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 said, trust no man, but you're on the side. | ||
I need your day pause in the column. | ||
I said, treat you from girls and your mother. | ||
My mama said, trust no home, use a problem. | ||
I'm at one, two, start the track. | ||
I'm at the first. | ||
Itchy. | ||
See, Ricky said, but I don't want to fool you. | ||
But they want to fool you in a world. | ||
OK. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. not my rules. | ||
I just enforce them, all right? | ||
They say, trust no man, but you're on the side. | ||
I'm a senior. | ||
unidentified
|
They want to see the crowd. | |
I said, treat you from girls and your mother. | ||
unidentified
|
My mama said, trust no home, use a problem. | |
But they say, trust no man, but you're on the side. | ||
I'm a senior. | ||
unidentified
|
They want to see the crowd. | |
Blacked out the sky. | ||
It's a curse. | ||
Everything. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to evolve. | ||
OK. | ||
You know my ain't seen. | ||
I'm a petty machine. | ||
I've been making ways way before this dog trick. | ||
I was taking out the city when I was just a chick. | ||
With the phone back, fit it, thinking with the weight of it. | ||
It was a real chick. | ||
Yo, what's it? | ||
The shit. | ||
It was three, six. | ||
unidentified
|
Who'd take? | |
It's a kept set. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Take me to my first show. | |
I know. | ||
We only drop jewels way before they drop shuttle. | ||
I still don't do that. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll be like it. | |
I don't want the way. | ||
Does it save me? | ||
I ain't think. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't want to fall you. | |
Not my words. | ||
Not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them. | ||
All right? | ||
I don't want to fall you. | ||
American first, bitch. | ||
American first, bitch. | ||
First, bitch. | ||
Just don't, bitch. | ||
I was looking to believe your dream. | ||
Cause I'm a star. | ||
Blacked out with Scott. | ||
He's a person. | ||
Everything. | ||
Swarming on everybody who dared to oppose. | ||
And you know I ain't seen. | ||
I'm ready to see. | ||
And then we can wave. | ||
Baby, hold it. | ||
Slow kick. | ||
Yo. | ||
Pick me out. | ||
City. | ||
I was just a chick. | ||
With the phone back. | ||
Get it. | ||
Pick it with the weight of it. | ||
Yo. | ||
It's true. | ||
Check. | ||
Yo. | ||
Was it the shit? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Was three. | ||
Six. | ||
unidentified
|
Woo. | |
Tight. | ||
Was the upset. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Take it to my first show. | ||
I know. | ||
We only dropped jewels. | ||
Way before they dropped. | ||
Shuttle. | ||
First, dude. | ||
I love it. | ||
Now, baby. | ||
I love it. | ||
I love it. | ||
The way. | ||
Does it seem to be. | ||
I think. | ||
Take those buttons. | ||
They say. | ||
Oh, oh, oh. | ||
American first, bitch. | ||
And people don't realize 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 lead with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around you. | ||
It's drag queens in schools. | ||
It's 18-year-olds joining OnlyFans. | ||
It's the filth on TikTok. | ||
It's this country not having a border. | ||
It's the idea that our kids and we, this generation, are never going to own anything. | ||
Think about it. | ||
Never making an income to support a family. | ||
Never being able to have a family. | ||
People being corrupted before they're even a teenager by things on their phone. | ||
Sick addiction to technology. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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 of that movement. | ||
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
|
Believe me, it's for their benefit. | |
My message is that things have to change, and they have to change right now. | ||
My soul 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, 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
|
I am with you. | |
I will fight for you with every breath in my body, and I will never, ever let you down. | ||
A new droiper war. | ||
A new droiper war. | ||
I am taking bodies on the floor. | ||
I am with it all. | ||
I took to my demons and I see the writings on the wall. | ||
Niggas is dying when it's over. | ||
I get excited for them cops. | ||
And no one ain't crying when he gone. | ||
Cause Brody was fighting for them calls. | ||
I do this shit for my brothers. | ||
We do this shit for each other. | ||
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 if they walk. | ||
I can't see a damn thing if they walk. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They like Steve. | ||
They can't see me. | ||
They won't beat me. | ||
I'm in that guinea. | ||
We can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
They say, can we really go back? | |
And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right, when you're left wing, the answer is, The answer is no. | ||
We're never going back. | ||
unidentified
|
It's gone. | |
It's gone. | ||
All of that is gone. | ||
But I would call myself something like a Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
And Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | ||
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | |
Come on. | ||
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 include in the real world. | ||
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're 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 going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | |
It's the only way. | ||
We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
because 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're a man of every week. | ||
Lawrence, I found something really interesting. | ||
In 2016, Donald Trump vowed that the United States would 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. | ||
Telling us it's good enough. | ||
We need to hear the words immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
unidentified
|
No more. | |
Not since he announced his reelection 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 gonna 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, 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 going to 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'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Groyper War II. 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. | ||
unidentified
|
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
|
To be continued... | |
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 exists 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 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. | ||
We're 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. | ||
unidentified
|
The thing that said, take a look at what happened. | |
These are people who work hard, but no longer have a voice. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
Don't sit yet. | ||
unidentified
|
You don't like this. | |
You don't like this. | ||
You don't like this. | ||
You don't like this. | ||
It was patriots like you that built this country. | ||
And it's patriots like you that are going to save our country. | ||
unidentified
|
To all of those who think that they can coerce and subjugate the citizens of this land, hear these words from me tonight. | |
The people of America will not surrender our borders. | ||
We will not surrender our culture. | ||
We will not surrender our fate. | ||
Surrender our values. | ||
We will not surrender our history. | ||
We will not surrender our liberty. | ||
And above all, we will not surrender our children. | ||
We are done with their distorted visions for America. | ||
It's time to start talking about greatness for our country again. | ||
unidentified
|
We want our country to be great again. | |
We want our country to be respected. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't want to be anyone 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 | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
The end of the day is the end of the day. | ||
unidentified
|
Our best days are yet to come. | |
Are you an instant? | ||
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 Groeper 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
|
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 really impressive deals. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go big or go home. | ||
Donald Trump. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman who looks like that has to have a special set. | ||
It's the night. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Donald. | ||
Oh, you feel great. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm Donald. | ||
It's a special. | ||
Listen, are you nagging here? | ||
Are you? | ||
No, please. | ||
Just nagging. | ||
I'm calling this. | ||
No. | ||
Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
What do you want? | ||
I'm Donald. | ||
It's here. | ||
It's hard. | ||
I'm not in my home. | ||
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, Donald? | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
What? | ||
Trump has a new game. | ||
What is it? | ||
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 was, but I think people are tired of seeing the United States ripped off. | ||
That's the guy in the car, right? | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
That's the guy in the car, right? | ||
That's the guy in the car. | ||
I wouldn't have to. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Okay, kids, make it fast. | ||
I've got a plane. | ||
Jamie Green. | ||
The magazine. | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
I think he's a little. | ||
Scalch. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
First of all. | ||
Now the ball is good. | ||
The mail modeling would be what it is today. | ||
You've got to be worth some money on this. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. | |
We'll be right back. | ||
Why wouldn't you dedicate yourself to public service? | ||
Because I think it's a very mean life. | ||
I would love and I would dedicate my life to this country, but I see it as being a mean life. | ||
And I also see it as somebody with strong views and somebody with the kind of views that are maybe a little bit unpopular, which may be rife, but may be unpopular, wouldn't necessarily have a chance of getting elected against somebody with no great brain but a big smile. | ||
And that's a sad commentary for the political process. | ||
And if you have a minute, why don't we go? | ||
Talk about it somewhere only we know. | ||
This can be the end of everything. | ||
So why don't we go? | ||
Somewhere only we know. | ||
Somewhere only we know. | ||
I'm not supposed to be here tonight. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
I'm supposed to be here tonight. | ||
but he would staple green cards 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, telling us, It's good enough. | ||
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. | ||
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. No, | |
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh | ||
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh All right | ||
All right Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh | ||
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh I want to be addicted And you know why I want to be addicted? | ||
Cause I want a wall Right? | ||
I want a wall And I want to drill, drill, drill Power Power Power Power Power Power Power My love has got no power He's got his strong beliefs My love has got no fame He's got his strong beliefs My love has got no money | ||
He's got his strong beliefs Want more and more People just want more and more Freedom and love What he's looking for Want more and more People just want more and more Freedom and love What he's looking for Free from desire My insensis purify Free from desire My insensis purify Free from desire | ||
My insensis purify Free from desire Na na na na na na na na na na To the top Teddy on my chest Nigga, I'm trying to Slip those in the vip I got one of the blitz I got one of the vibes I cut both and I see lies They go fucking lies Bitch, you know this kid is saying You can fucking die | ||
Outro Music | ||
Thank you. | ||
And people don't realize 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. | ||
It's the filth on TikTok. | ||
It's this country not having a border. | ||
It's the idea that our kids and we, this generation, are never going to own anything. | ||
Think about it. | ||
Never making an income to support a family. | ||
Never being able to have a family. | ||
People being corrupted before they're even a teenager by things on their phone. | ||
Sick addiction to technology. | ||
The future is so bleak. | ||
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? | ||
You can't tell who they is. | ||
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, | ||
unidentified
|
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 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. | ||
Believe me, it's for their benefit. | ||
unidentified
|
is that things have to change, and they have to change right now. | |
My soul 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 future, 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
|
I am with you. | |
I will fight for you with every breath in my body, and I will never, ever let you down. | ||
A new droiper war. | ||
I am with you, I am with you. | ||
I am with you. | ||
I am with you all. | ||
I am with you. | ||
I do this shit for my brothers, 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 raise! | ||
I can't see a damn thing, thank God. | ||
I can't see a damn thing, thank God. | ||
Yeah, they like Steven. | ||
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, We're never going back. | ||
unidentified
|
It's gone. | |
It's gone. | ||
All of that is gone. | ||
But I would call myself something like a Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now, and Jesus Christ is our future after we die on Earth. | ||
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth. | |
We 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. | ||
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're gonna do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do, The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
*music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* Hold it up, where you had that gun? | ||
On em, yeah, pull up by the side, yeah, pull up on em Now I got this bag on hash, on em I'm straight out, it's diamonds, I'm straight out, it's lights, yeah, yeah How you gon' take these bills, how you gon' take these lights? | ||
Yeah, turn about my show and he's just doin' right Yeah, yeah, we gon' all night You gon' take me big, gon' take me big, gon' shut up all night You gon' take my drink, you gon' take my cup, you gon' take me all right They're out of the feeling, they've been out of the front of the bank And they jumpin' and flash up tweakin' We got the bills that we put them outside of you Out of your mind, you crazy tweakin' That's what I'm out of my lane, bad in my mind No really, but out of my tweakin' Know that you love these lights, you love in this world We runnin' it back every weekend Shut it up with me every time I know Bless you bleakin' All | ||
y'all drunk inside this life's that world Y'all get it Runnin' back up every weekend Now you see I'm run off on the table You say that I'm bad for no reason Bitch, I'm better I'm better Lawrence, I found something really interesting | ||
In 2016, Donald Trump vowed That the United States would buy And more importantly, hire American 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. | ||
Telling us it's good enough. | ||
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 going to 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 your fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts. | ||
Are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked Our Creator, four times. | ||
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
|
Thank you. | |
May God bless the United States of America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you and God bless America. | ||
Okay, thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you so much, everybody. | |
Can I just say, are you trusting Brian Adams? | ||
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. | ||
This is a war 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. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
The thing they said, take a look at what happened. | |
These are people who work hard, but no longer have a voice. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
And 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. | ||
unidentified
|
You're like this. | |
I am your voice. | ||
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 belongs to you, belongs to me. | ||
It was patriots like you that built this country, and it's patriots like you that are going to save our country. | ||
unidentified
|
To all of those who think that they can coerce and subjugate the citizens of this land, hear these words from me tonight. | |
The people of America will not surrender our borders. | ||
We will not surrender our culture. | ||
We will not surrender our fate. | ||
Surrender our values. | ||
We will not surrender our history. | ||
We will not surrender our liberty. | ||
And above all, we will not surrender our children. | ||
We are done with their distorted visions for America. | ||
It's time to start talking about greatness for our country again. | ||
unidentified
|
We want our country to be great again. | |
We want our country to be respected. | ||
unidentified
|
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 we deserve. the respect that we deserve. | ||
We want our country to be respected. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
We must always remember that we share one home and one glorious destiny. | ||
We all believe the same red blood of patriots. | ||
We all salute the same great American flag. | ||
unidentified
|
Our best days are yet to come. | |
Are you an innocent? | ||
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 Groeper 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 movement. | ||
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. | |
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
It feels so right. | ||
It's a deal. | ||
I put together some real recipes. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go gig or go home. | ||
Donald Trump. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman who looks like that has to have a special set. | ||
It's the night. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Donald. | ||
I told you you were great. | ||
Oh, thank you very much. | ||
I'm Donald. | ||
It's a special. | ||
Listen, are you nagging here? | ||
Are you? | ||
Are you doing great? | ||
Just mad. | ||
I'm calling this. | ||
No. | ||
Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
What do you want? | ||
The Donald is here! | ||
Everything's separate 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, Donald? | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
What? | ||
Trump has a new game. | ||
What is it? | ||
Mr. Trump! | ||
My new game is Trump, the game. | ||
Trump, the game. | ||
Mr. Trump! | ||
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 knows, but I think people are tired of seeing the United States ripped off. | ||
I don't know. | ||
That's the guy in this bar, right? | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
That's me, too. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Okay, kids, make it fast. | ||
I've got a plane to do it. | ||
He created a magazine. | ||
Mr. Trump? | ||
I think he did it. | ||
Scabby! | ||
He's got a plane to do it. | ||
Excuse me, first of all, he's got a plane to do it. he's got a plane to do it. | ||
Their male modeling would be what it is today. | ||
He's got a plane to do it. | ||
Come to my block, come and see how we living, we chilling with black Why wouldn't you dedicate yourself to public service? | ||
Because I think it's a very mean life. | ||
I would love and I would dedicate my life to this country, but I see it as being a mean life. | ||
And I also see it as somebody with strong views and somebody with the kind of views that are maybe a little bit unpopular, which may be right, but may be unpopular, wouldn't necessarily have a chance of getting elected against somebody with no great brain but a big smile. | ||
And that's a sad commentary for the political process. | ||
And if you have a minute, why don't we go? | ||
Talk about it somewhere only we know. | ||
This can be the end of everything. | ||
So don't we go somewhere only we know. | ||
Somewhere only we know. | ||
I'm not supposed to be here tonight. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm supposed to be here tonight. | |
In 2016, Donald Trump vowed that the United States would buy and, more importantly, hire American. | ||
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. | ||
Telling us it's good enough. | ||
We need to hear the words immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
unidentified
|
No more. | |
Not since he announced his reelection 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, 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 going to 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. | ||
unidentified
|
I want you to... | |
I'm sorry, Mr. Quentis. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Groyper War II. | |
Bitch, I'm bigger. | ||
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh | ||
I'm straight out is like I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm not naive. | ||
I'm gonna turn my dream, you gonna turn my cup, it'll turn me alright. | ||
And I didn't feel it that they had a price on the bank, they chug with the blocks I'm tweaking. | ||
We had a good since we were pulling outside of you, out of your mind, you crazy tweaking. | ||
You got me out of my lane, back out of my mind, I'm really bad out of my tweaking. | ||
Now that you're loving these lights, you're loving this world, we're running in bank every weekend. | ||
Shut up with me every time I know, but she bleaking. | ||
You're loving this light, this light's that world, you're getting running back up every weekend. | ||
Now you see I'm run off on the table, you say that I'm bad but I'm raising. | ||
Bitch, I'm better, I'm better. | ||
I wanna be a dictator. | ||
I wanna be a dictator. | ||
And you know why I want to be a dictator? | ||
Cause I want a wall. | ||
Right? | ||
I want a wall, and I wanna drill, drill, drill. | ||
Drill, Drill! | ||
*music* | ||
*music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* | ||
*music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* Blast out 400 people over there working. | ||
Swarming on everybody who dared to approach it. | ||
What up? | ||
Always good. | ||
When I was just a chick. | ||
With the old back said it. | ||
Thinking with the way to fit. | ||
It's bullshit. | ||
Y'all wasn't for shit yet. | ||
I was three sick. | ||
unidentified
|
Who'd say it was a upset? | |
You took me to my worst show. | ||
I go. | ||
Only drop jewels. | ||
Way before they drop shuttle. | ||
First year, I'm going to. | ||
Now I'm going to. | ||
All the way. | ||
Does it say it? | ||
I'm going to. | ||
Take those buttons. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our credo. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect. | ||
The respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
Man, go to the center. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
You're a libertarian mother. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back here with you tonight on Tuesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Not the biggest show ever. | ||
Featured story tonight, we're talking about the Ukraine summit, which was held today in Saudi Arabia between representatives from the United States and Russia. | ||
Notably, no Ukrainians. | ||
And it seems like it was a good meeting. | ||
Everybody was happy about it. | ||
The Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, said it was a good meeting. | ||
Marco Rubio, our Secretary of State, as well as Mike Waltz, National Security Advisor, they said it went well. | ||
And they've laid out a four-step roadmap for how the United States and Russia are going to resume diplomacy and hopefully bring an end to the war. | ||
And that is really the first step. | ||
They have to pick up where they left off and resume a diplomatic communication because that's where we are right now is that they're just not talking at all. | ||
And the United States is treating Russia as though they are a pariah state. | ||
So it's a good first step. | ||
So we'll talk about the meeting. | ||
I actually consider it very positive. | ||
This is one of the big positive developments now that Trump has won the election. | ||
It is that I think there is a good chance the war in Ukraine will come to an end. | ||
I don't know how soon that will happen. | ||
I think it is more complicated than maybe people think. | ||
But I do think this is positive. | ||
So I'm optimistic about it. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
Finally, some good news. | ||
We're also going to talk tonight about Doge. | ||
And, you know, I'm going to have to complain a lot about this. | ||
It just sucks. | ||
And if you saw the press conference today, Trump held a press conference at Mar-a-Lago, and he went through some of the wasteful spending that Doge is uncovering. | ||
And to me, all of this is just so, like, cuck-servative coded. | ||
This is what Rand Paul does every year. | ||
This is what the budget hawks, the fiscal conservatives, they always and they love to do this. | ||
They go through item by item the most ridiculous cases of wasteful government spending. | ||
So Trump does a press conference at Mar-a-Lago and line by line he goes over each item. | ||
$15 million for transgender surgery in Colombia, $50 million for... | ||
Underwater, basket weaving in Mozambique, that kind of thing. | ||
And I put this on Twitter, and everybody's on my case about it. | ||
The replies are always AIDS on Twitter. | ||
But I said on Twitter about this press conference, about what Trump said, does nobody who supports this know how to do math? | ||
It's a $2 trillion deficit. | ||
$2 trillion over what the government brings in in tax revenue. | ||
The budget is nearly $7 trillion. | ||
$7 trillion in federal outlays. | ||
And it's a deficit of roughly $2 trillion. | ||
And that's coming down. | ||
It was much higher around the time of the pandemic. | ||
So how much really is $10 million when you're talking about a $7 trillion deficit? | ||
The math isn't working there. | ||
And people say, well, gotta start somewhere. | ||
Well, should we let the fraud continue? | ||
Let's say that we elected Trump even for that reason, and we didn't, but let's say we did. | ||
If anybody were really serious about You would go to the biggest line items in the budget, which are entitlements, coming in at $5 trillion, and then defense, which is just under $1 trillion. | ||
So between entitlements and defense, that's the vast majority of the spending. | ||
The non-defense, non-entitlement, or discretionary spending, Is less than 10% of the whole budget. | ||
And you've got Elon and Doge coming in and taking a sledgehammer to it and causing all these disruptions. | ||
What's the point? | ||
Go for the entitlements. | ||
Go for defense. | ||
And it looks like that's what they're doing. | ||
That's our other story tonight. | ||
So they're now going in to the Social Security Administration, which is pretty bold and politically risky. | ||
And Elon and Trump are saying that there are millions of people in the Social Security program who are over 200 years old. | ||
And that's supposed to suggest that those people are getting payments. | ||
So they're posting, and I've seen this on Twitter, they're posting these numbers that there are potentially millions of people that are in the Social Security program in the records of the... | ||
Social Security Administration, who are over the age of 120 years old, the implication being that they're getting a monthly payment from the government. | ||
But that's not true. | ||
So the press has fact-checked that, and it turns out that Social Security is automatically suspended for anybody over the age of 115. So what they're posting is just not true. | ||
The insinuation is not true. | ||
They say they've identified all this savings. | ||
I don't think that's true. | ||
I just don't believe that's the case. | ||
Certainly not the kinds of numbers that they're implying when they say there are, you know, 10 million people that are 300 years old. | ||
So we'll talk about that too. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Kind of a slow week, though. | ||
I mean, like our big stories, we always go into these like big arcs. | ||
My favorite's always the foreign policy stuff, like Russia and Israel and Gaza. | ||
And then the election was good. | ||
But the latest arc, the Doge thing, it's just about the most boring arc I think we've ever done. | ||
This is always a pretty boring time, February, sort of a low-key month. | ||
But damn, it's pretty boring. | ||
It's pretty slow. | ||
But it's going to be a good show regardless. | ||
Before we get into it, I'd like to remind you to smash the follow button on Rumble. | ||
Smash the like button. | ||
Leave a comment down below. | ||
Tell me what you think. | ||
Thoughts? | ||
What do you think about this show? | ||
What else? | ||
There's not too much else going on. | ||
Yeah, not a whole lot. | ||
So I posted on Twitter today this clip. | ||
And this is just a great genre of content. | ||
You ever go on YouTube and you see black people reacting to rock songs that they've heard for the first time? | ||
This is like a distinct genre. | ||
There's a lot of YouTubers that only make this content. | ||
And I question how authentic it really is. | ||
I think they're really just kind of farming this out for clicks and advertising money. | ||
I think they're putting us on. | ||
But this is a genre of content where black people will listen to rock music, and maybe it's real, maybe it's not, but they say they've never heard it before, and they listen to a famous rock song, and they get really into it, and they really like it, and white people love this. | ||
White people just love it. | ||
And so somebody sent me a clip. | ||
There was a compilation of black people listening to The Fray for the first time. | ||
You know The Fray? | ||
It's like a 2000s. | ||
Rock band. | ||
And I love that band. | ||
Great band. | ||
A lot of great songs. | ||
They sing How to Save a Life, Never Say Never, Cable Car. | ||
A lot of good songs. | ||
And anyway, so he sent me this compilation of black people reacting to that song. | ||
And I thought it was so good. | ||
I love it. | ||
And I posted the clip of one guy who was really jamming out to it. | ||
And, you know, I was thinking... | ||
So you could be cynical about it, and you can say, and I think it's true, that black people are definitely just farming that out. | ||
And pick your favorite song. | ||
Any white person, pick your favorite rock song, and you can find a video on YouTube of a black person pretending to have never heard it and listening to it for the first time and really enjoying it. | ||
And these videos have millions of views. | ||
People love this. | ||
And you could say that, have they really never heard those songs before? | ||
Are they really enjoying it that much? | ||
Or is this just, you know, so we could be cynical. | ||
But I was watching the video. | ||
I got a big kick out of it. | ||
I really enjoyed it. | ||
And I was thinking to myself, why is it that white people do like that? | ||
I was thinking, why is it that when we see a black person with like a do-rag on, Because that was another one. | ||
It was two black guys and they have a do-rag on and they're really getting into it. | ||
And you ask yourself, why is it that we as white people like to watch black people enjoy our culture? | ||
And I was thinking, contrary to a lot of the racialists, Or race idolaters on the right, and this is going to be, maybe a lot of people aren't going to agree with this to watch the show, but I'm going to say it because this is what I feel, and it's true. | ||
You know me, I'm a Catholic, and I am a white nationalist. | ||
I think America should be a white country, but I don't hate the other races. | ||
I don't think they're less than human, and I wouldn't even strictly say that I'm a white supremacist. | ||
I'm proud of being white. | ||
I think the white people are certainly exceptional at a lot of things, maybe most things, but I think that there's an inherent equality that we all have. | ||
Anyway, and this is distinct from other people on the right, and I see this more and more, people that are genuine race idolaters. | ||
They worship their race. | ||
And this even compromises their spirituality. | ||
They think that they won't even adhere to Christianity because they think Christianity is racially egalitarian. | ||
Anyway, we talked a little bit about this last night. | ||
And when I see things like that video, now maybe it's sentimentality. | ||
Maybe it's playing on your emotions because it's nostalgic. | ||
So maybe there's something subjective there. | ||
But I think about the reason that white people like to see black people enjoy the music. | ||
And I think there is something fundamental. | ||
There is something within all of us that we do actually long for a universal community of human beings. | ||
And obviously I think that doesn't mean that we shouldn't have borders. | ||
And that doesn't mean that we shouldn't have distinct racial communities within the world. | ||
But I think that when you see videos like that, there is something about that that makes you feel good. | ||
There is something about that where you actually like that they appreciate our culture. | ||
And vice versa, black people like when white people appreciate their culture. | ||
I think it does betray the fact that on a deep level, we do actually. | ||
We do actually have this universal human experience, and we actually do like to share. | ||
There is this innate human desire to share with other people, our culture, things about ourselves, just like we have a desire to share within a racial community, but also between racial communities. | ||
And I was thinking that at the same time, at the same time that I saw that, I was also thinking about the Trevor Noah video. | ||
I don't know if you guys saw this, but it was actually really surprising. | ||
Trevor Noah is the South African black host of The Daily Show. | ||
He took over for Jon Stewart some years ago. | ||
I don't really particularly like him. | ||
I think he's anti-white. | ||
I don't think he's very funny. | ||
I don't think he's as smart as he thinks he is. | ||
I think he's got a real attitude. | ||
But he was on this talk show with these two black women, and they were more insufferable than him. | ||
But he said on the show that as Jim Crow and segregation and racism was on its way out, he said America automatically embraced racial integration. | ||
And he said that that was really a false dichotomy that was presented, that you either had segregation and cruelty and abuse. | ||
And animosity towards the black people. | ||
But then the only other course besides that was racial integration, which is that blacks and whites would be forced to live together, forced to integrate, and that's just how it has to be. | ||
He said, and is there something to be said for the fact that black people can relate to other black people more than they relate to white people or even more specifically that Africans from Africa can relate to other Africans and communicate with each other in their own way and understand and is there something to be said for the fact that black people can relate to Even more specifically, that Africans from Africa can relate to other Africans and communicate with each other in their own way and understand each other in a deeper level. | ||
The word he's looking for is familiarity. | ||
They're familiar. | ||
Their habits, the way they talk, sense of humor, all sorts of things. | ||
Even little things that we don't often think of when we think about racial or cultural differences. | ||
He said, and is there something to be said for the fact that maybe we should go our separate ways? | ||
Maybe we feel more comfortable and more familiar with people that are like us. | ||
And maybe there's something to be said for a separation without that animosity. | ||
And I feel like that, like synthesizing those two truths, that is how to develop a kind of post-woke or like a post... | ||
Political correctness, post-integration racial politics, because I think everybody is recognizing integration is failing. | ||
We are different. | ||
We are distinct. | ||
There is a tension between the races. | ||
At the same time, it doesn't mean that we have to kill each other. | ||
We are different. | ||
We're never going to bridge that gap between the races. | ||
There will always be a golf. | ||
There will always be an uncomfortable tension. | ||
There will always be discomfort. | ||
There will always be a lack of familiarity. | ||
There will always be a sense of alienation between the races. | ||
And so that is what Trevor Noah is saying. | ||
At the same time, it doesn't mean we have to eradicate each other. | ||
At the same time, it doesn't mean we have to subjugate each other. | ||
And I think that is towards a racial politics where there are distinct racial communities in the world and in the country, and that the relationship between the communities is just simply managed. | ||
And there can be times when there is more harmony between the races and less harmony, and certainly there will be conflict and there will be times of relative peace. | ||
But I think that's where things need to go, this idea that there is sameness. | ||
We're human, and our humanness and our innate urge for universal community, it makes us want to share with each other and in some cases come together. | ||
At the same time, that same human nature also turns inwardly. | ||
And at the same time that we want a universal community, we feel more comfortable within our own racial community most of the time. | ||
And so maybe we can come together in certain common spaces, certain public spaces, like in a government building or in a church or a public square. | ||
But maybe we retreat to our separate corners in our neighborhoods and playgrounds and schools and things like that. | ||
And sort of like, how do you synthesize those two positions? | ||
Because, you know, I would say that, and it's not to say that, oh, it's just I'm in the middle, but I'm not someone who is so racist that says... | ||
unidentified
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I could never be a Christian because black people are inferior. | |
Because there are people that believe that. | ||
I know people that think that. | ||
And I disagree with them strongly on that. | ||
You know, and there are people that say, we just hate people that aren't like us. | ||
And this and that. | ||
So I'm not necessarily that far. | ||
But I'm also not on the other side where I say race means nothing. | ||
And America should become all brown people. | ||
And I want brown people in my neighborhood. | ||
Because it's like, you know, I want to live in a white neighborhood. | ||
When I get married and have a family or if I decide to do that, I want to raise my kids in a white neighborhood and I want the people to be white. | ||
I want them to be like me. | ||
And even more particularly, I don't even want to live in the South. | ||
I want to live in the Midwest or among American ethnics because people that are Italian and Irish that live in Boston or Chicago or New York are different than people that are German. | ||
And English that live in Naperville, who live in like Springfield, Illinois. | ||
They're different. | ||
So, so anyway, so those are just some thoughts I've had about race, but I think that's sort of the future. | ||
And it reminds me of what I think Sam Francis, it was either Sam Francis or Pat Buchanan, but they said about race, they said, it's not everything, but it isn't nothing. | ||
And that's sort of where I'm at. | ||
Because I saw that video. | ||
You know, I saw some people kind of being really negative in the replies. | ||
unidentified
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They said, oh, you're posting an N-word. | |
This is crap. | ||
And it's like, isn't there some sense of camaraderie between the races? | ||
Isn't it amusing? | ||
I don't actually hate the other groups. | ||
I don't want to go and get married to them and live with them all the time. | ||
I have to deal with all their problems and be an alien in my own land at the same time. | ||
So that's just what I was thinking about that video because I saw it and I was like, I like that they like the song. | ||
That's my favorite song. | ||
I like that they like it. | ||
And there's something common, which is why we both enjoy it and we like sharing it. | ||
But then we want to go home. | ||
And I saw a chart today. | ||
And it's showed births, how many white births there are, state by state, in terms of percentages. | ||
And it's like, we're cooked. | ||
Our country is so, it's gone. | ||
It's already over. | ||
In California, 19% of the births are white. | ||
19%. | ||
So it's like, in 50 years, California, Texas, Florida, like most of the country. | ||
It's going to be completely alien. | ||
And I don't want to live here! | ||
I don't want to live in a country that's like that. | ||
So we need a white enclave. | ||
We need a white enclave where the white people can live. | ||
Okay, there's a ton of brown people here. | ||
I want to live in a part of the country that is white. | ||
And that's how I feel. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
So that's just some shower thoughts for you. | ||
Literally, I was literally in the shower for like 90 minutes clipping that. | ||
I was in the shower for like 90 minutes like on my phone and then someone sent that to me and I spent like 30 or 40 minutes looking at black people reacting to that song and like finding the best clip and trimming it up to post on Twitter. | ||
So it was literally a shower-thon. | ||
I was watching it. | ||
I was like, all right, they like the song. | ||
This is great. | ||
But I was like, why do we like that? | ||
You know, because we like people, but we also like our own people just a little bit more. | ||
And that's true with them as well. | ||
And I think about that when I talk to Ye. | ||
You know, when I talk to Ye, he told me the other day, he's like, He's like a great black and a white racist teaming up. | ||
I was like, that's so true. | ||
That's so true. | ||
But we are distinct in that way. | ||
Anyway, so that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the news of the day, I guess. | ||
Boring-ass news about Doge. | ||
I guess we'll just dive right in. | ||
So our first story is about Doge. | ||
They're cutting through the government, cutting all the wasteful spending. | ||
And I've been saying this the whole time. | ||
I have to cover my bases because if I don't, people are going to get up my ass about this. | ||
Okay? | ||
I do support cutting the budget. | ||
Okay? | ||
And I've said this for a very, very long time. | ||
I've been doing this show for eight years. | ||
And for eight years, I've been saying the debt is a bigger problem than you think. | ||
Because there are a lot of people that subscribe to modern monetary theory. | ||
There's a lot of people that think the debt is like theoretical. | ||
And lately we're seeing that is not true. | ||
Because now that we have this persistent inflation, and the inflation is unanchored from the Federal Reserve's actions on interest rates recently, now that we have interest rates that are above zero for really like the first time in 20 years, the chickens are coming home to roost. | ||
The debt has been accumulating for all this time. | ||
Trillions are being added to the debt every year. | ||
The debt is now north of $30 trillion. | ||
And again, for 20 years, that didn't matter because interest rates were zero since the housing bust in 2006. Now that interest rates are coming up because inflation is coming up, now we're paying a ton of interest on that debt. | ||
And if the interest remains high to combat inflation and the deficits keep going up or they stay high and the debt keeps growing, the interest keeps climbing along with the other liabilities and you get into a situation where the government is functionally bankrupt. | ||
It's a big problem. | ||
And I've been saying it for a long time. | ||
And so I do actually support what Doge is doing in principle. | ||
When Doge goes into the federal departments and agencies and they're looking for waste, fraud and abuse to cut and they're firing personnel. | ||
I support this. | ||
And by the way, I support it for multiple reasons. | ||
I support it for fiscal reasons. | ||
I think that is responsible, which is to say it is making the country solvent and it is putting us in a better economic position. | ||
But I also support it for political reasons because at the same time, and this is another way to think about it, maybe this is the real reason. | ||
When you retire, this is what they say. | ||
When you retire all government employees, that's the neoreactionary terminology for this, not only are you saving money and there's a cost savings, but you're also removing all of these personnel who have a distinct interest. | ||
And I said this last week. | ||
the bureaucracy in Washington, D.C., the permanent civil service that works in the departments and agencies, they do not get replaced from one administration to the next. | ||
So you have people in the Department of Education, in the USAID, the Foreign Service, the State Department, Department of Energy. | ||
They've been working these government jobs for decades. | ||
And as such, as government workers, they've become a unique class, distinct from the private sector, even distinct from what we conventionally think of as the political system. | ||
These are people that they're... | ||
Their politics is bound up with their interest as a class. | ||
They will never vote for shrinking government because that means losing their job. | ||
Their class interest is a political interest. | ||
And so they start to develop all these other political ideas. | ||
Like, for example, the State Department favors a massive footprint of the United States all around the world because that means that they're in business. | ||
Their economic class interest is their political interest. | ||
Now, this is a problem because they control the political system. | ||
So you have this political class running the political system, and their politics is protecting the political system. | ||
So the purpose of the system is no longer to, let's say, for example, educate Americans or have cheap energy or Influence the other countries in America's interest. | ||
The purpose of the system becomes to perpetuate the system itself. | ||
Like a teacher's union. | ||
You know, it started out as this is how we're going to get teachers paid. | ||
Then it turns into, well, you know, we need more money so that we can make more money. | ||
It becomes a self-perpetuating system. | ||
So for economic fiscal... | ||
And political reasons, I support what they're doing. | ||
But here are my criticisms of it. | ||
And I've said this at the same time. | ||
They are really not serious about cutting the deficit. | ||
Because, and everybody knows this, anybody that just looks at the numbers, the federal expenditures are almost all, 90% of it, is two things. | ||
Entitlements and defense. | ||
That's it. | ||
It's these liabilities, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, those are the big ones. | ||
That's $5 trillion a year. | ||
$5 trillion in 2024 out of $6.75 trillion was those entitlements. | ||
And those are protected by law. | ||
Congress can't come in and cut those year over year like they could when they're appropriating money for the federal departments and agencies. | ||
That's considered mandatory spending. | ||
Mandatory meaning you have to appropriate that money as opposed to discretionary spending where it is at Congress's discretion whether they will appropriate or not, whether they will fund or whether they will cut. | ||
So the vast majority of it, the majority of it is entitlements, mandatory spending that they can't touch. | ||
And then within discretionary spending, the... | ||
The stuff that they can touch, the majority of that is defense. | ||
It's the military. | ||
And that goes up every single year. | ||
It goes up under Republicans. | ||
It goes up under Democrats. | ||
It always goes up. | ||
It's going to be something like $900 billion, maybe a trillion dollars this year, up from $800 billion when Biden was elected. | ||
So defense, which is the biggest part of discretionary spending, that's always going up. | ||
What's left is what you would call, what you would categorize as non-defense discretionary spending. | ||
That's the departments, that's the agencies, that's everything else. | ||
That's 10% of federal budgetary outlays. | ||
That's 10% of what's going out, what's going out the door in spending. | ||
And that is what they're cutting. | ||
That is what they're going in and gutting and they want to close down the Department of Education and they're gutting the Department of Energy and they're gutting the State Department and they're gutting and it's nice and it's good. | ||
Like I said, for the aforementioned reasons, I support it more for the political reasons than anything in this case. | ||
But in terms of the cost savings, how substantial will that really be in the long term? | ||
I don't think it's that significant. | ||
It's especially not significant when you consider that the source of future spending, future liabilities, it's all coming from entitlements, interest on the debt, and defense. | ||
So presently, those are the big expenditures. | ||
In the future, those are the big expenditures. | ||
And the big problem that nobody wants to talk about is in particular the unfunded liabilities, which are all of these retirees. | ||
All these people that will retire at the age of 65, they're going to live to be 100 or 90 or whatever, especially with life extension, and they're going to be collecting Social Security and Medicare for 40 years. | ||
And there's going to be more old people than young people. | ||
The old people are going to cost more to take care of in retirement and healthcare benefits than young people are putting into. | ||
The pot. | ||
That has always been the fiscal crisis. | ||
That has always been the debt crisis. | ||
Ever since the New Deal and the Great Society, that was always the math problem that they had. | ||
And yet Doge is coming in and saying, well, we're going to cut the Department of Education. | ||
Look, we saved a few billion dollars. | ||
We're talking $100 trillion in unfunded liabilities. | ||
So this nicky-nack like, well, we're not sending $20 million in condoms to Tanzania. | ||
I mean, okay, that's great, but it's not really doing much. | ||
So that's one. | ||
Here's the other problem with this. | ||
There's a few problems. | ||
Here's my other issue. | ||
When, and we talked a little bit about this last night, so I don't want to spend too much time on it tonight. | ||
But when I see Trump out there reading out the list of wasteful government programs and government spending, I'm thinking to myself, Is this really why we fought the whole battle? | ||
Again, I said this all last night, but we've been fighting for 10 years. | ||
Trump got shot. | ||
He got indicted, convicted, impeached twice, reputation destroyed in the media. | ||
All his supporters, some of them jailed, doxxed, suicided, locked up, some of them killed. | ||
It's a 10-year political revolution. | ||
And at the end of it... | ||
We have people that are basically saying this openly now that what this is is like a 90s-era liberalism. | ||
That's what Elon tweeted today. | ||
He said what we're doing is what the Democrats talked about in the 90s. | ||
It's just common sense. | ||
We fought for 10 years and all this for austerity, for fiscal conservatism, for Doge to go in and fight waste, fraud, and abuse. | ||
Like the Democrats in the 90s, that's what it was all for? | ||
Because when I signed up, when I was 18 years old, when I was in college, I signed up to roll back illegal immigration, to get the United States out of the Middle East in the Iraq War, to stop free trade and build factories in America. | ||
That's what it was about to me 10 years ago. | ||
It was about nationalism, it was about patriotism, free speech. | ||
Second Amendment, Fourth Amendment, things like that. | ||
Now it's about fiscal conservatism. | ||
And that to me really sounds more like Paul Ryan. | ||
That sounds like Eric Cantor. | ||
That sounds like the Libertarians. | ||
And not even like the worst like establishment Republicans from like 15 years ago. | ||
That's who that reminds me of. | ||
That's Rand Paul. | ||
So for Trump to go out there and say, well, you know, now this is just about cutting spending. | ||
And 90s-era liberalism, I'm like, that's not really the deal. | ||
That's not really what we signed up for. | ||
And people say, well, you know, well, it's good that they're doing it. | ||
And I agree. | ||
Like I said, I agree. | ||
But where are the priorities? | ||
If the priority is cutting the spending, it should be defense and entitlements. | ||
But I don't even think cutting the spending should be the priority. | ||
And I'll give you a perfect example. | ||
Consider something like illegal immigration. | ||
On average, on net, one illegal immigrant costs the government in benefits and in-kind transfers. | ||
If you quantify how much the government spends on net on an individual illegal immigrant over their lifetime, it's like $127,000 for every single one. | ||
Came in. | ||
In four years under Biden, 10 million times 127,000. | ||
That's what? | ||
That's trillions of dollars for those people. | ||
That's like, what, one, two trillion dollars or something like this? | ||
And that's just the amount of people that came in under Biden. | ||
That's not counting the children that they'll have who will assuredly take on as many benefits or roughly the same. | ||
That's not counting people from previous administrations that came in. | ||
If we have an illegal immigrant population of 40 or 50 million people, that's a considerable amount of money. | ||
And that's not taking into account all kinds of other economic costs that are involved. | ||
So if the priority were deporting illegal immigrants, not only do you solve a major problem that is not economic in nature, But the knock-on effect, the second-order effect, is that you actually save money in the long run. | ||
Or something like the Iraq War. | ||
How much did the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan cost over their life? | ||
Global war on terror. | ||
All these authorization of use of military force at something like $8 trillion over 20 years. | ||
In Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Libya, all these countries. | ||
And that's another thing where, again, it's not even strictly economic in nature, and yet the second order effect is that you save money. | ||
So should we be prioritizing the Department of Education and, like, cutting the Kennedy Center and the JFK Library and stuff like that? | ||
Or should the focus be on mass deportations, ending the foreign wars? | ||
Really creating a robust tariff regime. | ||
I'm surprised that they didn't do more on tariffs. | ||
Now, they're being developed. | ||
I assume there's a negotiation. | ||
But I want to see tariff man. | ||
I want to see industrial policy. | ||
I don't think we're even getting that. | ||
I mean, there's a negotiation right now within the Republican Party between the Senate and the House about what they're going to include in budget reconciliation. | ||
I don't see anything in there for Subsidies. | ||
I don't see anything in there for any kind of other actions that would foster industry in America. | ||
I see corporate tax breaks. | ||
That's bullshit. | ||
Corporate tax cuts is, you know, it's not something I'm necessarily against in itself. | ||
But we need a very targeted, directed industrial policy that is meant to protect the advanced industries of the future. | ||
We need tax credits. | ||
We need subsidies. | ||
We need government research and development. | ||
We need tariffs and import duties. | ||
We need export controls. | ||
We need to strengthen intellectual property protections. | ||
We need kind of like a whole of government approach on industry, not corporate tax cuts and austerity. | ||
So that's kind of my beef with what they're doing right now. | ||
It's not to say that I don't support it and there's a lot of super smart guys that are running it. | ||
You know, like these whiz kids. | ||
I support getting young people involved in government. | ||
You know, so it's not that I'm against it necessarily. | ||
It's just that I think it's maybe misdirected in some ways. | ||
And this is a story from the Associated Press. | ||
There's also just a lot of crap coming out of there. | ||
Elon is going around saying that they're tackling Social Security. | ||
They're going to find all this waste, fraud, and abuse, and they're going to cut all that. | ||
They're not actually going to fundamentally change how Social Security is administered. | ||
They're going to find waste, fraud, and abuse, and there's going to be all these cuts. | ||
And to bolster that argument, they say, well, we're going through the data, and we found that there are like 10 million people over the age of 120 who are obviously dead, but they're still considered in Social Security. | ||
And I suppose the implication, what we're supposed to believe when we hear that, is that all those people are receiving benefits, which would be pretty ridiculous if people that are 250 years old are getting Social Security. | ||
Well, there's a report out from AP that says that's not true at all, actually. | ||
And so this is the story. | ||
It says, quote, On Tuesday, Trump said at a press briefing in Florida that we have millions and millions of people over 100 years old. | ||
Receiving Social Security benefits. | ||
They're obviously fraudulent or incompetent. | ||
He said, if you take all those millions of people off Social Security, all of a sudden we have a very powerful Social Security with people that are 80, 70, and 90, but not 200. He said there's one person in the system listed as 360 years old. | ||
A July 2024 report from Social Security's Inspector General states that from fiscal years 2015 through 2022, the agency paid out almost $8.6 trillion in benefits, including $71.8 billion, or less than 1% in improper payments. | ||
That's $71 billion in seven years. | ||
So about $10 billion per year. | ||
We spend $5 to $7 trillion per year in that period. | ||
We're talking about $10 billion per year in waste. | ||
That's just to give you an idea of the math, the scope. | ||
It's not that much. | ||
It says most of the erroneous payments were overpayments to living people rather than to dead people. | ||
In addition, in early January, the Treasury clawed back more than $31 million in a variety of federal payments that improperly went to dead people. | ||
The money was reclaimed as part of a five-month pilot program after Congress gave the Treasury Department temporary access to the Social Security Administration's full death master file for three years as part of the Omnibus Appropriations Bill in 2021. The SSA maintains the most complete federal database of individuals who have died, | ||
and the file contains more than 142 million records going back to 1899. Part of the confusion comes from Social Security software system based on the COBOL programming language, which has a lack of date type. | ||
This means that some entries with missing or incomplete birth dates will default to a reference point of more than 150 years ago. | ||
Additionally, a series of reports from the SSA's Inspector General in March 2023 and July 24 State that the agency has not established a new system to properly annotate death information in its database, which included roughly 19 million Social Security numbers of people born in 1920 or earlier or not marked as deceased. | ||
This does not mean, however, that they were receiving benefits. | ||
A July 2023 Social Security Office of the Inspector General report states that almost none of the number holders discussed in the report So in other words, they're going around with these numbers saying, well, there's 10 million people in the database that are over 120 years old. | ||
And again, the implication is those people are getting benefits. | ||
But we have all these reports going back 10 years that say, The reason that that appears this way is because of a programming language in the database that they have, which improperly marks the year that they were born. | ||
It says that most of the waste is accruing to overpaying people rather than going dead people, and that the system automatically stops payments to people that are over the age of 115 anyway. | ||
And here's the point. | ||
Again, you want to cut the waste, great. | ||
But how much waste will you really find in Social Security? | ||
Because if it's 1%, it's not really enough. | ||
It's not really a lot. | ||
If you're going around and you're going to cut $80 billion from a program that's trillions of dollars, it's really a drop in the bucket. | ||
Is it not worthwhile? | ||
I don't know that it's not worthwhile, but I don't think it's as aggressive as what they're saying. | ||
I just don't think you're going to find all that much money, and I think that that's why they've got to prioritize other stuff. | ||
If they really wanted to grow their way out of the debt trap, which is what you have to do, then you need industrial policy. | ||
And it's not just a give me what they're—and this is what I'll lay out, and then we'll move on to the other story. | ||
The economic strategy that they are all in on is driving the deficit down so that the interest rate— It goes back down. | ||
Drive the deficit down. | ||
They're issuing less debt. | ||
Interest rates go down because of the laws of supply and demand. | ||
Bring the interest rates down, and this is what they're really after. | ||
They want interest rates to go way, way low again because low interest rates is what powers speculation on technology. | ||
Low interest rates is what fuels venture capitalism. | ||
When someone like Mark Andreessen or Sean McGuire is looking to spend billions of dollars on these super risky potential tech unicorns, you know, the next Uber, the next Airbnb, the next whatever, it's very risky. | ||
So when you're looking for these super, super risky tech companies, you want to invest in as many as you can. | ||
You want to get all that coverage in the event that one of them pops off. | ||
And if you're loaning out all that money, you need the money to be free to borrow. | ||
If you're borrowing all these billions of dollars to invest in all these super risky speculative tech companies, the money can't be super expensive to borrow. | ||
Because if the interest rates are high and it costs a lot to borrow money, then you can't invest in risky projects or as many of them. | ||
And you have to be a lot more conservative. | ||
And when that tightening occurs, it's the tech industry. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
It's Silicon Valley. | ||
It's venture capital. | ||
That's who takes the hit. | ||
And that's the slowdown that's been happening over the past couple of years because of the interest rate hikes. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
So they want to bring down the interest rates to make money free so that VC and all these tech companies can grow as much as possible. | ||
And what they really want to do is AI. They want to funnel all of that money into drones, AI, VR, all this stuff that's totally risky. | ||
And they think that when they pour all the money into AI, AI will become like God and will solve all our problems. | ||
That's literally what they believe because Elon wants to go to Mars and, you know, you can't live on Mars. | ||
You need to live underground. | ||
That's why he's got a tunneling company because they're going to have to drill underground and live underground. | ||
That's why he's doing a rocket ship company because they're going to send the supplies on rocket ships. | ||
That's why he has a battery company because it's going to run on batteries. | ||
Okay? | ||
Everything that Elon is doing is for that. | ||
And to answer a lot of these questions and find efficiencies and, you know, have these breakthroughs to get us to Mars, they need AI to be able to innovate. | ||
So this is the crazy strategy, and it's like in reality what we need the government to do. | ||
It's not to just give free money to venture capitalists to just pump it into their cronies' startups. | ||
It's for the government to have that power. | ||
It's for the government to make targeted investments. | ||
It's for the government to build up the labor force, for the government to put up trade barriers and protect trade, especially against China. | ||
As opposed to what they're doing right now. | ||
It's for the government to create a society that's more conducive to innovation. | ||
I mean, because the way it is right now, what they seem to be forgetting is that in 100 years, we're not going to have a country if you don't have law and order and some degree of homogeneity. | ||
If the country is just 10,000% diversity and it's a constant ethnic war and the people are low IQ. Or, you know, they have these cultures which are not conducive to the way of life that we have. | ||
It's, you're going to kill the golden goose, so to speak. | ||
So I think the, you know, this accelerationist approach where it's like, hey, we're screwed. | ||
Let's just pour as much, print as much money, pour it into tech, get technology to. | ||
Like, they take priority in allocation of resources. | ||
They get all the chips. | ||
They get all the materials so that they can build AI, and AI is going to solve all the problems. | ||
No one voted for that. | ||
No one voted for that. | ||
And I think that's misguided, and I think most people disagree with that. | ||
And yet that is the policy. | ||
That is the whole-of-government approach that's being undertaken. | ||
And that's when he realized that that is how the election was a sham. | ||
And what currently animates the White House is this distinct business interest. | ||
It's a distinct interest of one sector of the economy. | ||
And they have this ideology that they're going to get all the free money and they're going to build AI and they're going to become like gods and they're going to fix everything. | ||
And like, they got Trump in office so that they could do that, so they could get in there and make it happen. | ||
But that's not what anyone voted on. | ||
People voted on inflation, immigration, stuff like that. | ||
And that's why I was trying to tell people throughout the election, like, look, you think this is one thing, but really it's something else. | ||
And that should have been obvious. | ||
Elon did not give Trump $300 million to deport illegals. | ||
He gave Trump $300 million to get the administrative state off of his neck at Tesla and SpaceX to get competitive procurement. | ||
For SpaceX and Palantir and for XAI to relax safety and environment regulations on his companies, to secure the supply chains for his batteries, and for other electronics with lithium and cobalt and nickel and rare earths and things like that. | ||
That's why Elon gave $300 million. | ||
And that's why all the other tech people supported it too. | ||
And that's why they placed all these personnel. | ||
That's why they have all these influential. | ||
AI, crypto, and other czars in the government, these unofficial positions who are now advising everybody in government. | ||
So I just disagree with the whole direction of this thing. | ||
And what needs to emerge is a kind of forceful right-wing opposition to this technocratic idea. | ||
It's like a technological technocratic. | ||
And we need to push back against that and have a faction that says the social order of America takes precedence. | ||
The spiritual, moral, and social order of America takes precedence over some of these economic factors or perceived what they really are financial interests rather than economic factors. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the Ukraine war. | ||
And we'll talk about some of the developments on that front. | ||
So it looks like there's been a big breakthrough. | ||
You know, last week we covered the phone call between Trump and Putin. | ||
Last week Trump spoke on the phone with the Russian president for an hour and a half. | ||
And at the same time, the Secretary of Defense gave a press conference and gave some key concessions. | ||
And what's happening is two things here. | ||
On the one hand, there is a warming of relations. | ||
Under the Biden administration, after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, of course, Russia was completely severed and isolated from the international – I should say from the Western-led international system. | ||
We put sanctions on them, put sanctions on their personnel, financial sanctions, seized their assets, cut them off from the SWIFT payment system. | ||
And of course we're selling Ukraine weapons to kill the Russians and we're condemning them in the United Nations and kicking them out of supranational bodies and our companies are boycotting them and they're getting sanctioned at the Olympics and things like that. | ||
They're being treated like a pariah state. | ||
And there is no diplomatic relationship any longer between Washington and Moscow. | ||
And that's a problem because we're in a war with Moscow. | ||
And it's counterintuitive, but when you're in a war with another country, that's actually when you need a diplomatic relationship. | ||
Because that's how you negotiate an end to the war. | ||
That's also, by the way, how you negotiate other things. | ||
That's how you coordinate, in this very peculiar conflict, the rules of engagement. | ||
If the United States is giving weapons to Ukraine to kill Russians... | ||
It puts us in a situation where there could be miscalculations. | ||
What happens if a Russian missile comes at Ukraine and we don't know if there's a nuclear warhead on it? | ||
What happens if a weapon goes towards Ukraine and we think it's going to hit Poland? | ||
Or vice versa? | ||
And what happens if some... | ||
This miscalculation or misperception triggers a nuclear response or a direct attack or some unintended escalation. | ||
This is a very important word, miscalculation. | ||
This is what leads to uncontrollable conflicts. | ||
This is what leads to a world war. | ||
This is what leads to a nuclear war, especially when you have two nuclear superpowers which are engaged in a proxy war, which is increasingly a very direct shooting hot war. | ||
So you need a diplomatic relationship for rules of engagement to avert miscalculations and also so that you can expedite the end of the war with negotiations. | ||
That doesn't happen when you have a fanatical ideological regime like we had under Biden where we said, well, like Russia's not a democracy or whatever. | ||
So the only outcome is like they're going to be defeated utterly. | ||
And it's like, what do you think is going to happen? | ||
You think you're going to wipe Russia off the map? | ||
How do you think that's going to play out? | ||
I mean, seriously, you think we're going to overthrow Putin? | ||
We're not going to talk to Moscow until Ukraine takes back their territories or Putin's thrown out of office or Russia ceases to exist or we're in a war with them and destroy the whole world? | ||
Like, what exactly is the intended outcome? | ||
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So... | |
It was a very positive development last week that Trump and Putin spoke on the phone. | ||
And not only did they begin to thaw those relations by talking again, but Trump also gave up some, I don't know if they're concessions, but created a starting point for a negotiation. | ||
He said, look, Ukraine is never getting those territories back. | ||
Ukraine's also never joining NATO. And America will not have a military presence in Ukraine. | ||
All of those things would be non-starters for Russia in a negotiation. | ||
Russia would never accept any of those things. | ||
And Washington knew that. | ||
And Washington knew that probably that would be the basis of the deal. | ||
But they would never say it out loud. | ||
Because to say that would be to dispel the fiction, which is the war aims in Ukraine. | ||
You know, what they were saying for years is, no, no, we're going to beat Russia. | ||
Meaningfully lose the war, lose territory. | ||
Maybe the government will be dissolved. | ||
To say out loud, well, we're going to have to surrender. | ||
Ukraine's going to have to give it up. | ||
And they're not going to join NATO, and Russia's going to get what they want. | ||
It would have been heresy. | ||
So Hegseth, the Secretary of Defense last week, said, yeah, that is going to be the starting point. | ||
Which is sane. | ||
I mean, that's just sanity. | ||
We don't want to be in this war. | ||
We have our own other priorities, notably China. | ||
We don't want to go to war with Russia. | ||
We don't want to be in a war with Russia. | ||
So let's pick up the phone and let's just admit the reality, which is, look, good game. | ||
Russia won. | ||
Previous administration tried to call Russia's bluff. | ||
They weren't bluffing. | ||
They went in. | ||
The previous administration tried to stop them. | ||
It didn't work. | ||
Okay. | ||
And now this is the new reality. | ||
So that's a good step. | ||
And then today, Marco Rubio, the Secretary of State, traveled to Saudi Arabia, which is hosting the bilateral talks. | ||
Note that they are bilateral, not trilateral. | ||
Ukraine is being deliberately excluded from the talks. | ||
Rubio, Mike Waltz, and Steve Witkoff traveled to Saudi Arabia to meet with the Russian delegation. | ||
And they met for the first time, just like... | ||
It was the first time that the heads of state spoke. | ||
This is the first time that the foreign ministry spoke. | ||
And this is what happened at the meeting. | ||
This is from the New York Times. | ||
Or pardon, this is from antiwar.com. | ||
It says, quote, Following a high-level meeting between U.S. and Russian officials, the State Department said Washington and Moscow will begin taking steps to normalize the diplomatic relationship between the two superpowers. | ||
U.S.-Russian diplomacy sank during the first Trump administration, and Joe Biden cut nearly all contact with Russia after the invasion of Ukraine. | ||
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, and Middle East Envoy Steve Witkoff met with a Russian delegation led by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Tuesday. | ||
During a press conference after the meeting, Rubio said the parties agreed on four points. | ||
He said, quote, He | ||
said the last thing we agreed to is that while our teams are working on all this, the five of us that... | ||
We're here today are going to remain engaged in the process to make sure it's moving along in a productive way. | ||
While Tuesday's talks were the first significant effort aimed at ending the war in Ukraine since April 2022, Trump's effort to engage with Russia has been condemned by much of the political class in the West. | ||
Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky has said he will refuse to abide by any agreement inked between the U.S. and Russia. | ||
Which you just love to see. | ||
You love to see that he thinks that he's going to stand in the way. | ||
But this is a very positive development, and this is consistent with what the Trump administration really is, which is that they are, to the core, China hawks. | ||
More than anything, what Silicon Valley and the Bannonites, Trump crew, What they all have in common, Mike Waltz, Elbridge Colby, Rubio, they're all China hawks. | ||
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And what's the significance of this? | |
When the United States isolated Russia, Russia was forced to deepen its strategic alliance with China. | ||
And they signed a treaty to that effect, a permanent security cooperation agreement. | ||
I believe that was two years ago or one year ago. | ||
And I've said before on the show, Russia and China are not natural allies. | ||
Never have been. | ||
As a matter of fact, they're actually natural adversaries, strictly speaking, because they share such a massive border. | ||
They have a massive border. | ||
They're both nuclear powers with large militaries. | ||
They're both exporters of natural resources. | ||
And so by those facts alone, that makes them... | ||
It makes them adversaries. | ||
And historically, they have been. | ||
Even during the communist days, the United States engaged in a trilateral diplomacy between Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China. | ||
And so the big geopolitical transition that is taking place in this century, of course, it goes without saying, is the rise of China. | ||
It's a nation of a billion people with a purchasing power that is greater than the United States, industrial capacity that has already exceeded the United States. | ||
They have large middle class. | ||
The people are educated. | ||
They have a shipbuilding capacity that rivals the United States. | ||
Actually, it's like 400 times greater. | ||
Their navy is bigger. | ||
Their navy in the Pacific is bigger. | ||
It's going to become far bigger than ours in the coming years. | ||
And China will compete with the United States for hegemony in the region, in Asia. | ||
And then, because of the Belt and Road Initiative, they will compete for global hegemony with the United States. | ||
They're building ports, bridges, highways, cables, all kinds of infrastructure, which has dual use, commercial use, and could be converted to military use. | ||
In every continent in the world, nearly every country on the planet is involved in Belt and Road and is receiving Chinese credit in some form. | ||
And so this is the great global competition. | ||
It is a new Cold War. | ||
It is a new arms race. | ||
In every way, it's that. | ||
Now, if China is the priority, you know, when Obama inaugurated this pivot to Asia, shifting our focus away from counterterrorism in the Middle East, Shifting away from countering Russia and Europe towards the Pacific, if that was a change inaugurated by Obama, | ||
continued under Trump, continued under Biden, will continue under this administration during a very critical period, it would follow then that not only can we not be involved in Ukraine fighting this war when we need to be countering China, it's the opposite. | ||
We actually should be working with Russia. | ||
If Russia is a strategic asset to China, we should be working to wrest that from China rather than the opposite, which is driving Russia into China's arms. | ||
And what we've done in the Ukraine war is exactly that. | ||
We have pushed Russia into strategic cooperation with China, where Russia is providing China with oil and advanced technology and military equipment. | ||
And in exchange, China is, they're buying it. | ||
And they're making up for what Russia was receiving from the United States. | ||
And this is like the nightmare coalition. | ||
To have Russia, China, Iran, and the African countries working together, this is a recipe for disaster. | ||
Because the future of competition between the U.S. and China, among other things, Like shipbuilding and espionage and these industries of the future, at its core, eventually will become a war about minerals, a war about raw materials. | ||
Because in order to build these technologies of the future, the electronics, the optics, the batteries, electric vehicles, drones, Because it's really a battery revolution, which is driving the drone revolution, driving a lot of these things. | ||
You're going to need the raw materials that China has, that Africa has, that Russia has, that are in Central Asia, that are in Kazakhstan, that are in the Middle East, that are in Afghanistan, that are in the Congo. | ||
And if Russia and China are working together, and if they control Central Asia, if they control the Indo-Pacific... | ||
If China becomes the hegemon of the Pacific, and if they use their credit to buy off Africa and Latin America, very quickly we find ourselves in a precarious situation where we are on the back foot. | ||
So when Rubio says we're talking about bringing an end to the war and then talking about geopolitical and economic cooperation in the aftermath, this is what he is talking about. | ||
This is what Trump was talking about years ago. | ||
This is what should have been the strategic thinking in the beginning of the 21st century for people that were prescient. | ||
So that's where all of this is headed. | ||
It's China hawks. | ||
They're prioritizing China over Russia, over Iran, and other conflicts in the Middle East. | ||
They want to put all our resources into Taiwan. | ||
They believe that China will invade Taiwan. | ||
They believe that China is unconcerned at the prospect that the United States would intervene directly to defend Taiwan. | ||
So China believes that they could go in and take it. | ||
And Taiwan will not be able to repel the attack and the United States won't intervene on their behalf. | ||
And China believes, and American planners believe, that if China is successful in doing that, then the Philippines is next, Vietnam is next. | ||
The dominoes start to fall, and then China, or rather the Pacific, becomes China's playground. | ||
And the most important shipping, all the commerce, all the population, Asia being increasingly the most important region in the world, will then be controlled by China. | ||
And subsequently, consequently, China will rule the 21st century, or the latter half of it. | ||
That's the big idea. | ||
So how do we arrest that development? | ||
How do we contain China? | ||
We need to bolster our existing Quad allies, Japan, India, Australia. | ||
We have to continue to bolster the security of Taiwan. | ||
We need to continue to build naval bases in Indonesia and Philippines and keep up the island chain around China and then cut off that land-based Silk Road. | ||
Economic belt that would run through Central Asia and Russia. | ||
That's the big idea. | ||
That's the big geopolitical game that's being played here. | ||
That's the new strategic thinking. | ||
So it is about pulling Russia from China's orbit. | ||
And, you know, that does put Putin in a good position because then he gets to play China and the United States off of each other for his benefit. | ||
And this is really the birth of, like, a truly multipolar world order. | ||
Where different poles are not aligned. | ||
You've got many players. | ||
You've got stronger players. | ||
You've got middle powers. | ||
Weaker players. | ||
And you've got big powers like Russia. | ||
That's an arms provider. | ||
A security provider. | ||
Petra state. | ||
You've got China, which has credit, which has a lot of things. | ||
United States, which has everything. | ||
But then you've got middle powers. | ||
You've got Turkey playing. | ||
Russia off the United States. | ||
You've got Brazil playing China off the United States. | ||
Saudi Arabia playing the United States and China. | ||
You've got Europe now thinking about what they're calling strategic autonomy, where they're not totally beholden to Washington. | ||
And, you know, of course, this is something that was... | ||
You know, Europe was drifting closer to Russia until the Ukraine war. | ||
Then that, now it's gone in the other direction. | ||
But, you know, who knows? | ||
Maybe if Washington pushes them far enough, maybe they will look toward China for artificial intelligence. | ||
That's what Vance's speech at Munich was about on some level. | ||
So, anyway, so this is the geopolitical game that's being played. | ||
I support it. | ||
I think that I do agree that China is the biggest threat to American dominance if you're talking about. | ||
Now, if you want to expedite the collapse of the American state, you would say we want China to win. | ||
But if you are the American state, you're saying that what's good for the state is that China is contained. | ||
So, I mean, their thinking isn't entirely wrong. | ||
It just depends on kind of what your perspective is. | ||
Because for a long time, I would say. | ||
Hey, man, I want China to win because America is controlled by the Jews. | ||
So when you say, well, America needs to do this, what you're really saying is, like, this is what's good for the Jews to control America. | ||
So, you know, I'm a little bit ambivalent about who's actually going to win this one. | ||
I'm a little ambivalent about, you know, because America wins and it's like... | ||
I love America. | ||
At the same time, who's really winning, you guys? | ||
Who's really winning? | ||
When America wins, who's really winning? | ||
Because I don't feel like we really won the last few battles. | ||
It was another group. | ||
I mean, did we win? | ||
That's why we got all these brown people dumped on us. | ||
That was our fucking prize. | ||
Everybody goes and dies. | ||
We win the war. | ||
We drop the bomb. | ||
We win the Cold War. | ||
All right, America's made the world safe for democracy, defeated fascism, defeated communism, collapsed the Nazis, then the Soviets. | ||
Here's your prize. | ||
100 million brown people in your neighborhood. | ||
100 million brown people that hate you. | ||
All right, sweet. | ||
Meanwhile, Israel, it just gets land. | ||
Israel gets bigger. | ||
It gets more fascist, more powerful. | ||
They're the winners. | ||
Who's better off? | ||
Israel's bigger than it was 20 years ago. | ||
America's browner than it was 20 years ago. | ||
Who's winning exactly here? | ||
You know, your neighborhood is filled with Mexicans now. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
I am Mexican. | ||
So I, you know... | ||
So I'm in a Mexican neighborhood. | ||
I'm Mexican. | ||
Okay. | ||
But your neighborhood is all Mexicans now. | ||
I don't think that was really the victory you thought it was. | ||
So do we want to win so more of that can happen? | ||
Or maybe we do a tactical loss and then there's a period of civil unrest. | ||
You know, barbarian units are spawning in, barbarian pikemen, barbarian warriors are spawning and attacking your cities, pillaging your tile improvements, capturing your workers. | ||
And there's a period of civil unrest where you change your ideology and culture tree and you transition from Jewish control to something else. | ||
So there's many schools of thought on what's really good for, strictly speaking, we, us, the people here. | ||
But what's good for the American state, that is the right approach. | ||
If you're playing on the chessboard, the right approach is pry Russia. | ||
Pride Moscow from Beijing. | ||
Give them meaningful concessions. | ||
Integrate them economically. | ||
Integrate them strategically. | ||
Make them part of the solution rather than part of the problem with China. | ||
I mean, that is the right playbook, I believe. | ||
In terms of what's good for people like you and me. | ||
Radical people. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Seeing China invade Taiwan and land on Mars and everything. | ||
And all that. | ||
Maybe China will be like France in the American Revolution. | ||
You know, people forget that. | ||
People are like, you can never take foreign money. | ||
And I never have, but I am, like, unironically open to it. | ||
Because in the American Revolution, we would not have won without France. | ||
Okay? | ||
The American Revolution had great guys, great thinkers, great generals. | ||
Militia with fighting spirit and everything. | ||
But if they didn't have the French Navy coming in, if they didn't play a great power off of the imperial government, it wouldn't have happened. | ||
And this has been my thinking for a long time on this. | ||
People say, how is that America first? | ||
It's like, you don't know the history of America. | ||
And it's not to say like, hey, let's take Chinese money to like beat Republicans. | ||
I'm not saying that, but I'm saying like... | ||
Having other powers able to influence America, maybe not the worst thing. | ||
Because right now, another country is influencing America. | ||
It's not like that would be different. | ||
It's just that our country is controlled by Israel and Jews. | ||
And I don't know. | ||
I mean, maybe you need something from without to knock that off. | ||
To knock them off the proverbial horse. | ||
Is that an idiom? | ||
But you know what I'm saying. | ||
Knock them off the top of the hill. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
It's good stuff. | ||
Positive development. | ||
We want to see the war in Ukraine end because the worst case scenario is a nuclear war outside of the geopolitical thinking. | ||
But anyway, so that's that. | ||
But I want 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. | ||
My hair is getting a little ridiculous. | ||
I got to get a haircut. | ||
It's also too hot in here. | ||
It's like 2 million, 6 million degrees. | ||
It feels like an oven in here or something. | ||
Which is very inhumane. | ||
That's very inhumane. | ||
It's the worst atrocity in history. | ||
Oy vey. | ||
It's starting to feel like an oven in here. | ||
Anyway, I feel like I'm being thrown on a great pyre with millions of bodies day in and day out. | ||
And they're all burning up. | ||
They're all burning up at a record pace. | ||
They're burning up. | ||
So my hair's getting frizzy because of the heat. | ||
And I need a haircut. | ||
It's too long. | ||
All right, anyway, let's take a look at the Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
That's gay shit. | ||
You're a faggot. | ||
You are a gay faggot, dude. | ||
Video games are awesome. | ||
I don't know if this is a generational thing. | ||
If you're old, it's kind of forgivable. | ||
If you're like an old fart and you're like, video games are for incels, it's like you could be forgiven for ignorance. | ||
It's a generational thing. | ||
We get it. | ||
But if you're a young guy, you're just a cock-sucking LARPer. | ||
Honestly. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, don't play video games where real guys do stuff! | |
Like, really, nigger faggot? | ||
Like, I'm gonna be in my garage making furniture out of wood? | ||
Like, that's better than playing video games? | ||
It's fucking not. | ||
unidentified
|
It sucks. | |
I don't know what girl told you that. | ||
I don't know what stupid fucking bitch told you that, but that is not true. | ||
Video games are the perfect form of entertainment. | ||
Whether you're talking about a first-person shooter, strategy game, game that tests your reflexes, tests your mind. | ||
Literally, what is better than simulated violence other than violence itself? | ||
You know? | ||
Because that's sort of what it is. | ||
Search and destroy, whatever. | ||
And stuff like that versus like our strategy game where you're managing the economy or like war effort. | ||
You're playing like a 4X strategy game. | ||
It is literally the most superior form of entertainment. | ||
And if you don't get it, you're either an idiot or you're a LARPer or your girlfriend told you your girlfriend said, hey, hey, dude. | ||
Your girlfriend said, a real man doesn't play video games. | ||
Can't you go and, like, do something manly, like, with your hands? | ||
I'll do something manly with my hands. | ||
How about I throw you through a fucking wall? | ||
How about that? | ||
A real man does that. | ||
A real man doesn't drink milk in his coffee. | ||
How about a real man's gonna fucking break a coffee cup over your stupid bitch face? | ||
What do you think about that? | ||
Real man do that? | ||
Real man backhand you with a coffee cup? | ||
Real man throw coffee in your face? | ||
So I can't, no, I'm sorry, I can't abide that. | ||
Video games are a W. This is just LARP shit. | ||
unidentified
|
A real guy, real guy is like, you know. | |
We don't have time for this archaic stuff. | ||
Video games are perfect. | ||
So it's the best thing. | ||
And, you know, you're kind of right. | ||
It's a coping mechanism. | ||
But so is everything else, you know. | ||
So is the rest of it. | ||
You know, we listen to the sound of the waves on the ocean because it's relaxing, helps us cope, just like video games. | ||
We need to cope. | ||
The world is horrible. | ||
We need to cope. | ||
The world is a horrible place. | ||
And the only people that don't want you to cope are people that hate you. | ||
You know, these people would say, don't play. | ||
Don't chill out. | ||
Don't relax. | ||
This is like Vivek Ramaswamy type stuff, but... | ||
Super, like, feminist coded. | ||
So fuck you. | ||
Kill yourself. | ||
I seriously hate you. | ||
If I met you, I would instantly hate you. | ||
Because you're a fucking piece of shit and deserve death. | ||
unidentified
|
That's how I feel about, you know. | |
You know, like video games, dude. | ||
F you. | ||
Dude, shut the fuck up, piece of shit. | ||
You know, these people that super chat the show are just dirtbags. | ||
Why aren't you getting YouTube premium? | ||
Shut the fuck up. | ||
Like, does this all you fucking idiots think about? | ||
I complain about advertisements. | ||
I'm like, man, advertisements suck. | ||
Um, you could get premium. | ||
I know. | ||
Well, why don't you? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know, because I don't want to put my fucking card information in. | |
Like, can we just watch YouTube without these, like, punitive ads? | ||
Isn't that kind of like a load of garbage that the ads are literally inflicted? | ||
They're punitive in nature. | ||
Do you know that's what they are? | ||
The ads are meant to, like, in a very hot, they're hostile. | ||
They're made to ruin the experience. | ||
They're made to irritate you. | ||
That's their purpose. | ||
And you're like, why don't you just pay for premium? | ||
Why don't you just install an ad blocker? | ||
Because why do I have to go and install an ad blocker? | ||
I'm just trying to watch a YouTube video. | ||
And look, I could deal with like a commercial here and there. | ||
Everyone was fine. | ||
You know, when they said you have to watch a little preview before some of the videos, people said, yeah, all right. | ||
And then when people said, you can't skip them, people said, okay, got it. | ||
But then they start putting them in the middle of the video. | ||
These like mid-real advertisements that the creator can't even place. | ||
Then you got the ads that they read in the video. | ||
Then you have the stuff on the TV where they make you get up and pick up the remote and be on top of it. | ||
Like it's a job. | ||
I'm trying to watch a four-hour video about the Hundred Years War, and every five minutes, two-minute ad, and you've got to skip it twice. | ||
You've got to watch the clock, which the rate at which the clock expires is deceptively fast or slow. | ||
You have to be on top of it, watch it, and there's this narrow window where you could skip, and you skip it, and then it triggers another quick time event, and you've got to press it again. | ||
And I'm like, this is crazy. | ||
Like, whose idea was this? | ||
This person should be lynched. | ||
This person should be lynched. | ||
Like, legally, of course. | ||
Not actually. | ||
It's a joke, obviously. | ||
They should be given the death penalty. | ||
I'm giving out fucking death penalties on the show. | ||
I'm like, I'm going to YouTube. | ||
No, okay. | ||
Let's not go there. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
That's a joke. | ||
I was not in Minecraft. | ||
I'm going to YouTube headquarters in Minecraft. | ||
That's a joke. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no. | |
But like, that's a joke. | ||
I'm kidding, kidding, kidding, kidding. | ||
Obviously kidding. | ||
All I'm saying, all I'm expressing is my outrage. | ||
I'm just expressing my outrage that they would do this to us because they are doing it to you. | ||
Someone somewhere said, what if we made these assholes watch a 50-second advertisement? | ||
And then a quick time event where they have to press the skip button in a window and then they gotta press it again. | ||
Yeah, that'll show them. | ||
That'll make those assholes get up and get the remote on the coffee table and it'll be so fucking annoying they'll have to give us 18 bucks a month. | ||
That was literally the thought process. | ||
They hate you. | ||
Wake up, white man. | ||
They hate you. | ||
It's a humiliation ritual and a secular religion. | ||
They hate you. | ||
And we could just do things. | ||
You know, this is just like Skloven morale. | ||
This is slave morality. | ||
When you go and say, just buy the $18 ad, this is like saying, hey, just pay the stamp tax, dude. | ||
Just pay the T-tax. | ||
Hey, dude, it's not that bad. | ||
You know, if you're not guilty, you got nothing to hide. | ||
This is just like loyalist, this is Tory talk, okay? | ||
You fucking scum. | ||
This is loyalist talk. | ||
You'll be executed for this. | ||
You'll be executed for cowardice. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
And they are doing that. | ||
Do you have a reason for not getting the premium? | ||
For me, $18 a month is well worth. | ||
It's a dollar well spent. | ||
Well, you should consider suicide tonight. | ||
Okay, and that's my message to you, is that, among other things, you know what else would be well worth the Daily Shield? | ||
Buying a lot of ammunition, a firearm, to commit suicide later today, because you are a bitch. | ||
You are a pussy. | ||
Okay? | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
Don't commit suicide. | ||
That's a joke. | ||
Don't commit suicide. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
Obviously, don't commit suicide. | ||
Don't shoot yourself. | ||
I'm kidding, of course. | ||
But you do need to consider your life choices. | ||
You do need to reflect a little bit and say, why am I willingly giving my abusers $18 a month? | ||
You're like a vassal. | ||
You're giving up a tribute because you are a suzerain of Indian programmers. | ||
Like, that's what that is. | ||
Well, if you just pay the $18, they'll leave you alone. | ||
Just pay the $18. | ||
No, I will not. | ||
I will not do that. | ||
I will not do that on principle. | ||
I will not be coerced into giving them $18. | ||
Okay, if I'll pay the $18, you know, I thought about doing it, but when they did that, that was like an act of war. | ||
I thought about buying YouTube Premium, and then they did that. | ||
That's like an act of war. | ||
Now I'm never giving you $18 a month. | ||
Now I'm never doing that. | ||
I will continue to deprive them. | ||
I will not look at the ads. | ||
So anyway. | ||
But I don't know why we're still on this. | ||
Like, I'm complaining about the ads. | ||
You should be with me. | ||
You should be like, yeah, good point. | ||
unidentified
|
It is BS. You're like, why don't you just pay up? | |
Alex Karp published his first book this week, which is calling for a new Manhattan project for Silicon Valley. | ||
Do you plan on reading slash reviewing it? | ||
Maybe. | ||
Again, terrible question. | ||
Do you plan on reading a book? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, thanks for telling me. | |
Yeah. | ||
What are you going to do with that information? | ||
Hey, this guy wrote a book. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you going to read it? | |
Maybe. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
What are you going to do with that information? | ||
Now that I've told you maybe, what are you going to do with that information? | ||
What itch did that scratch for you to ask that? | ||
I've already said it. | ||
They strategically avoid third-rail commentary while serving as a filtering mechanism to prevent people from gravitating toward more extreme causes. | ||
Hey, hey, dumbass. | ||
I wrote an essay about it, like, two days ago on Telegram. | ||
Pretty fly white guy sent $5. | ||
Do you keep speeding up the superchats? | ||
Uh, no. | ||
No, they're 1.6. | ||
Haddock sent $5. | ||
Hey, Nick, thanks for all your work. | ||
Are you familiar with Al-Ansewurl? | ||
He's a French activist and author that's been pretty cutting-edge on many topics. | ||
Red pill-slash-dating stuff in the 80s. | ||
Critique of neocons in the 90s. | ||
Great friend of Leif Orson. | ||
Nope. | ||
Haddock sent $5. | ||
Though he comes from Marxism, there's overlap between you two. | ||
He's worked to more perennial positions, drawing on Gnone, Elul, French Catholicism. | ||
In that, he speaks of a certain left-slash-right synthesis versus technical battle, one you've hinted at yesterday. | ||
I'll look him up. | ||
See, this is a good super chat. | ||
I wish it wasn't spread across three different ones, but... | ||
I like that. | ||
Very good Think so? | ||
There are no generals. | ||
I'm firing all the generals, okay? | ||
There are no... | ||
People think there's generals. | ||
There are no generals. | ||
People think I'm like in a war room with the generals. | ||
I don't fucking talk to. | ||
It's just me, okay? | ||
It's always been just me. | ||
This whole Groyper general thing, that was something literally six years ago. | ||
And ever since 2021, it basically ceased to exist. | ||
Okay, after January 6th, all the Groyper generals from Groyper War flaked, and now it's just me. | ||
So people now just use that as a pejorative. | ||
It's like if some guy is like, you know, does something embarrassing, they say, oh, that's a Groyper general. | ||
It's like that's not a real thing, okay? | ||
So, you know, we just got to... | ||
Like, forget about that and let that go. | ||
Greatest Gooner sent $100. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Greatest Gooner. | ||
W. Awoken American sent $5. | ||
You looked way too annoyed coming back from that DoorDash last night. | ||
They must have fucked up your order. | ||
Very good. | ||
unidentified
|
Very funny. | |
By the time you see this, I would have already finished my 21-hour shift. | ||
Probably going to end it all NGL. Gong Triad sent $5. | ||
Hey, Nick. | ||
Just found your channel back during the election. | ||
Do you think Trump is only pretending to be on Netanyahu's side until Saudi Arabia forms an alliance with Iran? | ||
Love the show 07. | ||
Real Donald Trump sent $10. | ||
I can't help but notice that Chuck Johnson was right about the Russian Jewish mob owning the GOP. | ||
Why else would the Republicans be so against Ukraine? | ||
And it's not that I'm for Ukraine or anything. | ||
That is true. | ||
Wallflower sent $5. | ||
I'm American, but of Russian citizenship also. | ||
I don't want to move to Russia. | ||
Their food sucks. | ||
I went to this Russian restaurant in L.A., and one of my Jewish best friends... | ||
Was like, oh, you got to go to this Georgian restaurant in LA and in the Valley. | ||
So I go to this restaurant. | ||
He's like, oh, yeah, you got to go. | ||
It's so good. | ||
And I'm like, yeah. | ||
He goes, yeah. | ||
I'm like, what should I get? | ||
He's like, get the pickled herring, the beet salad. | ||
The – and the – there's like some potato thing. | ||
It's like a potato thing with like a – or no, it's like a dumpling with a potato filling. | ||
And I get the borscht as well because that's just like the staple. | ||
And I go there and it's like fucking fish toast. | ||
It's like a piece of like fucking fish, like a straight up peach hunk of a fish. | ||
Like if you cut a little chunk of a fish off and put it on a piece of toast, like fish toast. | ||
The beet salad is like beets and mayonnaise. | ||
It's just like purple salad. | ||
And then the borscht is just, I mean, I don't know. | ||
I mean, soup, weird taste. | ||
And then a dumpling with a fucking tuber in it, with a potato in it. | ||
And I'm like, dude, why would you tell me to get this? | ||
This is like, sucks. | ||
This is peasant. | ||
This is surf food. | ||
It's not even peasant food. | ||
I think peasants were eating like mutton. | ||
I think peasants were eating cheese. | ||
Where's the fucking cheese? | ||
This is just like... | ||
unidentified
|
This is surf food. | |
This is like prisoner food. | ||
Who is this even for? | ||
Why are we eating this in the 21st century? | ||
There's an In-N-Out down the street. | ||
You can pay $5 for meat, for a hamburger, for a beef on a bun with cheese, and we're eating a pickled herring on a little toast? | ||
What's the matter with you? | ||
It's just crazy. | ||
It's like eating grass. | ||
Like, let's just eat grass and tree bark, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
So, that was insane. | |
I can't do it. | ||
What's the last question? | ||
and Oh, which do... | ||
Side with? | ||
I haven't heard those groupings before. | ||
Carlisle and Shakespeare and Nietzsche and Gerta. | ||
I like Gerta. | ||
I like Carlisle. | ||
I like Shakespeare. | ||
I like them all. | ||
I like them all. | ||
Why do we have to choose? | ||
But what's even the question? | ||
Pizza Diaco sent $150. | ||
Where did I go wrong? | ||
I lost a friend somewhere along in the bitterness, and I would have stayed up with you all night had I known how to save a life. | ||
Yeah, those are the lyrics. | ||
Thank you for the big super, excuse me, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
I'm having a lot of issues lately. | ||
I don't know what's going on. | ||
A lot of like GI issues. | ||
I don't know if it's my diet or what, but just like a lot of like acid reflux and stuff. | ||
Anyway, sorry for, excuse me for that burp. | ||
But yeah, but thank you for the huge super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Pizza, Diet Coke. | ||
I could go for that. | ||
I go for a little of that. | ||
Okay. | ||
It really is. | ||
That is the right word for it. | ||
It's dreadful. | ||
It's dreadful and blackpilling and depressing. | ||
second post down on my ex-accounted amshiakin you may enjoy it is a gas chamber oh fuck off fresh garbage five cent ten dollars loneliness has followed me my whole life everywhere in cars and bars sidewalks stores everywhere there's no escape i'm god's lonely man that's such like a pick me incel quote but it's so true That's such like an incel pick-me, like, I'm the lonely guy, but it's so true. | ||
Like, yeah, I really am the taxi driver. | ||
Thank you. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Give him a firm handshake. | ||
Make sure you get your shoes shined. | ||
Look him in the eyes. | ||
Be confident. | ||
Be yourself. | ||
That's my advice. | ||
If so, please organize a Groyper meetup Based Mood said $5 What are your thoughts on Steph winning All-Star MVP over Tatum When Tatum dropped more points for Team Shaq than Curry at NBA All-Star Weekend Dude, shut up Zigzag Groyper sent $10 Hey. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Yeah, you should do that. | ||
He's still going on Telegram, but I don't really know. | ||
I don't really know what he's up to. | ||
So it's been a minute. | ||
Ryan Corselius sent $5. | ||
Thoughts on who is the greatest American songwriter to ever live? | ||
I say Tom Petty. | ||
Tom Petty's pretty good. | ||
Greatest American songwriter. | ||
Oh, yay. | ||
Easy. | ||
Yay. | ||
Kanye West. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'd have to think about that. | ||
I don't really know enough about the behind-the-scenes stuff, you know? | ||
I know the music. | ||
I know the songs. | ||
But I don't know enough about, like, the personnel. | ||
I'm not a music nerd like that. | ||
The track listing. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
But Tom Petty's good. | ||
Brother Nathaniel sent $10. | ||
Hi, Nick. | ||
How do you feel about accepting my apologies for my missteps on my part toward you? | ||
I don't want anything to do with you. | ||
So, go away. | ||
Pinnock sent $10. | ||
It's not public information yet, but my friend Adelta told me that the pilot from the recent crash is a woman. | ||
Really? | ||
Oh my goodness. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Damn, that's crazy, bro. | |
Oh my... | ||
Like, can we just... | ||
Everything's just so tired. | ||
Like, I'm just so... | ||
Can something new occur like a DEI plane crash? | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Like, bruh. | ||
We've seen this movie before. | ||
We've seen it all before. | ||
Thanks. | ||
- Yes, thank you. - Andy Sennigat sent $10. | ||
With 10 million bricks, you could build about 10 apartment buildings. | ||
With 2 trillion, you could build whole Manhattan from scratch and have more than 10 million left over. | ||
Also, Keith can retweet you all he wants He is still a bitch nigga. | ||
Old Keith Woods. | ||
What are we going to do with him, chat? | ||
Chat, what are we going to do with him? | ||
W or L, Keith Woods? | ||
Let me take the temp. | ||
All right, chat. | ||
W or L, Keith Woods? | ||
Thoughts? | ||
What are we thinking? | ||
W or L, Keith? | ||
I got to wait for the chat to catch up. | ||
unidentified
|
L, L, L, W, W, L, L. Hmm, a lot of L's. | |
A lot of L's. | ||
Yeah, it's mostly L's. | ||
Not today. | ||
Maybe someday, but not today, my friend. | ||
Maybe someday, but not today, my friend. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah, look, I'm trying to be a little more friendly. | ||
The older I get, I'm just becoming a curmudgeon. | ||
Everybody pisses me off. | ||
I'm just like... | ||
You know, and I don't know, is it me? | ||
But the older I get, everybody's bothering me, and I'm picking fights with everybody, and it's like, not to publicly doubt myself, but I'm like, damn. | ||
But at the same time, I'm right about everything, so I'm justified, but it's like, you know, maybe I just got to be diplomatic for the sake of the movement. | ||
A Moe Cent $5. | ||
The cultural difference between white and black people is what makes us special and makes us appreciate each other. | ||
Mixing destroys both. | ||
That's just like a gay take. | ||
I hate that take. | ||
Mario Suarez sent $20. | ||
You're an extremely intelligent and insightful person and you have a buoyant and joyful spirit which emanates every time you speak. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Chipper and jovial. | ||
That's what they call me. | ||
Shut up. | ||
Previews are good. | ||
Previews are better than the movie. | ||
That's my hot take. | ||
I actually like movie trailers better than the movie because movie trailers, for some reason, they just hit harder than the movie itself. | ||
Like, I remember the trailer for True Grit when that movie came out with Jeff Bridges. | ||
It was the coolest trailer ever. | ||
And the trailer for Inception and the trailer for Cloud Atlas. | ||
Remember that one? | ||
I love that movie. | ||
Cloud Atlas is one of my favorite movies when I was a kid. | ||
Gets no recognition, but I still love it. | ||
But that was a good trailer. | ||
I think the trailers are actually better than the movies, often. | ||
More energy. | ||
More energy, better. | ||
I 100% would. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
When it's a big ticket item, well, it depends on what it is. | ||
When it's a used car, the custom is to haggle. | ||
It's customary. | ||
And the reason why it matters if it's customary is because if it is expected that you will haggle, then they will try to rip you off. | ||
If you buy the car at the price they give you, They expect that they're going to come down. | ||
It's like a negotiating tactic. | ||
So if you go and say, oh, I'll just take your price, then you're going to end up paying more. | ||
So I think it sort of depends on the custom. | ||
Other stuff that you buy, like a super expensive concert ticket or you go to Balenciaga and buy a pair of shoes, you've got to pay full price. | ||
You've got to pay full price. | ||
It sort of defeats the purpose if you get it. | ||
I think that's really... | ||
To get like designer stuff secondhand or like in a Jew-y way. | ||
The whole point is to pay full boat. | ||
That's why you flex it. | ||
To pretend is really cringe. | ||
But for something like a fundraiser, that falls into the latter category. | ||
You make the contribution because you're – it's like just an excuse to support the cause. | ||
So yeah, I would lose respect for a person that does that. | ||
I thought he got a pony up. | ||
But thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
So not for something like that. | ||
Don't haggle with me. | ||
Okay. | ||
Get the fuck out of here with that. | ||
kill yourself. | ||
Up North Canada, grow up and send $5. | ||
The information you have shared on Pudgy, Vance, I had no idea about and most people probably have no idea about. | ||
That's true. | ||
Leroy Baggins sent $5. | ||
America's operating system is rotten to the core. | ||
Try ordering a pizza, navigating the fake tech, remote jeats, and blacks. | ||
It's infuriating and broken. | ||
We're in an AI race but can't even do the basics. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
I think they probably could. | ||
I think they probably could. | ||
But, I mean, I think the main difference is that the building that Hania stayed at, allegedly Israel had planted those explosives there. | ||
Months before. | ||
And I would bet that the Ayatollah has better security than Guest. | ||
So, I mean, people believe that Israel killed the president of Iran, Raisi, Abraham Raisi, last year. | ||
So I think they probably could if they really wanted to, but it would be destabilizing. | ||
And, you know, if they decapitated the Iranian regime and they killed the Ayatollah, then... | ||
The next regime will go to war with Israel. | ||
So, I think they have to be more artful about it. | ||
CC Red 95 sent $10. | ||
Good show. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Molly Hayes sent $10. | ||
You have said before that the way Trump ended ISIS was by stopping the money flow. | ||
Why would he not do the same with illegals? | ||
No free shit? | ||
I actually believe they would really self-deport. | ||
That's just stupid. | ||
Because there's really no way to... | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
When you say, well, you're just doing stuff, the money flow. | ||
The way that you do that is something like mandatory E-Verify, but the interest would never go for that. | ||
So they're actually not doing that. | ||
I mean, what we would like is for H.R. 2 to be included in this upcoming budget bill, its immigration policy, and we'd like included in that is nationwide E-Verify. | ||
The problem is the interest will never go for that, and they always carve out these exceptions, like in Florida. | ||
In Florida, they did an executive order for E-Verify. | ||
Except they said that if you have a company with fewer than 25 employees, you are accepted from the executive order. | ||
You don't have to use E-Verify. | ||
So what do you think all these companies did? | ||
They used that loophole, and they started a bunch of corporations with fewer than 25, and they're all under a big corporation. | ||
They're all owned by the same person or whatever, but they do everything they can to get through the loophole, and now it's not effective. | ||
So, yeah, I mean, I think that's a real possibility, but that's just not even something they're talking about. | ||
They won't even say E-Verify because they know they'll never get it. | ||
Like Vance would say, we'll make it harder for them to employ, but he wouldn't say E-Verify because if he said E-Verify, he'd be expected to make good on that and he knows they're not going to get it. | ||
So they just make this vague promise, we're just going to make it harder for them to employ. | ||
Okay, well, it's also super profitable to employ illegals, so if the firms can do it, they will. | ||
If they can get away with it, they will. - Perseus sent $5. | ||
Regardless of what kind of admin we get, it best we will get half measures. | ||
I think a default is inevitable. | ||
Politicians are incentivized to expand or maintain benefits or else they lose their election. | ||
The sooner it happens, the better. | ||
The king of the night sent $100. | ||
First time ever sending super chat to a streamer. | ||
Literal African Canadian Muslim living in Toronto here. | ||
FNF fan that started watching you around six months ago after seeing that Myron has been publicly vouching for you. | ||
Big groiper now. | ||
Your monologues are just great and get better every day. | ||
Praying for your safety. | ||
Capital of Benin. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
I don't know the capital of Benin. | ||
Yeah, I don't know that one. | ||
Africa, I forgot. | ||
I used to know them all when I was in college because I took an African studies class, but I don't remember Benin anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
But I appreciate the big super chat. | ||
African-Canadian Muslim, bruh. | ||
You're not helping us beat the allegations. | ||
You gotta go home. | ||
But I appreciate the super chat. | ||
I'm teasing you a little bit, kind of. | ||
But I appreciate the compliment as well. | ||
Glad you like the monologues. | ||
But I don't know about... | ||
I know where it is. | ||
I'm on the Capitol, though. | ||
Ryan Corsillius sent $5. | ||
Hair looks marvelous. | ||
Know anything off the top of your head about the only Vancouver in America? | ||
And, um... | ||
Isn't it in Washington State? | ||
I don't know a ton about it. | ||
I vaguely remember it from when we did the Joe Kent campaign. | ||
unidentified
|
pain. | |
Am I right about that? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah, I vaguely remember it because that was the major city in Joe Kent's district when he was running, but I don't know anything about it other than that. | ||
Nate Hicks sent $5. | ||
I am an America First CPA. | ||
Do you think that can be useful to the movement besides hiring white Americans only? | ||
Or maybe do I just need to donate more than a measly $5? | ||
Am I only good for a little bit of money? | ||
That would be helpful. | ||
CPA is helpful. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Thank you! | ||
That's the benefit of it, you know? | ||
It's like, cleans you out. | ||
In the morning, you drink your coffee, eat your breakfast, take a shit, you're ready for the day. | ||
Caffeinated, you're ready to take on the day. | ||
It has so many benefits. | ||
Caffeine, specifically coffee, flushes you out, gives you energy, suppresses your appetite, and it's like a delicious hot drink. | ||
It's perfect. | ||
It's like the only good thing about adult life. | ||
That's the only good thing. | ||
That's such like a stereotype, and it's so sad, but it's also true. | ||
Being an adult sucks in literally every way that you can possibly imagine. | ||
Other than that, you have coffee in the morning. | ||
unidentified
|
That's like so cringe, but it's so true. | |
Because that is, you watch like that Hub's Life guy. | ||
You watch Hub's Life and he goes, the best part of my day, looking forward to my coffee. | ||
And his life is so miserable and sad. | ||
He like wakes up in that godforsaken house in fucking Texas. | ||
And drinks his coffee. | ||
And he goes to work and eats lunch out of like a Tupperware. | ||
Is there anything more degrading than that, than being an adult man and eating out of a Tupperware? | ||
Rich people. | ||
Every day, rich people eat on a charger and a plate. | ||
And they'll have a super salad. | ||
You know, every day, rich people will eat on a real plate. | ||
And they will drink out of real glassware. | ||
And that is how they eat all their meals. | ||
And they eat it in a dining room. | ||
And you eat your food out of a Tupperware container like a fucking mouse. | ||
Like a gerbil. | ||
It's literally like a small animal pet. | ||
Like a rabbit or a guinea pig. | ||
It's like you are in your little cubicle, your workstation, eating out of a Tupperware, reheating an enchilada or something. | ||
You went to Panera Bread. | ||
Panera Bread's okay, I guess. | ||
That's not so bad. | ||
He went to Panera. | ||
That's pretty good. | ||
But it's like, so that's his, like, he goes to work. | ||
The work is just, like, miserable. | ||
Life sucks. | ||
You eat your little Tupperware lunch, drive home, like, watch TV. Watch TV, go to the gym, walk your gay-ass dog. | ||
His dog's the worst dog I've ever seen in my life. | ||
And like the only thing that's redeeming about that entire day that he had was the coffee at the very beginning. | ||
It's the only thing that hits 100%. | ||
Like 10 out of 10. Everything else is you have to cope about it. | ||
Everything else you have to tell yourself a narrative about yourself. | ||
That, like, doesn't create existential misery. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, hey, this is better than what most people have. | |
You know, he's like a 29-year-old guy with, like, a full-time office job and a house. | ||
And he's got to tell himself, like, hey, I'm, you know, doing a lot better than other people my age. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, at least I got a roof over my head. | |
Hey, at least, you know, I got a wife that loves me and blah, blah, blah. | ||
You have to tell yourself, like, this kind of stuff. | ||
You have to construct, like, this elaborate, convoluted conceit, you know, this narrative to... | ||
Stave off existential misery. | ||
And it's like the only thing that you don't have to do that about is coffee. | ||
Because rich or poor, you're all in on the cup of joe. | ||
Then things start to diverge. | ||
Then the experience begins to diverge a little bit. | ||
But the cup of joe, you know, we can all... | ||
We're all drinking that up. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Schizogale sent $5. | ||
I bought a property in Israel. | ||
and what they do for you is they don't give it to you. | ||
Wonder Pets Patriot sent $10. | ||
You're absolutely right about ads being punitive in nature. | ||
I still remember the Spotify premium ads that played kitten squealing or chainsaws and said get premium to avoid all ads. | ||
Might as well spit on me. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Santa Cruz glory percent five dollars. | ||
Here's a drama alert. | ||
You're a fucking loser. | ||
Matt Walsh. | ||
Shabas Koi race trader greatest hits. | ||
Matt Walsh. | ||
These people exist. | ||
What's the last part of it? | ||
I don't get the last part. | ||
Literally. | ||
Every time Dude Shut up Why are we doing that? | ||
unidentified
|
Favorite book on the Holocaust to recommend to friends? | |
It's like, is this my life now? | ||
Is this my life? | ||
Can I apologize? | ||
Can I recant my racism and just be... | ||
Is this my life now, getting asked by teenagers? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, what's your favorite book on World War II, the Holocaust, to red pill my normie friends so they don't think I'm crazy? | |
Well, you are crazy. | ||
It's like this is my life forever and ever. | ||
Brother. | ||
Why don't you touch grass? | ||
Have you ever thought of that? | ||
Why don't you get a cookbook? | ||
Why don't you get some bitches? | ||
Francis. | ||
He has recently been diagnosed of bronchitis and bilateral pneumonia. | ||
Lord, heal your servant, Francis. | ||
Yes, we are praying for the Pope. | ||
Commonwealth grow a percent $10. | ||
He who uses a palantir may look into the future and see what is to come, but he may also be deceived by the will of Sauron, for the dark Lord can manipulate what is seen. | ||
Gandalf. | ||
I will feel a lot more uneasy about this if I wasn't a Palantir shareholder. | ||
Office of Special Plans 2. Yep. | ||
unidentified
|
Well said. | |
Jason Murphy sent $10. | ||
Is Trump being compromised by Doge behavior, especially Doge security breaches via big balls, leading to a real impeachment in J.D. Vance presidency if he ever decides to put Israel second? | ||
unidentified
|
Possible. | |
It's like House of Cards. | ||
Energy Groyper sent $5. | ||
Groyper generals out. | ||
Key Groyper lieutenants in. | ||
The Key Groyper lieutenants. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Key Groyper sent $5. | ||
Is it true that Hibad Lubevich believed the Reverend killed Stalin? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
No, no, I've never heard that before. | ||
Black Balaclava sent $5. | ||
Book Club, USA, Books. | ||
unidentified
|
Yup, Book Club. | |
Master 90 2019 sent $10. | ||
Nick, I recently started watching, I want to ask you what exactly did you say to Trump? | ||
Did you look him in the eyes and say it's the Jews? | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
You're just like mentally unwell. | ||
Or really, really dumb. | ||
Either way, we need some elite human capital. | ||
Richard Hanani, if you can hear us, please save us. | ||
unidentified
|
Richard Hanani, if you can hear us. | |
Forgive me. | ||
unidentified
|
Forgive me. | |
The wages of low IQ anti-Semitism. | ||
unidentified
|
These are the wages of low IQ anti-Semitism. | |
I'm sorry! | ||
I didn't know! | ||
How could I know? | ||
Richard Anania, please have mercy. | ||
We need some elite human capital. | ||
unidentified
|
What exactly did you say to Trump? | |
Did you say it's the Jews? | ||
Oh, brother. | ||
Thank you. | ||
logical impetus for instigating war in Ukraine was to loosen Russia's foothold in Syria per clean break slash on behalf of Israel. | ||
Shut up. | ||
Cloud Strike, Sonic 12,040, sent $5. | ||
You should do a stream with Kai Sennin and redial him on the Jews and he could redial all the American younglings. | ||
Why haven't you thought of this yet? | ||
No need to thank me. | ||
Keep the change. | ||
Catholic Confederate sent $5. | ||
Did you see this Karen try to shove the dude into the water? | ||
unidentified
|
Lol. | |
No curator sent $5. | ||
Hey Nick, what's your favorite video? | ||
Also recommended books? | ||
Catholic Confederate sent $5. | ||
Did you Okay, chill. | ||
unidentified
|
Chill. | |
Oh, that's what they all say. | ||
John Dave Irving sent $109. | ||
If I get with Ashley St. Clair, formerly sex laptop, underage kosher creaming, do you think I can live in the Elon maternity mansion? | ||
Could leave notes like give Nick a blue checkmark, and if that doesn't work, I can just trans another one. | ||
Thoughts? | ||
Wouldn't hurt. | ||
unidentified
|
Wouldn't hurt. | |
You know, she's looking. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Is that part of their deal with Elon? | ||
Could she take on another husband? | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I mean, hey, it's worth a shot. | ||
If you don't ask, the answer is always no. | ||
If you got shacked up, here's the thing though, if you got shacked up with Ashley, I doubt Elon would keep the benefits flowing. | ||
So you'd have to keep it low-key. | ||
You'd have to get with Ashley as like a sneaky link, you know, sort of like a side deal. | ||
They can't know, you know. | ||
That's got to be the move. | ||
We got to get Groyper's on this. | ||
We got to get a Groyper. | ||
Who's another Groyper billionaire? | ||
unidentified
|
Who's richer than Elon that could get with Ashley? | |
Thank you for the big... | ||
Wow, another one. | ||
Thank you for the other big super chat. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
More pizza and Diet Coke. | ||
Hi, Nick. | ||
I haven't had food truck out, so I've been broke. | ||
But I don't miss your shows. | ||
You are still the GOAT. I love you and your monologues. | ||
Keep up the good work. | ||
Thank you very much, Christine. | ||
I know you're watching. | ||
It's all good. | ||
I'm coming out to the food truck. | ||
First thing, you gotta let me know when you open it up. | ||
You don't have to send me super chats. | ||
Just let me know when the food truck opens up first thing in the spring. | ||
I don't know if I'll go first thing, but I'll be there. | ||
I'll be there to get some whatever you guys eat. | ||
Pierogi, stuffed cabbage, rice, whatever it is. | ||
I'm there. | ||
But hey, good to hear from you. | ||
Hope you're doing well. | ||
We miss you. | ||
We miss you. | ||
But I get it. | ||
It's winter. | ||
Everyone's hibernating. | ||
Sheckles are scarce. | ||
I get it. | ||
But I appreciate it. | ||
It's good to hear from you. | ||
Hope you're enjoying the time off. | ||
And I can't wait. | ||
I'm going to be a hungry customer. | ||
world and I don't even like Israel they are just playing the game better than our leaders lol yeah anti-semitic at $10 the monologue you have regarding a multi-ethnic country with mono ethnic communities it could work but it cannot be democracy we need Rhodesia 2.0 It should be like Rhodesia! | ||
unidentified
|
Did you feel like Rhodesia? | |
And did you tell us the Jews to Trump? | ||
What's your favorite book about the Holocaust? | ||
What's your favorite book about the Holocaust to recommend to Red Pill Normies? | ||
It should be like Rhodesia 2. You know, we can have segregation and freedom association, but it's got to be like Rhodesia. | ||
Yeah, very good. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Any other brilliant suggestions from any other novel, fresh ideas? | ||
Clearly from a brilliant thinker. | ||
Any other? | ||
What else? | ||
Should it be like Hitler's Germany? | ||
What else are we going to do? | ||
One drop law? | ||
Nuremberg Acts? | ||
What else? | ||
What else you got for us? | ||
21 pilots sent $5. | ||
Vindicated on Hub's life, by the way. | ||
He quit his 9 to 5 and now rents an office space where he pretends to work a 9 to 5 for a few hours. | ||
Is that true? | ||
you Is that actually true that he's pretending to work? | ||
I saw that he got a new job. | ||
Is that the new job? | ||
It's fake? | ||
Because I saw he got a promotion. | ||
I didn't watch all the videos. | ||
That would really be some sociopathic behavior if he did that. | ||
He was doing like a live stream where he was working. | ||
And I was so tempted to go in there and just start typing like, hey man, fuck you. | ||
I was like so tempted. | ||
I caught him on a live stream on TikTok and I was so tempted to just get in there and just be like, hey, fuck you. | ||
Which is like over and over. | ||
Hey man, you know, you're a real piece of shit and everyone hates you. | ||
Go in and just really like some serious like demonic negativity. | ||
Really just sending the maloic, you know, the evil eye, maloic behavior. | ||
You know, some imprecatory psalms going his way. | ||
Sending out some imprecatory psalms. | ||
Delayed release. | ||
Timed release of those. | ||
That would really be some crazy... | ||
Stuff if he was like LARPing as an office worker. | ||
Normalize the norm, by the way. | ||
Totally betrayed everything he stands for. | ||
He started out as a champion of mediocrity and like everyone, you know, rose above. | ||
That's natural. | ||
Very, very against. | ||
Because of the microplastics. | ||
I'm very against the microplastics. | ||
Sorry, let me clarify my question. | ||
I have some business and funds in Singapore that I was planning to send your way. | ||
If China takes Taiwan, what do you think will happen to Singapore? | ||
I wonder if I should move my business. | ||
Okay, well, you know, it's not going to happen anytime soon, I don't think. | ||
So if you're really worried about that, I'm kind of the wrong guy to ask, I think. | ||
No one knows, you know. | ||
You see, if a 26-year-old live streamer without a security clearance had a better idea of when China would invade than, like, the NSA or, like, the Department of Defense. | ||
You know, I think China would be in real trouble, actually. | ||
It's sort of the question. | ||
You know, will they or won't they? | ||
No one really knows. | ||
You know, I think the government knows, but not the rest of us. | ||
It'd be a real problem if everybody knew. | ||
It's interesting, though. | ||
Interesting cue. | ||
Huff's life quit his 9 to 5 so that he could work on something new. | ||
But it turns out it's just another 9 to 5. | ||
Endless L's. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, hey, normalize the norm. | |
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
We got to get to the bottom of this. | ||
I got to know. | ||
I forget what it was. | ||
It was like a big company, though. | ||
He was with some big name recognition company. | ||
So, yeah, he's moving up in the world. | ||
Good for him. | ||
Good for him. | ||
You know what? | ||
Good for him. | ||
Good for old Hub's life. | ||
And I'm just going to be in a ditch somewhere shaking my fist when he walks by. | ||
You know, he will have the last laugh. | ||
I don't deny this at all. | ||
He'll be like an old man. | ||
His kids will be grown. | ||
He's got his wife. | ||
He'll be in a stupid baseball hat and like his athleisure wear and like no-show socks and gym shoes. | ||
And he'll be walking down the street and I'll be just like some bum in a trash can like Oscar the Grouch. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'll be like, ah, you know, I recognize you. | |
And he'll be like, kids, kids, go with your mother. | ||
And, you know, he'll be vindicated. | ||
He'll be vindicated, you know, but I'm sort of like burn twice as bright, half as long sort of deal. | ||
So, that's okay. | ||
Okay, well, you don't even know the difference between there and there, so maybe leave it to a priest. | ||
Fuck off. | ||
That's pretty good. | ||
That's pretty good. | ||
Can't even get through it without two three-minute ads. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Oh, I don't know. | ||
Heavy question. | ||
I like being known, but at the same time, it really is cumbersome. | ||
That is the question. | ||
Anybody that has any notoriety asks themselves that because you do – the only reason people become famous is because they want to be famous, because they're really into themselves. | ||
They want to assert themselves and impress themselves upon the world and exert and everything like that. | ||
But then you do, and it becomes such a – Practical encumbrance. | ||
And that's kind of the question. | ||
Is it worth the encumbrance? | ||
The negativity, the harassment, the stalking, everything that comes with it. | ||
Not being able to trust people. | ||
It's a Faustian bargain. | ||
That's the very nature of it. | ||
It's part of the job. | ||
It's just involved in the job, I would say. | ||
It's an occupational hazard. | ||
Okay. | ||
Ha ha. | ||
Yeah, nah, she put a bomb in the pierogies like a pager. | ||
Couldn't get me at the mailbox. | ||
I'm not that Mexican, dude. | ||
Schizogale sent $5. | ||
If I got doxed and nearly killed, I'd be pissed off in general, too. | ||
Cut yourself some slack. | ||
You're a good lad. | ||
Hey, I appreciate you saying thank you. | ||
Thanks. | ||
I appreciate someone saying that. | ||
Yeah, because it's like people are trying to kill you and everyone's like, hey, man, you seem like... | ||
And then if you don't move past that in like a week, people are like, hey, man, you're kind of like in a bad mood. | ||
What's the problem? | ||
It's okay to not be okay. | ||
No, but I appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm good. | |
I'm just frustrated. | ||
I'm a little frustrated about kind of the whole political situation in general. | ||
But I appreciate you saying that. | ||
Thank you. | ||
$5. | ||
Spinefish, if you can hear us, send $3. | ||
Please, Spinefish. | ||
Yeah, whatever happened? | ||
John Dave Irving sent $69. | ||
If there are no Grover Gennies, then how am I going to talk shite to Dalton for not being one for booning 24-7 to e-girls? | ||
I don't know what a Gennie is, but thank you very much for the $69 super chat video. | ||
Very good, sir. | ||
Very good. | ||
Now, no more swastikas in the group chat. | ||
Please. | ||
Dude, John Dave Irvin crashing out, posting swastikas, alienating our members. | ||
unidentified
|
This guy's out of control. | |
No, but I appreciate it. | ||
He's a troll. | ||
He is a congenital troll. | ||
Well, thank you very much. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Okay! | ||
That's our last super chat. | ||
That's going to do it for me. | ||
I'm exhausted. | ||
I'm still resetting the sleep schedule, so I'm a little bit in the twilight zone. | ||
But, you know, as the week goes on, the sleep schedule will migrate further north. | ||
You know, the sleep schedule went all the way around the clock. | ||
I was, like, waking up at 8 a.m. | ||
and then noon and then, like, 5 o'clock and then 7 o'clock. | ||
Then I was waking up at midnight. | ||
And now it's kind of coming around on the other side. | ||
Now I'm like, then I was waking up at four. | ||
Then I was waking up at seven. | ||
You know, waking up at nine. | ||
And it's going to gradually, the sleep schedule will migrate later and later until it's at like two or three. | ||
And then I'll wake up and I'll be super high energy for the show. | ||
So I'll just take a few more days. | ||
All right, but that's going to do it for me. | ||
Remember to smash the follow button. | ||
Smash the like button. | ||
Leave a comment down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday at 8 o'clock Central. | ||
As always, thanks to our top super chatters, Pizza Diet Coke, John Day, Vervin, Canuck, Greatest Gooner, King of the Night, and Rome of the West. | ||
Thanks to them. | ||
Thanks to all our super chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. |