Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
People don't realize what they have. | |
And then nowadays, I am so upset that the things we did and the things we fought for and the boys that died for it, it's all gone down the drain. | ||
Our country's gone to hell in a handbasket. | ||
We haven't got the country we had when I was raised. | ||
Not at all. | ||
Nobody will have the fun I have. | ||
Nobody will have the opportunity I have. | ||
It's just not the same. | ||
Jesus is the way and the life and the King of Israel. | ||
We just leave with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around 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 gonna 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. | ||
That has changed the calculation. | ||
unidentified
|
God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the, you know, richest person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
I think they've been extremely unfair to you. | ||
unidentified
|
Who is they, though? | |
We can't tell you they is, can we? | ||
There is no future if we do nothing now. | ||
There is nothing to lose. | ||
People that are scrambling, trying to protect their ever-shrinking share of what they have are foolish. | ||
It's all going. | ||
It's all going away. | ||
This country is being ripped apart and raped and looted. | ||
We're being slowly poisoned and, in some cases, quickly murdered and assassinated. | ||
And we're killing ourselves every day, inadvertently, with the kinds of things that we eat and breathe and drink and see. | ||
People have got to start to radically begin to obey their conscience and tell the truth and do the right thing. | ||
People have got to start to get courageous. | ||
And this is the time for everybody to turn and look to God and to pray and to ask for strength and to ask for wisdom to get through this time and to transform and sanctify this country. | ||
And the alternative is that there will be no country. | ||
Is it really only as big as low gas prices? | ||
Is it really only so big as bringing inflation and gas prices and the corporate tax rate back down? | ||
It's not about waiting for someone to come in and change the policy and make it better. | ||
It's a personal decision that we all have to make to become soldiers of Christ. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
My own narrative is not one of some sudden, looming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Greupel Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and, of course, defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure that | ||
the future and the success of that movement. | ||
We paved the way with our courts, those roipers and all the alt-riders that got banned, all the alt-riders that got slandered, even people that killed themselves. | ||
Our courts has paved the way for you now to walk over. | ||
And you can't give us acknowledgement. | ||
Now you want to slam the door on us. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not right. | |
In the days after the September attacks, there were countless rumors about strange coincidences surrounding the events. | ||
One report about a group of Middle Eastern men spotted the morning of September 11th parked just across the river from New York City has not gone away. | ||
*Music* The Romans? | ||
Whatever they know. | ||
You're looking at him, asshole. | ||
You're looking at him, asshole. | ||
She want to fuck up the pan. | ||
I put the crumb on the fence. | ||
It couldn't be more clear cut. | ||
The way things are going... | ||
It's over. | ||
Forget about it. | ||
Everything good is over. | ||
Everything good about our society is over. | ||
When you drive into a nice, rich suburb and breathe it in, because it's done. | ||
It's gone. | ||
Go to a nice suburb where the lawns are nicely kept, where the mailman walks around and delivers the mail, where people are walking their dogs, and little kids are ice skating in the park, and people are driving around, and they're driving clean cars, and the houses are maintained and kept up, and you go down to the bakery, and you get a... | ||
we can't even get into the transportation. | ||
Maybe somewhere you go to a train station and people politely wait for people to leave before they enter. | ||
You go to an elevator and people wait for the people leaving the elevator before they get in. | ||
Things work. | ||
You go to the grocery store. | ||
There's food. | ||
unidentified
|
You walk around. | |
The air is clean. | ||
unidentified
|
The water's clean. | |
Things are running on time. | ||
Things are reliable. | ||
Breathe it all in and appreciate it while it lasts because it's all going out. | ||
This country is going to be mostly non-white by the end of this century. | ||
That's going to be in the lifetimes of our grandchildren. | ||
I'm a young guy. | ||
That's going to be, if I have kids, a generation of my grandchildren. | ||
They're going to be living in South Africa. | ||
Graffiti, violence, litter, weeds everywhere, dust and dirt and filth. | ||
And open sewage. | ||
And the water's poisonous and the air is poisonous. | ||
And the government's unstable. | ||
And the entertainment is slop and trash. | ||
And everything is just going to suck. | ||
Okay? | ||
We're fighting for our lives here. | ||
We're fighting for our civilization. | ||
The question is, is it worth it? | ||
And a lot of people, you know, they sort of understand where things are headed. | ||
It's good enough now. | ||
And many people are just trying to enjoy the last hurrah before it's all over. | ||
People are living lives of hedonism, taking advantage while they can. | ||
Or they're living more responsible lives, but similarly, just trying to soak it in while they still can. | ||
And ignoring, living in a sort of self-imposed naivete or delusion about what's going on just outside the city gates, outside of the gated community, on the other side of the tracks, downtown, wherever. | ||
Can't do it forever. | ||
Can't run forever. | ||
Question is, is our civilization worth it? | ||
Is it worth it to have a civilization like this on Earth? | ||
There is something involved where we have to forgive them. | ||
We do have to forgive them for their ignorance. | ||
We do have to forgive them for their misunderstanding. | ||
And we have to embrace them and say, better late than never. | ||
Welcome to the right side of history. | ||
Welcome to our massive vision. | ||
our massive and ambitious vision for how we want the world to be. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
you Saying to me is like this is probably pretty cool for you. | ||
I'm like yeah My | ||
my soldiers push forward my soldiers scream out my soldiers rage I can't see a damn thing if they ain't guap I can't see a damn thing if they ain't guap yeah they like Steven they can't see me they won't beat me I'm in that guinea you can't go back to the past that's what people are We always say, isn't it? | ||
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 to convert really more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't believe in the real world. | ||
Our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're gonna do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're gonna make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
unidentified
|
It's the only way. | |
We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because if there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny, then nothing can stop us. | ||
unidentified
|
and not English. | |
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
Is your right. | ||
That ain't your main idea. | ||
This ain't your pick up. | ||
I'm a fly guy. | ||
You got no pain, you got no bangers, you can fuck with a tie. | ||
You don't got your friend, no pain, you can fuck with a tie. | ||
There's some haters, they fucking with the world, go on. | ||
America first is inevitable, it's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's pain. | ||
Too much favor on your side. | ||
Except to manage your voice and save you, I reply. | ||
I should look at me but nothing bad. | ||
I'm a fly, that's on God. | ||
It's like the rightest in the dark. | ||
They go, they get my heart. | ||
And all my blood is locked up on the guard. | ||
You can feel the interesting you wanna be. | ||
One from one and four to one and three. | ||
Thirteen from limit, gotta end it, that's on me. | ||
Be the new commander and the chief. | ||
That's the three. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God. | ||
You create fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God. | ||
Has won the victory, bro. | ||
You're the new commander and love of God. | ||
We brainwashed out here, bro. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
This is a free man talking. | ||
I don't turn that to see you. | ||
I don't turn that to see you. | ||
I don't turn that to see you. | ||
I don't turn that to see you. | ||
unidentified
|
Never, ever, ever give up. | |
Don't give in. | ||
Don't back down. | ||
And never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | ||
And the more righteous you fight, the more opposition that you will face. | ||
In your hearts are inscribed the values of service, sacrifice, and devotion. | ||
Now you must go forth into the world and turn your hopes and dreams into action. | ||
America has always been the land of dreams because America is a nation of true believers. | ||
When the pilgrims landed at Plymouth, they prayed. | ||
When the founders wrote the Declaration of Independence, they invoked our Creator four times. | ||
Because in America, we don't worship government. | ||
We worship God. | ||
It is why our currency proudly declares, "In God we trust." And it's why we proudly proclaim that we are one nation under God. | ||
The story of America is the story of an adventure that began with deep faith, big dreams, and humble beginnings. | ||
The next generation of American leaders, never, ever give up. | ||
There'll be times in your life you'll want to quit. | ||
Never quit. | ||
Never stop fighting for what you believe in and for the people who care about you. | ||
Carry yourself with dignity and pride. | ||
Demand the best from yourself. | ||
The more people tell you it's not possible. | ||
That it can't be done, the more you should be absolutely determined to prove them wrong. | ||
Treat the word impossible as nothing more than motivation. | ||
Relish the opportunity to be an outsider. | ||
The more that a broken system tells you that you're wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing. | ||
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
|
Jacob's Jesus Jesus | |
Jesus Jesus 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. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
Thank you so much, everybody. | ||
Can I just say, are you trusting Brian? | ||
Yes. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
|
We all salute the same great American flag. | |
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
Are you winning, son? | ||
Are you winning, son? | ||
I wish that you cocaine-play patient. | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden looming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Mommy Malcolm? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Greupel Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and, of course, defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
unidentified
|
Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Donald Trump, were all cut from the same cloth, and that cloth is very, very large. | |
It's not too big, is it? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey. | |
Hey yourself. | ||
It's wrong, isn't it? | ||
It feels so right. | ||
I put together some I like that. | ||
Go gig or go home. | ||
Donald Trump. | ||
You know, you're really beautiful. | ||
A woman that looks like that has to have a special set. | ||
It's the dolly. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Hey, Donald. | ||
You look great. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm Donald. | ||
It's the special. | ||
Justin, are you begging her? | ||
Are you? | ||
You don't know. | ||
You speak to that. | ||
You're going to the show. | ||
Look at this right here on the street. | ||
It's Donald Trump. | ||
He was. | ||
Donald. | ||
He's here. | ||
He's here. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Everything's set for tonight, Mr. Trump. | ||
I wonder what Trump's game is this time. | ||
Trump's got a new day. | ||
Trump's got a new deal. | ||
Watch your game, Donald. | ||
Heard about Trump's new deal? | ||
What? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
Trump. | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
He said that I'm doing 20-something. | ||
Trump has a new game. | ||
What is it? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
My new game is Trump. | ||
The game. | ||
Trump. | ||
The game. | ||
This sounds like political presidential Trump. | ||
You said, though, that if you did run for president, you believe you'd win. | ||
I like that. | ||
I would say that I would have a hell of a chance of winning. | ||
I've never learned to lose. | ||
I've never learned to lose in my life. | ||
I don't know how your audience is, but I think people are tired of seeing the United States ripped off. | ||
That's the guy on the far, right? | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I believe that. | ||
Okay, kids, make it fast. | ||
I've got to play. | ||
Can you create a magazine? | ||
Mr. Trump. | ||
We can do it. | ||
Scalch. | ||
So far. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Down the wall. | ||
Down the wall. | ||
Your male modeling would be what it is today. | ||
They see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their position. | ||
You, America, in such a way is merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
We're going to smash your brain and read the Bible, idiots. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | |
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough, man? | ||
Shit. | ||
Just eat a Big Mac, you stupid bitch. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
Woo! | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
You're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
It's not funny. | ||
Sipping wine. | ||
Having some, uh, some hot stuff and some pizza. | ||
Oh! | ||
I'm weird. | ||
I'm normal. | ||
I'm, I'm the, well, I'm not normal. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm an expensive drink. | |
I'm 40. I'm original. | ||
All right, I'm an original. | ||
I'm an original. | ||
One person raised his voice. | ||
The teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
But in the end, he had logic on his side. | ||
And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Ford. | ||
I'm out. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You're talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory. | ||
Bro. | ||
I like this. | ||
This is what you like. | ||
I was. | ||
Highlight, but nobody never tell you to meet me Like Christ, only ever seeing me Ones when the key to me Like a Tyler Perry made a movie Searching for a deity Now you wanna see it free Now you wanna see it free Like to see it free of peace Tell me what you like like Turn it down to the right | ||
Like, I was driving with my dad And he told me it ain't price-like I'm just trying to find I've been looking for a new way I'm just really trying not to reach Do the full way I don't have a pool Being on my Pesto If I can hold a textile Nothing to tell textile Got another word Better picture or a test Smoked Rest in love with God I don't really wanna rest So Spanish will be life-like Everything in my life Talking with my dad And he said it ain't Christ-like America first is inevitable Unstoppable | ||
And the reason why Is because It's not real To build a big business It's not cool To shill for Israel It's not This is a Christian nation This is America I fear and | ||
love God When you remove The fear and love of God You create the fear And love of everything else I like to | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Voipers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, to the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Cheers everybody. | |
Cheers everybody. | ||
you It's gonna happen. | ||
It's gonna happen. | ||
They kick me off the plane, you know what that means? | ||
White boy summer road trip. | ||
They give us lemons, we make lemonade. | ||
They throw me behind bars, and I start throwing baseball up against the wall, and now I'm playing catch. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
The only time that they win is when they triumph over our spirit, but they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
And I believe in America. | ||
unidentified
|
And I believe in what I'm doing. | |
We are still enjoying. | ||
unidentified
|
White Boy Summer is still on it. | |
I don't care if I have to drive there. | ||
I don't care if I have to get in Lake Michigan and go all the way around the Panama Canal. | ||
unidentified
|
Nothing is going to stop White Boy Summer. | |
Nothing is going to stop America first. | ||
unidentified
|
America first, bitch. | |
There's always a way. | ||
In Alaska, white people found in this country. | ||
This country wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
Wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
And white people are done being bullied. | ||
Done being bullied. | ||
We're the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
unidentified
|
And I think our ancestors smile on us right now for what we're doing. | |
Cheers. | ||
In the days after the September attacks, there were countless rumors about strange coincidences surrounding the events. | ||
One report about a group of Middle Eastern men spotted the morning of September 11th parked just across the river from New York City has not gone away. | ||
*Music* And the Romans? | ||
Who are they now? | ||
You're looking at them asshole. | ||
*Music* you you you | ||
We paved the way with our corpses. | ||
Ruypers and all the alt-riders that got banned, all the alt-riders that got slandered, even people that killed themselves. | ||
Our courses paved the way for you now to walk over. | ||
And you can't give us acknowledgement? | ||
Now you want to slam the door on us? | ||
It's not right. | ||
that's not right. | ||
We're bringing humanity back. | ||
We're making humanity cool again. | ||
If you want like the aloof corporate, you know, robot people, okay, you know, go somewhere else. | ||
This is the human stream. | ||
This is the human being stream. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching human beings first. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a human being. | |
We got a great show for you tonight. | ||
Our feature story is about how humanity is back. | ||
Humanity is back, and the real human beings are back. | ||
unidentified
|
And we've got a lot to talk about, lots to get into. | |
Follow my telegram channel at realhumanbeing.org, realhuman.com. | ||
Give me your email, which should be human at human.com. | ||
I'm being silly, but it's true. | ||
unidentified
|
It's true. | |
Some people get it, some people don't. | ||
It's the human against the haters. | ||
A lot of haters, a lot of bitterness, a lot of resentment. | ||
unidentified
|
And, you know, there's... | |
The human beings have to rise up. | ||
You know, against all the hate, against all odds, against all the snipes, and the jabs, and the feds, and the journalists, and the doubters, and the traitors, and the deceivers, the human beings got to rise up! | ||
And we've got to do what must be done no matter what. | ||
With the power of God, with the will of God guiding us, God paving a path, we've got to rise up with our God-given strength and we've got to be human again. | ||
unidentified
|
We've got to be really and truly and extremely human. | |
And we're looking at being human very strongly. | ||
It's called being human and we're looking at it very strongly. | ||
unidentified
|
Nobody's a bigger human being than me. | |
And it's so true, and I say it all the time, and it's truly special. | ||
It's going to be something truly special. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
I'm not supposed to be here tonight. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
unidentified
|
I want this I thought for myself. | |
I'm doing drugs without a help. | ||
My voice is nothing but I scream without a help. | ||
I stretch my hair but my coat just goes up. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
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. | ||
They're manipulating the conversation. | ||
And Elon retweeted today, or reposted, Trump saying in June, staple the green cards to the diplomas. | ||
unidentified
|
And that's a reminder, hey, this is what we got. | |
This is the deal. | ||
I put in 277. | ||
I bought the platform for you. | ||
I made Trump win. | ||
And now Trump's gonna deliver. | ||
And if you're against it, well, there goes your checkmark. | ||
If you voted for him, you are a sucker. | ||
I expect apologies. | ||
I want apology forms. | ||
I want you to- I'm sorry, Mr. Puentes. | ||
unidentified
|
I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War | |
2. I should have supported Groy for War | ||
2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have | ||
supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have | ||
supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. I should have supported Groy for War 2. My love has got no fame. | ||
He's got his strong beliefs. | ||
My love has got no money. | ||
He's got his strong beliefs. | ||
Want more and more. | ||
People just want more and more. | ||
Freedom and love. | ||
What he's looking for. | ||
One more and more. | ||
People just want more and more. | ||
Freedom and love. | ||
What he's looking for. | ||
Freedom and love. | ||
My senses purify. | ||
Feed from desire. | ||
My senses purify. | ||
Feed from desire. | ||
My senses purify. | ||
Feed from desire. | ||
The na na na na na na na na. | ||
I'm gonna... | ||
We do have to forgive them for their ignorance. | ||
We do have to forgive them for their misunderstanding. | ||
And we have to embrace them and say, Better late than never. | ||
Welcome to the right side of history. | ||
Welcome to our massive vision. | ||
our massive and ambitious vision for how we want the world to be. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
We'll be right back. | ||
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... | ||
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God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the, you know, richest person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
I think they've been extremely unfair to you. | ||
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Who is they, though? | |
We can't tell you who they is, can we? | ||
There is no future if we do nothing now. | ||
There is nothing to lose. | ||
People that are scrambling, trying to protect their ever-shrinking share of what they have are foolish. | ||
It's all going. | ||
It's all going away. | ||
This country is being ripped apart and raped and looted. | ||
We're being slowly poisoned and, in some cases, quickly murdered and assassinated. | ||
And we're killing ourselves every day, inadvertently, with the kinds of things that we eat and breathe and drink and see. | ||
People have got to start to radically begin to obey their conscience and tell the truth and do the right thing. | ||
People have got to start to get courageous. | ||
And this is the time for everybody to turn and look to God and to pray and to ask for strength and to ask for wisdom to get through this time and to transform and sanctify this country. | ||
And the alternative is that there will be no country. | ||
Is it really only as big as low gas prices? | ||
Is it really only so big as bringing inflation and gas prices and the corporate tax rate back down? | ||
It's not about waiting for someone to come in and change the policy and make it better. | ||
It's a personal decision that we all have to make to become soldiers of Christ. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
My own narrative is not one of some sudden, looming bolt of lightning out of the globe. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
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Why are you called Mommy Malkin? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Greupel Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Schill, Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty and, | ||
of course, defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure For the future and the success of that movement. | ||
We've paved the way with our corpses. | ||
Ruypers and all the alt-riders that got banned. | ||
All the alt-riders that got slandered. | ||
Even people that killed themselves. | ||
Our corpses paved the way for you now to walk over. | ||
And you can't give us acknowledgement. | ||
Now you want to slam the door on us. | ||
It's not right. | ||
That's not right. | ||
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That's not right. | |
In the days after the September attacks, there were countless rumors about strange coincidences surrounding the events. | ||
One report about a group of Middle Eastern men spotted the morning of September 11th parked just across the river from New York City has not gone away. | ||
*music* | ||
*music* | ||
It couldn't be more clear-cut. | ||
The way things are going, this civilization is over. | ||
It's over. | ||
Forget about it. | ||
Everything good is over. | ||
Everything good about our society is over. | ||
When you drive into a nice, rich suburb and breathe it in, because it's done. | ||
It's gone. | ||
Go to a nice suburb where the lawns are nicely kept, where the mailman walks around and delivers the mail, where people are walking their dogs and little kids are ice skating in the park. | ||
And people are driving around and they're driving clean cars and the houses are maintained and kept up and you go down to the bakery and you get a... | ||
we can't even get into the transportation. | ||
Maybe somewhere you go to a train station and people politely wait for people to leave before they enter. | ||
You go to an elevator and people wait for the people leaving the elevator before they get in. | ||
Things work. | ||
You go to the grocery store. | ||
There's food. | ||
unidentified
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You walk around. | |
The air is clean. | ||
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The water's clean. | |
Things are running on time. | ||
Things are reliable. | ||
Breathe it all in and appreciate it while it lasts because it's all going out. | ||
This country is going to be mostly non-white by the end of this century. | ||
That's going to be in the lifetimes of our grandchildren. | ||
I'm a young guy. | ||
That's going to be, if I have kids, a generation of my grandchildren. | ||
They're going to be living in South Africa. | ||
Graffiti, violence, litter, weeds everywhere, dust and dirt and filth. | ||
And open sewage. | ||
And the water's poisonous and the air is poisonous. | ||
And the government's unstable. | ||
And the entertainment is slop and trash. | ||
And everything is just going to suck. | ||
Okay? | ||
We're fighting for our lives here. | ||
We're fighting for our civilization. | ||
The question is, is it worth it? | ||
And a lot of people, you know, they sort of understand where things are headed. | ||
It's good enough now. | ||
And many people are just trying to enjoy the last hurrah before it's all over. | ||
People are living lives of hedonism, taking advantage while they can. | ||
Or they're living more responsible lives, but similarly, just trying to soak it in while they still can. | ||
And ignoring, living in a sort of self-imposed naivete or delusion about what's going on just outside the city gates, outside of the gated community, on the other side of the tracks, downtown, wherever. | ||
Can't do it forever. | ||
Can't run forever. | ||
The question is, is our civilization worth it? | ||
Is it worth it to have a civilization like this on Earth? | ||
There is something involved where we have to forgive them. | ||
We do have to forgive them for their ignorance. | ||
We do have to forgive them for their misunderstanding. | ||
And we have to embrace them and say, better late than never. | ||
Welcome to the right side of history. | ||
Welcome to our massive vision. | ||
our massive and ambitious vision for how we want the world to be. | ||
unidentified
|
*music* | |
He's like, this is probably pretty cool for you. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
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Hey. | |
Good shoot. | ||
The rage has fallen. | ||
The anguish has fallen. | ||
Their lives have meaning because we, the living, refuse to forget them! | ||
And as we ride to certain death, we trust our successors to do the same for us! | ||
Because my soldiers do not buckle or yield when faced with the cruelty of this world! | ||
My soldiers push forward! | ||
My soldiers scream out! | ||
My soldiers reach! | ||
You can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
They say, "Can we really go back?" And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, We're never going back. | ||
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It's 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 on earth. | ||
unidentified
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We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth. | |
We love everybody. | ||
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And we want people that can burn really more than anyone. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't believe in the real world. | ||
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're gonna do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're gonna make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
unidentified
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It's the only way. | |
We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because if there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to beat their final destiny, then nothing can stop us. | ||
unidentified
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and dropping it. | |
*music* | ||
*music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* *music* | ||
*music* *music* *music* It's brilliant! | ||
It's brilliant! | ||
America first, Vietnam! | ||
It's inevitable. | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | ||
It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
It's hell. | ||
How you put too much paper on your side And just to mention what you say, yeah, I reply. | ||
I should look at me but not to fly. | ||
I'm a bad. | ||
That's on God. | ||
You got lights shining bright as in the dark. | ||
They go come to know they got my heart. | ||
And all my blood is blocked upon the yard. | ||
You can feel the same thing you want to be. | ||
You can feel the same thing you want to be. | ||
One from one to four to one to three. | ||
Thirteen from limit gather in the destiny. | ||
I fear and love. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
Definitely. | ||
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God. | ||
Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
This, this is a Christian nation. | ||
This is a miracle. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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. | ||
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Never, ever, ever give up. | |
Don't give in. | ||
Don't back down. | ||
And never stop doing what you know is right. | ||
Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy. | ||
And the more righteous you 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, 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 dreams. | ||
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. | ||
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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. | ||
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We'll be right back. | |
May God bless the United States. | ||
United States of America. | ||
And I just want to let you know that God blesses you. | ||
And I want to just say you are special in every way. | ||
God bless you and God bless America. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
Thank you so much, everybody. | ||
Can I just say, are you trusting Brian? | ||
Yes. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The future belongs to the people who follow their heart no matter what the critics say. | ||
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We must always remember that we share one home and one glorious destiny. | |
We all bleed the same red blood of patriots. | ||
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We all salute the same great American flag. | |
Our best days are yet to come. | ||
Are you okay? | ||
winning send. | ||
I know I saw a foot first, so I'm tiny, deep in my eyes, I'm getting like the only thing I can do. | ||
I know I saw a foot first, so I'm getting like the only thing I can do. | ||
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. | ||
unidentified
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
unidentified
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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. | ||
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 Friday. | ||
We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
Lots to get into. | ||
Big show. | ||
It's actually kind of a slow news day, so it's not the biggest show ever. | ||
It's not the biggest, most exciting show you're ever going to see in your life, but it's going to be an okay show. | ||
We're talking about the border bill or the budget bill, whatever it is. | ||
We're talking about a bill. | ||
And the featured story is that the House of Representatives passed the president's big, beautiful bill. | ||
That's literally what they're calling it. | ||
It's the big, beautiful budget bill bill. | ||
And this is their budget reconciliation bill that we've been talking about for months. | ||
This is, it's like an agenda bill. | ||
They're going to pass everything that they want. | ||
In this president's second term in this bill, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on Social Security. | ||
They're going to make the original tax cut permanent. | ||
It's going to cost many trillions of dollars, so they have to find some ways to cut it, and that's the big controversy. | ||
And there's no indication that this bill is going to pass in its current form or anytime soon. | ||
But it just cleared the House a couple of days ago. | ||
By one vote, it passed the House of Representatives 215 to 214. | ||
And there were two House Freedom Caucus members that voted against it. | ||
One voted present. | ||
It seems that even if this is the final form of the bill, it might not pass the House to go to the president's desk. | ||
So now it's on its way to the Senate. | ||
The Senate is considering the bill, and they don't even like what they have. | ||
So this bill barely passed the House, barely got every Republican on board, literally by one vote. | ||
It may not even go back through the House, and yet now the Senate is saying they have tons of problems with the bill. | ||
For starters, the bill slashes Medicaid. | ||
It's going to cost trillions of dollars to make the corporate tax cut from 2017 permanent, and that's what it is. | ||
It's going to cost trillions of dollars for all the other tax cuts. | ||
And there's an expansion of military spending, massive increase to the budget for the DOD. | ||
There is a lot of money for the border and for ICE. | ||
To pay for all this, they're going to cut Medicaid. | ||
They're going to make it more means-tested. | ||
There's going to be work requirements, which means that the lowest income earners are going to lose benefits. | ||
And that is the question. | ||
How much are we going to spend? | ||
How are we going to pay for it? | ||
And how we pay for it may be politically suicidal. | ||
Cutting Medicaid to pay for a corporate tax cut, not a winner, not politically a winning issue. | ||
So many Republicans in the Senate and even the House, understandably, are very concerned about that. | ||
They're shooting for July 4th to finish the process. | ||
So we'll talk all about that and what's going to be in the bill. | ||
In particular, we'll get into some of the spending on border. | ||
Because there's some good stuff on the border, but it's not as good as the original bill. | ||
And it'll probably be worse once it goes through the Senate. | ||
And we'll talk about, again, some of the political ramifications. | ||
We're also going to talk tonight about the potentially final round, the fifth and final round of U.S.-Iran negotiations, which took place actually earlier today. | ||
And we talked a lot about this earlier in the week. | ||
I talked about it with Alex Jones yesterday afternoon. | ||
And yesterday, it was put together in 72 hours. | ||
There was a fifth round of discussions between the foreign minister of Iran and Steve Witkoff. | ||
It took place in Italy, in Rome. | ||
And the talks were not good. | ||
They were not good. | ||
The first two rounds of talks, very positive, very constructive. | ||
Everybody was happy. | ||
Third round was a disaster. | ||
Fourth round was a disaster. | ||
Fifth round yesterday, all signs indicate it might have been a disaster. | ||
Iran came into it saying, look, if you let us have enrichment, we have a deal. | ||
If you don't, we don't. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
And both parties left the negotiations. | ||
Actually, the United States left early. | ||
Steve Witkoff met with Israel before meeting with Iran. | ||
And his meeting with Israel went 40 minutes too late. | ||
So he made the Iranian foreign minister wait all that time. | ||
And then he left early. | ||
Then he left 20 minutes early, and the negotiations, which are supposed to be three hours, they only lasted two hours and 20 minutes. | ||
And both sides came away without a deal. | ||
And the United States did not articulate a position that would give Iran any indication that there's going to be a deal. | ||
So we'll talk a little bit about that as well. | ||
Of course, you know what that means. | ||
If there's no deal, there's going to be a war. | ||
So we'll talk all about that. | ||
Should be a pretty good show. | ||
Before we get into it, I want to remind you to smash the follow button on Rumble. | ||
Smash the like button. | ||
Leave a comment down below. | ||
I was a little bit later than I wanted to be tonight. | ||
But you know what, guys? | ||
I'm just... | ||
It's so hard. | ||
I tried to be on, you know, the clock is ticking and I was... | ||
It's just one of those things. | ||
But it's Casual Friday! | ||
But you know what? | ||
Then I thought it's Casual Friday. | ||
No shirt and tie. | ||
We could be a little casually 15 minutes late and everyone's not going to be mad at me. | ||
But we're here. | ||
We're trying to bring the time earlier. | ||
I know the show keeps getting later and later all the time. | ||
unidentified
|
And so we kind of were there tonight. | |
But yeah, like I said, it's been kind of a slow week. | ||
Not too much has been going on. | ||
I guess that's a good thing. | ||
We had the big shooting on Wednesday night. | ||
So far, it doesn't seem like, you know, knock on wood, I don't want to jinx it, but... | ||
It doesn't seem like there's going to be any major crackdown. | ||
I hope I'm not eating those words in a few days, but that was probably the biggest breaking news of the week, and like I said, not too much has resulted from that so far. | ||
It's just been a lot of these two big stories, and not for nothing, but I did predict this back in January and February. | ||
I think I said that at the beginning of the week. | ||
If you go back and you watch my show from January and February, I said, look, Trump is going to get a lot of easy wins. | ||
He's going to notch a lot of these executive orders, a lot of the low-hanging fruit. | ||
I said, and then the slog is going to be Iran and budget reconciliation. | ||
You go back on Telegram. | ||
If you search on Telegram, budget and Israel, well, I mean, you'll get a lot of results for Israel, but – And we're in the thick of it. | ||
So I know, you know, some people complain I talk too much about Iran, but that is one of those huge, huge issues. | ||
Very sticky, very complicated issue. | ||
And it's... | ||
In 2017, Trump came into office and it was North Korea. | ||
And their nuclear tests, their warhead and their missile tests they were conducting, which that is what dominated the coverage in February, March, April, May and June 2017. | ||
And it went on for a year until they have the summit in June 2018. | ||
And over the same issue. | ||
Over nuclear proliferation. | ||
Same tactics. | ||
Brinksmanship, carrier strike groups, sailing to the sea of Japan. | ||
I mean, all that stuff. | ||
It's so funny how it mirrors it almost exactly. | ||
And it was the same budget battle. | ||
If you recall, back in 17, it was a substantial fight within the Republican conference, which had the House and the Senate over the omnibus spending bill. | ||
And whether or how we were going to pay for a border wall. | ||
And I believe that was finished by around this time, back in 2017. | ||
So, it's so funny. | ||
I've been doing this show eight years, and it just comes full circle. | ||
It feels like I'm experiencing it all over again. | ||
The same stories, the same arcs, the same complications from when I was a teenager. | ||
from the first Trump administration. | ||
And with that in mind, you have to say that The nuclear issue poses much greater risks. | ||
So, there's that. | ||
But anyway, so, yeah, so it's been kind of slow. | ||
I just say that because I feel even sometimes like it gets a bit monotonous. | ||
I do the show every night and I find myself falling into the same kind of speech and pattern and everything like that. | ||
But, I mean, look, these are the issues. | ||
Someone said that the other day. | ||
I said, look, this is the news. | ||
You know, this is what's going on. | ||
So, not too much else and not a lot of drama either. | ||
I mean, outside of the bookworm situation, which is really a nothing minor deal. | ||
Not too much drama. | ||
So, I don't know. | ||
I guess we're getting ready for the summer. | ||
But, anyway, with that, you know, usually I like to do a little anecdote, but there's nothing going on. | ||
So, I guess we'll dive in. | ||
We'll start talking about, we'll talk about the Iran negotiations. | ||
Just because the budget stuff is just really boring to me. | ||
But we'll get into these Iran negotiations. | ||
I was actually a little bit surprised about this. | ||
So we've been talking about it all week. | ||
And look, it's coming to a head. | ||
I know I've been saying that for a long time, but the deadline is coming up. | ||
This weekend marks the seventh week since Trump made the ultimatum for Iran to make a deal. | ||
I mean, the following week is it. | ||
It's done. | ||
And we're either going to war or there's going to be something like a deal. | ||
Now going into this week, going into Monday, the fifth round of negotiations, which had been scheduled for the previous Sunday, had been canceled. | ||
So they were supposed to have a fifth round of talks this previous weekend. | ||
They had been canceled. | ||
They had been postponed. | ||
Finally, they put something on the calendar. | ||
They said Sunday. | ||
They pulled the plug last minute, and it seemed like... | ||
It was done. | ||
And that's where Israel started to say, we are going in and we're going to strike Iran unilaterally, which we covered, I believe, on Monday or Tuesday. | ||
And then in just the last three days, the last 72 hours, Iran and the United States came together for another round of talks. | ||
They happened this morning in Rome, Italy. | ||
This was the fifth round of talks. | ||
And Iran came into it very pessimistically. | ||
There was a big speech that the Ayatollah gave on Tuesday. | ||
The Supreme Leader gave a speech on Tuesday. | ||
That was the one-year anniversary of their last president who died in a helicopter crash, if you remember that, Ebrahim Raisi. | ||
Mysteriously died. | ||
We don't know if he was assassinated, if maybe his own people took him out. | ||
Maybe it was just a freak accident. | ||
But the Supreme Leader gave a speech on the one-year anniversary of the death of their president, and he said these negotiations have objectively failed. | ||
The United States is not serious. | ||
They don't want to make a deal. | ||
He said their demands are not serious. | ||
The talks have been a failure, and we're not going to proceed. | ||
That's where things stood on Tuesday. | ||
And on the same day, Steve Whitcoff came on television and said respectfully, Our position, and it's the first time they articulated it in a clear and final way, Steve Whitcoff said we're not going to allow Iran to have enrichment. | ||
And we're not going to go into all that. | ||
If you've been watching the show, you know what that means. | ||
At the center of the impasse between Iran and the United States in this nuclear topic, it is that enrichment capability. | ||
Whether they can keep the infrastructure and whether they will continue to. | ||
The United States says they can't enrich. | ||
Now, it's still a little bit ambiguous if we want them to dismantle, if we actually want to oversee that they destroy the centrifuges, or if we just want them to stop enriching with verification. | ||
It's unclear what exactly they're demanding, but what they're saying is, at the minimum, no enrichment can continue. | ||
And Iran says that's not serious. | ||
That's a non-starter. | ||
But they put together these negotiations, like I said, since Tuesday. | ||
After Witkoff gave the position, after the Ayatollah gave the speech and pulled the plug, they came together and they said, we'll have one final round of talks. | ||
It'll be on Friday morning or Friday afternoon, I guess, local time in Italy. | ||
And Iran came into it pessimistically. | ||
They said, we have no hope for a deal. | ||
They said, it's very unlikely that any kind of deal is going to happen. | ||
And Iran said, this is how we're going into it. | ||
They said, if the United States lets us have enrichment, we have a deal. | ||
If they don't let us have it, we don't have a deal. | ||
And it's off. | ||
So this is the story. | ||
This is how it went down. | ||
This is from, I believe, New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, He said the negotiations are too complicated to be resolved in two or three meetings. | ||
He said there was potential for progress in the negotiations after Oman made several new proposals. | ||
Oman's foreign minister said that some but not conclusive progress had been made. | ||
He said we hope to clarify the remaining issues in the coming days to allow us to proceed toward the common goal of reaching a sustainable and honorable agreement. | ||
That's all bullshit. | ||
Seems like nothing happened. | ||
Ahead of Friday's talks, Irakshi said that fundamental differences remained with the United States, adding that Tehran was open to its nuclear sites undergoing further inspections. | ||
He said we will not have an agreement at all if the United States wants to prevent Iran from enriching uranium. | ||
The talks came ahead of a June meeting of the UN nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, and the October expiration of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, the JCPOA. | ||
In a letter to the UN, Aragshi, the foreign minister, wrote, we believe that in the event of any attack on the nuclear facilities of Iran by the Zionist regime, the United States will also be involved in bare legal responsibility. | ||
The Mossad chief David Barnea and strategic affairs minister Ron Dermer met the U.S. negotiator Steve Witkoff on Friday before the talks with Iran. | ||
One idea floated so far might allow Iran to stop enrichment within the country but maintain a supply of uranium provided by a consortium of countries in the region in the United States. | ||
There are multiple countries offering low-enriched uranium that would be used for peaceful purposes, but Iran's foreign ministry has maintained that enrichment must continue within the country's borders, and a similar fuel swap proposal failed to gain any traction in negotiations in 2010. | ||
So it looks like we're at the end of the rope. | ||
And one of two things is going to happen. | ||
Because going into this meeting, it seemed like this was all or nothing for both sides. | ||
I mean, and the reason I restate the timeline is to give you the impression that it seems like if there's no movement on this, I don't see how this goes on much longer. | ||
The United States made their position clear. | ||
Iran made their position clear. | ||
They both have lost faith in these negotiations. | ||
It appears that Israel has been successful at sabotaging them. | ||
Both sides said, look, we'll give it one more try. | ||
It didn't work. | ||
Nothing happened. | ||
There's no agreement. | ||
And it wasn't very positive. | ||
You know, this happened today, and there was no positive reaction from either side. | ||
Neither from Oman, nor Iran, nor the United States. | ||
None of them came away very happy. | ||
There wasn't an agreement. | ||
Now, we'll have to wait and see over the next few days if that changes, if there's another negotiation scheduled. | ||
Even if there is, how much more time can there be? | ||
The Ayatollahs losing faith in it. | ||
We're approaching the deadline set by the United States. | ||
And maybe more importantly, we're reaching this period of time during the year that Israel said they're going to strike Iran. | ||
And that's really the timeline here that matters. | ||
Because as I said from the beginning, as I said last year, we are not operating based on the timeline of Donald Trump. | ||
We're not operating on the timeline of the Supreme Leader or of the JCPOA and its expiration. | ||
We are operating on the timeline of Benjamin Netanyahu and the state of Israel. | ||
That is who is controlling the timeline here. | ||
That's very important to keep in mind. | ||
The United States so far has been unwilling to restrain Israel. | ||
Netanyahu remains in power. | ||
And although there has been some jockeying for political power within his country, he's become very unpopular. | ||
He remains a fixture. | ||
And so the timeline to consider is not even Trump's deadline. | ||
It's not whether the Supreme Leader thinks it's going to work again or even the JCPOA timeline. | ||
It is in particular Israel's estimation of the window of opportunity where they can strike Iran. | ||
It's the strategic consideration. | ||
That is what is dictating the tempo and the timeline here. | ||
So people are talking in terms of these international legal deadlines. | ||
You know, well, the JCPOA expires in October. | ||
That's when Iran will be able to enrich without limitation. | ||
People talk about other things. | ||
It's the strategic situation that is dictating the timeline. | ||
And in particular, that strategic situation is this. | ||
Israel disabled Hezbollah in October of last year, killed their leadership, destroyed their command and control and communications. | ||
Israel has disabled Hamas. | ||
Israel has degraded the Houthis and bombed their ports and their cities. | ||
Maybe most importantly of all, Israel overthrew the government of Bashar al-Assad in Syria. | ||
They expelled the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, which severed the link between Iran and Lebanon. | ||
And Israel destroyed all of Syria's air defenses. | ||
And currently, Syria is in a state of civil war. | ||
This is underreported. | ||
Nobody is talking about this. | ||
But ever since this new government came to power in Syria, on the contrary, people think that that ended the civil war. | ||
The civil war is still raging on. | ||
This new president does not have control of his borders. | ||
The United States remains in Syria. | ||
And although they've moved the troops around, they're still there. | ||
What's more, the new government is massacring and killing the minority Alawite population in the population centers on the Mediterranean coast. | ||
And this is a situation which could blow up at any time. | ||
So, it is the weakness historically of Syria. | ||
It's the instability of that regime. | ||
It is the withdrawal of the IRGC that, In addition to some of what Israel did in Iran last year when they bombed their air defenses in October, this has created a situation, it's perfect, for Israel to bomb Iran. | ||
And Israel doesn't want to pass up on that opportunity. | ||
This is what U.S. intelligence told us in March. | ||
They said that they're shooting for mid-2025. | ||
So that means like end of spring, beginning of summer. | ||
May, June, July 2025, U.S. intelligence said Israel's looking at bombing Iran's nuclear program somewhere around that time, in that window. | ||
That's where we are. | ||
And it's been all over the press. | ||
Israel says that window of opportunity is closing. | ||
That's why, based on private discussions, based on movement of military hardware, it looks like they're preparing for a strike. | ||
And maybe that's why they tried to get together last minute. | ||
Maybe that's why, based on that news which came out this week, maybe after that report, that is why Iran decided to give the talks another try. | ||
And maybe the United States as well. | ||
Another report came out today. | ||
It said that the United States has conveyed to Iran through Iraq that the United States is demanding that all of Iran's forces leave Iraq. | ||
This is a huge problem. | ||
Because again, we've talked about up until this point, and this has been the subject of the negotiation, there is this impasse between Iran and the United States on the nuclear program, on enrichment. | ||
Iran wouldn't even agree to negotiate if it included anything other than nuclear talks. | ||
They don't want to talk about their missiles. | ||
They don't want to talk about their proxies. | ||
Here we are at the end of the deadline. | ||
Iran is in the crosshairs. | ||
Israel's getting ready, preparing to strike. | ||
Iran has given up on the talks. | ||
The United States is immovable in their red lines. | ||
Looks like it's all over. | ||
And the United States throws another wrench by introducing something that Iran doesn't even want to talk about. | ||
The United States throws a wrench into this already fraught negotiation saying, well, on We want the Hezbollah branch that's in Iraq and all the other Shiite militias that form the basis of Iraq's security force to leave the country. | ||
How's that going to go over? | ||
So it's the end of May, and it's coming to a head. | ||
I don't like where this is going. | ||
And I said this at the top. | ||
One of two things is going to happen here. | ||
Either Trump is going to do something extraordinary. | ||
He's going to kick the can down the road and say, well, you know what? | ||
We're going to give him another 60 days. | ||
Or Trump is going to say we're going to give him until October when the JCPOA expires. | ||
Or Trump will change the punishment mechanism and he'll say, well, we're not going to bomb Iran. | ||
We're going to put... | ||
We'll stop them from selling oil. | ||
Something like that. | ||
So either Trump will budge and he'll massage it and it might give us some more time. | ||
And I think that's a distinct possibility. | ||
Or Trump will do something on the other side. | ||
He will call out Israel directly. | ||
There will be more exposure of Israel's plans. | ||
Maybe the United States will leak it to Iran. | ||
That is what Biden did last year. | ||
Biden gave advance notice to Iran about Israel's counterattack and interceded on their behalf in some ways. | ||
But I think the way it's going to go down is that Israel's going to strike Iran. | ||
I think that's what they want. | ||
That's what their population supports. | ||
That's what they've wanted for 50 or 60 years. | ||
And they're not going to get another opportunity like this. | ||
This is make or break because in the off chance that... | ||
Think about where that goes. | ||
If there is a nuclear deal with Iran, that means Iran has a civilian nuclear program. | ||
They're permanently a threshold nuclear state. | ||
And then they integrate with Saudi Arabia. | ||
They integrate with the other countries in the region. | ||
They deepen their strategic relationship with Russia and China. | ||
That means they're not going anywhere. | ||
They're a fixture. | ||
I don't think Israel allows that. | ||
I don't think they let this one slip through their fingers, and I don't think Trump is going to be the one to stop them, based on what he owes to those people. | ||
So that's the latest on these negotiations. | ||
It was kind of surprising. | ||
I didn't see it covered anywhere. | ||
I was very on top of it. | ||
Of course, we've been following this story on the show for a very long time in tons of detail. | ||
So I was watching and waiting to see what the result would be and how it was going to happen. | ||
I don't see it being reported. | ||
I mean, it's out there, but it's not on the front page. | ||
Nobody seems to be talking about how we're really running out of time here, but we are. | ||
And I've been saying it really from the beginning, and every prediction has come true so far. | ||
There were people a year ago saying the war in Gaza was going to gradually come to an end. | ||
I remember. | ||
I remember back in the beginning of 2024, people were saying, oh, that's all overblown. | ||
They're going to bring the war to an end. | ||
And think about all the surprises from the Pager attacks, the decapitation of the Hamas leadership in Iran. | ||
Think about what they did in Syria. | ||
They overthrew Bashar al-Assad. | ||
Nobody thought that was going to happen. | ||
People thought that was over. | ||
People said, it's unrealistic they're going to deport all these people. | ||
Now Trump is facilitating it. | ||
It's like, so every... | ||
It has been consistent with that from the start. | ||
And if that's the case, then we have a lot of reason to be very concerned about this. | ||
And you know what? | ||
It might not happen. | ||
I mean, you never know. | ||
I don't understand the people that have this total confidence that it's going to be okay. | ||
I see this on Twitter, and every time you see something positive about Iran, you get these guys like Kurt Mills, who I have decided to pick on, who really bothers me for some reason. | ||
You get these big Trump cheerleaders, these Tucker Carlson. | ||
Tucker Carlson seems to be concerned about it. | ||
Kurt Mills doesn't. | ||
Some of the big cheerleaders at Amcon, they don't. | ||
And every time there's a positive development, they're on the timeline saying, see, trust the plan. | ||
I told you we have no reason to worry. | ||
It's like we have every reason to worry. | ||
This is bad stuff. | ||
But what can you do? | ||
So anyway, so that's the latest update on what's happening in Iran. | ||
We'll see how that turns out. | ||
We'll probably have an update on Monday. | ||
We'll have to see what happens this weekend. | ||
I mean, are they going to bomb them this weekend? | ||
Is there going to be some breakthrough? | ||
Maybe there's a follow-up conversation. | ||
Maybe they schedule another talk. | ||
I don't know, but we're on the knife's edge here. | ||
So we'll see what happens next week. | ||
But I do want to move on. | ||
I want to get into the budget reconciliation bill. | ||
Somehow this is even more boring. | ||
You know, this has been in the news for a long time, but I haven't covered it because I really just hate talking about these fiscal matters. | ||
To me, it's the most boring thing ever. | ||
We're going to get into it because it is newsworthy. | ||
And in particular, the reason why we're talking about budget reconciliation, it matters for the economy. | ||
It matters for some other reasons. | ||
What really matters about this budget bill, the reason you need to care, is because whether or not we carry out the mass deportations has everything to do with this bill. | ||
Because if you've been following the mass deportation immigration story, Going back eight years, the problem has always been a lack of appropriations, or that's what they say. | ||
There's no money for a border wall. | ||
They say they don't have the infrastructure, they don't have the personnel to deport a large number of people. | ||
They don't have enough ICE agents, they don't have enough Border Patrol agents, they don't have enough detention capacity to detain illegal immigrants while they adjudicate whether or not they should be deported. | ||
And so Trump is asking Congress for over $100 billion for Border Patrol and for ICE. | ||
It's split between them. | ||
It's about $65 billion for border, and it's actually a little bit more for deportations. | ||
It's about $81 billion for deportations. | ||
This all comes down to this budget reconciliation process. | ||
So the Republicans have control of the House. | ||
They have control of the Senate. | ||
In order to get anything passed, anything substantial in the Senate, you need a supermajority. | ||
So Republicans have 53 votes, technically 54 with a tiebreaker. | ||
You need 60 votes to get anything passed. | ||
And that has to do with some of the procedural rules. | ||
We're not going to get into that. | ||
But basically, to get anything passed through the Senate that affects policy, that affects budget, that affects anything, you need 60 votes. | ||
That means Republicans are going to need six Democrats. | ||
That's not going to happen. | ||
Every year, there is a provision, and this is procedural. | ||
It's called the budget reconciliation process. | ||
Now, a bill that affects one of three things can pass the Senate with a simple majority. | ||
So you get this once per fiscal year. | ||
You can pass a bill with just 51 votes or a simple majority if it increases revenue, decreases spending, or raises the debt ceiling. | ||
This has been in the procedural rulebook for 50 years. | ||
It's called the budget reconciliation process. | ||
And this is how the parties have gotten around the filibuster. | ||
This is how they get around that 60-vote threshold. | ||
And so once per year, technically they could do it three times. | ||
They could do a bill that increases revenue, they could do a bill that decreases spending, or they could do a bill that increases the debt ceiling. | ||
Typically, they combine it into one. | ||
And they could do each of those once per fiscal year. | ||
Again, usually they combine them into one bill. | ||
They have a bill that increases revenue, decreases spending, or increases the debt ceiling. | ||
And that way they can put in certain tax cuts, changes to the tax code. | ||
They could put in guidelines on how they're going to appropriate money. | ||
They could jam all this stuff in there and they could pass it along party lines with a simple majority. | ||
That's what they're trying to do. | ||
That's what they've been trying to do. | ||
Ever since January, Republicans who have a very slim majority in the House, they have a two-vote majority there. | ||
They've got a three-vote majority in the Senate, which is a little more substantial but not a supermajority. | ||
They have been trying to cobble together their own majority to pass a budget reconciliation bill that does everything that Trump wants to do. | ||
So Trump promised that he wants to make the 2017 tax cuts permanent. | ||
The tax cuts in 2017 were passed using the same budget reconciliation process. | ||
And that is what cut the corporate tax rate from 35%, I think down to 24%. | ||
And it changed the marginal tax rates. | ||
It cut them a little bit. | ||
It doubled the standard deduction. | ||
It changed the tax code for a lot of people, but the big piece was that it significantly lowered the corporate tax rate. | ||
So Trump wants to make that permanent. | ||
He wants to eliminate all taxes on TIPS. | ||
He wants to eliminate taxes on Social Security benefits. | ||
He wants to eliminate taxes on car loans. | ||
I guess interest on car loans or something like that. | ||
In addition, he wants to increase the military budget to a trillion dollars. | ||
And like I said, he wants money for... | ||
He wants something like 140, 170. | ||
It was 170. | ||
Now it's down to 140 billion. | ||
But he wants $140 billion for the border wall, for mass deportations, for other immigration enforcement. | ||
Now here's the problem. | ||
So Trump wants all this stuff in one big, beautiful bill. | ||
That's been the debate. | ||
There are some in the Republican conference that want to pass multiple bills. | ||
They want to pass one bill with the tax cuts. | ||
They want to pass another bill with the spending increases. | ||
Trump says, no, I want everything in one agenda bill. | ||
I want one big, beautiful bill. | ||
The problem is this. | ||
In order for Republicans to pass it, they have to use budget reconciliation because they don't have 60 votes in the Senate. | ||
But to access the budget reconciliation process, the bill has to be budget neutral. | ||
It can't increase the deficit. | ||
So the tax cuts are going to increase the deficit. | ||
Increasing the budget for border security and military is going to increase the deficit. | ||
These are two things that increase spending. | ||
Cutting taxes brings in less revenue, and increasing spending spends more money. | ||
So, how are they going to access budget reconciliation if they're increasing the deficit by cutting taxes and increasing spending? | ||
They have to offset these things by cutting spending elsewhere. | ||
How do you pay for the corporate tax rate cut? | ||
How do you pay for the tax cuts, which in the long term are going to cost money in lost revenue? | ||
How are you going to pay for the increases in military and border spending? | ||
You have to cut spending elsewhere. | ||
That's the big disagreement. | ||
And that's a big part of why Elon Musk was deployed with Doge. | ||
They thought they were going to waltz in there and cut $2 trillion from the deficit. | ||
They thought they were going to cut $2 trillion in federal spending per year. | ||
Then they said we're going to cut $1 trillion. | ||
Then they said we're going to cut less than that. | ||
That was the goal. | ||
It was a failure. | ||
They cut something like maybe $30 billion, maybe less. | ||
I mean, it's nothing. | ||
They may not even, when all is said and done, have cut spending at all. | ||
Spending may go up, actually. | ||
But so this is the problem. | ||
They want to cut corporate tax rates, they want to cut tax on tips, cut tax on a lot of different things, overtime, Social Security, this and that. | ||
And they want $200 billion more, $150 billion more for military, $150 billion more for border. | ||
How do you pay for it? | ||
Well, they say they're going to cut that from Medicaid. | ||
That's health care for poor people, basically. | ||
They want to cut $880 billion from Medicaid. | ||
And then they want to get rid of all the subsidies in Biden's Inflation Reduction Act. | ||
So Biden's IRA bill had a ton of different tax credits and subsidies for green energy investments and other things. | ||
And it was actually quite successful. | ||
It brought in a lot of investment from Europe. | ||
If you look at after the pandemic, European GDP growth is like nothing, and the United States has been blowing up because we're taking all their business. | ||
So the Inflation Reduction Act, the Biden Infrastructure Law, I mean, these were actually, I mean, they weren't perfect. | ||
CHIPS Act as well. | ||
These series of laws, they weren't perfect. | ||
I mean, it's not what I would have done. | ||
But they were good. | ||
And they were stepping in the right direction. | ||
So Trump wants to gut Medicaid. | ||
He wants to cut a trillion dollars from Medicaid. | ||
And then he wants to get rid of all these green energy subsidies. | ||
That's how they're going to pay for it. | ||
But this creates a big political problem. | ||
Because, I mean, I don't even know if that sounds good on paper. | ||
I was going to say, I mean, maybe that sounds good on paper. | ||
I mean, does it? | ||
They have the midterm elections coming up in 2026. | ||
They're going to start campaigning for that a year from now. | ||
So you think that's so far off. | ||
It's November 2026. | ||
In 12 months, they're going to start campaigning for the 2026 midterms. | ||
Republicans are defending a two-seat majority in the House. | ||
The Senate's probably going to be okay because of the map, but the House might go just like it did in 2018. | ||
So Republicans have to think, how is this going to play in the midterms? | ||
We're going to take health care from poor people to pay for tax cuts for corporations. | ||
How is that going to play? | ||
So there's a lot of debate over this, and it barely passed in the House this week. | ||
It passed the House 215 to 214 by one vote. | ||
Now it's in the Senate, and the Senate's not happy. | ||
The Senate says, we don't agree with the numbers. | ||
They say it doesn't do enough to account for the deficit. | ||
We don't want to cut Medicaid, though. | ||
This is a story. | ||
This is from The Hill. | ||
It says, quote, House Republicans on Thursday passed a sweeping bill full of President Trump's legislative priorities. | ||
The chamber cleared the sprawling package in a 215 to 214 vote. | ||
In the end... | ||
The House Freedom Caucus Chair, Andy Harris, voted present. | ||
The bill, titled One Big Beautiful Bill Act, adopting Trump's slogan for the bill, extends the tax cuts enacted by the president in his first term in 2017, boosts funding for border deportation and national defense priorities, | ||
imposes reforms like beefed-up work requirements on Medicaid, It also does away with taxes on tips and overtime. | ||
The clock is ticking. | ||
Treasury Department Secretary Scott Besson said Congress must raise the debt ceiling by mid-July to avoid an economy-rattling default, leaving lawmakers little time to hash out their differences and deliver Trump a bill. | ||
That he could sign into law. | ||
They said they want to enact the bill by July 4th. | ||
Today, the 1,116-page bill faces a swarm of objections from Senate Republicans. | ||
GOP senators are calling for a rewrite of the bill, so they want to start from scratch, to address concerns ranging from Medicaid reforms and the phase-out of clean energy incentives. | ||
To the sale of government-owned spectrum bans and the bill's projected impact on the federal debt. | ||
The deal struck with Republicans from blue states to raise the cap on the SALT tax deductions from $10,000 to $40,000 is also a sticking point with Republican senators. | ||
The biggest obstacle may be the threatened opposition from Senate conservatives who say the bill doesn't do nearly enough to cut future deficits, which are projected to exceed $2 trillion annually for the next two years. | ||
So we're going to have $2 trillion deficits adding $2 trillion each year to the debt for the next two years. | ||
Senator Ron Johnson, an outspoken fiscal hawk, said Thursday there are four Senate Republican conservatives who will vote against the bill as it is currently drafted, which would be enough to sink it if there is full attendance. | ||
The Congressional Budget Office projects the bill will add another $3.8 trillion to the debt. | ||
Johnson thinks the number is likely to be closer to $4 trillion. | ||
Probably it's higher than that. | ||
Because what they do, excuse me, people complain when I burp on the show. | ||
Pardon me. | ||
Something that they do, in order to make the bill revenue neutral or to make it neutral in terms of deficit, they have to model. | ||
They have to use statistical and mathematical models to predict. | ||
How the tax cuts will affect future revenue and growth. | ||
So you might say, how do they know whether this bill will increase or decrease the deficit? | ||
They use these advanced statistical models to predict if it will grow the economy. | ||
Then how will that affect revenue? | ||
If the economy is bigger and we're taxing it at a lower rate, maybe we're going to get more revenue. | ||
And there's a lot of different hypotheses and models. | ||
And they use different numbers about how to come up with these predictions. | ||
So the rule says, look, if you want to access budget reconciliation, it can't increase the deficit. | ||
It's got to bring down spending, increase revenue, increase the debt ceiling. | ||
In order to make that work, Republicans have a lot of leeway in how they model those predictions. | ||
And what they do is they deliberately fudge the numbers. | ||
They pick numbers that will make it look better than it is. | ||
And they can choose which types of numbers they use and how they calculate certain things. | ||
And so they basically pick the model that says that the impact will be the least significant on deficit. | ||
So when they come up with a prediction and say, well, the official projection says – That's the most favorable number because that means that's the number that allows them to increase spending the most. | ||
There are other models they could use, but those models would show the deficit would go way higher, and that would restrict how much they could increase spending. | ||
So they say, well, we're going to increase the deficit $2 trillion per year. | ||
That's excessive, and it's probably an understatement. | ||
It's almost certainly... | ||
So with that being said, Senate Republicans are coming in and saying there's absolutely no way we're voting for this in its current form. | ||
It doesn't offset the increase in the deficit enough. | ||
You're increasing all the spending between the tax cuts and the increase to military and the border, but you're not doing enough to offset it by cutting Medicaid, by cutting these other things. | ||
And the Senate doesn't want to cut Medicaid either. | ||
They don't want to touch Medicaid either. | ||
So that means if they're not touching Medicaid, but they think it increases the deficit too much, guess what's going to go? | ||
Take a wild guess. | ||
I know. | ||
Maybe this sounds super complicated. | ||
The bill's going to do a few things. | ||
It's going to increase spending for the military, increase spending on border and deportations. | ||
It's going to cut taxes for the poor workers and corporations. | ||
To pay for it, it's going to take a hatchet to Medicaid, which is health care. | ||
Something here has to go. | ||
They don't want to cut Medicaid as much as they are. | ||
They don't want to cut the green subsidies, the other stuff. | ||
They want to keep the tax cuts because that's good for their friends. | ||
They definitely want to keep the increase in spending for the military. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
So what is it that they don't? | ||
What is it that is unacceptable about this bill for the Senate? | ||
What is it that they really don't want? | ||
Let's see. | ||
Something's got to give. | ||
Is it going to be the corporate tax cuts? | ||
Are Republicans going to give up corporate tax cuts? | ||
No, they love corporate tax cuts. | ||
Are they going to make huge cuts to Medicaid? | ||
Which Trump said, don't fuck with Medicaid. | ||
And that's going to bury them in the midterms. | ||
How's that going to play? | ||
No, they're probably not going to cut Medicaid. | ||
Are they going to cut defense spending? | ||
Or I should say the increases to defense spending. | ||
No, they love the military that's always got to go up. | ||
That number's always got to go up because Israel needs their missiles. | ||
So what, what, oh what, are they possibly going to cut when all is said and done? | ||
What are they going to get rid of to bring those deficit numbers down? | ||
It's going to be the border. | ||
All day long it's going to be the border. | ||
And it's already going down. | ||
The original proposal, the original bill they put together had $90 billion. | ||
For border security, $90 billion for border security. | ||
We spend $900 billion on the military. | ||
So this is a big number. | ||
10% of our military budget would be going towards border. | ||
That's actually really substantial. | ||
To put that in perspective, in 2018, Trump was asking for $17 billion for a border wall. | ||
Trump said he wanted $17 billion. | ||
The original bill had $90 billion for the border, so it was like more than four times what he was asking for and didn't get in 2017. | ||
In 2017, they gave him $1.6 billion. | ||
Now, in the first form of the bill, they said $90 billion and $110 billion for ICE, $110 billion for deportations. | ||
So the whole package would be $200 billion. | ||
$200 billion to secure the border and do mass deportations. | ||
If he did that, that would be the home run. | ||
$200 billion to build a border wall, 700 miles of river barrier, 900 miles of land barrier, thousands of border patrol. | ||
I mean, this would have been a serious package. | ||
Detention centers, ICE agents, detention centers in the interior of the country. | ||
A $200 billion package. | ||
The numbers are way down. | ||
That was the first form of the bill. | ||
What they passed in the House on Thursday was $68 billion for the border, down from $90 billion. | ||
So minus $22 billion for the border. | ||
And $81 billion for ICE, down $30 billion. | ||
So we're down $50 billion. | ||
We're already down 25%. | ||
They had $200 billion for border at the beginning of the process. | ||
Now we're down 25%. | ||
Now we're sitting at about $140 billion. | ||
A little bit more than $140 billion for border. | ||
And what are Republicans in the Senate saying? | ||
This is what passed the House. | ||
Republicans in the Senate are saying, it's too much money. | ||
We have to make cuts. | ||
We have to start from scratch. | ||
Are they going to eliminate the corporate tax cut? | ||
No. | ||
Are they going to eliminate tax on tips? | ||
No. | ||
Or I should say eliminate the elimination of the tax on tips? | ||
No. | ||
Are they going to cut more out of Medicaid? | ||
They're going to cut less out of Medicaid. | ||
They're going to cut less out of the green energy subsidies. | ||
They're not going to touch the military because they want a $1 trillion military budget. | ||
And they need it because they want to fight Iran and China and Russia at the same time. | ||
So what's going to go? | ||
It's going to be the border, of course. | ||
And by the way, here's a little secret. | ||
When these Republicans get together and they tell the press, well, we want a bill that's in two pieces. | ||
We want a bill that's in one piece. | ||
We are concerned about the deficit. | ||
They're all speaking in code. | ||
They're all speaking in code. | ||
They don't care whether it's one bill or two bills. | ||
When they're debating about procedure, that is a coded way to debate about policy. | ||
The reason they wanted to pass it in one or two or three separate bills is because they wanted to pass the tax cuts, because that's easy, because they actually want that. | ||
And then when it's time to consider the border appropriations, they want to say, fuck you. | ||
They want to pass the tax cut, and then when it comes time to consider whether we're going to have a border wall, they want to say, ah, geez, best we could do is $10 billion. | ||
Maybe we'll try it again next time. | ||
Maybe we'll try it again after the midterms. | ||
That's exactly what they did in 2017. | ||
That's what they did a couple months ago. | ||
A couple months ago, there was another appropriations crisis. | ||
They were facing another one of these deadlines, and Republicans kicked the can down the road. | ||
They did the same thing in December, if you recall. | ||
They did it in December. | ||
They did it in February. | ||
They kicked the can down the road to July. | ||
And, you know, they might do it all over again. | ||
At the end of it, they might say, you know, we don't want to put a ton of border security in here. | ||
And what's Trump going to do? | ||
They don't listen to him. | ||
So, I hope that there's money for ICE when all is said and done. | ||
But this isn't giving me a ton of confidence. | ||
It started out, like everything else, I got nervous. | ||
It's so funny. | ||
Because, you know, I've been hypercritical of Trump. | ||
I've been very pessimistic. | ||
I've been blackpilled. | ||
Guilty as charged. | ||
And whenever Trump threads to do something really good, I get a little nervous because I say I'm going to look like an idiot. | ||
When Trump said we're going to do Liberation Day, we're going to put a 15% tariff on every country. | ||
I said, damn, he really did it. | ||
I feel dumb. | ||
Then a week later, he backed off completely. | ||
When Trump announced the negotiation with Iran, I said, damn, maybe he is going to make peace in the Middle East. | ||
Well, now they're towing the line and they're adopting Israel's policy and they're getting ready to bomb Iran. | ||
They're putting a strike fighter aircraft in Diego Garcia. | ||
Yeah, not so much. | ||
And earlier in the year, they said, we're going to give $200 billion to ICE to deport a million people per year. | ||
I was like, damn it, maybe they are going to do mass deportations. | ||
Maybe it's going to happen. | ||
But there's still no bill. | ||
It's May. | ||
There's no bill. | ||
They're not even close to an agreement. | ||
The Senate wants to start from scratch. | ||
They want to cut the deficit more. | ||
And that's going to come out of the border. | ||
It keeps going down. | ||
And by the way, here's the timeline. | ||
So Scott Besson said the deadline is July. | ||
I don't think that's true. | ||
Unless the timeline's changed, they have said that the strike date is August or September. | ||
That means that... | ||
Well, when we hit that ceiling, it means the government can't borrow money to pay its obligations. | ||
And that means we default on the debt. | ||
We can't pay Social Security benefits. | ||
We can't pay Medicare benefits. | ||
We can't pay salaries. | ||
Then it turns into how much cash does the government have on hand? | ||
And how much tax will it get? | ||
Or how much cash will it get from taxes to keep paying the government's liabilities? | ||
So they call that the strike date, when the government hits the debt ceiling, they've borrowed so much, they legally cannot borrow anymore, and they have to dig into their cash reserves. | ||
How much cash on hand? | ||
How much cash are they getting from tariffs and taxes and everything? | ||
Now, they say that date is August or September. | ||
And what that means is that's the hard deadline for this bill to pass. | ||
This bill, it does all these things, but it also increases the debt ceiling, $4 trillion. | ||
So Republicans are going back and forth. | ||
Well, we want to pass it by June 15th. | ||
We want to pass it by July 4th. | ||
The real deadline is when the government runs out of money. | ||
And that date might be August. | ||
It might be September. | ||
And if they still don't reach an agreement by then, you know what they might do? | ||
They might say, we're going to pass a stopgap measure. | ||
We're going to pass a temporary measure. | ||
We're going to raise the debt ceiling for six weeks or three months so we can work out these differences and have more time to make a final bill. | ||
Here's the point. | ||
We might not get this bill until fall of this year. | ||
Why does that matter? | ||
Why does it matter That we might not get a final completed version on the president's desk until September. | ||
Because the president signs the bill. | ||
It takes a little while for the funds to hit the bank account. | ||
And if the president is relying on $150 billion for ICE to come from this bill, and it doesn't come until 2026, that means that we're starting the mass deportations during the midterms. | ||
And I've said this repeatedly. | ||
You can't start mass deportations during the midterms. | ||
We did this all before. | ||
We did it in 2018. | ||
The exact same thing happened. | ||
Remember a little expression called kids in cages? | ||
Remember the kids in cages? | ||
Do you want to know when that happened? | ||
That happened in the spring and the summer of 2018. | ||
In other words, half a year before the midterm elections. | ||
That is because It took a year for the Trump administration to get serious on the border. | ||
They implemented a zero-tolerance policy, and that meant they were separating minors from their adult guardians at the border. | ||
And they were detaining the adults and the children separately. | ||
And yeah, they were in cages, okay? | ||
They were in fucking cages. | ||
They were in chain-link fences that resembled cages. | ||
And wall-to-wall, 24-7, that's all the media covered. | ||
In the summer of 2018, kids in cages, zero tolerance, this is a humanitarian disaster. | ||
They took a sledgehammer to the president's approval rating. | ||
And they portrayed it like he was Hitler, like they were concentration camps. | ||
Now what are they going to do? | ||
The Republicans are delaying it. | ||
They're denying by delaying. | ||
They're denying the president's demands by delaying the timeline. | ||
Because they know. | ||
That if they wait until September and the funds don't hit until a few months after and it takes a few months to ramp up, they know it's not going to play that the president is going to be doing door-to-door immigration raids, deporting thousands of people every day in the middle of the midterms. | ||
I mean, you saw the story about that guy that got put in a prison in El Salvador, remember? | ||
Remember that illegal immigrant who was sent to an El Salvadorian prison? | ||
And it turns out he may or may not have been a legal resident or something. | ||
Okay, imagine like 500 of those stories every single day, every day, until the midterms. | ||
That's what we're talking about. | ||
So that's why I said, I said this in like November. | ||
I said, if you want mass deportations, you got to hit the ground running. | ||
You got to do it in 2025. | ||
Because that gives people a chance to forget or get used to it or get tired of hearing about it. | ||
When 2026 rolls around. | ||
But you can't pick it up in the spring of 2026 and say, okay, now we're going to sweep neighborhoods and kick out illegal immigrants that have been here for 20 years. | ||
You can't do it. | ||
Because it will be catastrophic. | ||
And you could already see it in the president's job approval. | ||
His job approval is now underwater. | ||
Now, it's still higher than it was in his first term. | ||
I'll grant that. | ||
But it was... | ||
It was at an all-time high and has precipitously fallen ever since. | ||
In particular with Hispanics. | ||
The Democrats are going to be activated in 26. They're going to regroup. | ||
They're going to be activated. | ||
The media is going to be getting them out there. | ||
You could already see him spinning it up. | ||
And if they get Republicans to start doubting Trump, you know, this new coalition of... | ||
It's not going to be pretty. | ||
And Republicans are going to lose their two-seat majority and then forget about it. | ||
That's what they're setting up for. | ||
And that's exactly the same playbook as in 2018. | ||
Republicans didn't give Trump a border wall in 2017. | ||
In 2018, they gave him a tax cut. | ||
They overturned the individual mandate. | ||
They did stuff like that. | ||
They did nothing on the border. | ||
They did nothing on the border when they won the majority in 2022. | ||
And I don't think they're going to start now. | ||
I am highly skeptical they're going to do anything serious. | ||
And I think this is part of the program because if they wanted to, they could. | ||
If Republicans were serious, they could give an influx of cash for the border. | ||
But I don't think that's what – I think they do not want to close the border. | ||
They do not want mass deportations. | ||
So they're going to deny the president by delaying it until it's not politically feasible. | ||
I hope I'm wrong about that. | ||
I hope they give him a boatload of money for deportations. | ||
I hope Trump follows through and deports a million people per year. | ||
I mean, a million per year? | ||
I'll be reasonable and I'll be fair. | ||
A million per year is a lot. | ||
That would be more than any president in modern history. | ||
To do one million interior removals, I'm not talking about they turn them away at the border. | ||
I'm talking about not a return, removals. | ||
A million removals per year would be massive. | ||
Now, people say, well, 10 million came in, and I get that. | ||
But look, we just don't have, we got to be practical here. | ||
I'd be willing to say a million per year is a huge step up, huge step in the right direction. | ||
And that is so significant that I do believe people would self-deport. | ||
I'm a reasonable person. | ||
I'm not going to be unfair. | ||
I think that would be a commendable step. | ||
But that would be the minimum. | ||
I mean, a million per year is a lot. | ||
That would be the minimum to me to qualify for mass deportations. | ||
I don't think it's going to happen, though. | ||
So that's the budget reconciliation bill. | ||
We're going to watch and see what they do with it. | ||
The Senate wants to start all over again. | ||
They're saying we're not going to get the bill until July. | ||
I don't think we're even going to get it by July. | ||
I think we'll get it after that. | ||
I think the deadline is later than that. | ||
I think they're bullshitting. | ||
They always do that with the debt ceiling. | ||
They say it's earlier than it is to increase the pressure. | ||
Then they start finding money. | ||
They did it, I don't know if it was last year or the year before, but they said, the government's going to run out of money in May. | ||
And then they said, Never mind, we meant June. | ||
And it's like, how do you get that wrong? | ||
How do you not know? | ||
You're lying. | ||
They literally just kept pushing it back weeks and months. | ||
They said, we're going to run out of money tomorrow. | ||
And then they said, actually, Janet Yellen says, we got another month. | ||
It's like, okay, so which is it? | ||
And Scott Besson is doing the exact same thing. | ||
So realistically, it's probably a September deadline. | ||
We might not get the bill until then, and good luck. | ||
That's that. | ||
But 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 this. | ||
We'll take a look. | ||
We'll see what you have to say about our boring slow news day. | ||
Let me get my headset on here. | ||
And we'll get set up. | ||
Let me get a little water, too. | ||
My mouth is a little dry tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to go to the next one. | |
Okay. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm ready now. | ||
Luke Bullock sent $10. | ||
Hey, man. | ||
Many of my friends say you're fed. | ||
What is the single best counterpoint you would give to this claim? | ||
Thanks. | ||
Yeah, I hear that all the time. | ||
I would say, what's the evidence that I am? | ||
Whereas I've yet to see any evidence that isn't basically fundamentally dishonest or deeply flawed. | ||
What's the evidence that I am? | ||
You know, people say things like, well, I heard Rudyard, the what-if-alt history guy. | ||
He said, well, he's a fed because, you know, he's promoting real anti-Semitism and sexism. | ||
Like, I'm sorry, that's not an argument. | ||
You know, what people say about January 6th, they say he wasn't arrested after January 6th. | ||
Not being arrested isn't an argument. | ||
You know, there were 500,000 people that day. | ||
500,000 people were at the Capitol on January 6th, literally. | ||
Anywhere from, maybe it was a quarter of a million, maybe it was half a million. | ||
Out of the quarter million to half million, I think it was 1,700 people got charged. | ||
So let's even use the small, let's say it was a quarter million people and 1,700 people got charged. | ||
So it's less than 1% of the people that were there at the Capitol got charged. | ||
And they say, he's the Fed because he didn't get charged. | ||
Well, I guess there's 248,000 Feds then who were in attendance. | ||
They say, but, you know, he told people to go into the Capitol. | ||
Nobody got charged for saying go into the Capitol, okay? | ||
Nobody got charged. | ||
And by the way, I didn't say go into the Capitol. | ||
I said, we're moving towards the Capitol. | ||
I was far away. | ||
I wasn't even on the steps. | ||
I was much further from the Capitol than many people. | ||
Alex Jones was near the steps. | ||
Patrick Casey was near the steps. | ||
There were a lot of people that were on the steps that didn't get charged. | ||
People were on the steps. | ||
People were on top of the mezzanine. | ||
Didn't get charged. | ||
I was nowhere near there. | ||
People got charged for trespassing, vandalism. | ||
Being in a militia or fighting with the cops. | ||
I didn't do any of that. | ||
What's more, I guess the best evidence is I'm persecuted by the feds. | ||
I got put on a federal no-fly list. | ||
My bank account was frozen for almost a year. | ||
I got subpoenaed by the U.S. Congress. | ||
I had to pay anywhere from a quarter million dollars to $300,000 in legal fees. | ||
Does anybody know that? | ||
I had to pay anywhere from $250,000 to $300,000 in legal fees, fighting my friends, the feds, right? | ||
So what happened there? | ||
The feds, what, they didn't know? | ||
They forgot I was a fed while they persecuted me for years? | ||
When the DHS put me on a no-fly list, when the DOJ froze my money, I mean, these were separate government entities. | ||
Then when the Democrats subpoenaed me, I guess they didn't know I was a Democrat plant when they did that. | ||
That happened over the course of years. | ||
I probably got put on a terrorist watch list. | ||
That's why my bank accounts got closed. | ||
So, you know, people say, well, you're a Fed, you're like this promoted opposition. | ||
It's not only that I'm not promoted, they're actively trying to kill me and shut me down. | ||
They're actively trying to stop me. | ||
I got charged here in Chicago. | ||
I got doxxed. | ||
Someone tried to kill me. | ||
I tried to defend myself. | ||
I got charged with a crime. | ||
So there seem to be a lot of mistakes going on, right? | ||
I mean, man, I wish flashing my badge worked like it used to. | ||
I mean, you just don't get the same benefits as you used to. | ||
I mean, I'm a Fed, and yet I... | ||
I get banned from banks. | ||
I get banned from processing credit cards. | ||
I get banned from flying on an airplane for a year. | ||
Then I get put on the Quad S list, which is enhanced screening. | ||
I get charged, even though I'm getting death threats and attacked in my house. | ||
My doc stays up. | ||
I get subpoenaed by the U.S. Congress. | ||
I have to pay a quarter of a million dollars in legal fees out of my own pocket. | ||
And that happens over a period of four years. | ||
That goes on for four years. | ||
I don't even have a checkmark on Twitter. | ||
Elon Musk calls me an asshole. | ||
I don't get ads on Rumble. | ||
I don't even get on the front page. | ||
I barely have a checkmark. | ||
So. | ||
And you know, look. | ||
The Fed hysteria is out of control. | ||
When we say someone's a Fed. | ||
We mean something very simple. | ||
Do you know what cops do? | ||
When we say someone's a fed, a federal agent is somebody that is either a confidential informant, they're cooperating with law enforcement, or they're an actual agent of federal law enforcement or intelligence. | ||
Somebody becomes an informant when they get charged with a crime. | ||
That's how it works. | ||
Somebody gets charged with a crime. | ||
By the federal government. | ||
Usually it's a gun charge. | ||
Usually it's something very serious. | ||
And the federal government comes in and says, look, we can make the charges go away or diminish the sentence or reduce the charge, but then we own you. | ||
You've got to work for us. | ||
So I've never been charged. | ||
So that doesn't make sense. | ||
Then you have law enforcement agents. | ||
What a law enforcement agent tries to do is entrap other people. | ||
They try to entrap other people by soliciting them to commit crimes, like a terrorist or a mass shooter or somebody who's trying to purchase a weapon or create an explosive or something like that, and then the cops come in. | ||
So typically you say someone's a fed if they're saying, hey, let's go commit a crime. | ||
I say the opposite of that. | ||
But the problem is, and the reason I'm spending some time on this is now, they say that anybody who disagrees with you is a federal agent. | ||
They say something like, if you are talking about race, if you're talking about Jews, if you're talking about Israel, in other words, if you're talking about anything to the right of Sean Hannity, well, that's divide and conquer. | ||
That's the federal government trying to divide the people, trying to divide the Republican Party. | ||
And it's like, listen, I'm not a fucking Republican. | ||
I've never been a fucking Republican, okay? | ||
I'm not a fiscal conservative, you know, rube or whatever. | ||
I never have been. | ||
And that's the problem. | ||
It's like, they said that about Richard Spencer. | ||
They said that about Andrew Anglin. | ||
They said that about Jared Taylor. | ||
They say that about Patriot Front. | ||
And, you know, Patriot Front, I say they might be feds, they might not be. | ||
I say the danger with Patriot Front is that they're... | ||
They're not, but they could be considered one. | ||
They have a membership list. | ||
They do get picked up when they do the stickers and they do uniforms and that opens you up to liability with RICO and other things. | ||
But a lot of boomers say, oh, anyone that talks about white people is a fad. | ||
Anyone that talks about black people is a fad. | ||
Anyone that talks about Jews is a fad. | ||
And by the way, With me, that whole thing started basically for that reason. | ||
It started because Tucker Carlson and Max Blumenthal put out a hit piece. | ||
They didn't like that I went against Joe Kent, who's a CIA agent himself. | ||
And they said the only reason Nick Fuentes is going up against Joe Kent is because he's a fed. | ||
The only reason Nick Fuentes is working with Ye to hurt Trump is because he's a fad. | ||
It's like I worked with Ye and we... | ||
And we're not! | ||
Because of obvious good reasons. | ||
And we didn't like Joe Kent because Joe Kent disavowed me because he's pro-Israel. | ||
So it's like, that argument doesn't work. | ||
Anyway, so... | ||
So that would be my rebuttal. | ||
New grow hyper 24 cent, $20. | ||
Lowell, is this a family show now? | ||
I'm a new fan and I've been playing your show. | ||
But then when I put my two-year-old to bed, she said, fuck you. | ||
That was after the Dave Portnoy rant, Lowell. | ||
She had never said that before. | ||
I thought, well, I better fix my AirPods. | ||
I love your show. | ||
Men can have their space. | ||
I'll wear headphones. | ||
Yeah, we don't want that. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
It's like, oh, I'm not family friendly, okay? | ||
I'm a young guy. | ||
I'm, you know, I'm a little psycho. | ||
I'm a little quirky. | ||
So people say, oh, I watch a show with my kids. | ||
I'm like, this is not a family show. | ||
The language is very colorful. | ||
But yeah, so maybe let's do the AirPods until they're 15 or something. | ||
Mitch Ford, 26 cents, $10. | ||
I've got a one-year-old son, wife, and I want to have lots more. | ||
I'd love to listen to your show with my sons in the future the way my dad and I would listen to Rush Limbaugh in the truck when I was a kid. | ||
Since you were talking about cleaning the language up a bit. | ||
God bless. | ||
Yeah, maybe when your kids are a little bit older, you know. | ||
Oh, thank you. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
What happened to Poop Fart Porker? | ||
unidentified
|
It's been a minute. | |
I don't know. | ||
That wasn't even my best joke. | ||
I wouldn't be a good... | ||
Look, I'm not... | ||
I'm just naturally funny. | ||
I just have a funny way about me. | ||
I don't think I'm like a good joke writer necessarily or a good like, I hear that people are, you're funny! | ||
You should be a comedian! | ||
and it's like some people are just funny, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
But, uh... | |
When you did that Shapiro bit, I was dying. | ||
I wasn't even really super proud of that one, to be honest with you, but I appreciate it. | ||
No, I didn't. | ||
But I can imagine what he said. | ||
But thank you. | ||
I don't love that. | ||
Cursing, cursing. | ||
Dot, I don't know if it's really a curse. | ||
I mean, Republicans or Republicans. | ||
Catholics don't believe. | ||
Brain fart. | ||
Catholics don't believe that swearing is a sin. | ||
It can be a sin, but it's not inherently a sin, as well as my understanding of it. | ||
So, I don't know if you're a Protestant or not, but Catholics don't see it as like a grave sin. | ||
Protestants think it's like a serious sin. | ||
Catholics don't. | ||
And I don't, that's kind of like a blackism. | ||
Cursing curses me like, you know, it's not a real curse, right? | ||
It's just profane language, right? | ||
It's just vulgar language. | ||
Caesar's phallus sent $10. | ||
Everyone celebrating this renaissance of based memes on Instagram and claiming that we won. | ||
Meanwhile, the largest institutional shareholders of Metastock are BlackRock and Vanguard Group. | ||
This is strategic. | ||
Once a meme, always a meme. | ||
Okay, I mean, I wouldn't go that far. | ||
Groiper Family Dental sent $10. | ||
Russia collusion. | ||
Cue the Democrat outrage and election denial. | ||
Eric Swalwell sleeps with a Chinese spy. | ||
Cue the Republican outrage. | ||
IPAC crushes every single congressional candidate who doesn't pledge loyalty to Israel by partisan crickets. | ||
Osner sent $10. | ||
Quick, everyone. | ||
Let's use free speech and voting to take our country back. | ||
Study Plato and we can destroy our enemies with logic. | ||
Rhodesia didn't study enough Aristotle. | ||
That is why they got destroyed. | ||
Please, don't make the same mistake so go to your library and study Latin. | ||
Who is that directed at? | ||
I'm curious. | ||
What's the cancer card? | ||
Who's that? | ||
I don't know what you're talking about, but the cuck feature? | ||
He wants me to do it, but I don't know. | ||
I mean, we didn't do it when I was over there, so I don't know if he's even going to put out the album. | ||
But, I mean, we talked about it over the phone recently. | ||
He's like, oh, I still want you to do... | ||
I want you to say the N word on cuck. | ||
But we'll see. | ||
No. | ||
Can't say that I have. | ||
Yeah, I want to see that. | ||
Honestly, those movies have grown on me. | ||
I kind of hated that franchise when I was younger, but they've been really good. | ||
I mean, the. | ||
Was it the one after Ghost Protocol? | ||
The one reason the helicopter chase? | ||
Not the one that was about AI, but the one that came before that was really excellent. | ||
I saw it on a plane. | ||
I think it was called... | ||
Let me see. | ||
So I'm really excited. | ||
The previous one was pretty good. | ||
I didn't love the... | ||
Rogue. | ||
Rogue something. | ||
Rogue Nation. | ||
That's the one that was awesome, that I really liked. | ||
And then Fallout, or maybe, do I have a backwards? | ||
No, Fallout was the good one, I think. | ||
Fallout was the one I really liked. | ||
Dead Reckoning, that's the one, part one, that I thought was just okay. | ||
So yeah, so I'm excited. | ||
I think I'm probably going to go watch it. | ||
I don't really like Tom Cruise though. | ||
Matthew P. sent $10. | ||
Douglas Murray going to lecture at Nixon Library next month. | ||
Permission to egg him, my leader. | ||
No, no, no egging. | ||
No egging because I don't want to get fucking egged so I'm not going to tell my people to go do that. | ||
Matthew P. sent $10. | ||
He put the chrome on the bench but I put the chrome to my dome. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
Croyper sent $15. | ||
Nobody does it like you. | ||
You're the future. | ||
You're the goat. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Meow meow sent $10. | ||
Hi, Israel more like Israel, am I right? | ||
Aus nationalists sent $50. | ||
Late 2024, Australian fed police discover abandoned caravan full of explosives with a list of Jewish names and addresses. | ||
A synagogue was burnt down around the same time they used these to pass hate speech. | ||
laws. | ||
This year they discovered the caravan was a false flag from a foreign country and no arrest for an attack. | ||
Laws still in place. | ||
unidentified
|
Be careful. | |
Is that confirmed it was a false flag? | ||
I'll have to look into that. | ||
I've never heard of that, but that would be really interesting. | ||
Matthew P. sent $10. | ||
Shut up. | ||
You deserve to be dead after what you did. | ||
You. | ||
He-e-e-a-me? | ||
Ha ha ha, I'm giving you a chance. | ||
No one ever gave me a chance. | ||
Don't lose your head, Mr. Coulson. | ||
Just one more to go before your time runs out. | ||
Last riddle. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I hate that movie. | ||
movie sucks. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
the Money Masters documentary by a Catholic in 96 chronicles the history of usury from antiquity until now oh great thank you real Christopher Reeves sent $15 my friend and I are obsessed with the show not fags there's no one else keeping it as real as you out there keep it up need your book Rex ASAP Comfy Friend sent $10 you actually thought Ye was a Nazi and he left you looking like a fool all the witness were right feels like you sold us and your integrity out for a crumb of nigga tension This is the third time it's happened. | ||
This is the third time. | ||
I love it. | ||
Ye goes on InfoWars and says, you know, I love Hitler. | ||
There's a lot of things that I love about Hitler. | ||
And then he did an apology in Hebrew. | ||
And then he came back and went full Nazi on Twitter with the swastika t-shirt. | ||
And then he deleted it all and said, I'm not anti-Semitic. | ||
And then he comes out with a song called Heil Hitler. | ||
And then he comes on Twitter and says, I'm not anti-Semitic. | ||
It's the third time, okay? | ||
And, you know, look. | ||
He doesn't need to be a Nazi until the day that he dies for it to be effective. | ||
I mean, he put out a song that said Heil Hitler and it happened and it went viral. | ||
And now he says, well, I'm taking a step back. | ||
Okay. | ||
I mean, that doesn't change what has happened. | ||
You don't take back that he said, I love Hitler, DEFCON 3, he lost Adidas to do this. | ||
It doesn't take back the swastika shirt. | ||
It doesn't take back any of that stuff. | ||
So, you know, you could talk about the Wignats. | ||
50% of the Wignats went and worked with the SPLC. | ||
You want to talk about people that aren't Nazis anymore? | ||
Talk about Matt Heimbach. | ||
Talk about Richard Spencer. | ||
Talk about how many of those guys I'm not a white nationalist. | ||
I went and reformed my life. | ||
I mean, that was like 80% of the alt-right and the alt-right from 2016 and 2017 did the exact same thing. | ||
Thank you. | ||
High Velocity 454 cent $20. | ||
I would love to see you do a collab with Leonardo Joni. | ||
She is intelligent and super based. | ||
I got to see her underground comedy show back in March. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Oh, you'd love to see that? | ||
I'll get right on that then. | ||
Lucky Luciano sent $10. | ||
The Jews obviously run our country, but they would have no power if our elites didn't sell out to them. | ||
Are there any patriots left in our government? | ||
I don't want violence, but it seems like the only people. | ||
Matthew P sent $10. | ||
Ex-adult film actresses are dropping like flies. | ||
Most recent one is Faye Reagan, missing for 16 days now. | ||
Is that true? | ||
I haven't been following all that, but what's going on? | ||
Would she die or something or what? | ||
unidentified
|
Interesting. | |
Well, I mean, I don't know. | ||
When you're a hooker, that tends to happen. | ||
Detroit Croy percent $10. | ||
I get an America first hat. | ||
You the realest nigga. | ||
Cameron Short sent $10. | ||
Candace was listed as a co-founder of Glorify, a fintech banking startup launched 2022, which she actively promoted. | ||
Glorify received $50 million in funding from Peter Thiel and later shut down due to a lack of operational support and other internal issues. | ||
unidentified
|
Interesting. | |
Like I said, I've never – I said the other night – someone brought this up I feel like a couple weeks ago. | ||
Let's take a look. | ||
Anti-woke banking startup cancels itself. | ||
The company which missed multiple launch deadlines had its CEO step down in misconduct, deciding reputational attacks. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Failing economy. | ||
I need an email. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Let's see. | ||
Less than three months after its public debut, the anti-woke banking app glorifies, canceling itself. | ||
The company laid off employees and informed them the end is nigh. | ||
Well, well, well. | ||
In October, the Wall Street Journal detailed the tumultuous beginning of the startup that led to a swift collapse. | ||
Business partner Nick Ayers managed to secure an imposing roster of bet. | ||
Because he was behind a lot of the personnel problems in the first Trump White House. | ||
He's with Nikki Haley and Mike Pence. | ||
Enticing investors like Peter Thiel and Kelly Loeffler, Vivek Ramaswamy, and Ken Griffin. | ||
Oh, brother. | ||
Ken Griffin was a huge Nikki Haley backer and a DeSantis backer. | ||
He's from Citadel. | ||
He's a Wall Street guy. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Promises a market chock full of plumbers, electricians, police officers fed up with big banks. | ||
unidentified
|
So what was Candace Owens' role there? | |
She was a co-founder and spokesperson. | ||
Interesting. | ||
Well, how did she get hooked up? | ||
Really, really? | ||
Dude, man, every motherfucking single time, dude. | ||
Every single time! | ||
Every single time! | ||
Well, I gotta put that in the Obsidian file. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
Teal, Vivek, Ken Griffin, Kelly Leffler, and Nick Ayers. | ||
Nice. | ||
Very interesting. | ||
Yeah, we'll have to look into that. | ||
Rendixen sent $10. | ||
Had another dream featuring you a few nights before the Spanish class one. | ||
We went to the same university and had a groyper friend group. | ||
This one guy was simping for Indiana. | ||
Oh, fuck off. | ||
Stop having dreams about me. | ||
You want to know why I don't want you to have dreams about me? | ||
In your dreams, I'm an idiot, because you're an idiot. | ||
In your dreams, I'm some dummy caricature. | ||
I'm not me. | ||
Stop dreaming about me. | ||
I had a dream about donuts last night. | ||
I had a dream that I went and got some donuts. | ||
And I told the lady, I'm like, I want a vanilla sprinkle and I want a chocolate sprinkle. | ||
And she gave me a vanilla jelly donut and a chocolate jelly donut. | ||
I'm like, I said vanilla and chocolate sprinkle. | ||
I'm like, no, I said vanilla and chocolate sprinkle. | ||
I said if I wanted it jelly-filled, I would have said jelly-filled, you dumbass. | ||
She's like, well, there's like vanilla and chocolate frosting on it. | ||
I'm like, yeah, but it's filled. | ||
So, yeah, so I had a dream about that. | ||
And then there was like a sexual portion of the dream after that. | ||
I'm not going to get into it. | ||
But, yeah, but that really irritated me. | ||
I woke up kind of angry about it, actually. | ||
Because you know what it is? | ||
It's this diet. | ||
I can't have sugar on this diet. | ||
I mean, I still am, but I'm having less. | ||
I'm on this diet, and it's been... | ||
I'm so hungry. | ||
I'm so hungry and I have to eat so many vegetables. | ||
I've been on this diet and it's all just like protein and like bullshit. | ||
And I want to kill myself! | ||
I'm on this diet and I'm talking to Chad GPT. | ||
I'm like, what's my diet for today? | ||
And it's like sweet green with extra chicken and then fucking pig. | ||
I'm like, I want to die right now. | ||
So I haven't had ice cream since last week. | ||
I mean, look, I cheat a little on the weekends. | ||
Cheat a little bit on the weekends. | ||
But man, I haven't had a donut in like two or three weeks. | ||
I may never have a donut again. | ||
Ever since I cut out sugary, ultra-processed junk. | ||
Ever since I cut out ultra-processed sugary junk, you know that sugar's the worst thing for you? | ||
You know that sugar's addictive? | ||
I've been trying to eat clean, whole foods. | ||
I eat my scrambled eggs, fresh avocado, and locally sourced, in-season fresh fruit. | ||
I gotta have my fresh fruit. | ||
I gotta have my locally sourced fresh fruit. | ||
It's in-season. | ||
Ever since I've been eating clean, I feel great. | ||
So much energy. | ||
My skin is clear. | ||
I don't know about you guys, but I'd rather be miserable and eat a diet of garbage than feel good and have to be an insufferable faggot like that. | ||
Is it just me, or does all of that stuff come across like extremely off-putting? | ||
I see these fucking assholes on social media all day and they're like, I eat clean. | ||
I got a clean whole foods. | ||
I'm like, could you fucking shoot yourself? | ||
Shut up. | ||
She's like, no one cares what you ate today, you fucking faggot. | ||
I see it all the time. | ||
People are like posting their wooden cutting board. | ||
Here's my little scrambled eggs, my fresh fruit. | ||
I'm like, no one gives a fuck about your fucking scrambled eggs, you loser. | ||
Shut up. | ||
It makes me so mad. | ||
And you know, it's like if people want to do that, fine. | ||
Go and do that. | ||
Stop telling everybody. | ||
People like start eating clean and then they want to tell everybody about it. | ||
Shut up. | ||
No one cares. | ||
And they all change the way they talk. | ||
They're all talking like they say that kind of stuff like sugary, ultra-processed foods. | ||
Who are you? | ||
What are you, a health teacher? | ||
Shut up. | ||
unidentified
|
Ah. | |
Oh. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Like, yeah, I want to eat candy, okay? | ||
Sue me. | ||
That's why I like Europeans. | ||
I saw this TikTok of this Italian guy, and he's like, for breakfast, we eat a breakfast pastry and orange juice. | ||
And he goes, you know, some people say that's a lot of sugar. | ||
He's like, we don't care. | ||
He goes, we are don't care. | ||
I'm like, dude, yes. | ||
Sign me up for that. | ||
So I did this rant already, but that's my fundamental beliefs. | ||
These are my deeply held fundamental beliefs. | ||
You know? | ||
Solid men 333 cent $10. | ||
Yair Lapid former Israeli PM. | ||
Sid Netanyahu is lying about close ties with Trump. | ||
Even if that's true, it feels almost impossible to avoid war with Iran. | ||
Bob frog ex-signats shipper sent $10. | ||
I deeply agree with love speech, love everybody and forgiveness. | ||
However, I will still hire Hitler nigga. | ||
Besides it's a false Mossad op killing anyways. | ||
The new Nazi party is nonviolent. | ||
Carpenter Groy percent $60. | ||
Hey Nick, fist time super chatter. | ||
Oh, it's none of your business, but thank you very much. | ||
I love that. | ||
Tell us how you really feel. | ||
Well, it's really none of your business. | ||
What do you mean truthfully? | ||
What, like I'm lying to you all the time? | ||
Truthfully, like what, I'm gonna lie to you? | ||
Shut the fuck up. | ||
Mind your own business. | ||
Hey, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
And no message. | ||
Beautiful. | ||
No attempt at a penetrating heart to heart. | ||
What are you doing? | ||
But don't lie. | ||
I hate this diet. | ||
I'm hungry. | ||
That's how I feel. | ||
I'm hungry right now. | ||
You want to know how I am? | ||
I'm hungry. | ||
And I'm irritated. | ||
Thank you for helping me to question everything. | ||
My brother in Christ, you are in the crosshairs. | ||
Please protect yourself and keep fighting for Christ at any cost. | ||
Yeah, I will. | ||
Thanks for telling me. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you, brother. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
No message. | ||
Beautiful. | ||
Love it. | ||
I mean, I guess it's going well. | ||
My weight is going down. | ||
Now I've got to integrate the working out. | ||
The working out part is the part I'm putting off. | ||
I could do not eating. | ||
I could refrain from things. | ||
But working out, I think about working out and I just go like this. | ||
I think about getting on the bike or working out and I'm just like, I want to watch TV. | ||
I hate working out. | ||
unidentified
|
I just hate exerting myself. | |
I don't want to move. | ||
I know people are like, but you have to. | ||
I'm like, I know, but I just don't want to. | ||
You know? | ||
I really just, I wish I was just a brain in a vat. | ||
I wish my brain was in the robot. | ||
I don't want to work out. | ||
Everything about it, the like, I just start to think about it and just like, ugh, you know, like I gotta put on a workout. | ||
Clothes, like, work out, shorts and shirt, and get a gay-ass water bottle, and okay, here I go, and ugh, you know, you gotta, like, do push-ups and stuff, and it's too chalant. | ||
Working out is so chalant. | ||
I'm nonchalant. | ||
You know, I'm... | ||
Working out is so chalant. | ||
It's just like the definition of a hard-on. | ||
Like, get in your gear. | ||
Get in the car. | ||
unidentified
|
drive to the gym, and the whole gym is like... | |
I don't want to do it, but I'm going to... | ||
I'm gonna do it, but I really don't want I'm not going to be happy about it. | ||
I'm not going to get addicted to going to the gym. | ||
I'm not going to like it. | ||
I'm not going to be in love with it. | ||
I'm not going to say, oh, but once you get into it, I'm going to hate it. | ||
I'm always going to hate it, and I'm always going to not want to do it. | ||
So you can make me go to the gym. | ||
You can't make me like it. | ||
You can't make me get excited to go to the gym. | ||
Once you get into it, you get addicted to it. | ||
You love how it feels. | ||
You always feel better when you go. | ||
No, you don't. | ||
You never do. | ||
You feel like tired. | ||
So anyway. | ||
I'm coming to terms with the fact that I'm getting older and fatter and all that. | ||
It's not easy. | ||
It's not easy to give up your youthfulness, but we all have to do it. | ||
So, yeah, so I guess the diet's going okay. | ||
The diet's the easy part, because I could refrain from eating. | ||
That's easy, but the pushing myself and all that, that's the hard part, so. | ||
But we'll get there. | ||
I have to transform. | ||
I have to transform, you know? | ||
I have to get a crazy physique so that I don't get mogged. | ||
But I don't know if I care enough. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, being mogged, if I just never go outside, I can mostly avoid that. | ||
But I'll do it for the race war. | ||
But I have to do it for the... | ||
Because you can get mogged by other white people, whatever. | ||
You can't get mogged by other races. | ||
You have to juice up for the race war, honestly. | ||
It's a joke, of course. | ||
Mr. 54 sent $10. | ||
If Israel was able to get us in such a major chokehold, do you think retaliation could be effective? | ||
I know it's not morally correct, but may be effective. | ||
Start with Judea Christians at entry level positions in Likid. | ||
Dude. | ||
No fat chicks sent $50. | ||
Me and my girlfriend were dying laughing at your take on bread being the best part of the meal. | ||
You and your girlfriend? | ||
Sounds fun. | ||
Thank you, though. | ||
Whoa! | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
200 a month! | ||
Thank you very much, man. | ||
I really appreciate it. | ||
Save it, though, because we're going to be starting up something soon with perks and benefits for the $100, $200 a month club. | ||
But thank you very much. | ||
Matthew P. sent $10. | ||
A Jewish-controlled anti-Semitic candidate incoming 2028. | ||
No, not going to happen. | ||
Trent Horny sent $10. | ||
Heard you say yesterday that you somewhat like Josh Hawley. | ||
I've been close to his team for a while, and there are a lot of people here who pretty politically aligned with you. | ||
I said that, you know, what Josh Hawley purports to be, I agree with, but I think he's kind of a fraud. | ||
Slavone, 11 cent, $10. | ||
Nicholas, what ethnicity wife would you want? | ||
Perhaps Italian. | ||
Don't say Slavic. | ||
I don't want to play this game right now. | ||
Not in the mood. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, well, what are you going to do? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I kind of like the food die. | ||
You know, I want the Fruit Lips to be red and blue. | ||
Banyanbay 94 cent $10. | ||
Hello Nick, new fan. | ||
Keep up everything you do because you're truly an inspiration to many. | ||
My question to you however is what do you think of GG33? | ||
He mentioned you quite a bit and continues to call you out, so will you ever address him? | ||
No, he's another ankle-biting Jew, and honestly, he's not worth my time. | ||
When he becomes a bigger streamer, maybe he'll be worth my time. | ||
Until then, he's another ankle-biting Jew who's just not worth it. | ||
Killicam sent $100. | ||
Enjoy your weekend. | ||
Brother, stay black. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
No, you stay black, my nigga. | ||
I appreciate you. | ||
Enjoy your weekend, buddy. | ||
Be careful. | ||
Memorial Day weekend. | ||
The brothers are active. | ||
God knows. | ||
Memorial Day weekend in Chicago. | ||
Are you ready? | ||
Buckle up. | ||
Hold on to your diapies because it's Memorial Day weekend in Chirac. | ||
Stay indoors. | ||
No, but I appreciate it buddy. | ||
Stay safe out there. | ||
Stay safe out there this, uh... | ||
Memorial Day. | ||
It's going to be brutal. | ||
He's so silly. | ||
You know, Keith Woods, he's like this big nerd, but yet, no, he's not wise. | ||
He's not wise like me. | ||
Wrong about everything award. | ||
Wrong about vaccines. | ||
Wrong about Trump. | ||
Wrong about... | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
You know, but that's okay. | ||
I don't know what to do with Keith. | ||
I don't know what we're going to do with him. | ||
But that is literally true. | ||
Week one, and he said BAP was right about everything. | ||
All that concern about Iran and Palestine was overblown. | ||
This is great. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, Keith. | |
Keith, Keith, Keith, you ignorant slut. | ||
When are you going to learn? | ||
Then I'm right about everything. | ||
Oh, shut up. | ||
Oh, shut up. | ||
Shut up. | ||
All right. | ||
W. W3 friends. | ||
I like that. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Truth lover, 69 cent, $10. | ||
Friday night, couple of Medellos. | ||
Medellos with the fellas. | ||
And it's fucking Friday, boys. | ||
And we're wearing our beer hat and it's Memorial Day weekend with the bros. | ||
Truth lover, 69 cent, $10. | ||
That clip where a dean asks Ye if he thinks Hitler would like him and Ye responds that he would be one of the scientists that America cleaned up had me dying. | ||
Most people think of Ye as unintentionally funny, but Ro is genuinely hilarious. | ||
He really is! | ||
No glaze, but, like, he is one of the funniest people I've ever met. | ||
unidentified
|
The shit he says just makes me laugh out loud. | |
He's a funny guy. | ||
Say what you will, he's a funny guy. | ||
You'd be a good judge on Kill Tony. | ||
Buster M sent $10. | ||
Can you explain how Protestant branches of Christianity have been infiltrated by Jews and turned into a propaganda arm? | ||
Jimbo Zoomer sent $10. | ||
Please swear more fuck the kids. | ||
unidentified
|
False. | |
O underscore O. Pause. | ||
unidentified
|
Fuck the way it paused. | |
Mmm. | ||
Mmm. | ||
That's true. | ||
I agree with that. | ||
Okay. | ||
Don't be gross. | ||
It's just me what? | ||
Shut up, bitch. | ||
Shut up. | ||
Scholars, thanks for introducing me to A. My father passed this year and the song back to me gives me comfort. | ||
Thanks, man. | ||
Keep up the good work. | ||
That gives you comfort. | ||
My dad died. | ||
But the song about beautiful big titty bitches falling out of the sky gives me a lot of consolation. | ||
unidentified
|
That song gave me a lot of comfort after my dad died. | |
The song about... | ||
What's the correlation? | ||
But I appreciate it, I guess. | ||
No Dalton. | ||
Remember, no Claude. | ||
Dude, somebody tweeted the other day, we're gonna stab Dalton to death with real knives at F5. | ||
No, we're not going to do that. | ||
I disavow. | ||
Why is everyone picking on Dalton? | ||
I love Dalton. | ||
Okay, Dalton is a good friend. | ||
I've known him for years. | ||
I love that guy. | ||
Everybody's always saying they want to kill Dalton. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
No Dalton. | ||
Remember, no Dalton. | ||
Me in the elevator at AFPAC 5? | ||
Remember, no Claude Felter. | ||
No, we love him. | ||
We love Dalton. | ||
Come on now. | ||
But I appreciate the big super chat. | ||
Shut up, dude. | ||
Dude, shut up. | ||
Stop giving me diet advice. | ||
No one cares about your diet advice. | ||
Okay? | ||
No one cares. | ||
Did you know that if you don't eat sugar, you won't crave it? | ||
Listen, shut the fuck up. | ||
No one cares. | ||
I love anytime diet gets brought up, people just want to tell you to choose. | ||
Just stop. | ||
Thank you. | ||
They've been in the Middle East for a thousand years, dude. | ||
You know, I don't really think about Muslims that much. | ||
Look, I mean, their religion is false, and I don't want them in my country. | ||
I don't want them to outnumber white people in Europe. | ||
I don't want them to build a Sharia law center in the middle of Texas. | ||
But generally speaking, I get along with them. | ||
They're a little pushy. | ||
they're pushing their religion on us and, uh, they kind of have that like Egyptian scammer thing going on. | ||
But, um, I've known Muslims my whole life and they're, I like a lot of them. | ||
Hard to make a big generalization. | ||
I just don't see the big deal. | ||
I mean, for Europeans, I get it if you're a European. | ||
A lot of Europeans are really anti-Muslim, and I get it. | ||
In America, they're not very numerous. | ||
So you just don't clock them as detrimental in the way that Jewish power is or in the way that even – So I think that's something that Europeans are preoccupied with and for good reason, but not so much here. | ||
Should I get one of those? | ||
I always thought about it, but I feel like I'd play it once and then I'd never use it again. | ||
Maybe a VR workout. | ||
That might be fun. | ||
VR workout. | ||
A little VR cardio? | ||
Nah, it's a joke. | ||
That'd be gross. | ||
unidentified
|
...$10. | |
Yay, Nazi capitulation on Twitter. | ||
Surprised you didn't touch on that. | ||
Knowles did a whole segment on it today. | ||
I feel like he'll be back. | ||
I mean, he's got a spinning swastika deep inside of him. | ||
So he'll be back. | ||
Sometimes he likes to take a chill pill. | ||
I get it. | ||
You know, some days you feel like a Nazi. | ||
Some days you're a little more magnanimous. | ||
I get it. | ||
He deported 100K in first 100 days. | ||
You got those numbers wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
No, he didn't. | |
ICE is everywhere. | ||
Going after construction companies right here in Florida. | ||
He got creative with self-deportations, which will be effective. | ||
He might suspend hobbyist corpus. | ||
That 100,000 number is self-reported. | ||
Can't find that anywhere in the data. | ||
And if you look at the official numbers from April, which is what we have numbers for, they said that we had only deported about 50,000 up until that point. | ||
And the 100,000 number came about two weeks after that. | ||
That's a self-reported number. | ||
It has no basis in any. | ||
There's no government stat that said that. | ||
A fucking spokesperson said that. | ||
It's not true. | ||
And even still, if they had deported 100,000 up until this point, we're four months in. | ||
Four months in. | ||
That's over 120 days. | ||
100,000 in over 100 days is about 1,000 per day. | ||
Which is $300,000 per year, which is $1.2 million in four years. | ||
And we're not even there. | ||
What they say, the most recent number, Tom Holman said, is they're deporting an average of $500 per day, which is half that. | ||
So that's not true. | ||
You're wrong about that. | ||
But you're a cocksucker who you read one headline and you say, oh, see, that vindicates my emotional attachment to the Republican candidate for president. | ||
Don't be an idiot. | ||
Watch another show if you're going to be an idiot. | ||
$629.15. | ||
Get a candle, nigga. | ||
Why? | ||
Lil Sippy sent $10. | ||
If Candace's show is Elementary Red Pill and your show is AP Red Pill, what is Alex Jones? | ||
I don't know, dude. | ||
I'm not... | ||
Curious on your viewpoint of who led the revolution? | ||
Is Alex Jones a general? | ||
Why are we playing games? | ||
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Okay. | |
Alright, I think that's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for us. | ||
Another exhausting week of Super Chats. | ||
Who's like the generals in the Revolution? | ||
Who would Scott Adams be? | ||
Who would Goyper be? | ||
Who would Pepe be? | ||
Who would Moon Man be? | ||
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Would he be a lieutenant or a general? | |
Dude, shut up. | ||
Like, shut up. | ||
All right. | ||
That's all I got for you. | ||
That's it. | ||
That's the show. | ||
I do look skinnier. | ||
Look at my jawline. | ||
I'm just carving it like marble. | ||
Carving it like out of a stone. | ||
Okay, these gains are made in the kitchen. | ||
They're made in the kitchens of DoorDash. | ||
They're made in the ghost kitchens of DoorDash. | ||
Look at that. | ||
Look at that definition. | ||
Look at how powerful. | ||
It's like a box. | ||
Look at this. | ||
It's like a box. | ||
That's me. | ||
That's my body. | ||
That's who I am, and you're nothing. | ||
That's my jaw. | ||
All right. | ||
All right, that's all I got. | ||
No, really, this time. | ||
All right, well, hey, remember to smash the follow button on Rumble. | ||
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. | ||
Big thank you to Juan, Davicito, Aravace, I'm Hoplite, Jordan Jones, Great Noticer, Leon DeGruyper, and Killa Cam, the Black Gruyper. | ||
We love you guys. | ||
Thank you to our top super chatters. | ||
Thanks to our top super chatters, all our super chatters, everybody that watches the show, we love you. | ||
We got two more. | ||
I'm not reading those. | ||
I will see you on Monday. | ||
I am going to do a show Monday. | ||
Memorial Day? | ||
I'm not doing a show Thursday or Friday, so I am going to do a show Monday, okay? | ||
Because I'm not taking a break. | ||
I'm doing another collaboration next weekend, so I won't be here Thursday, Friday of next week. | ||
I'll see you on Monday. | ||
Until then, have a great weekend. | ||
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end. | |
Have a great rest of your evening. | ||
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America. | ||
America first. | ||
America first. |