fertility crisis. | ||
That's why we're not having children, because there are all these other considerations, because there's the consideration of the market, of equality, of human resources, of civil rights, all these other things. | ||
And so we've created a society that is conducive to A system, a political and economic system, but not to the biological reality. | ||
And so if we can say there are men and women and if we are to say that transgenders are people that are deeply confused and so we shouldn't have them in the military and society should not be accommodating them in every way and we should not impose these delusions on children causing irreparable harm, we have to take it a step further. | ||
And I always thought that was a valid critique. | ||
When the gay marriage debate was raging, they would say, well, what about divorce for heterosexuals? | ||
What about the fact that there's casual sex? | ||
And in principle, you either have licit moral sexuality within marriage or anything goes. | ||
Or really anything goes. | ||
Otherwise, it's all arbitrary. | ||
And I suppose something that's arbitrary and in favor of what's normative, it's better than a free-for-all, but there is no substitute for moral sexuality. | ||
So it's good, but like everything else, it's not enough unless it fundamentally changes society. | ||
It's like with immigration. | ||
You can close the border, but it's too little too late. | ||
You know, I feel like everything is following this pattern. | ||
It's like we had a free-for-all at the border for 30 years. | ||
We had an absolute free-for-all. | ||
For 30 years, millions and millions of people came in legally, illegally. | ||
And after it got so overwhelming that even the most liberal people said it is just logistically impossible to absorb these people, then they said, okay, we'll take a temporary pause. | ||
And we'll deport a moderate amount of people. | ||
It's like, okay, but are we ever going to get a lot of them out? | ||
Are we ever going to stop taking people ever? | ||
Well, they prefer not to answer. | ||
And I feel like the same is true as sexuality. | ||
We had 20 or 30 years of a free-for-all. | ||
Think about the generational ripple effect of no-fault divorce, feminism, abortion, pornography, all of it. | ||
Think about how many broken lives people have been shattered by this. | ||
Think about all the, they say half of the... | ||
Married people get divorced now, but it's difficult to track these statistics for statistical reasons, which we could get into. | ||
But they estimate it's about 50% of married couples get divorced. | ||
Think about all of the children who are deeply messed up because they grew up in a broken home. | ||
It causes irreparable harm psychologically for a child to experience that really at any age, whether they're very young, whether they're an adolescent. | ||
It's deeply wounding. | ||
And think about then how those people carry that with them into their relationships, into their marriages or not. | ||
How many marriages never happen? | ||
Think about how many children discovered pornography at the age of 11 or 12. And some recover and some don't. | ||
And some, there's deep dysfunction and others, you know, not as much. | ||
And then the same goes for OnlyFans. | ||
How many young girls turn 18 and experiment with that? | ||
It's like, and how many guys are into that? | ||
So, we've had that going on. | ||
It's been escalating for 30 years. | ||
And finally, when it just got literally too ridiculous to continue to support, it could not support its own weight. | ||
Finally, when they were telling you to look at a guy that's 6'5 in a wig and call that person ma'am. | ||
And they said five-year-olds should be cutting off their genitals. | ||
Finally, people said, yeah, all right, I think that's enough. | ||
Are we really ready now to just move on as though there are no other problems? | ||
That's always the concern, and this is what makes me a radical. | ||
Not that I support those things. | ||
This is what situates me on the radical end of the spectrum. | ||
This is what makes me an outsider, a critic, anti-establishment. | ||
Because many of the people that voted for this are ultimately going to settle for this. | ||
And I hope that the administration goes further, but I don't think that it will. | ||
I think that the Republican Party has shifted in a very liberal direction. | ||
And I think that Trump has actually helped institutionalize that in some ways. | ||
So that is what makes me a little bit further to the right than your average Trump supporter or Republican. | ||
And it goes without saying, it doesn't come from a place of hate or anything like that. | ||
I think that even on the radical right, there needs to be a little bit of reflection about how we treat the subject. | ||
Because I think in some ways, it is a good thing that we underwent a liberal period. | ||
I think that in some ways the empathy and the understanding for people should be retained. | ||
That's like we talked about the other day. | ||
I think that as Christians we have to be... | ||
Charitable and merciful, but we have to have the justice of God's laws. | ||
We have to have the justice. | ||
We have to have the truth. | ||
We have to have the truth in the charity. | ||
It's not enough to have mercy, you know, as Ratzinger said, it's not enough to have charity and mercy. | ||
It is just sentiment without the truth, without the Christ, without the law. | ||
And that's the element which I think might be missing. | ||
This is sort of a – what I get the sense of when I see the transgender stuff coming from Republicans is it almost seems like a meme more than anything because many of these Republicans, I mean, they associate with transgenders. | ||
Richard Hanania is regularly appearing on transgender podcasts. | ||
Curtis Yarvin had a transgender person get married in his home. | ||
Pause. | ||
I'll say it again. | ||
Curtis Yarvin, who everybody loves, had a transgender wedding hosted in his home. | ||
And if you go to Sovereign House, you'll find a dozen transgender groupies there. | ||
And if you go to Man's World magazine, you'll see photo shoots from a transgender fashion show. | ||
And if you went to their party in Austin, it was sponsored by Passage Press, but they didn't want their name on it because they knew the transgenders would be there and they didn't want to get the heat from people like me. | ||
So, and by the way, the same goes for J.D. Vance. | ||
Have you read what J.D. Vance said about transgenders? | ||
He wrote, I don't know, about five or seven years ago, back when he was a big fan of Barack Obama, J.D. Vance wrote that he, Cried with his transgender friend and they cried together about the treatment that the transgender people were getting. | ||
It's like, so these are your people. | ||
Now, do they oppose transgenderism because they are Catholic or even Christian or even moral? | ||
No! | ||
No, they're talking about creating a based form of pornography. | ||
Many of them are in support of homofascism, which is a real thing. | ||
Which is a real thing. | ||
And they unironically embrace that. | ||
And many of them, like I said, roll with transgenders regularly. | ||
So, I think that as Catholics, we have to be cautious. | ||
I don't know, although they are delivering these things, I think, for the base. | ||
And like I said, I think these are valid reasons for people to vote Republican, and they're good. | ||
And they're good strictly because it will save lives. | ||
The idea that a child in the United States would have their genitals removed or not go through puberty, I mean, that is just by definition satanic. | ||
I mean, this is just like demons eating your fucking kids. | ||
Like, that's what it is. | ||
The idea that a baby is aborted in the womb. | ||
A child is born and then is not able to go through their normal development. | ||
They're not able to go through puberty. | ||
That they're mutilated. | ||
When you see these surgeries, just watch some of these videos, graphical videos of a transgender operation. | ||
It will make you wince. | ||
It's so wrong. | ||
And that this is happening to children, it's like you wonder why God hasn't destroyed this country with a meteor by now. | ||
I suppose he sent Trump instead by sparing his life because whoever is going to get rid of that, I support it. | ||
But I think that we have to take a look and say, now that we've gotten rid of the worst of the worst, that is probably the most heinous and abominable thing that was happening in the country between abortion and that. | ||
Why don't we take a step in another direction and say, is it really that much less abominable? | ||
I mean, it is, but how much less abominable? | ||
To subject children to divorce and porn. | ||
That's the next step. | ||
And you could already see that we're, I think some Republicans are advancing on that, but we really need to push on that. | ||
Because this isn't enough. | ||
But I am surprised at the boldness of it to ban that by executive order. | ||
We'll see what happens in the courts, but it's very good and it's a godsend. | ||
So we love to see it. | ||
But that's that. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our featured story. | ||
About the Chinese supercomputer, shifting gears totally. | ||
And our feature story, I'm sure you've heard about it by now. | ||
It's the buzzword. | ||
Everybody's talking about it. | ||
It is the DeepSeq R1 AI model, which was launched out of China last week. | ||
And it is a phenomenon. | ||
It is a large language model, which is a direct competitor to ChatGPT and other similar AI models. | ||
It came out of China. | ||
And the reason that it has been so disruptive in getting headlines is because it is objectively superior to anything that America has made. | ||
Like I said at the top of the show, it has sailed to the top of the Apple App Store charts because it is free, unlike ChatGPT. | ||
And unlike many of the other competitors in America, the other competitors aren't even in the top 200 on the App Store. | ||
So it is one of the most popular AI models in the world today, if not the most popular, and it is free. | ||
It is smarter and better and more efficient. | ||
It was cheaper to develop and required fewer personnel and less time, and it runs on less energy. | ||
And what this has signaled in a nutshell is that China is winning the artificial intelligence race. | ||
This was, like Vivek said, I think actually poignantly, This was the Sputnik moment. | ||
We are right now engaged in a great power competition with China, very similar to the Cold War. | ||
In fact, many of the different domains of the Cold War are now once again a domain for great power competition. | ||
For 30 years, there was no competition in the realm of space, in the realm of advanced technology, military hardware, anything like that. | ||
All of that has changed recently. | ||
And it seems that America has fallen behind in a few critical areas. | ||
There is a new arms race, for example, and it is a conventional arms race as well as a very unconventional, futuristic arms race. | ||
One area where America has fallen behind is hypersonic missiles. | ||
We don't have them. | ||
We do not have hypersonic missiles. | ||
Russia has developed a significant hypersonic missile capability. | ||
The reason this is such a destabilizing development is because this has made our anti-ballistic missile systems irrelevant. | ||
We withdrew from the ABM Treaty 25-30 years ago under George W. Bush. | ||
To build anti-ballistic missile systems that would theoretically create a shield or an early warning about ICBMs, ballistic missiles launched by Russia. | ||
Now that their missiles are so fast, now that they create a plasma field around the warhead. | ||
That will bypass any anti-missile system that we have, and it makes all of that redundant. | ||
This is why Trump is now talking about an American Iron Dome in the realm of artificial intelligence, which is a security as well as a commercial domain of competition. | ||
Now China has beaten us on AI, and the question is, what are we doing? | ||
Because like I said at the top of the show, the United States is all in on AI. Under the influence of a new technological oligarchy, Elon Musk, Marc Andreessen, Sam Altman, Sean McGuire, Peter Thiel, the United States has embraced a techno-optimist vision. | ||
They call it effective accelerationism. | ||
And the goal is to accelerate technology, specifically artificial intelligence, and the rate of progress on artificial intelligence as much as possible. | ||
So that we could solve all of the impending problems, such as energy scarcity, that we are reaching peak oil, such as some of our competence problems, that global IQ and IQ in the United States is going down. | ||
ecological and climate problems, that there may be a shortage of resources, that there is going to be pollution that is doing irreversible damage, that the climate is changing. | ||
I think not as much as a byproduct of human activity as people say, but it's a part of it. | ||
So they believe that AI is going to – and this is what they say. | ||
They have no solutions. | ||
They believe that AI is going to solve everything that we can't solve. | ||
They think that... | ||
And by the way, they think that AI is going to solve all the problems. | ||
They want to accelerate that as much as possible. | ||
That is our governmental policy. | ||
The venture capital behind the AI companies and the AI companies themselves are all in on Donald Trump. | ||
Because Donald Trump is going to roll back the safety regulations on AI. Donald Trump is going to... | ||
Open up energy so that we can fuel the data centers that power AI and Donald Trump will import the cheap labor that will work on AI. In order to develop AI we are being told by these oligarchs that we need to build bigger computers. | ||
We need our own chips. | ||
And we need as many of them as possible. | ||
And if we build supercomputers with more computation, with more chips, more cards, then we're going to get better AI. And that requires massive investment. | ||
And we need to build data centers with nuclear reactors. | ||
And that is the conventional thinking. | ||
And basically, our economy has been propped up by these assumptions for the past few years. | ||
With these breakthrough developments in artificial intelligence, everybody is all in on AI, which is supposed to bring about a fifth industrial revolution and transform everything. | ||
And again, the assumption was huge investment, more compute, more chips, more investment, more everything to build a bigger computer, to achieve an AGI, to achieve recursive self-learning. | ||
So that we could get a super intelligence that will unlock the secrets of the universe and make the United States the final superpower. | ||
Like that is in effect the big idea. | ||
We're going to get to the point where AI learns enough that it becomes a human level intelligence. | ||
It can improve itself. | ||
Because it can improve itself, it will improve itself faster than man was able to create it in the first place. | ||
At an exponential rate, and it will become smarter than all people put together. | ||
And then, the country that unlocks the super intelligence, who can wield it, who harnesses it, who holds the keys, or the on and off button, that country will own the future. | ||
Until the next epochal transformation, if there is one. | ||
That is the big idea. | ||
And again, the assumptions were, That's the promise, but the assumption was we just need all this investment. | ||
We just need the computers. | ||
We just need more immigrants, more H-1Bs. | ||
And what China has done is they came in with a fraction of the personnel, a fraction of the investment, a fraction of the energy usage. | ||
They made it free. | ||
And it's better in every way than everything we have. | ||
All the optimism, all the hype, all the talk from the gay Jews in Silicon Valley, from Sam Altman, from Jacob Hellberg, because that's who's pushing it. | ||
Jacob, excuse me, Jacob Hellberg, who is the right-hand man for Palantir. | ||
Jacob Hellberg, who was at these tech companies, who is married to Keith Raboy. | ||
Sam Altman was at his gay wedding. | ||
Jacob Helberg was in Trump's ear because he was the first donor in March of 2024 from Silicon Valley to max out the contribution to the Joint Fundraising Committee. | ||
Helberg was in Trump's ear in the beginning. | ||
And then David Sachs, friend of J.D. Vance, who is now the AI czar. | ||
They were in Trump's ear telling him, we need to drill to power AI. We need the immigrants to power AI. AI will drive the investment and they will fix all our problems and they will drive the future. | ||
They told that to Trump. | ||
And what China has done is shown that they don't know what they're talking about. | ||
These people that are running our country are not as smart as they think they are. | ||
And they're not as smart as they have convinced themselves or all of us. | ||
That they are. | ||
Moreover, this is the second major development in consumer software where China has defeated us outright, objectively. | ||
The first was TikTok, and I think the two are highly, these developments are highly related. | ||
Last year, we had to ban TikTok. | ||
It was the fastest growing social media in the United States, the fastest social media to accumulate a billion active users, vastly outpacing Instagram, YouTube, any product developed by an American company. | ||
It was popular organically and it was owned in China. | ||
It was more popular. | ||
It had a faster rate of adoption because it was better. | ||
Their proprietary algorithm, their software, was better than anything that Facebook or Instagram, Meta, Alphabet, it was Google, it was better than anything that any of them had developed. | ||
And they couldn't beat it. | ||
They had to imitate it. | ||
Meta had to roll out their Instagram Reels. | ||
Alphabet, Google had to roll out their YouTube Shorts. | ||
Snapchat, I think, has something similar now. | ||
The United States, for the first time, was copying China and creating something objectively inferior. | ||
And when they couldn't compete, when they couldn't drive the users back to the American tech companies, they just banned it. | ||
They banned it because China won. | ||
And now, here we are again. | ||
So, first, it was the race for social media and data. | ||
Social media was really in the business of data. | ||
Why is Facebook paying to host your inane posts and photos? | ||
Why is Instagram paying to host all of that? | ||
Because they were harnessing your data. | ||
They were harnessing your device information, your tastes, habits, geolocation, all of your information. | ||
Social media was in the business of big data, metadata, and TikTok won. | ||
And that's why they're getting the data, and that's why they had to be banned. | ||
Now, now that they're taking the data and putting it into artificial intelligence, you see? | ||
Now that they're taking the data and putting it into these language models to train the AI to create the supercomputer, to create the superintelligence, now China's winning that too. | ||
China has a better AI model, cheaper... | ||
More efficient and smarter than anything that America has. | ||
And here are now the existential questions. | ||
So America has been the leader, was the leader at the end of the Cold War, by far. | ||
They describe the United States and its preeminent position in the world as a hyper-power, as a unipole. | ||
It wasn't a mere superpower. | ||
It was a hyperpower because no other country in the world could project power on an intercontinental basis. | ||
There was no other country that, think about that, that had a global footprint. | ||
Every other country was, strictly speaking, a regional country. | ||
And every other regional power was absolutely dominated by the United States. | ||
Uncontested level of relative and absolute power. | ||
They said there was simply no other pole. | ||
We were the uncontested and sole center of gravity on the planet. | ||
China was a backwater. | ||
Russia was in a state of anarchy. | ||
35 years have passed. | ||
Years 2025. Here we are. | ||
And it seems that we are now, well, it's apparent and it's true, we are in a new Cold War. | ||
A great power competition is broken out between the United States against Russia and China. | ||
And Russia and China have sort of an unconventional alliance. | ||
Russia has the military. | ||
China has the credit. | ||
Russia has the natural resources. | ||
China has the factories. | ||
So they're splitting their factors of production. | ||
They're not natural allies. | ||
They come from different civilizations. | ||
Yet they have been driven together. | ||
Again, they're not natural allies, but they have complementary roles and they have been driven together by the United States. | ||
We are now in a state of cold war in a couple of hot spots, a couple of geopolitical flashpoints in Syria, in the Caucasus, obviously in Ukraine and Taiwan and West Africa, in South and Central America. | ||
It is a war which is becoming more intense. | ||
It's becoming hotter. | ||
And basically every development in the past 15 years could be put in the context of this confrontation. | ||
And for a time it seemed unthinkable that we would ever be beaten by China and Russia. | ||
There were all kinds of ideas about how their economy would eventually fall apart. | ||
They're saying that now with their speculation and real estate. | ||
Construction, which is now falling apart and maybe terminally low growth. | ||
And there are problems inside Russian society. | ||
They said that for a long time. | ||
And there has been so much said ideologically about what China represents, which is a new ideological battle. | ||
They said that China represents authoritarianism and... | ||
And in some way fascism, they're saying it's communism, it's a form of fascism. | ||
They are saying that they are pushing an alternative system to liberal democracy, that the United States is spreading human rights, liberalism, democracy against autocratic rule by the Russian dictator and the Chinese communist surveillance state. | ||
And for all the talk, all the doubts, all of the overconfidence, the hubris, all of this loaded language, it seems that they are winning. | ||
In some ways, they are winning in certain domains where this competition is taking place. | ||
And like I said, missiles is one area which we've talked about on the show. | ||
And another one now is in these industries of the future, like artificial intelligence, which are the most important, or some of these softwares. | ||
And what does it say about the American system if it is losing to China? | ||
There are deep implications. | ||
We made it an ideological battle. | ||
We said that what is on the line, what is at stake here, is democracy itself. | ||
Okay. | ||
Well, democracy gave us the gay Jew Sam Altman and Sam Bankman Freed, these degenerate, faker, I mean, these guys are snake oil salesmen and basically criminals. | ||
Our democracy, our open society, this system gave us scammers. | ||
Gave us these immigrants that are really experts at marketing, and they're experts at selling, and they're experts at raising capital, but they're not actually at every level. | ||
Zuckerberg and Facebook and Instagram, for all the hype and all the talk, they got trounced. | ||
They got schlonged by TikTok. | ||
And for all of Elon's genius, Tesla is getting its lunch eaten. | ||
By BYD, the Chinese electric car manufacturer. | ||
We are putting massive tariffs on Chinese cars because you could buy a Chinese electric car for super cheap. | ||
And they're turning it into a factory. | ||
They're becoming one of the automotive superpowers of the world right now. | ||
So we had to ban TikTok. | ||
We had to ban BYD. And now we have to ban DeepSeek R1. And now they're talking about don't download DeepSeek. | ||
It's going to get your keystrokes. | ||
Yeah, that's sort of what happens when you input information into a device. | ||
They say it's logging information such as your IP address and your keystrokes. | ||
You're telling me that if you go to a website, it knows your IP and it logs what you type into it? | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
You're telling me for the first time. | ||
And now we have to ban Deep Seek R1. So I wonder, China is supposedly a communist autocratic dictatorship, a surveillance state. | ||
It is a homogeneous, chauvinist, Han, racial supremacist empire. | ||
They're the bad guys on the wrong side of history. | ||
We are a thriving... | ||
Dynamic, energetic, multiracial, multicultural, liberal, democratic, market-oriented republic. | ||
So, what happens when the dictatorship makes better stuff every single time? | ||
What happens when the dictatorship makes better cars, better social media, better AI, better missiles? | ||
What happens then? | ||
Does that mean their system is maybe better? | ||
Maybe we were wrong? | ||
Sort of a problem. | ||
And look, I don't want America to lose. | ||
But this is a situation where China beating us in the great power competition and Russia beating us in a couple of different domains, it should force us to reflect. | ||
And here is something that I've thought about a lot. | ||
This is something that they're thinking about too. | ||
And when I say they, I mean people like Peter Thiel. | ||
Many of the people behind Trump, like Peter Thiel in particular, they're all in on the war with China. | ||
That is the one thing they all agree on. | ||
They're all China hawks. | ||
All of Trump's cabinet officials, Bannon, Thiel, they're all China hawks. | ||
And I think one reason why is because they believe... | ||
That a great power competition will energize America. | ||
It will awaken the spirit of the country. | ||
They believe that a lack of, and I think this is the case, they believe that a lack of competition and conflict has made us complacent and has killed our energy. | ||
And they think that if we are engaging China, and if it is a real battle, that we're going to wake up and rise to the occasion. | ||
But I've thought about this a lot. | ||
And you have to compare it to the Cold War because, of course, this is what drove the United States in the space race, in the arms race. | ||
This is what inspired a period of American greatness. | ||
And realistically, all of the conflicts were related. | ||
World War I, World War II, the Cold War. | ||
All of these conflicts were related to the rise of these... | ||
New powers. | ||
Germany on the continent and then Russia. | ||
They're all related. | ||
And that century of conflict gave us a century of progress. | ||
It gave us the nuclear bomb, which gave us nuclear energy. | ||
It gave us the internet. | ||
It gave us the airplane. | ||
It gave us the intelligence agencies. | ||
It gave us all kinds of things. | ||
So many of the technologies we have are really military developments pertaining to the World Wars and the Cold War. | ||
And they believe that something similar will happen with China. | ||
But when you compare this new confrontation with the confrontation from 100 years ago, what is missing is the reason. | ||
What is the reason, the reason of state? | ||
What is the reason for why our state exists? | ||
What is the purpose of our country? | ||
What's the why? | ||
We're in this struggle with China, and we're supposed to rise to the occasion. | ||
Why? | ||
If the problem is terminal apathy and complacency, what about a confrontation with China would change the attitude of Americans? | ||
We're going to stand up for democracy? | ||
Who cares about democracy? | ||
We're going to stand up for our way of life. | ||
What is our way of life anymore? | ||
We're going to stand up for our people. | ||
Who are our people? | ||
We're going to stand up for our nation. | ||
And what is our nation? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Stand up for our God? | ||
I know who my God is, dude. | ||
Do other people? | ||
And so the question is, we're getting in this confrontation with China. | ||
They know why they're doing what they do. | ||
They have a reason for achieving greatness. | ||
Do we? | ||
Make America great again. | ||
At this point, why? | ||
Look who's leading us. | ||
Vivek Ramaswamy, he just got done browbeating white people for being lazy. | ||
These Indians are coming into our country and telling us, you're lazy, you're lazy, you're having too many sleepovers, you need to work harder to compete with us. | ||
Our new overlords, they're buying up all the new construction. | ||
They're totally foreign, clannish. | ||
Why? | ||
Why? | ||
Why bother? | ||
Why, at this point? | ||
Everything's a dump. | ||
Everything sucks. | ||
Even the new stuff sucks. | ||
I mean, even the Teslas. | ||
And I'm not just trying to take a dump on Elon, but if you're ridden in a Tesla, they're not super nice. | ||
They're plastic. | ||
They're pretty cheap. | ||
And really, we're getting the cars away from oil for the purpose of energy politics. | ||
It's not really much better. | ||
I mean, why? | ||
Okay. | ||
So I think that really, in order for America to be great, in order to compete with China, we have to first figure out the reason to shake us out of the... | ||
And it wasn't a lack of competition. | ||
It was that there is no sense of identity and belonging. | ||
There is literally no reason to live. | ||
It is a terminal nihilism that our civilization is facing. | ||
All of the problems are overwhelming. | ||
The social dislocation, the loss of humanity. | ||
People are saying, I just want to be on TikTok, man. | ||
I just want to scroll on TikTok. | ||
I just want to chill out. | ||
Who even wants to bother anymore? | ||
Why? | ||
For what purpose? | ||
People feel like society is so unfair and so ugly and so foreign. | ||
People are saying, why bother? | ||
Everyone is saying that. | ||
And so why would the geniuses, why would the true geniuses go and line up behind Sam Altman to develop an AI to, like, beat China? | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
So that is my deep anxiety about the country is we're hurtling towards this confrontation with China. | ||
They're beating us in some areas. | ||
It is having a profound existential effect on the United States. | ||
This is why the economy is collapsing. | ||
I haven't even talked about that. | ||
NVIDIA is down 17%. | ||
It crashed the stock market because all of these people said, hey. | ||
I thought the future of the economy was wrapped up in AI. Seems like China is going to win that race. | ||
Maybe all of this is overvalued. | ||
That is what has caused the market correction is that China came in and ate our lunch yet again on something that was supposed to be the machine of the future. | ||
But I think the bigger problem is when we look inside, we're not going to like what we find. | ||
When there is a self-reflection about our system, and think about it, to me what is so rich about this is that everybody right now that is faking optimism, everybody that is saying, rah, rah, rah, it's okay guys, it's morning in America, I don't believe that for a second. | ||
And a lot of people say, well, that's the problem, man. | ||
If you don't just believe, then it's not going to happen. | ||
It's not going to happen for very deep and profound reasons, not because I'm being a negative Nelly. | ||
We are being told right now by Trump and by his Silicon Valley backers, Sean McGuire at Sequoia, Mark Andreessen at A16Z, Elon Musk at Tesla and SpaceX, among others. | ||
We're being told by all these people, guys, the future's bright. | ||
We need reasons to be excited about the future, man. | ||
We're going to Mars. | ||
We're building AI. We're putting a Tesla in a rocket ship and we're going to Mars. | ||
They're telling us it's morning in America and Trump has delivered a political victory. | ||
We're energizing the country and we're going to be virile and... | ||
We're unlocking the spirit of the Bronze Age and Eric Prince is going to have pirateers raiding the cartels. | ||
All this kind of stuff. | ||
Here's what's so delicious. | ||
So all these people are trying to be cheerleaders. | ||
Techno-optimism. | ||
The one thing that we could get behind is technological progress. | ||
And that's going to save our country and that's going to lift our spirits. | ||
And we're in this competition with China. | ||
And one week in, one week in, all of our hopes placed on this machine. | ||
This machine will save us from the lack of religion, from the lack of race, family, belonging, society, beauty, art, goodness, decency, conscience. | ||
The machine that will save us. | ||
From having to deal with any of that, that we've invested trillions of dollars, it's going to save our economy just with the investment alone. | ||
Trump is going all in on it. | ||
In one week, China comes in and pours cold water all over it. | ||
Yeah, that thing that you thought would fix your soul, that thing that you thought would fix the soul of your country, you could... | ||
Paper over it. | ||
You could innovate out of it. | ||
Yeah, well, ours is better, cheaper, more efficient, and it's free to use. | ||
And yours cost $2,000, and a Jewish scammer just raised hundreds of billions trying to make it. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
So, you know, China coming in and dashing our hopes on AI, I think it's... | ||
The deeper existential crisis is, is there anything even to rally around? | ||
People say, what is the existential purpose of the United States? | ||
I would say, what is the United States? | ||
I would say, what am I? Who am I? That's a question that an American faces. | ||
They're saying, well, if we fight against China, maybe that's how we'll figure out our sense of purpose. | ||
I think every American is saying, who am I? Not what is America, who am I? What is my sense of purpose? | ||
Am I really an NFT maker? | ||
Is that my purpose? | ||
My purpose is to make NFTs and scam venture capitalists out of their cheap credit? | ||
We're going to bring interest rates to zero and we're going to try and scam a VC into giving us millions of dollars. | ||
So we could party and gamble on shitcoins and like build a computer to beat China and like cure cancer? | ||
I don't think that's the answer, guys. | ||
And that's another thing that makes me a radical rightist. | ||
I think that we have to get back to the soul. | ||
I think that it is a profound spiritual crisis. | ||
It's not all these other things. | ||
People say what went wrong was DEI and diversity. | ||
What went wrong is that 100 years ago, there was a mass apostasy that we don't believe in God anymore. | ||
And now we don't know who we are and why we are. | ||
And there's no orientation. | ||
There's no grounding. | ||
So who's going to want to go and get together with a bunch of immigrants and Indians and Jews who are all fucking gay atheists and code a computer so that, like, what? | ||
I mean, really, for what? | ||
At the end of the day, for what? | ||
For what purpose? | ||
What is meaningful about any of that? | ||
Go and live on Mars. | ||
Why? | ||
They say we're going to get excited to go to Mars so we can live underground? | ||
So our bones will lose mass? | ||
And we'll live underground and never see sunlight or breathe air or see real grass? | ||
We're going to live in some sort of a dome on another fucking planet. | ||
That's what we have to... | ||
And the irony is they call the liberals the bug men. | ||
Liberals are the bug men. | ||
But to get excited about the future, we got to think about getting on a rocket ship and going to live underground on a barren wasteland that the air is poisoned to breathe. | ||
And we're going to live underground indoors. | ||
We're going to live indoors and fabricate food and lab-grown meat. | ||
Work with robots and Indians. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, yeah, I'm good. | |
I think I would rather live in the Middle Ages than live on Mars. | ||
I think I would rather be a medieval peasant. | ||
At least everybody was white. | ||
At least everybody was white and we got to be in the sun. | ||
And yeah, you had to shovel mud all day and whatever. | ||
But hey, at least we get to have the sun and you hear a storm cloud, hear the rain. | ||
And we get to smell the incense in the cathedral and hear the liturgy. | ||
You know? | ||
And we get to eat cheese. | ||
We're going to go and live underground in a, like, interstellar? | ||
Or it's going to be something like that on Earth? | ||
Guys, I don't know about all that. | ||
So, I feel like China has a deep sense of identity and a connection with their, people call them communists. | ||
Let's just drop that. | ||
That's not what communism is. | ||
The Chinese have a deep connection with who they are, a deep connection with perennial principles about what it is to be human and their tradition and their identity. | ||
There's a coherent sense of self within society. | ||
They seem not to be as alienated as we are. | ||
And maybe that's for genetic reasons and cultural reasons, but it's also just true. | ||
That there is less individualism and then less of a sense of alienation. | ||
There's a sense of being a part of a coherent whole, which is not just horizontal but vertical, connected to the past and future, but also connected to everybody else. | ||
And what connection do we have with anybody, I mean, literally in our own fucking neighborhood? | ||
Or your own spouse, for that matter. | ||
Maybe that doesn't go for our traditional Catholics, but for your average person. | ||
What connection do people have, even... | ||
In the most intimate setting between two individuals in this country or between their parents and children. | ||
And so there's just this lack of unity, identity, humanity, and that is the black hole at the center of this society that's eating everything. | ||
And people think that we're going to get a Sam Bankman Freed and a fucking Sam Altman and we're going to get an Elon Musk. | ||
To make some sort of machine that's going to fix it, and we can't even do that. | ||
And that was supposed to inspire all of us to fix ourselves and our country. | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
I think we've got to go back to basics. | ||
People don't want to actually do the difficult thing. | ||
They don't want to give up worldliness, in a sense. | ||
And on some level, that's what it is. | ||
It's this attachment. | ||
There's like a deep irony at the center of it, which is that China is as close to an eternal place as we have on Earth. | ||
It's the oldest civilization. | ||
It's the oldest continuous civilization. | ||
And I feel like there's this deep connection to mortality there. | ||
I mean, literally, we're led by people that want to live forever. | ||
Literally, China's been around for a lot longer than we have. | ||
And they are not as attached. | ||
We are led by scammers that want to live forever. | ||
And they think that if we just keep reaching and cheating and scamming and lying, we're going to get there. | ||
And we're just going to hold on tight and never going to die. | ||
That's what they believe. | ||
If you were worth $500 billion, you wouldn't want to die either. | ||
And it's something like that that is killing us. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
To me, that's the deep existential problem because I was thinking about it. | ||
I said that in theory, this should have been, would have been, and people think it's going to be the thing that shakes us from our slumber, wakes us from our slumber. | ||
This is going to awaken the energies of Americans and shake us from our terminal apathy. | ||
Why would it? | ||
Speaking as a young American, I don't care that much. | ||
A hundred years ago, they were defending Christendom, freedom. | ||
On some level, they were defending their way of life. | ||
What's the way of life now? | ||
What's the social contract? | ||
Who's we? | ||
You know, Elon Musk is we. | ||
I'm sorry, who's we? | ||
Didn't you just say to fuck ourselves in the face because we're hateful racist? | ||
Didn't Vivek just chastise us for having sleepovers? | ||
Sorry, when the fuck did you get here? | ||
Who's we? | ||
Sam Altman, all these gay Jews that are buying babies, they say we. | ||
Who's we? | ||
All these other people in our multiracial, working class, populist thing. | ||
Who the fuck is we? | ||
And why? | ||
So that you could be worth a trillion dollars? | ||
So that you could be the king of the world? | ||
And live forever? | ||
And what are we going to be? | ||
Ants? | ||
We're going to be literally on an ant farm on Mars? | ||
We're going to be on an ant farm in the United States? | ||
It would be more dignified to be a subsistence farmer than what they have in store for us. | ||
So anyway. | ||
So that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our... | ||
I didn't even read the article, but that's what I think about DeepSeek and the whole situation. | ||
We're going to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
Let me get set up. | ||
And we'll do it, okay? | ||
unidentified
|
We'll do it. | |
We'll do the Super Chats. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
All right. | ||
Okay. | ||
We'll do it. | ||
If you want. | ||
And by the way, one reason why I'm a big believer in the Catholic Church, or one reason how you know the Catholic Church is holy is that it's against AI. And the Catholic Church came out with a document today saying that the shadow of death Follows artificial intelligence. | ||
And the Catholic Church has been speaking on this for a long time. | ||
Even Pope Francis, who everybody hates. | ||
Pope Francis, who idiot chuds, say, the Pope's a communist. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, the Pope's a communist. | |
Yeah, okay, well, the Jesuit communist, he promulgated an encyclical a few months ago and basically spoke to the loss of humanity. | ||
Excuse me, in our world. | ||
And it's everything that the Catholic Church has been saying has been absolutely spot on, on all this stuff. | ||
And you don't love every little thing that they do. | ||
I get it. | ||
I understand. | ||
But on the important matters, Catholic Church remains a source of wisdom, especially in this time when there's so much confusion. | ||
unidentified
|
You don't know. | |
Who to believe in? | ||
Everybody's a fucking spy. | ||
Everybody's a scammer, CIA agent, a dual agent, liar. | ||
Everybody is an artifice, an actor. | ||
The Catholic Church remains a source of wisdom, especially when you read those types of documents like what they put out today. | ||
I think it was... | ||
Antica et Nova was the document today. | ||
So people should read that. | ||
But anyway, we're going to take a look at the Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all that. | ||
Well, that's one of the arguments. | ||
I don't remember exactly the back and forth. | ||
TJ Swag sent $5. | ||
I'm at Georgia Tech, where I and the researchers in AI are pessimistic about Aji. | ||
If these men really believe in Aji, they will be disappointed and their plans frustrated. | ||
This is good for us. | ||
Ultimately, Christ is king. | ||
God is sovereign. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I hope their plans are frustrated. | ||
unidentified
|
I hope it doesn't happen. | |
What was your question last night? | ||
night I forgot. | ||
Ultra-Orthodox Christian sent $5. | ||
Trump's new press secretary, Caroline Leavitt, is 27 years old, but her husband is 32 years older than her. | ||
Thoughts? | ||
That's pretty based. | ||
That's pretty base, not going to lie. | ||
Ethan Allen sent $5. | ||
That's kind of a big age gap. | ||
It's a little bit of a big age gap, but it's based. | ||
Ethan Allen sent $5. | ||
Paul Atkins was the SEC chair from 2002 to 2008 when the ratings agencies were hoarding themselves ahead of the financial crisis. | ||
Hester Peirce was his legal counsel. | ||
Paul is Trump's pick for SEC chair and Hester leads the crypto task force. | ||
We cooked. | ||
The good news is, hopefully our crypto is going to be worth a lot of money, so at least we'll get rich. | ||
That's the good news. | ||
Hey, thank you! | ||
Groyper in the South, you know, I beef with the Southerners a lot, but they're good people. | ||
I mean, they really are. | ||
I don't, listen, it's not my culture. | ||
I don't love it, if I'm being honest. | ||
I just can't really vibe with Southerners, but they're good people. | ||
They have good hearts, and, you know, so they're solid. | ||
So I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
We love the Southerners. | ||
Reluctantly, we love our Southerners. | ||
Matthew P. sent $10. | ||
Let us forcefully reaffirm today that the seeds of anti-Semitism must never again be allowed to take root in the human heart. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, no. | |
Remembering the suffering and tears of the victims of the Holocaust. | ||
Let us repeat, never again. | ||
Pope Francis, vicar of men, I mean Christ. | ||
Okay, well that you're going to hell for saying that. | ||
Young Whip Jeezy sent $10. | ||
Looking thin tonight, King. | ||
Thanks! | ||
You mean it? | ||
unidentified
|
Dude, look at that. | |
Thank you. | ||
Look at the angles. | ||
Look at the way the light. | ||
Look at these angles. | ||
You ever seen angles like that? | ||
Thank you. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Some say that the ex was thrown off of a building. | ||
Yeah, Peter Thiel's ex-boyfriend who embarrassed him at a party. | ||
Dude, read the story about this. | ||
One of Peter Thiel's ex-boyfriends committed suicide by throwing himself out of a building. | ||
And this happened after, let me set this up for you. | ||
So Peter Thiel is married to a guy, married to a guy, but he has this boyfriend. | ||
And the boyfriend's like younger and I think he's like Hispanic. | ||
And not me, by the way, just like some like dark, I think he's like a darker skinned like Hispanic guy. | ||
So Peter Thiel's carrying on this affair with this younger guy. | ||
Peter Thiel hosts this big party in Miami. | ||
I think Miami Beach holds this huge, lavish party. | ||
Everybody's there. | ||
And Peter Thiel's there with his husband. | ||
And the husband sees that the boyfriend is there. | ||
And the husband says loudly, Why is he here? | ||
And it's like record scratch. | ||
The whole party stops and everybody looks. | ||
And Peter Thiel has to throw the boyfriend out of the party. | ||
And they say that the boyfriend was so embarrassed and Peter Thiel cut him off. | ||
Kicked him out of his condo in West Hollywood and cut him off financially. | ||
He was so despondent that he killed himself after that. | ||
That was a rumor. | ||
That's the story. | ||
But could you imagine? | ||
This is who's funding the right wing. | ||
So Peter Thiel is there with his gay husband, and the husband goes, Peter, what is he doing here? | ||
What is he doing here? | ||
And it's like record scratch, and everybody looks, and the boyfriend's like dancing, and the boyfriend's voguing or whatever. | ||
And Peter Thiel's like... | ||
You know, Peter Thiel's, like, sweating profusely cold and clammy. | ||
So I think that, like, you need to go. | ||
I think that you need to leave this party. | ||
This is what's going on. | ||
This is what's playing out in the new right, okay? | ||
That's J.D. Vance's mentor, okay? | ||
And that is the vice president of the United States mentor. | ||
That is the mentor! | ||
Of the Vice President of the United States. | ||
J.D. Vance was made by Peter Thiel. | ||
Peter Thiel picked him up and brought him into venture capital and then gave him $15 million in a Trump endorsement to become a U.S. Senator. | ||
That is who made J.D. Vance. | ||
J.D. Vance founded Rockbridge Network and is actually also an investor in Rumble, this platform. | ||
That is who is behind Sovereign House, Ethereum, Remelia, all of these different publications. | ||
IM1776, Passage Press, Curtis Yarvin. | ||
Okay. | ||
That's who's behind all of it, okay? | ||
Just so you understand. | ||
Just so you understand. | ||
J.D. Vance with Usha and his boss, Peter Thiel. | ||
And Peter Thiel's throwing out his boyfriend. | ||
What is he doing here? | ||
Peter. | ||
Peter Thiel. | ||
I thought we were married. | ||
What is he doing here? | ||
Seriously. | ||
You said you were through with him. | ||
You said we were done with him, Peter. | ||
What about us? | ||
And Peter goes, um, so, um, I think it's time for you to leave. | ||
That's my Peter Thiel impression. | ||
Jeez, like, we're cooked. | ||
Brother, we are fucking cooked. | ||
unidentified
|
Cooked. | |
Stick a fork in us because we're pasta. | ||
It's over. | ||
Yes, it does. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Yeah, I'm with you on that. | ||
Pagans are just... | ||
They have like a shrine to like Zeus, brother. | ||
Zeus isn't real. | ||
Omega friend sent $5. | ||
Disavow Lily Gattis to prevent her from networking her Jewish ass into the movement. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
I saw she apologized. | ||
But. | ||
Can't let it happen again. | ||
Djokovic Danilo sent $5. | ||
Opinions on NATO bombing Serbia in 1999. | ||
Don't really care. | ||
Danilo, that's an interesting name. | ||
Danilo, Danilo. | ||
Danilo. | ||
Interesting name. | ||
Reminds me of someone. | ||
Charles Darcy sent $5. | ||
Like you said, Musk and Lil Peck have captured the Trump admin. | ||
Starting with the OPM. Great article from Wired. | ||
I know. | ||
I tweeted about it the other day. | ||
Did you get that from me? | ||
Greatest Gooner sent $100. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Greatest Gooner. | ||
Nice. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Because we're not a city-state. | ||
Okay. | ||
Because the United States has a population of 350 million people and it's the third biggest country in the world. | ||
That's why. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, why can't the United States be like Singapore? | |
What's the difference between Singapore and America? | ||
Me, when I'm very intelligent. | ||
Why can't America be like a fucking city-state? | ||
Gee, I don't know. | ||
Well, the United Arab Emirates is comprised of, what, 12 Emirates or something like that? | ||
That's like a federal system, different Emirates led by different emirs. | ||
And they're a petrostate! | ||
So, it's basically a constellation of city-states powered by immense oil wealth. | ||
Yeah, why can't we be like that? | ||
Because we're a giant fucking country. | ||
Because we are a true empire. | ||
Because we have a giant landmass with a giant diverse population. | ||
Okay, that's the... | ||
Hello, that's obviously the difference. | ||
If we were a tiny island in the desert with unlimited money, we could probably make a lot of things happen, but we're not. | ||
If we were a tiny island in the middle of the desert with unlimited money and a small population, we could really do a lot of things, but we're not that. | ||
I mean, the Emirates isn't even really a country, strictly speaking. | ||
You know, in the Middle East, and it's not to say, look, they have sovereignty, they have a state, they're a competitive regional state, regional power. | ||
But the idea that they have nationhood, they really don't. | ||
I mean, it's in the name. | ||
It's like Central African Republic. | ||
You know what the demonym is for Central African Republic people? | ||
Centralese. | ||
Centralese. | ||
So if you're from Central African Republic, like you would say, I'm an American. | ||
I'm German. | ||
They'd say I'm Centralese. | ||
Centralese. | ||
Central African Republic. | ||
Similarly. | ||
An emirate is like a state. | ||
It's like a principality. | ||
An emir is the head of an emirate. | ||
A prince is head of a principality. | ||
A king is head of a kingdom. | ||
So their identity is that they're Arab – they were like Arab traders. | ||
They traded pearls in the emirates 100 years ago. | ||
I believe it was their major industry was pearls. | ||
Before the discovery of oil, and they were under the United Kingdom. | ||
So they're not even really a nation. | ||
In the Middle East, you have Egypt, you have Turkey, you have Iran, and then you really don't have a distinct nationality. | ||
What is Saudi Arabia? | ||
It's the House of Saud, the Saudi royal family, which really was just the one to... | ||
Exert power over these Bedouin tribes in the Arabian Peninsula. | ||
And then they discovered oil and then they locked down this dictatorship. | ||
But I mean, just look at population density. | ||
You know, it's not dense. | ||
There's not a big population. | ||
So, you know, when you say, well, why can't we do what the Emirates does here? | ||
Like Andrew Tate always says, well, the Emirates are—and that's true. | ||
And it works when you're a city-state, but when you're a country, the rules are a little different because, you know, you can drive. | ||
You can drive around. | ||
And the difference is our cities are much bigger and have been developed over a long period of time. | ||
We also don't have unlimited money. | ||
unidentified
|
We're not an island. | |
So there's a lot of differences. | ||
We don't— We have a contiguous border with Mexico. | ||
It is one of the longest contiguous borders in the world, and it is the greatest disparity in wealth along any border in the world. | ||
There is no other border in the world where there is a greater disparity of wealth or GDP per capita between one country and another. | ||
And so that's another thing. | ||
We border Mexico, which is a huge part of our immigration problem. | ||
They literally just pour in. | ||
They call them ampersands because they straddle the line. | ||
Many of them, between America and Mexico, they'll come here, they go to Mexico in the summer, they send remittances back home. | ||
Some of them will work here for 20 years and then go home. | ||
So, it's a little bit more complicated than that. | ||
But great question, dumbass. | ||
unidentified
|
Why can't we be like a... | |
I don't know, man. | ||
Look at the first... | ||
The first thing. | ||
unidentified
|
Size? | |
Well said. | ||
Really well said. | ||
totally true. | ||
Charles Darcy sent $5. | ||
Neat article from Jan 16 said almost everything that Trump would do in his first week. | ||
Says that Miller has not even tried to change Musk's opinion on H1BS. | ||
Won the argument, by the way. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me see. | |
Let me see. | ||
I don't even say that. | ||
Let me see Miller. | ||
I don't see where it says he didn't try to change his mind. | ||
And But yeah, yeah, right, won the argument. | ||
Well, they said that after the whole H-1B thing in December, they said, well, we won that one, you guys. | ||
Like all these people are saying, oh, the pushback against legal immigration, that shows that we won. | ||
It's like, no, no, we didn't because Vivek is going to run for Ohio governor. | ||
So he did not get thrown out over that. | ||
Vance is going to give Vivek his team. | ||
Musk still supports H-1Bs. | ||
So does Trump. | ||
Trump was signing executive orders last week and he said, I support H-1Bs like I bring in the best waiters and the best maitre d's and I bring in all, I hire H-1Bs and it's great and I'm on both sides and I think we need great people coming in. | ||
No, we didn't win the argument. | ||
No, we didn't win the argument. | ||
We absolutely did not. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Oh, very good. | ||
here for a good while but now I get it yeah Christine Weston Chandler sent five dollars daughters in bed GF working all night reheated Applebee's leftovers almost ready for dinner freshly smoked pot cigarette and a cold brewski in the fridge that has my name all over it yup I'm ready for America first well done Well done, sir. | ||
I think I'm good, actually. | ||
unidentified
|
On JQ Radio. | |
I haven't seen a ton of it. | ||
But, I mean, I've said it before. | ||
It's getting to a point, like a bunch of people are just arrested because I guess they entrapped the wrong guy or something and beat him up in, I think it was Boston or something. | ||
But I think it's one of those things where people try to appear tough and edgy by taking the safest position ever. | ||
People go, I don't like pedophiles. | ||
Yeah, you could say I'm pretty controversial. | ||
I don't like pedophiles. | ||
And everyone's supposed to go, dude, you're awesome. | ||
Dude, you're a hero. | ||
Dude, can we give you a medal? | ||
Niggas be like, maybe this isn't politically correct, but I don't think you should rape kids. | ||
And people go, you're a hero. | ||
unidentified
|
You're my hero. | |
You're really tough. | ||
I think we should kill pedophiles. | ||
Dude, you're fucking tough. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
You're so fucking tough and a hero and so hardcore. | ||
So it's just like the cheapest. | ||
It's like the new form of saying, maybe this isn't politically correct, but I think racists are pieces of shit. | ||
Maybe it's not politically correct, but fuck Nazis. | ||
And people go, whoa, you're awesome. | ||
It's just like virtue signaling for pissant mediocrities. | ||
Sigma grinds at Roy percent $10. | ||
Hey, Nick, what's your opinion on nofap and semen retention? | ||
It's great. | ||
You have not established that atheism is genetic. | ||
unidentified
|
So, that's a complete non-sequitur. | |
If God is good, then white people are genetically predisposed to being atheist. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
Stimulant grow up percent $100. | ||
That's your, that's your nig IQ, by the way. | ||
unidentified
|
Seething non-white trying to make an argument. | |
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
No message. | ||
Please unblock me on X. We can collaborate. | ||
I'll create merch under your brand and give you a slice of my audience. | ||
let's push our differences aside and we can be unstoppable together first of all i don't know who you are i don't know what jew face is second of all why is that a good deal for me i make my own merch why would i oh you're gonna give me a cut of my merch i have fucking merch a different i and i don't know who you are so Let's put our difference... | ||
I have a problem with you, but I'll get over it and sell your merch. | ||
Oh, thank you, but I'm good. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's hard to know with the veil of ignorance, maybe. | ||
Trump administration should coerce them into overturning the Expropriation Act. | ||
We sanctioned them into Negro communism in the 90s. | ||
I agree. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Yes, that is something the Trump government, if it were really America First, would do, is lean on South Africa to leave the whites alone. | ||
Sammy sent $10. | ||
All right, bring him here. | ||
Sammy sent $10. | ||
Yesterday's stream and today's were top-notch. | ||
So is theocratic socialism going to be the superior ideology of the 21st century? | ||
Yeah, maybe. | ||
unidentified
|
something like, I wouldn't call it that, but. - Chad Champion sent $5. | |
Do you believe in the Big Bang or Pangry? | ||
Sammy sent $10. | ||
I am worried that if Trump strong arms Israel and says no war with Iran, he will appease them with West Bank annexation. | ||
Israel wins either way. - Dumb. - Ryan Shorts sent $15. | ||
Hey Nick, I'm 19 and fairly new to your stuff, but I love it and you've taught me a lot. | ||
Could you give me some political book and author recommendations? | ||
I know it's not very specific, Ugh. | ||
I hate when people ask me this. | ||
I think you just have to go and, um, It has to be a self-led thing. | ||
Everybody's looking. | ||
Look, you're either in it or you're not. | ||
People say, tell me what books to read to know the right stuff. | ||
It's like you're either smart enough to lead your own inquiry or you're never going to get it. | ||
Books to read? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know, man. | |
The thing, I didn't read a book that got me to where I am. | ||
I just thought about it, you know? | ||
But a good place to start is Un's Review. | ||
That's a good place to start. | ||
American Pravda. | ||
Like, for example, everything that I talked about tonight, I didn't get from a fucking book. | ||
I just did research. | ||
Spy Fail is a pretty good contemporary book that talks about some of this stuff, gives you a good idea of what's going on. | ||
Israel Lobby's class, I mean, that's just like the seminal classic, tells you some of the stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm trying to think. | |
Pat Buchanan has a lot of good entry-level stuff. | ||
If you read Death of the West, Suicide of a Superpower. | ||
If you want to go back in time. | ||
I think Carl Schmitt has a good essay on the Catholic Church. | ||
Demestro wrote about the Catholic Church. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
There's a lot of stuff out there, but you kind of got to do your own work. | ||
Charles Darcy sent $5. | ||
Steve Wyckoff is a strange figure. | ||
I wasn't skeptical of him, but he genuinely seems to be a part of the restrainer camp with Diminio et al. | ||
Did business with Qatar. | ||
Praised them many times. | ||
Negotiated the ceasefire. | ||
Now meeting Hamas in Gaza. | ||
Yeah, I agree with that. | ||
I agree with that. | ||
I agree with you. | ||
Yeah, I will. | ||
I will be reaching out to you. | ||
unidentified
|
I want to know the lore. | |
Duh, Hollywood is woke. | ||
sent $10. | ||
Hey man, would love to hear your thoughts on anarcho-primitivism. | ||
Thanks in advance. | ||
Yeah, it's stupid. | ||
Bob Nelson sent $5. | ||
Just got rumble on my son's advice and this is the top show on the site. | ||
You spoke on Trump meeting BB this February. | ||
Why call it an issue? | ||
Biden barely made calls. | ||
We're on top. | ||
Don't be a downer kid. | ||
You're sharp. | ||
So I subscribed. | ||
Catch you tomorrow. | ||
unidentified
|
That's gotta be bait. | |
Kim sent $5. | ||
Don't you think J.D. Vance's I Just Don't Care line sets the precedent for our foreign allies to not help us when it comes to counterinsurgency and future wars? | ||
It feels like one of the quiet parts we shouldn't say out loud while others are watching. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, no, I don't. | |
It's a typical cat. | ||
Do you have any book recommendations and how do you find the right books? | ||
You know, so we have the internet, which is a great thing. | ||
And, um, you know, you just start, you just start, um, If I were you, because not everybody needs to be an expert in politics. | ||
When I say read, I mean read what you like. | ||
Read about things that are important, and what's important is current events, history, philosophy, economics, okay? | ||
Start with the classics. | ||
Start with the classics of anything. | ||
Start with the classics of history, philosophy, literature, whatever it is that you like. | ||
You really, when you're just starting, you can't go wrong because what happens is you start to read and you start learning things. | ||
And then you, with each book that you read, you get a better idea of where to go next. | ||
So when I say to go and read, I'm not even specifically saying go become an expert in the Jewish question. | ||
I'm saying go read your area of interest. | ||
And study. | ||
But study things that are important. | ||
Math is important. | ||
Science is important. | ||
Theology is important. | ||
Philosophy is important. | ||
Start with what you're interested in and just look up the best books. | ||
Look up the classics, the best, 101, and you really just have to jump in. | ||
What's important is you just start reading. | ||
When I was in middle school, One of my teachers gave me a couple books. | ||
I was really interested in the Cold War, so I just read them. | ||
And they turned out to be pretty important books. | ||
It was The Coming Anarchy and The Reluctant Sheriff. | ||
Coming Anarchy was written by, I don't remember, but it was one of the most important post-Cold War ideas, because there were like four. | ||
There was End of History, Tragedy of Great Power Politics, Coming Anarchy. | ||
And I think Krauthammer's. | ||
Maybe there was a fifth one. | ||
Reluctant Sheriff was by Haas. | ||
Richard Haas, I think, who's the chair of the Council on Foreign Relations. | ||
Anyway, they were important books. | ||
And even though I didn't agree with everything in them, it gave me context. | ||
And I just, you know, it's two random books. | ||
Someone gave it to me. | ||
I read them. | ||
And I learned stuff. | ||
And then I read more books. | ||
You know, I read Brett Stevens' book. | ||
I got Brett Stevens' America in Retreat from my father for Christmas in like 2015. Brett Stevens is like a neocon, total Jewish neocon, but I read it. | ||
And I read Unthinkable by Kenneth Pollack, which is about Iran's nuclear program. | ||
Similar deal. | ||
Alarmism about Iran. | ||
And I read Gary Kasparov, Winter is Coming, another neocon. | ||
You know, point is... | ||
I read a lot of bad books, and that is what led me to the truth. | ||
Sometimes you have to read bad books. | ||
You actually have to, to find the good books. | ||
And it's good to read things you don't always agree with. | ||
It's good to read things that aren't always the best. | ||
That's what happens in a self-guided study. | ||
The point is, you just start. | ||
You just start with a subject. | ||
Excuse me, a topic. | ||
unidentified
|
You read something old or something... | |
That's being talked about, and you think about it, and it points you in other directions. | ||
Then eventually I read Pat Buchanan. | ||
I read Pat Buchanan, and he talks about a lot of things in his books. | ||
I read books that he recommends in his book. | ||
And you eventually just read widely enough, and then you can figure out where you want to go deep. | ||
You read wide, and then you can go deep. | ||
You read a lot of different kinds of things, and then the things that you agree with. | ||
Interested in, then you go deeper into the subject. | ||
So that's why I always hate people talking about book lists. | ||
I mean, there's some essential ones. | ||
I've given a book list before, a long time ago. | ||
I think, well, you know, there's really funny. | ||
Somebody was on a Twitter space. | ||
These BAP guys were on a Twitter space. | ||
And they were like... | ||
They're like, oh, one of them said, the one reason I know Nick Fuentes sucks is because he doesn't have a book list. | ||
He never tells his followers to read books. | ||
And some guy goes, yeah, he's got a book list. | ||
And the guy goes, oh, yeah? | ||
Oh, I'd love to know what's on it. | ||
What's on there? | ||
And the guy starts reading off the book list. | ||
And the guy goes, oh, that one's pretty good. | ||
Oh, that's pretty good, too. | ||
Wait, this is his? | ||
Oh, no, I don't believe that. | ||
That's not real. | ||
This isn't his. | ||
Where did you find that? | ||
And it was an epic book list. | ||
So if someone could pull that up, I would post that. | ||
If someone has that, I think someone compiled it. | ||
Someone said, here are books that Nick Fuentes always mentions on the show. | ||
I came out with one in 2018. And then someone else developed one just from my show, from watching my show. | ||
So if someone has that, send it to me. | ||
I'll post it. | ||
Let me see. | ||
Where is it? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know if it's on Google, but... | |
Well, whatever. | ||
I'll look for it later. | ||
That's my advice. | ||
Going to hell grow a percent $20. | ||
Conservatives hope more deportations will cause a wave of self-returns. | ||
It's a false hope. | ||
This is counterintuitive, but the opposite has been happening over the last 20 years. | ||
Data from DHS shows the number of self-returns has plummeted despite rising deportations. | ||
Yeah, I don't think that's going to happen. | ||
It's a cope. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I always thought they were gay. | |
In high school, one of my best friends was obsessed with 21 Pilots. | ||
The, like, adjacent friend group was obsessed with 21 Pilots. | ||
I have, like, a small friend group of, like, six or seven guys, and we were, like, adjacent. | ||
We were, like, a junior partner of a bigger friend group that had, like, 20 people in it. | ||
And we didn't love all of them and everything that they were about. | ||
And they were like a 21 Pilots cult. | ||
Like they went to the 21 Pilots concert and they had a group chat named after 21 Pilots and they wore a 21 Pilots t-shirt. | ||
And I always thought it was the fucking gayest band ever. | ||
And I hated it. | ||
So I like Phoenix. | ||
I like Phoenix. | ||
Back in those days, I liked Ra-Ra Riot. | ||
I liked Passion Pit. | ||
I liked Walk the Moon. | ||
So in that genre. | ||
But I fucking hated 21 Pilots. | ||
They were all really into Bo Burnham. | ||
Remember when he had his initial wave of popularity? | ||
They liked Bo Burnham and 21 Pilots. | ||
Basically a metric shit ton of the worst stuff in the world is what they were into. | ||
2010s though, man. | ||
Make it 2013 again through Science or Magic, please. | ||
Those were the days, huh? | ||
The 2010s, 2012, 2013. Do the Harlem Shake. | ||
I'm going to kill myself now. | ||
Dude, the early 2010s were peak. | ||
There was another friend group that was separate. | ||
And they were like the—they were like a crunchy hipster friend group. | ||
They were like the crunchy, like, Edward Sharp and the Magnetic Zeros, like, Sepia friend group, you know? | ||
They were like the fedora and scarf, like—they were like that friend group, and they fucking sucked. | ||
They were like a—like a crunchy— Crunchy, granola, folk, hipster friend group. | ||
Remember that whole scene? | ||
They were like a Portlandia. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Yeah, so those are the days, man. | ||
Harlem Shake. | ||
Remember Harlem Shake? | ||
I cry every time. | ||
Those are like the first memes, you guys. | ||
Not really, but kind of. | ||
The first viral memes. | ||
ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, Harlem Shake, Gangnam Style, Thrift Shop. | ||
I remember when Gangnam Style came out. | ||
I remember the first day it came out. | ||
I think it was at the pool. | ||
I think I was at the pool. | ||
Or something. | ||
And I remember watching it and I was like, this is so weird. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
And I watch it a bunch of times. | ||
I remember when Gangnam Style came out. | ||
I remember when Thrift Shop came out. | ||
Remember Thrift Shop? | ||
That song had a stranglehold on the culture. | ||
I still love that song. | ||
I still love Macklemore. | ||
Fight me. | ||
Sue me. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay? | |
I like Macklemore. | ||
I like Can't Hold Us. | ||
I like Thrift Shop. | ||
Okay? | ||
Sue me. | ||
Fight me. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway. | |
Yeah, those were the days. | ||
They just don't make music like they used to. | ||
Fuck Lana Del Rey. | ||
Young the Giant. | ||
My heart goes out to you. | ||
Walk the moon. | ||
unidentified
|
My heart goes out to you. | |
Thank you. | ||
Well, well, well. | ||
Yeah, big surprise. | ||
unidentified
|
Gay. | |
Gay. | ||
It's like smoking a tiny penis. | ||
It's like you're sucking on a tiny penis. | ||
unidentified
|
No, that's a joke. | |
But like, no, but it is gay because it's just like a LARP. Smoking cigarettes has turned into a LARP where people think they're like cool. | ||
You know, people are like, oh, I'm like, I'm based. | ||
I'm smoking a cigarette. | ||
I'm based. | ||
It's like, you're not based. | ||
You're gay. | ||
Doing anything self-consciously is gay. | ||
If you're doing anything to seem cool, you're a faggot, okay? | ||
If you're like the Hestia cigarettes, oh, we're all in New York. | ||
We're all in New York and we're all smoking cigarettes and fuck you, you're gay. | ||
So I don't like it. | ||
I think it's not healthy. | ||
Cigarettes are not good for you. | ||
You shouldn't smoke them. | ||
It's one thing. | ||
Some people are super into tobacco. | ||
I have a friend who's like a tobacco nerd. | ||
He's like a real, talk about a crunchy granola hipster. | ||
He's like really into rolling his own cigarettes. | ||
Just ask him about it. | ||
He's really into rolling his own cigarettes and tobacco. | ||
If you're like a hobbyist, okay, fine. | ||
unidentified
|
Fine. | |
And, you know, if you're like a blue-collar person and you organically smoke cigarettes because you hate your life, fine, you know, based. | ||
If you're like a machinist or like a blue-collar guy and like you live in an apartment, you're like, dude, fuck this, you know, fine. | ||
But if you're like, if you like live in New York and you're like a right-wing internet guy and you think you're like cool for smoking cigarettes, you're just a fag, okay? | ||
You're just a total fag. | ||
unidentified
|
That's how I feel about it. | |
The shadow. | ||
I'm literally Voldemort. | ||
I've never seen Harry Potter, but I am like the unnameable shadow. | ||
You know, speak of the devil and he will appear. | ||
People say Nick Fuentes and everybody goes, I don't know, she'd be saying that out loud? | ||
And it's just like a shadow that looms. | ||
It's always sort of just out of sight, out of mind. | ||
unidentified
|
Don't mention him here. | |
Don't mention him in the live chat. | ||
So it's kind of awesome. | ||
That's true aura, especially in an era. | ||
Everybody is trying to be that. | ||
Everybody is trying to be the villain. | ||
Everybody's trying to be edgy. | ||
No one's fucking edgy anymore. | ||
Everybody's trying so hard to be edgy. | ||
And I'm not even. | ||
I just am. | ||
Because I'm real. | ||
I'm the only real entity. | ||
I'm the only real human being in the scene. | ||
Everybody's trying to be. | ||
I just am. | ||
Okay? | ||
They're all trying to be the cigarette-smoking, politically-incorrect villain. | ||
And I'm just an eccentric maniac. | ||
You know, I just, that's what I am. | ||
I just am a freak. | ||
I am a radiohead creep. | ||
You know, they want to be that. | ||
I unfortunately am that. | ||
I just, I am that. | ||
For better or for worse. | ||
They want to be, they LARP as like a solitary eccentric. | ||
They LARP as like a marginal person, a marginal creep. | ||
I am that. | ||
I am that. | ||
You know, they watch Taxi Driver and say, that's literally me. | ||
That is literally me. | ||
So, yeah. | ||
It's wannabe. | ||
It's like a whole scene of wannabes. | ||
Beardson. | ||
Yo, Beardson Beardley in the chat. | ||
Goats and Goatly. | ||
My heart goes out to the leader of the Irony Bros. | ||
He's like the Peter Thiel to my J.D. Vance. | ||
He's the Peter Thiel to my Vance. | ||
He taught me everything I know. | ||
Cameron Martin sent $5, sending my thoughts and prayers from Sydney, Australia. | ||
You were a big influence in bringing me to Catholicism from the Anglican Church. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Love to hear it. | ||
Thank you for the super chat. | ||
No fat chick sent $100. | ||
For years, I second-guessed my beliefs because of society, always feeling conflicted. | ||
But after finding AF last summer, I finally have peace of mind knowing I'm not crazy. | ||
Hearing the truth, even when harsh, is refreshing. | ||
Your honesty and perspective have been a game-changer for me. | ||
I can't watch anything else now. | ||
Thanks for all you do. | ||
Prayers for you and stay safe. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
And I appreciate the kind words. | ||
I'm glad to hear that the show resonates with you. | ||
Yeah, I know, dude. | ||
I hear it every day. | ||
It's like, what else could you watch other than this? | ||
She's always talking shit, dude. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
This is why we say no e-girls. | ||
According to Financial Times, Trump wants him to deal with Iran diplomacy and the same people attacking Mike Domino are calling him an agent of Qatar slash Iran because of the ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon. | ||
Yeah, I've heard that, but who knows if that's real. | ||
Slavic Lukovic sent $100. | ||
Missed you, big guy. | ||
God bless you and your family. | ||
Thank you, and thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Missed you, buddy. | ||
Slavic Lukovic. | ||
That's a name I haven't heard in a long time. | ||
Long time. | ||
Thank you, buddy. | ||
Did you see Vivek on it in stream getting asked about IPAC from the chat and saying that they are one of the most transparent PACs? | ||
unidentified
|
I did. | |
Aiden. | ||
Why didn't you ask Vivek about Nick Fuentes? | ||
Well, we know why. | ||
You know what? | ||
It's okay. | ||
It's okay. | ||
I get it. | ||
It is funny, though, that Aiden Ross said, I'm going to break the Nick Fuentes curse. | ||
And then after streaming with me for a week, he's like, oh, I got banned from Amex and then disappeared for two months. | ||
So it's like, the curse is undefeated. | ||
I think the curse is undefeated. | ||
But no, we still love Aiden Ross. | ||
I hope he's doing all right. | ||
Did you see that? | ||
There's a scene in Hillbilly Elegy in the movie. | ||
Where J.D. Vance is at this formal dinner and he's panicking because of all the silverware. | ||
And he runs into the hallway, very dramatic, and he calls up his wife. | ||
unidentified
|
Usha, I don't know what to do. | |
There's all these fucking forks. | ||
And Usha says, J.D., this is how you use the forks. | ||
And then she goes, now take your left hand and your right hand and touch your index finger to your thumb. | ||
This is not a satanic symbol. | ||
This is what she says in the movie. | ||
She says, if you look down, she said, the B is for bread and the D is for drinks. | ||
She goes, now put your hands to your eyes. | ||
And Vance goes, okay, now what? | ||
And she goes, oh my gosh, I can't believe you actually just did that. | ||
unidentified
|
And he goes, oh, oh, I don't know what I do without you. | |
This fat faggot is who they are trying to meme as America first like that. | ||
They're trying to meme him as the cool future leader, the cool young. | ||
He was probably at the Peter Thiel party. | ||
Maybe that's where it took place. | ||
Maybe J.D. Vance was at the Peter Thiel party. | ||
Where the boyfriend drama took place. | ||
You have one in the dining room. | ||
J.D. Vance is trying to use the utensils. | ||
He panics because he can't. | ||
He runs to the hallway. | ||
Usha, I don't know what forks to use. | ||
Now put your hands to your head. | ||
Oh, like this? | ||
Ha ha, you did that? | ||
You fell for that? | ||
Oh, Usha? | ||
Meanwhile in the dining room, Peter, what is he doing here? | ||
Why did you invite him? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, I think you need to leave. | |
This is our movement. | ||
This is our country. | ||
This is what Jack Posobiec wants you to believe is the based future of our country. | ||
It's, you know, it's enough to make you want to commit suicide. | ||
But you shouldn't. | ||
But it would make you want, it makes you want to. | ||
But you shouldn't. | ||
But it makes you want to. | ||
But you shouldn't. | ||
My heart goes out to you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Whoa, in a while. | ||
What is that? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
The show sucked lately? | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thanks, I guess. | ||
At least it's getting better. | ||
Whoa! | ||
Thank you for the massive super chat. | ||
My heart goes out to you. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
07's in the chat. | ||
Heart goes out in the chat. | ||
My heart goes out to you in the live chat. | ||
For the massive super chat, the goat putting the show on his back. | ||
Andreas Olofsson, European. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you for the massive super chat. | ||
I don't know what you mean by being shilled by G. I'm not tech literate like that. | ||
I'm not on tech forums. | ||
I only go on poll and X. I stick to poll, X, biz. | ||
Those are my main areas. | ||
I don't go on G. Ethan Ralph in rehab? | ||
Well, good for him. | ||
You know, I unfortunately, I can't link up with him. | ||
He's too unstable. | ||
And also, he doxxed five of my people and ruined two of their lives or something like that. | ||
One of them didn't have a life to ruin. | ||
He already had no life. | ||
But the other one, the other one lost his job and really messed up his life. | ||
You know, so I don't know. | ||
I can't forgive him because it's not my place to forgive him because he fucked up four people's lives. | ||
But, you know, I'm glad that he's getting the attention and the help that he needs. | ||
But thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Good point. | ||
What genius wants to get behind a gay Jew like Sam Altman? | ||
But 15,000 young men would build a eye with a Chad Catholic like Nick Fontes. | ||
unidentified
|
Based? | |
Very true and very based. | ||
Great show as always, Nick. | ||
Very good. | ||
Spiritual warfare sent $5. | ||
I just want my hat. | ||
Smitty wear Benja Jermaine Jensen. | ||
One day I'll say, it was his hat. | ||
He was number one. | ||
The monologue started flowing so hard when you began to compare this new Cold War to the previous. | ||
You're a vessel for Holy Spirit, brother. | ||
Thanks! | ||
Yeah, you know, I just got into a rhythm. | ||
You know, I just got into it. | ||
But thank you, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Made friends with a northeastern guy who negotiated on behalf of the Shanghai Tesla factory regarding how many cars they could produce. | ||
Tesla set forth a number. | ||
Friends said the factory could produce much more. | ||
Dreadfast sent $10. | ||
He said the representative for Tesla didn't believe him. | ||
So they made a deal. | ||
The Shanghai factory guarantees X amount of cars produced, but every car they produce over the amount agreed upon would be bonus money for China. | ||
Well, the factory completely blew the numbers out of the water. | ||
Two-thirds. | ||
Dreadfast sent $10. | ||
It's almost as if it's something innate in the Chinese spirit that lets them play the underdogs so well and then explode onto the world stage with their true potential. | ||
Similar to how Jays have chutzpah or Americans are pioneers. | ||
It's definitely something to be aware of anticipating China's next moves. | ||
Well, they're a closed society. | ||
I think it's just a simple—I don't know if it's necessarily that they're an underdog. | ||
They're clearly very ambitious. | ||
But they're just a closed society, and they're pursuing a long-term strategy in secrecy with absolute unity in the state and society. | ||
And that's when you're like that, you get to be fucking awesome. | ||
Hussain Paris sent $5. | ||
If you would just cheese M instead of hand it, I'm a frigging AI record, yo. | ||
For real, dude. | ||
Where's my cheese? | ||
Dude, I just, you know, I just realized, like, last week, a couple weeks ago, I just really love cheese and bread. | ||
Like, you could never convince me that an all-protein diet is what we're made for because I don't even like protein. | ||
I just like bread. | ||
I could just eat bread for the rest of my life and be happy as a clam. | ||
unidentified
|
You know? | |
Literally, what is better than bread and cheese? | ||
Nobody can convince me. | ||
I had a dream today. | ||
I took a nap. | ||
It was so weird. | ||
I woke up, ate a box of chicken, and then I just crashed. | ||
I fell right back asleep. | ||
And I had this dream. | ||
It was such a good dream. | ||
I had a dream that I was at this... | ||
I'm going to tell you my dream story just this one time because it was very visual. | ||
unidentified
|
And good. | |
I had a dream that I was in like a church and I was looking for a room. | ||
I forget what I was looking for, but I was looking for something. | ||
And I accidentally walked into a bakery. | ||
They were like baking for like a bake sale or I don't know, maybe they made stuff. | ||
And I walked into like this empty bakery slash pantry. | ||
And there was like cookie dough and cookies and cinnamon rolls and like pastries. | ||
And I was like, oh my gosh. | ||
And I just went to town. | ||
And I had pastries and cookie dough and cookies and dough for a cinnamon roll. | ||
And then I woke up and I was like, damn it! | ||
That's like a fat person's dream. | ||
I recognize that that is like a fat person's dream. | ||
It was a really nice dream. | ||
It was a really good dream. | ||
Maybe one day it will be a reality. | ||
But yeah, I had a dream that I was like, I was like looking for something and there were people around me and I went through this door and closed it behind me and then I turned around and it was like, and it was free. | ||
And in the dream, I was eating these pastries and I looked up and there was a camera. | ||
unidentified
|
And I was like, no. | |
They're going to see I ate all these pastries. | ||
unidentified
|
I was like, damn. | |
But I didn't care. | ||
I was like, I'm going to eat more. | ||
I was like, whatever. | ||
I'll eat these cookies. | ||
Spiritual warfare sent $100. | ||
Citizens in federal workforce are getting offered severance from the government. | ||
P.S. Take my money because you are so awesome. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I saw that. | ||
Yeah, but they're saying it's really more like it has to do with the Returning to in-person work. | ||
So Trump has ordered all the federal employees to go back to work, and they anticipate a lot of people aren't going to come back to work. | ||
So he's saying that they're offering a severance to them instead, and they anticipate 10% will take it. | ||
So yeah, basically it's a self-layoff, but it's a great idea. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Middle-aged? | ||
I'm not middle-aged. | ||
Don't you just love, like, right before a rainstorm, the way it smells? | ||
You know how in summer, when, like, a real rainstorm comes in, there's, like, this smell? | ||
I don't know what that is, because sometimes it's there and sometimes it isn't. | ||
And, like, last summer, the summer before that, I went to this restaurant, I got a hot dog. | ||
It was a summer day and then I went outside and it was like that smell and I was like, it just took me back, you know, to my childhood. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know what that is, but it was awesome. | |
Yeah, basically. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat from the Remilio community, from the Miladies. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Dude, I give out advice for young people all the time. | ||
I already gave the advice yesterday. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Low effort ass, bitch ass. | ||
Bro said, hey, I'm a freshman. | ||
Any advice? | ||
For you, no advice. | ||
For you, get fucking smart. | ||
But thank you for the big super chat, evil emperors. | ||
No message. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
For the youngsters that are like, give me a sincere message, they don't even ask for it. | ||
I'll give it freely. | ||
unidentified
|
But for people that are like, hey, any advice? | |
Yeah, get smart. | ||
Ryan Myers sent $5. | ||
How about that land whale who is now suing Lyft because her driver didn't want to try and wedge her in his backseat? | ||
unidentified
|
I didn't see that. | |
That's funny though. | ||
I'm Catholic. | ||
Counting up the genealogy from creation to now, 6,000 years. | ||
I'm Catholic. | ||
We don't believe in that. | ||
Based Groipler sent $15. | ||
The attempt on my life has left me scarred and deformed, but I assure you my resolve has never been stronger. | ||
First person to make that joke. | ||
It is a civilizational state. | ||
In the West, we must get back to idea and doing so in part requires rekindling faith and a singular identity in the West. | ||
Otherwise, we are disintegrating into signal noise. | ||
Yeah, you just said what I said. | ||
That's true. | ||
Who is this Ethiopian Groyper? | ||
He's spitting. | ||
Spitting every night. | ||
W. W Chatter. | ||
Riddle me this. | ||
They shoot people for corn. | ||
They've been doing this since they were born. | ||
They are most likely to give you AIDS, and they are dark as the ace of spades. | ||
Also, what do you think about the book The Secret History of World by Mark Booth? | ||
Ski Bitty Groie, percent $5. | ||
Goatsen has officially surpassed Chris Burnett on X. | ||
It's over. | ||
Goats in one. | ||
Dude, Goats in undefeated. | ||
Imagine being, like, lowering yourself to being a Beardson A-log. | ||
You know, that's your life. | ||
And then he laps you in followers easily. | ||
He becomes super viral again and laps you in followers because he's funnier than you. | ||
The King, the Kingslayer, and it's an easy Beardson W. Easy Beardson W. Ian Groyper sent $13. | ||
Hey, Nick, new viewer here loved your rant about high school last night. | ||
Any nonfiction book suggestions for a 20-year-old, my heart goes out. | ||
Big Double G Groyper sent $5. | ||
Come to Gibsonia PA. | ||
We have 0% black population in his heaven. | ||
Little town outside of Pittsburgh. | ||
Anonymous Tipper sent $5. | ||
Remilio forever. | ||
Nicholas Fent has sent $10. | ||
You'll surely find them, Star of David, clinging to life more eagerly than any other people, even more than polytheists. | ||
Each one of them wishes to live a thousand years. | ||
But even if they were to live that long, it would not save them from the punishment. | ||
And Allah is all seeing of what they do. | ||
unidentified
|
Quran 2.96 Blasphemy. | |
We don't need the Quran, okay? | ||
We have the Bible, but hey, 20-year-old nonfiction book suggestions. | ||
Dude, just go with what you're interested in. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's what I did. | ||
Just find something you're interested in and just go. | ||
Start with something basic or something hard. | ||
I mean, it's really, it's up to you. | ||
What kind of nonfiction are you looking for? | ||
It's kind of general. | ||
unidentified
|
So, I mean, do you want a biography? | |
Do you want history? | ||
What is it that you'd like? | ||
But honestly, you should just go and look for it. | ||
Fig tree tree of good and evil sent $5. | ||
Christ's sacrifice transcends all continuums of existence and is in the very foundation of creation. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
They're reading up the Marxist clip on X. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
I knew they were going to love that. | ||
Fuck them. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Who's Edward Hanania? | ||
unidentified
|
What did he throw off a roof? | |
I get it. | ||
You're a fucking idiot. | ||
That's what I would say. | ||
I didn't read that. | ||
Yeah, I'm sorry, but like, I'm trying to reconnect to my faith. | ||
But what about Web3, blockchain technology, the climate crisis, the conflict in the Middle East? | ||
What the fuck does one have to do with the other, you stupid idiot? | ||
What does one have to do with the other? | ||
What are you even talking about? | ||
You sound like a fucking NPR listener. | ||
I'm finding it difficult to connect with my faith because of Gaza and societal decay. | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
What the fuck does that even mean? | ||
Shovel face, shovel head retard. | ||
unidentified
|
I just don't even know. | |
Sometimes you people say stuff and I'm just like, what the fuck are you talking about? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Does that sound like it made sense in your head? | ||
I just, I don't know what to do with that. | ||
You're putting that across this desk. | ||
I don't know what to do with that. | ||
Italian conquisted or sent $10. | ||
How and where can we create a white ethnostate? | ||
We need Europe to be 100% white in America to be majority white. | ||
I'm just like, oh, I thought it was wired. | ||
Surrounded by nothing but African-American brown criminals. | ||
Shut up, dude. | ||
Shut up. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I haven't. | |
I thought this had a wire. | ||
I was going to wrap it around my neck to kill myself. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, how can we create and go, boy, end those day because we're like black people? | |
Shut up, dude. | ||
I didn't watch that, but yeah, it did look sus. | ||
Thank you. | ||
My heart goes out to you. | ||
We love the moms. | ||
We love moms. | ||
We love Groyper families. | ||
W mom. | ||
I have a soft spot for moms, you know? | ||
So, hey. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
W mom. | ||
W son. | ||
Goated mom. | ||
unidentified
|
Gom. | |
Call her Gom because she's a goated mom. | ||
Call her Wom because she's a W mom. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Love you, man. | ||
Thanks for everything you do. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Brian M. sent $10. | ||
W defending South African whites. | ||
I'm glad you is. | ||
No one puts pressure on a Trump boy more than you. | ||
The nation that matters knows this to be true. | ||
Bless you and your family. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Yeah, well, there are people. | ||
We gotta look out for our people. | ||
I see a non-99 cent, $10. | ||
Do you listen to Blade? | ||
Slash or a Drainer? | ||
unidentified
|
Trash. | |
Tasman sent $5. | ||
Cars from the 60s have style, craftsmanship, and make you feel something when you're in them. | ||
Teslas are soulless plastic appliances designed purely for efficiency. | ||
Same with buildings, furniture, etc. | ||
Even our stuff has no solar identity anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
No fucking way. | |
No fucking way. | ||
Architecture used to be trad and based. | ||
Now it is modern and cringe. | ||
Just like architecture and car. | ||
I've now, oh my gosh, the studio is shaking. | ||
You've never met someone like me before. | ||
I think old architecture is based because it is beautiful. | ||
New architecture is oppressive and ugly. | ||
unidentified
|
Dude, ba- I'm amazed! | |
Fro did the meme. | ||
unidentified
|
Cars from the 60s. | |
Ah, yeah, though, they were made with craftsmanship. | ||
That's so true, dude. | ||
That is so true. | ||
Tesla's our soulless plastic appliances purely for efficiency. | ||
Yeah, probably a bunch of bug men driving him around thinking it's the end of history. | ||
Am I right? | ||
A couple of bug men with their seed oils driving him around with a bunch of nicks. | ||
Can't go totally out the rails. | ||
Yeah, but that's so true, dude. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I wish we lived in a trad-based city with traditional architecture. | ||
And classic cars and cigarettes and real tobacco. | ||
Good point. | ||
Never thought of it that way. | ||
Dude. | ||
Kill yourself. | ||
Spitting. | ||
Always spitting. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
No taste. | ||
Hey, I love you guys, but look, I'm just Christian, alright? | ||
I remember that. | ||
I don't remember that. | ||
I would have to, I mean, I can't visualize it. | ||
Let me see. | ||
Is it this? | ||
unidentified
|
I feel like I vaguely remember. | |
you Vaguely remember that. | ||
I do remember when Dubstep came out. | ||
I remember going to my friend's house in like 7th or 8th grade. | ||
And he was like, oh, you ever heard of Dubstep? | ||
And I was like, no, what's that? | ||
unidentified
|
And he's like, this. | |
And he played Skrillex. | ||
And I was like, what is this? | ||
I didn't like it. | ||
I was like, I don't like that. | ||
I remember when it came out. | ||
Well, they accused me of being affiliated with the Wilkes Brothers, which is different. | ||
Because I was photographed outside of the Pale Horse headquarters. | ||
So they said, oh, the Wilkes Brothers must be funding him. | ||
Which they're not. | ||
Really? | ||
Do people talk about me in school? | ||
That's crazy to think about. | ||
Yeah, I wasn't a fan. | ||
Dude, how do you not know? | ||
It's so obvious. | ||
No, I wasn't a fan of that one. | ||
Oh, thanks. | ||
Well, I don't know. | ||
Has that been confirmed? | ||
I saw it reported by one source, but I didn't see it in anything mainstream. | ||
No, I don't watch superhero cartoons. | ||
I have a statue of Jesus that's off to the side, though. | ||
I don't have anywhere to put it. | ||
Where would I put the crucifix? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I didn't want to do a bunch of decorations, but yeah, maybe. | ||
No, there's nothing gayer than that. | ||
Anal sex, it's right above that in terms of gayness. | ||
It's like gay anal sex is like, you know, whatever the, it's like N minus one. | ||
N being the total number of things, and then the gayest thing in the world is that. | ||
Steak, avocado, eggs, and berries on a wooden cutting board. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm posting it online and saying, this is what cures you of diseases. | |
This is why people have chronic diseases, because they don't eat like this. | ||
They don't eat good whole foods like this. | ||
They don't eat whole foods like I'm eating today. | ||
Look at how I drizzled honey on it. | ||
If you do that, like, you're not going to make it. | ||
Not going to make it. | ||
All these men posting food Instagram, you know? | ||
And they played it. | ||
They played it just right. | ||
I'm going to chop up the avocado. | ||
I'm going to drizzle the honey. | ||
And I'm going to take it outside. | ||
unidentified
|
Take a picture of it. | |
You need to be eating like this. | ||
You need to be eating like I eat. | ||
Whole good, high quality, fresh nutritional foods. | ||
Shut up, dude. | ||
Just, it's enough already with carrying on like that. | ||
Burger. | ||
Dude. | ||
Good idea. | ||
Yeah, let me do that. | ||
Yeah, that's crazy. | ||
Sheboygan Grover said $5. | ||
The word you're looking for is petrichor, fresh summer rain, Thanks. | ||
unidentified
|
Mmm. | |
Earthy scent produced when rain falls on dry soil. | ||
The word was coined by Richard Grenfell Thomas. | ||
From rock or stone, the ethereal fluid that is the blood of the gods in Greek mythology. | ||
Hmm. | ||
When a raindrop lands on a porous surface, air from the pores form small bubbles which float to the surface and release aerosols. | ||
Carrying the scent as well as bacteria and viruses. | ||
Raindrops that move slower produce more aerosols. | ||
More common after light rains. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
Interesting. | ||
Hmm. | ||
I was wondering why it doesn't happen every time. | ||
scientists believe humans appreciate the rain scent because ancestors relied on rainy weather for survival that's cool Very cool. | ||
Wow, learn something new every day, huh? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Very nostalgic. | ||
I did. | ||
Totally vindicated on that. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Oh, I see. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Really? | ||
Okay, that's gotta be John Day Verving. | ||
Tragic sent $5. | ||
I got an ad for Girls Gone Bible Live in My City. | ||
Would be fun to ask then the JQ. | ||
Alex Corbell sent $5. | ||
Hey Nick, just got my Christ Pant Aquare hoodie shipped today and it looks fucking amazing. | ||
Love Arthur Quan Liard and his bass takes. | ||
unidentified
|
He's the GOAT, dude. | |
Goated poster. | ||
Good for you. | ||
unidentified
|
It really is. | |
I haven't read any of his stuff. | ||
I have one or two of his books. | ||
I have the... | ||
What is it? | ||
It's like the... | ||
I forget, but I have one of his books. | ||
The absent viewer sent $25. | ||
Watching with my mom tonight. | ||
First time she's ever watched the show live. | ||
I will make a groyper out of her. | ||
unidentified
|
Christ is King 07. Sorry for all the bad language. | |
Apologies. | ||
Bob Nelson sent $5. | ||
Trump and BB are going to get things in the Middle East settled down. | ||
I am pretty confused listening the rest of your show, though. | ||
Can you explain the Sam Altman and Peter Thiel influence thing you mentioned earlier? | ||
Thanks. | ||
I do that every night. | ||
Silas sent $30. | ||
Would you fly to Russia and interview Putin? | ||
Speak to him about the subversion in our country and around the world. | ||
Yeah, let me call him up. | ||
Let me call him up. | ||
I'll take a trip out there. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll set them straight. | |
All right, we got like two more. | ||
Ruby 219 sent $10. | ||
UAE works despite its ethnic diversity is because it is illegal to be unemployed. | ||
85% of the population is expats. | ||
If anyone of them loses their job, they have two weeks to find a new job and get approved by the government. | ||
After that two weeks, they will kick down doors to enforce a deportation order. | ||
Yeah, which is what becomes possible when you're a city-state. | ||
White majoritarian sent $5. | ||
Earned as Nick realized Jesus wore sandals and spoke Aramaic about kissing goat fuckers are so retarded. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Yeah, Sneeko started saying that and they've just, oh, he thinks that Jesus was wearing sneakers. | ||
It's like because they think he's a Muslim. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyway. | |
Okay, all right. | ||
That's our last super chat. | ||
Wow, felt like a long show tonight. | ||
That's going to do it for me. | ||
As always, remember to smash the follow button, subscribe to the channel, smash the like button, leave a comment down below. | ||
I'm on the air every Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock central as always. | ||
Thanks to our top super chatters. | ||
Huge shout-out to Andreas Olofsson for the massive Super Chat. | ||
Thanks to our top Super Chatters, Spiritual Warfare, Greatest Gooner, Stimulant Groiper, Faustian Fake Cell, No Fat Chicks, Slavic Lukovic, Permabulla, and Evil Empire. | ||
Thanks to all them. | ||
Thanks to all our Super Chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. |