Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
As soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can just play a play. | ||
I said trust young man. | ||
I'm a son of a bitch. | ||
I'm a son of a bitch. | ||
I said change from girls. | ||
I can't do it. | ||
My mama said trust no hoes. | ||
There's no problem. | ||
I'm at one two. | ||
Stop the track. | ||
I'm a person. | ||
Action. See Ricky said. | ||
I don't want to go. | ||
I don't want to go. | ||
Okay. Okay. | ||
I don't want to go. | ||
I don't want to go. | ||
Give the code to sack your boots. | ||
Don't have your back with the punches. | ||
It's doing the bad one. | ||
Always know. | ||
It's here before you start running. | ||
If you don't can put them in above your head. | ||
Pray before you go to be everything. | ||
My mama's here. | ||
I don't want to go. | ||
Stay. Now they're hungry. | ||
All the way. | ||
Does it seem to be a good day? | ||
They're hungry. | ||
Not my words. | ||
unidentified
|
Not my rules. | |
I just endorse them. | ||
unidentified
|
All right? | |
They say cross don't be. | ||
I'm a person. | ||
Trust. No hope. | ||
Use a woman. | ||
But they say cross don't be. | ||
I'm a person. | ||
Everybody. I'm a person. | ||
Warming on everybody. | ||
Warming on everybody. | ||
Peace out. | ||
first, bitch. | ||
Blacked out the sky. | ||
Everything. Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
who dared to vote. | ||
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 us, 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? | ||
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, booming bolt of lightning out of the globe. | ||
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... | ||
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
|
They 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. | ||
unidentified
|
I will fight for you. | |
and I will win for you. | ||
unidentified
|
*Cheering* | |
Saying to me is like, this is probably pretty cool for you. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
it is. | ||
it is. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
A new droiper war. | ||
Nigga, this war. | ||
Nigga, this war. | ||
I'm chucking bodies on the floor. | ||
I'm with it all. | ||
I talk to my demons and I see the writings on the wall. | ||
Nigga's is dying when it's on. | ||
I get excited for them cops. | ||
And Noah ain't crying when he gone. | ||
Cause brody was fighting for the cold. | ||
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 us. | ||
My success is 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. | ||
I can't see me. | ||
I can't see me. | ||
I won't be me. | ||
I'm in that guinea. | ||
We 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
|
*Dramatic Music* | |
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth. | ||
We love everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
And we want people to convert really more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't include any real people. | ||
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
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. | ||
There are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny. | ||
unidentified
|
then nothing can stop us and nothing will. | |
We'll be back in every weekend. | ||
You see them from the deep end. | ||
You say that I'm bad for no reason. | ||
Bitch, I'm better. | ||
I'm dumb. | ||
I'm dumb. | ||
I'm gonna see these dumb. | ||
I'm gonna see this jet. | ||
You know I'm different climbers. | ||
How I got this damn. | ||
Got it, I ain't trying. | ||
Wishing that night family. | ||
Wishing that night memories. | ||
Hold it up. | ||
Where you at the club? | ||
Hold it up. | ||
Where you had that gun? | ||
On em. | ||
Pull it by side. | ||
Pull up on em. | ||
Now I got this bag on hats. | ||
On em. | ||
I'm straight out of these diamonds. | ||
I'm straight out of these lights. | ||
How you gonna save these bills? | ||
How you gonna save these lights? | ||
You know I'm gonna be in the middle of this. | ||
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 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'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
I should have supported Grape of War 2. | ||
unidentified
|
Grape of War 2. | |
2. I should have supported | ||
2. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Because in America, we don't worship government. | |
We worship God. | ||
It is why our currency proudly declares, in God we trust. | ||
And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure that began with deep faith, big dreams. | ||
And humble beginnings. | ||
The next generation of American leaders never, ever give up. | ||
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
unidentified
|
Never quit. | |
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible, that it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | |
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, The more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
You must keep pushing forward. | |
And always have the courage to be yourself. | ||
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
|
back. We'll be right back. | |
May God bless the United States. | ||
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 Adams? | ||
Our movement is It's about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
The Washington establishment and the financial and media corporations that fund it exist for only one reason to protect and enrich itself. | ||
The establishment has trillions of dollars at stake in this election. | ||
For those who control the levers of power in Washington and for the global special interest, they partner with these people that don't have your good in mind. | ||
Our campaign represents a true existential threat like they haven't seen before. | ||
This is not simply another four-year election. | ||
This is a crossroads in the history of our civilization that will determine whether or not we, the people, reclaim control over our government. | ||
The political establishment that is trying to stop us is the same group responsible for our disastrous trade deals, massive illegal immigration. | ||
And economic and foreign policies that have bled our country dry. | ||
The political establishment has brought about the destruction of our factories and our jobs as they flee to Mexico, China, and other countries all around the world. | ||
It's a global power structure that is responsible for the economic decisions that have robbed our working class, stripped our country of its wealth. | ||
And put that money into the pockets of a handful of large corporations and political entities. | ||
This is a struggle for the survival of our nation. | ||
And this will be our last chance. | ||
This election will determine whether we're a free nation or whether we have only the illusion of democracy, but are in fact controlled by a small handful of global special interests rigging the system, and our system is rigged. | ||
This is reality. | ||
You know it, they know it, I know it, and pretty much the whole world knows it. | ||
The thing that said, take a look at what happened. | ||
unidentified
|
These are people who work hard, but no longer have a voice. | |
I am your voice. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
We are going to do things to you that have never been done before. | ||
Don't sit yet. | ||
unidentified
|
to like this. | |
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 stop." | |
We will not surrender our 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. | ||
with you. | ||
here with you. | ||
with you. | ||
here with you. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
unidentified
|
We must always remember that we share one home and one glorious destiny. | |
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
unidentified
|
We all salute the same great American flag. | |
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you an instant? | |
My 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. | ||
unidentified
|
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump, were all cut from the same cloth, and that cloth is very, very large. | |
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. It's wrong, isn't it? | |
It feels so right. | ||
It's a deal. | ||
I put together some real person deals. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go big or go home. | ||
Donald Trump. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman that looks like that has to have a special set. | ||
It's the night. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Donald. | ||
Oh, you look great. | ||
Come on. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm done with it. | ||
This is my story. | ||
Listen. Are you nagging here? | ||
Are you? | ||
No. You speak to Matt. | ||
I'm going to do this. | ||
No. Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
What do you want? | ||
What do you want? | ||
It's Donald. | ||
It's here. | ||
It's Donald. | ||
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? What's your game, Donald? | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
What? Mr. | ||
Trump. Mr. | ||
Trump. Mr. | ||
Trump. He says it's a new place. | ||
What is it? | ||
Do you want to do it? | ||
What? That's right. | ||
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 don't know how your audience is, 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. | ||
Kevin, thank you. | ||
I wouldn't have a good one. | ||
Okay, kids, make it fast. | ||
I've got a plan to do it. | ||
He created a magazine. | ||
Mr. Trump, if you do it, scourge me. | ||
So far. | ||
I'm not going to do it. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
First of the money. | ||
I'm not going to do it. | ||
to do it. | ||
not going to do it. | ||
I really see something that said, take a look what happened. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. Why this beat so crazy? | |
We will make America proud again. | ||
When you try to kill ourselves, we will rule. | ||
We will make America wealthy again. | ||
And yes, together, we will make America great again. | ||
I said most of them not from a trench. | ||
Come to my block. | ||
Come and see how we living. | ||
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 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. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm supposed to be here tonight. | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
I should have supported Grape of War 2. | ||
unidentified
|
Grape of War 2. | |
Grape of War 2. | ||
I should have supported Grape of War 2. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stopped. | ||
I stopped playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can hit that yay button. | ||
I should have supported Grape of War 2. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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 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. | ||
But... That has changed the calculation. | ||
unidentified
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God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the, you know, richest person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
I think they've been extremely unfair to you. | ||
Who is they, though? | ||
We can't tell you who they is, can we? | ||
There is no future if we do nothing now. | ||
There is nothing to lose. | ||
People that are scrambling, trying to protect their ever-shrinking share of what they have are foolish. | ||
It's all going. | ||
It's all going away. | ||
This country is being ripped apart and raped and looted. | ||
We're being slowly poisoned and, in some cases, quickly murdered and assassinated. | ||
And we're killing ourselves every day, inadvertently, with the kinds of things that we eat and breathe and drink and see. | ||
People have got to start to radically begin to obey their conscience and tell the truth and do the right thing. | ||
People have got to start to get courageous. | ||
And this is the time for everybody to turn and look to God and to pray and to ask for strength and to ask for wisdom to get through this time and to transform and sanctify this country. | ||
And the alternative is that there will be no country. | ||
Is it really only as big as low gas prices? | ||
Is it really only so big as bringing inflation and gas prices and the corporate tax rate back down? | ||
It's not about waiting for someone to come in and change the policy and make it better. | ||
It's a personal decision that we all have to make to become soldiers of Christ. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
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
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Why are you called Mommy Malkin? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Griper 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
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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 future, I am with you, I will fight for you, and I will win for you. | ||
unidentified
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Saying to me is like, this is probably pretty cool for you. | |
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
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you. I am with you. | |
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. | ||
Yeah, nigga this war. | ||
I am taking bodies on the floor. | ||
I am with it all. | ||
I talk to my demons and I see the writings on the wall. | ||
Niggas is dying when it's so well. | ||
I get excited for them poes. | ||
And no one ain't crying when he gone. | ||
Cause bro, he was fighting for the poes. | ||
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 depths, we are going to the world. | ||
We trust our successors to do the same for us! | ||
Because my soldiers do not buckle or yield when faced with the cruelty of this world! | ||
My soldiers push forward! | ||
My soldiers scream out! | ||
My soldiers reach! | ||
I can't see a damn thing, thank God. | ||
I can't see a damn thing, thank God. | ||
Yeah. They like Steve. | ||
They can't see me. | ||
They wanna 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. | ||
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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. | ||
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We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth. | |
We love everybody. | ||
unidentified
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And we want people that can burn really more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't believe in the real world. | ||
Our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
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The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | |
That's the only way. | ||
We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because 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. | ||
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
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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
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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'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
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I should have supported Groy for War 2. | |
It's not cool to share Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's hell. | ||
It's not cool to share Israel. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
New York. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
It's not cool to share Israel. | ||
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
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Never, ever, ever give up. | |
Don't give in. | ||
Don't back down. | ||
And never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | ||
And the more righteous you're fighting. | ||
unidentified
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America! | |
Americanism, not globalism, will be our... | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
America first. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back here with you tonight on Monday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight, lots to get into. | ||
Big show! | ||
Our featured story tonight, we're talking all about the signal leaks of American war plans in Yemen. | ||
What's going on? | ||
Maybe you've seen this. | ||
Maybe you've heard about it. | ||
It's totally outrageous. | ||
Hours before the Trump administration bombed Yemen, the heads of the State Department, Defense Department, National Security Council, and other White House advisors started a group chat on the messaging app known as Signal, and they accidentally added to the group chat... | ||
The editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, which is a left-leaning publication. | ||
Inside the group chat, they discussed their imminent plans to bomb Yemen, including targets, how they would carry out the strike, when they would carry out the strike, and then they reacted to it live as it was happening inside the group chat. | ||
And so the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic was able to see all of this information. | ||
They were texting it to him. | ||
And today he published an article about the experience, including the text messages. | ||
He did not include any of the operational details of the strike, but he did reveal some of the messages by the Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, the Vice President. | ||
And so we'll be talking all about this tonight. | ||
It's a big scandal. | ||
The White House basically confirmed its authenticity and that they're investigating it. | ||
Some say it's illegal that they were discussing sensitive wartime planning inside of an unsecured group chat, which also happened to include the media. | ||
So we'll talk all about this article. | ||
And there are some people, and I think there's something to this. | ||
Who say that maybe the whole thing is fake, but not in the way that you think. | ||
Some people are saying that it's authentic, but that it was effectively staged. | ||
And it was staged for one reason or another, maybe to make Vance look good, based on what Vance said, and we'll talk about specifically what he said. | ||
Some say that it was staged to make other people look bad. | ||
Mike Waltz, the National Security Advisor, he's maybe the most pro-intervention, pro-war member of the inner circle. | ||
He is allegedly the one that added the journalist to the group chat. | ||
So they say that maybe it was staged to make him look worse for OPSEC reasons. | ||
That's operational security because he leaked the messages or because he's the one that's pushing for war. | ||
And I think that's a possibility we have to consider. | ||
So we'll talk all about that. | ||
That'll be our main story. | ||
We're also going to be talking tonight about the imminent Liberation Day. | ||
This is what the president is calling April 2nd. | ||
This is the day in which reciprocal tariffs will come into effect. | ||
And it's interesting because the president is repeatedly and consistently walking back his trade protectionist agenda. | ||
What was promised during the campaign is that when Trump was elected, he would put in place a 15% across-the-board tariff. | ||
That means all goods coming into the United States would be subject to a 15% tax, effectively. | ||
And he said the reason for the tariff is we collect revenue, and this will offset the tax cuts and other things that he promised. | ||
Also, this would make American goods more competitive. | ||
But then on top of that, he says that this could also be a tool for foreign policy, and he's used it in that way over the past few months. | ||
Well, he's since walked back the threat of a 15% across-the-board tariff. | ||
That's not happening. | ||
We're not really getting any tariffs at all, actually. | ||
He changed the threat now to a reciprocal tariff where we will levy the same tariff rate and on the same types of goods that other countries are applying to our exports. | ||
So, for example, they call them the dirty 15, countries that have a 15% tariff on American goods, countries like India, Mexico, Canada, the European Union. | ||
We will put in place the same tariff that they put on us against them, against their goods. | ||
That was the promise. | ||
It was supposed to happen on April 2nd. | ||
Now they're walking that back, and so now we're not even getting reciprocal tariffs. | ||
Now Trump says, just a little more than a week before this is supposed to even happen, now Trump is saying there won't be reciprocal tariffs. | ||
He said there will be targeted reciprocal tariffs, which means that some countries will have some tariffs on some goods. | ||
We don't know anything more than that. | ||
It's completely vague. | ||
This is another retreat. | ||
It was 15% across the board. | ||
Then it was reciprocal. | ||
Now we have no idea what it is. | ||
We know it's going to be substantially less than even reciprocal. | ||
So we'll talk all about the latest on tariffs. | ||
Stock market seems to be happy with the news. | ||
Bitcoin and the stock market were both up today on the news that Trump is... | ||
Once again, retreating on the tariff threat. | ||
And I want to talk a little bit tonight in particular about this tariff policy. | ||
I was the most optimistic about tariffs compared to any of the other promises. | ||
We know that the big pillars of the Trump America First agenda are immigration, foreign policy, and trade. | ||
I am pessimistic about immigration and foreign policy. | ||
I thought sounded much better in this cycle, at least during the campaign. | ||
And I thought, especially after Inauguration Day, with all of the tariff threats, I thought there was a much higher chance of follow-through this time compared to last time. | ||
But here we are, just like everything else, a few months in, I guess two months in, and it's not looking good. | ||
Seems like we're not really doing what was promised. | ||
And in particular... | ||
And we'll touch on this tonight. | ||
There's two ways that you can look at a tariff policy. | ||
It's supposed to be an economic policy, but it seems like Trump is really only using it as a tool with foreign policy. | ||
So we'll flesh that out tonight. | ||
It's going to be a good show. | ||
Before we get into the news, I want to remind you to smash the follow button on Rumble. | ||
Smash the like button. | ||
Leave a comment down below. | ||
Let me know what you think. | ||
We had a big show on Friday. | ||
If you missed it, I went over the JFK files on Friday, and we went pretty thoroughly into the JFK assassination conspiracy. | ||
It was a long show. | ||
I did like a two-hour monologue talking about the whole thing, and even that wasn't enough. | ||
We talked about it on Friday. | ||
I said the topic is too big really to fit into any stream, unless you spent like 12 hours on it. | ||
It's a huge subject, but I tried my best to condense the most important parts and the big ideas about the JFK conspiracy into the show on Friday. | ||
So if you missed that, make sure to check it out. | ||
People are always asking me to do a deep dive on a subject, and that's the first time we've done one in a long time, at least on an historical topic. | ||
Usually I'll do a deep dive on foreign policy, what's happening in the Middle East. | ||
Or current events. | ||
But this is the first time in a long time I've just chosen a subject and done a really thorough show about it. | ||
And it was fitting because we had the JFK files drop at the beginning of last week. | ||
So if you missed that, make sure to check it out. | ||
I've been thinking about doing more deep dives. | ||
And I don't want to give away my idea, but I know you guys really love shows like that when I do all information. | ||
Especially when I do like a primer. | ||
People are always asking for a book list, a really in-depth explanation. | ||
And so I'm thinking maybe this year I might produce more content like that. | ||
I'm not going to give away my idea, but I have been thinking a lot about this because, you know, the big problem with people when they get red-pilled is there's almost nowhere to go for really good information that is packaged in a way that is accessible. | ||
And that isn't like crazy. | ||
So many people are becoming aware of the truth. | ||
And unlike mainstream conservatives or mainstream liberals, there's no publication you can go to, there's very few, where you can get all of the information about these forbidden topics, these highly censored, highly controversial topics. | ||
And if you do find the information, it's disorganized. | ||
The information isn't reliable. | ||
A lot of it's false, filled with red herrings, wild speculation, conspiracy theories. | ||
And if it's good, typically it's not accessible. | ||
We're talking like 30,000-word essays. | ||
Like one of the best resources that I use is the UNS Review, and I tell people to read it, but it's over a lot of people's heads. | ||
I think it's great writing, but... | ||
For example, he'll do a piece about the Holocaust that's 30,000 words. | ||
Most people are not going to read that. | ||
So, you know, we really need to do a better job bringing the material to the people in a way that is digestible. | ||
Shorter videos, longer videos, but information that's gold standard with but also delivered in a way that's a little bit more digestible than some of the stuff that's out there. | ||
So anyway, I tried to do that on Friday, but I'm thinking. | ||
The other thing I wanted to throw out there before we get into the news, what is going on with Trent Horn? | ||
I saw this on Twitter today. | ||
I actually thought it was an older video, but if you've never heard of him, Trent Horn is this popular Catholic apologist. | ||
He goes on the Whatever podcast on YouTube, and he's got his own channel. | ||
He's big on Catholic Answers, and he does work for a couple of other organizations. | ||
But he's fairly popular on social media. | ||
He's also Jewish. | ||
He's ethnically Jewish. | ||
And this guy cannot stop talking about me. | ||
He's done many videos about me over the years and he's accused me of being a bad Catholic because he says I hate Jews and I'm a Holocaust denier and also I'm sexist and I hate women and I'm racist and I hate minorities and all this kind of stuff. | ||
And a lot of people say this about me. | ||
But he made another video about me today and he said that I am like angry and hate women. | ||
A few months ago, around the time of the election, there was this meme going around called Wife Jack. | ||
It's like a cartoon, a Wojak meme of like a guy's wife. | ||
And it was the gayest shit imaginable. | ||
It's like, it was a Wojak of a person's wife, but it wasn't even funny. | ||
It was just like a female Wojak. | ||
A Wojak is like that white cartoon guy. | ||
And it was like their wife just saying relatable shit, like, my feet are cold, or like, I went to Target and bought something on sale. | ||
Like, the shit wasn't even funny. | ||
It was supposed to be these, like, relatable memes, like shit your wife says. | ||
And it's like, who is this for? | ||
Is this made for just, like, the lowest T, like, gayest men imaginable? | ||
And we're supposed to believe men are sharing these with each other. | ||
Oh, my wife always says that. | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
She's so adorable. | ||
And then it was mutating, which whatever. | ||
Maybe some people find that funny. | ||
I don't find that. | ||
I don't find the end of the male life cycle amusing at all. | ||
Maybe some people find that funny. | ||
But then it mutated into something really perverse. | ||
Maybe you think they're funny. | ||
Whatever. I think that's really gay. | ||
But whatever. | ||
But then it turned into something completely different where people were saying it was political. | ||
People said there was this, it represented this political cultural victory because they said that in the old days, our parents and our grandparents made jokes about hating their wife. | ||
You know, they'd say things like, oh, take my wife, for example. | ||
No, really, take her. | ||
You know, there were all these jokes. | ||
Boomers, they say, promulgated this, like, cultural stereotype that men hate their wives. | ||
Like, men can't stand their wives. | ||
Their wives drive them crazy. | ||
And so people were saying, not only is the meme funny, which, again, super gay. | ||
But they were saying, actually, it's a triumph over our parents because our parents hated their wives, and that's toxic. | ||
We love our wives. | ||
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We love our wives so much, and we don't care who knows. | |
I love my wives so much. | ||
And they were saying, isn't that such a sweet, fucking, wholesome, chungus thing that we all love our wives? | ||
And I said, that is just repulsive and and just disgusting. | ||
But that's what was going on at the time. | ||
It was totally outrageous. | ||
Someone had to say something. | ||
Someone had to do something about it. | ||
Of course, that person was me. | ||
I had to stand up to these people and get attacked for it. | ||
Maybe that's why someone tried to kill me at my house. | ||
We'll never know. | ||
He died, but maybe his motivation is... | ||
He liked the wife jag meme. | ||
Anyway, but I was very outspoken about it and Trent Horn does a video about me and says, oh, well, that's not Catholic at all because you're supposed to love your wife and all this. | ||
And then he even put Thomas Aquinas on blast. | ||
Thomas Aquinas. | ||
The doctor of the church, literally the smartest man that ever lived, said that a husband can reprimand his wife and also strike his wife to discipline her. | ||
And Trent Horn said, oh my gosh, that is sexist. | ||
That is not cool. | ||
He said in the comments of his own video, he said, how do we feel about the fact that men can hit their wives, but women can't hit their husbands? | ||
So the video's totally ridiculous. | ||
It's totally outrageous. | ||
But honestly, the thing that's really getting beyond the pale, the thing that's really frustrating is these fucking Jews that talk trash about me nonstop. | ||
It's other people too, but it's also a lot of Jews that do this. | ||
I'm talking about Andrew Klavan, Ben Shapiro, Trent Horn. | ||
All these Jews do is talk trash about me. | ||
That's all they do is like concern troll me. | ||
All they do is make videos and bitch about how I'm a fake Christian, I hate women, I hate Jews, I hate this one and that one, and I'm such a bad person, and I'm racist, and I'm a pied piper for the young people. | ||
And not one of them will sit down and have a discussion. | ||
I've said repeatedly, if Trent Horn has a problem with me, I'll have a debate with him. | ||
I'll have a conversation with him. | ||
And it'll be simple. | ||
I'm a human being. | ||
If you've ever seen me do a debate, I'm nothing but polite and respectful. | ||
And in every case, they refuse to sit down. | ||
They say, I'll never sit down with him. | ||
He's an anti-Semite. | ||
And yet, they'll sit down and debate with people that support child pornography. | ||
Like Trent Horn. | ||
We'll talk about me constantly and say, I'm a terrible person. | ||
I'm a piece of shit. | ||
I'm a fake Christian. | ||
Will he talk to me? | ||
No. He won't talk to me because I'm such a vile anti-Semite. | ||
But then he'll go to the whatever podcast and debate Destiny about whether child porn, artificial intelligence, you know, virtual child porn is virtuous or not. | ||
So that's cool. | ||
Destiny, who's a cuck. | ||
Drug addict, total profligate degenerate. | ||
That guy's fine. | ||
The guy who says he cheered when Trump died, he says conservatives should be killed. | ||
That guy's fine. | ||
He'll sit down with him, but I'm beyond the pale. | ||
And it's no different than Jordan Peterson, Andrew Klavan. | ||
They do the same thing. | ||
Andrew Klavan, first of all, such a sick human being. | ||
So negative, so hateful. | ||
He's always trash-talking me. | ||
Won't even say my name, but he'll say those people that say Christ is king in America first. | ||
I mean, check my bio on Twitter. | ||
He'll say those people that say that they're so stupid and so evil and this and that. | ||
Same with Jordan Peterson, says I'm a rat. | ||
They'll sit down with destiny, they won't sit down with me. | ||
I don't know how that's even... | ||
How do you as a man constantly talk trash about somebody? | ||
You won't face them. | ||
I don't understand that. | ||
So anyway, once again, it's an open challenge to Trent Horn, this bitch. | ||
He's always going to make these YouTube videos. | ||
And you know what really gets me? | ||
It's this like female tone. | ||
He's always doing these videos like finger wagging. | ||
That's not nice. | ||
That's not very Christian at all. | ||
He's making these jokes. | ||
Take a look for yourself. | ||
I can't believe that. | ||
You know, it's so feminine. | ||
It's so cowardly. | ||
But once again, I'm throwing down the challenge. | ||
If he wants to sit down and have a discussion, be happy to do it. | ||
It'd be respectful. | ||
We could have a debate, conversation. | ||
We could have a third party. | ||
He could pick, be the mediator. | ||
But I'm getting really tired of Trent Horn talking trash about me. | ||
And you know what it is on some level? | ||
I mean, let's just say it. | ||
He is Jewish. | ||
At the end of the day, there is something going on within the Catholic community. | ||
And we talked about it last week or two weeks ago when they said that Christ is King is an anti-Semitic slogan. | ||
And this was coming from the ADL. | ||
This was co-signed by Jordan Peterson. | ||
It was being promoted by Chris Ruffo and the guys at Babylon Bee. | ||
And it was literally a report that was created by a subsidiary of the ADL. | ||
The guy who runs the organization that drafted the report is on the board of the ADL in California. | ||
ADL is a Jewish group that was founded 100 years ago to defend a pedophile murderer. | ||
And so we saw that last week, and there was a big debate among Catholics about whether you could say Christ is king. | ||
Then today, Joe Lonsdale. | ||
Who is with the Founders Fund. | ||
That's Peter Thiel's angel investing venture capital group. | ||
He's very good friends with Peter Thiel. | ||
He was at the, I believe, the Stanford Review paper that Peter Thiel founded. | ||
Joe Lonsdale just published a paper today on Substack saying how Christians need to call out anti-Semitism. | ||
Then there was this Philos conference last week. | ||
Christians and Jews talking about how we got to call out anti-Semitism. | ||
And then there's this Trent Horn. | ||
He was at that conference as well. | ||
And now it's a crusade against Nick Fuentes and Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson and others. | ||
And it's always the same. | ||
They'll talk about everything else. | ||
They'll talk about we're sexist, we're racist, we're this, that, and the other. | ||
At the center of it, though, is they don't want Christians. | ||
To become aware of who and what we are, which is that we are set against the Jewish religion. | ||
It's in the gospel by nature of what we are and what they are. | ||
I mean, what is a Jewish person? | ||
It's an ethnicity, and they descend from the Pharisees. | ||
And insofar as you have Jewish people that self-identify as Jewish, That means they, in essence, their self-identification is that they reject Jesus Christ. | ||
That's what their religion is based in, and that is where their ethnic identity comes from also. | ||
If they accepted Jesus, they'd be Christians. | ||
And they'd say, I'm Jewish, but I'm also Christian, or I'm Catholic or something. | ||
But these guys like Trent Horn, they just can't let it go. | ||
He's Jewish, he's Catholic, and he's super liberal. | ||
He thinks he knows better than Thomas Aquinas. | ||
He thinks he knows better than St. Augustine. | ||
He thinks he knows better than countless popes that have issued encyclicals and other papal documents describing the relationship between Christians and Jews. | ||
He thinks he knows better. | ||
And he also, by the way, by virtue of that, being, I guess, some kind of modernist, thinks he knows better than all of them about women, about race, about politics, about democracy, about all of it. | ||
And so there's this process where I was born Catholic. | ||
I was baptized and confirmed Catholic. | ||
People like myself became aware and said, hey, wait a second. | ||
We used to live in a Catholic world. | ||
The world was run by Europe, and Europe was run by the Catholic Church. | ||
What happened? | ||
Now we see the world is run by Israel, and the world is run by this transnational Jewish syndicate. | ||
And we look at the moral degeneration of the world and the degeneration in many other ways, of nationality, of kingdoms, of cultures, of races, of everything, and we say this aligns with Jewish values. | ||
This aligns with these revolutionary Jewish thinkers, the communists, the capitalists, the modernists, the postmodernists, the liberals, those behind the Enlightenment. | ||
The Illuminists, the Masons, you know, all of that stuff comes from Jewish mysticism. | ||
And Catholics like me are saying, I'm starting to clearly understand where we went wrong. | ||
I'm starting to clearly understand if they say the essence of politics is the distinction between us and them. | ||
We say we're starting to become aware of... | ||
What the teams are, if we're engaged in this spiritual war or this great civilizational battle, we're starting to see where that divining line is. | ||
And it seems like there's this cavalry coming in to say, oh, no, no, no, no, not so fast. | ||
Not so fast. | ||
It's the ADL that wants to put a little paper, a little pamphlet inside the Bible during Easter that says, Well, we can read the Passion, but let's not fall into anti-Semitism. | ||
It's the Philos Group. | ||
It's Joe Lonsdale. | ||
It's Trent Horn. | ||
It's this endless cadre of so-called Christians that are conspicuously tied up with rabbinical Jews, the ADL, the State of Israel, getting all this money to tell us, hey, everything's cool. | ||
There's two ways to get into heaven now. | ||
You can profess Jesus. | ||
Or he could be Jewish. | ||
Either one. | ||
And fortunately for us, it's not a matter of opinion. | ||
You know, we know objectively that they are wrong. | ||
So, at the heart of it is that discrepancy. | ||
It's that disagreement. | ||
So, Trent Horn just can't stop talking about me. | ||
Hey man, shut the fuck up. | ||
If you don't want to face me, then shut the fuck up. | ||
Stop talking about me. | ||
Stop gossiping about me. | ||
Stop slandering me. | ||
Stop taking my clips out of context. | ||
That's BS. | ||
I'm so sick of that. | ||
I don't know how people do that. | ||
It's so pathetic. | ||
You know me, I call people out and then I'm willing to face them. | ||
And when I say that, it's not a tough guy thing. | ||
It's not like I'm going to, you know, get in their face. | ||
I'm not some tough guy or anything. | ||
But if I have something to say, I say it. | ||
If I disagree, if I have a problem with somebody, I say it. | ||
And I'll say it on my show and I'll say it to their face. | ||
I'll say it in a debate, whatever, on a panel. | ||
I don't know where these people get off. | ||
I don't know where they have the balls to do this constant crusade, playing my clips, talking trash, calling me a racist, a bad Christian. | ||
And then you say, hey man, you know, and I've done it many times. | ||
He's taken a clip. | ||
You know, one time he cited a speech that I gave and said I was a Jew hater. | ||
And in the same video, I said we should love everybody, Jews, liberals, even the people that are persecuting us. | ||
Like in my case, I said we should love everybody. | ||
And I posted the clip. | ||
I said, hey, why didn't you include this part where I said we have to love everybody? | ||
Oh, no response. | ||
unidentified
|
So I've had it up to here with this Jew. | |
And anyway, so that's that. | ||
So I just want to throw that out there. | ||
I'm so sick of it. | ||
I can't stand it anymore. | ||
He shows a bunch of clips. | ||
It's like obviously jokes. | ||
He plays this clip where I said, I'm going to crash my car into Wife Jack and break through the windshield and kill her. | ||
It's a cartoon. | ||
You realize I'm talking about killing a cartoon, you stupid fucking idiot? | ||
Anyway. So that's that. | ||
So I just want to throw that out there if, you know, people are going to clip that or whatever. | ||
But that's that. | ||
We're going to move on. | ||
I do want to get into the news tonight. | ||
Guy really pisses me off. | ||
And it's especially the whole, like, the feminine, that really gets to me. | ||
That really bothers me. | ||
Like, you're, I'm sorry. | ||
You're talking to another grown-ass man, okay? | ||
You're not talking to your fucking daughters. | ||
You're not talking to some stupid bitch. | ||
You're talking to another grown man, okay? | ||
Get your fucking finger out of my face. | ||
Stop wagging your finger in my face telling me, we don't use language like that. | ||
Well, let's keep our hands and feet to ourselves. | ||
You're talking to another fucking grown man. | ||
I'm so sick of these, like, feminine men, especially these, like, Like, uh, girl, dad, Christians, the whole, like, this whole feminist thing they have going on, I can't stand that. | ||
You know? | ||
It's like, I'm sorry, you're not my priest, you're not the pope, you're not my fucking boss, you're not my parents, you have no right to, and should not feel even comfortable talking to or about another man like that, this whole... | ||
Well, let's look at the clip. | ||
Oh, that wasn't very nice. | ||
unidentified
|
Now, was it? | |
Oh, well, that's not very, you know, these people think that Christian means just like being like a super nice guy. | ||
You know, they think that being a Christian is like if you're just a total sweetheart. | ||
It has nothing to do with like moral courage. | ||
It has nothing actually to do with righteousness. | ||
It just has to do with like, are you going to act like you're in kindergarten? | ||
Are you going to act like a preschooler? | ||
So anyway, but that's that. | ||
I do want to move on, though. | ||
I want to get into our news here. | ||
We'll stop talking about Trenhorn gossiping about me, always making videos about me, but won't sit down. | ||
Sit down with destiny, but not me. | ||
Anyway, but I want to get into the news. | ||
I guess we'll start with the first story here, which is about tariffs. | ||
And so the big story today, we are looking ahead to April 2nd. | ||
It's sort of funny. | ||
They were going to do this on April 1st, but they don't want people to think it's an April Fool's Day joke. | ||
So they pushed it to April 2nd. | ||
The Trump administration is saying that April 2nd, which is in a little more than a week, is going to be Liberation Day. | ||
April 2nd is the day when Trump's reciprocal tariffs are supposed to go into effect. | ||
Trump says that any nation that has tariffs on our goods, we will put a reciprocal tariff on their goods. | ||
So whatever the percentage that they apply to our exports and however much of our trade they put tariffs on, we will do exactly the same to them. | ||
And this is supposed to be groundbreaking. | ||
This is huge. | ||
This is the most ambitious protectionist agenda. | ||
In a hundred years, since the Smoot-Hawley tariff, maybe since William McKinley, this is a really big deal. | ||
Trump says reciprocal tariffs on every country in the whole world, which means we're putting tariffs on dozens of countries. | ||
This will affect trillions of dollars in trade. | ||
It's a huge deal. | ||
And so Trump says that April 2nd is Liberation Day. | ||
He says this is when we're finally liberated from free trade. | ||
Huge deal. | ||
Here's the problem. | ||
In the first place, this is already a significant retreat from the original promise, from the initial campaign promise. | ||
Trump said during the 2024 election that it would be at least a 15% tariff. | ||
Across the board, on everything that comes into the United States. | ||
Across the board, flat rate, 15%, anything that comes over the borders, it gets hit with a tax. | ||
That would have been revolutionary. | ||
That would have been groundbreaking. | ||
Trump changed it. | ||
About a month into the presidency, when asked about it, he said, well... | ||
Instead of doing across the board 15%, he said instead we're going to do reciprocal. | ||
So where we are already is significantly less, significantly weaker than what we were promised initially. | ||
They said reciprocal. | ||
But that's still pretty good. | ||
Well today, we now hear from the White House, we're not even getting that. | ||
The big news is that we're not getting reciprocal tariffs on April 2nd. | ||
Instead, we're getting targeted, limited reciprocal tariffs. | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
We don't know. | ||
This is supposed to happen in less than two weeks. | ||
And we still, nobody knows what exactly this entails. | ||
We did know during the election, 15%. | ||
We did know last week it was reciprocal. | ||
So every country that had tariffs against us was going to get tariffs. | ||
You would have to do a little more research, but you could then figure out what that would look like. | ||
Last week, Howard Lutnick and Scott Besant said that various nations were coming to negotiate with Washington and in anticipation of the reciprocal tariffs, they were lowering their trade barriers. | ||
In other words, expecting that the United States would impose tariffs on them, they were going to reduce their tariffs so that they would get... | ||
Lower tariffs on the goods they export to the United States. | ||
Well, now today they say, well, it's just going to be something else. | ||
They don't say anything more than that. | ||
And this is a story. | ||
This is from CNBC. | ||
It says, quote, That the president is not actually going to impose blanket duties on industrial sectors like automobiles, pharmaceuticals, and semiconductors. | ||
Shares of Tesla, which have been battered by sluggish sales and backlash against Elon Musk, soared almost 10% on Monday. | ||
Previously, the company submitted a letter to Trump's trade representative stating it was vulnerable to retaliatory tariffs imposed by other countries in response to Trump's measures. | ||
A source familiar with Trump's thinking told NBC early on Monday, the president has yet to make a final decision about the scale of the blanket tariffs expected to be announced on April 2nd. | ||
Trump delivered further volatility when he announced on True Social that starting that date, any country that purchases oil or gas from Venezuela would be forced to pay a 25% tariff on any trade they do with the United States. | ||
Later on Monday, Trump hinted at even more leeway in the April 2nd duties while stating other levies on industrial items could still be forthcoming. | ||
He said, I may give a lot of countries breaks, but it's reciprocal. | ||
But we might be nicer than that. | ||
We've been very nice to a lot of countries for a long time. | ||
So what does that mean? | ||
We're going to give countries breaks, but it's reciprocal. | ||
But we could be nice, but we've been nice for too long. | ||
Okay, so which is it? | ||
unidentified
|
So this is the same sentence. | |
I may give a lot of countries breaks, but it's going to be reciprocal. | ||
But we might be really nice, but we've been nice for too long. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, so what's it going to be? | |
Is it across the board? | ||
Is it reciprocal or is it going to be targeted? | ||
But which is it? | ||
And when? | ||
It's April. | ||
I mean, it's practically April. | ||
He's been in office for three months now, almost. | ||
And we don't even know what the plan is. | ||
The plan, not only has it not been implemented, and then it will be a tough transition. | ||
When you implement significant tariffs like this, There will be economic pain. | ||
It will boost inflation in the short term. | ||
It will put upward pressure on prices in the short term. | ||
They say it may cause a recession. | ||
And that's okay. | ||
Because the point of this is to, I mean, what economy means is to determine how you allocate your resources when you change the framework of the economy. | ||
These resources will be allocated. | ||
The market will correct. | ||
The market will calibrate how it allocates those resources within the parameters of the tariffs, and there's a transitional period. | ||
But we're not even there yet, okay? | ||
We're not at implementation. | ||
We're not at the pain period or on the other side of it. | ||
We don't even know what the plan is. | ||
It's supposed to be less than two weeks away. | ||
We don't even know what it is. | ||
But he goes on. | ||
He says we'll be announcing some additional tariffs over the next few days having to do with automobiles, cars, and also to do a little with lumber down the road, lumber and chips. | ||
The president has demonstrated a willingness to relent on his tariff threats even as he publicly maintains pressure. | ||
Last week, he signaled that when it came to tariffs on China, there was room for talk. | ||
And while he was intent on posing new tit-for-tat duties on longstanding U.S. allies, Daylight remained. | ||
He said, I don't change. | ||
But flexibility is an important word. | ||
Sometimes it's flexibility. | ||
So there will be flexibility, but basically it's reciprocal. | ||
Treasury Secretary Scott Besson also suggested last week that the range of countries targeted by the April 2nd tariffs would be more limited than what had previously been reported. | ||
Telling Fox News host Maria Bartomomo. | ||
That a dirty 15 referring to the 15% of nations with persistent trade imbalances with the United States would be affected. | ||
In descending order, the nations and entities with the largest trade deficits are China, the EU, Mexico, Vietnam, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Canada, and India. | ||
Trump's ongoing openness to negotiate is why the threatened 25% duties on Mexico and Canada were ultimately suspended and then scaled back to only include goods not covered by the US MCA. | ||
Trump also proved receptive to entreaties from major auto firms about how dramatic the impact of the tariffs with America's north and southern neighbors would be to their businesses. | ||
Heading into Monday, only steel and aluminum tariffs and higher duties against Chinese goods have gone into effect. | ||
So, all this talk about tariffs over the past two months, and all you have is... | ||
Steel, aluminum, and China. | ||
That's it. | ||
There are no tariffs on Mexico, EU, Canada, nothing major. | ||
It's just the tariffs on Mexico and steel and aluminum. | ||
And here's the thing about tariffs, and this is the problem. | ||
And we talked about this a little bit at the beginning of the year, and I've said this really for the past 10 years, ever since Trump got elected the first time. | ||
The problem with how Trump views tariffs, or I should say maybe people in Trump's cabinet, the problem with how they view tariffs is that they are effectively free traders, which means ideologically they believe in free trade. | ||
And maybe more importantly, to the extent that they want to change our trade policy, Some of them don't even believe in that. | ||
Many of them only view tariffs as a tool of foreign policy. | ||
Access to the markets inside the United States is extremely powerful and it makes other countries rich. | ||
We give them access to the very rich. | ||
And by selectively taking that away, that is a form of soft power. | ||
So, for example, earlier in the year, Trump imposed tariffs on Mexico and Canada, he said, because he wanted them to do a better job policing their borders with immigration and with drug trafficking. | ||
And so Trump said, you cannot have access to our markets. | ||
This would destroy both of their economies. | ||
This would destroy the businesses that... | ||
That employ so many people there and are a big source of their wealth. | ||
He said, we will basically destroy and cripple your economy. | ||
It's over for you if you don't make key concessions. | ||
But understand, that is using tariffs as a tool for foreign policy. | ||
That's using them as a tool of statecraft. | ||
The State Department is negotiating with the foreign ministries of Canada and Mexico, and they're using tariffs to coerce Those governments to do something that's unrelated to trade. | ||
Immigration and fentanyl have really nothing to do with trade at all. | ||
They have nothing to do with our economy. | ||
And unfortunately, all too often, that is the only way. | ||
That's the only reason that the Trump administration is willing to use tariffs for. | ||
We're going to put tariffs on Canada to get them to do this. | ||
Put tariffs on Mexico to get them to do this. | ||
Put sanctions on Iran or the secondary sanctions with Venezuela, 25% tariff on anyone that does business with Venezuela for a foreign policy objective. | ||
But the problem is that we need tariffs for the economy. | ||
In other words, you can threaten tariffs and maybe they go on and maybe they don't or maybe they go on until the country does what we want them to do and then they're taken away. | ||
We need tariffs to be a part of our economy. | ||
They need to be in the mix basically permanently for the purpose of building the American economy, not to get Mexico to do X, Y, and Z, not to get Venezuela or its allies to do something. | ||
We need tariffs to build our own economy. | ||
And in order to do that, tariffs need to be implemented in a very specific way. | ||
Right now, There is a report, I think it's by the Federal Reserve Bank in St. Louis, and it says that consumer spending in the first quarter of this year indicates that we're headed for a recession, that the GDP will contract by 3%. | ||
And when you look at the stock market, the stock market has been rough. | ||
There has been a ton of volatility. | ||
And the reason for the volatility in the markets is because of unpredictability. | ||
When Trump says, maybe I'll do tariffs, maybe I won't. | ||
Maybe I'll do tariffs, actually you have another month. | ||
Maybe I'll do tariffs everywhere, actually maybe not everywhere, but maybe I will, but maybe not. | ||
When they are unpredictable, companies and investors... | ||
Are unwilling to invest long-term. | ||
If the United States is going to apply a 25% tariff to everything coming across its borders from Canada, obviously companies are not going to invest if they think that that will affect them. | ||
It's going to change their decision-making whether that does or does not happen. | ||
So they hang on to their money and they wait to see what happens. | ||
And that's one example, but that happens every time there's a big tariff threat. | ||
And that's actually bad for the economy to have that uncertainty. | ||
The way that you impose tariffs, if you want them to be a part of your economic policy for the long term, if you actually want companies or countries or anybody to invest in the United States, they need to be predictable. | ||
You need to tell them what the rates are going to be, what goods are going to affect, when they're going to come into effect, give a reasonable amount of time, and then you have to follow through. | ||
And if they're implemented in such a way where there's transparency, where they are telegraphed in advance, where there is time to coordinate economic activity, and when they are predictable... | ||
You don't have as much volatility in the markets. | ||
Then people can plan and they can prepare. | ||
What is happening right now, and people have their own theories about why Trump is doing this. | ||
Some people say it's intentional for reasons we could get into. | ||
But you have all this volatility. | ||
You have consumption and investment slowing down. | ||
It may be slowing down the economy. | ||
And when you have An environment, an ecosystem, when the tariffs are being threatened but not being applied, when they're contingent on whether another country does something the State Department wants them to do or not, that's actually not part of economic policy. | ||
And we want tariffs because they build the economy. | ||
I understand that tariffs are useful for foreign policy, and that is one purpose for them. | ||
But we want tariffs to go into effect actually to nurture industry in the United States. | ||
To put it simply, we want tariffs to protect the steel industry. | ||
And it's a good thing Trump has tariffs on that. | ||
We want tariffs in the United States to protect our tech industry. | ||
We want tariffs to protect our auto industry. | ||
Right now, China is becoming an automobile superpower. | ||
They're becoming a car manufacturing superpower. | ||
These BYD electric cars. | ||
They're cheap. | ||
They're good. | ||
They're flooding the market everywhere. | ||
And the United States is trying to keep them out of the European market. | ||
We're trying to keep them out of everywhere else. | ||
You need tariffs against cars like that basically forever so that we could still make electric cars, so that we can make Teslas. | ||
We get another crack at being an automobile manufacturer. | ||
And we do need that across the board. | ||
We want to create an economy where Americans make things and then sell them to other Americans. | ||
Everybody's fixated on we want to sell things to other people. | ||
Do we want people to sell things to us? | ||
We want to make things and we want to sell to Americans. | ||
We want to buy the things that we make. | ||
That is a nationalist economic program. | ||
And that's why we want tariffs. | ||
We want to erect trade barriers so that we benefit from our markets. | ||
We have capital. | ||
We have the good jobs. | ||
We want all of it. | ||
And the problem is, in the first term and in the second term, you never get a comprehensive policy. | ||
Economists call it an industrial policy, which involves a mix of different policy tools that is sustained, that is comprehensive over a period of time. | ||
You don't get that in the first Trump administration, and it seems like we're not getting that in the second Trump administration. | ||
To put it simply, if we want to rebuild our economy, we need a mix of tariffs. | ||
We need better intellectual property. | ||
We need subsidies, actually. | ||
We need investments. | ||
We need tax credits. | ||
We need a mix of different policies from Congress so that we can build back up, for example, our ability to make ships, our ability to make ships also. | ||
I mean, those are two things that Asia makes that we don't that are super important. | ||
China has a 400 times greater shipbuilding capacity than we do. | ||
We used to have hundreds of ports. | ||
Now we have, or rather, shipyards. | ||
Now we have four. | ||
They can make hundreds of times more ships than we can. | ||
I'm talking like commercial ships, battleships. | ||
Also, Taiwan makes all the world's computer chips, semiconductors. | ||
Those are things that we want to make. | ||
Those are things that Americans actually can make. | ||
We want the capital to make them. | ||
We want the factories. | ||
We want the technical expertise. | ||
We want the supply chains. | ||
We want the high-paying jobs. | ||
We want to have them, for example, in times of war for national security reasons too. | ||
We want them because those industries will lead to the next industry of the future. | ||
If the next industry is... | ||
Quantum computing, AI, who can predict what will happen after that? | ||
We want chips because it will fold in, roll into the next thing. | ||
And the only way to achieve that, and that is what a good economy is, we're making these things and buying these things, is a comprehensive industrial policy that comes from the government, that comes from the top. | ||
You need research and development. | ||
You need subsidies. | ||
And yes, you need tariffs, and they need to be high, and they need to be targeted, and they need to be for the explicit purpose of building the economy. | ||
Not to get people to overthrow the government in Venezuela, not to get Canada to stop sending fentanyl. | ||
I don't even think that's true. | ||
I mean, fentanyl doesn't even come from Canada. | ||
It comes from Mexico. | ||
unidentified
|
It comes from China. | |
So this has been my problem with the tariff policy. | ||
All the talk is great, for the most part. | ||
Celebrating the legacy of McKinley. | ||
And, you know, let's say that they're putting up the tariffs and they say it's for foreign policy. | ||
I'm okay with them saying that, but they need to implement it like an economic policy. | ||
I'm okay with that being the first step, but it needs to go further than this. | ||
And what happened the first time, what's happening now is it seems... | ||
Like it's too ad hoc. | ||
Maybe we'll do terrorists, maybe not. | ||
Maybe we'll do terrorists, but not if Canada does this. | ||
Maybe we'll put across the board. | ||
Ah, never mind. | ||
They need to throw it down. | ||
You only have four years. | ||
We need something in Congress. | ||
And we need to get serious. | ||
And here's the last thing I'll say about it, then we'll move on. | ||
And I explained this on a Twitter space not too long ago, and in my debate with Dean Withers, they all talk about, but tariffs make things more expensive. | ||
Tariffs are going to cause prices to go up. | ||
Here's the thing about tariffs, even to the extent that you talk about tariffs as a tool for foreign policy. | ||
Productive capacity is the foundation of everything. | ||
And I'm using that word very specifically. | ||
People talk about the economy. | ||
What does the economy mean? | ||
To a lot of these people, the economy means we sell our debt. | ||
We export our debt. | ||
We export our dollars. | ||
Everybody denominates their trade in dollars. | ||
They need our currency. | ||
They need the paper. | ||
That's not the economy. | ||
The GDP, the earnings reports, the stock market, that's not the economy. | ||
Capital used to mean machines. | ||
When Karl Marx and Ricardo and Adam Smith talked about capital, they meant machines. | ||
They meant factories. | ||
They meant actual stuff. | ||
That's what the economy really is. | ||
When you look at China and they make cars, when you look at Japan and they make cars, when you look at China and they make everything, that's economy. | ||
That's capital. | ||
It's productive capacity. | ||
So people talk a lot about we need to grow the economy. | ||
We need the economy to be bigger. | ||
We need to be economically competitive. | ||
Unfortunately, that term is too loose. | ||
The foundation of everything is not the economy, as evidenced by our war in Ukraine with Russia, because you can't send money to go and fight Russians. | ||
You need artillery shells. | ||
You can't use money to heat your homes. | ||
In the winter or power your factories, you need natural gas that comes from pipelines, that comes from the ground. | ||
And that's why Russia is winning the war over Europe. | ||
Because for all of the economy that Europe and the United States has, Russia can make more shells. | ||
Russia has natural gas. | ||
Russia has fertilizer. | ||
Russia has all these things. | ||
And they can trade with China and they can get the things they don't have or the things that they don't make. | ||
That's economy. | ||
The productive capacity of a nation is the foundation of everything. | ||
If you don't have productive capacity, you don't have power. | ||
You don't have military strength. | ||
You can't control the seas. | ||
And then, by the way, if you don't have the productive capacity to make ships, to make aircraft carriers, to make face masks during the pandemic, to make medical equipment, to make chips, to make computers. | ||
If you don't have the productive capacity to make the things that you need to project power in the world, if you don't have power projection in the world, guess who controls trade? | ||
The country that does have power. | ||
The country that does have productive capacity. | ||
And so, you know, there's sort of this irony where people say like, you know. | ||
We're going to use tariffs for foreign policy. | ||
We don't really care. | ||
You know, we're going to have free trade and we're not really going to pursue a solid industrial policy. | ||
We're going to use tariffs to get the people to overthrow Venezuela. | ||
It's like, well, we're playing games doing that. | ||
China is building warships. | ||
We're playing games with that. | ||
They're building the industries of the future. | ||
It's all in-house. | ||
The supply chains are controlled by them. | ||
Who will have the ability to project power in 50 years? | ||
And then who will control the global economy? | ||
Then who will control anything? | ||
So you have to get these things right now. | ||
This is fundamental. | ||
This is extremely important. | ||
This should be a priority. | ||
Instead of using tariffs to secure a short-term concession, we should have tariffs in place comprehensively and permanently so that we can in the long term rebuild our productive capability, our productive capacity as a country. | ||
That is something that resonated with me in the first Trump campaign, I should say, but it never got off the ground. | ||
It has been 11 years now, or I should say 9 years, since Trump won the election the first time. | ||
We're hardly better off. | ||
We have some tariffs on aluminum. | ||
On steel, we have the tariffs on China were put in place in the first Trump admin, stayed there through Biden, are there now. | ||
But 10 years is a long time for there to not be any kind of whole-of-government approach to deal with this problem. | ||
So this is my concern, and I'm a little more optimistic about this than I am about immigration or foreign policy, but we need to see some follow-through. | ||
So I don't like this news. | ||
It would have been good to see reciprocal tariffs. | ||
It would have been good to see some across-the-board tariffs. | ||
It's got to happen at some point and needs to be combined with other things. | ||
So they got to focus up. | ||
But that's that. | ||
That's the tariffs. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our featured story, which is even better. | ||
I mean, this is great. | ||
So our featured story is about this signal leak. | ||
How does this even happen? | ||
Today, it was reported in The Atlantic that, if you remember a couple weeks ago, I guess it was last week, the Trump administration restarted the U.S. war in Yemen. | ||
So last year during the Biden administration, the United States and the United Kingdom were at war with the Houthi rebels in northern Yemen. | ||
They're attacking shipping in the Red Sea, and we're bombing them. | ||
We're bombing... | ||
Now their ports, their city, and Trump has restarted the war as of last week, hit him with major airstrikes. | ||
They've been going on almost every day since last week. | ||
It's far more significant than anything that happened last year. | ||
And what we've learned today is that before the strikes began, these are very significant, very consequential strikes. | ||
This is a serious military action. | ||
This is the most serious military action since Trump took office. | ||
We have now learned that before the strikes began, a group chat was created on Signal, the encrypted messaging app, which included the vice president, national security advisor, secretary of defense, secretary of state. | ||
And apparently they accidentally added to the group chat. | ||
The editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, the newspaper. | ||
This was an accident. | ||
The purpose of the group chat was to plan the military strike. | ||
So they were discussing the targets. | ||
They were discussing which weapons they would use. | ||
They were discussing the timing of the strike. | ||
Which cities they were going to hit. | ||
This is apparently the highest level talk between the critical elements in our Military-Industrial Complex, or the, I should say, State Department, Defense Department, planning out this strike, and they accidentally had a journalist eavesdropping and reading the entire conversation. | ||
It was the journalist, by the way, who discovered that this happened. | ||
They didn't even know. | ||
They didn't know that they added him on accident. | ||
He left and then informed the public. | ||
They didn't even know the entire time. | ||
It's not like, in other words, he was sitting there and then, you know, Rubio said, hey, wait a second, who's this guy? | ||
I don't recognize that number. | ||
And they removed him. | ||
They didn't even notice he was there. | ||
He said that he left the group chat because he felt like it was compromising national security. | ||
He left voluntarily. | ||
Imagine if he was a bad actor. | ||
This is our government. | ||
And this is a story. | ||
This is from the New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth disclosed war plans in an encrypted group chat that included journalists two hours before U.S. troops launched attacks against the Houthi militia in Yemen. | ||
The editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, wrote that he was mistakenly added to the text chat on Signal by Michael Waltz, the national security advisor. | ||
Not only was the journalist inadvertently included in the group, but the conversation also took place outside of the secure government channels that would normally be used for classified and highly sensitive war planning. | ||
Mr. Goldberg said he was able to follow the conversation among senior members of President Trump's national security team in the two days leading up to the strikes in Yemen. | ||
The group also included Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. | ||
Two days he was in there. | ||
At 11.44 a.m. on March 15th, Mr. Hegseth posted the operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information about targets, weapons, and attack sequencing, said Goldberg. | ||
The information contained in them, if they had been read by an adversary of the United States, could conceivably have been used to harm American military and intelligence personnel, particularly in the broader Middle East. | ||
The Hegseth text on Saturday, it was mainly procedural and policy texting. | ||
Then it became war plans. | ||
And to be honest, he said, that sent a chill down my spine. | ||
Mr. Hegseth, said Goldberg, said that the first detonations in Yemen would be felt two hours hence at 1.45 p.m. Eastern Time, so I waited in my car in a supermarket parking lot. | ||
If this signal chat was real, I reasoned, Houthi targets would soon be bombed. | ||
At around 155, initial airstrikes hit buildings and neighborhoods in and around the capital of Yemen that were known Houthi leadership strongholds, according to Pentagon officials and residents. | ||
Mr. Hegseth, said Goldberg, declared to the group, which included the journalist, that steps were taken to keep the information secret. | ||
He said, we are currently clean on OPSEC, using the military acronym for operational security. | ||
Several Defense Department officials expressed shock that Mr. Hegseth had put American war plans into a commercial chat group. | ||
They said that having this type of conversation in a signal chat itself could be a violation of the Espionage Act. | ||
So how does this happen? | ||
They created a signal group chat. | ||
Keep in mind, these are literally the highest-ranking officials in the United States government. | ||
This is the Vice President of the United States. | ||
The Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth. | ||
The Secretary of State, Marco Rubio. | ||
The National Security Advisor, Mike Waltz. | ||
Stephen Miller was in there. | ||
And then they accidentally added the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg. | ||
And you wonder, let's say this is real. | ||
So first of all, we know it is real. | ||
The White House confirmed it is an authentic leak. | ||
They're downplaying it. | ||
They're saying, well, it's really not a big deal. | ||
Mike Johnson commented on it. | ||
The White House. | ||
Trump commented on it. | ||
They said, oh, it's no big deal. | ||
So it is real. | ||
But assuming it is, let's say, authentic. | ||
It's sincere. | ||
It's sort of funny. | ||
I wonder, did they add Goldberg? | ||
Was there supposed to be some other Goldberg? | ||
Was somebody scrolling through their contacts and said, oh, there's Jeffrey Goldberg. | ||
Was it a different Goldberg they needed to add to the call? | ||
It's kind of funny, like... | ||
Who is this apparently other Jewish person who was supposed to be on the text chain? | ||
We don't even know. | ||
Otherwise, how else does it happen? | ||
Did somebody just misclick? | ||
You can imagine J.D. Vance is scrolling through his phone on Signal. | ||
Okay, Pete, Marco, Mike, let's see, Stephen. | ||
And then what? | ||
Like they accidentally selected it? | ||
You know how like sometimes you're going through your camera roll and you accidentally highlight a picture? | ||
Was it like that? | ||
I mean, how does that even happen? | ||
And then they're in a signal group chat like there's not a government app for this? | ||
So they're planning out how to bomb Yemen on the same app that you're like... | ||
Texting memes on? | ||
Could they do this in a Twitter group chat? | ||
They're on their official Twitter account? | ||
Hey, alright, this is a group chat. | ||
Let's make a profile picture. | ||
Let's make a group photo for the group. | ||
We'll give it a name. | ||
How is this even happening? | ||
And then you wonder, was it staged? | ||
We're assuming that it's authentic. | ||
And that would give you a lot of... | ||
There'd be a lot of questions. | ||
Like, why? | ||
Why would they be debating this or discussing this on Signal? | ||
Seems a little bizarre. | ||
And then you ask, how do they add somebody by accident? | ||
I mean, literally, if it's authentic, it must have been a misclick. | ||
That had to be what it was. | ||
Scrolling and accidentally tapped the wrong person? | ||
And then you almost wonder if it's not fake, but staged. | ||
Was this... | ||
In other words, some sort of performance. | ||
And you read through some of the messages and they don't seem real. | ||
The way that they're talking to each other, it almost doesn't seem like how they would really be talking to each other. | ||
And other people have commented on this as well. | ||
The actual specific text messages, they don't actually sound like real officials discussing military plans. | ||
It almost reads as though it was written for... | ||
Public disclosure, as if they knew it would be read by the public. | ||
It reads as though they're writing like they're cognizant of the fact that it is public. | ||
It almost reads too sterile, too manicured, too maybe robotic. | ||
It almost sounds artificial. | ||
And then you wonder why that might be. | ||
And I think about specifically there was an exchange. | ||
So let's talk about the strikes in general. | ||
After the Gaza ceasefire fell apart at the beginning of this month, Israel began bombing Hamas and ostensibly all Palestinians again in Gaza. | ||
The Houthi rebels in Yemen began bombing shipping in the Red Sea. | ||
Who cares? | ||
The United States... | ||
Trump restarted its campaign then against the Houthis, and we did this major, like I said, we did this major airstrike. | ||
It is still ongoing, actually. | ||
We're bombing them every day. | ||
We're bombing the households of the leadership, the headquarters of the leadership. | ||
We're bombing their port cities. | ||
It's brutal. | ||
And there's been a lot of criticism of the administration. | ||
People say this is another war. | ||
Trump ran on the promise that there would be no new wars. | ||
He's a peacemaker. | ||
Well, here we are. | ||
This is the third country the United States has bombed. | ||
Somalia, Syria, now Yemen. | ||
And now we're involved in what is effectively an open-ended conflict with no end in sight in Yemen, which has a very high likelihood of potentially spinning out of control and expanding into other conflicts like in Iraq or in Iran or elsewhere. | ||
So when the strikes happened, there was a lot of backlash. | ||
And people said we didn't elect Trump to bomb Yemen. | ||
As a matter of fact, we elected Trump so that we would stop bombing countries in the Middle East. | ||
That's why we elected him the first time also. | ||
Well, inside these text messages, there's a text from J.D. Vance. | ||
Out of the whole group, you have Walsh, you have Rubio, you've got Miller, you've got a bunch of other people, you've got Vance. | ||
Out of the whole group, Vance is the only one that expresses any degree of skepticism. | ||
He's the only one that second guesses the strikes. | ||
And Vance says, well, I'm not going to say anything publicly. | ||
I'll go along with it, he says, but I think we should wait. | ||
He said 3% of the trade that goes through the Strait of Hormuz, or excuse me, the Suez Canal, he said 3% of that trade is American, 20% of it is European. | ||
He said, it's not really our business. | ||
He said, I don't want to bail out the Europeans again. | ||
They're freeloaders. | ||
Why bail out the Europeans? | ||
He says, so I don't know if I support this. | ||
I think we should wait. | ||
This isn't America first, he's effectively saying. | ||
He says, but I'll go with it if this is what the president decides. | ||
And Pete Hegseth comes in and says, yeah, I'm sick of the freeloaders too, but this is about freedom of navigation and this is about sending a message and this and that. | ||
The only concern that they express, by the way, is that Saudi Arabia might be affected. | ||
This is something I've talked about on the show a lot. | ||
The risk of escalation with the Houthis is that the Houthis will re-engage Saudi Arabia. | ||
The Houthis were in a brutal war with Saudi Arabia for years. | ||
And the reason this was problematic for the United States is because the Houthis were bombing Saudi Arabia's oil fields. | ||
And so if missiles from the Houthis are raining down on Saudi Arabia, this is not good for foreign investment. | ||
Saudi Arabia is trying to attract investment. | ||
They're trying to translate their oil wealth into long-term prosperity. | ||
It's not good for that. | ||
But it's also bad for oil prices. | ||
It sends oil prices skyrocketing because it harms their ability to produce and export oil. | ||
So the Houthis previously were targeting two pressure points for the United States, Israel, and Europe. | ||
In the past year, they've been targeting Red Sea shipping. | ||
But since Biden forced a truce between Saudi Arabia and Yemen and took the Houthis off the terrorist... | ||
The state sponsors of terrorism list or terrorist watch list, they were at war with Saudi Arabia and they were putting pressure on us by bombing Saudi Arabia's oil fields. | ||
That was the only concern that Vance expressed. | ||
He said, well, we just need to make sure the Saudis are taken care of. | ||
He said, I don't think we should do it. | ||
Our trade isn't really affected that much. | ||
He said, I'm just concerned about, and what about Saudi Arabia? | ||
What if they get hit? | ||
Oh, imagine that. | ||
You know, Israel is slaughtering these Palestinians and Saudi Arabia is patiently waiting it out so they can make a deal with the devil. | ||
That's what's going on. | ||
Saudi Arabia was on their way to making a normalization deal with Israel where Saudi Arabia would establish a diplomatic relationship and recognize Israel. | ||
In exchange, they would get a defensive treaty with the United States, like a NATO-level security guarantee. | ||
Plus, they'd be brought into IMEC and attract a ton of investment. | ||
So Saudi Arabia, that was derailed after October 7th. | ||
They're waiting for all the Palestinians to be genocided. | ||
They're not going to do a thing about it. | ||
They're waiting for that to end so that then they can make a deal with Netanyahu and then get all the money. | ||
And J.D. Vance is worried about, oh, I hope this doesn't spill over into Saudi Arabia. | ||
And I almost wonder if the messages were leaked. | ||
Maybe this is crazy. | ||
Admittedly, this is speculation, pure speculation. | ||
This is not by any stretch obvious or supported by the evidence. | ||
This is speculative. | ||
I almost wonder if the messages were leaked to make Vance look good. | ||
I almost wonder if that was put out there so that Vance looks like he wasn't going along with it to sort of protect his reputation. | ||
To say, hey, look, Vance is sticking up for us. | ||
Vance is more America first than Trump. | ||
Trump and all these other guys want to go to war with Yemen, but Vance protested, and the only reason he went along with it was to be a team player. | ||
I almost wonder if it was leaked to make him look good. | ||
Or, conversely, I wonder if it was leaked to make Mike Waltz look bad. | ||
Mike Waltz, the national security advisor, He is the one that added the journalist to the group chat. | ||
So that means, by the way, that if he added the journalist, it's his responsibility. | ||
If there's an espionage act, if there's legal culpability, it's his fault. | ||
That's an almost fireable offense. | ||
If this turns into a big scandal, if this ever became a real problem, that would be like grounds for dismissal. | ||
Does somebody want Mike Waltz out? | ||
I can think of some people that would want him out. | ||
What's more, inside that clique of like Vance, Waltz, Rubio, Hegseth, they say that Waltz is the most neocon. | ||
They say that he is the most aggressive, the most interventionist, and he's the one pushing for the strikes. | ||
I wonder, did they put this out there to put him on blast for that reason too? | ||
So the whole thing is a little bit... | ||
Weird. I don't necessarily trust it. | ||
And I think it's real. | ||
I think it's a real leak. | ||
The question is whether or not it was staged. | ||
And whether or not this is some sort of power play by somebody inside the administration. | ||
And then the question is to what end? | ||
Is this to make someone look good? | ||
Is this to try to jettison somebody from the team? | ||
I think just based on what is inside the texts, the most obvious conclusion is either it was there to make Vance look good and Waltz look bad. | ||
Maybe it was created by someone from Vance's team, and that's why it makes Vance look good. | ||
Maybe it's by someone on Vance's team trying to get Waltz out, and in the process, it just happens to make JD look like the America First guy. | ||
And there is a little-known rivalry. | ||
The rumor that I heard before, I'll let you in on some of the inside baseball. | ||
You're not going to hear this on another show because other people aren't privy to this information. | ||
But here's the rumor. | ||
Before the election, the rumor is that Michael Anton was going to have this job. | ||
Michael Anton was going to be the national security advisor. | ||
Michael Anton is famous for writing the Flight 93 election article. | ||
He was at Claremont. | ||
Long-time ally of Peter Thiel. | ||
Peter Thiel got Anton into the first Trump administration. | ||
And of course, Vance is a protege of Peter Thiel. | ||
And the rumor was that the National Security Advisor job was Michael Anton's. | ||
Allegedly, he was going to get it. | ||
And then during the transition, he lost the power struggle to Mike Waltz. | ||
Mike Waltz got the job. | ||
And Anton didn't. | ||
And allegedly Anton was beside himself. | ||
He was furious they didn't get the job. | ||
And of course Anton comes from the Peter Thiel faction. | ||
He comes from the Peter Thiel wing. | ||
It's a very important job. | ||
National Security Council is like the most prestigious group. | ||
When you're talking about personnel in the White House and the administration, at the very bottom you have the BS departments like, I don't even want to say because I know People in some of them, but like, you know, you're talking about like the Department of the Interior and like Department of Agriculture. | ||
It's like Department of Transportation. | ||
There's not a lot of people that want to work in those departments. | ||
National Security Council is like the most prestigious position. | ||
It's not glamorous. | ||
It's not a great job. | ||
You have to go into like a windowless room and you're just like doing policy all day. | ||
But... For personnel, that is like the dream job because that is how you climb your way up the ladder. | ||
Anything related to State Department, Defense Department, and anything that liaises with the White House, which is what the NSC does, it's prestigious. | ||
So Anton wanted that job. | ||
Apparently Anton was promised that job. | ||
He got passed over for Waltz. | ||
You almost wonder... | ||
Since Waltz is the one that added the journalist to the group chat, maybe it's real, maybe it isn't. | ||
Maybe it's completely fake. | ||
Maybe it's real, but it's staged. | ||
But none of this seems like it's authentic. | ||
There's something strange, maybe, but the idea that the vice president and the secretary of state and the secretary of defense created a group chat? | ||
And they're like, hey guys, ready to bomb Yemen? | ||
They're literally texting each other emojis during the bombing. | ||
Mike Waltz and Hegseth are literally texting emojis like muscle emoji, American bang emoji. | ||
They're literally texting strings of emojis while the strikes are going on. | ||
Somehow I don't think that's, for one reason or another, I don't think that's real. | ||
They're on an encrypted third-party messaging app. | ||
They're in a group chat. | ||
They're like, hey, are we ready to bomb Yemen? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It doesn't seem America first. | ||
It doesn't seem Groyper America first. | ||
Oh, come on. | ||
I fucking hate the Europeans too, but this is about sending a message. | ||
Something about it doesn't seem right. | ||
And since Waltz is the one who added the journalist, Since if this is fake in any way, he would be the one culpable. | ||
He'd have to say maybe it's some sort of op to knock him out of orbit. | ||
And who would want him gone? | ||
And I saw some of the anti-war. | ||
It's a lot of the anti-war types. | ||
Like I would imagine it's the Tucker Carlson types. | ||
It's people like Kurt Mills was talking about it. | ||
Kurt Mills has been around these guys forever. | ||
They are all very anti-Waltz and have been talking badly about Waltz. | ||
You also have imminently potentially a war with Iran that they're trying to stop. | ||
You almost wonder in this, like, very critical time, is this a very bold attempt to oust him from the inner circle to replace him with somebody from a different faction? | ||
I wonder if that's what's happening here. | ||
But that's all speculation. | ||
By no means is any of that 100% or even 90%. | ||
I mean that's all just a theory. | ||
But we'll have to wait and see what else comes out, if there's any more information about how this came to be, if we get any more public comments, if there's any fallout. | ||
The whole thing seems very strange. | ||
I don't know if I believe it. | ||
I don't know if I buy that it's what they're saying it is. | ||
That seems like theater. | ||
So we'll see if anybody loses their job. | ||
But that's that. | ||
That is the strike in Yemen and the Signal group chat. | ||
Weird, weird deal. | ||
But with that, we're going to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our super chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
Let me get set up. | ||
We'll take a look. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll take a look. | |
All right, let's see. | ||
unidentified
|
Omega for $10. | |
The Chinese guy who keeps super chatting about me has Napoleon complex and is still seething because I made fun of his height. | ||
That's why he is throwing hundreds of dollars at you to try to drag you to the top. | ||
Okay. I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, I'm not really following along with all that. | |
Good. Good. | ||
I love to hear that. | ||
Honestly, get law degrees. | ||
Ugh, it's like some dust in my water or something. | ||
People are always asking me, how can I help the movement? | ||
How could I help the movement? | ||
Oh, come to a meet and greet and take a picture of me. | ||
The way that you help the movement, if you're a young person, go to college. | ||
You want to help the movement? | ||
Go to college. | ||
Get a degree. | ||
Get a law degree. | ||
And work in politics. | ||
Work in politics, work in tech. | ||
The best thing you could do for the movement is to develop political influence and connections or make a ton of money. | ||
Those are the things you can do. | ||
Because those are the things the political movement lives and dies on, is resources, connections, and that's really it. | ||
That's really it. | ||
You know, people are like—and look, respectfully, somebody said the other day I was hating on people from the trades. | ||
I like people from the trades, but we're involved in a political movement during technological singularity. | ||
What we need are like a cadre of like bureaucrat types, political lawyer types, people that know that if you could— That could be plugged into government and work well? | ||
Like, when we're talking about filling up the White House, who do you think we're talking about filling the White House with? | ||
We're talking about we want to get our personnel in the White House. | ||
You know, the White House doesn't need a ton of tradesmen. | ||
I know that sounds shitty. | ||
There's no way to say it. | ||
That doesn't sound shitty. | ||
People say, oh, I'm in the trades, or I do this, or I do that. | ||
It's like, okay, but think about what a political movement needs. | ||
What a political movement needs. | ||
You know, strictly speaking, political expertise. | ||
Like in the purest form, it's a cadre of revolutionaries that are going to literally run the fucking government. | ||
That means bureaucrats. | ||
That means lawyers. | ||
That means people with poli sci degrees. | ||
That means people that are in the civil service. | ||
That means people that are working in the various departments and agencies. | ||
So if you can't see yourself working there, that's a problem. | ||
On the other side of it, Well, who donates to the—where's the money being made? | ||
And who's donating to the campaigns? | ||
It's tech. | ||
You want to make it big? | ||
I mean, you could either be independently wealthy from your own industry, but the big thing, what's really influential, are these industries that are close to the government, which is tech. | ||
The industries that are closest to the government is national security, defense, and that's all tech right now. | ||
I mean, in the old days, it was like Lockheed Martin. | ||
As time goes on, it's going to be Anderil. | ||
It's going to be Palantir. | ||
It's going to be these venture capital types, like the government's being filled up by Andreessen Horowitz. | ||
So that's helpful. | ||
And then on the other side is media. | ||
We do media. | ||
We're trying to spread propaganda. | ||
Propaganda is good for a lot of things. | ||
So anything digital, anything with cameras, anything with editing. | ||
Audio, video. | ||
And those are really the skill sets. | ||
So that's just a little add-on. | ||
So good for you, but I'm glad to hear that. | ||
I don't even want to say more than I should right now, but I feel like we're in a better position than ever. | ||
We are an invisible empire. | ||
The Groypers are an invisible empire. | ||
We're everywhere. | ||
And we have very solid people. | ||
But the people that are the most solid are the people that have gone to college and gotten degrees from good schools. | ||
And then these are the people that are, I mean, they're taking over everywhere. | ||
So I'm really glad to hear that. | ||
If you're getting a degree, you're on your way to law school, you're on a great track. | ||
The only thing is just keep faith in our movement. | ||
Never become assimilated. | ||
Never let them convince you to be mainstream or whatever. | ||
That doesn't mean go and be a Spurg and tell everybody how fucking based you are. | ||
But like never let them convince you to be a normie. | ||
That's the only thing. | ||
Fred Bunstein sent $50. | ||
Hey, Nick, I liked your shirt during the JFK. | ||
Hey, thank you very much. | ||
Beer and pizza money. | ||
Okay, well, I don't drink beer, but I'll take the pizza money. | ||
I love the beer and pizza. | ||
That sounds so poor. | ||
That makes me never want to eat pizza again. | ||
When you say beer and pizza, you make me sound like I'm some kind of fucking grunt. | ||
You make me sound like I'm some kind of peasant with, like, dirty hands. | ||
Here, buddy, here's some beer and pizza for you guys. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, hey, all right, thanks, man. | |
Like I'm some kind of fucking, like, depth groveler. | ||
Like I have soot all over my face. | ||
Like I have soot all over my face. | ||
Like I just came out of a mine shaft with, like, grease-covered hands. | ||
Oh, thanks, sir. | ||
You know, I'm wiping my forehead with, like, some kind of dirty rag. | ||
All right, beer and pizza for the guys. | ||
That makes me never want to eat pizza ever again. | ||
But I appreciate it. | ||
But hey, it's a thought that counts. | ||
I do love pizza, as a matter of fact, but I don't drink beer. | ||
I don't drink fucking beer, okay? | ||
I don't drink alcohol. | ||
I've never had alcohol before in my life. | ||
And even if I did drink alcohol, I wouldn't drink beer. | ||
Just so you understand. | ||
Just so you understand. | ||
Beer and pizza money. | ||
Beer and pizza is like the equivalent. | ||
Of like a pizza party for like a little kid. | ||
unidentified
|
All right! | |
Beer and pizza! | ||
The boss bought beer and pizza for all of us depth grovelers, for all of us mineshaft workers. | ||
Oh, brother. | ||
Beer and pizza! | ||
Golly! My diet is all Blueprint. | ||
My diet is 100% longevity mix. | ||
I don't even eat solid foods. | ||
I just drink longevity mix. | ||
I just eat pure Blueprint Protocol. | ||
Chocolate. Olive oil. | ||
We're not doing any beer and pizza anymore, but thank you. | ||
What was retarded? | ||
I don't know who you're talking about. | ||
But thank you for that. | ||
That was heretical and I don't know what the fuck you're talking about. | ||
But you sound like an idiot, actually. | ||
But I appreciate it. | ||
Oh, you're glad for me? | ||
That made you glad? | ||
You sat there and said, oh, I'm glad. | ||
What do you mean you're glad? | ||
Well, what's there to be glad about? | ||
But thank you. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Hope you had a good weekend. | ||
Good cushion alcohol sent $10. | ||
I hate the phone. | ||
I really hate it. | ||
Look, I think it's a wonderful marvel of human ingenuity, but it's its yet-sar heart trap. | ||
It's true. | ||
He's right about that. | ||
He was right about that. | ||
Sailor Sobel sent $10, celebrating cause I had just fully red-pilled my mom. | ||
She was a Zionist last month. | ||
I catechized her to become Catholic a year after my baptism and now this? | ||
Dad used to hate the church but now is converting too. | ||
Still a Zionist, but it's only a matter of time. | ||
I'm so rhetorically locked in right now. | ||
AF. Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Based! I red-pilled my parents, and I'm based. | |
I saw. | ||
Friend Horn gave an embarrassing reaction to your wife Jack comments that-I saw. | ||
Classics posted the clip on X. The Daily Wire is a sinking ship. | ||
Would it not be fitting for them to finally engage in a monetized debate with a last ditch effort to save their company and save face? | ||
Honestly, that's the only thing they could do. | ||
The only thing that Daily Wire could do to save their sinking ship is to defeat me in battle. | ||
That's it. | ||
They're crashing and burning. | ||
They're on their way out. | ||
Their credibility is gone. | ||
Like, the walls have been breached. | ||
Okay, the Red Keep... | ||
unidentified
|
The Red Keep is no longer safe. | |
Little Game of Thrones reference. | ||
No, but it's... | ||
Like, it's over. | ||
It's like in Dune. | ||
It's like in Dune when they get in the pyramid. | ||
The Fremen and the, you know, it's just, it's over. | ||
It's fucking over for them. | ||
And so now their only hope is to trial by combat. | ||
Their only hope is to defeat me in battle. | ||
If they defeat me, they rescue their credibility and they say, oh, the Groypers were wrong. | ||
The anti-Semites were wrong. | ||
We still deserve to exist. | ||
Right now, the question is, does Daily Wire deserve to exist? | ||
And I'm holding a sword to their neck saying they don't. | ||
I'm holding a dagger to the throat of the Daily Wire and saying, it's over, okay? | ||
I'm the king now. | ||
Only thing that saves them is a fair trial by combat. | ||
So I think now's the time. | ||
Send me the champion. | ||
Send me your champion. | ||
I demand satisfaction. | ||
Whether Shapiro or Peterson, Trent Horn isn't there. | ||
He's not a Daily Wire, but someone will have to fight me now. | ||
Okay, be normal. | ||
Try being normal, actually. | ||
I go to church, okay, buddy? | ||
Like, I just go to church. | ||
You know. | ||
Niggas be like, I go to the Latin Novus Ordo. | ||
Hey, shut the fuck up. | ||
Just go to church. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm so sick of this, like, going to Latin Novus Ordo. | |
Hey, just go to church. | ||
This is why we're Catholic to avoid all that. | ||
Okay? You know, it's like a Protestant tendency to be doing this like, oh no, I go to this one. | ||
It's like, hey, we're all on the same team. | ||
So I'll just church. | ||
Marco meant on quarters. | ||
It sent $10. | ||
The dude's posting wins. | ||
Guy tweeted five apostrophe five. | ||
Lucas bird won the national championship at 133 pounds and immediately goes to hug his six feet, three inches girlfriend. | ||
Bro is a legend. | ||
One of the most disgusting humiliation rituals I have ever seen. | ||
The entire arena knew what goes on in their bedroom. | ||
unidentified
|
Puked. *sniff* I don't get it. | |
5'5", Lucas Bird won the championship and hugged his 6'3 girlfriend. | ||
He's 5'5", she's 6'3". | ||
Yeesh. It gives us hope, though, for the short guys out there. | ||
It gives us a little hope. | ||
It's like that movie Tall Girl. | ||
It's like that movie Tall Girl, remember? | ||
When that short guy, dude. | ||
Okay, the twist at the end of that movie, the short guy always carries around a milk stool. | ||
He's like a short guy, has a crush on a tall girl, and is like schtick, because he carries around a milk stool. | ||
He's so quirky. | ||
The twist is at the end, he was always carrying around the milk stool, because one day he was going to get up on it and kiss the tall girl. | ||
Could you die? | ||
Like, dumbest movie ever. | ||
But I saw it years ago. | ||
unidentified
|
I was just watching it. | |
I was just watching it. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
You gotta grope him. | ||
You're never gonna win. | ||
You're never gonna defeat. | ||
Vivek is too... | ||
He's too eloquent. | ||
You will never defeat him in a Q&A. | ||
Nice try. | ||
Jerusalem sent $15. | ||
Feeling energized at late hours compared to conventional sleep times is consistent with being a night owl or delayed sleep-wake phase disorder. | ||
It is considered a normal human variant in circadian rhythm unless it causes significant dysfunction in life. | ||
It is just how you are wired. | ||
I think I am that way. | ||
I really do. | ||
I'm a night owl. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
I feel alive during the night. | ||
In the daytime, I want to go. | ||
I'm like a vampire. | ||
I'm a vamp. | ||
You know? | ||
In the daytime, it fills me with dread. | ||
When I see the sun coming up, I'm just like, oh, gosh. | ||
I really just hate when the sun comes up. | ||
And then I go outside, I open the door, and I'm like, I don't want to be in the light. | ||
But then when I'm in the dark, I'm like in my element. | ||
I feel wired. | ||
I feel energized. | ||
I feel activated. | ||
Active ingredient. | ||
I become the active ingredient of the night. | ||
So I don't know what that is. | ||
Brian Johnson said, oh, well, you know, you're going to crash. | ||
Well, I do. | ||
But it's worth it. | ||
See, I really hate the daytime. | ||
I can't tell you how much I hate being awake during the day. | ||
That's why I love winter, because it's dark all the time. | ||
unidentified
|
I hate... | |
There's just something about the vibes of the day. | ||
The vibes of the day are off. | ||
It's just not cool. | ||
It's too bright. | ||
It's too hot. | ||
It's too many people. | ||
The whole concept just fills me... | ||
You want to know why? | ||
Because when it's daytime... | ||
One, the sun is in your eyes constantly. | ||
Two, way too bright. | ||
Three, way too hot. | ||
Four, you know that when you go out during the day, you're going to encounter traffic. | ||
Like there's going to be a million people on the road. | ||
And like negotiating traffic is going to be a headache. | ||
And you know that like during peak hours, there's going to be tons of traffic. | ||
The worst sight in the world for me, what just makes my stomach turn. | ||
Is when I get onto the highway. | ||
You know when you get onto the entrance ramp onto the highway and it's during rush hour and you get on the entrance ramp and you just see fucking a million cars with their taillights on just like moving a little and then stopping? | ||
That sight is just like I think I would rather see the Grim Reaper. | ||
I think I would rather see like Falling off of a fucking building. | ||
I think I would rather see, like, a great white shark headed for me than see that. | ||
Like, it's daytime, it's too bright, and then you get on the entrance ramp and then you just see fucking a million cars and you're just like, oh my gosh, like, I'd rather be dead right now. | ||
So, that's daytime vibes for me. | ||
Daytime vibes is like that. | ||
That's daytime. | ||
To me, nighttime, It's like no one's on the highway. | ||
You can go as fast as you want. | ||
At nighttime, no one is anywhere. | ||
All you have to do is worry about cops, and that's it. | ||
On the highway, you could just go crazy. | ||
That's what's great about nighttime. | ||
Nighttime, you go to a place that's about to close, and no one's in there at all. | ||
You're the only guy in there. | ||
It's dark, so you can see easier. | ||
So, no one's fucking bothering you in the daytime. | ||
People are texting you, calling you, you know, people are expecting you to be places. | ||
At nighttime, no one's bothering you. | ||
No one's awake. | ||
No one's calling you. | ||
You're not getting spam calls and stuff like that. | ||
You just do your thing. | ||
It's quiet. | ||
In the daytime, you've got car alarms going off. | ||
People are yelling. | ||
Dogs are barking. | ||
People are honking their horns. | ||
Emergency vehicles. | ||
unidentified
|
Nighttime, it's just quiet. | |
So that's the best. | ||
It's the best time. | ||
It's the best time to be awake. | ||
So I reject the blueprint protocol on night. | ||
John Marks sent $10. | ||
What your opinion is on the Bayside Mull incident in 2024. | ||
There is significant evidence that it was a demonic apparition or some sort of extraterrestrial activity. | ||
Half of Florida's active police force showed up for an incident, still unexplained by officials. | ||
Ten feet tall apparitions spotted on cams. | ||
Oh, yeah, I remember that. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I never looked into it, but that's pretty creepy. | ||
Yeah, he's got to just drop the Islam thing. | ||
You see him go to that imam? | ||
And the imam said, well, if you ask any questions about Islam, you're kafir. | ||
Get out of my sight. | ||
It's like the religion that you must uncritically accept. | ||
Can't ask questions. | ||
Can't be skeptical. | ||
And he throws out, he's like, if you have a problem with the fact that Muhammad married a nine-year-old, you're kafir. | ||
unidentified
|
Get out of my sight. | |
I don't want to see you. | ||
You're an infidel. | ||
And Sneeko's like, wait, what? | ||
And the guy's like, yeah. | ||
God chose the Arabs because we're the most moral people. | ||
And Sneeko's like, wait, what? | ||
No refunds, buddy. | ||
And now if you quit, they'll cut your head off. | ||
Dude, he's obsessed with me. | ||
He's got to stop, man. | ||
unidentified
|
Or he's got to debate. | |
Thank you. | ||
True. That's funny. | ||
unidentified
|
Don't ever stop saying it. | |
Don't let him yuck your yum, okay? | ||
He's a hater. | ||
Say W all you want, Mom. | ||
That's, no. | ||
Good on you. | ||
That's epic. | ||
unidentified
|
That's so funny. | |
We love moms. | ||
That's so funny. | ||
Imagine mom saying W. Yo, W? | ||
W's in the chat? | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
That's going to be me when I'm a parent, if I'm ever a parent. | ||
unidentified
|
That'll be me. | |
My kids will be like, oh my gosh. | ||
I'll be like, hey, listen. | ||
Listen, punk. | ||
Listen, YN. | ||
We invented memes, okay? | ||
We invented based on the internet. | ||
But sure enough, you know, it's happening now. | ||
All these kids that are younger than me, all these like 18-year-old kids are like calling me unk. | ||
unidentified
|
Because I don't know... | |
What is it? | ||
Santa Cruz Medicinals or whatever? | ||
Because I needed to get put on to that. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, oh, do you know what this is? | |
You know what? | ||
Shut the fuck up. | ||
We invented based. | ||
unidentified
|
Now I'm really sounding old, right? | |
Uh, yeah, I started watching it. | ||
I turned it off. | ||
Good luck. | ||
Good luck. | ||
Come into grips with the fact that Hub's Life won. | ||
Shut up! | ||
You want to hear my take on it, dude? | ||
You already know the information. | ||
I love how people research a thing and then they're like, I want, but I want you to say it now. | ||
Willie Geeky, two cent, $10. | ||
We're the fighting Irish. | ||
We don't back down. | ||
We don't quit. | ||
We don't make excuses. | ||
We rise, we push, and we fight, not just for ourselves, but for each other. | ||
Every challenge we face, every setback we endure, only fuels the fire and True. Did he get engaged? | ||
How do I do that? | ||
Also, would love to see more casual streams. | ||
That's bae. | ||
I think you're overstating that. | ||
I don't think that's true. | ||
Yes, very true. | ||
Very true. | ||
No, you're too stupid. | ||
Nope. Get away from me. | ||
unidentified
|
I love when people are like, no, absolutely not. | |
No. No, no book list for you. | ||
unidentified
|
Can I have some books on history? | |
Can I have books on foreign policy? | ||
Try educating yourself. | ||
Okay. Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. We're doing that. | |
Yeah, he did that. | ||
He literally did. | ||
John Smith said $25. | ||
I see why you keep dodging debates with leftists. | ||
You concede that Trump aims to impose a 15% across the board there, but said that was ridiculous when you debated Dean. | ||
You've also conceded on the Russia Ukraine war, despite your debate with destiny, who had facts on his side. | ||
He also beat you in the immigration debate, by the way. | ||
unidentified
|
It was ridiculous. | |
Did you watch the show? | ||
I said it was ridiculous and now it's not happening. | ||
I was right. | ||
You said... | ||
That Trump imposing a 15% across-the-board tariff was ridiculous. | ||
Yeah, and he's not doing it. | ||
He already walked that back. | ||
And he's walking back the walk-back. | ||
He walked back the 15% and the reciprocal tariffs. | ||
Now he's just saying, well, I'll do some tariffs on some countries. | ||
I was right. | ||
Dean Withers is like, Trump says he's going to do a 15% tariff. | ||
I'm like, that's never going to happen. | ||
I was right. | ||
And when did I concede on Russia and Ukraine? | ||
When did I ever concede? | ||
Russia's winning. | ||
I said during that debate, I said, by next year, Russia will have won. | ||
And they said, what does that mean? | ||
I said, they will have full control over those four oblasts, which they do. | ||
Which they did then and they still do. | ||
And the immigration debate, it wasn't even a debate. | ||
It was a lecture. | ||
He didn't know what the Hard Seller Act was. | ||
He literally didn't know what the hard sell or how do you have a debate with somebody on immigration they don't even know like one of the most important immigration laws in the past hundred years so it wasn't even it's not even fair to call that a debate it was more like a teaching session. | ||
No. Ryan Keller sent $10. | ||
Saw an Indian park a Jeep Wrangler today and then walk over to another Jeep and put a duck on it. | ||
We are living in hell. | ||
Put a duck on it? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
A duck? | ||
unidentified
|
A duck? | |
Thank you. | ||
What is that? | ||
Is that like a car thing? | ||
What's it like an actual, like an animal? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
John Smith sent $10. | ||
Just admit the left is correct for the most part and you are a bad faith debater who lies. | ||
Destiny owns you. | ||
Destiny doesn't even own his own wife, dude. | ||
Destiny's wife is getting turned out by some TikToker. | ||
He don't own shit. | ||
And he's getting sued for millions of dollars. | ||
He don't own shit. | ||
We're all cooked. | ||
It's over. | ||
It's because he worked at that building. | ||
Abe Zapruder worked at that building. | ||
That's why. | ||
Is it a coincidence that the guy who worked at that building was outside that building? | ||
No, but the guy that owned that building was probably... | ||
Yeah, I don't disagree with you. | ||
I think Zapruder was probably a Zionist agent. | ||
But... It's not a coincidence because he's a Jew. | ||
It's a coincidence because the guy that owned the building was in on it. | ||
So that's why. | ||
But yeah, I'm familiar with the Zapruder film. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I guess they're just stupid or something. | ||
I did, yeah. | ||
Yeah. Why would Jack Ruby... | ||
Well, Ruby said he had to kill Oswald because he thought there'd be a Holocaust against the Jews if he didn't. | ||
Because, like, people would blame the Jews. | ||
Why would people blame the Jews that Kennedy was killed? | ||
And Oswald said... | ||
He had to do it to prevent that from happening. | ||
It's sort of a weird motivation. | ||
I love when people... | ||
Yeah, I did all the research for the show. | ||
unidentified
|
Did you read it at this? | |
Why did you and Sam Hyde unfollow each other on Twitter? | ||
I didn't unfollow him. | ||
Unless he soft-blocked me. | ||
Let me check. | ||
We follow each other? | ||
What are you talking about, dumbass? | ||
John Smith sent $10. | ||
Anyone above 120 IQ knows the real reason you won't talk to Destiny anymore is because he has outpaced you intellectually. | ||
Everything else is an excuse. | ||
He stopped talking to me, actually. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Diet Coke Roy percent $20. | ||
Hey Nick are you on team Bomardero crocogili war team tra la la tra la. | ||
Penis Roy percent $10. | ||
I'm black pilled Nick. | ||
I just watched many videos of this Chinese guy posting China better YouTube shorts. | ||
It's clearly propaganda and the comments are full of self-hating Americans saying in America this would cost $500 some gay exaggerated number. | ||
Why is nationalistic self-hate so prevalent? | ||
unidentified
|
Why are people commenting on videos saying they don't like America? | |
Because America sucks, dude. | ||
Because our country is like a joke. | ||
Like, you know, I don't think that's self-hate to say that we're furious about, like, how our country—our country is a joke. | ||
It just is. | ||
New York, L.A., and Chicago are three biggest cities, and they're all a dump. | ||
Like, each is worse than the last. | ||
Chicago is supposed to be a world-class city, and you have people getting shot in every part of the city. | ||
By these like young black kids. | ||
The mayor is a joke. | ||
The mayor is a fucking idiot. | ||
You look in New York, same situation with the people getting pushed in front of trains. | ||
Like that's a, it's a consistent problem that people are getting thrown in front of trains and the subway. | ||
Like our country is a joke. | ||
The cost of living is super high and we have to live with these animals that are, and by the way, like a big part of why things are expensive is to avoid them. | ||
We can't live like this. | ||
We can't enjoy the public, the commons, because they have been ruined by the lowest common denominator. | ||
It's changed everything. | ||
You can't ride public transportation. | ||
You can't go to public school or send your kids to a public school. | ||
You can't live in the city and walk to the park or enjoy any kind of free amenity. | ||
Anything that isn't super expensive, you can't enjoy. | ||
Because it's being ruined by these fucking people because the mayors are all black and you can't enforce the laws against the black people or anybody for that matter. | ||
And so, you know, we live in this like bubble society where you basically have to stay inside a bubble to avoid the consequences of diversity. | ||
You have to live in a bubble. | ||
You have to travel in a bubble. | ||
And you have to travel to other bubbles. | ||
You have to live in a bubble, which is your white suburb or white building, you know, like a super high HOA to avoid diversity, to literally price the diversity away from you. | ||
Then you have to get in a car. | ||
That's a bubble because you can't ride public transportation. | ||
And then you go to other bubbles where you're not going to have to deal with that shit. | ||
And you can never be... | ||
Out in the world. | ||
Because if you're out in the world, you're dealing with these fucking people. | ||
And it's very expensive for everybody to live in a private bubble. | ||
And it's bullshit. | ||
And even still, you can't avoid it. | ||
So it's super expensive. | ||
Everything sucks. | ||
Like, service is terrible everywhere. | ||
You have to pay all this money. | ||
Nothing's even good. | ||
And you have to pay all this money because you step outside of it and it's anarchy. | ||
You know, I was thinking about this the other night. | ||
I was driving around the city and I was thinking about the fact that if you go to any gas station or convenience store, what are you going to find? | ||
If you go to a convenience store late at night, who's going to be behind the counter? | ||
An Indian. | ||
An Indian, a Muslim. | ||
And who's going to be patronizing the establishment with you? | ||
Drug dealers, nigs. | ||
Mexicans, right? | ||
And it's like you live in an alien planet, you know? | ||
Suddenly you're transported to the third world. | ||
You go to like a 7-Eleven past 11 o'clock and you better carry a gun and the people behind the counter are going to be the usual suspects. | ||
And I was thinking, what if you had a problem? | ||
Like, let's say you were sick. | ||
Like, I don't know. | ||
You needed medical attention or... | ||
You're having some kind of other issue. | ||
You needed to borrow somebody's phone. | ||
Let's say you go to a 7-Eleven late at night. | ||
This is just a thought experiment, okay? | ||
So bear with me. | ||
Let's say you need a phone. | ||
You need medical attention. | ||
You pull over at a gas station or a 7-Eleven late at night. | ||
You go in there. | ||
Would you rather encounter an Indian or a white person? | ||
Would you rather encounter an Indian who barely speaks fucking English and is indifferent to you completely? | ||
They don't give a fuck about you. | ||
They're like, hey, whatever, man. | ||
Get out of my store. | ||
Or would you rather encounter a white person who reminds you of your parents? | ||
Would you rather encounter an old white guy, an old white woman who's actually nice? | ||
And they see a fellow white person. | ||
They're like, oh, how are you doing? | ||
Oh, can I help you? | ||
What would you rather... | ||
Do you see how different... | ||
Could you imagine a society where you could expect something like that? | ||
How different it would be? | ||
How different it would feel? | ||
How different everything would be? | ||
What a difference it would make? | ||
To have that kind of, that's what society used to be like. | ||
That's what society should be like. | ||
That's what we've lost. | ||
And it's like unthinkable, but it's really not crazy. | ||
Like, all these convenience stores and gas stations, they're all run by, it's like an ethnic clan. | ||
It's like a big ethnic clan, and it's all in the family, you know? | ||
The Indians, they all run the gas stations, convenience stores. | ||
I mean, is it inconceivable that it'd be a big white family, a big Irish family, a big Polish family, or some other kind of family running the stores? | ||
I mean, is that crazy? | ||
Like, it's totally feasible. | ||
Like, you can make a living off that. | ||
That's not insane. | ||
And yet we live in a society where it's, you know, that's who's running it. | ||
And it's so alien. | ||
And you think about how much more empathy there would be in society if the people running the fast food restaurants, the diners, the convenience stores, imagine if they looked like your parents and you looked like their kids. | ||
How much more empathy there would be in the world. | ||
If you saw your mother or father in the people that worked at the 7-Eleven and they saw in you their children or grandchildren or at the diner or at the mechanic or wherever, it would be fucking utopia. | ||
And instead, you know, we have like an alien planet. | ||
So no, I disagree. | ||
unidentified
|
And by the way, that's what they have in China. | |
In China, they have this sense of nation, of community. | ||
Because they all look like each other. | ||
Because they're all from the same race. | ||
It's familiar. | ||
It's all in the family. | ||
And so everywhere they go, conceivably, and it's not to say that, hey, every white person's like a nice person, but it is to say that there's more of a spirit of looking after one another, seeing your... | ||
Fellow countrymen as part of an extended family, as opposed to, like, you know, someone from some alien place, they don't give a fuck about you. | ||
Oh, look, some white person, fuck them. | ||
Oh, it's some Indian running the store. | ||
Oh, yeah, good luck with that. | ||
So, no, I get it. | ||
I understand it completely. | ||
I wish we had something like that. | ||
And you look at the cities, like some of the videos coming out of, like, Chongqing. | ||
And Shanghai and elsewhere, it's like they do look like they're living in the future. | ||
And I know that's not probably a totally accurate representation, but I know people that have gone to China, and they say the streets are safe. | ||
They say women walk the streets at night. | ||
They feel perfectly safe because there's cops everywhere. | ||
They say there's cops on every street corner, and so it feels tyrannical, but it also feels safe. | ||
That's a serious country. | ||
Dubai, from what Andrew Tate says, seems like a serious country. | ||
And it's different, but China, the Emirates, they feel like they're taking it more seriously. | ||
Here it's a big joke. | ||
There's fucking trash everywhere. | ||
It's violent. | ||
There's all this diversity. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
Nobody cares. | ||
Nobody takes anything seriously. | ||
Everybody's wearing sweatpants. | ||
Nobody takes anything seriously. | ||
It's all a big joke. | ||
And it's like disgraceful. | ||
It's embarrassing. | ||
You know, the lack of law and order, the lack of decorum, the lack of respect, no standards, the filth. | ||
It's like embarrassing. | ||
So I get it. | ||
The like wanting to live in China, like admiring what they have. | ||
I get it. | ||
You look at it in France. | ||
Jared Taylor reposted an article about how they rounded up a bunch of African refugees and stuck them in this museum. | ||
And the Africans won't leave. | ||
They just gave the Africans the museum. | ||
They had, like, this performing arts center, museum. | ||
They put a bunch of African refugees there to stay. | ||
They turned it into a dump. | ||
They asked the Africans to, like, follow some basic rules. | ||
They didn't. | ||
And now they just gave it up. | ||
Now they don't even go there. | ||
Now it's just a refugee camp. | ||
It's like, this is our country. | ||
In a serious country, you'd have men with guns come in there and fucking round them up, and if they disobeyed, they'd just get fucking shot by the government. | ||
Like, that would be a serious country. | ||
Like, all right. | ||
You know, they'd call the cops. | ||
The cop would say, get the fuck out. | ||
And they'd be rough. | ||
You'd get some rough guys to go in there and beat the fuck out of them and get them out. | ||
And if they really resisted, they'd just get fucking smashed in the face with guns and get thrown in jail or deported. | ||
But we live in a joke. | ||
But our country's a joke. | ||
Our civilization's a joke. | ||
So we say, ah, you have it. | ||
Ah, we don't even care. | ||
You take it. | ||
You can keep it, I guess. | ||
And you let these savages just take over. | ||
It's like that with everything. | ||
So I totally get it. | ||
I'm furious about the way things are. | ||
People should be. | ||
People should be. | ||
Why are people, you know, hate their own country? | ||
Because look at what it's turned into. | ||
How could you take pride in this? | ||
Look at what it's turned into. | ||
It's a big free-for-all. | ||
Race first sent $10. | ||
I go on Monkey the Omegle clone a lot. | ||
And I talk to a lot of Africans from different countries and they all tell me the same thing, that the Chinese are bribing politicians in their country in order to legally mine and harvest resources. | ||
Also that it's dangerous to the local population. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Connor MC grow a percent $10. | ||
I love to see you in action. | ||
Eyes fixed keenly on the monitor, fingers gripping the mouse like you're afraid of it running away. | ||
That room is your domain. | ||
Okay. That's funny. | ||
Commonwealth Grow A% $10, up or not. | ||
Is it time to admit the deal? | ||
JD, Kent, Tucker, CIA/TechPro wing is meaningfully more based on foreign policy than the Trump, Hegseth, Waltz, Winscoff, Ultratzio wing? | ||
No, I don't think that's true at all. | ||
I think that Teal and that group are more politically savvy. | ||
But they're not more based. | ||
I mean, read what they say. | ||
They're not more based at all. | ||
They work for Israel. | ||
I mean, Palantir is like a front for Mossad. | ||
I think they're more savvy. | ||
They know how to disguise it better, but they're no different. | ||
I mean, you saying that, by the way, you saying that just goes to show it works. | ||
They just say the right words and you go, oh, they seem pretty based. | ||
Dude, Palantir is infiltrated by Mossad. | ||
They're calling for war with Iran. | ||
You're the mark. | ||
You're just a big fucking sucker idiot. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, well, but they said beige things on Twitter! | |
Yeah, that was their intention. | ||
They did that by design. | ||
You're the mark. | ||
Fucking dumb idiot. | ||
Jack Lance sent $10, getting an economics degree and then going to law school. | ||
I want to become a seal in between because a lot of people without political connections went there to become politicians. | ||
But I wanted your thoughts on if that seems like a good plan. | ||
Maybe I should shadow a political campaign instead, IDK. | ||
I don't know, dude. | ||
Maybe just, like, grow up and figure it out. | ||
Do you think Suzy Wiles is the most powerful individual in the administration? | ||
If not, who? | ||
I love when people... | ||
It's better when people super chat and say, hey, man, I followed your advice. | ||
I'm in school. | ||
I'm going to go to law school. | ||
And then you have people that are like, um, I think I'm going to do this. | ||
unidentified
|
I think I'm going to... | |
Just tell... | ||
Okay, man. | ||
Figure it out. | ||
Like, figure it out. | ||
It's actually not that hard. | ||
You know, you notice a difference? | ||
One guy super chats and says, I'm getting a policy degree. | ||
I'm going to law school. | ||
Taking your advice. | ||
Awesome. Good for you. | ||
Then the other guy. | ||
I want to become a seal in because, between, because a lot of people without political connections went there, become politicians. | ||
But I wanted your thought. | ||
Is that a good plan? | ||
Okay, dude. | ||
Why don't you figure it out? | ||
Okay, maybe I should shadow a political campaign. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Well, you know, it sounds like you really don't have it figured out. | ||
You know, it sounds like you really have no idea what you're doing. | ||
So why don't you get a clue first and then get back to me. | ||
Penis grow. | ||
I percent $10. | ||
I have groyper dysmorphia. | ||
I can't tell how big or influential this movement is. | ||
At times it feels like AF has no power, but at other times America first has the spotlight. | ||
Any tips? | ||
Up North Canada grow. | ||
I percent $10. | ||
This is so true. | ||
I got white pilled three weeks ago when I saw a good looking dude, mid 20s, nice suit in an Audi SUV listening to a video of yours in the car. | ||
W speakers windows open. | ||
First time I've seen something like this. | ||
Clearly successful, although I'm not trying to value material. | ||
You get the point. | ||
Yeah, I was at the airport the other day and I saw this guy like eyeballing me and I was like, oh, you know, I'm always nervous. | ||
I never know. | ||
Are they going to be good? | ||
Is it going to be bad? | ||
But this like tall super Chad, this like tall ginger super Chad. | ||
And I mean, I'm like inhaling the sandwich. | ||
Super embarrassing like a pig. | ||
I get up and my mouth is full. | ||
I was hungry. | ||
unidentified
|
And the guy's like, hey bro, can I get a picture? | |
I was like, yeah, sure. | ||
unidentified
|
He's like, hey, he's a big fan. | |
And I was like, yeah. | ||
Because I was distracted. | ||
I was eating. | ||
I'm going to my gate. | ||
But super Chad. | ||
It's always Chad's. | ||
So yeah, there's a lot of, look, the show is bigger. | ||
I get recognized all the time. | ||
I never used to get recognized, ever. | ||
Like, I've been doing this show a long time, and for like, up until a year ago, I never got recognized, ever. | ||
I could count on one hand, literally, the amount of times I've been recognized. | ||
And now lately, I've been recognized like three times in the past two days. | ||
I was at Chick-fil-A. | ||
Just like a few hours ago. | ||
And I go through the drive-thru and the guy's like, wait a second, are you that guy? | ||
I was like, maybe. | ||
And he goes, oh yeah, I see your shit all the time. | ||
He goes, doesn't everyone hate you? | ||
I'm like, well, you know, some people do. | ||
He's like, well, most people. | ||
I'm like, oh well, some people do. | ||
He's like, alright, have a good day, man. | ||
I'm like, yeah, thanks, I guess. | ||
He goes, doesn't everyone hate you? | ||
I'm like, well, not everyone. | ||
Clearly not everyone hates me. | ||
Sometimes it feels like that. | ||
He's like, well, most people do. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm like, well, I don't know if it's, how are you measuring that? | |
I mean, like, okay, so some people hate me. | ||
What the fuck is that kind of a thing to say to somebody? | ||
Doesn't everyone hate you? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't even know who you are. | ||
Just put the fucking chicken nuggets in the bag, okay? | ||
Jeez. Leah, literally, just put the fries in the bag. | ||
How about just put the fries in the bag, worrying about everyone hates me? | ||
That was like earlier today, so. | ||
Some good, some not so good. | ||
He was nice enough, though. | ||
I mean, he wasn't a jerk. | ||
I don't know if he meant it in a bad way. | ||
It seemed like he did. | ||
But. And then the day before that, I'm at this restaurant. | ||
This guy's like, hey, man. | ||
He said, your views are interesting. | ||
He goes, but I don't agree with people trying to kill you at your house. | ||
I'm like, thanks. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
I love when people say that like, hey, listen. | ||
I do appreciate the sentiment, but people say that like, it's like, wow. | ||
Thank you. | ||
People say, you know, I don't agree with everything you say. | ||
But, you know, people shouldn't try to kill you for your views. | ||
Thanks. Thank you. | ||
Thanks for sticking up for me. | ||
No, but I do appreciate the sentiment. | ||
It's just funny when people say it. | ||
It's like, yeah, I am. | ||
Thank you for recognizing my humanity. | ||
I know I disagree. | ||
I know I have views that you disagree with, but thanks for recognizing that I have humanity, that I'm a human being. | ||
No, but I do appreciate it because some people clearly reject my humanity. | ||
Many people do. | ||
Some would say everyone does, but yeah, so I get recognized all the time now. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
I don't know if I like it. | ||
I actually don't like it because I actually don't like to draw a lot of attention. | ||
I know people think I want to get a lot of attention. | ||
I don't. | ||
I really don't. | ||
I do this show, I express my views, and I have an outrageous sense of humor. | ||
I have a wild sense of humor, but I'm really just speaking my mind. | ||
But in real life, I'm really just quiet. | ||
I'm a quiet guy. | ||
I just go about my life. | ||
I don't really talk to anybody. | ||
I'm just trying to do my thing. | ||
And now that everybody recognizes me, I feel like everybody's watching me all the time. | ||
And I'm already a paranoid... | ||
I'm already like a histrionic paranoid person. | ||
And now legitimately I have to wonder like are people looking at me? | ||
Are people watching me? | ||
Are people spitting in my food? | ||
Are people poisoning my food? | ||
So I don't know what I'm going to do. | ||
I don't know what I'm going to do. | ||
I got to move to another country. | ||
But if I go to another country, Israel is going to kill me. | ||
I don't think they do it on the land. | ||
I don't think they do it on U.S. soil. | ||
But I think if I went to another country, they would do it. | ||
Or they could do it if they wanted to. | ||
So, I guess they could do it here. | ||
But I feel like that would be pretty bold, you know? | ||
They would do it in like, they would do it in Portugal. | ||
You know, they'd do it in like Italy. | ||
Would they do it here? | ||
I mean, they could. | ||
But I don't know that it would be pretty bold. | ||
Anyway. What was the question again? | ||
What was the question again? | ||
Oh yeah, so you saw someone watching my show. | ||
Well that's okay, good for you. | ||
I'm going, you know what it is? | ||
It's TikTok. | ||
It's like TikTok and Instagram. | ||
Everybody sees me on TikTok and Instagram now. | ||
unidentified
|
So, yeah. | |
You know, people just be, hey, just be nice, okay? | ||
I don't know what it is, like... | ||
Even if I saw Harry Sisson somewhere, I wouldn't be like a dick. | ||
I'd be like, hey, I would be nice. | ||
I would be funny about it. | ||
If I were like a normal fag, if I was like a normie, normgroid, normicon guy, and I saw Harry Sisson... | ||
You know, at the drive-thru. | ||
I'd be like, hey, you're that guy. | ||
I would make a joke about it. | ||
I'd be like, huh, tough loss, huh? | ||
Hey, have a good day, man. | ||
I'd be funny about it. | ||
Because I'm a nice guy. | ||
It's called being a decent fucking person. | ||
I don't know what it is where it's like, people gotta be rude. | ||
You know? | ||
Like, I'm a guy. | ||
Yeah, I'm like a semi-famous person, but I'm just a guy, you know? | ||
Like, I'm not murdering people at night. | ||
You know, like, I do a show. | ||
I just give my opinion, and people go, F you, buddy. | ||
It's like, okay, neither of us are in control here. | ||
You know that, right? | ||
Like, we're both just tax pigs, okay? | ||
We're all poor, like, relatively speaking. | ||
I'm not as poor as the people at the drive-thru. | ||
But it's like, you understand? | ||
Like, in some ways, I do understand the class. | ||
Solidarity. It's like, you understand neither of us are in control here, right? | ||
Like, we're both just a couple of schlubs, you know, with our opinions. | ||
So anyway. | ||
So that's me. | ||
That's me. | ||
That's how I'm doing. | ||
How am I doing? | ||
I'm glad you asked. | ||
Matty D. Matty D. Sent $10. | ||
Cookie King reposted a clip of you. | ||
Santa Cruz commented, what's your plan when you join the Cookieverse? | ||
I saw that, yeah. | ||
Yeah, when's the collab? | ||
Yo, Cookie, when's the collab? | ||
Yo, Cookie and Dylan, when's the collab? | ||
What are you pulling up? | ||
What are they pulling up to Chicago? | ||
Oh, that would be sick. | ||
I'm such a fan. | ||
Yo, Cookie King and Dylan. | ||
Yo, I gotta get the sea salt spray. | ||
No, but I'm a big fan, seriously. | ||
No, but seriously, I'm your biggest fan. | ||
When's the collab? | ||
Dillington, I follow the channel. | ||
When's the collab? | ||
I got a collab. | ||
I heard Myron bumped into them. | ||
So jealous. | ||
Jelly? I'm so jealous. | ||
They talked about how they ran into Myron in Miami. | ||
I'm like, why? | ||
And Sneeko, what the fuck? | ||
I wish I was there. | ||
They don't invite me to that show. | ||
You know what? | ||
I think it's a black thing. | ||
I think it's a black thing. | ||
You know, Myron's always hanging out with Sneeko. | ||
He doesn't hang out with your boy anymore. | ||
He's very supportive. | ||
I'm not dissing him right now. | ||
Because he's always, you know, gassing me up and defending me and I appreciate that. | ||
But he's always hanging out with Sneeko. | ||
I think it's like a black thing. | ||
These black people love to hang out with each other. | ||
It's like when I was growing up. | ||
My best friend in first grade was black. | ||
And he would never invite me to his place. | ||
He lived in an apartment. | ||
But then I found out he was hanging out with the other black kids at the apartment. | ||
I'm like, so you hang out with the other black kids at the apartment? | ||
I invite you to my white-ass nice house. | ||
You don't invite me to your fucking hovel? | ||
I shouldn't say he was a nice guy. | ||
I shouldn't say that. | ||
He's a nice guy. | ||
But I was like, hey, and my mom used to tell me, she'd be like, that's how they are, you know, when I was like a kid. | ||
When I was like seven, I'd be like, why doesn't he, he never invites me to his house. | ||
I always invite her to my house, but he hangs out with the other black kids. | ||
And she'd say, that's how they are. | ||
That's how they are. | ||
They hang out with each other, you know. | ||
She'd say, you know, they're embarrassed. | ||
Because, you know, they don't want to invite the white kid to the Section 8 apartments, probably. | ||
So. I went over there one time and their TV was broken. | ||
So fucking typical. | ||
I went over there one time for like 10 minutes. | ||
I was like, finally, I get to go to my buddy's house. | ||
He was cool, but he would never invite me over. | ||
And their TV was broken. | ||
unidentified
|
Their TV had like a giant hole in it. | |
We were playing Chronicles of Narnia on PS2. | ||
And the TV had a giant hole in it. | ||
So typical. | ||
So fucking typical, you know? | ||
But no. | ||
But he was a nice guy. | ||
He was a good guy. | ||
The family was nice, too, actually. | ||
But, you know, typical black shit. | ||
That's what they do. | ||
That's what those people do. | ||
I mean, they stick together. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
So, yes, I was so jealous. | ||
Of course, because Myron was hanging out with Sneeko. | ||
If he invited me, I would have met Dylan and Cookie King. | ||
But I'm not black enough, you know? | ||
But I guess I'm not... | ||
Oh, because it's because I'm white? | ||
I'm not black enough to roll with them, I guess. | ||
You know, I didn't get invited. | ||
When's the last time you seen your boy on Fresh and Fit? | ||
I'm just saying. | ||
I know there's like drama over there. | ||
I'm not trying to give him a hard time, but like, you know, our wayward, you know, Nigg, Sneeko, he's on the show after he canceled on us. | ||
I don't get the fucking, okay, is what it is. | ||
No drama, no beef, but it's like. | ||
I wanted to meet Dylan and Cookie, okay? | ||
Whatever. We'll collab some other time, I guess. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Shut what down? | ||
Oh, and the leaks? | ||
Okay, don't care. | ||
Someone says Harry Sisson posted, double down. | ||
He said, MAGA is mad that I have game, lol, dude. | ||
Fucking king. | ||
That's so true. | ||
Why are they mad at him? | ||
Because he's like a player? | ||
I mean, seriously. | ||
There's a lot we could not like Harry Sisson about, but not because he gets bitches, okay? | ||
Let's be honest. | ||
Anyway, but thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I didn't know that was $100. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
I'm not following this Omega thing saga. | ||
I don't know what that's about, but I appreciate it. | ||
No, no, I do not. | ||
But it's really none of your business. | ||
Canucks sent $100. | ||
Palantir's flagship product that the intel agencies use aggregates data from satellite imagery, bank records, phone data, and social media posts of people they're spying on. | ||
They named it Gotham, which is a fictional city notorious for its corruption from its police force to its politicians. | ||
Um, it's giving ominous, it's giving evil corporation vibes. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Sounds like it's from the... | ||
They did it in Dark Knight. | ||
Remember when Batman used everybody's cell phones to do echolocation like a bat? | ||
Maybe it's because of that. | ||
That's what it sounds like. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Yeah, pretty freaky, man. | ||
Dude, shut up. | ||
person. Okay, thank you. | ||
English or Spanish? | ||
Roman Groy, percent, $10. | ||
Hey, Nick, studying economics at NYU. | ||
Have connections to NYFED for future work. | ||
Ironically, all Jewish and Indian. | ||
I love my study. | ||
All I read, watch, and listen to is out of passion is economics. | ||
The one thing I hate is being surrounded by libs and nicks. | ||
When I have to hide being a Nicky and Nazi praying for you. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
That's crazy. | ||
sent $15. | ||
How do I stop watching porn? | ||
Well, you gotta not watch Sailor Sambles sent $10. | ||
Tired of people misusing the phrase humiliation ritual. | ||
It's about induction into the satanic cults of the elite in a hazing process. | ||
It's not just making fun of someone. | ||
It's a literal ritual. | ||
Also, I like the night at M5 apostrophe 7. | ||
Sophocles sent $10. | ||
I was just watching it. | ||
Nick was on a date confirmed. | ||
unidentified
|
Was just watching what? | |
I wasn't on a fucking date. | ||
I watched it. | ||
I think I watched it with the Groypers back in the day. | ||
I watched it at one of those, um... | ||
I watched it with all the old Groypers that I now hate and that all hate me. | ||
The old heads. | ||
Well, they're not really old heads. | ||
They were just like the old Groyper generals. | ||
I think I watched it with those guys years ago. | ||
But yeah, it was a dumb movie. | ||
Space Crusader sent $10. | ||
Don't die as a religion. | ||
My competitor is Jesus Brian Johnson. | ||
Okay, I don't know if I support that aspect. | ||
Why you guys always got to make it? | ||
Okay, it's like he's a funny guy. | ||
He replied on Twitter. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, yeah, like he's not Catholic. | |
Okay. Hey, Thank you very much. | ||
Commonwealth grow a percent, $10. | ||
Half we want Europe to end the war in Ukraine and provide for their defense. | ||
They need trade through the Suez. | ||
Shut up! | ||
Marco Menton quarter zip sent $10. | ||
Is it true that Chief Keef is more influential than Ye in Chicago? | ||
unidentified
|
video. | |
I'm not black. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
I love wearing the streets. | ||
What the fuck does that mean? | ||
Okay, I don't know what that means. | ||
I mean, what is that over the mayor's office? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
No, I don't think that's true at all. | ||
unidentified
|
But I don't know. | |
I don't live in the South Side with the black people. | ||
You think I'm really with all the black people down there listening to drill music? | ||
I mean, at this point, in terms of like, if you're talking about the music, the music that comes out of Chicago is definitely more, I mean, it's all drill music. | ||
Chicago is known for drill music, so it probably is a little more Chief Keef influenced, I would think. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
I don't listen to that drill music. | ||
I'm not into that. | ||
Gross. Okay. | ||
Commander Grover 25 sent $10. | ||
I got a knock off American first hat in the mail today. | ||
Looks just like yours. | ||
Penis Grover sent $10. | ||
Do you think exorcists are real? | ||
Do you think people can get possessed like in the movie? | ||
Sometimes I wish super paranormal things were real like that mall apparition, the super chat refer-Im sent $10. | ||
The Miami alien thing is fake. | ||
It was a bunch of black kids setting off fireworks at an outdoor mall. | ||
People at the mall thought it was an act of shooting and that's why the cops showed up with force. | ||
A TikToker made up the alien story and admitted it later. | ||
Mm. Arch Rapist sent $50. | ||
I die every day waiting for you. | ||
Also, fuck John Smith. | ||
Thanks! He was hanging out with JF? | ||
No, it's a joke. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
Kidding, kidding. | ||
We love JF. | ||
I was just teasing. | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
I heard that... | ||
He was friends with a pedophile or something, but I didn't really look into it very much. | ||
But, yeah, if that's true, then that's, well, I mean, there's two sides. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
But I don't know the details. | ||
I got to look into it, I guess. | ||
But I see a lot of conservatives trashing him because of the woman thing. | ||
I don't see anybody talking about the pedo thing. | ||
I see people talking about the fact that he's talking to a bunch of different girls. | ||
Which, in that case... | ||
Watching a retro video game stream filled me with nostalgia. | ||
Being nine years old, school just got out for the summer. | ||
Riding bikes around with friends. | ||
Coming back and playing Donkey Kong Country 2. Passing the controller around. | ||
Mom comes in with the free sons and pizza rolls. | ||
Life's good. | ||
And it can only truly be appreciated in retrospect. | ||
It'll never be the same. | ||
Okay, thank you for the big super chat! | ||
I'm not gonna walk with you down memory lane right now. | ||
Because you're vastly older than me. | ||
I can't relate to you. | ||
And the pizza... | ||
I never did pizza rolls, so it's... | ||
Shattering my immersion. | ||
But thank you very much for the big super chat. | ||
Yeah, man. | ||
That's good times back in the day, but now we're adults. | ||
We should do a crusade. | ||
We gotta be like King Baldwin and shit, but on a real note, hope you're having a wonderful, fantastic day, sugar glum. | ||
Okay. Imperium AI sent $20. | ||
Harry Sisson is gay, and this is the cheapest data I've ever paid for. | ||
Go download the Imperium Jobs app. | ||
Go tell your mommy and daddy to buy custom-built-eye employees from us. | ||
Illegal immigrant grow. | ||
I percent $10. | ||
Was a serious concern. | ||
I love her, but her parents came here illegally, and I don't know how to handle this moral quandary. | ||
I know this movement is pro-Latino. | ||
Is that even real? | ||
It is. | ||
That was based. | ||
That was based. | ||
Cheddar. What about cheddar? | ||
What about... | ||
What about Detective Cheddar, dude? | ||
Detective Cheddar is on it. | ||
That's true. | ||
Well, some of them do. | ||
unidentified
|
That guy at Chick-fil-A did not fuck with me, I don't think. | |
Yeah, true. | ||
Okay, all right. | ||
That's our last Super Chat. | ||
Sheesh, long show. | ||
That is the last Super Chat. | ||
That's going to do it for me. | ||
As always, remember to smash the follow button, smash the like button, leave a comment down below. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock central. | ||
Thank you to our top super chatters tonight. | ||
Canuck, Jesus died for us, Cocaine Groyper, and Vortex Groyper. | ||
Thank you to all of them. | ||
Thanks to all our super chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
*music* It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. |