Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can hit that yay button. | ||
They said trust your man. | ||
I was gonna believe you. | ||
They was in the dollar. | ||
They said change from girls that they're probably. | ||
My mama said trust no hoes. | ||
There's no problem. | ||
I'm at one, two. | ||
Start the track. | ||
I'm at the first. | ||
Edge. See Ricky said. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just enforce them. | ||
All right? | ||
They said trust don't be. | ||
I was gonna believe you. | ||
Take care. | ||
I'm out of town. | ||
I'm gonna say trust no hoes. | ||
There's no problem. | ||
But they said trust don't be. | ||
I was gonna believe you. | ||
Take care. | ||
I'm out of town. | ||
Everything. It's warming up. | ||
Everybody. Here Here Here Here Here Here Here | ||
Here Here Here Here Here | ||
Here Here America's first bitch America's first bitch America's first bitch America's first bitch America's first bitch America's first | ||
bitch America's first bitch America's first bitch America's first bitch America's first bitch See Ricky said If you let the bottle don't wanna blow you If you wanna blow you, hit a world Okay, | ||
bro Leave the code to sack your brother's gonna have me Backward upon this It's new as a day one Always love is here before you start it And you're no man but the man above your head Pray before you go to be Everything my brother's here I'm gonna throw a snake on it Now they're high The whole world of the band doesn't see me The big thing goes The big thing goes They start Not my words, not my rules I just enforce them, alright? | ||
They say trust no baby I'm gonna send it to the lead Your day was And I'm out of time And I'm gonna send you I'm gonna send you I'm gonna send you I'm gonna send you I'm gonna send you Trust no hope Use a woman But they say trust no baby I'm | ||
gonna send you Believe your day was And I'm gonna send you Not the sky It's everything Swarming on everybody Who dare to And you know my ain't sick Teddy is shit And I'm in with your legs Maybe for the snow kick Yo, pick me out the city When I was in the tank Who know all that city Thinking with the way to drink Yo, it's rude thing Yo, what's it? | ||
The shit And I'm sick Who take this I'm upset Yo, take me to the worst Show this alcohol Only drop jewels Way before they drop Jettles First they're broken Now they're broken All the way Does | ||
it seem Deep like they They think Those budgets They still Fuck you Yeah, it's the same America's first bitch This is What's the name I'm gonna send you I'm gonna leave your day When I send you I'm gonna send you I'm gonna | ||
send you I'm gonna send you Everything Swarming on everybody Who dare to vote And you know my ain't sick Thank | ||
you. | ||
And people don't realize what they have. | ||
And then, nowadays, I am so upset that the things we did and the things we fought for and the boys that died for it, it's all gone down the drain. | ||
Our country's gone to hell in a handbasket. | ||
We haven't got the country we had when I was raised, not at all. | ||
Nobody will have the fun I have. | ||
Nobody will have the opportunity I have. | ||
It's just not the same. | ||
Jesus is the way and the life and the King of Israel. | ||
We just lead with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around you. | ||
It's drag queens in schools. | ||
It's 18-year-olds joining OnlyFans. | ||
It's the filth on TikTok. | ||
It's this country not having a border. | ||
It's the idea that our kids and we, this generation, are never going to own anything. | ||
Think about it. | ||
Never making an income to support a family. | ||
Never being able to have a family. | ||
People being corrupted before they're even a teenager by things on their phone. | ||
Sick addiction to technology. | ||
The future is so bleak, but That has changed the calculation. | ||
unidentified
|
God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the, you know, riches, person, all of this, so I can serve Him. | ||
I think they've been extremely unfair to you. | ||
Who is they though? | ||
You can't say who they is, can you? | ||
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
|
Thank you. | |
you. | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden booming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Greifel Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and | ||
of course, defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
America is a nation of believers, dreamers, and strivers that is being led by a group of censors, critics, and cynics. | ||
These interests have rigged Our political and economic system for their exclusive benefit. | ||
unidentified
|
Believe me, it's for their benefit. | |
My message is that things have to change, and they have to change right now. | ||
My soul and exclusive mission is to go to work for you. | ||
It's time to deliver a victory for the American people. | ||
We don't win anymore, but we are going to start winning again. | ||
So to every parent who dreams for their child, and every child who dreams for their future, I say these. | ||
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, he's like, this is probably pretty cool for you. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
|
it is. | |
it is. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
I'm like, yeah. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
I'm like, yeah. | ||
The courageous fallen, the anguished fallen, their lives have meaning because we, the living, refuse to forget them. | ||
And as we ride to certain death, we trust our successors to do the same for us. | ||
Because my soldiers do not buckle or yield when faced with the cruelty of this world. | ||
My soldiers push forward, my soldiers scream out, my soldiers raise! | ||
I can't see a damn thing, thank God. | ||
I can't say a damn thing, thank God. | ||
Yeah. They like Steve. | ||
They can't see me. | ||
They won't beat me. | ||
I'm in that guinea. | ||
We can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
They say, can we really go back? | |
And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right when you're left wing, the answer is no. | ||
We're never going back. | ||
unidentified
|
It's gone. | |
It's gone. | ||
All of that is gone. | ||
But I would call myself something like a Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
And Jesus Christ is our future after we die. | ||
unidentified
|
on earth We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth. | |
We love everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
And we want people that can burn, really, more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't even believe in the real God. | ||
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the 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 not in love. | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* Now I got this bag with hats on them I'm straight out of these diamonds, I'm straight out of these lights Yeah, yeah, how you gon'serve these bills? | ||
How you gon'serve these lights? | ||
Yeah, turn up at my show, at least just do it right Yeah, yeah, we go out all night You gon'serve me big, gon'serve me big, gon'serve up all night You gon'serve my dreams, you gon'serve them my cup, you gon'serve me all right They had the feeling, they had the problem, they thinkin' | ||
they tell me the flash I'm tweakin'We got the bills, they keep both outside, you out of your mind, you crazy tweakin'Got you mad at my lane, mad at my mind, I'm really mad at my twinkin'Know that you lovin'these lights, you lovin'this world, we runnin'it big every weekend Shut it in love with me every time I know All y'all track inside this | ||
life, that world Y'all get to run the bed up every weekend Now you see I'm torn off on the tape and You say that I'm back for no reason Bitch, I'm back up, I'm back up Only, only, only, only, only, only Lawrence, I found something really interesting. | ||
In 2016, Donald Trump vowed that the United States would buy and, more importantly, hire American. | ||
But in June of 2024, during the all-in podcast hosted by his donor, David Sachs, he committed that he would not only expand work visas, but he would staple green cards to them. | ||
I cannot support this. | ||
And I will not encourage my followers to turn out in November to vote for this or campaign for this. | ||
It is not an unreasonable demand to say that we will not vote for a candidate that promises to import more legal immigrants. | ||
And it is not unreasonable because for the first time in 20 years, it is the majority opinion that there are too many legal immigrants coming into the country. | ||
Ask yourself this. | ||
If not Donald Trump, if not now, then when? | ||
So they may say mass deportations. | ||
They may say illegal immigration. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
And Americans need to get used to saying that. | ||
Native Americans never get what they ask for because they're always telling themselves and negotiating with themselves Telling us it's good enough. | ||
We need to hear the words immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
No more. | ||
Not since he announced his re-election campaign in November 2022 have I told anybody to vote for Trump. | ||
When pushed for details on the policy, clearly They're repeating the same script as every other Republican, and they show that they're really not serious about mass deportations. | ||
For that reason, I actually don't believe that illegal immigration will fall to historic lows. | ||
And this is your America First policy. | ||
We need the people. | ||
We need limitless green cards. | ||
And by the way, once they come in, you can't deport them. | ||
So people, when confronted with this reality, first they said it was a throwaway remark. | ||
They said he didn't really mean it. | ||
Well, he's doubled down on it many times. | ||
He doubled down on it in June, August, last week. | ||
Now they say, well, so what? | ||
Even if he means it, he said it last time. | ||
No, he didn't. | ||
Last time he was against H-1B visas. | ||
unidentified
|
Like you thought you were going to tap the screen to pressure Trump, except one problem. | |
Elon owns the platform. | ||
But now the checkmarks 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 $2.77. | ||
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 say, I'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
I should have supported Grape of War 2. | ||
unidentified
|
Grape of War 2. | |
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. | ||
Don't back down. | ||
And never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | ||
And the more righteous your fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts, Are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked Our creator four times. | ||
Because in America, we don't worship government. | ||
We worship God. | ||
It is why our currency proudly declares, in God we trust. | ||
And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure that began with deep faith, big dreams, and humble Beginnings. | ||
The next generation of American leaders. | ||
Never, ever give up. | ||
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
Never quit. | ||
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible, that it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider the more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong. | ||
The more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
You must keep pushing forward. | |
And always have the courage to be yourself. | ||
America is better when people put their faith into action. | ||
Pray to God and follow his teachings. | ||
Today, each of you begins a new chapter as well. | ||
When your story goes from here, it will be defined by your vision, your perseverance, and your grit. | ||
You will build a future where we have the courage to chase our dreams no matter what the cynics and the doubters have to say. | ||
You will have the confidence to speak the hopes in your hearts. | ||
And to express the love that stirs your souls. | ||
As long as you have pride in your beliefs, courage in your convictions, and faith in God, then you will not fail. | ||
As long as America remains true to its values, loyal to its citizens, and devoted to its creator, then our best days Are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
back. May God bless. | |
The United States of America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you and God bless America. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you so much, everybody. | |
Can I just say, are you trusting Brian? | ||
Yes. Our movement. | ||
This is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
The Washington establishment and the financial and media corporations that fund it exist for only one reason, to protect and enrich itself. | ||
The establishment has trillions of dollars at stake in this election. | ||
For those who control the levers of power in Washington, and for the global special interests, 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 struggle. | ||
This is a struggle for the survival of our nation. | ||
And this will be our last chance to save it. | ||
This election will determine whether we're a free nation or whether we have only the illusion of democracy, but are in fact controlled by a small handful of global special interests rigging the system, and our system is rigged. | ||
This is reality. | ||
You know it. | ||
unidentified
|
They know it. | |
I know it. | ||
unidentified
|
Pretty much the whole world knows the thing that said take a look what happened These are people | |
who work hard but no longer have a voice I am your voice They've been put on notice if you fuck around with us if you do something bad to us We are going to do things to you that have never been It's been done before. | ||
Don't sit yet. | ||
unidentified
|
You're gonna like this. | |
The 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. | ||
unidentified
|
But they're going to find out the hard way. | |
They will find out like never before. | ||
This nation belongs to you. | ||
Belongs to me. | ||
It was patriots like you that Built this country, and it's patriots like you that are going to save our country. | ||
unidentified
|
To all of those who think that they can coerce and subjugate the citizens of this land, hear these words from me tonight. | |
The people of America will not surrender our borders. | ||
We will not surrender our culture. | ||
We will not surrender our faith. | ||
Surrender our values. | ||
We will not surrender our history. | ||
We will not surrender our liberty. | ||
And above all, we will not surrender our children. | ||
We are done with their distorted visions for America. | ||
It's time to start talking about greatness for our country again. | ||
We want our country to be great again. | ||
We want our country to be respected. | ||
unidentified
|
The time for action. | |
has come. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | |
you. Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
Because it's the outsiders who change the world and who make a real and lasting difference. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever came easy. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
unidentified
|
We must always remember that we share one home and one glorious destiny. | |
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
We all salute the same great American flag. | ||
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you winning, son? | |
Are you winning? | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden, looming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Groeper Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and of course defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who through an increasing amount of activism are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump. | ||
We're all cut from the same cloth. | ||
And that cloth is very, very large. | ||
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. Tell yourself. | |
Hey. | ||
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
It feels so right. | |
It's a deal. | ||
I put together some real impressive deals. | ||
I like that. | ||
Go big or go home. | ||
Donald Trump. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman who looks like that has to have a special set. | ||
It's the night. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Donald. | ||
Oh, you look great. | ||
Oh, fuck. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm done with it. | ||
It's a special. | ||
Listen, are you begging here? | ||
Huh? Are you? | ||
You don't. | ||
You speak to fact. | ||
I'm calling this. | ||
Oh. Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
What do you want? | ||
The Donald is here. | ||
It's a star. | ||
On Monday night. | ||
Everything's set for tonight, Mr. | ||
Trump. I wonder what Trump's game is this time. | ||
Trump's got a new day. | ||
Trump's got a new deal. | ||
What's your game, though? | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
Mr. Trump, are you serious? | ||
If you want I want to really see something that said, take a look what happened. | ||
Hey. Why this beat so current? | ||
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 trencher. | ||
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 that 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. | ||
You're not supposed to be here tonight. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
unidentified
|
I want this show for myself. | |
I'm doing drugs without a help. | ||
My voice is nothing but a scream without a help. | ||
I stretch my hair, but my curve just goes up. | ||
I'm going to go. | ||
Lawrence, I found something really interesting. | ||
In 2016, Donald Trump vowed that the United States would buy and, more importantly, hire American. | ||
But in June of 2024, during the all-in podcast hosted by his donor, David Sachs, he committed that he would not only expand work visas, but he would staple green cards to them. | ||
I cannot support this. | ||
And I will not encourage my followers to turn out in November to vote for this or campaign for this. | ||
It is not an unreasonable demand to say that we will not vote for a candidate that promises to import more legal immigrants. | ||
And it is not unreasonable because for the first time in 20 years, it is the majority opinion that there are too many legal immigrants coming into the country. | ||
Ask yourself this. | ||
If not Donald Trump, if not now, then when? | ||
So they may say mass deportations. | ||
They may say illegal immigration. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
And Americans need to get used to saying that. | ||
Native Americans never get what they ask for because they're always telling themselves and negotiating with themselves, telling us, It's good enough. | ||
We need to hear the words. | ||
Immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
No more. | ||
Not since he announced his re-election campaign in November 2022 have I told anybody to vote for Trump. | ||
When pushed for details on the policy, clearly they're repeating the same script as every other Republican and they show that they're really not serious about mass deportations. | ||
For that reason, I actually don't believe that illegal immigration will fall to historic lows. | ||
And this is your America First policy. | ||
We need the people. | ||
We need limitless green cards. | ||
And by the way, once they come in, you can't deport them. | ||
So people, when confronted with this reality, first they said it was a throwaway remark. | ||
They said he didn't really mean it. | ||
Well, he's doubled down on it many times. | ||
He doubled down on it in June, August, last week. | ||
Now they say, well, so what? | ||
Even if he means it, he said it last time. | ||
No, he didn't. | ||
Last time he was against H-1B visas. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, you thought you were going to tap the screen to pressure Trump, except one problem, Elon owns the platform. | |
But now the check marks are being removed, which means people are being de-amplified. | ||
And it's being manipulated. | ||
unidentified
|
They're manipulating the conversation. | |
And Elon retweeted today, or reposted, Trump saying in June, staple the green cards to the diplomas. | ||
And that's a reminder, hey, this is what we got. | ||
This is the deal. | ||
I put in $277. | ||
I bought the platform for you. | ||
I made Trump win. | ||
And now Trump's going to deliver. | ||
And if you're against it, well, there goes your checkmark. | ||
If you voted for him, you are a sucker. | ||
I expect apologies. | ||
I want apology forms. | ||
I want you to know I'm sorry, Mr. Plantis. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Groiper War 2. What | |
He's looking for Feed from desire Mind and senses purify Feed from desire Mind and senses purify Feed from desire Mind and senses purify Feed from desire Na-na-na-na-na-na-na | ||
Outro Music Outro Music Outro Music | ||
Outro Music Outro Music Outro Music Outro Music | ||
Outro Music Outro Music Outro | ||
Music Outro Music Outro Music Outro Music Outro Music Outro Music Not my words, not my rules, I just endorse them, all right? | ||
They say, trust me, I was like, I'm gonna leave your day, boys, I'm out of time, I'm gonna say, I'm gonna say, trust me, I'm gonna say, trust me, I'm gonna leave your day, boys, I'm out of time, I'm gonna say, laugh out the sky, I'm just a turn to everything, swarming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
And your mama ain't shake, I'm Kenny, shit, and you've been with your ears way before the start, kick, yo, I'm in the city, I was just a check, with the more guys, they didn't think you were the way to fit, yo, it's true, shit, yo, what's it, | ||
shit, yo, what's it, shit, yo, what's it, shit, yo, what's it, shit, yo, what's it, shit, yo, I'm taking to the first shows, I know, only drop jewels way before they drop, shut up, I'm taking to the first, bitch. | ||
I'm taking to the first. | ||
Okay. Okay. | ||
Okay. Okay. | ||
Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael | ||
Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael Rafael | ||
Rafael Rafael 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 opportunity I have. | ||
It's just not the same. | ||
Jesus is the way and the life and the King of Israel. | ||
We just lead with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around you. | ||
It's drag queens in schools. | ||
It's 18-year-olds joining OnlyFans. | ||
It's the filth on TikTok. | ||
It's this country not having a border. | ||
It's the idea that our kids and we, this generation, are never going to own anything. | ||
Think about it. | ||
Never making an income to support a family. | ||
Never being able to have a family. | ||
People being corrupted before they're even a teenager by things on their phone. | ||
Sick addiction to technology. | ||
The future is so bleak, but that has changed the calculation. | ||
unidentified
|
God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the, you know, riches, 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. | ||
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, People 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
|
Thank you. | |
My own narrative is not one of some sudden booming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Groeper Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty, and of course defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, | ||
unidentified
|
an increasing amount of activism are really going to ensure the future and the success America is a nation of believers, dreamers and strivers that is being led by a group of censors, critics and cynics. | |
These interests have rigged our political and economic system for their exclusive benefit. | ||
Believe me, it's for their benefit. | ||
unidentified
|
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 say these words to you tonight. | ||
I am with you, I will fight for you, and I will win for you. | ||
Probably pretty cool for you. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
|
it is. | |
And as we ride to certain death, we trust our successors to do the same for us! | ||
Because my soldiers do not buckle or yield when faced with the cruelty of this world! | ||
My soldiers push forward! | ||
My soldiers scream out! | ||
My soldiers raise! | ||
You can't go back to the past. | ||
People always say, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
They say, can we really go back? | |
And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right when you're left-wing, the answer is no. | ||
We're never going back. | ||
unidentified
|
It's done. | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
on Earth. | |
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth. | ||
We love everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
And we want people to convert, really, more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't include the real deal. | ||
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the 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. | ||
I'm a dumbest man, though you see the world from the deep end. | ||
You say that I'm bad for no reason. | ||
Bitch, I'm back up. | ||
I'm dumbest man. | ||
Bitch, I'm dumbest man. | ||
You see the shit. | ||
You know I'm different climbers. | ||
Yeah, I got this damn. | ||
Body car ain't trying. | ||
Richer than I family. | ||
Richer than they memories. | ||
Yeah. Hold it up. | ||
Where you at the club? | ||
Hold it up. | ||
Where you had that gun? | ||
Pull up by side. | ||
Pull up on them. | ||
Now I got this bag on hats. | ||
On them. | ||
I'm straight out of these diamonds. | ||
I'm straight out of these lights. | ||
Yeah. How you gon'save these bills? | ||
How you gon'save these lights? | ||
Yeah. Turn up at my show. | ||
At least just do it right. | ||
Yeah. Yeah. | ||
We go out all night. | ||
You gon'serve me big. | ||
Gon'serve me big. | ||
Gon'serve up all night. | ||
You gon'save my dream. | ||
You gon'serve my cup. | ||
You gon'serve me all right. | ||
They ain't a villain. | ||
They ain't a villain. | ||
They ain't a problem. | ||
They thinkin'each other with the blocks. | ||
I'm tweakin'. | ||
We got no bills that you put up outside. | ||
You out of your mind. | ||
You crazy tweakin'. | ||
I just ran out of my lane. | ||
Bad out of my mind. | ||
I'm really ran out of my tweakin'. | ||
Know that you lovin'these lights. | ||
You lovin'this world. | ||
We runnin'it back every weekend. | ||
Sheldin'in love with me every time I know. | ||
Well, she bleepin'. | ||
All y'all try to get sight. | ||
This life's that world. | ||
Y'all get to runnin'back up every weekend. | ||
Now you see I'm gone off on the deep end. | ||
You say that I'm back for no reason. | ||
Bitch, I'm back up. | ||
I'm back up. | ||
Lawrence, I found something really interesting. | ||
In 2017, I'm back up. | ||
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 checkmarks 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 $277,000. | ||
I bought the platform for you. | ||
unidentified
|
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 say, 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. | ||
Years from now, some of them may look back and ask themselves whether they've made the right choice, whether they've made the most of the opportunities they've been given. | ||
Together, we have the same mission. | ||
Over the course of your life, you will find that things are not always fair. | ||
You will find that things happen to you that you do not deserve and that are not always warranted. | ||
But you have to put your head down and fight, fight, fight. | ||
unidentified
|
Never, ever, ever give up. | |
Don't give in, don't back down, and never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | ||
And the more righteous your fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts, Are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked Our creator four times. | ||
Because in America, we don't worship government. | ||
We worship God. | ||
It is why our currency proudly declares, in God we trust. | ||
And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure that began with deep faith, big dreams, and humble Beginnings. | ||
The next generation of American leaders. | ||
Never, ever give up. | ||
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
Never quit. | ||
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible, that it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider the more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong. | ||
The more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
You must keep pushing forward. | |
And always have the courage to be yourself. | ||
America is better when people put their faith into action. | ||
Pray to God and follow his teachings. | ||
Today, each of you begins a new chapter as well. | ||
When your story goes from here, it will be defined by your vision, your perseverance, and your grit. | ||
You will build a future where we have the courage to chase our dreams no matter what the cynics and the doubters have to say. | ||
You will have the confidence to speak the hopes in your hearts. | ||
And to express the love that stirs your souls. | ||
As long as you have pride in your beliefs, courage in your convictions, and faith in God, then you will not fail. | ||
As long as America remains true to its values, loyal to its citizens, and devoted to its creator, then our best days Are yet to come. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
May God bless the United States of America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you and God bless America. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you so much, everybody. | |
Can I just say, are you trusting Brian? | ||
Our movement is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people. | ||
The Washington establishment and the financial and media corporations that fund it exist for only one reason, to protect and enrich itself. | ||
For those who control the levers of power in Washington, and for the global special interests, they partner with these people that don't have your good in mind. | ||
Our campaign represents a true existential threat, like they haven't seen before. | ||
This is not simply another four-year election. | ||
This is a crossroads in the history of our civilization that will determine whether or not we, the people, reclaim control over our government. | ||
The political establishment that is trying to stop us is the same group responsible for our disastrous trade deals, massive illegal immigration, And economic and foreign policies that have bled our country dry. | ||
The political establishment has brought about the destruction of our factories and our jobs as they flee to Mexico, China, and other countries all around the world. | ||
It's a global power structure that is responsible for the economic decisions that have robbed our working class, stripped our country of its wealth, And put that money into the pockets of a handful of large corporations and political entities. | ||
This is a struggle for the survival of our nation. | ||
And this will be our last chance to save it. | ||
This election will determine whether we're a free nation or whether we have only the illusion of democracy, but are in fact controlled by a small handful of global special interests Rigging the system, and our system is rigged. | ||
This is reality. | ||
You know it, they know it, I know it, and pretty much the whole world knows it. | ||
unidentified
|
The thing that said, take a look at what happened. | |
These are people who work hard, but no longer have a voice. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
unidentified
|
They've been put on notice. | |
If you fuck around with us, if you do something bad to us, we are going to do things to you. | ||
Two that have never been done before. | ||
Don't sit yet. | ||
unidentified
|
You're gonna like this. | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
you. | ||
It's patriots like you that built this country, and it's patriots like you that are going to save our country. | ||
unidentified
|
To all of those who think that they can coerce and subjugate the citizens of this land, hear these words from me tonight. | |
The people of America will not surrender our borders. | ||
We will not surrender our culture. | ||
We will not surrender our faith. | ||
We will not surrender our values. | ||
We will not surrender our history. | ||
We will not surrender our liberty. | ||
And above all, we will not surrender our children. | ||
We are done with their distorted visions for America. | ||
It's time to start talking about greatness for our country again. | ||
unidentified
|
We want our country to be great again. | |
We want our country to be respected. | ||
unidentified
|
The time. | |
For action has come. | ||
As long as we are led by politicians who will not put America first, then we can be assured that other nations will not treat America with respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
We are not alone in this world, we are not alone in this world, we are not alone in this world. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The more that a broken | ||
system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead. | ||
Because it's the outsiders who change the world and who make a real and lasting difference. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever came easy. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
unidentified
|
We must always remember that we share one home and one glorious destiny. | |
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
We all salute the same great American flag. | ||
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
you an infant? | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Groeper Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty, and of course defending Nick Fuentes, and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump. | ||
We're all cut from the same cloth. | ||
And that cloth is very, very large. | ||
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. Hey. | |
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
It feels so right. | |
I put together some I like that Donald | ||
Trump I like that 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 Thank you very much I'm doing this This restaurant Listen Are you begging her? | ||
Are you? | ||
Are you doing Just back Look at this Right here on the street It's Donald Trump What do you want? | ||
It's Donald It's here It's here Everything's set for tonight Mr. | ||
Trump I wonder what Trump's game is this time Trump's got a new day Trump's got a new deal What's your game though? | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
What? Mr. | ||
Trump Mr. | ||
Trump He says it's going to be 20% Do you want to go to the world? | ||
That's right What? | ||
What does a new game? | ||
What is it? | ||
Mr. Trump My new game is Trump The game Trump The game This | ||
sounds like Political presidential Trump You said though That if you did run for president You believe you'd win I would say that I would have a hell of a chance of winning Maybe I went to lose I've never gone into losing my life I don't know how your audience was But I think people are tired of seeing the United States whipped off That's the guy on fire, right? | ||
Mm-hmm Tell me Thank you I wouldn't tell you Okay, kids, make it fast I've got a plane He created a magazine Mr. | ||
Trump If you do it Scabby He's so far I don't know how to do it Excuse me, personal | ||
money Now the ball is together Their mail | ||
modeling would be what it is today I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do | ||
it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't | ||
know how to do it I | ||
how to do it I don't know | ||
how to do it I don't know | ||
how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I | ||
don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how | ||
to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't | ||
know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know | ||
how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know | ||
how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I | ||
unidentified
|
don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it I don't know how to do it | |
I really see something that said, take a look what happened. | ||
Hey. Why this beat's so crazy? | ||
We will make America proud again. | ||
When you try to kill ourselves away, 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 trencher. | ||
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 that 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. | ||
here. "Lawrence, I found something really interesting." In 2016, Donald Trump vowed that the United States would buy and, more importantly, hire American. | ||
But in June of 2024, during the all-in podcast hosted by his donor, David Sachs, he committed that he would not only expand work visas, but he would staple green cards to them. | ||
I cannot support this, and I will not support it. | ||
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 there 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 checkmarks 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 $277,000. | ||
I bought the platform for you. | ||
unidentified
|
I made Trump win. | |
And now Trump's gonna deliver. | ||
And if you're against it, well, there goes your checkmark. | ||
If you voted for him, you are a sucker. | ||
I expect apologies. | ||
I want apology forms. | ||
I want you to say, I'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
I should have supported Grape of War 2. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Grape of War 2. | |
If you say that I'm fat, I'm gonna raise you. | ||
Bitch, I'm bigger. | ||
On them, on them diamonds, yeah, you see these diamonds Girl, you see this shit, you know I'm different climbers Yeah, I got this damn, got it, I ain't tryin'Wishing them like family, wishing them they memories, yeah Hold it up, where you at the club? | ||
Hold it up, where you had that gun? | ||
On them, yeah, pull up by side, yeah, pull up on them Now I got this bag on hats, on them I'm straight out of these diamonds, I'm straight out of these lights Yeah, yeah, how you gon'save these bills, how you gon'save these lights? | ||
Yeah, turn up at my show, at least just do it right Yeah, yeah, we go all night You gon'save me big, gon'save me big, gon'shut up all night I'm gon'save my dream, they gon'hold up my cup, they gon'save me all right I got the feeling, they big, got the problem, they make | ||
it, they jump with the blacks, I'm tweaking We got the bills, so you put it by side, you out of your mind, you crazy tweaking Got you out of my lane, bad in my mind, I'm really right out of my tweaking Know that you're loving these lights, you're loving this world We're running it big every weekend, shut it up I ain't love with me every time I know But split, all y'all track inside | ||
this life, that world Y'all get to run the bag up every weekend Now you see I'm gone off on the tape, man You say that I'm bad, that's what I'm raising Bitch, I'm better, I'm better On them, on them, on them, on them I want to be a dictator And you know why I want to be a dictator? | ||
Because I want a wall Right? | ||
I want a wall, and I want to drill, drill, drill My love has got no money, he's got his strong beliefs | ||
My love has got no power, he's got his strong beliefs My love has got no fame, he's got his strong beliefs My love has got no money, he's got his strong beliefs One more and more, people just want more and more Freedom and love, what he's looking for One more and more, people just want more and more Freedom and love, what he's looking for | ||
Free from desire, my insensis purify, free from desire My insensis purify, free from desire My insensis purify, free from desire Na-na-na-na-na-na-na | ||
So like, I'm tired, I'm headed on my chest Now I'm tired, I'm gonna slide those in the vid I can't wanna bleed, I can't bite a fight I can't throw with nothing legs, they go fucking lies We should | ||
know this kid is saying, you gon'fucking die I should put a little bit of a nigga, I'm a fryer, guys I'm a fryer, guys They said it didn't want to preach, I'm stupid, I got us You got no pain, I got no pain, you can't even fuck with us I'm a | ||
fryer, I got no pain, you can't even fuck with us I'm a fryer, I'm fucking with the world, boy I'm a fryer, I got no pain, you can't even | ||
fuck with us But as soon as people | ||
start playing games, I stopped I stopped playing games And at any moment, I could kick that yay button Okay. | ||
Okay. Okay. | ||
Okay. Not my words, not my rules. I can endorse them, alright? | ||
be right back. | ||
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 had. | ||
Nobody will have the opportunity I had. | ||
It's just not the same. | ||
Jesus is the way and the life and the King of Israel. | ||
We just lead with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around you. | ||
It's drag queens in schools. | ||
It's 18-year-olds joining OnlyFans. | ||
It's the filth on TikTok. | ||
It's this country not having a quarter. | ||
Americanism, not globalism will be our credo. | ||
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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 Wednesday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
Is it Wednesday already? | ||
Wow. I thought it was Tuesday. | ||
We got a big show. | ||
Our featured story tonight, we're talking all about Liberation Day. | ||
Huge News. | ||
Huge day. | ||
Exciting day. | ||
We have been waiting for this so far for the entire second Trump term. | ||
We've been waiting months for this. | ||
No idea what was going to be in it, what the policy would be, but today we finally got it and it's good. | ||
I'm actually very happy about it. | ||
This might be so far the best Trump policy in the first or the second term. | ||
No exaggeration. | ||
It might be the best policy, economic policy, in like a century. | ||
I am very pleasantly surprised. | ||
I'm going to be very complimentary of the president tonight. | ||
And you know I've been very critical of his deportation policy, immigration policy, foreign policy, education policy. | ||
I haven't been a happy camper. | ||
And I haven't really been a fan. | ||
And I've been I've made that known. | ||
I've been very outspoken about this. | ||
But we have to be equally outspoken in praise of the trade policy, because this is great. | ||
And our featured story tonight, we're talking all about the brand new trade policy. | ||
They're calling it Liberation Day, April 2nd. | ||
And this is the long-awaited tariff schedule, which Trump campaigned on. | ||
But never articulated the details or specifics. | ||
There were some early tariffs, some that went into effect, some that were threatened and then suspended against Mexico and Canada, the European Union and China, on certain types of goods. | ||
That's been going on for the past two months. | ||
But today was the long-awaited announcement of the robust, comprehensive, Sweeping across the board tariff policy, which is going to change the entire international system. | ||
The United States, and in particular its trade policy, anchors the entire international trade system. | ||
And it's all based, effectively, on massive trade deficits, massive abuse. | ||
And we'll talk about what has been going wrong and how we got here. | ||
We'll talk about the problem as it is. | ||
But today, Trump announced as part of Liberation Day, the new tariff schedule, it is two parts, two major aspects to the policy. | ||
The first, and in my opinion, the best part, is there is a universal, across the board, Permanent, baseline tariff of 10% on everybody. | ||
In my opinion, that's the best part. | ||
And if you've been watching the show, I have been cautiously optimistic about trade, and my main concern or reservation, if there are, maybe there's one, maybe there's a couple reservations, it is that the ad hoc implementation of tariffs, which is to say, Threatening them, but then rescinding the threat. | ||
Generally cultivating an air of uncertainty and unpredictability. | ||
I said that is an issue. | ||
The tariffs have to be predictable. | ||
They have to be predictable. | ||
They have to be permanent. | ||
The other problem, I said, is not just that they are sort of all over the map. | ||
There's no certainty about what the trade policy will be today, what it'll be tomorrow. | ||
The rates, the categories of goods affected, which countries, not only is it ad hoc and unpredictable when it needs to be predictable and constant, I said, but also we need a tariff policy that is a fixture of an economic policy as opposed to using tariffs as a foreign policy tool to extract concessions and not actually being part of a mix of economic tools, | ||
rather being a tool in the foreign policy toolkit. | ||
This is an across-the-board permanent tariff. | ||
It's a baseline and it applies to everybody. | ||
And that means that this is going to generally affect the economy of the United States in the near and long-term future. | ||
So in my opinion, that's the best part. | ||
That's the winner. | ||
It could be higher. | ||
I think it should be 20%. | ||
It should be 15% or 20%. | ||
But this is a great start. | ||
It's a 10% Universal, across the board, permanent, baseline tariff. | ||
The second part is that there is a reciprocal tariff on all of the countries that have very high trade barriers or actually even low barriers against the United States. | ||
And so countries that have trade barriers against our goods, we are applying something proportionately. | ||
It's not the same rate. | ||
In each case, it's about half. | ||
So if you look at the trade barriers that other countries have against us, we have about half of, our rate is about half of what theirs is against them. | ||
So in addition to the baseline, there's this reciprocal tariff. | ||
Anything more than 10%, we are proportionally tacking on an additional tariff. | ||
On their goods. | ||
So it's the 10% baseline, and then it's reciprocal against countries that have a higher than 10% trade barrier against the United States. | ||
This really surpassed my expectations. | ||
I thought, and again, there was a lot of ambiguity surrounding the policy. | ||
It sounded like Trump was walking it back considerably. | ||
He campaigned on 15% across the board, Then walked it back to reciprocal, then said there'd be flexibility in our reciprocal approach. | ||
And I said, what is it going to be by April 2nd? | ||
By April 2nd, it's going to be nothing. | ||
But they walked it back up to a 10% baseline and reciprocal, which is really good stuff. | ||
So we're going to talk about all that. | ||
I'll give you the details on the policy. | ||
We'll get into it. | ||
And I'll answer some of the common questions. | ||
Concerns about tariffs, counter arguments. | ||
We will get into it. | ||
We're also going to talk tonight, potentially about two stories. | ||
I'm not sure which one I'm going to do. | ||
We may talk about Marine Le Pen in France, who has been barred from running for office. | ||
More likely, though, I think we're going to talk about something that I actually just saw before I went live. | ||
I think I prefer to talk about this. | ||
It's a 17-year-old Texas football player, white, who was stabbed to death By a 17-year-old black student. | ||
A track athlete, I think, is what he is. | ||
For no apparent reason. | ||
Horrible, tragic story. | ||
Good-looking, 17-year-old young guy. | ||
High GPA, high school athlete. | ||
Stabbed to death. | ||
Died on the scene in his identical twin brother's arms. | ||
Killed by a black student. | ||
And we'll talk about that. | ||
If we have time, we'll get to both. | ||
I have a feeling that we might not get to both. | ||
But those will be our big stories. | ||
It's going to be a good show. | ||
It's good to be back. | ||
Before we get into it, I want to remind you to smash the follow button on Rumble, smash the like button, leave a comment. | ||
Let me know what you think about the show. | ||
What else is going on with me lately? | ||
Not much. | ||
You know, the other day, I'll say this before we get into the news. | ||
I tried out Civilization VII, the video game. | ||
If you guys watch the show, you know I'm a huge fan of Civ V. I never played Civ VI. | ||
I've always been a huge fan of Civ V. I have probably more hours on that game than any other game on Steam. | ||
And the other day, I was bored. | ||
I was looking for, like, a resource management game, and I couldn't find anything. | ||
I said, why not just give it a shot? | ||
It got terrible reviews, but I said, why not? | ||
I'll just... | ||
I'll do a little playthrough. | ||
I'll just see how it is. | ||
I'll see for myself. | ||
Absolutely terrible. | ||
Do not buy. | ||
I got Civ VII, and I just went into it, and it's very similar, so I sort of enjoy the similarities to the other games, but... | ||
The big problem with the game, they chopped it up into now. | ||
It used to be the case you play Civ V. And you play through from the beginning of time until the future, and it's uninterrupted, it's a thousand turns, it's whatever it is. | ||
This new game, they separate it up into like three mini-games. | ||
They call them eras or ages. | ||
So you play through the Ancient Age, then you play through the Exploration Age, then the Modern Age. | ||
And it's so confusing, and you play through One section, one chapter of the game, and by the next one you lose all your guys, you lose all your armies, you lose your cities, you lose all your shit. | ||
It doesn't even make sense. | ||
And then the worst part, I invested like 24 hours in this playthrough, or like a lot of time, and really I just wanted to see the late stage, the end stage units, the end game. | ||
I wanted to see the tanks, the planes, missiles, There's no nukes! | ||
There's no nukes. | ||
There's no stealth bombers. | ||
There's no precision fighters. | ||
What a joke. | ||
What a total letdown. | ||
So if anybody was considering getting Civ 7, do not buy. | ||
Absolute trash. | ||
And you know, they posted a picture of their dev team. | ||
I ratioed this post. | ||
The studio that makes the game, they posted a picture, a group photo of their developer team. | ||
And it's all chicks. | ||
It's all chicks and nigs. | ||
And that's why the game is shit. | ||
It's all minorities. | ||
It's all women. | ||
And that's why the game sucks. | ||
Complete perversion of the original vision. | ||
The world leaders don't even make any sense. | ||
You go and play as the American civilization, you're playing as Harriet Tubman or something. | ||
Harriet Tubman. | ||
Used to be the case you play as America, you're George Washington. | ||
Now you play as Harriet Tubman. | ||
Really? It doesn't even make any sense. | ||
So, I overall, I give it a pass. | ||
I'm passing on it. | ||
I shouldn't say I give it a pass. | ||
I'm passing on it. | ||
Not a good game. | ||
It's such a shame too. | ||
I was looking forward to that because I skipped over Civ 6. Too cartoony. | ||
Didn't like a lot of the new mechanics. | ||
I said I'll give it a try. | ||
I'll try the new one. | ||
What a joke. | ||
This is like I said yesterday. | ||
It's ironic. | ||
They're ruining our civilization. | ||
They're ruining our civilization! | ||
They're ruining the thing in real life, and they're ruining the game of the same name! | ||
They're ruining Western White civilization, and they're ruining the franchise. | ||
We can have nothing. | ||
We can't have it in the real world. | ||
We can't have the simulation. | ||
That's honestly the worst part. | ||
We're going to be human batteries for artificial intelligence. | ||
We're going to live in the matrix. | ||
And when they strap us into VR, when they strap us into a simulated world with a VR headset generated by artificial intelligence, it's going to be as gay as the real world. | ||
That's the worst part. | ||
Because it would even be redeeming. | ||
If you said we're living in trash world, there's 10 billion Africans, It's a total hell world. | ||
But at least we could live in a tenement apartment and strap ourselves in a VR and we can make our wildest dreams come true. | ||
Maybe you would say that's a form of escape. | ||
But they're bringing the ruin into the digital world. | ||
It's not enough they ruined the universe, they ruined the metaverse! | ||
They're ruining all possible universes. | ||
They're ruining the universe in the real world, they're ruining the metaverse in the digital world as well. | ||
There is no escape. | ||
The real world is DEI, too many women, too many blacks, too much bullshit, too much trash, and they're bringing all of those worst components now into the digital world too. | ||
There's no escape from it. | ||
So, that's just a little heads up for you. | ||
Civilization has been ruined in both ways. | ||
Anyway, so that's what's been new with me, but I want to move on. | ||
I want to dive into our news. | ||
We'll talk about... | ||
What should we get into first? | ||
I guess we'll talk about this murder first, because this to me isn't really even a big story in itself, but I have some thoughts on it. | ||
So I saw this before I went live. | ||
It's another one of these, unfortunately, very common tragedies now. | ||
You see it all the time. | ||
Young, white teenager killed by one of these black people. | ||
And this is the story. | ||
It says, quote, is mourning the heartbreaking loss of Austin Metcalf, a 17-year-old football standout at Memorial High School, who was tragically killed during a UIL track meet Wednesday morning. | ||
Police say an altercation between two students escalated quickly during the District 11-5A championships. | ||
Austin was stabbed in the chest by Carmelo Anthony, a fellow 17-year-old black student from Frisco Centennial High School. | ||
Austin died in the arms of his identical twin brother, Hunter, who tried to stop the bleeding before emergency crews arrived. | ||
He wasn't just a football player. | ||
He was a leader, a 4.0 GPA student, a beloved friend and teammate. | ||
He was Memorial's MVP and one of the top defenders in the area. | ||
A prayer vigil was held Wednesday evening at Hope Fellowship Church, where he was a regular in the youth group. | ||
The church was filled with teammates, classmates, teachers, community members who gathered to honor his life. | ||
And this is nothing new, tragically. | ||
This type of story, we've heard it before. | ||
We've seen it all throughout our lives, maybe close to home. | ||
One of these happened actually in my neck of the woods. | ||
When I was in high school, there was a beautiful young girl. | ||
She lived in a rich suburb. | ||
A black man broke into her house, her parents' house. | ||
A burglar found her at home. | ||
I actually think she came home early from school and found him breaking into the house to burglarize it. | ||
He stabbed her dozens of times, killed her brutally, stole her phone, and then was texting and calling the parents, taunting them. | ||
And it turned into, obviously, a devastating event for the entire community. | ||
It was unbelievable at the high school and all the surrounding suburbs. | ||
Nobody could believe it. | ||
But as time has gone on, of course, we've all heard or seen a story like this, like I said, if not in our own neighborhoods, we've seen it on the news. | ||
It also happens in other countries too. | ||
It happens in the United Kingdom. | ||
It happens in continental Europe, Australia, Canada. | ||
And what is so shocking is when you see the two pictures side-by-side. | ||
I'm gonna say something really brutally honest here that everybody's thinking, that everybody knows. | ||
You see the side-by-side in this murder Of the killer and the victim. | ||
And on one side, you see the victim. | ||
And it's, you know, and let's be adults here for a second. | ||
This is a very handsome young man. | ||
Handsome, great looking, 17 years old, 4.0 GPA, playing football, volunteering for the church group. | ||
And then on the other side, you have this ugly, ugly piece of shit scumbag. | ||
And there's something especially wicked about this dynamic, and there's a reason that people don't show the side-by-side. | ||
There's a reason the mainstream media, of course they don't show the picture of the perpetrator, because every time they're going to be black, and they don't want people to create a narrative, which should be created, the obvious conclusion, But another reason they don't show the side-by-side is because they don't want people to see the contrast. | ||
And of course, there are white people who are violent too, although I don't think to the same extent and on the same level, and we'll get into that in a second. | ||
But there's something especially wicked about the fact that one of them had a future, one of them was a winner, one of them was actually in many ways a gift to the world, and on the other side you have this deadbeat. | ||
You have this ugly deadbeat. | ||
And there's something especially heinous about someone ugly with no future killing someone who is beautiful with a future. | ||
And in some sense, this is something that is echoing across our civilization, which is that our cities are under siege by ugly people. | ||
Ugly people that don't produce, that don't build, And they're destroying something that is beautiful. | ||
They're destroying the handiwork of a noble people. | ||
There's something especially heinous about this. | ||
More heinous, for example, than if one beautiful person killed another beautiful person, than if one productive person killed another productive person, than if one civilization waged a war on another civilization in the truest sense of the word. | ||
And you see something like this and On some level, I also—here's another thing that's brutally honest that maybe people aren't going to like. | ||
I almost don't even like to see it. | ||
I don't even like to see a beautiful white face being portrayed as a victim. | ||
Because although people need to see what's happening, although people need to see the reality, On the other hand, I'm getting really sick and tired of broadcasting white people being killed, white people being abused, white people being victimized. | ||
I understand there is a political purpose for that. | ||
I understand, of course, that it is creating outrage and so there's And of course it's the news. | ||
We want to see who's there. | ||
But there's something that offends my pride as a white person to constantly see blacks as the predators and whites as the prey. | ||
Blacks as the killers and whites as the killed. | ||
Because on some level, you know that black people take some sort of sick pride in the fact that we live in fear of them. | ||
We live in fear of their impulsive, reckless, senseless violence. | ||
Somewhere deep down, and it comes out when these things happen, they do take some sort of sick pride that this is the dynamic, that we are peaceful, that we aren't given to violence, that we can't call upon and summon that kind of brutality in an instant, in a moment, in the way that they can. | ||
And on the one hand, while we're very sympathetic to the person who was killed, of course the killer is at fault. | ||
It's almost broadcasting our own weakness, and I hate that. | ||
On the flip side, we don't want to see white people going out and killing black people in an equally senseless way. | ||
That would be immoral. | ||
We don't want to see innocent people being killed on the other side of the racial divide or something like that. | ||
And this is where you have the government that comes in. | ||
What is offensive to our sensibilities is the lack of justice. | ||
That here we are, as white people, trying to have a civilization, trying to have order, peace, prosperity, beauty, productivity. | ||
Here we are, trying to have, in a word, civilization. | ||
And we are not allowed to be left alone. | ||
We are being forced to live among people that refuse to be a part of it. | ||
They refuse to be peaceful. | ||
They refuse to be sociable, respectful, productive. | ||
Any of these things. | ||
And of course, we are being indoctrinated with this ideology. | ||
Of course, we're being told, you know, it's like in this television show on Netflix. | ||
There was a similar story in the United Kingdom. | ||
A young black guy stabbed a white girl. | ||
They adapted the story for a Netflix television show. | ||
They said it's a white boy who killed a girl because he was indoctrinated by Andrew Tate. | ||
We're being told that we're the problem. | ||
I watched a show on Apple TV or Hulu. | ||
It's called Paradise. | ||
And in the show, I'm not going to give you any of the spoilers or story, but the main character is a upright, upstanding black man who is the most moral, acts with integrity and conscience, a loving father and husband. | ||
And one of the antagonists in the show is a motherless white guy who's brutal and violent. | ||
I mean, this is what we're getting from Hollywood when this is the reality. | ||
And surely, If this guy were racist, if his parents were racist, if we lived in a racist society, he would still be alive. | ||
He would still be walking the earth. | ||
And not only would his life be spared, and he would get to live out his full potential and his own story, but in addition, all the lives around him would not have been utterly destroyed. | ||
His twin brother will never recover from that. | ||
His parents will never recover from that. | ||
His other loved ones may never recover from this. | ||
It's self-inflicted. | ||
We're doing it to ourselves. | ||
We're telling ourselves, this is okay. | ||
We're willing to tolerate a level of injustice. | ||
We're willing to tolerate trouble in paradise because of some sort of ideological commitment to Equality or something like that? | ||
White guilt? | ||
And you know, it's so funny, I started, it's not funny. | ||
It's sort of interesting. | ||
I started to think about what are we going to do about this? | ||
People get very angry. | ||
You see these people, they're so smug. | ||
And you wonder, how can we wipe the smug satisfaction off of their faces when these black people are killing white people? | ||
Well, it's obvious. | ||
You think about vigilantism. | ||
You think we can't have that. | ||
We've been deprived of justice. | ||
We think the state must intervene with brutal violence. | ||
You think this killer needs to be made an example of. | ||
This young man who killed a beautiful young white person who was productive and was going to contribute to society, he should be made an example of by the law. | ||
They should give him the death penalty. | ||
And then I thought, that's not good enough. | ||
It's not enough that he gets the death penalty. | ||
I started to think, how can we send a message to these killers? | ||
How can we send a message? | ||
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We need a public execution. | |
And then I thought about it. | ||
You have this persistent problem of brutality from blacks, brutal, merciless, senseless violence from adolescent black men. | ||
I think there has to be something done about it. | ||
Maybe vigilantism, maybe the state. | ||
I say the only answer to these people that do not listen to reason, that do not listen, is to match in an organized way with the state. | ||
Because we're not, it's, we're not about mob action. | ||
We're not about senseless revenge, vengeance. | ||
That's not who we are. | ||
Those aren't our morals. | ||
What we want is justice. | ||
We have a state to administer justice, I said, so we should deliver the death penalty in equal measure to the killer. | ||
And in order to send that message, we have to do it in public. | ||
And then I thought, wait a second, we've just recreated lynchings. | ||
We just recreated the same thought process behind the KKK and behind the mob lynchings or executions That we hear so much about in the long history of race relations in the United States. | ||
Now, you might say to yourself, and that just goes to show how misguided that thinking is. | ||
Because we would equate that type of action with moral evil. | ||
Because we're indoctrinated, that was racism, that was evil, that was the moral stain on America, that was a legacy of slavery and Jim Crow and the Klan. | ||
So if you're thinking like this, and it sounds like that, and that is the pinnacle of evil, then this must be wrong. | ||
This way of thinking must be misguided if it leads to that place. | ||
But, me, I don't think in terms of heuristics. | ||
I'm a free thinker. | ||
I don't think in terms of rules. | ||
I don't think in terms of, my 7th grade teacher told me this was bad, and therefore it's bad. | ||
I flip the thinking on its head and I think, maybe we thought about it all wrong. | ||
Emmett Till, all these others. | ||
You know, there's two sides to every story. | ||
One story is that white people are evil and prejudiced and irrationally hateful against black people. | ||
And that is why we enslave them. | ||
That is why white people lynched them. | ||
That is why white people killed them. | ||
That is why white people with Mob, vigilante justice killed young blacks like Emmett Till. | ||
And that's why we have to pay racial penance. | ||
That's why we have to have forced integration and tolerance and equality. | ||
We have to think twice. | ||
We have to create space. | ||
We have to listen. | ||
We have to wipe away our white tears and do the work. | ||
But there's two sides to every story, just like this one. | ||
At the end of this, you should see this black killer dead. | ||
This black killer should be in the electric chair or on the other end of firing squad. | ||
In a hundred years, when we're long gone, will there be a society that teaches in the history books that this was some sort of racial injustice that this killer was put in the electric chair? | ||
Are we going to hear the Sov story from his loved ones about how he was somehow the victim? | ||
About how the allegations against him were false or drummed up because of racism? | ||
You wonder, what was it like a hundred years ago? | ||
And in the case of someone like Emmett Till, well, it turns out the accusation was he beat and raped a white girl. | ||
Now, knowing what we've seen with our own eyes and with our own experience, what do you think's more likely? | ||
What do you think's more likely? | ||
There's no question. | ||
That in the history of race relations in the United States, there was injustice on both sides, without question. | ||
I'm not here trying to say the KKK should be lionized or something like that. | ||
Nothing close to it. | ||
I'm not saying that slavery is defensible. | ||
I'm a Catholic. | ||
Of course, I don't believe that. | ||
But it is to say, of course, that in the long history of race relations, and there is a Hatfield and McCoy's cycle of vengeance on both sides, There's bound to be injustice. | ||
There's bound to be senseless violence. | ||
But we're taught a story that whites are the problem. | ||
Whites are the perpetrators. | ||
Blacks are the victims. | ||
Whites have evil in our DNA. | ||
Whites by genetics are killers and oppressors, and blacks are innocent. | ||
And this has colored our way of thinking, and it's informed the way our society is structured today. | ||
But we have to undo that thinking. | ||
And think about what kind of society we want to live in. | ||
And I will tell you this as plainly as possible. | ||
I don't want to live around black people. | ||
I just don't. | ||
It would be irresponsible if I had a wife and kids to live near black people. | ||
It just would be. | ||
And that's not to say that every black person is violent. | ||
It's not to say that every black person is the same way. | ||
But we watch the news, we read the papers. | ||
When you drive downtown in Chicago, you know who you gotta look out for and worry about when you're thinking about whether you're gonna get carjacked, when you're worried about catching a stray bullet, when you're worried about who's gonna pull up on the side of the road and literally shove a rifle in your face and steal your iPhone or shoot you point-blank execution-style in Lincoln Park. | ||
We know who's doing it. | ||
I don't wanna live near them. | ||
I don't want to be near them. | ||
They make me nervous. | ||
That's a survival instinct. | ||
And the way this story unfolded, it's sort of interesting. | ||
Apparently this white student, this Austin Metcalf, confronted a friend of the killer. | ||
Presumably black also, and said something like, hey, you're sitting in the wrong spot. | ||
You're in my spot. | ||
Something like this. | ||
And that's when the black guy jumped in and stabbed him to death. | ||
Unfortunately, we just don't know. | ||
When you're on the subway, when you're driving in your car, when you're in the city streets, you don't know whether the black person in proximity to you is one of the good ones, Or one of the ones who is going to summon an unbelievable, I mean literally for people like us, an unthinkable level of spontaneous brutality, senseless and merciless violence in an instant. | ||
We don't know! | ||
There's ambiguity. | ||
You're sitting on a subway. | ||
You look across. | ||
You see someone acting strange or aggressive. | ||
Is this someone who was going to pull out a knife and in two seconds slit my throat and kill me? | ||
Or is this just someone who's having a bad day? | ||
We don't know. | ||
I'm not willing to risk my life to find out. | ||
It's not worth it to me. | ||
I'm not willing to put myself in a position to find out. | ||
You know, us white people, we like to live our lives. | ||
We like to go to college. | ||
We like to get jobs. | ||
We like to have kids. | ||
We like to make plans. | ||
We'd like to be around. | ||
We'd like to buy a house with a 30-year mortgage and pay the bills. | ||
We'd like to get married and an eternal contract and a sacrament before God. | ||
We'd like to have kids and invest in them emotionally and financially so they can have a future. | ||
We like to landscape our lawns because we like them to look nice. | ||
And we're actually not willing to throw away our life over some kind of pissing contest on public transportation, on a football field, on a sidewalk. | ||
They are! | ||
They are! | ||
They who are in and out of jail, they who make money from a life of petty crime, they who are going nowhere, In many cases, and I'm not saying blacks, but this class of predators who almost exclusively happen to be black, they are willing to throw it all away. | ||
As a matter of fact, it's not even willing because that would almost say that there's a precognition. | ||
That would almost suggest that there is some sort of active thought process when in actuality it's just instinct. | ||
And you have people that are living by the laws of man and living by the laws of civilization, based on rationality, based on reason, living alongside people that live by the rules of the jungle, that live by instinct and impulse, that live by unconscious decision-making. | ||
It doesn't work. | ||
It can't work. | ||
You cannot have people living by the laws of man That are taught to share, and to be a gentleman, and to be considerate. | ||
Taught to turn the other cheek and be Christian. | ||
People that are wearing a business suit on their way to their job, living alongside people that are shooting and killing to get to the top of the heap, to get to the top of the hill. | ||
You can't have them living... | ||
Because if we were to live by the laws of the jungle, it would look like Nazi Germany. | ||
If we were living, if whites were living by the same rules as the blacks, it would look like Vikings. | ||
It would look like pillage and torment and ingenuity and innovation and brutality that they could never fucking conceive of. | ||
Systematic violence that they are not even capable of. | ||
But we don't live like that, because it's wrong, because we've evolved past that. | ||
And we don't want to return to that. | ||
And so, something here has got to give. | ||
And I don't think that we should be the ones giving. | ||
The question is, how long is it going to take for white people to summon the courage to create a political solution to this problem? | ||
We have a state. | ||
We have laws, we have police, we have prisons. | ||
These institutions have legitimacy, but not for long. | ||
How long is it going to take for the government to step in and restore order? | ||
If it doesn't, it's gonna get ugly. | ||
First for us, then for them. | ||
It's ugly now, for us. | ||
It's an inevitability that eventually it will get ugly for the other side. | ||
It's only a question of when. | ||
That is, unless the state will enter in and enforce the laws. | ||
But how much more will white people take? | ||
And the funny thing is, I'm speaking about this in a very direct and straightforward way. | ||
I am a Christian. | ||
I'm not in favor of brutality and violence, these things that they physically hurt to hear about. | ||
It's horrible. | ||
We don't want to live in a violent world. | ||
We don't want to live in an unjust world. | ||
But we also want to survive. | ||
We also want to be alive. | ||
And it seems that all the white people can say about it, the only language, the only vocabulary they can use, contrary to what I'm saying, is to speak in terms of fairness. | ||
You see, day in and day out, our society is being spoiled. | ||
By barbarians. | ||
And all white people can say is, well, this is really unfair, because if we did this to them, they wouldn't be so happy, now would they? | ||
Even that language is based on selflessness. | ||
Even that language is based on fairness and equity. | ||
Which is to say, you're not being fair to us. | ||
And there is some insinuation which is, we can't repay you in kind. | ||
We can't do to you what you do to us, because it wouldn't be fair. | ||
Because if we did it, you would be unhappy. | ||
And justifiably so, it would be unfair. | ||
And so what's being said is we are constrained by ourselves. | ||
We are restraining ourselves because of this conception of political correctness, fairness, what the other side would think, what they might do. | ||
We have to start thinking about what's best for us. | ||
I want to be alive. | ||
I want my family to be alive. | ||
I want my race to be alive. | ||
I want us to prosper. | ||
It's not enough to be alive. | ||
I want to be free from fear. | ||
Now, that's unreasonable. | ||
We all have a reasonable level of fear. | ||
But in the 21st century, there is no reason why we should fear taking public transportation that we pay for. | ||
Going to a high school football game that our property taxes pay for. | ||
We should not just be able to survive, we should thrive in society, in a refined, advanced civilization. | ||
And I don't know about you, I want to achieve that at any cost, within the confines of morality. | ||
But we must pursue absolute justice At absolutely any cost and any kind of liberal idea that gets in the way to me is useless. | ||
Any liberal idea that gets in the way of justice for children that are being stabbed to death at school and shot is completely useless. | ||
And people just need to set these priorities straight. | ||
It's all these other people that Our preaching passivity and complacency and self-restraint in the face of an overt attack on our kind, on our way of life, has to be done away with. | ||
We need a war-like mentality. | ||
And God bless us, we are merciful. | ||
But we can only have mercy after we have justice. | ||
Just like God. | ||
God doesn't say infinite compassion and no justice. | ||
God says perfect justice, perfect mercy. | ||
In His justice, in His mercy. | ||
And we, whites, we are a Christian race. | ||
Just like Jews are cultural Jews, we are cultural Christians also. | ||
Even those that don't believe in Christianity, those are cultural Christians also. | ||
I obviously am Catholic, but even the whites that are not Christian or Catholic, there are cultural Christians as well. | ||
But a prerequisite for mercy first is justice. | ||
You can offer clemency, you can offer compassion, you can offer forgiveness after the judgment is meted out. | ||
After they stand before a judge and receive their penalty and servant. | ||
Then they can have mercy. | ||
Then they can have compassion. | ||
But we've got it backwards. | ||
We're giving mercy before justice. | ||
There's no cash bail in Chicago. | ||
There's no cash bail in Illinois. | ||
They don't get charged. | ||
They don't get prosecuted. | ||
They're getting mercy before they get their justice. | ||
So we can be a merciful and compassionate society, we can be a nation of forgiveness, but first we have to be a nation of justice. | ||
You can't give forgiveness before you've sentenced them to a punishment. | ||
So that's what we have to do in the country. | ||
I'm waiting for the politician that says this. | ||
I'm waiting for the politician, and in some way that's Trump. | ||
In my opinion, Trump is a failure if he doesn't prefigure someone who comes after who makes him look weak. | ||
Trump preached law and order in 2016. | ||
We don't hear so much about that anymore. | ||
We need someone that comes after him, that makes him look like Barack Obama, that makes him look like Kamala Harris by comparison. | ||
Because this is just out of control. | ||
We're letting it be killed. | ||
We're letting it slip through our fingers. | ||
We're killing it with our own complacency. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
Those are just my thoughts on this. | ||
It makes me really angry to see it because, like I said, we know this is so wrong. | ||
This is somebody on the other side, this black guy. | ||
Really? He took this one out of the world? | ||
It's so twisted, and it's so evil, and we have a society that is effectively apathetic. | ||
People get upset, people get angry, but it's impotent. | ||
And this is not a call to violence. | ||
This is not a call to action at all. | ||
So clip this. | ||
This is not calling for anybody to take up arms or be a vigilante. | ||
I think that is evil too. | ||
I think that revenge killing, mob justice, I don't think there's anything moral about that either. | ||
I think that is sometimes a reaction. | ||
I don't think it's justified. | ||
I don't believe in that. | ||
I don't think Christians can condone that. | ||
I'm not a consequentialist. | ||
I don't believe that, you know, ends justify the means in all cases. | ||
I don't believe in passion. | ||
I believe in righteous anger, but I don't believe in taking action out of passion, out of emotion. | ||
But I do think that we need to sublimate how we feel. | ||
We need to transmute these feelings into political action to solve this problem. | ||
It's not enough to say, if the shoe were on the other foot. | ||
Something needs to be done. | ||
Something needs to change. | ||
This needs to stop. | ||
I'm sick and tired of hearing about BLM, Black Lives Matter. | ||
It's not even a question anymore. | ||
The question is whether the lives of these people matter, the lives of the white people. | ||
Do our lives matter? | ||
Do we get to survive? | ||
Do we get to prosper? | ||
Do we get to live free from fear? | ||
Are we going to be cajoled and bullied into giving up our lives? | ||
You know, this guy steps to a black person. | ||
You gotta know these people are, they can and will kill you for nothing. | ||
You're playing with fire. | ||
And by the way, they're not tough. | ||
It's not because they're tough. | ||
They're cowardly. | ||
Someone confronts another person, he probably got stabbed from behind. | ||
And we've all seen the videos. | ||
White people get an altercation with black people and ten more black people jump in. | ||
Or they jump in with weapons. | ||
With knives, with guns. | ||
They sucker punch you. | ||
And that's where white people are foolish. | ||
You know, we in our compassion, we in our foolhardy bravery, Our pride. | ||
Try and stand against them when they are cowardly and shameless. | ||
They will attack in packs. | ||
They will attack with weapons. | ||
Again, with no regard for society, for any morality, anything like that. | ||
Unless you're capable of that kind of violence or willing to throw your life away for something like that, like, you know, what happened to Daniel Penny. | ||
Just avoid at all costs. | ||
This is why people want nothing to do with them. | ||
We don't want to be in a situation where there's this ambiguity. | ||
If I discriminate, I'm a racist. | ||
If I don't discriminate properly, I'm dead. | ||
We will just avoid them. | ||
If we're walking down the street and if we encounter a black person, if he's safe and we avoid, we're racist. | ||
If he's not safe and we don't avoid, we're dead. | ||
How about, I don't want to run into them. | ||
I don't want to enter these events. | ||
I don't want to enter into a quick-time event every day that I go to work, every day that, you know, that your wife is walking the kids to the park. | ||
We don't want to enter into a quick-time event. | ||
Is this a good black person that we have to worry about being racist? | ||
Or is this a bad black person where we should be racist because they're about to put a gun to my head or a knife to my throat? | ||
And by the way, I don't want to live like Rambo. | ||
I don't want to live, at all times, And a heightened state of awareness of my blood pumping and my hand on my gun waiting to be ambushed by maniacs. | ||
We shouldn't have to live like this. | ||
So, by the way, it's like this in the big cities. | ||
It's like this in LA, New York, Chicago. | ||
This is now what America has to offer. | ||
It didn't used to be like this. | ||
It shouldn't be like this. | ||
We should look out for each other. | ||
We should see this as an attack on our kind. | ||
This is our way of life. | ||
That's their way of life. | ||
They killed one of ours. | ||
This is wrong. | ||
It can't stand. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
But I want to move on. | ||
I do want to get into the tariffs. | ||
That's just a little aside about this. | ||
Brutal murder. | ||
It's it's just such a horrible thing to witness and you know I am the reason that people are afraid to talk like this is because watch I do this monologue and I'm gonna get media matters and I'm gonna get right-wing watch to clip it and they're gonna say Nick Fuentes wants to kill black people Nick Fuentes but And then you get canceled and then there's and then there's the mob action. | ||
Oh docks his ass. | ||
He's racist You know, which is what when you talk about these issues, they then try to literally kill you which is the irony You say, I don't want to live in fear. | ||
I don't want to live in a situation where I'm either going to be life destroyed for being racist, killed if I'm not sufficiently racist. | ||
And then they say, I can't, you know, Jewish liberals, by the way, these are all the Jews, the Jews will come in and say, oh, you're racist. | ||
You're racist. | ||
And they're going to broadcast that on the internet and target you to make you stop talking like this. | ||
So you accept Are locked. | ||
You accept the situation. | ||
That's what happens. | ||
Everybody's afraid to say it. | ||
They don't want to scare the hoes. | ||
They don't want their girlfriend to be mad. | ||
You know, because the women, they don't fucking get this at all. | ||
The women don't get it. | ||
The women are sympathetic. | ||
You know, people are afraid of the social ramifications. | ||
They're afraid, if they're in politics, of the political or financial ramifications, the effects on their employment. | ||
They're worried about being cancelled. | ||
Someone needs to tell the truth. | ||
This is wrong. | ||
This is wrong, and no one's saying it. | ||
No one's talking about it. | ||
And the way people talk about it, it's in these weird coded ways. | ||
They speak in code. | ||
People are outraged, but they won't allow themselves to... | ||
They don't even allow themselves to articulate in words what their problem is, because they've been programmed not to. | ||
We have to have an awakening of the white people which is we don't need to live like this We don't want to live like this. | ||
We don't need to live like this. | ||
We don't need to put up with this and You could go at any level. | ||
Okay, the sheriff's the cops Prosecutors, you know what it is. | ||
It's a whole fucking country of people that say hey, man, I'm just doing my job You know what? | ||
Fuck you Because like honestly You see, you see what happened to me. | ||
I don't want to talk about my active case. | ||
I caught a fucking battery charge in this cock-sucking motherfucking piss city. | ||
You got this fucked-hard mayor who has let these people ruin our city. | ||
He says, we need, we need more safe places for our young people. | ||
They're shooting people in the Gold Coast. | ||
They're, these fucking people are shooting people in Streeterville. | ||
That's the safest place there is. | ||
They're the violence. | ||
They're Creating the culture of, they're the ones with the guns and tasers and knives. | ||
They're shooting each other. | ||
They come to a rich neighborhood that is safe, and they cause the fucking problems, and the black mayor, who shouldn't be there, fucking ignoramus, comes and says, well, they need somewhere safe to be. | ||
It was safe until they got there, and I get charged. | ||
They're driving cars through windows to steal Jordans. | ||
They're robbing cash registers for nine dollars. | ||
And I catch a charge, and it's these cock-sucking fucking people in the justice system, cops and whoever, and they're giving me grief! | ||
I get a charge, they're motherfucking me, calling me on the phone. | ||
So unbelievable. | ||
When are they gonna- I fucking pay taxes! | ||
When are we gonna have representation looking out for us? | ||
And forget that! | ||
When are we gonna have our own fucking people looking out for us? | ||
When are we going to have our own people looking out for us? | ||
Anyway, apologies for the colorful language. | ||
But when are we going to have anybody stand up and do the right thing? | ||
Where's the courage? | ||
Does anybody have the capacity for courage anymore? | ||
Anybody? Anywhere? | ||
Or is everybody just doing what's convenient? | ||
And the path of least resistance for themselves. | ||
And they wonder why things are messed up. | ||
It's because no one's willing to fight. | ||
No one's willing to stand up. | ||
You know what? | ||
If you're not willing to fight for your city, if you're not willing to fight for your country, if you're not willing to stand up for what's right, whatever you're doing, wherever you are, who's gonna? | ||
You have no right to it. | ||
It will be taken from you. | ||
You're not entitled to it. | ||
So, that's the frustration. | ||
That's so unbelievable. | ||
You see it all the time. | ||
Like what happened with Daniel Penney, what happens to all these people. | ||
So... Something's gotta change. | ||
Something's gotta change fast. | ||
But that's that. | ||
Because eventually, I mean, man... | ||
And by the way, here's what's even unfortunate. | ||
Here's the best part. | ||
You wanna know the best part? | ||
When the powers that be decide to fix it, they're just going to take away our rights. | ||
The solution's obvious. | ||
We need to be separated, okay? | ||
I don't want to live near them. | ||
People talk about, well, we got to get to the bottom of the why. | ||
I don't care what the why is. | ||
I don't care. | ||
Why are these people killing and stealing? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I don't want to live near it. | ||
They should figure it out. | ||
That's a real shame. | ||
It's a real problem. | ||
They need to figure it out. | ||
I want to live with people that have figured it out already. | ||
I want to live with people that are not. | ||
You see these videos online. | ||
Little black kids are knocking over little white kids' blocks. | ||
Little black kids are punching white guys in the balls. | ||
You see that clip? | ||
In New Orleans. | ||
Clearly there's something up. | ||
I don't know what it is. | ||
Let's build some walls around it and let's just be away from it. | ||
Let's build some walls around ourselves and let's just be far away from it. | ||
They can fake, you know, for all they talk about the black community and black excellence and black pride, okay, you know what? | ||
Take all of that human capital and you get to have all of it. | ||
Hey man, we have no claim. | ||
We'll forfeit that. | ||
That's yours. | ||
You get to keep that treasury of awesomeness and you can figure it out. | ||
But the best part is, when the powers that be come to solve it, they're not going to separate us. | ||
What they're going to do is just take away all our rights. | ||
If you can't trust people not to stab and steal and everything like that, well, they're just going to put in place mass surveillance. | ||
They're just going to put cameras everywhere, drones everywhere. | ||
They're just going to take away our fundamental rights. | ||
And we're going to be in a race to the bottom. | ||
Rather than take away the rights of people that commit crimes, rather than put them in prison, which is, that's what it is. | ||
When you put someone in prison, you take away their privileges, their rights. | ||
Rather than take away the rights of the criminals by imprisoning them, we're going to turn the whole country into a prison. | ||
How do we stop mass incarcerating blacks? | ||
We turn the whole country into a prison. | ||
We turn the whole country into a maximum security prison. | ||
And everybody will go back to their cells and everybody will live in a prison-proof world where there's bulletproof glass at Popeye's. | ||
They're going to open up the tray and you put the money in, they put the chicken in. | ||
That's what it's going to be, rather than the obvious. | ||
When will the insanity stop? | ||
When will racism return? | ||
And I'm not getting off on that, by the way. | ||
I'm not somebody that woke up and thought that. | ||
I grew up in a white suburb. | ||
I had no animosity towards other races. | ||
And on some level, I still don't. | ||
I don't consider myself a prejudiced person. | ||
But this is a societal problem. | ||
And this is after year after year, all these incidents, and nobody cares. | ||
Nothing ever happens. | ||
These cities have gone to ruin. | ||
Michigan Avenue is destroyed. | ||
It's gone. | ||
It's a ghost town. | ||
And it drives reasonable people to this point. | ||
I'm a reasonable person. | ||
We've been driven to this point by these contradictions, by the senselessness, the lack of reason, the lack of sense. | ||
We've been driven to this. | ||
So, and honestly, we have to pray for prudence. | ||
And I want to make it clear. | ||
I'm not someone that's calling. | ||
I'm expressing righteous indignation right now. | ||
It's very sick and sad and tragic and preventable. | ||
I am not calling for violence. | ||
I want to make that crystal clear. | ||
And for people that say, oh, you know, you don't need to say that, you do, because this is where they always take it. | ||
If you're upset about what's happening, they literally call you a terrorist. | ||
You start talking about solutions, they call you a terrorist. | ||
You talk about things as they are. | ||
They say you're an enemy of the state. | ||
You're a danger to everybody. | ||
I'm not calling for violence. | ||
I don't think anybody should engage in violence. | ||
I don't think we should give them the satisfaction. | ||
You know? | ||
I don't think that we should lower ourselves to that. | ||
I think that white people need to get smart. | ||
Don't get angry. | ||
Don't get even. | ||
Get smart. | ||
Get away. | ||
Get away from them. | ||
Keep your loved ones safe. | ||
Tell them the dangers. | ||
Don't be afraid of being called a racist. | ||
You know, like that, oh, I don't want to be a Karen, winds up dead. | ||
I don't want to be, oh, I'm not one of those racists. | ||
I'm not afraid of them. | ||
Famous last words. | ||
Be smart, use the information to protect yourself and your loved ones. | ||
And step up, have some courage in these situations. | ||
We have to get together and find a way out of this without where this is headed, which is either tyranny or a war of everyone against everyone. | ||
Anyway, so that's that. | ||
I do want to move on, though. | ||
I didn't even want to talk too much about it, but man, it really just drives me crazy, especially because of my experience, how I've been vilified and what I've been subjected to. | ||
I've killed nobody. | ||
I do a fucking talk show. | ||
I'd like to remind people of that. | ||
As much as I've been vilified, as much as people treat me like I'm radioactive, people talk about what a heinous person I am, people feel ju- they feel strong, they feel brave attacking me in a cowardly way with the crowd. | ||
I do a talk show. | ||
These are killers that walk among us. | ||
Killers and predators. | ||
There's real bad guys out there. | ||
And people cannot summon the courage to do- to even speak about it in a plain way. | ||
So anyway, so that's that. | ||
But I do want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our big story tonight. | ||
Featured story, on a lighter note, because that's really, it is really ugly and disturbing. | ||
I want to move on. | ||
I want to get into our featured story tonight, which is about the Liberation Day, the announcement of the Trump reciprocal tariffs. | ||
On a lighter note, much more positive, finally some good news. | ||
So when Trump ran for office in 2016, He launched a revolutionary America First agenda in complete contravention of the mainstream Republican agenda. | ||
The old Republican agenda was based on cutting taxes, shrinking government, deregulating the economy, going to war for Israel, among other things. | ||
Trump's agenda was based on three things. | ||
Ending the foreign wars, a foreign policy of restraint, It was based on immigration restriction, preserving the identity of America, its cultural identity, its heritage, its demographics, the integrity of its laws and its borders. | ||
And lastly, although this is one that people don't talk about as much, but we're talking about it tonight, one of the fundamental biggest pillars of Trumpism of America First is a protectionist trade policy, an industrial policy. | ||
This is quintessential. | ||
This is fundamental to nationalism. | ||
It is fundamental to Trumpism, to America First. | ||
And the reason I frame it this way is because a lot has changed since Trump launched his first campaign 10 years ago. | ||
It seems that Trump is fighting to have a restrained foreign policy and losing that fight. | ||
We're bombing Yemen. | ||
We're threatening Iran. | ||
We're giving Israel weapons to destroy Gaza. | ||
We're unhappy with Putin and maybe getting more aggressive against Russia. | ||
So there's this eternal struggle to restrain the American war machine because of the military-industrial complex, because of the Zionists, the neocons, the Jews. | ||
So we have not quite achieved that. | ||
American troops remain in Iraq, remain in Syria, We're actually deploying more force. | ||
It's a greater force posture in the Middle East than before he got in. | ||
On immigration, once again, it's a fight. | ||
We have secured the border, but there is no border wall. | ||
We have secured the border, but there are no mass deportations. | ||
We have not reversed all of the illegals that have poured in under Biden, which was even greater than anything before Trump first came to office in 2016. | ||
So we're not completely fulfilling that. | ||
What's more, there's been a 180 on immigration, legal immigration. | ||
Whereas in 2016, Trump said, we don't want H-1Bs. | ||
We want Americans to be dreamers. | ||
We want Americans to be programmers. | ||
Now Trump wants more H-1Bs. | ||
And it's really funny. | ||
Michael Knowles, this is just a really quick aside. | ||
It has nothing to do with the show tonight. | ||
But I was watching Michael Knowles' speech today. | ||
He gave a speech at Yale a couple days ago. | ||
And somebody said, why isn't Trump America first on immigration? | ||
And Michael Knowles said, well, you know, the administration lags behind the avant-garde part of the Republican Party. | ||
He said, Trump is in favor now of H-1Bs and legal immigration. | ||
He said, but in fairness, he says, the mainstream of the party, the administration lags behind the avant-garde dissidents, the more radical elements in the movement, he said, but eventually we'll get there. | ||
And I want to say for all the people that make excuses, that's just not true. | ||
Okay? The first Trump administration was against H-1Bs. | ||
Now they're for it. | ||
But these defenders of the administration will twist themselves into pretzels coming up with these convoluted theories. | ||
Oh, well, the reason Trump is now in favor of H-1Bs is because, you know, typically the administration lags behind the avant-garde wing. | ||
What the fuck are you talking about? | ||
That isn't true. | ||
Hey, dummy, that's not true. | ||
That's false. | ||
The avant-garde is really progressive. | ||
The administration lags behind. | ||
Really? Because in the first Trump administration, they were against H-1Bs. | ||
So the second administration lags behind the first? | ||
How does that work? | ||
We will get back to where we were 10 years ago? | ||
10 years from now? | ||
How does that even make sense? | ||
Like, they will sooner construct a completely convoluted mental model to satisfy the contradiction. | ||
You know, we like Trump, but he's doing the opposite of what we want. | ||
How do we, how do we resolve this? | ||
Well, um, you know, well, Trump is pushing us there. | ||
We'll get there eventually. | ||
It's just because, you know, we're more extreme than he is because we're on the outside. | ||
Okay, but he reversed his policy from 10 years ago. | ||
So that doesn't work. | ||
But it's like I always say, it's always these people like Knowles and Doyle, they will just contort themselves. | ||
The mental gymnastics. | ||
And that's literally, it makes me furious to hear that because it's like, that's not true! | ||
I want to grab by the shoulders! | ||
You made that up! | ||
That's not true! | ||
Like, you just invented that. | ||
It's not even speculation, it is literally just, you're involved in You're in fantasy land! | ||
Anyway, but to return to my point, so Trump is, needless to say, struggling on immigration. | ||
But the one thing that Trump has been consistently solid on, this is my point, if Trump has been unsuccessful at implementing a restrained America First foreign policy, if he's been unsuccessful at implementing an immigration restriction policy, What he has been successful at, I think is by far and away the biggest success, is that he is solidly America first on trade. | ||
Always has been. | ||
This has always been the most solid part. | ||
And Trumpism is a revolutionary political movement. | ||
And I should say it has become really a reforming movement. | ||
Unfortunately, Trump has not led a genuine revolution He's not genuinely created regime change. | ||
He's not genuinely, really changed the political system of the United States. | ||
He's changed characteristics of it, but he hasn't fundamentally changed it. | ||
It's not in the truest sense of revolution. | ||
It started out that way, and then it became a reforming movement. | ||
And with any reform movement, the regime, the political order, accepts some of the tenets of the revolution and rejects others. | ||
That's why it's a reform and not a complete upheaval. | ||
And that doesn't mean it's a failure. | ||
That doesn't mean necessarily the Trump revolution is a failure. | ||
We have to judge it based on net which reforms have been accepted by the system. | ||
And I think one of the big reforms that was accepted by the system was that free trade is not working. | ||
That is one of those things that was undeniably absolutely true, which is that free trade is bankrupting America. | ||
He was right. | ||
And the system recognizes that. | ||
How do we know? | ||
Because when Trump won in 2016, free trade was the universal dogma of the political system. | ||
We want free trade. | ||
We want bilateral or multilateral free trade agreements. | ||
Obama was implementing the TTP, the TTIP, among others. | ||
We had NAFTA in place. | ||
nobody was arguing against NAFTA since the year 2000, you know, since the reform party and Trump turned that all on its head. | ||
And after four years of Trump from 2017 to 2021, Biden kept in place Trump's tariffs on China. | ||
So Trump entered where free trade was the undisputed dogma. | ||
And by the time he left his successor kept in place, the protectionist tariffs. | ||
And not only that, but he actually... | ||
Made the industrial policy more comprehensive. | ||
Not only did he keep in place the trade barriers, but he also created the CHIPS Act and the Biden Infrastructure Law, which are subsidies to make American industry more competitive. | ||
And we actually got a lot of investment from Europe because of the Biden Infrastructure Law, or the Inflation Reduction Act also. | ||
And the CHIPS Act, although it's not enough, is starting To bring manufacturing back, it's starting to bring back some industry to the United States. | ||
So you have had, like I said, this reform has been accepted over what will then be 12 years. | ||
Four years of Trump, four years of Biden, four more years of Trump. | ||
If it is successful, it will continue on after that. | ||
And so I want to make that clear because a lot of people say you're very negative about Trump some days and other days you're positive. | ||
Well, I want to make it clear. | ||
I don't think holding for federal money hostage from elite universities to change what their professors say about Israel. | ||
I don't think that's a good thing. | ||
I don't think it's a good thing to bomb Iran. | ||
I don't think it's a good thing to drag our feet on deportations. | ||
It is a good thing to implement trade barriers and tariffs. | ||
I support that 100% and I think Trump has always been very successful at that. | ||
I think the regime is in some ways accepting this reform. | ||
But the big development from today is we finally got the big tariff package. | ||
Trump campaigned throughout the election last year on a 15% across-the-board tariff, which is all goods coming into the United States would be taxed at 15%. | ||
And I thought this was almost unrealistically too good. | ||
And I was very critical last week. | ||
It sounded like Trump was walking it back. | ||
For the past three months, Trump has been sort of hemming and hawing about what that promise would actually become in policy. | ||
He said he would do a 15% across-the-board tariff, and then once elected and then inaugurated, there was this open discussion, this sort of open process where he pondered whether it would be a 15% across-the-board tariff, he floated the idea of a reciprocal tariff, Which is that countries with high barriers, we would impose a high barrier on them. | ||
Countries with low barriers, we'd impose low or no barrier on them. | ||
And then last week, he said, well, maybe we'll just be super flexible. | ||
We're going to be reciprocal, but we're going to be super flexible. | ||
And so he was saying all these different things at once. | ||
He would say, well, we're going to be reciprocal and very tough, but also we have to be flexible, but not too flexible. | ||
We've been flexible for too long. | ||
But also, it's very important to be flexible. | ||
So, we didn't know what it would be, but Trump said that today, April 2nd, would be Liberation Day. | ||
This is when he would roll out his trade plan. | ||
And according to the news, according to some sources, he came to his final conclusion, to a decision, only yesterday. | ||
So he was deciding, apparently, for months. | ||
And then yesterday, the day before, made the decision, Which plan he would go with, and the plan is unbelievably positive. | ||
It is very broad, very far-reaching, very tough, very aggressive. | ||
Surprisingly so, and I'm very pleasantly surprised with the package. | ||
So today, Trump announced reciprocal tariffs on almost every country in the world. | ||
It's a two-part policy, like I said earlier. | ||
The first part Is it is a 10% across the board universal permanent baseline tariff. | ||
It's the baseline. | ||
That means that the floor for all imports coming into the United States are going to be taxed at 10% no matter what. | ||
That's huge. | ||
It's huge that it's a baseline, that it's across the board. | ||
It's huge that it's permanent. | ||
And we'll talk about why that is. | ||
But that is part number one, is that it's a 10% baseline tariff for everybody. | ||
On top of that, for those countries with trade barriers against the United States, for those countries like China, like Korea, like the European Union, like others, those countries that have imposed tariffs In excess of 10% against our goods, we are adding an additional tariff on top of the 10% in proportion to how high their barriers are against the United States. | ||
So it's a baseline 10% and it's proportionate against those countries with higher trade barriers against the United States. | ||
And this is a story from the New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, President Trump unveiled his most expansive tariffs to date. | ||
Saying he will impose a 10% tariff on all trading partners except Canada and Mexico, as well as double-digit tariffs on dozens of other countries. | ||
While Mr. Trump has been saying for weeks he would impose reciprocal tariffs, his announcement went far beyond what many analysts had expected. | ||
The tariffs will apply to more than 100 trading partners, including the European Union, China, Britain, India. | ||
Under Mr. Trump's plan, the United States will impose a staggering new 34% tariff on Chinese goods, on top of the 20% tariff that he had imposed on Beijing in recent months, a 20% tariff on imports from the European Union, and a 24% tariff on goods from Japan. | ||
India will face a 26% tariff on its exports to the United States. | ||
Trade experts, economists, Democratic and even a few Republican lawmakers swiftly rebuked the tariffs. | ||
Officials from other countries protested with some contemplating retaliation. | ||
In a slight reprieve, the new tariffs will not apply to products that Mr. Trump already hit with separate levies, including steel and aluminum, and vehicles and vehicle parts. | ||
Energy and other minerals not available in the United States will also be excluded. | ||
White House officials defended the tariffs by arguing that pernicious trading practices by other countries led to large and persistent trade deficits for the United States, and senior administration officials said they had little appetite for haggling with individual countries over lower tariff rates, even with U.S. allies that have offered to reduce their own levies on American exports in recent days. | ||
Trump officials also issued an early warning to countries that have threatened to impose retaliatory tariffs against the United States. | ||
Nick Iacovella, the Executive Vice President at Coalitions for a Prosperous America, said, quote, So, this policy is great. | ||
Like I said, totally blew away my wildest expectations. | ||
It could have gone further. | ||
I think the baseline tariff could be a little higher. | ||
That group in particular, CPA, their policy paper recommends a 17% baseline tariff. | ||
And Trump promised 15%. | ||
So, you know, it could have been a little bit higher. | ||
But overall, this is an extremely bold and unprecedented trade action. | ||
And I want to restate this point because this is very important. | ||
These were my concerns about the trade policy, which have now been answered. | ||
The first is that so far, Trump's implementation of tariffs has been scattershot. | ||
He is creating a climate of uncertainty, unpredictability, threatens tariffs, then walks it back. | ||
Says we'll use tariffs to achieve very ambiguous concessions from other countries, that It's hard to say objectively how those conditions would be satisfied, and therefore, it's very hard to predict whether there will be tariffs, and against what countries, and on what goods. | ||
And the problem with that scattershot approach, without predictability, without certainty, you cannot have an economic correction. | ||
If investors and multinational corporations and other economic decision makers, if they know that there's going to be a tariff, it's going to be this much, and this is when it's going into effect, they can plan. | ||
If they have confidence knowing when it's going to happen, how much it's going to be, how long it will last, when and how it will apply against what goods, they can make long-term decisions with confidence about Where they're going to deploy capital. | ||
But if they don't know, then they can't. | ||
They can't make those decisions. | ||
And therefore, they will be hesitant to deploy capital. | ||
They'll be hesitant, for example, to invest money in America if they don't know. | ||
And so, that's not the best thing. | ||
It needs to be permanent, predictable, reliable. | ||
It needs to be certain. | ||
So that this recalibration can occur, so that companies can make these decisions with confidence. | ||
We can change the parameters of the economy, but we need to do it in such a way where people know what to expect. | ||
And there will be a period of correction and recalibration, and that is to be expected. | ||
But over a period of time after the transition, there will be a new normal that is established. | ||
That can only happen in an environment where there's predictability and certainty. | ||
So that's one. | ||
Two, and this is my other concern, is that Trump uses tariffs not just for the economy, but also for foreign policy. | ||
It's one thing to say, we're going to put in place tariffs permanently. | ||
That is the new law of the land. | ||
America has trade barriers now, and everyone's going to have to deal with it. | ||
And we're doing it to grow our economy. | ||
It's something completely different to say, we're going to put tariffs on you if you don't do what we say. | ||
But if you do it, we're going to let him go. | ||
That is a foreign policy tool, not an economic tool. | ||
That is meant to compel compliance with the State Department. | ||
It's not necessarily meant to grow American industry, strictly speaking. | ||
And that's another issue. | ||
We need permanent tariffs. | ||
And those two issues are related, because you can understand, if they're being used as a negotiating tool, then they're going to be ad hoc. | ||
Then they're going to be unpredictable. | ||
Then they're going to be off and on. | ||
We're going to threaten them and then walk it back, adjust them. | ||
So what we need are tariffs for our economy. | ||
We need them permanently. | ||
We need them to be consistent, predictable. | ||
We need them to be a part of a mix of other policies that come from the government. | ||
Yes, the government will need to take a role in planning the economy to some extent, although that is anathema. | ||
We need the government to steer the economy Using tariffs as part of a broader policy toolkit to nurture domestic industry. | ||
Now, a lot of people say that kind of thinking is socialist or communist. | ||
They fall back on these heuristics. | ||
They say, the government can't do anything right. | ||
The government is inefficient. | ||
Innovation comes from the free market. | ||
The free market Allocates resources efficiently. | ||
The free market organizes the economy efficiently. | ||
The government can't do it. | ||
Now, these are heuristics and these are ideas which are true within context. | ||
They're partially true. | ||
The price mechanism, for example, the idea that we have prices. | ||
Why does something cost a certain amount of money? | ||
Well, the cost reflects the relative scarcity Of that good. | ||
If there's an egg shortage, for example, eggs are going to become more expensive because there's fewer of them. | ||
There's fewer of them, which means demand for them increases. | ||
Not everybody can have as many eggs as they want. | ||
We're going to have to economize on them. | ||
We're going to have to constrain how they're allocated. | ||
We raise the price and only those people that absolutely need them We'll be able to get them because they'll be willing to pay for them. | ||
That is what the price signal is good at. | ||
And markets, insofar as that is letting the price mechanism do its thing, having markets without a lot of barriers, letting prices communicate relative scarcity to allocate resources, generally that's a good thing. | ||
But that by itself is not the only consideration in an economy. | ||
That is true within Limitations. | ||
One of the reasons, for example, one of the shortfalls of the market, of the private sector, of the price system, is that the price system, the markets, are not always necessarily the best at long-term planning. | ||
Because maybe that works in time. | ||
Maybe that works right now. | ||
If you want to reflect the relative scarcity of something like eggs right now, well, the price system will communicate the relative scarcity of the eggs with how the prices rise and fall. | ||
But over the long term, the market has difficulty doing these things, especially with things like technology that don't yet exist. | ||
So, for example, something like human flight, the internet, green technologies, New sources of energy. | ||
They might not necessarily be economical right now. | ||
There might have to be, for example, in a new technology, which might be very risky, might have very low odds of becoming viable, and then therefore lucrative. | ||
It might not necessarily be According to the laws of the market, profitable to pour tons of money in research and development on a very risky, very speculative, new type of technology. | ||
That is why, throughout the history of the United States, many of the biggest technological innovations have come from the military. | ||
So, the internet is a perfect example. | ||
And many other technologies, during World War I, during World War II, and other tech Products. | ||
They would not have come into existence without huge government money for a military application, tax dollars that were spent with no, necessarily, no anticipation of a short-term profit, or maybe even a profit at all. | ||
Something like the Manhattan Project, the nuclear bomb, could have never been created by the private sector, just wouldn't happen. | ||
The nuclear bomb was created By the government. | ||
The internet was created by the government. | ||
The first computers created by the government. | ||
Many of these things were created, the resources were marshaled and directed by the government. | ||
So this, these kinds of, and these are examples, but these types of heuristics like innovation only comes from the private sector, that's not necessarily true or wholly true. | ||
The idea that markets perfectly organize our society for us is not necessarily always true. | ||
Or at least it's partially true. | ||
And so that's one of the first things to understand about a protectionist policy. | ||
When you start to say we need the government to subsidize industries, protect industries, we need the government to actually plan for the future, we need the government to think 10, 20, 30 years in the future, Well, | ||
actually, it does work. | ||
It worked in the case of the Manhattan Project. | ||
It worked in the case of the Internet. | ||
It worked in the case of building up our industry in World War II. | ||
It worked in the case of the tariffs that were in place from the founding of the country until 1930. | ||
Actually, it does work. | ||
So that's just some of the common arguments from conservatives about tariffs in general, or a protective and industrial policy in general. | ||
But then people talk about tariffs. | ||
It's so funny. | ||
You look at this announcement about the tariffs, and it's Everybody in elite society is freaking out. | ||
It's Republicans and Democrats. | ||
It's the Washington Post and the Telegraph and the Wall Street Journal. | ||
It's liberals and conservatives. | ||
They're all saying, oh, Trump's trade policies are so dumb. | ||
Oh, I don't understand what he's doing. | ||
This goes too far. | ||
This is going to shrink the economy. | ||
This is going to cause a recession. | ||
This is going to raise prices. | ||
To put it very simply, The problem that they have with the tariffs is it means that it's going to be less profits for them. | ||
It will be less profits for giant multinational corporations. | ||
They will undergo some years of pain. | ||
Those that own stocks. | ||
Of which only the richest people own most of the stocks. | ||
It is those that own the assets, those that own stocks, from which all this foreign money pours into, or to which all the foreign money is pouring into. | ||
It is they who will undergo a period of pain when the stock market goes down for a little while, when the economy contracts for a little while. | ||
And it is those media companies that they own which are sending the message. | ||
It is the political parties that they contribute to which are complaining. | ||
In a word, it is the capitalist class. | ||
It is those that own what is now considered to be capital. | ||
It is those with wealth. | ||
Most people in this country do not have wealth. | ||
The vast majority of the people in this country do not have wealth. | ||
We say about most people they live paycheck to paycheck. | ||
What that means is, if they lost their job and their income, they have no savings to fall back on. | ||
They don't even have cash holdings. | ||
They don't even have cash. | ||
They don't own their homes. | ||
They don't own stocks. | ||
They don't own businesses. | ||
They don't even have cash in the bank. | ||
They have no wealth. | ||
And there is all the difference in the world, in this economy, between those that have wealth, not even those that make money, that make income, but those that own wealth, and those that do not. | ||
Those that own stocks, Those that own real estate. | ||
Those that own companies, firms. | ||
It is they, and the richest among them, that own the media. | ||
It is they that contribute money to the political system. | ||
And it is they that are the most affected by this. | ||
Because what our trade policy effectively does is it sucks money out of the United States. | ||
It sucks money out of industry. | ||
Out of manufacturing. | ||
Out of small towns inside the United States. | ||
It sucks it out into the world and it is returned back to the United States in the form of foreign investment. | ||
In the form of foreign companies or entities buying real estate services, insurance services, financial services. | ||
We have financialized the economy. | ||
The wealth and the money is leaving the productive parts of our economy. | ||
It's leaving factories. | ||
It's leaving manufacturing plants. | ||
It's leaving automakers. | ||
It's going out into the United States like a wave receding, like the ocean pulling back. | ||
And then it comes back into the United States, into the financial industry, the insurance industry, the real estate industry. | ||
I'll talk about how that happens. | ||
But that is effectively what is taking place. | ||
It's a wealth transfer. | ||
And so over the past 20 or 30 years, the proportion of economic activity in the United States that is manufacturing, that is industry, that is agriculture, has gone down. | ||
And the amount of the economy that is services, financial, insurance, and real estate has gone up. | ||
It's a wealth transfer. | ||
The money went from good-paying jobs, factories dispersed across society, across the country. | ||
The money has left. | ||
The wealth has been transferred into financial services, real estate services, insurance services in New York, in Chicago, in the big cities, in San Francisco, in L.A., and has rewarded those people that are in those industries, And it rewards those that own assets where the money is flowing into. | ||
If you own real estate, this money is coming into real estate. | ||
It makes your wealth more valuable. | ||
If you own stocks, the money's leaving industry, going out into the world, flowing back as a form of foreign investment into companies, into stocks. | ||
It makes the stocks go up. | ||
So if you own, if you own, okay, if you have wealth, if you have, If you're a capitalist, if you have capital, capital, you are a happy camper. | ||
You are benefiting from this trade policy. | ||
You are being enriched. | ||
But if you're an income earner, if you're a worker, you are being impoverished. | ||
You are having your wealth taken. | ||
Your job is gone. | ||
And that is causing a death spiral. | ||
It's causing your whole society to collapse in on itself. | ||
in all the mid-size and smaller towns across the country. | ||
That is why both sides are articulating dissatisfaction. | ||
That's why both sides, Republicans and Democrats, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post and the New York Times, are saying, this is terrible. | ||
That's why both sides, because they're the same side. | ||
Because the rich, the capitalists, the wealth owners, they also happen to own the media. | ||
They also happen to own the political system. | ||
With everything else they own. | ||
And they're squealing out because when this trade policy happens, it will reverse that process. | ||
And these profits and the foreign investment that's coming in is going to start to dry up. | ||
And it's going to be, at the minimum, a headache. | ||
It may be a loss for them. | ||
They may lose money on this. | ||
They will lose money in this transitional period. | ||
And that's why they're sort of leaving out that part of it. | ||
They're saying this will be very bad. | ||
But they're leaving out the corollary, which is for me. | ||
This will be very bad for us. | ||
Not for the country. | ||
It will be bad for them. | ||
It will be bad for multinational corporations. | ||
It will be bad for the wealthy. | ||
It will be bad for the capitalists. | ||
It may be bad for them in the short term. | ||
How does this happen? | ||
We have had persistent trade deficits in the United States for decades now. | ||
What is a trade deficit? | ||
It means that we are importing more than we are exporting. | ||
So on net, the whole country, against all the other countries, we import more than we export overall. | ||
But we also maintain persistent high trade deficits with our biggest trading partners bilaterally, like China, like India, like the European Union, and so on. | ||
What is a trade deficit? | ||
It means that when we do trade with China, we get more stuff than we give them. | ||
We, on net, are buying more stuff from China than they are buying from us. | ||
The deficit is the difference. | ||
So we're getting stuff. | ||
We're getting more than we're giving. | ||
Well, no country on earth gives more than they get for free. | ||
We're not really getting more than we give. | ||
On net, everything has to balance out to zero. | ||
So, if we're getting more than we're giving, it's not that we're getting these goods from China for free. | ||
We're not getting this glut of manufactured products for nothing. | ||
What a sweet deal! | ||
We get all this stuff and we don't have to give them that much stuff in return. | ||
Well, it's just in a different account. | ||
It has to square to zero in a different account. | ||
Otherwise, it wouldn't be profitable for countries to engage in trade. | ||
So, if we're getting more than we're giving to China, it's not that we're actually getting a surplus of stuff, we're just paying for it with things other than stuff. | ||
We're paying for it with things other than strictly goods and services. | ||
How do we pay for things other than in goods and services? | ||
Well, we pay for it with currency, cash, And the cash eventually flows into foreign investment, in real estate, stocks. | ||
It flows into debt. | ||
They buy up our debt. | ||
They buy up our bonds. | ||
They buy up our hard assets in the country. | ||
So when we have a trade deficit with China, we get all this stuff. | ||
We give less. | ||
The difference, let's say we're giving it to them in cash. | ||
So, you know, we import a million dollars worth of stuff. | ||
We export $500,000 worth of stuff. | ||
Then we give them $500,000 in cash. | ||
Chinese company puts that in a bank. | ||
The bank takes that $500,000 and they come back to America and they buy bonds, which is debt, which they earn interest on. | ||
We owe them. | ||
They buy real estate, a productive asset. | ||
It earns a rent. | ||
And by the way, there's a finite quantity of real estate. | ||
They buy up land. | ||
They buy up property. | ||
They buy up stocks. | ||
They take that money and they buy stocks on an American Stock Exchange, and now they own equity in a company, and they're getting a dividend. | ||
They're earning a rent on that as well. | ||
We're getting stuff. | ||
They're getting our hard assets. | ||
We're getting stuff. | ||
We're getting textiles. | ||
We're getting apparel. | ||
We're getting parts. | ||
Whatever. And what they in return are getting is our country. | ||
They're getting ownership over our country. | ||
They're getting a claim over our debt. | ||
They're getting a claim over our companies. | ||
Ownership in our firms. | ||
And they're getting a claim over our land. | ||
They're getting our real estate. | ||
Now maybe you're starting to understand why the rich love free trade. | ||
Why they don't care about deficits. | ||
Why they say deficits don't matter. | ||
Because we're importing all these cheap goods. | ||
It's putting our industry out of business. | ||
When we're getting more stuff than we're giving, over time, we stop making stuff. | ||
Because they're making our stuff. | ||
Their stuff is cheaper. | ||
It's more competitive. | ||
We're buying all of it. | ||
And so it's no longer profitable or economical to buy from ourselves. | ||
So we stop making stuff. | ||
So factories shut down. | ||
Manufacturing shuts down. | ||
We don't make steel anymore. | ||
We don't make cars anymore. | ||
We don't make stuff anymore. | ||
They make the stuff. | ||
So, we buy their stuff. | ||
They buy our assets. | ||
What happens when that money goes out to China? | ||
We import products from them. | ||
We give them our currency. | ||
They buy our assets. | ||
The money comes back to the United States. | ||
We buy their goods. | ||
The cash comes back to us. | ||
And you can think about the strategic ramifications of a country like China owning all our shit. | ||
But also, let's think about the effect that that has on the country. | ||
When China takes the money that we've given them for their stuff, and they spend it here, guess what happens? | ||
Stock market goes up. | ||
They buy our company, it drives up the value of the stock market. | ||
When they buy real estate, it drives up the price of real estate. | ||
When they buy our debt, it drives down interest rates. | ||
And what's more, when they buy real estate, how does that happen? | ||
Well, they talk to a giant real estate firm. | ||
And so now the real estate business in America is booming because we have to do these big real estate deals. | ||
And to secure the financing and make the deal, we need financial people to make the real estate deal and to manage their stock portfolio and other things. | ||
So we need a big financial industry. | ||
And then You need insurance on the real estate. | ||
You need insurance on whatever you buy. | ||
So then you go to the insurance industry. | ||
So the real estate industry, the insurance industry, and the finance industry are all benefiting from this as a service. | ||
And all those that own the real estate and business assets are being made rich off of this. | ||
As a consequence, over 20 or 30 years, our industry and manufacturing has been shrinking. | ||
Our financial sector, our service sector, which also includes real estate, insurance, other stuff, has been growing. | ||
And we have become a country that no longer makes stuff. | ||
China now makes stuff. | ||
Japan makes stuff. | ||
Germany makes stuff. | ||
Other countries make stuff. | ||
We do the financial transacting of the world. | ||
And ensuring those things and making those deals. | ||
That's what we're doing. | ||
Now, here's the question. | ||
Some people say, and that's fine. | ||
Some people say, well, it's 21st century. | ||
We don't want to work in factories. | ||
Some people say, in response to this, that's just comparative advantage. | ||
They say, we're an information economy. | ||
So that's why, you know, we have these professionals. | ||
It's sort of their turn. | ||
They're at a stage in their development where they make stuff, and we're at a later stage in development where we think about stuff. | ||
That's what some people say. | ||
But ask yourself this. | ||
Is it equally beneficial for a country to make, I don't know, steel, cars, planes, parts, have factories, versus making investment devices, financial instruments, Making insurance adjustments, whatever. | ||
Are those equally beneficial industries to have? | ||
For a variety of reasons, economically, strategically? | ||
Of course they're not! | ||
Would you rather be the country that makes battleships, tanks, planes, artillery shells, ammunition, and by the way, to do all those things, you know what you need? | ||
To make tanks and rocket ships and things like that, Or fighter jets? | ||
You need a commercial industry. | ||
You need an automobile industry. | ||
You need machinists. | ||
You need a workforce that knows how to make stuff. | ||
You need factories that can make stuff, that make stuff commercially. | ||
If you want a shipyard to make battleships, you need a shipyard that makes commercial ships. | ||
If you want a shipyard, you need lots of steel. | ||
You need a domestic steel industry. | ||
What's better to have? | ||
Would you rather have An ecosystem of industry where you're making steel, you're making cars, you're making parts, you have a skilled workforce, and you have the infrastructure to make construction equipment, infrastructure equipment, construction equipment to make, and then ultimately military equipment and hardware. | ||
Or do you want the financial industry? | ||
Or do you want a bank? | ||
Do you want a bunch of people doing arbitrage, speculation, People managing investment portfolios, people managing insurance. | ||
What is better for a country to have in the long term, strategically? | ||
And that's sort of what I'm getting at. | ||
It is better to have industry. | ||
It is better to have industry for multiple reasons. | ||
And maybe you could start to think about why. | ||
The obvious is strategy. | ||
It is strategically better to have industry. | ||
If we don't have steel, if we don't have commercial industry, then we don't have a defense industry. | ||
If we don't have a defense industry, we don't have a military. | ||
If we don't have a military, we're fucked. | ||
That's basically it. | ||
China can build 400 times more ships than we can. | ||
Want to know why? | ||
Because they have a commercial fleet. | ||
Because all their factories that they have, they got to put the goods on ships and send them to other countries for trade. | ||
So they make all this stuff, then they make the ships that they put the stuff on that they send to the other countries. | ||
It's not that hard to then just start making ships with guns on them. | ||
They make cars and make other stuff, then they just start making military vehicles. | ||
This is what they do. | ||
And they have a skilled workforce and they have capital, real capital, real assets to do these things. | ||
If America doesn't have shipyards because it doesn't have commercial shipping because it doesn't make anything, We can't make battleships. | ||
We gotta have other countries make our battleships. | ||
What happens if there's a war? | ||
What happens if there's a trade dispute? | ||
What happens if China wants to bully us? | ||
Well, now we're relying on a very fragile and super complex, incomprehensible international trading system where a car is really coming from like 40 different countries. | ||
What happens if like China blockades those countries or buys those countries off, bribes them with cheap credit, with the Belt and Road Initiative, then what do you do? | ||
So, strategically, this is a big problem. | ||
If you don't have productive capacity, if you don't have industry, you don't have a military. | ||
If you don't have a military, you can't impose your will on the world. | ||
If you can't impose your will on the world, you don't have supply chains. | ||
You can't make stuff. | ||
You see how this is circular? | ||
To have military might, you need economic might. | ||
To have economic might, you need military might. | ||
To keep our power going, we have to preserve our industry. | ||
That's a strategic reason. | ||
But there's also an economic reason. | ||
These technologies don't come from nowhere. | ||
Where do you think these various technologies were invented? | ||
They rolled from one to the other. | ||
There's a technology tree So, we make steel. | ||
Then we make railroads. | ||
Then after we make railroads, we make cars. | ||
Then after we make cars, we make planes. | ||
There's a tree of technology where one technology, one industry, then blossoms and flowers into the next. | ||
Because that industry is cultivating a workforce. | ||
Research and development. | ||
Know-how. | ||
State-of-the-art equipment. | ||
It has in-house all of those things which then blossom into the next thing, into the next technology. | ||
You have vacuum tubes, then they turn into televisions. | ||
You have steel, then it turns into rail. | ||
It's a technology tree. | ||
If we want to have the most important, valuable technologies of the future, we need to make the technologies of today. | ||
We need to have the workforce, we need to have the capital, we need to have the industry, we need to have industry towns where this stuff is happening. | ||
We need to have all of it. | ||
And control over those technologies determines the course of the future. | ||
The country that has the nuclear bomb is the country that owns the century. | ||
The country that owns The battleships, the steam engines, rail, locomotives, that's the country that owned the previous century. | ||
And so on. | ||
The country that has the chips and semiconductors, the country that has artificial intelligence, quantum computing, that country will own this century. | ||
The economic and the strategic are deeply interconnected. | ||
And the free market doesn't think about those things. | ||
The free market is a tool. | ||
The free market is a tool that allocates resources. | ||
But society still needs to make decisions in the long term about what is beneficial holistically. | ||
The free market can tell you how many eggs there are. | ||
The free market can tell you how much wood should go into a pencil, you know, in the famous example. | ||
But the free market will not tell you which industries of the future are going to pay off. | ||
The free market is not going to negotiate with Mexico not to dump their steel here. | ||
The free market is not going to set these strategic, military, economic, the comprehensive priorities of a nation in the long term and execute them. | ||
That's something only the government can do. | ||
That's something that only the state can do. | ||
And they've done it before. | ||
It's a warped view of our history where people say it's like, you know, the free market times are great and big government socialism is when times were bad. | ||
The market and the state are inseparable. | ||
So that is why this 10% across-the-board tariff is excellent, because this is going to make American industry more competitive. | ||
It's going to make American industry profitable, lucrative. | ||
It's going to make the goods that come out of there competitive. | ||
And people say, well, prices will go up. | ||
People say there'll be a recession. | ||
They're right. | ||
Right now, we don't have industry for us to get it. | ||
There's going to need to be investment. | ||
Resources will have to be taken from one place and put somewhere else. | ||
And it will take time to build it and train up the workforce. | ||
And this will all take time. | ||
But on the other side of the transition, you have a country that makes stuff. | ||
You have a country that has jobs. | ||
You have a country with a skilled workforce, with factories. | ||
You have a country that has manufacturing and industry that, like I said, will be on the technology ladder to the next technological development. | ||
We will have a productive capacity where we can make a commercial empire that is also a military empire. | ||
That is the backbone of American power projection. | ||
So this is absolutely essential to do, and it should have happened a long time ago, but it's good that it's happening now. | ||
So that's my case on tariffs. | ||
That's why this is America First. | ||
America First is about recognizing that a nation There is such a thing as a national interest, as opposed to the GDP, the economy, whatever that means. | ||
The nation has an interest. | ||
The nation is a whole. | ||
And it's greater than the sum of its parts. | ||
And it has strategic interests that must be achieved. | ||
They must be fought for. | ||
That's what nationalism, that's what America First is. | ||
Putting the well-being of the nation ahead of the well-being of the shareholders. | ||
The well-being of the nation ahead of the well-being of the financial people, the insurance people, the real estate people, the capitalist class. | ||
Putting all Americans, and they'll win too, they'll come out good on the other side, but it's about making sure that everybody in the country is taken care of. | ||
The country as a whole is advancing. | ||
That's what America First is. | ||
So this is the America First trade policy. | ||
It's not free market. | ||
It's not liberal. | ||
But that's a good thing. | ||
It's nationalist. | ||
So, like I said, this is by far and away Trump's most solid issue, the most solid pillar in the America First pantheon. | ||
This is the most solid part of his agenda, his legacy. | ||
And I have nothing but Praise for it. | ||
I hope that he sticks with it. | ||
Hope he doesn't walk it back. | ||
Because if he keeps his foot on the gas for the next four years, maybe another Republican gets in, this will succeed. | ||
It will rebuild the country. | ||
And we're in dire need of that right now. | ||
So, nothing but praise from me. | ||
Excellent policy. | ||
Excellent policy, Mr. President. | ||
We need more of this. | ||
Less policing anti-Semitism. | ||
If we could just be anti-Semitic as well, we'd have nothing but good things to say. | ||
If we could just have this and be anti-Semitic and be critical of Israel, deport illegal immigrants, we'd be in great shape. | ||
But some of these other things need some work. | ||
But anyway, so that's that. | ||
I do want to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all that. | ||
I'm going to get set up here. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to get set up here. | |
I mean, it's really, it's so simple. | ||
It's kind of funny. | ||
You know, today when people say capital, They're referring to money. | ||
They're referring to cash that isn't even real. | ||
If you say, I'm going to raise some capital, you mean you need someone to give you fiat money. | ||
But capital used to mean machines and factories. | ||
There's a reason. | ||
There's a difference. | ||
We talk about capital, capital markets, and things like that. | ||
We're talking about, you know, we need cash. | ||
Capital used to mean Machines. | ||
Factories. Equipment. | ||
Because that is the stuff of an economy. | ||
That actually produces stuff. | ||
We consume things. | ||
A nation needs things. | ||
It needs to make things. | ||
You need equipment to make things. | ||
You need heavy equipment, commercial equipment to make things. | ||
That's capital! | ||
We have no capital! | ||
We need real capital, not fake capital. | ||
We need real capital. | ||
And that's really what the economy is. | ||
We have a fake economy. | ||
We have a stock market, which is all fake. | ||
We have fake money, fake stock market, fake assets, numbers on a screen, fake numbers, fake GDP. | ||
It's all abstract. | ||
And then we have a real economy, which is how much stuff do we make? | ||
And we talked about this with the war in Ukraine. | ||
We ran into this issue. | ||
Where we're in this war with Russia in Ukraine. | ||
We put all these sanctions on them. | ||
We say we're going to rip apart your economy. | ||
You're banned from our financial system. | ||
And Russia's doing just fine. | ||
You want to know why? | ||
They make stuff. | ||
They were banned from the fake economy. | ||
It didn't have a huge effect. | ||
Because they have a real economy. | ||
Their real economy is they have titanium, they have nickel, they have fertilizer, they have oil, they have natural gas. | ||
They have factories. | ||
They make missiles. | ||
They make tanks. | ||
They make stuff. | ||
And Europe ran into this problem. | ||
They had no capital. | ||
Germany has factories, but the factories needed natural gas. | ||
Uh-oh. | ||
We get all of that from Russia. | ||
So, who wins and who loses? | ||
And it was a series of these catastrophes. | ||
The pandemic, and then the Ukraine war. | ||
In the pandemic, we couldn't get face masks. | ||
We don't make them. | ||
In the pandemic, we couldn't get pharmaceuticals. | ||
We don't make them. | ||
Things you wouldn't even think relate to national security do. | ||
In a national security crisis, maybe you need iodine pills, you need face masks, you need vaccines, you need pharmaceuticals, you need other stuff you don't necessarily think of. | ||
It's good to make stuff. | ||
It's better to make stuff. | ||
And then we're in a situation where you got all these cargo ships That are waiting outside the port all these supply chain disruptions talk about inflation talk about an economic contraction and Then the same thing happened in Ukraine and then I think that's when a lot of the planners in the United States said this is not tolerable we need and that's when you started to hear about friend-sharing and Started here about Hardening our supply chains, | ||
securing our supply chains, because you saw during the pandemic and the Ukraine war, the weakness and vulnerability of this system. | ||
Russia makes shells, we don't. | ||
China makes ships, we don't. | ||
China has all the face masks, we don't. | ||
And that's not going to bode well for us as the world becomes more unstable. | ||
Anyway. But that, okay, but I'm for real this time, that's that. | ||
Okay, but let's look at the Super Chats. | ||
Now it's your turn. | ||
Now it's your turn. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Capcom Instagram sent $20. | ||
Charlie Kirk is showing up to my local USC campus soon for some of his Ben Shapiro style owning college students content. | ||
I'm basically going to show up and corner him on debating. | ||
Well, you're not gonna corner him. | ||
He has security. | ||
You gotta go in with a plan. | ||
If you're gonna go up and ask him a question, you have to just force the issue and say, You say it's a free marketplace of ideas. | ||
I would even say something like, but you don't debate the far right. | ||
You need to say something like, don't even necessarily make it about me, but say, you say you're in a free marketplace of ideas, but you never debate people further to the right than you. | ||
There are people further to the right than you. | ||
One example is Nick Fuentes, who is as popular of a streamer as you are. | ||
Gets very good numbers on Rumble. | ||
Has a huge platform and engagement on Twitter. | ||
And although you talk about him, you don't debate him. | ||
I would frame it, I would frame it something like that. | ||
That would be how I would go about it. | ||
Because that's just the truth. | ||
You know, conservatives want to debate dumb college kids. | ||
They don't want to debate me. | ||
You got to say you yourself. | ||
Called out the Groypers. | ||
You had a very famous feud with the Groypers. | ||
Your people that work for you made threads about the Groypers. | ||
You fire people for working with the Groypers. | ||
And yet you won't debate them. | ||
Why is that? | ||
If you're so right, if they're so wrong, why don't you prove them wrong? | ||
They're going to have a platform regardless. | ||
If you're confident, why won't you bury the far right? | ||
Or, you know, If they're wrong, why don't you bury their position? | ||
That's what I would say. | ||
Sailor Sobble sent $10. | ||
Bet after seeing Laura, the clingy spider B-T-C-H ain't looking so bad now, is she? | ||
How could one zoologist be so vindicated? | ||
At least I'm kind. | ||
Eccentric? Always. | ||
Mean? Never. | ||
P.S. You read me like a book the other night I couldn't even lie that was hysterical. | ||
At least it's not my co-worker's attention. | ||
Cookie Groper sent $10. | ||
Just because you were born in a barn, does not make you a horse. | ||
Just because you were born in the U.S., does not make you an American. | ||
Oh wow, never heard that one before. | ||
Hey, thanks for the big super chat! | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Save your subscription money. | ||
We're gonna have a subscription very soon. | ||
So... Just wait a little bit. | ||
Wait a little bit longer. | ||
Which side are you on, buddy? | ||
You sound like you're in the middle. | ||
Ah, very good. | ||
Six million joke. | ||
Iran's proxy groups getting systematically killed. | ||
Two, Pearl Harbor slash 9/11 part two. | ||
Three, hit Iran with bombs and cyber attacks. | ||
Four, China assists Iran, prolonging the war. | ||
Five, Americans suffer at home in an economic crisis that rivals the Great Depression. | ||
Six, I kill myself and go to purgatory. | ||
Well, they're not being systematically killed. | ||
Hamas is being killed. | ||
But the Houthis are not. | ||
You're not going to defeat them with air power alone. | ||
And we'll see if it expands to other theaters. | ||
Right now, Hezbollah is in retreat, although they're saying they're going to restart their war. | ||
So we'll see. | ||
But I mean, this is where it's going. | ||
These engagements are going to start cropping up. | ||
I mean, these other groups are going to get involved. | ||
The Shiites in Iraq and Syria. | ||
I mean, what if they start? | ||
They don't really exist in Syria anymore. | ||
But what if the Iraqi Shiites start attacking Americans? | ||
What if the Houthis actually score a blow against the United States? | ||
I mean, this is the powder keg. | ||
Conor sent $15. | ||
Do you like firehouse subs? | ||
Never been. | ||
Sailor Sobol sent $10. | ||
And not for nothing, but yeah, I've been reliably informed that I am indeed as hot as I am delightful and funny. | ||
Is this real? | ||
Get the dude. | ||
That's got to be fake. | ||
Sheboygan Groi percent $10. | ||
I know someone already said it yesterday, but RIP again to Val Kilmer. | ||
He was goaded as Moses and the Prince of Egypt. | ||
I don't think I ever saw that. | ||
But yeah, R.I.P. | ||
St. Francis of Assisi sent $10. | ||
People need dramatic examples to shake them out of apathy and I can't do that as Bruce Wayne. | ||
As a man, I'm flesh and blood. | ||
I can be ignored. | ||
I can be destroyed. | ||
But as a symbol, as a symbol, I can be incorruptible. | ||
What symbol? | ||
Something elemental. | ||
Something terrifying. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, shut the fuck up, fag. | |
Dude, black people are out there killing niggas and you're like, as Batman said, I'm gonna be terrifying. | ||
It's like you're gonna be fucking making tendies, buddy. | ||
You're gonna be fucking heating up tendies, bitch. | ||
So don't even, don't talk tough if you're doing that. | ||
Matthew P. said $10. | ||
Can we wage an all-out war on simps? | ||
It is one thing to give your money and attention to an online sex worker who in turn gives you attention and sexy content that contains nudity. | ||
Not- I don't know if that comparison's doing you any favors. | ||
I don't think that's funny. | ||
That's my- that's my buddy. | ||
It's not a joke, okay? | ||
He tragically died practically in my arms. | ||
Poor little guy. | ||
So sad. | ||
I watched him die. | ||
You know how traumatic that is? | ||
I found him barely alive. | ||
I rushed him to the hospital. | ||
Poor guy. | ||
That was very sad. | ||
I felt so bad for him. | ||
He was so little. | ||
So little when he died. | ||
You know what's so sad? | ||
His cage was full of hay. | ||
Full of hay! | ||
And full of poo, too! | ||
So I don't know what was happening if he wasn't absorbing the nutrients or maybe he was just getting really picky about his hay. | ||
I didn't even notice. | ||
And then he was, he was just, this little nigga would rather starve than eat the fucking hay. | ||
Because he doesn't like the way it tastes. | ||
I'm like, really, bro? | ||
But he had issues before. | ||
I don't know if it was that or if it was a GI issue, but he was not right. | ||
And, uh, picked him up, rushed him over, and then he was just... | ||
Then he was gone. | ||
Poor little guy. | ||
He was a good bunny. | ||
I still look over where he used to be, where his cage used to be. | ||
Expecting to see him. | ||
That's the worst part. | ||
That's the worst part when you wake up and then you remember, oh yeah, he's dead. | ||
But he was good. | ||
I gotta, we gotta make a little tribute. | ||
We gotta make a little tribute to Edward. | ||
He was a good little bunny. | ||
He was a good little, he was a good little man, you know? | ||
He lived a nice life. | ||
Nice year-long little life. | ||
Weird two years. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat! | ||
I appreciate it! | ||
Hey, thank you very much. | ||
And no cringe. | ||
Hi, Nick. | ||
I was spamming you with messages on X about the hats and you rightfully blocked me. | ||
I apologize. | ||
Is there any way you can unblock me? | ||
I would really appreciate it. | ||
No. My X handle is the same as this super chat. | ||
Either way, America first. | ||
We anti-semitic fully. | ||
No, no, I'm not gonna block. | ||
Dude, this guy is DMing me. | ||
You fucking scammed me. | ||
I will read your messages, and I will let the chat decide if I will unblock you or not, okay? | ||
I will read the messages this person is sending to me. | ||
And then I will let the chat decide. | ||
I will let them give a recommendation whether I will unblock you. | ||
Just so people can get a taste. | ||
This guy's DMing me. | ||
Can I please buy a hat? | ||
I want to wear it on campus this semester. | ||
Are they really reselling for $800? | ||
The guy offered one for that, but there's no way. | ||
I can't get any updates on my hats from support. | ||
You're scamming me, dude. | ||
Where are my hats, dude? | ||
It's been six months and no hats. | ||
Support won't respond. | ||
Are my hats ever shipping, dude? | ||
Six months and no hat, dude. | ||
unidentified
|
WTF? Dude? | |
Now what do you think? | ||
Should I unblock this person or not? | ||
What do you think? | ||
One. One for remain blocked, two for unblock. | ||
One for he is rightfully blocked, he should stay blocked. | ||
Two for he should be unblocked. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see. | |
Let's see what people say. | ||
Ones or twos? | ||
One for remain, two for unblock. | ||
unidentified
|
One for remain, two for unblock. | |
Some twos, but looks like mostly ones. | ||
Well, now it's kind of even. | ||
unidentified
|
you. | |
Alright, I'll unblock. | ||
There's enough twos, I'll unblock. | ||
unidentified
|
You're scamming me, dude. | |
Where's my hats? | ||
Hey, relax, buddy. | ||
Relax. I'm giving updates all the time! | ||
I'm giving updates all the time! | ||
On Telegram, on Twitter, on the show. | ||
Patience, patience. | ||
unidentified
|
Gosh. Where's my hats? | |
Dude, you're scamming me. | ||
Crazy, the like, you know, consumers are, have gone insane. | ||
I didn't particularly like that show. | ||
It was okay. | ||
I mean, everybody watched it. | ||
unidentified
|
I guess the best episode was, um... | |
What was the best episode? | ||
Isn't there an episode where they were, like, uh... | ||
I'm getting it confused like Danny Phantom. | ||
Isn't there an episode where they were, like, on TV or they were, like, on the internet or something? | ||
unidentified
|
Let me see. | |
I got this deviated septum problem. | ||
Channel Chasers! | ||
Was it that one? | ||
I feel like that was an iconic episode. | ||
I vaguely remember it. | ||
I vaguely remember there was like a Star Wars tie-in. | ||
That I thought was super cool. | ||
But I didn't love that. | ||
I didn't love that show. | ||
It wasn't my favorite. | ||
I was into Spongebob, and... | ||
I'm trying to think what else. | ||
That wasn't the biggest... | ||
I didn't really love the animation style, honestly. | ||
Sandflea sent $10. | ||
For just $10, I can have a goat read my superchats and tell me to kill myself. | ||
I'm gonna enjoy this while I still can. | ||
Life is good. | ||
There you go. | ||
Yeah, no, you're so much smarter. | ||
Sophocles sent $20, hey Nick love the show yesterday. | ||
As much as pointing out our nation's subversion to a foreign entity is important, your feminism rants are seriously some of your most poignant talking points and you regularly give the best takes. | ||
Thank you, I appreciate that. | ||
Yeah, look, I mean, I talk a lot about Israel lately, but I'm based on every—I'm based on trade, I'm based on women, I'm based on Jews, I'm based on everything. | ||
So, we have a lot—we have something for everybody here. | ||
I'm red-pilled on women, I'm red-pilled on race, I'm red-pilled on Jews, I'm red-pilled on the economy. | ||
So, I'm all the way. | ||
Working on it! | ||
I don't watch the super chats so sorry if somebody already asked this I saw Pam Bondi wants to give Luigi Menjione the death penalty Do you think this would deter violence or create a martyr effect and cause more violence? | ||
unidentified
|
and It's interesting. | |
I think he should get the death penalty, but it might make him out to be a martyr. | ||
Yeah, it might be better if he just gets in prison forever, because then it's not glamorous. | ||
It's like he'll just be pathetically wasting away. | ||
So, yeah, you're right. | ||
It might backfire. | ||
I do, actually. | ||
Yes, I do. | ||
Virtuous Rapper sent $10. | ||
Aideen won on Academic Stream after AK previewed Ye's World War III album dropping tomorrow and said Ye needs to get help. | ||
It's a Yetser horror trap. | ||
Yeah, you know, the thing about Ye is he does keep these Jews around him that throw him under the bus. | ||
And, um, you know, he's he doesn't hold a grudge, which is an interesting quality. | ||
Like, well, some people he does. | ||
Some people, weirdly, he just lets it go. | ||
But he does. | ||
I have a habit of letting these Jews stick around and inflict... | ||
Like, you know, and I like Aiden Ross, but he's obviously not on board. | ||
You know, whenever Ye posts a swastika, does his stuff, he's always freaking out. | ||
So he's clearly not down with the mission. | ||
You know, but I don't know, maybe Ye keeps him around because he just likes to mix? | ||
I don't, I don't understand it fully, but... | ||
You can't trust these people. | ||
You can't trust them. | ||
I mean, they don't think it's a joke. | ||
I'm not saying strictly about Aiden Ross. | ||
I like Aiden, but, I mean, he's not really, you know, he doesn't fuck with that. | ||
Yeah, good one. | ||
She's crazy. | ||
She's absolutely crazy and you could tell that almost immediately and everyone that's something that everyone knows It's it almost just speaks for itself like I could sit here and say Trenthorne is a cock And his wife is crazy, or you could just literally watch her for two minutes, and it's just like every guy knows Every guy immediately understands what's happening there automatically Which is why it's so funny So everybody needs to... | ||
I'm going to clown on him so hard tomorrow. | ||
I'm going to do... | ||
I think I'm going to do a stream tomorrow, and I'm going to clown on him so hard because he deserves it. | ||
You have no right. | ||
You have no right to come for me. | ||
I'm doing this in self-defense. | ||
This is a retaliation. | ||
You have no right to call me out and talk shit. | ||
Those that live in glass houses, you have no right to come at me with this feminine, Fucking finger-wagging, faggoty-ass lecture about, I'm not a real Catholic, saying Thomas Aquinas is wrong too. | ||
Why don't we throw that in there as well, right? | ||
Bad enough. | ||
Oh, Nick Fuentes is a punk. | ||
Also, I'm better than Thomas Aquinas. | ||
Okay, buddy. | ||
Thomas Aquinas was chasing women around with a fucking candle. | ||
You're getting a fucking bottle chucked at your head, dressed up like a baby. | ||
unidentified
|
So... Little humility. | |
And by the way, I just want to say, you know, everybody loves to attack me because I'm obviously an eccentric guy. | ||
I've never claimed to be Chad. | ||
You know, I've never claimed to be like a Trad Guardian of, you know, sundresses and shield maidens. | ||
Like, that's never been me. | ||
I'm obviously not a eugenic football playing Chad or whatever. | ||
I'm me, I'm me. | ||
And I've got, you know, I've got some hangups and I've got some antisocial tendencies. | ||
And like, obviously I'm not the of what, what everybody should be about. | ||
But I don't say that I should be. | ||
I just say, look, women are this way. | ||
Men are this way. | ||
We've got a problem. | ||
The social order should be one way. | ||
And it honestly is actually fucked up that people try to bully me for being myself. | ||
And I know how that sounds, but it actually is fucked up, and that's why it really irritates me, especially when guys have no business doing that. | ||
It's like, listen, man. | ||
I don't want to come after you and your crazy fucking wife. | ||
I don't want to have to come for you and embarrass you and humiliate you. | ||
But it is one thing to argue the point. | ||
It's another thing to like constantly keep scorn upon me as a human being because of my defects, you know, or because of my Shortcomings? | ||
Because I wear my heart on my sleeve, I could be a LARPer, I could be a role player, I could play the part, I could typecast myself as the Alex P. Keaton, trad robot, you know, get married, wear a sundress, all that kind of shit. | ||
I could be that guy. | ||
But, you know, one of the reasons that people love me is because I'm not trying, I'm not acting, I'm being, I'm me. | ||
I'm authentic. | ||
And the things I say, people can relate to them. | ||
And it's always these fucking faggots that are always like, oh, you say that? | ||
That's really, like, weird. | ||
Oh, you said that? | ||
It's like, I'm relatable. | ||
I'm fucking real. | ||
People like me because, you know, they relate to it. | ||
But it's all these people that are trying to be a caricature. | ||
You know, they're trying to eat their vegetables and be Trad Guy. | ||
Oh, I smoke a cigar and drink whiskey like a proper guy should be about. | ||
And I just hate fucking fakers and posers and, you know, you don't got to be perfect, but you have to be yourself. | ||
And, you know, look, argue the point, but it's always like, you know, people are always coming for my neck like this. | ||
And it's that kind of like haughtiness, which is why nobody's connecting with the young people, you know? | ||
That's why people really fuck with me because I'm just, I'm just me, you know? | ||
All these other people, they're like, oh, I'm the art of manliness. | ||
I am curling my mustache. | ||
Every man has a beard and I like Chuck Norris. | ||
It's like, okay, well, fuck you. | ||
You're boring and you suck. | ||
So, now it's on. | ||
Now I'm pissed. | ||
Yes. From cell stage, to animal, to tribal, to city, ending at space stage. | ||
Can use bombs and shit. | ||
unidentified
|
you. | |
You ever play what? | ||
It's a god game from back in the day. | ||
What game? | ||
You ever play what? | ||
I don't know what game you're talking about. | ||
Yeah, I appreciate that. | ||
Aiden's always been very cool with me. | ||
I don't want to say too much because I don't want to compromise his reinstatement on Twitch, but yeah, he's always been... | ||
I like Aiden a lot. | ||
I think Aiden's a good guy. | ||
You know, and we don't agree. | ||
On a lot. | ||
I'm saying that just as much for me as I am for him. | ||
And because it's true. | ||
I mean, we're different people. | ||
We come from different backgrounds. | ||
We have some different values, but I do think he is a good guy. | ||
I do think he is a solid person. | ||
I never met him. | ||
I don't know him super well, but from my interactions with him, I will say he's more decent than a lot of people. | ||
I mean, and he's had a lot of opportunities to throw me under the bus, but he's been pretty solid. | ||
I appreciate that he's trying to be honest, you know? | ||
I don't even see it as, like, not throwing me out of the bus, but he's being honest, you know? | ||
People say, you had a Nazi on your stream, and he goes, well, he's not a Nazi. | ||
And I do appreciate that it would be easier to just say, oh, well, you're right, because that would be convenient. | ||
But he's like, no, no, he's actually a good guy, and I see where he's coming from. | ||
And I appreciate that. | ||
Because, you know, so many people, they just don't even care about the truth. | ||
They don't even care if what they're saying is correct. | ||
It's just about what's expedient. | ||
So I think he's a stand-up guy for that. | ||
Diango Gonzalez sent $10. | ||
Apology accepted. | ||
Although I must say, I was laughing like crazy when you were cooking me. | ||
Very good. | ||
That's good. | ||
Nice bait. | ||
Yep. Yeah, that was her. | ||
Kelly O'Loughlin. | ||
Very sad. | ||
That happened when I was in 8th grade, I think. | ||
Yeah, I remember it well. | ||
Yeah, she was this young girl from Indian Head Park, and like I said, she came home from school, interrupted a burglary, and this black guy stabbed her like 50 times to death. | ||
I mean, why you gotta do that? | ||
You're breaking into somebody's house, you're stealing. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a little girl, you know? | |
Take the shit and leave what kind of sadistic human being it's not it's an animal what kind of sadistic person Murders a little girl In such a brutal way like that because of a burglary gone wrong. | ||
It's just insane and this is what we're expected to deal with so You know it's got to stop Bobby Groy percent $10 the Civ game Twitter account deleted the post of their dev team you ratioed lol I know I saw Randy Darsh sent $100. | ||
Thank you for what you do Nick I've watched you for years now but have hardly ever contributed. | ||
I am currently in the hospital awaiting the arrival of my third child with my passed out wife. | ||
This would have not been possible without you helping me convert to Catholicism and get my shit together. | ||
I am forever in your debt. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Congratulations! Hope it's a good one. | ||
Hope it's a good child. | ||
No, but good for you, man. | ||
I'm really glad to hear that. | ||
God bless. | ||
Love to hear that. | ||
You know, because on top of everything, you encounter people And sometimes it's easy to forget because I'm in sort of a bubble, I'm in based world, you know, where everyone's based. | ||
But you forget how lost so many people in this generation are to drugs, porn, you name it, being liberal in general. | ||
And all the things that we sort of take for granted, for them, it's a big deal, you know. | ||
So when people say that they watch the show and they get their shit together, I love to hear that because You know, maybe we can't change the world in eight years, but we can change people's lives, you know, and that does change the world. | ||
So, you know, it could be frustrating and you think to yourself, well, man, how are we going to ever dig ourselves out of this? | ||
You know, we have responsibility to think about these problems seriously, but But, not to be corny, but changing somebody's life, well, that is changing their world. | ||
You know, that's changing, for them, that's their whole world. | ||
If you're bringing somebody back from the brink, getting them to turn away from a destructive life, or sinful life, or getting them to come back to the church or listen to their conscience, you know, that's an important thing to do as well. | ||
So, I'm always glad to hear that. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
God bless, man. | ||
Hope it's a good baby. | ||
Enjoy. I just read that. | ||
Whoops. Yeah, you literally have to get away from them. | ||
There's just no other... | ||
That happened to me once. | ||
I was downtown. | ||
And this guy was being... | ||
The thing is, you really have to have situational awareness. | ||
And, you know, so many people just don't. | ||
I'll be driving with people. | ||
People think I drive like a maniac. | ||
Look, this is a dangerous city. | ||
Not for nothing, but it has become a dangerous city. | ||
Anyone will tell you this. | ||
It's not because I'm a white guy. | ||
I used to go to the city a lot. | ||
It didn't used to be this bad. | ||
I'm talking about pre-pandemic, pre-George Floyd. | ||
It was never this bad. | ||
But now it's just a free-for-all. | ||
And I drive with people and they're like, oh, you're so paranoid. | ||
Oh, you know, you drive like a maniac. | ||
I have a situational awareness. | ||
I'm cognizant of who's behind me, who's in front of me, who's on the sides. | ||
You got to pay attention. | ||
And, you know, one night it was late at night. | ||
I went to something downtown with my friends. | ||
I'm driving on Lakeshore Drive, driving south. | ||
And somebody in front of me is driving really weird. | ||
They pull in front of me. | ||
They're slowing down. | ||
Light turned green. | ||
They didn't go right away. | ||
I was sketched out. | ||
And so the next exit, I go. | ||
I just get off Lakeshore Drive. | ||
I don't want to mess with that. | ||
People have been shot on Lakeshore Drive. | ||
And it was like 2 or 3 a.m. | ||
It was late. | ||
It was a weekend. | ||
Not a place you want to be, unfortunately, these days. | ||
And this guy follows me, even though he's in front of me, follows me off the exit. | ||
And he goes to, we get to a red light. | ||
He rolls his window down. | ||
I don't even wait. | ||
I just blow the red light. | ||
He starts following me. | ||
I just hit the gas and I'm blowing one red light. | ||
I'm blowing all these red lights flying around. | ||
Go to the tunnel, Lower Wacker, and I'm gone. | ||
And they're like, all right, you know, I'm driving with people. | ||
They're like, oh my gosh, what's gotten into you? | ||
unidentified
|
Blah, blah, blah. | |
I'm like, I'm not going to wait for somebody to Box me in. | ||
I'm not waiting for somebody. | ||
It was a black guy, too. | ||
It was a black guy in another muscle car. | ||
I'm not going to wait for him to roll down the window and find out. | ||
unidentified
|
That's how you got to be. | |
And that's the rule. | ||
You got to get away from these fucking people. | ||
Rule number one, get away. | ||
If you can't get away, pull out your gun or, you know, whatever. | ||
I mean, obviously, it's not that cut and dry, but you need to use your situational awareness. | ||
But Rule number one is if you think something is wrong, remove yourself. | ||
Do not think twice. | ||
Especially with them. | ||
You see, whether you're on foot, in a car, pay the fuck attention, and if you get a bad feeling, remove yourself. | ||
Don't be self-conscious, don't be, you know, turn around and walk the other direction. | ||
I mean, you saw there was a very famous video, I want to say it was a couple years ago, it was in Chicago. | ||
There was a couple. | ||
They were hanging out. | ||
They were downtown. | ||
Maybe it might have been in New York. | ||
I don't know if it was New York or Chicago. | ||
One of the two. | ||
But they were hanging out. | ||
I think they were at a wedding. | ||
They were at some kind of party. | ||
They were near a bus stop. | ||
This black guy's tweaking out what they should have done. | ||
They see that what you should do is turn and go in the other direction. | ||
But they didn't. | ||
They just hung out there. | ||
They were waiting for an Uber or they were waiting for a ride or something. | ||
And they just waited there. | ||
And then I think the guy like confronted the tweaker. | ||
And the guy got stabbed and died. | ||
Stabbed and died. | ||
Gone. And you never think about it like, you never think about, I'm going to leave my house and never come back today. | ||
You never wake up and think, oh, I'm going to go to this party and then I'm going to never come home. | ||
You never think about it that way. | ||
But sometimes that's what happens. | ||
You wake up one day, you're going to a party, blah, blah, blah. | ||
You go on the street. | ||
I've never been killed before. | ||
I will not be killed now. | ||
I've never been stabbed in my neck before. | ||
I won't be stabbed in my neck today. | ||
You can't think like that. | ||
You gotta be on alert. | ||
You gotta be on guard. | ||
And if that couple just said, uh-oh, something's happening I don't like. | ||
Split. Remove yourself. | ||
They both would still be alive. | ||
But the guy died. | ||
The guy got stabbed in the neck and died. | ||
So for all you young people, don't be a hero. | ||
Don't be tough. | ||
These people have nothing to lose. | ||
These people are unpredictable. | ||
They got nothing to lose. | ||
And you know what? | ||
I mean, that applies to some. | ||
That applies to anybody that looks unsettling. | ||
But let's be honest. | ||
I mean, 8 times out of 10, who's it gonna be? | ||
So for the young people, don't think there's any pride. | ||
In confronting somebody with nothing to lose, with a knife or a gun, you know, there's nothing heroic about that. | ||
They fight in packs, okay? | ||
They will sucker punch you in the back of the neck and they'll fucking kick your head. | ||
And it's not honorable and it's, you know, you're not a hero for going down for something like that. | ||
So just remove yourself in those situations and don't give them an opportunity. | ||
That's why I say just avoid. | ||
I don't go to the city anymore. | ||
I rarely go to the city for that reason. | ||
Because of them. | ||
So, and it's a shame, because it's a world-class city, and you should be able to go to Chicago and eat at nice restaurants and enjoy the amenities. | ||
You should be able to enjoy the commons, but it's been ruined. | ||
Happened just the other night. | ||
There was another teen takeover, where hundreds, maybe thousands of black teenagers were downtown in Streeterville, jumping on cars, mugging people, tasing each other. | ||
15-year-old got shot. | ||
It's horrible. | ||
Who wants to live there? | ||
Who wants to do business there? | ||
Who wants to visit? | ||
Imagine. You're paying, you know, some of those buildings, the HOA taxes are unbelievable. | ||
It's already super expensive. | ||
Who wants to pay that kind of money and deal with that? | ||
Who wants to? | ||
You're paying there for the amenities. | ||
You can't even walk around or else you're dealing with that. | ||
No one wants it. | ||
And then the businesses leave. | ||
And then the city goes bankrupt. | ||
And then you're Detroit. | ||
Then you're Detroit. | ||
Then it's over. | ||
Then the city collapses. | ||
That's where we are. | ||
And it's just off the map. | ||
It's just done. | ||
The population's shrinking. | ||
Everybody's going somewhere else. | ||
They've literally ruined the city. | ||
So. And don't get me wrong. | ||
The mayor's been complicit in it also. | ||
And there's a lot of corruption with these prosecutors and cops. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of blame to go around. | ||
But that is the precipitating factor. | ||
Because, you know, nobody wants to deal with that. | ||
And who can blame them? | ||
So, and the thing is, people say that's racist. | ||
You know what? | ||
Nobody would even be talking about blacks in this conversation if it wasn't always them doing the carjacking, you know? | ||
If every time there was a carjacking, you saw a different colored face, no one would have a problem with the black people. | ||
Everybody likes to say, oh, you can't say that. | ||
Okay, why the fuck not? | ||
That's who it is. | ||
So, I'm really getting sick and tired of, oh, it's not all of them. | ||
Oh, it's not this. | ||
Everybody knows what's going on. | ||
Everybody knows what's up now. | ||
People are more worried about how you talk about the problem than the problem. | ||
So. You know. | ||
And then there's plenty of decent black people. | ||
It's not all of them. | ||
But it's a lot of them. | ||
And it's the vast majority of the perpetrators. | ||
So, there's that. | ||
Nate Rowe, I percent $35. | ||
Yonick, what do you think about Mike Adams Health Ranger? | ||
I've seen him on Twitter. | ||
I don't know that much about him. | ||
I'm mutuals with him. | ||
I believe. | ||
Yeah, I am mutuals with him. | ||
I don't know him super well, though. | ||
I don't really know anything about him, honestly. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Cascadia Groy percent $25. | ||
If you like RTS, give Rise of Nations a try. | ||
Old Head RTS Game. | ||
It bends from ancient to early futuristic areas while managing resources, building infrastructure, and commanding a wide array of military forces, including nuclear missiles. | ||
The Conquer the World Campaigns kickass. | ||
Who's writing this? | ||
This is Chad GPT commanding a wide array of, what would he, Chad GPT? | ||
I hope you copied and pasted that from Steam. | ||
John Dave Irving sent $200. | ||
Nick, why are you the resistant people resisting the moral tenets of Christianity? | ||
What can we do better as white people to educate them? | ||
I.e., how have we failed? | ||
What are the top 10 books I should recommend to them moving forward? | ||
Very good, John Day-Verving. | ||
Thanks for the big super chat! | ||
You gotta give him pinheads and patriots. | ||
You gotta recommend literature. | ||
They haven't read Charlie Kirk, Campus Wars. | ||
unidentified
|
We haven't done a good enough job. | |
Uh, with the acculturation of black people and then tell them not to stab and shoot people. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a shame. | |
Yeah, it's unbelievable. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Johnny Paycheck sent $250. | ||
You're cut from my bonus after paying my taxes this year. | ||
Taxes are gay. | ||
Hey, thank you for the big super chat! | ||
I appreciate it! | ||
Alright, your bonus! | ||
Thank you, ma'am. | ||
Must have been a big bonus. | ||
I appreciate it very much. | ||
We love the rich. | ||
Yeah, we love the rich people. | ||
Go to him. | ||
I'll look at that later. | ||
He begged for it. | ||
He's been asking for it for a long time. | ||
Unreal, yeah. | ||
That's who we are, right? | ||
Fresh Prince of Zamunda sent $10. | ||
Trenthorne's wife is a dorkable and I'm tired of pretending she's not. | ||
No, that's not a dorkable. | ||
That's just totally insane. | ||
There's a dorkable and then there's just like unhinged banshee. | ||
She's the latter. | ||
Bobby Johnson sent $10. | ||
New yay album tomorrow. | ||
Lock in. | ||
Yeah, I saw. | ||
World War III. | ||
I'm excited. | ||
Trenthorne's wife. | ||
It's almost like an evolutionary development. | ||
That is how It's a tactic, I think, that they use to ground men into submission. | ||
So loud. | ||
So much yapping. | ||
And over time, you could see this as like a form of psychological warfare. | ||
Imagine living with that. | ||
Imagine being in like a protracted dispute with somebody like that. | ||
And she controls your sex life. | ||
Imagine the psychological toll that would take. | ||
That's why he looks so tired. | ||
That's why you look at his profile picture and he's like, He looks like this wounded dog. | ||
He looks like a cretin. | ||
Like a wounded cretin dog. | ||
Because that's what he is. | ||
He's like a beaten dog. | ||
It's like a dog that's terrified of its owner. | ||
It's like a dog with a volatile owner. | ||
You know? | ||
It's like you've got a volatile guy that's punching holes in the walls and screaming, and the dog's shaking. | ||
Don't hit me! | ||
I'm hungry! | ||
You know? | ||
That's Trenthorne. | ||
Because he knows that if he upsets his wife, she's gonna be really... | ||
Ascerbic, and loud, and overwhelming, and literally grating, painful to listen to, and unpleasant. | ||
It's like, it's a form of torture. | ||
It's like what they're doing in Guantanamo Bay. | ||
You know, they're blasting pop music 24-7 so you can't sleep. | ||
It's like, it's that level, and eventually a man is just defeated. | ||
The man is killed. | ||
This is why I like to say marriage is the end of the male life cycle. | ||
It's borrowed from a friend of mine. | ||
Because this is what happens. | ||
You know, you're a man, you're a boy, and then you're a man. | ||
And you're idealistic and you're ambitious and you have this zest for life. | ||
You love life. | ||
You love fun. | ||
You're sort of playful. | ||
Then you get married and, you know, your wife folds her arms and is like, you're not good enough. | ||
This wasn't good enough. | ||
And you're like, oh, I'm sorry. | ||
How can I make it better? | ||
And it's like day after day after day, years of this. | ||
unidentified
|
And eventually the guy is just like, OK, honey, yes, dear, whatever you want, whatever you want, we'll we'll make it. | |
I'm sorry. | ||
I meant to say we will make dinner. | ||
unidentified
|
How could I be so stupid? | |
I'm so stupid. | ||
I can't do anything without my wife. | ||
I mean, we should do the chores. | ||
unidentified
|
You're right, honey. | |
What would I do without you? | ||
You know, then you're just like a conditioned, like, shell of a man. | ||
Shell of a human being. | ||
Completely subjugated. | ||
I won't let that happen, you know? | ||
That's why you need to go the other way. | ||
You need to be terrifying. | ||
You need to instill fear. | ||
Not because you're abusive or cruel. | ||
But because, you know, a man is terrifying. | ||
Properly understood, a man is terrifying. | ||
What a man is capable of is terrifying. | ||
To another man, let alone to another woman. | ||
To a woman, for that matter. | ||
The only reason a woman would never fear a man is because he's been absolutely castrated, right? | ||
Why would a woman who is like a small, fragile creature, under what scenario does she not fear a man? | ||
Ever, under any circumstances, if he's castrated. | ||
As long as he has balls, there's the potential that he will lose control of himself and be a danger. | ||
This is just primitive. | ||
This is just instinct. | ||
You know? | ||
It's sort of like you can get a pet monkey, but the monkey's always got something, you know? | ||
You can get a pet monkey, a pet chimpanzee. | ||
It still might rip your face off if it's in the wrong mood, because there's this primal quality. | ||
And if you have a man, It's something similar. | ||
A man has balls. | ||
A man wants to fuck. | ||
You know, a man has instinct. | ||
And the only reason a woman would just, like, turn off fear is if she turns off hormones. | ||
Turns off penis and balls. | ||
No penis and balls. | ||
And what you get is, like, this neutered, like, feminine creature That is there to go to the office and talk about sports at the water cooler. | ||
And, uh, you know, talk about how much you love your wife and talk about the latest fucking thing from the store. | ||
Whenever I get around normies, I notice how much they talk about buying shit from the store. | ||
Like, I exist in a world where I'm like, when are we going to war with Iran? | ||
You know, what did they say at the Nintendo convention? | ||
That, that was the talk today. | ||
You know, we're talking about whatever. | ||
World War III, Tate, yay, Trump. | ||
And then I get around normies and they're talking about the latest, like, thing that you buy. | ||
They're talking about the Stanley Cup. | ||
They're talking about the latest and greatest, you know, 1999, as seen on TV, uh, convenience appliance. | ||
You know what I'm talking about? | ||
Every time I get around Normies, it's always like, oh, we love the Peloton. | ||
We love... | ||
I'm talking about my family. | ||
We love the Peloton. | ||
We love the Stanley Cup. | ||
unidentified
|
We love the new salted caramels. | |
We love... | ||
Like, every time I get around Normies, my family... | ||
No hate. | ||
No hate on my family. | ||
unidentified
|
I love my family. | |
But that's what Normies do. | ||
That's all they talk about. | ||
And I guess that's just being normal. | ||
You know, maybe that's just being like a normal guy, but they love talking about products and stuff like that. | ||
That's just a me thing, though. | ||
That's just being... | ||
I'll take it easy on my parents. | ||
That's just an autistic thing. | ||
Me being obsessed with one thing. | ||
Me having one obsession. | ||
But anyway. | ||
So yeah. | ||
Anyway, that's Trent Horn's wife. | ||
That's how he became how he is. | ||
$10, had a black kid beat the shit out of me in middle school. | ||
I got a two-week suspension and kicked off the robotic steam and he walked free since I said the N-word. | ||
Why would you ever admit that? | ||
That's just like something you take to the grave. | ||
I wouldn't- If you got beat up by a black person, it's something you just never admit, ever. | ||
Okay, but we're not. | ||
It is important that people do need to hear that. | ||
So, like I said, I know people hate when you say that, but if you don't throw in that clarification, they'll call you shit anyway, but it's really more for our people. | ||
Christine in Ohio sent $10. | ||
We just had this conversation today about this violence. | ||
I was at hospital today in Cleveland discharging my husband and two black women were screaming and fighting at the ER. | ||
Cops were breaking it up. | ||
I was scared getting to my car. | ||
I don't care why. | ||
I just want to wait out there like loose cannons. | ||
Scary. Sorry to hear that, man. | ||
Hope you guys are doing well. | ||
Glad to hear your husband's discharged. | ||
That's what I'm talking about. | ||
It's like, you literally can't be near them. | ||
Because you don't know where they... | ||
They start throwing stuff, a gun goes up. | ||
Who fucking knows? | ||
Who wants to find out? | ||
You know, you're at a hospital, an airport, a store. | ||
You're trying to get where you're trying to go. | ||
You're trying to do your thing, live your life. | ||
What we should expect... | ||
Is like friendliness, hospitality, you go to the store, you strike up a conversation, you have a pleasant exchange. | ||
That's how it should be. | ||
We don't even have that. | ||
Instead what we have is this like, it's hell in a cell. | ||
It's a steel cage match every time you go to the airport. | ||
It's already bad enough. | ||
Yeah, it's hard enough not to get in a fight with the TSA the way they are, you know. | ||
People so unhelpful, the inefficiencies there. | ||
We already live in hell. | ||
Then, on top of that, they're having a, you know, World Wrestling Entertainment going on. | ||
Fucking USA champion match going on. | ||
Tag team championship. | ||
In the other gate. | ||
Nobody wants to deal with that. | ||
Nobody wants to be involved and find out how that's gonna end. | ||
And it's always them. | ||
So, sorry to hear that. | ||
Hope you guys are doing good though. | ||
Yes Alright TX grow I percent $25 As someone who grew up in DFW It especially makes my blood boil Hearing this story We've been flooded by Jits and Asians To the point of becoming minorities In many once once White Afro and suburbs And these violent chimps True, that's what it is. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
That's where it is, what it is everywhere. | ||
Justin Roy percent, $50. | ||
Great show tonight. | ||
I'm also from the Chicago suburbs, but don't want to move into Chicago for obvious reasons. | ||
Do you have any cities you would recommend for grow hyper slash white people in general to move to as we progress in our careers and efforts? | ||
Yeah, I mean, Nashville is a lot of conservatives are there, Tennessee in general. | ||
A lot of people are moving to Florida. | ||
A lot of our people are moving to Texas. | ||
It's that sunbelt. | ||
It's Texas, Tennessee, the Carolinas. | ||
I mean, they got some blacks there. | ||
Florida. That's the unfortunate part, though. | ||
If you want a really good job, you're going to wind up in New York, L.A., Chicago, Miami. | ||
You're going to end up in one of these big cities. | ||
That's, that's where the big opportunities are, you know, for the most part. | ||
So, but yeah, I would move south. | ||
unidentified
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I don't think I will, but if you want to. | |
People say Idaho. | ||
Yeah, Idaho. | ||
Sure. No, I believe in a progressive tax rate. | ||
I'm not in favor of a flat tax. | ||
I need to philosophize cent $10. | ||
Trent Horn is a shameless instigator. | ||
A lot of the Catholic celebrity clique seems to be silently rebuffing you as well, like Matt Fradd bringing Doyle on Pints. | ||
The Holocaust gets brought up on like every other Pints podcast. | ||
Well, I don't know Matt Fratt or anything about him. | ||
I know his producer is like a big Doyle head. | ||
But I don't have beef with that guy. | ||
but yeah, it is what it is. | ||
Anonymous sent $10. | ||
It was interesting when Ye said Virgil created the blueprint for niggas that work for him. | ||
I had never thought about that before. | ||
When he said he's had a lot of problems with people because they're jealous of him, it reminded me of your situation, Noglaze. | ||
Well, I mean, look. | ||
A lot of people look at my life and they say, oh, you know, you've had a lot of people that you used to work with that you don't work with anymore. | ||
And people say, you're the common denominator. | ||
You don't understand my life, okay? | ||
Being a far-right live streamer, those are two unique categories, okay? | ||
Being a live streamer is already, like, let's say competitive. | ||
You have a lot of clout chasers. | ||
Because it involves fame and notoriety, you have a lot of clout chasers. | ||
So that is a characteristic of what I do, which is different than what normal people do. | ||
People say, you know, normal rules are if everybody doesn't like you or a lot of people don't like you, it's because of you. | ||
Well, but if you're involved in anything that involves fame or money, the rules change a little bit because everybody understands that fame and money are two things that are universally, deeply coveted. | ||
If you have those things, it's a stereotype, you attract people that want to use you. | ||
If you have a platform, if you have fame, no matter how much or how little, you see how shameless people are. | ||
People are addicted to fame or covet fame like a drug. | ||
And so there is like a specific type of person that covets fame and you find these people all the time. | ||
If you're a live streamer, you don't find them in politics because most people in politics aren't famous. | ||
But when you're a live streamer, when you get in front of a big audience, when it's a production, when it's a show, when it involves being seen, you get these covetous people. | ||
And that is characteristic, which makes it different. | ||
But I'm also not just a regular live streamer, where any live streamer will tell you the same thing. | ||
Any ordinary live streamer will tell you it's backstabbing, it's clout chasers, it's grifters, users. | ||
Anyone who has any bit of notoriety will tell you the same thing. | ||
But I'm also in politics. | ||
Politics is the same thing. | ||
What you find in politics is that when you have influence, especially someone like myself, when you're going up against the Jews, when you're going up against all these people, well, politics is also super competitive because people covet influence too. | ||
And power. | ||
People get betrayed in politics all the time. | ||
It's notorious. | ||
Happens all the time. | ||
I know so many people, when I got betrayed over and over and over again, people would objectively assess the facts and say, oh, that happened to me too. | ||
I know like at least three or four business owners who have their own faction that called me up a couple of years ago. | ||
We were having trouble. | ||
And they said, dude, the exact same thing happened to me. | ||
Someone I built up, someone I created, someone I made totally turned on me. | ||
Literally, no fewer than four people, business owners, who are pretty substantial in their own right, people you know or may have heard of, they called me and said, oh, that happened to me too. | ||
And then you're in right-wing politics. | ||
And the big thing about right-wing politics is it is a very high-pressure environment. | ||
If you join me, you're on a blacklist. | ||
If you're friends with me, if you do business with me, you're on a blacklist. | ||
People go out of their way to make your life shitty. | ||
You become a target. | ||
This is public. | ||
Alec Stein had me on his show. | ||
Lost contracts because of this. | ||
As a consequence, Alec Stein has good reason to say, fuck that guy. | ||
Now, anybody would say, oh, Alec Stein doesn't like Nick. | ||
Nick must be a real jerk. | ||
Alec Stein has actually said nice things about me. | ||
He's been very transparent. | ||
He said, look, I had Nick on my show. | ||
And then all my shit got canceled. | ||
I lost a lot of money. | ||
He says, and I like Nick. | ||
He's a smart guy. | ||
He says, but I can't associate with him because I want to have a career. | ||
Now he's been honest, but you could see how if he was a different kind of guy, he would say, oh geez, I can't be friends with Nick. | ||
But if I go against Nick, everyone's going to attack me. | ||
I need to come up with an excuse to disassociate. | ||
And this is what happens a lot. | ||
Where it's like, people like me, they like the idea of me, they get close to me, and then they go, oh shit, I bit off more than I can chew. | ||
They're trying to ruin my life. | ||
Oh, well, it's Nick's fault. | ||
I've had people that I literally gave them a career, and it didn't work out, and they told me, you ruined my life. | ||
I made you! | ||
I gave you a career! | ||
You lived by your friendship with me, and, you know, then sometimes people have problems because of me. | ||
Temporary setbacks in some cases. | ||
But people go, oh, when I was friends with you and you were dispensing favors, oh, it was great. | ||
You're my friend. | ||
I'm loyal to you. | ||
I love you. | ||
I'm coming to your birthday party. | ||
Oh, I had to sacrifice something because I'm friends with you? | ||
Well, you ruined my life. | ||
You're a horrible person. | ||
Really? But that's human nature. | ||
That's how people are. | ||
When you get a little older, when you go through it, Maybe you don't learn these lessons if you're just a student. | ||
You know, a lot of people say things about me. | ||
They really have no business because they don't have as much life experience. | ||
I'm not super old, but I have. | ||
I'm older than a lot of people that give me shit at this point, and I've gone through more than all of them. | ||
I've been in lawsuits. | ||
I've been in depositions. | ||
I've been persecuted by the federal government. | ||
I've been banned from things. | ||
I've employed people and fired people. | ||
I've been employed. | ||
I have a show. | ||
I have a nonprofit. | ||
I've done a lot of different things. | ||
And if you just haven't dealt with people in these ways, it's easy to be sympathetic to the disgruntled employee, the disgruntled Whistleblower. | ||
Oh, I'm gonna blow you up. | ||
I'm gonna ruin your life. | ||
You're a jerk and I'm a victim. | ||
It's easy when you've never done anything to find that person sympathetic. | ||
But anyone that has a business, anyone in politics, anyone with any degree of notoriety or status, anyone who has ever had something that other people covet will tell you exactly the same thing, which is that's when you find out how people really are. | ||
If people Don't want what you have. | ||
If you don't have anything that people want, it's easy to be a bleeding heart. | ||
It's easy to be credulous and believe everybody's story and feel sorry for everybody. | ||
Try and run something. | ||
Try and organize a lot of different people for a goal. | ||
Try and run a company and make it profitable. | ||
Try and motivate people. | ||
Try and deal with the tangle of people's lives. | ||
Try and hold on to something that people would kill you to have. | ||
Then you see how people really are. | ||
And that's not to sound bitter or resentful. | ||
That's a little piece of advice. | ||
That's a little piece of perspective for people that find it so easy to want to stand in judgment of somebody else's life and say, oh, this guy's a bad guy. | ||
This guy's a good guy. | ||
You know, I look at a lot of people and it's like, who are you to judge? | ||
You're some fucko on the internet. | ||
You know fucking nothing. | ||
That's why I don't listen to them. | ||
You know, people are always telling me, so-and-so said this, so-and-so said that. | ||
I'm like, I don't care what people say. | ||
People say a lot of shit on the internet. | ||
That was a revelation that I had. | ||
There was a time when I cared more about what people said. | ||
And then I realized, after I had dinner with Trump, after I did the Groyper War, after I pulled off AFPAC 3, I've done these big achievements, and after every one of those achievements, did my haters come around and say, oh, well, you know, I've been critical of him in the past, but he really did it this time. | ||
They found a reason to hate. | ||
They found a reason to dick ride. | ||
When I had AfPak 3 with 1,200 people, and, you know, we had LED video walls, super awesome event, Did my haters say, wow, great job? | ||
No, they found excuses to shit on it. | ||
When I was with Ye, my hero, you know, one of my favorite artists of all time, when I'm at dinner with Trump and Trump loves me, this is just like unbelievable level of mainstream penetration and, you know, in a personal dream and everything that people say, wow, good for him. | ||
No, they found a reason to shit on it. | ||
It's like, okay, so why do I care what those people say? | ||
And I'll tell you, this is the last thing I'll say, last piece of advice for you young people out there. | ||
You know, this is something I realized even in high school when I was in speech team. | ||
I went to my first speech team meeting and I was really nervous. | ||
I was 14. I was a freshman in high school and I was on the speech forensics team and I went to the first tournament and I was in the hallway. | ||
I was psyching myself up for the speech. | ||
And I remember being nervous and I was thinking, I'm in another high school that was hosting the tournament. | ||
It's other teachers from, coaches from other schools that are doing the judging. | ||
It's other students from other schools. | ||
I was thinking, I'm never going to see these people again in my life. | ||
If I embarrass myself, so what? | ||
If I go into that room and I make a fool of myself, big deal. | ||
I don't, I will never see these people again. | ||
They have no effect on my life. | ||
I'm like, so why would I be worried? | ||
Why do I have this fear or anxiety about, you know, what they're going to think? | ||
They're going to think, you know, maybe badly of me if I screw up and then tomorrow they'll never think about me literally ever again. | ||
And that was kind of just like a big revelation, which is you just got to talk your shit. | ||
You got to do what you got to do. | ||
You can't worry about, I know it's maybe super basic, but that's a way to process that and work through it because it's an irrational fear. | ||
But the way to process it is just to say, I'm going to be successful by any means necessary. | ||
Yeah, people are not going to like you. | ||
What else is new? | ||
People are going to, they're going to judge, you know, they might not love it. | ||
You might fall on your face. | ||
They don't matter. | ||
You know, what matters is the mish. | ||
Okay, what matters is the mish. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
So the Virgil, what Ye says, I can relate to, obviously on a much different level. | ||
I can't even imagine. | ||
And I saw it! | ||
I mean, I see it and I saw it. | ||
Having been his friend now for years, I have literally seen it with my eyes. | ||
People that come around him or have been around him, people that he thinks are loyal to him, that are leaking his shit to the press, trying to mess with his life, stealing his money, They do not care about him at all. | ||
And, you know, not to, like, you know, self-report about what a good guy I am, but my goal when I was with Ye in 2022 was to work for the political team. | ||
And I actually put my own interests aside. | ||
I could have looted it. | ||
I could have looted the campaign. | ||
You know? | ||
Other people did. | ||
Other people tried to. | ||
I could have used my access to loot the campaign and take money. | ||
I could have used my access to level up for myself. | ||
There were distinct opportunities. | ||
I didn't take them because it wasn't good for the team. | ||
Now, again, I'm not trying to say that's how good of a person I am. | ||
But it's like you don't know what it's like to be in that position where it's like you could. | ||
You could if you wanted to. | ||
And no one would know, and no one's watching, and the only reason not to fuck somebody over is out of pure loyalty and integrity. | ||
It's a very rare thing. | ||
And so if people say, oh, you fall out of favor with a lot of people, it's because loyalty and integrity are super rare. | ||
And you don't know. | ||
It's like Trump says, you don't know who's loyal to you for real. | ||
You don't know until shit hits the fan. | ||
You don't know until they have a bad day. | ||
I've had it happen to me. | ||
I've put people on. | ||
I've done a lot for people. | ||
And then the second that I ask something of them, or something bad happens to them because of me, and then it's all my fault. | ||
I'm the worst guy ever. | ||
Happened to me many times. | ||
And, you know, fortunately that's just human nature. | ||
When things are good, everybody's happy. | ||
When times are tough, watch how they turn. | ||
It's like Joker says, these people, they'll eat each other. | ||
It's true. | ||
It's happened to me. | ||
Close friends. | ||
And at this point, I'm immune to it. | ||
I'm just immune to it. | ||
At this point, I just suspect everybody and I just don't... | ||
I don't trust anybody. | ||
And I don't bring anybody into the inner circle unless I've really known them for a long time. | ||
That's just unfortunately how you have to be. | ||
And a lot of people don't get that. | ||
It's just naivete, people think. | ||
If I had power and influence and money, I would be benevolent and magnanimous, and I would be really nice. | ||
Everybody thinks that. | ||
Everybody thinks that. | ||
And then they get mugged. | ||
You know, they literally get mugged, and then they go, oh, I'm going to be a little more careful now. | ||
And then they keep getting mugged, and then they say, I have to be brutal. | ||
I have to be a complete fucking asshole just to protect myself and get shit done. | ||
And then everybody's like, why is my boss an asshole? | ||
It's like, well... | ||
Cause that's how you gotta be! | ||
That's how you gotta be when you're in biz. | ||
Little piece of advice. | ||
Yeah. I read that one before. | ||
Um... I don't know, we never talked about that. | ||
That was years ago. | ||
I don't even know, I know he's what, that basketball player or something? | ||
I don't even know the drama. | ||
Cassie Dillon Christmas party, bruh. | ||
Dude, she was giving me the bedroom eyes at the Christmas party. | ||
It was totally insane. | ||
She was trying to hook up with me. | ||
I'd even, I've told the story before, I didn't even know it at the time. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. That was crazy. | |
That was a long time ago. | ||
That was a long time ago. | ||
Now, seven years ago? | ||
Wow. Oh, man. | ||
I was a young man. | ||
I'm still a young man. | ||
Awesome monologue on international trade tonight. | ||
You really painted a clear picture on how free trade has been weaponized against our domestic manufacturing to enrich the capitalist class. | ||
We need to unlearn so much nonsense about invisible hands and paper clips and relearn the protectionism that built the middle class. | ||
100%. Thank you. | ||
The White Dame Dash sent $10. | ||
From the first monologue to the tariff breakdown, this is one of the most important and comprehensive episodes I've ever seen. | ||
Salute and much respect. | ||
Thank you very much! | ||
See, I need to get better at showing off my versatility a little bit, because you kind of tune into the show and every night it's just like, Israel sucks! | ||
unidentified
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I hate Israel! | |
And every show is just like a screed against Jews and Israel. | ||
It's like, yeah, maybe we Maybe we should talk about other stuff too sometimes. | ||
It's okay to take a step back and say, wow, yeah, I mean, you need to talk about it a lot, but maybe you need to talk about it slightly less, maybe just a little bit less. | ||
unidentified
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People are like, man, you really talk about Israel a lot. | |
I'm like, well, you need to. | ||
It's like, okay, but maybe not that much. | ||
unidentified
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Maybe not every night. | |
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Roman Groy percent $10. | |
Your monologue on random aggressive black violence was one of your greatest. | ||
I pray for the innocent white boys and girls every day and night. | ||
It breaks my heart to see our innocent beautiful and lovely people brutally ended and humiliated. | ||
We must reckon keys to the West at any cost at late. | ||
So true. | ||
Truth nuke! | ||
We need a little truth nuke tonight. | ||
Rick Robinson sent $10. | ||
Sad story about the 17-year-old. | ||
I've seen that mindless aggression from them enough in my years. | ||
They don't fight fair. | ||
They attack in packs unless it's someone they see as an easy target. | ||
Being in shape to run and carrying pepper spray should be everyone's bare minimum to defend themselves. | ||
100%. 100%. | ||
Well, you gotta be physically fit. | ||
Yeah, yeah, some like non-lethal weapons. | ||
I mean, if you can, carry a gun. | ||
If you can, carry a gun. | ||
But the thing about a gun that is important to know is that even a gun sometimes is not the best because it gives people a false sense of security. | ||
You carry around a gun and you kind of puff your chest out and go, oh, I'm good. | ||
I got my gun. | ||
Well, the thing is about these situations, you just don't want to be in them. | ||
The safest place to be is not in those situations, which means that you shouldn't take risks, needless risks. | ||
If you see something bad, you should just leave. | ||
If you get in a confrontation, you should retreat. | ||
Act as though you don't have one. | ||
And the gun is just the last resort. | ||
If you are forced into a situation where you can't get away, and there is no way to de-escalate, you know, that is when It is helpful to have one. | ||
It's helpful to have one in that situation, but the problem is then you get nut jobs and freaks that are just, you know, they want to pull their gun out all the time. | ||
You get road rage, people pull their gun out. | ||
People get in a fight over their snowblower. | ||
You see that clip in Pennsylvania, I think it was. | ||
People go back home and get their gun and people do some crazy shit with their guns. | ||
It's not what you think it is. | ||
Like, You know, my parents were firearms instructors for many years. | ||
My grandmother ran a security school and they trained bodyguards and cops. | ||
And so, you know, from a very early age, my parents are very literate when it comes to firearms and safety. | ||
And so, you know, I was indoctrinated from the time I was a kid by my father. | ||
Guns are not toys. | ||
It's a false sense of security. | ||
It's not like what you see in the movies. | ||
So, that's why I don't really relate to these gun nuts. | ||
I know that's a big part of the culture for hunters and things like that, but, you know, guns are made to kill people. | ||
They're made to kill people. | ||
They're not toys. | ||
It's not a joke. | ||
Super serious. | ||
And when you have one, you have to be extremely responsible with it. | ||
You see all the time people get fucked up with an accident, with themselves, with other people. | ||
So, but yeah. | ||
You just don't want to be in those situations. | ||
I'd say in addition to being, have a baseline level of fitness and have some non-lethal or lethal forces, just don't. | ||
Don't put yourself in a bad situation. | ||
Go in safe areas at safe times. | ||
Just have situational awareness. | ||
That is what is going to save your life. | ||
More than a gun, the best thing you could have is just situational awareness. | ||
What time is it? | ||
What day is it? | ||
What part of town am I in? | ||
Where am I? | ||
Where am I going? | ||
Who's beside me? | ||
Just having basic situational awareness will save your life. | ||
I mean, look at me. | ||
It's so ironic because people say, you're a racist. | ||
I wonder why a black person hasn't beat you up. | ||
It's like because I don't go around them. | ||
Ironically, the racist is safer because the cause of black violence is not being a racist. | ||
The cause of black violence is having an iPhone. | ||
It's being in a car. | ||
Being in the wrong place at the wrong time. | ||
Dude, don't even try. | ||
Invest in a stock index. | ||
This is not investment advice, this is not financial advice, but I mean, look, if you don't know what you're doing, the best thing you can do is just invest in an index fund. | ||
Both ideally crypto invest in something safe. | ||
I mean right now even bonds are really attractive bonds have a high interest rate. | ||
I Mean these days if you but you got to get a mix I mean talk to a financial advisor go to the bank talk to a financial advisor It depends on your situation, but people people think they're gonna get rich off stocks. | ||
You're not you're not gonna trade stocks and get rich Unless you're super intelligent that you're probably not No, I mean, I'm not intelligent enough. | ||
I'm not going to swing trade. | ||
I'm not going to get a forex account and think I'm going to beat the market. | ||
I don't know anything about that. | ||
I certainly don't know enough about it. | ||
And the vast majority of people aren't either. | ||
I see it all the time. | ||
Young kids are like, I'm going to trade stocks. | ||
You're going to go broke. | ||
First of all, you have no income. | ||
Second of all, you're going to lose what you invest. | ||
You know, the first way to make a lot of money investing is to have a lot of money. | ||
That's a pretty good rule. | ||
If you don't have a lot of money, you just want to protect your wealth from inflation by having a mix of different types of assets. | ||
Stock index fund is safe. | ||
Bonds are safe. | ||
You should have some crypto, some gold. | ||
Paid for by Americans. | ||
The markets will tumble tomorrow erasing 401ks. | ||
America isn't going to manufacture shit as they can't compete with Asians that don't go to sleepovers. | ||
Big mistake. | ||
Uh, yeah, and then it's gonna get better, dummy. | ||
Uh-oh, there's gonna be short-term pain? | ||
Better not do anything. | ||
I don't know if you're being sarcastic. | ||
Hawk Tuagroi percent $10. | ||
You're running the two-man on Laura Loomer and Kathy Ju. | ||
Who are you bringing with you and how many honey packs are you taking? | ||
Alright. Heroin user sent $10. | ||
People asking Khan Incorporated Campus questions need to be practicing their questions against an AI tool to act as the person they are questioning. | ||
They are famous enough for AI to know how to respond. | ||
Great show. | ||
Love that! | ||
Yeah, if you're gonna, that's really good. | ||
If you're gonna ask a question at a Q&A, that's good. | ||
Pitch it to AI. | ||
Have AI refine it. | ||
Or ask, yeah, that's really smart. | ||
I wish I thought of that. | ||
That's really good. | ||
Riley James sent $100. | ||
Rest in peace, Austin Metcalf. | ||
Absolutely tragic. | ||
Rest in peace. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Chad Champion sent $10. | ||
Knock knock. | ||
It's the veterinarian, sir. | ||
Your bunny died. | ||
Hey, that's not funny. | ||
That's not the kind of super chats we do on the show. | ||
That's just diabolical. | ||
That's diabolical, dude. | ||
Evil person alert. | ||
Pellegrino sent $10. | ||
Major Trump W. Everything so far has been performative, so I'm almost skeptical. | ||
He's facing tremendous resistance, but he's always believed in protectionism. | ||
This is core to him. | ||
It makes you wonder all the things that are possible if Trump was only just slightly race conscious. | ||
Maybe one day. | ||
Yeah, I hope he sticks to it. | ||
Martin Man sent $20, I'm mulatto. | ||
I was raised in white suburbia. | ||
All my friends are white. | ||
I fit in with them. | ||
I'm as worried around blacks too. | ||
Can you clarify how segregation would look like because I can't support AF if I can't live around white Well, you sound really dumb, honestly. | ||
What would segregation look like? | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
It's about supporting it in principle. | ||
What's important is getting people to support it in principle at this point. | ||
Erm, how would we go about that? | ||
It's as simple as freedom of association. | ||
And look, if you create a culture where, like, hey, it's this kind of neighborhood, and if you're legally allowed to do that, it would re-emerge, you know? | ||
Integration has been forced. | ||
Segregation is almost the natural state of things. | ||
It is integration which has been imposed upon us. | ||
If we just get rid of the imposition, things would probably go back to normal. | ||
But that's funny. | ||
I didn't even – you're mulatto. | ||
I can't support AF if I can't live around white people. | ||
unidentified
|
Good. | |
Bro doesn't want to live around his own people. | ||
Sorry! Brothers. | ||
Yeah, I feel like they're gonna get pulled over. | ||
I feel like they're gonna get pulled over. | ||
Sorry. Minor inconvenience for the good of the community. | ||
But if you are a mulatto, and you're in, like, Lincoln Navigator, and you have a collared shirt on, and you got 10 and 2, you know, then you're good. | ||
So that's... | ||
Wow. So true. | ||
Dog 123 sent $10. | ||
Did you see Aideen crashing out with academics over Ye? | ||
I feel like he and so many influential people are deliberately missing what Ye's doing and shifting the paradigm. | ||
Sneeko is not translating it well. | ||
We need you. | ||
Aideen ignores it, but chat still spams you all the time. | ||
Great economics lesson, W show. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Yeah. They are missing it. | ||
They are missing it. | ||
Someone needs to break through to them. | ||
I wish it was me, but I'm blackballed, you know? | ||
You know how it goes. | ||
I don't want to say anything. | ||
Contentious at this point, but I mean, let's just say based on recent developments, you kind of, I mean, you know, what's up, you know, what's going on with that. | ||
It is what it is. | ||
But. Yeah, if people want to have it broken down, they can watch my show. | ||
Talent. Just raw talent. | ||
Raw talent, authenticity, being awesome, being correct, having the truth on your side, having God on your side. | ||
Why do you still use Hotmail? | ||
Send $10, $500 Nintendo Switch with Mario Kart World Bundle. | ||
It is kind of crazy. | ||
Listen, I don't know who's playing Nintendo Switch as an adult. | ||
I get it if you're at like a party and everyone's playing like Super Smash or Mario Kart, but like, I have friends that are really into Nintendo and they were up this morning watching the Nintendo convention and it's like, what are you, four years old? | ||
Oh, Donkey Kong Bonanza! | ||
Kirby Kart! | ||
It's like, I'm sorry, You have a 401k. | ||
Excuse me, you have a 401k. | ||
You voted in the last election. | ||
You are playing on a Nintendo DS6. | ||
Playing a 3D platformer. | ||
They're like, alright, this 3D platformer looks awesome. | ||
It's like... | ||
Do you need a bag of Cheerios too? | ||
You need a bag of Cheerios and a bottle of milk with that? | ||
What's it gonna be? | ||
Saluga Groy, percent $10. | ||
Also in regards to the Trent Horn thing is crazy. | ||
Thanks for waking me up on women, King. | ||
They're batshit crazy and deserve to be treated like shit. | ||
Well, I don't know if you gotta treat them like shit, but you can't, you gotta just like, you can't give away the game, you know? | ||
That's the harsh reality of life. | ||
Overthinking it. | ||
You just gotta have this and aura. | ||
I might buy it. | ||
Yeah, I might buy it just to have it. | ||
I have a regular Nintendo Switch. | ||
I got it during the pandemic. | ||
I've played it like five times. | ||
In five years. | ||
So. I'm just look I'm gonna I'm a grown-ass man. | ||
It kind of sucks when you get old. | ||
You don't like video games as much. | ||
I could do Minecraft for two weeks. | ||
I could do a Fortnite stint. | ||
I love strategy games, but. | ||
Can't I can't do the like cartoon. | ||
I love COD still. | ||
is still awesome. | ||
The white dame dash sent $10. | ||
I live in Cleveland. | ||
Just six months ago, a 55-years-old white man was in a Kroger in Columbus an hour from me and he was telling three black teens to keep it down while inside the store. | ||
When he left, they followed him out to the parking lot and stomped him to death. | ||
He had a wife and two kids. | ||
That's what they do. | ||
Don't be a hero. | ||
It's like that other guy, I think in New Mexico. | ||
He was like a physics professor riding his bike in the morning And this, like, 14-year-old black kid was driving a car and ran him over. | ||
They ran him over and killed him, and he died, and they just laughed and kept driving. | ||
They recorded it, posted it on Facebook. | ||
This is what happens. | ||
This is our country. | ||
Everybody knows it. | ||
Genuinely sucks what's happened to most major cities. | ||
Hopefully one day we're able to restore order. | ||
Hopefully so. | ||
Simple John Doe sent $10. | ||
A white male with a nice car driving around the streets. | ||
Chicago would have been the perfect death wish had you lacked. | ||
Situational awareness. | ||
Why gamble with your life staying in Illinois with no net gain? | ||
unidentified
|
you. Thank you. | |
That is true. | ||
Well, look, I love Chicago. | ||
I was born here. | ||
My family's here. | ||
And there's something about me, I don't want to give it up. | ||
I don't want to give up the territory. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like the idea that you're going to get chased out of the city. | ||
You know, you can't think like that in some ways, but I don't know. | ||
I kind of do. | ||
It's personal. | ||
It's complicated. | ||
It's personal. | ||
I don't know if I'll live here forever, but they're really pushing me. | ||
They're really pushing me to leave because, you know. | ||
I mean, between my whole situation last year and then, besides even that, just crime's out of control, taxes are out of control. | ||
Now they're doing speeding cameras. | ||
What a jude-up fucking country. | ||
It's like, they're putting up speeding cameras. | ||
If you drive five miles per hour over the limit, you get a fine. | ||
But if you're driving a stolen car through the window of a store, you're good. | ||
Really? You're driving down all these streets, and you're getting shit in the mail. | ||
$200 fine, $200 fine. | ||
You're driving six miles per hour over the limit. | ||
Pay your bill or else we're gonna put the barnacle on your car. | ||
But if I stole a car, drove it through a store, robbed the cash register, and then ran away, I would have nothing to worry about, right? | ||
Nice, nice city, nice society. | ||
Aurelio Saul sent $10. | ||
Would be epic if that Nick got life in solitary confinement that drives him to suicide. | ||
A guaranteed 0% chance for salvation for that Nick, not even a human being. | ||
Dude, he wouldn't even. | ||
I mean, they'd just be like a pit bull. | ||
Rooks sent $20. | ||
A few years back, walked out of 7-Eleven and noticed car park next to 2 a.m. | ||
His car was facing the store and mine the street. | ||
Glanced at him while getting in. | ||
Never looked up, but he started his car and backed out to back in. | ||
A minute later, he honks his horn, and when I look up, he's pointing a gun at me. | ||
Yes, the race. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
There it is! | ||
You fill up your car in the day, go to a nice neighborhood. | ||
I mean, these are the things you have to do to protect yourself. | ||
You just gotta be square. | ||
Gotta be Christine in Ohio said $10. | ||
These men you talk about can't stand up to their wives. | ||
How would they ever stand up to these unhinged blacks? | ||
Men need to literally start manning up. | ||
Yeah. The last four years of Dylan Mulvaney's and soft effing men just suck. | ||
It's true, and I'm guilty of it too. | ||
I'm a sedentary schlub. | ||
I'm guilty of it too. | ||
We really need to... | ||
Get jacked up, you know, we need to get jacked up. | ||
We need to get prepared for the race war now, but not actually but we but actually We kind of do actually we actually kind of do You know you can't but you know, how much is that even gonna help? | ||
You'd like to think that the government would do it but If it's gonna be a jungle out there, yeah, you kind of do need to be physically strong I bet that's probably true. | ||
Is it really? | ||
That's so embarrassing. | ||
That's the worst joke ever, but... | ||
unidentified
|
But I don't know, in the moment, I thought it was so funny. | |
You gotta send me the clip. | ||
You gotta send me the link. | ||
How people are responding to that one. | ||
That's so stupid. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
It's just funny. | |
Observing that copulation provokes many female insects to devour the male of the species. | ||
Pen that. | ||
After the sexual aspect disappears, the male acquires the character of prey and is eliminated. | ||
Oh, thanks. | ||
Thanks, guys. | ||
NSN, thank you very much. | ||
Yeah, I think Heidegger was right about that. | ||
Yeah. Hey, hey! | ||
And hey, don't give up on the bunny situation. | ||
I have one that roams free and is the best. | ||
All right. | ||
Actually, you are the best. | ||
Hey, good to hear from you! | ||
We love these people. | ||
Hey, very pleasant surprise here from you. | ||
Man, what a blast from the past. | ||
That's funny you have a bunny. | ||
Yeah, maybe I'll get a couple more. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe mine just had a bad temperament because mine, it was a Holland Lop and they're supposed to be friendly. | ||
But this one just wasn't. | ||
He was just a dick. | ||
Like, he wouldn't let me pick him up. | ||
He was such a spaz. | ||
You know? | ||
I'd be petting him. | ||
I was nothing but gentle and nice to him. | ||
And he was just a fucking sperg. | ||
Like a, like total skittish spaz. | ||
So yeah, maybe I'll just get a couple more. | ||
Maybe, maybe there'll be nicer ones. | ||
You're giving me a little inspiration. | ||
Don't give up on the bunny. | ||
Maybe I won't, but hey, good to hear from you, Linda. | ||
The old book, yes. | ||
What does it make? | ||
What does make motherhood great again or something like that? | ||
I vaguely remember it. | ||
It was so long ago. | ||
But yeah, man, I can... | ||
I understand that. | ||
I know. | ||
That's what happens when you get old. | ||
You get fat. | ||
When you get old, you get fat. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
I mean, even they have to admit it. | ||
Even they, when they criticize me, they're like, well, he's very well-spoken and talented and funny, but, you know, he's a bad guy. | ||
It's just like, it's undeniable why The show is successful. | ||
They just don't want to give me my due. | ||
I'm obviously fun and funny and it would be a good show and people would watch it, but they have to maintain this blacklist. | ||
They won't let me in the damn ass club. | ||
It sucks. | ||
Let me in the club. | ||
I've earned it. | ||
I don't want to be in the club and compromise. | ||
I want to bring the ideas into the club with me. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
They would bring me into the club if I disavowed all my views, but I want to be in the club. | ||
I want to have access to the club, to the club shorties. | ||
I want to have access to the club resources. | ||
But they, they're like, you got to stop the antisemitism at the door. | ||
And I'm like, never, never going to happen. | ||
Thanks for the big super chat! | ||
What's Cutter? | ||
You see Trump pronounced it Cutter? | ||
I was right, you see? | ||
I love the end. | ||
I know that's basic, but I think the ending's excellent. | ||
Let me think, what else? | ||
It's been a minute since I watched the show. | ||
I love when he punches a wall behind her. | ||
That was intense. | ||
I love when that girl is giving him a hard time and he sends the guy and he goes, it won't be cinematic. | ||
That was awesome. | ||
And I love the storyline when his friend gets involved in gambling and they just ruin his life. | ||
Yeah, those are some of my favorite. | ||
Great show! | ||
We're the best. | ||
Italians are the best. | ||
Okay, kill yourself today. | ||
I don't know what I'd do. | ||
That'd be... | ||
I do think about that because it's like... | ||
It's a catch-22. | ||
You are either getting killed or... | ||
You're, like, a pussy. | ||
You have to, like, drop her from your life and pretend it never happened. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
It's either, like, if you back down, it's ignominious shame forever. | ||
You just have to blot it from the record of history, pretend it never happened. | ||
But if you engage, you might get stabbed in the throat. | ||
You know, you're at a bar, you're having a good time, you know, whatever. | ||
And then it's like, oh, I'm going to get stabbed in the neck because someone got shoved or something. | ||
That's one of those situations. | ||
It's a guy where it's like, look, this is why we have all the rights. | ||
This is why men have all the privileges, because we are forced into a situation like this basically as a rule. | ||
I don't know what I do. | ||
I have to maintain the element of surprise. | ||
I would probably do a preemptive attack. | ||
I would probably do some kind of sneaky preemptive attack. | ||
The best option would be, like, initiating the violence and then going to jail forever. | ||
Going to jail forever. | ||
Maybe. I don't know. | ||
It depends on the situation, really. | ||
Let me see. | ||
unidentified
|
To express myself on my Twitter, and you're telling people that I need to be detained and shit like that. | |
Like, I don't, I talk exactly like people talk online, except for I'm a celebrity. | ||
Because I don't have to worry about getting dropped. | ||
The final get dropped was Shopify. | ||
I put up the swastika, and they took their backing away. | ||
But, You'll play stuff with people killing each other and doing drugs and all this like destructive behavior all day. | ||
That's why I'm pressing y'all so much. | ||
Aiden, why is it such a- He's so- dude, he's awesome. | ||
He's so- it's so true though, right? | ||
That's what's funny to me about Ye is he literally talks like an internet edgelord. | ||
Because these are- that is how people talk online, behind anonymous accounts. | ||
You know, they say the N-word, they talk about Hitler, they're just raw, and it's true. | ||
He just happens to be one of the biggest celebrities in the world, joining up with the edgelords, saying, yeah, how could I be acting like Hitler when I'm a nigger? | ||
You know, and everyone's like, that's, yo, that's actually just like edgelord Twitter content. | ||
And it's true. | ||
What is the difference? | ||
He's a celebrity. | ||
Let's see, Aiden says, because you have children whose lives will be forever impacted by the damage you're causing. | ||
Once again, here we go, right? | ||
Oh, if you have a wife and kids, you can't say what you want. | ||
You're a believer in God. | ||
Why are you taking this route instead of going the love route? | ||
God does not want us to divide us further. | ||
We should be aiming for unity. | ||
This is always what they do, though. | ||
Somebody gets abused. | ||
Somebody is the victim of injustice. | ||
You fight back, and then people want to say, oh, well, you know, that's not Christian. | ||
Like, Ye had his kids taken away from him. | ||
They tried to imprison him. | ||
They tried to—you have his personal trainer literally texting him, I will poison you, I will drug you and destroy your mind and take custody over your life. | ||
They're trying to control him, enslave him, take his family. | ||
Then, for speaking his mind, they took his wealth, his deals, froze his money, took his Twitter account for a time. | ||
He fights back every step of the way. | ||
They only escalate their attacks further, and you have people on the sidelines saying, why are you being mean? | ||
Why are you being a jerk? | ||
Why aren't you being a nice person? | ||
What about your kids? | ||
What about your family? | ||
And that's just another form of control. | ||
It's a form of gaslighting. | ||
And you just have to tune those people out. | ||
It's... I don't know how you see that Harley Pasternak tweet and not side with Ye. | ||
You literally have a celebrity personal trainer saying, if you don't shut up, I will drug and poison you and destroy your life. | ||
After that, it should have been over. | ||
Should have been over for his enemies. | ||
Everybody should have been behind Ye. | ||
But of course, you know, Ye triggers them because he touches that sensitive issue. | ||
He touches the third rail. | ||
And people are not rational. | ||
They don't see it that way. | ||
So, Team Ye. | ||
Love the guy. | ||
Jules Word sent $10. | ||
Would you debate McGa Muslim debater Manar reports on Christianity versus Islam? | ||
He tried getting the destiny debate, but destiny got scared. | ||
By the way, Manar respects your channel. | ||
Maybe I don't know who that is. | ||
Zayden Starr sent $10. | ||
Great monologue tonight, Nick. | ||
I used to work at a major hedge fund, and something I thought you might find interesting is that many PMs who deal with macro are former intelligence slash CIA. | ||
Theoretically, they are hired to assess global risk. | ||
Big banks like JPM employ tons of these people on Intel teams. | ||
Yeah, of course, that's why they call it a regime. | ||
You can't even call it the state because the state That's a public-private partnership. | ||
All the way across. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The leading cause of death for black males ages 1 to 40 is homicide. | ||
Mostly other blacks. | ||
We hate it too. | ||
It's a real problem and no one has the intelligence or the balls to solve it. | ||
The answer is simple. | ||
Lock all these super predators up for life. | ||
Which means growipers and powerbanging the gavel. | ||
100% yeah. | ||
And listen, I am a Christian. | ||
I'm not going to fall into like we hate black people or something. | ||
There are people that say that. | ||
I don't believe that. | ||
I don't have hatred in my heart for black people or people for being black. | ||
But it is a black issue. | ||
It is black, like you said, super predators. | ||
It's not all black people. | ||
And you do need to say that. | ||
People say, don't say that. | ||
You don't need to say that. | ||
But unfortunately, there are people that do take it all the way. | ||
And there are people that call for violence. | ||
There are people, there are sick people out there that hear a monologue like I did tonight, and they say, I'm going to carry out an act of violence. | ||
I don't support that at all. | ||
I think that's gravely immoral. | ||
And I'm against, in principle, acting out of passion, and especially Revenge killing, you know, taking an innocent person's life to settle a score with another member of their tribe or something like that. | ||
So, unfortunately, you do have to say that. | ||
But it's true. | ||
It's a blight on everybody. | ||
Everybody should be able to live in a safe society. | ||
Unfortunately, it is tribal. | ||
But if we solve the problem, it will benefit everybody. | ||
And you're right. | ||
I mean, ironically, the biggest beneficiaries will be the black people in some ways. | ||
John Dave Irving sent $14. | ||
Think about it. | ||
How are they gonna call you a scary white supremacist neo-nazi when you got a couple of little flying squirrels in your front pocket? | ||
Anyway, the decision is made. | ||
So if you back down, I'll live stream the euthanasia and tag you. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. Yeah, maybe we'll do that. | |
Okay, then. | ||
Okay. All right. | ||
That's our list. | ||
That's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's all I got for you tonight. | ||
This is a marathon show. | ||
I've been live for four hours almost. | ||
That's gonna do it for me. | ||
That's all I got. | ||
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. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thank you to our top Super Chatters. | ||
Special thanks to Johnny Paycheck, John Dave Irving, Kurd Merkins, Riley James, Philip Sir, Randy Dash, and Testosterone. | ||
Thanks to all of them. | ||
Thanks to all of our Super Chatters, everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. |