Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, you should thank your buddy. | ||
I think we're going to first. | ||
See, Ricky said, Do you let the party don't wanna pull you? | ||
If you run the ball, you get a wood on. | ||
Okay, boom, bitch slop. | ||
Clean the code to sack your buttons, don't have it back with consciousness. | ||
And stick with the day one horrible swan. | ||
Before you go to me, everything my heart is. | ||
First day, market, now they hot, but I wonder where it doesn't seem to be. | ||
They take those projects, they start fucking. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
unidentified
|
I can enforce them, alright? | |
They said, Trust to me, put your numbers and never leave your day bars in the car. | ||
Mama said, Trust no hope, use a rubber. | ||
They said, Crush tooth band, put your public living to believe. | ||
Your day bars in the car. | ||
Everything is swarming on everybody who dared to love. | ||
Hey, you know my ain't sick, I'm ready to shit. | ||
I've been with your days, way before the snow kick. | ||
We got the city, and I was just a drink. | ||
I'm the old guy, I said it, to give it the way to drink. | ||
No, it's rude, sick, yo, what's it for shit? | ||
I'm sick, sick, rude, tight, yes I have a set. | ||
You took me to the worst shows, I go overboard. | ||
Only drop jewels when before they draw jutt up. | ||
On the way, cause it's ain't me. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Girls, let your punner said trust no hope. | ||
I think it's the first, it's the first. | ||
See, Ricky said, Do let the party don't wanna pull you. | ||
If you run the roll, you get a wood on this slide. | ||
Clean the code to sack your breaks, don't have it back with consciousness. | ||
And stick with the day one horrible swan. | ||
before you go to me Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I can enforce them, alright? | ||
They said, Trust to me, put your cover and never leave your day wars in the car. | ||
Mama said, Trust no hope, use a rubber. | ||
They said, Crush tooth, baby, put your public living. | ||
Come and leave your day wars in the car. | ||
Everything is warming up. | ||
Everybody. | ||
Everything is warming up. | ||
You was pretty sick, good tight. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
America's first bitch. | ||
They said, Crushed tooth, baby, put your public living. | ||
Come and leave your day bars in the car. | ||
Everybody. | ||
Warming on everybody. | ||
We dare to. | ||
unidentified
|
Warming on everybody. | |
Warming on everybody. | ||
You was pretty sick, good tight. | ||
Only dropped jewels when before they dropped And people don't realize what they have. | ||
And then nowadays, I am so upset at the things we did and the things we fought for. | ||
And the boys that died, boy, it's all gone down the drain. | ||
Our country's going to hell in a handbasket. | ||
We haven't got the country we had when I was great. | ||
Not at all. | ||
Nobody will have the fun I am. | ||
Nobody will have the opportunity. | ||
I am. | ||
unidentified
|
They should just not the same. | |
Jesus is the way and the life and the king of Israel. | ||
We just lead with love. | ||
We're really at a crossroads here. | ||
Look around you. | ||
It's drag queens in schools. | ||
It's 18-year-olds joining OnlyFans. | ||
It's the filth on TikTok. | ||
It's this country not having a border. | ||
It's the idea that our kids and we, this generation, are never going to own anything. | ||
Think about it. | ||
Never making an income to support a family. | ||
Never being able to have a family. | ||
People being corrupted before they're even a teenager by things on their phone. | ||
Sick addiction to technology. | ||
The future is so bleak, but that has changed the calculation. | ||
unidentified
|
God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the riches 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 say they is impressed. | ||
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
|
To be continued... | |
you you you Thank you. | ||
When I get home, I want you Hello, I got places to be Hello, I got places to be Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
Have a great show for you tonight. | ||
You got that back, back, dance her like a punk. | ||
*music* | ||
We paved the way with our corpse. | ||
Roypers 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. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
They go how, Hillel. | ||
They go how, Hillel. | ||
They don't understand the things I say on Twitter. | ||
They go how, Hillel. | ||
They don't understand the things I said on Twitter All my niggas now she's making love here Oh, you can watch her leave The Romans? | ||
Where are they now? | ||
You're looking at them, asshole. | ||
They don't understand the things I say on Twitter. | ||
All my niggas Nazis niggas howling. | ||
Howling. | ||
All my niggas nice is niggas howling. | ||
She wanna fuck up Japan. | ||
I put the crumb on the bed. | ||
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
|
Welcome to our massive vision, our massive and ambitious journey. | |
Saying to me, he's like, this is probably pretty cool for you. | ||
I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
|
I ain't body. | |
I can't feel it. | ||
But I feel my heart. | ||
I'm a little body. | ||
so I will fight for you with every breath in my body. | ||
And I will never ever let you down. | ||
A new Reuper War. | ||
Yeah, nigga this wall, nigga this wall, I'm chucking bodies on the floor, I'm with it all, I chuck to my demons and I see the writings on the wall. | ||
Niggas is dying when it's so real, I get excited for them posts, and Noah ain't crying when he gone, cause Brody was fighting for them. | ||
I do this shit for my brothers, we do this shit for each other. | ||
The courageous fallen, the anguished fallen, their lives have meaning because we the living refuse to forget them. | ||
And as we ride to certain death, we trust our successors to do the same for us. | ||
Because my soldiers do not buckle or yield when faced with the cruelty of this world. | ||
My soldiers push forward, my soldiers scream out, my soldiers rage. | ||
I can't see a damn thing, I can't see a damn thing, I can't see a damn thing, I can't see a damn thing. | ||
Yeah, they like speeding, they can't see me, they won't beat me, I'm in that guinea. | ||
We can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
unidentified
|
They say, can we really go back? | |
And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right wing or left wing, the answer is no. | ||
We're never going back. | ||
It's gone, it's gone, all of that is gone. | ||
But I would call myself something like a Christian futurist instead. | ||
Because Jesus Christ was our past before any of us were born or conceived. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
And Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | ||
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | ||
unidentified
|
We love everybody. | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
The mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | |
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by lying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
unidentified
|
The only way we have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | |
We have to want it more than they do. | ||
Because if there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny, then nothing can stop us. | ||
And nothing will. | ||
unidentified
|
Outro Music | |
you're living these lights and loving this world we run in and make every weekend savage like that world running back up every weekend they say that I'm back for no reason When I get home, I want you. | ||
Hello, hello, hello, hello. | ||
Hello. | ||
I got faces to be here Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Quentis. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
You got that rock, rock, this her turn on the phone Menjelina, do the girl, Menjelina, do the girl You got that rock, rock, this her turn on the phone | ||
Let's go. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
No one's allowed to say that the blood is a quintessential part of this, that the blood of our people is something that is essential. | ||
That we are different. | ||
that America was different because we are different. | ||
unidentified
|
America was different. | |
Palantir is an AI data analytics company. | ||
They use artificial intelligence to look at vast amounts of data and create insights. | ||
If the government has an amount of data which is kind of unimaginable, if you've got every phone call, every email, every transaction, every photograph of a license plate on the highway, satellite data, it's too much data for a bureaucracy to sift through. | ||
Palantir comes in and interprets the data using algorithms, using artificial intelligence, using software to make vast amounts of data usable. | ||
That's what they are. | ||
And so many of the people that worked with Elon that came into the government through Doge worked with Palantir. | ||
now that doge is finished palantir seems to be just getting started and the reason why is because it's not | ||
unidentified
|
It's not good to shift for Israel. | |
It's me. | ||
How you do too much paper on your side? | ||
And that's the man just wanted to save your eyes. | ||
I reply. | ||
Try to look at me, but not just black. | ||
I'm back, that's all God. | ||
like You can really get your thing you wanna be. | ||
What from one to four to one and three? | ||
13 per limit at it, and it just a year between God. | ||
When you can move the fear and love, you create fear above everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God, Jesus has won the victory, bro. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
This is Amira Harris. | ||
No, I cannot let my family call. | ||
I go home. | ||
It's so good. | ||
It's so good. | ||
We brainwashed out here, bro. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
the free man talking the free man talking the free man talking | ||
Thank you. | ||
I can ask you, ask you, ask you, ask you, ask you, ask you. | ||
Thank you so much, everybody. | ||
And I just say, are you trusting me? | ||
I am. | ||
unidentified
|
I am. | |
Just up, let me be honest. | ||
And I saw a funny first time. | ||
I saw it for the first time. | ||
She seems on my eyes, but I'm better at the old man Waste now, just get in love Waste | ||
now, just get in love Waste now, just get in love Waste now, just get in love Waste now, just get in love Waste now, just get in love She's a cocaine, my patient I'm a doctor, but I'm running out of patience If you don't be lucky, I'll take you close to the space. | ||
When I get home, I want you. | ||
Hello, hello, hello, hello. | ||
I got places to be Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Quentis. | ||
Have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Bye. | ||
you you Bye. | ||
This is the time to come you If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. | ||
If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. | ||
As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. | ||
That is why the world hates you. | ||
Remember what I told you: a servant is not greater than his master. | ||
If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also. | ||
They will treat you this way because of my name, for they do not know the one who sent me. | ||
Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and do not do what I say? | ||
A new command I give you: love one another. | ||
As I have loved you, so you must love one another. | ||
By this, everyone will know that you are my disciples if you love one another. | ||
You have heard that it was said: love your neighbor and hate your enemy. | ||
But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your Father in heaven. | ||
He causes his Son to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. | ||
If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? | ||
Are not even the tax collectors doing that? | ||
And if you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? | ||
Do not even pagans do that? | ||
Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly father is perfect. | ||
Are you winning, son? | ||
Are you winning? | ||
I wish that you cocaine-y, baby. | ||
I want nothing to do. | ||
My own narrative is not one of some sudden booming bolt of lightning out of the blue. | ||
It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and glares, low beams and high beams of light, some of which I did not want to see. | ||
And then finally, a point of no return reckoning. | ||
unidentified
|
Why are you called Monnie Nolt? | |
I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Groica Wars of 2019 when so many of these brave young men were on college campuses challenging the likes of Zio Shield Dan Crenshaw, questioning him about his undying loyalty, of course, defending Nick Fuente 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. | ||
We can't be held hostage by this country forever. | ||
When will it end? | ||
unidentified
|
When will any leader put their foot down and reassert American sovereignty? | |
Do we run the world or does Israel? | ||
Do we even run our own country? | ||
Do we control our own military? | ||
unidentified
|
Do we control our own government or does Israel? | |
When can we expect a real victory? | ||
And who's going to deliver it? | ||
JD Vance? | ||
If they revealed birth-right citizenship, his wife wouldn't be a citizen anymore. | ||
unidentified
|
I've known no other country. | |
This is my home. | ||
My love has got no money. | ||
He's got his strong beliefs. | ||
My love has got no power. | ||
He's got his strong beliefs. | ||
My love has got no fame. | ||
He's got his strong beliefs. | ||
My love has got no money. | ||
He's got his strong beliefs. | ||
Want more and more. | ||
People just want more and more freedom and blood. | ||
What he's looking for, want more and more. | ||
People just want more and more freedom and blood. | ||
What he's looking for. | ||
Freed from desire. | ||
Mine and senses purified. | ||
Freed from desire. | ||
Mine and senses purified. | ||
Freed from desire. | ||
Mine and senses purified. | ||
Freed from desire. | ||
My life is like a first-person video game, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
This is like, this is my primary. | |
This is me like walking, walking down the hall. | ||
This is my primary weapon. | ||
Press circle to interact. | ||
Press circle to interact with this item. | ||
At the end of the day, here's the question: Is it worth it to save the country? | ||
Does the country matter? | ||
Is it worth it to preserve our civilization? | ||
Is it worth it to preserve our religion? | ||
Maybe bigger than that. | ||
Is the truth worth it? | ||
What is the truth worth to you? | ||
What is telling the truth worth to you? | ||
Is it worth something, nothing? | ||
What are you willing to give to tell the truth? | ||
They see America merely as a vessel. | ||
I mean, only a class of people so rootless in their transition in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
We're gonna smash your brain in with the Bible, idiot. | ||
unidentified
|
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | |
Where's enough enough, babe? | ||
Where's enough enough? | ||
That's it. | ||
Just need a big back suit, bitch. | ||
unidentified
|
In the peace of money, that's the stuff in life. | |
Now the last of life Feel like angels You can move a country In a peaceful country You're not mistaken That's the stuff in love. | ||
Another lesson. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not funny. | |
Sipping wine, having some hot stab and some pizza. | ||
I'm weird, I'm normal. | ||
I'm the wild, not normal. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a soldier, I'm fourth. | |
I'm a rich, though. | ||
I'll ride up and randomly. | ||
unidentified
|
One person raised his voice. | |
Teacher couldn't believe it. | ||
The classroom couldn't believe it either. | ||
but in the end he had logic on this side And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
Feel like the mirror from Casino. | ||
Where they got the sun in Fortezino. | ||
No, I'm sorry. | ||
When you growing on the ice, what you second to me, the girl, she be blowing on the grace. | ||
And put the game through the game for the feel like the nerve on casino. | ||
Where they got the sun in Fortecino. | ||
And I'm addicted to Sarah Cora. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I feel like the nigga on Cassell. | ||
We got the sun and the water's free on me. | ||
I feel like the nigga on Cassell. | ||
I feel like the nigga on Cassell. | ||
I feel like the nigga on Cassell. | ||
It's not, it's not to shift Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
unidentified
|
This is a mirror. | |
I fear and love God. | ||
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won a victory, bro. | ||
Type like this is what your life like. | ||
Try to live life right. | ||
Who really knows you think you're playing like type right? | ||
This is like a movie but it's really very pipelike. | ||
Every single night, right, every single pipe right. | ||
I was looking at the camera, I don't even tight like I was screaming at my daddy, don't be in it, Christ like. | ||
I was screaming at the rest of the week, just type like looking for a bright light. | ||
Legal, what's your life like riding on the white fight? | ||
Filling like a tight bike, pressing on the gas, it was over food type like screaming at my dad, then he showed me any Christ like. | ||
But nobody never tell you me, type Christ. | ||
Only ever see it in me. | ||
unidentified
|
Judging for a GG, now you want to be a dream. | |
Now you wanna see it free. | ||
Take the TV of peace. | ||
Tell me what you like like. | ||
Turn it down to Christ like my dad and he told me it ain't Christ-like. | ||
I'm Just trying to find another for a new way. | ||
Just really trying not to break through the blue way. | ||
I don't have a food, feeling on my festo. | ||
Fuck up all the texto, that's no text, though. | ||
Another word, better picture or a desmo. | ||
Wrestling with God, I don't really want to rest so bad as fuck. | ||
Fucking with my dad, and he said it ain't Christ-like. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
It's unstoppable. | ||
You know what's in that? | ||
And the reason why... | ||
It's because it's not good to shill a big business. | ||
It's not enough to ship Israel. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is a Christian nation. | ||
unidentified
|
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 propose a toast to our people. | ||
I'd like to propose a toast to the Roypers, to White Boy Summer, White Boy Century, to the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Cheers, everybody. | |
That's gonna happen. | ||
unidentified
|
That's gonna happen. | |
They kicked me off the plane. | ||
unidentified
|
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 spirits, but they never can. | ||
unidentified
|
They'll never take that away from us. | |
Because I believe in God. | ||
And I believe in America. | ||
And I believe in what I'm doing. | ||
We are still enjoying. | ||
unidentified
|
White Boy Summer is still on. | |
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 | ||
white people found in this country This country wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
Wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
white people are done We're the keeper of the American tradition. | ||
unidentified
|
And I think our ancestors smile on us right now while 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 They don't understand the things I say on Twitter. | ||
They don't understand the things I say on Twitter All my niggas Nazis making a hell of a Oh, I can't watch everybody | ||
The Romans We paved the way with our corpses. | ||
Groipers 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. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, look, I'm a real human. | |
At the end of the day, I don't come on the show with all these calculated talking points or anything. | ||
unidentified
|
This show has always been me just, you know, I'm just talking to you. | |
I'm just getting on the air. | ||
You know what I'm about. | ||
You know, you know my story. | ||
unidentified
|
I was just real. | |
I'm just real. | ||
unidentified
|
I just laid all on the field there. | |
I'm a real human. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm here. | |
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. | ||
unidentified
|
Realhuman.com. | |
Give me your email, which should be human at human.com. | ||
I'm being silly, but it's true. | ||
It's true. | ||
Some people get it, some people don't. | ||
It's the human, human against the haters. | ||
A lot of haters, a lot of bitterness, a lot of resentment. | ||
And, you know, there's, and we've just got to rise up above against that. | ||
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 fads and the journalists and the doubters, the traitors, the deceivers, the human beings got to rise up. | ||
And we 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. | ||
unidentified
|
We've got to rise up with our God-given strength. | |
And we've got to be, we've got to be human again. | ||
We got to be really and truly and extremely human. | ||
And we're looking at being human very strongly. | ||
unidentified
|
It's called being a human, and we're looking at it very strongly. | |
Nobody's a bigger human being than me. | ||
And it's so true, and I say it all the time. | ||
unidentified
|
And it's truly special. | |
It's going to be something truly special. | ||
We can't be held hostage by this country forever. | ||
When will it ever? | ||
unidentified
|
When will any leader put their foot down and reassert American sovereignty? | |
Do we run the world or does Israel? | ||
Do we even run our own country? | ||
Do we control our own military? | ||
Do we control our own government or does Israel? | ||
unidentified
|
Do we control our own government or does Israel? | |
Hello, I got places to be Hello, I got places to be I got places to be Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Quentis. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
There's 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. | ||
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Welcome to our massive vision, our massive and ambitious journey. | |
Can't go back to the past. | ||
That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
They say, can we really go back? | ||
And the answer is: whether you're conservative or liberal, right when you're left with the answer is no. | ||
We're never going back. | ||
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 conceited. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now, and Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | ||
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Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | |
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 convert really more than anybody. | |
But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't include the mission of our movement is to make this country a Christian country. | ||
The mission is to create a Christian future in our time. | ||
The only way we're going to do it is not by infiltrating, not by subverting, not by buying, which is what a lot of people do. | ||
The only way that we're going to make this happen is with the boldness of a real Christian. | ||
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The only way we have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | |
We have to want it more than they do because there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny. | ||
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then nothing can stop us, and nothing will. | |
Bring me back to every weekend. | ||
No snowballs on the deep end. | ||
You say that I'm bad for the raisin away. | ||
Bitch, I'm better, I'm better. | ||
I'm, I'm better. | ||
Got these city dumps. | ||
Gotta see this kid. | ||
No, I'm different clumps. | ||
God got the standard. | ||
Body current training. | ||
Wishing in that family. | ||
Wishing in their memory. | ||
Hold it back. | ||
Where you wear the club? | ||
Hold it back. | ||
Where you had that gun. | ||
On them. | ||
Yeah, pull up by the side. | ||
Yeah, I pull up on them. | ||
Now I got this baby hat on them. | ||
I'm straight out of the dumps. | ||
I'm straight out these lights. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
He gon' save these bills. | ||
How you gonna save these lights? | ||
Yeah, turn up at my show. | ||
And he's just do it right. | ||
Yeah, yeah, we gon' all night. | ||
You gon' send me big gon' send me bigo, serve up outnate. | ||
You gon' share my joy, you'll stop my cup. | ||
You'll straighten me all right. | ||
They had a feeling that they had a brother to make it trouble with the blood so tweaking. | ||
We had the bills in the blood, but let me out of your mind, you crazy tweaking. | ||
Has a bit out of my lane, man of my mind. | ||
I'm really wearing out of my drinking. | ||
Not that you never need life to love in this world. | ||
We're running and make it for weeks. | ||
Shut it up from me every time I go. | ||
Yeah, she's bleaching. | ||
Oh, y'all trying to get savage like that world. | ||
Got me running back every weekend. | ||
Let me see. | ||
I'm going off on the table. | ||
You say that I'm back for no raisin. | ||
this If you graduate from a United States University with a skill, upon graduation or your diploma, We should staple a green card behind your diploma. | ||
Look, folks, it makes absolutely no sense, by the way, that we send home 40,000 engineers and scientists who are in a PhD in our university every year and we send them back home. | ||
We should be stapling a green card to each and every one of those degrees as they walk across the stage. | ||
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By the way, if someone gets an advanced degree, I want them to stay here, so I'd staple the green card to their diploma. | |
You may recall that when we did in 2005-2006 our innovation agenda, we said right then in there, staple the green card to the diploma. | ||
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Please promise us you will give us more ability to import the best and brightest around the world. | |
What I want to do, and what I will do, is you graduate from a college. | ||
I think you should get automatically as part of your diploma a green card. | ||
He said this on the all-in podcast with David Sachs, a Silicon Valley Test CEO. | ||
It just so happens that they were going to do the podcast at a fundraiser two weeks earlier at David Sachs' house, where David Sachs and his friends raised $12 million for Trump's campaign. | ||
Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Mitt Romney, and now Donald Trump all say green cards for every foreign student. | ||
And do you want to know why they've all said this? | ||
It was all written for these people by their campaigns, which are taking money from all the same people. | ||
This reflects the uni party consensus. | ||
This reflects the globalist consensus of the Republicans and the Democrats, which both serve the same billionaires and the same giant firms. | ||
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White supremacist/slash Holocaust denier named Nick Fuente. | |
Nick Fuente. | ||
Nick Fuente. | ||
Jesus! | ||
Jesus Christ was our past. | ||
Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
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And Jesus Christ is our future after we die. | |
We want THIS century to become the most Christian century in the history of planet Earth! | ||
*Dramatic music* *Dramatic | ||
music* *Dramatic | ||
music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic | ||
music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* *Dramatic music* Thank | ||
you. | ||
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Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
I'm not supposed to be here tonight. | ||
I'm supposed to be here. | ||
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I want to shark off my shoulders on charge of how my voice has nothing but a screw. | |
I stretch my head, but my curve just goes up. | ||
I stretch my head, but my curve is very low. | ||
When I get home, I want you. | ||
Hello, hello, hello, hello. | ||
I got places to be Leaving everybody watching America First, my name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
You got that back, but that's a backup bump. | ||
You got that back. | ||
You got that back, that's a bump. | ||
You get that light, you get that light, you get that light, it's just running down, you're going to want to keep you on the road. | ||
They believed a lion could be brought to heal. | ||
They have total control that a lion could, from his courage, be pride over every single thing that the lion himself would learn to kneel. | ||
They pull the string. | ||
The lion would not care, even if his line died. | ||
Things have to change. | ||
That the lion himself would accept such a deal. | ||
And they have to change right now. | ||
In the end, it was only to themselves they had lied. | ||
Lied. | ||
I am your voice. | ||
Lawrence, I brought something really interesting In 2016, Donald Trump vowed that the United States would buy and, more importantly, hire American. | ||
But in June of 2024, during the all-in podcast hosted by his donor, David Sachs, he committed that he would not only expand work visas, but he would staple green cards to them. | ||
I cannot support this, and I will not encourage my followers to turn out in November to vote for this or campaign for this. | ||
It is not an unreasonable demand to say that we will not vote for a candidate that promises to import more legal immigrants. | ||
And it is not unreasonable because for the first time in 20 years, it is the majority opinion that there are too many legal immigrants coming into the country. | ||
Ask yourself this: if not Donald Trump, if not now, then when so they may say mass deportations, they may say illegal immigration. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
It's not enough. | ||
And Americans need to get used to saying that. | ||
Native Americans never get what they ask for because they're always telling themselves and negotiating with themselves, telling us it's good enough. | ||
We need to hear the words immigration moratorium. | ||
No more immigrants. | ||
No more. | ||
Not since he announced his reelection campaign in November 2022 have I told anybody to vote for Trump. | ||
When pushed for details on the policy, clearly they're repeating the same script as every other Republican, and they show that they're really not serious about mass deportations. | ||
For that reason, I actually don't believe that illegal immigration will fall to historic lows. | ||
And this is your America first policy. | ||
We need the people. | ||
We need limitless green cards. | ||
And by the way, once they come in, you can't deport them. | ||
So people, when confronted with this reality, first they said it was a throwaway remark. | ||
They said he didn't really mean it. | ||
Well, he's doubled down on it many times. | ||
He doubled down on it in June, August, last week. | ||
Now they say, well, so what? | ||
Even if he means it, he said it last time. | ||
No, he didn't. | ||
Last time he was against H-1B visas. | ||
Like, you thought you were going to tap the screen to pressure Trump, except one problem: Elon owns the platform. | ||
But now the check marks are being removed, which means people are being de-amplified, and it's being manipulated. | ||
They're manipulating the conversation. | ||
And Elon retweeted today or reposted Trump saying in June, staple the green cards to the diplomas. | ||
And that's a reminder: hey, this is what we got. | ||
This is the deal. | ||
I put in 277. | ||
I want the platform for you. | ||
I've made Trump win. | ||
And now Trump's going to deliver. | ||
And if you're against it, well, there goes your check mark. | ||
If you voted for him, you are a sucker. | ||
I expect apologies. | ||
I want apology forms. | ||
I want you. | ||
I'm sorry, Mr. Quentis. | ||
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should have supported Grape of War 2. | |
Wish it at night, family Wish it at night, mommy, yeah Hold it up When you wear the clothes Hold it up When you had that gun Hold me, yeah Pull up by the side. | ||
Yeah, I'll pull up on him. | ||
Now I get this bail patch on him. | ||
I'm straight out of these dumps. | ||
I'm straight out of these lights. | ||
How you gonna save these bills? | ||
How you gonna save these lights? | ||
Yeah, turn up at my show at least. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
We gonna holiday. | ||
You gon' send me big gon' send me fingo turn up night. | ||
He's gonna show my trees, come on, come here, treat me all right. | ||
I didn't feel like we had a brother making a jump in the blood, so tweaking. | ||
We're gonna build some buttons, let me out of your mind, you crazy twiggin'. | ||
Got your man of my lane, man in my mind. | ||
I'm really wearing out of my twiggins. | ||
Know that you're living these lights, you living this world. | ||
Running and making weekends every time I mean, this is part of the sad thing of Hat Buchanan as far as I'm concerned. | ||
Sad thing is, and I know that no one who watches him will believe me. | ||
Pat does raise issues that I think are important. | ||
Doesn't mean everything he says is false. | ||
It doesn't mean he's not talented. | ||
He's enormously talented. | ||
Doesn't mean he's a bad person. | ||
I'm not attacking him personally. | ||
I mean, I think that, you know, the sovereignty of the American military, et cetera, I mean, these are not just crank issues. | ||
It's young white men who've been totally cut out of our economy, attacked mercilessly. | ||
I mean, they really are the victims and they're desperate, and no one speaks for them. | ||
So they go to Fuentes because he's like incredibly articulate and they think he's our leader. | ||
But unfortunately, Pat Buchanan raises them in a way that I think is discredited. | ||
But he is clearly part of a campaign to discredit non-crazy right voices. | ||
Pat Buchanan is part of the reason it's so hard to have that conversation because he discredits it by his presence. | ||
That's a campaign to destroy credible voices on the right. | ||
And Fuentes is part of it. | ||
And that he believes in conspiracies and that he believes that the Jews are this sinister, secretly organized force trying to affect American politics. | ||
And those aren't discussions I think normal people, sober people, should be having. | ||
Anyway, like, who is this kid exactly? | ||
And maybe it's just an accident that the guy goes after, exclusively goes after people who are in the same, roughly the same. | ||
And then he gets up there and he's like, you know, making Holocaust jokes. | ||
When attacked, he can always fall back on the line: well, the, you know, the tiny cabal that controls American politics doesn't like me because I speak truth to power. | ||
This is actually, incidentally, almost verbatim, what he said the other day, that I offend the plutocracy, that I'm a wanted man by the inside the beltway people, and in an every sense, cast himself as a victim who is sort of a Karen Silkwood of politics, someone who's so truthful that he's being hunted down by the conspiracy that runs Washington. | ||
I mean, it's all a bit much. | ||
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My love has got no money, he's got his strong beliefs. | |
My love has got no power, he's got his strong beliefs. | ||
My love has got no fame, he's got his strong beliefs. | ||
My love has got no money, he's got his strong beliefs. | ||
Want more and more. | ||
People just want more and more freedom and blood. | ||
But he's looking for want more and more. | ||
People just want more and more freedom and blood. | ||
What he's looking for. | ||
Freed from desire. | ||
Mind and senses purified, freed from desire. | ||
Mind and senses purified, freed from desire. | ||
Mine and senses purified, freed from desire. | ||
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. | ||
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Welcome to our massive vision, our massive and ambitious goals. | |
Welcome to our massive vision, our massive and ambitious goals. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Quentis. | ||
Have a great show for you tonight. | ||
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Bye. | |
That's what I could phone, you got that hot, hot, it's a ton of phone Mesutina, D-D-D-D, you got that hot, hot, that's what I could phone You got that hot, hot, that's what I could phone Oh, this is a ton of phone | ||
All that's interesting. | ||
All that's interesting. | ||
When can we expect a real victory? | ||
And who's going to deliver it? | ||
JD Vance? | ||
If they revealed birthright citizenship, his wife wouldn't be a citizen anymore. | ||
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I know no other country. | |
This is my home. | ||
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This is my home. | |
How can you call it a movement when you have no emotions? | ||
You eat all the movement'cause you have no motion. | ||
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You eat all the movement. | |
You just interviewed Nick Fuentes or had a conversation with him. | ||
What did you think of that? | ||
What do you think of him? | ||
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My experience with Nick Fuentes is that he's a terrible person and a terrible human being. | |
But he is clearly part of a campaign to discredit non-crazy right voices. | ||
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I can confirm he's dishonest. | |
This child, this weird little gay kid in his basement in Chicago, young white men who've been totally cut out of our economy, I mean, they really are the victims and they're desperate and no one speaks for them. | ||
So they go to Fuentes because he's like incredibly articulate and they think he's our leader. | ||
But in one of the saddest ironies of all, like he's acting against your interests, actually. | ||
But then when it comes to me, I'm one of the real disaffected white people. | ||
You want to talk about me and them? | ||
I am them. | ||
He says Nick Fuentes is leading all of the disaffected young white men. | ||
I am a disaffected white, young white man. | ||
I was a precocious, intelligent, young white college student who went to Boston University, who was pro-Trump and red-pilled by Trump and animated by Trump's message of America first. | ||
And I asked questions about Israel and I was punished for it. | ||
I did it years before Tucker Carlson started talking about Israel last year. | ||
And I sacrificed and I was targeted by the ADL, by the SPLC, by the federal government, by the conservative movement that both Candace and Tucker were a part of. | ||
He's lonely. | ||
He's weird. | ||
He lives in a basement. | ||
That's a lot of people because of the problems you claim to care about. | ||
Do you care about Kwarna and people going into debt to order pizzas and home ownership being impossible? | ||
Or do you think that's a contemptible, low-status thing to be ridiculed and mocked? | ||
What is Wrong with being from Chicago? | ||
What is wrong with being weird? | ||
What is wrong with living in your basement? | ||
I'm the inauthentic person. | ||
I am that person. | ||
I am a spokesman for the disaffected white man because I am one and you two are not. | ||
My dad didn't even graduate college. | ||
My mother's father was a garbage man in Chicago and he committed suicide. | ||
He was a veteran of World War II. | ||
Who's the CIA cutout? | ||
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Who's the poser? | |
Who is America? | ||
I am America. | ||
Chicago is America. | ||
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That's an American story. | |
The Canary Mission is an Israeli-funded blacklist, which since July 2025 has been confirmed to be used by the Trump administration to target students, professors, and professionals who oppose Israel and reside in the United States. | ||
This idea is part of an initiative created by the Heritage Foundation, the same group responsible for the infamous Project 2025. | ||
In their initiative, titled Project Esther, they state that students participating in pro-Palestinian protests and activism are supporting Hamas, a group that the United States designates as a foreign terrorist organization. | ||
Therefore, pro-Palestinian students are considered to be supporting terrorism and are subject to the revocation of visas, frozen bank accounts, asset seizures, and the denial of basic constitutional rights. | ||
In effect, the Canary mission serves as a means to circumvent constitutional protections, allowing the federal government to engage in intelligence gathering activities that would otherwise be considered unlawful. | ||
But the Canary mission is not alone. | ||
Palantir, another company closely aligned with the state of Israel, uses AI-driven analytics to maintain private databases on U.S. citizens and currently works with four federal agencies. | ||
While government contracting with the private sector is longstanding, the prominent influence of Jewish groups within these increasingly powerful organizations warrants careful examination. | ||
I renew the call for all able-bodied young American men, all of our elite human capital, all of our geniuses, warriors, intelligent people to dedicate themselves to American sovereignty and independence. | ||
As Christians, as Americans, as white people, as citizens of the United States, and anybody that settles for anything less is just as much of an enemy, I would actually consider them worse than our oppressors. | ||
So on Independence Day, it's important to reflect on the fact that we are an occupied nation. | ||
Now, just like then, we're being ruled by a small country across an ocean, serving itself at our expense. | ||
And as long as that is the case, I will always be obsessed with that. | ||
As long as that is the case, I will always be speaking out against that and fighting against that. | ||
And I will always be anchored, understanding that that is the fundamental struggle. | ||
As long as our presidents have to kiss the wall in Israel and wear a small hat, as long as they have to say that we want to make Israel great again and they're the greatest country ever, I will never be okay with that. | ||
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Ever. | |
And it doesn't matter what they offer me or us. | ||
It doesn't matter how they might try to placate us or appease our interests, the concessions they'll make. | ||
As long as that is the case, it is unacceptable. | ||
And that's what it means to be an American. | ||
How did we get here? | ||
This is not a timeline going back to 1948. | ||
What had just happened before the 2016 election? | ||
Barack Obama created the joint comprehensive plan of action, the JCPOA, or the Iranian nuclear deal. | ||
And Barack Obama brought together China, Russia, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States and the European Union to enforce a nuclear deal that restricts Iran's enrichment of uranium. | ||
The early talks were conducted in secret, and the Israelis were furious, furious about this. | ||
They hated Obama. | ||
Netanyahu went to a joint session of Congress and gave a speech in defiance of the American president and its nuclear deal, and Congress gave 37 standing ovations. | ||
This is the background of Trump's first election. | ||
2016 election happens. | ||
Trump gets elected with the help of the Israelis. | ||
You don't believe me? | ||
There's a whole article about it. | ||
It's an excerpt from James Bamford's book, Spy Fail. | ||
It goes into great detail about the hidden collusion in the 2016 election. | ||
It wasn't Trump and Russia. | ||
It was Trump and Israel. | ||
And why was Israel so hell-bent on getting a Republican elected in 2016? | ||
To scuttle the Iranian nuclear deal. | ||
And that's exactly what happened. | ||
That was the ask. | ||
The United States will withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal. | ||
In 2018, Donald Trump declares the IRGC, the Revolutionary Guard, which is the military of the regime, a terrorist group. | ||
Greenlights that group for sanctions, for attacks. | ||
Now the United States is in a shadow war with Iran. | ||
It culminates by January 2020 in the assassination of Qasem Suleimani. | ||
Suleimani was the architect of the axis of resistance. | ||
Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, Suleimani built all of it. | ||
Are you starting to see Obama had this solved? | ||
He made the deal. | ||
The Israelis hated him for it. | ||
They colluded with Trump to get him elected so that Trump would do maximum pressure and create a ladder of escalation, pulling us out of the deal, declaring the IRGC terrorists, then killing its leader, putting sanctions on the regime. | ||
This is a war that started a long time ago, that Trump made hot in 2018 and has been going on for seven years. | ||
That's the nature of forever wars. | ||
Just like in Iraq, which went from 1990 until today, just like Libya, which went from 2011 to today, Syria, which went from 2011 to today, and Iran, which went from 2018 until today. | ||
That's the nature of forever wars. | ||
And if you're not paying attention to those underlying forces, you're going to fall for it again and again. | ||
You're going to be surprised and confused and coping over and over. | ||
And people are just tripping over themselves to do it again. | ||
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The End If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. | |
If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. | ||
As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. | ||
That is why the world hates you. | ||
Remember what I told you? | ||
A servant is not greater than his master. | ||
If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also. | ||
They will treat you this way because of my name, for they do not know the one who sent me. | ||
Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and do not do what I say? | ||
The new command I give you. | ||
Love one another. | ||
As I have loved you, so you must love one another. | ||
By this, everyone will know that you are my disciples if you love one another. | ||
You have heard that it was said, Love your neighbor and hate your enemy. | ||
But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your father in heaven. | ||
He causes his son to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. | ||
If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? | ||
Are not even the tax collectors doing that? | ||
And if you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? | ||
Do not even pagans do that. | ||
Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect. | ||
Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect. | ||
But as soon as people start playing names, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I just got yay, bud. | ||
I said, trust your man. | ||
I'm a son of a bitch. | ||
I said, change your girls like a brother. | ||
My mama said, trust no hoes. | ||
There's no problem. | ||
I'm a son of a bitch. | ||
Out the track. | ||
Out the first. | ||
Edge. | ||
See Ricky said. | ||
I don't want to phone you. | ||
But if you want to phone you. | ||
You don't want to. | ||
Okay. | ||
Bro. | ||
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This is why. | |
Give the code to sack you. | ||
Bro. | ||
It's gonna have you back. | ||
And stick with your baby one horse, I was there before the start. | ||
Pray before you go to be every day. | ||
I'm going to see you. | ||
First day walking, now they hop it. | ||
I wonder where it doesn't seem to be. | ||
Can't they take those projects? | ||
They start fucking. | ||
Not by words, not my rules. | ||
I can force them, all right? | ||
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They say, trust them, man. | |
Put them up and say, if you believe your day, boy, send them out a comment. | ||
Say, if you don't do it, you're going to stick them out a comment. | ||
Mama said, Trust no hope. | ||
You're so rubber. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
It was pretty sick, too, tight. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
America's first bitch. | ||
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Oh, yeah. | |
See, Ricky said, Double in the party, don't wanna pull you. | ||
If you run the road, you get a wood on my book, bitch slop. | ||
Keep the code to sac your butts, don't have your back with the buttons. | ||
Stick with the big one homies, now we're still before we start it. | ||
You know what I'm saying, but the man above your head. | ||
Pray before you go to bed, everyday my parents is. | ||
I'm in the first day pocket, now they hot it. | ||
I'm on the way it doesn't seem to be. | ||
I'm in the first day pocket, now they hot it. | ||
I'm in the first day pocket, now they hot it. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
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I can enforce them, all right? | |
They said, trust those fans, but the lovers said, you never leave your day, boys. | ||
And I'll come and see the dream. | ||
I was thinking like a couple more. | ||
Mama said, Trust no hope, use a water. | ||
They said, Crush to me, put your mother slipping. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
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 are dying, boy. | ||
It's all going down the drain. | ||
Our country's going to hell in a handbasket. | ||
We haven't got the country we had when I was great. | ||
Not at all. | ||
Nobody will have the fun I am. | ||
Nobody will have the opportunity. | ||
I am. | ||
unidentified
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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 you're even a teenager by things on their phone. | ||
Sick addiction to technology. | ||
The future is so bleak, but that has changed the calculation. | ||
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God is using me. | |
He's breaking me down. | ||
Removing all of the richest person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
I think they've been extremely unfair to you. | ||
Who is they, though? | ||
We can't tell you they is. | ||
There is no future if we do nothing now. | ||
There is nothing to lose. | ||
People that are scrambling, trying to protect their ever-shrinking share of what they have are foolish. | ||
It's all going. | ||
It's all going away. | ||
This country is being ripped apart and raped and looted. | ||
We're being slowly poisoned and in some cases quickly murdered and assassinated. | ||
And we're killing ourselves every day. | ||
Inadvertently, with the kinds of things that we eat and breathe and drink and see. | ||
People have got to start to radically begin to obey their conscience and tell the truth and do the right thing. | ||
People have got to start to get courageous. | ||
And this is the time for everybody to turn and look to God and to pray and to ask for strength and to ask for wisdom to get through this time and to transform and sanctify this country. | ||
And the alternative is that there will be no country. | ||
Is it really only As big as low gas prices, is it really only so big as bringing inflation and gas prices and the corporate tax rate back down? | ||
It's not about waiting for someone to come in and change the policy and make it better. | ||
It's a personal decision that we all have to make to become soldiers of Christ. | ||
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To be continued... | |
you you you Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
When I get home, I want you. | ||
Hello, hello, hello, hello. | ||
I got places to be I got places to be Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas Jay Quentis. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
You got that back, back, back, this her time to fall Menjelina, do you, menjelina, do you, girl You got that back, back, that's her, oh, oh You got that man, you got that man, you got that man. | ||
Thank you. | ||
We paved the way with our corpse. | ||
Royfers 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. | ||
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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. | ||
They don't understand the things I say on Twitter. | ||
They don't understand the things I say on Twitter. | ||
All my niggas, Nazis, niggas, how are you? | ||
They don't understand the things I say on Twitter. | ||
The Romanshole. | ||
They don't understand the things I say on Twitter. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our Twitter. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
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America first. | |
The American people will come first once again. | ||
respect the respect that we deserve From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
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, Casual Friday. | ||
It's a casual fit, but the subject matter is anything but casual, anything but light. | ||
We got a big show for you tonight. | ||
A very big and exciting show. | ||
This is going to be what I consider the sequel, part two of my investigation into Tucker Carlson, the CIA, the neocons, and what is going on right now in the country with this explosion of questions, interest, curiosity about the role of Jewish power in the country. | ||
I don't know if this will be the end of the series. | ||
I didn't think I would even do a sequel. | ||
But tonight we are going to continue on from where we left off last week. | ||
If you didn't see the show last week, I would highly encourage you to watch it. | ||
It's one of my most watched videos on Rumble already. | ||
I think we're nearly at 800,000 views. | ||
It's by far one of the biggest shows on my channel that I've done. | ||
But I do want to stress, if you haven't seen that one yet, you're going to want to watch it. | ||
And I know it's a big time commitment. | ||
It clocked in at about three hours. | ||
That was not my intention, but it was a lot of material to get through. | ||
I didn't anticipate it. | ||
And I know it's a bit of a time commitment. | ||
Usually the show is about an hour. | ||
At least the monologue is. | ||
But if you haven't seen that one already, you're going to want to see it because there's a lot of information that I covered in the first one that's going to be highly relevant to what we're going to talk about tonight. | ||
And as I said, I did not intend for this to be a series. | ||
I didn't intend to make a sequel. | ||
How we got here is that last week, as you all know, infamously, it was in the afternoon, Tucker Carlson published his interview with Candace Owens, and they talked about a lot of the usual stuff. | ||
They talked about her ongoing defamation case against Emmanuel and Brigitte Macrone, talked about the Israel-Gaza situation, among other things. | ||
But one thing, obviously, the shot heard around the world, is that they launched a 15-minute personal attack, as well as an attack on my reputation. | ||
And this attack did not come out of nowhere. | ||
It was based on things that Tucker Carlson has been saying privately for a very long time, actually for years. | ||
He's been saying these things to Alex Jones, Candace Owens in private, really anybody who will listen. | ||
And what started out as a whisper campaign and a collaboration with Max Blumenthal at the Gray Zone back in 2023 blew up into the public wide out in the open last week on Friday when he condemned me on his show, saying that I represent a campaign to discredit the authentic anti-neocon, ostensibly America First figures on the American right wing. | ||
That was the basis and the subject of his attack. | ||
He said that I, being a crazy extremist, a bigot, a hateful anti-Semite, by attacking or embracing America First figures like himself, Joe Kent and J.D. Vance, he said I was clearly deployed by either intelligence or by the far left to, | ||
by a toxic association or by sabotage, bring down the legitimate figures criticizing the neoconservative establishment Inside Washington. | ||
So last week, as you know, I went on a three-hour tear. | ||
I was accused of being a CIA asset myself. | ||
I went into the history of my relationship with Tucker, why he's saying these things, and I shined a light on some of his past associations. | ||
Notably, our dispute came from my antagonism towards Joe Kent, a CIA officer who, with backing from Peter Thiel, ran for Congress in 2022. | ||
I pointed out how Joe Kent, being in the CIA, receiving money from the CIA, he actually attacked me first on the basis that I don't support Israel and on the basis that I am a white identitarian and a Christian nationalist. | ||
He said, the real America First is inclusive populism. | ||
It's pro-Israel and it doesn't talk too much about race or religion. | ||
And I pointed out how that's a consistent theme with all of these so-called legitimate America firsters, from Joe Kent to J.D. Vance to Tucker himself. | ||
I went over all their past statements, their support for Israel, their support for multiracialism, which they call colorblind meritocracy, their opposition to Christian nationalism and support for religious pluralism. | ||
I talked also about their conspicuous connections to the CIA. | ||
Joe Kent worked for them directly. | ||
Vance is a creation, an artifice, who is mentored by Peter Thiel, one of the CIA's biggest contractors, and Tucker Carlson, famously, whose father ran a CIA propaganda empire throughout the 80s and 90s. | ||
Now, that's a brief recap of where we left off last week. | ||
As I said, I did not intend to make a sequel. | ||
That was going to be the end of it. | ||
But as the day went on on Friday and Saturday and Sunday, as the weekend progressed last week, in response to my groundbreaking investigation, many of the Groipers, many of my fans and other people, went into the archives and they went digging. | ||
And they found a lot of new information and new clips and quotes, not just from Tucker Carlson, but also from his father, Dick Carlson. | ||
And after watching some of these clips, I came to the conclusion that everything that I talked about on Friday was woefully insufficient. | ||
And the reason it was insufficient is because it lacked context. | ||
The goal of the show tonight is to provide the context. | ||
Because of course, many of the things we talk about on the show, I expect that you know what I know. | ||
I expect that you know what Tucker knows or what many of these other people know. | ||
And in many cases, to start in the middle of the story does not do the whole story justice. | ||
In many ways, it is a half-truth. | ||
All stories have to start from the beginning. | ||
And this story, like many other stories, is a story of generations. | ||
It's a story of fathers and sons and grandsons. | ||
It's a story of institutions and countries. | ||
And bear with me, this show might be a little bit more complex and complicated than last week's. | ||
You might have to watch it a couple of times. | ||
And I believe after this investigation, which I've been conducting over the past week, and really over the past few years, at some point we will have to turn this into some sort of feature-length, highly produced project because it's a little bit difficult to keep track of all these threads. | ||
It's going to require visual cues, a script, all these other things. | ||
It is going to require a lot of immense organization for people to really digest the breadth and the entirety of the story. | ||
So in any case, after I saw some of these clips last week, I came to the conclusion that we had to basically create a prequel because although the case was extremely compelling last week, and I'll tell you why it was compelling, although the show that I did last week was persuasive, factual, according to almost everybody, extremely compelling. | ||
Even those that are fans of Tucker, former fans, or continue to be fans, even people that don't like me praised the show. | ||
It was universally praised. | ||
Now, I'm not saying that to say I'm doing the best job ever. | ||
I'm a great guy. | ||
I'm saying that is the strength of the weight of the evidence. | ||
It suggests, I don't say that for my own accolades. | ||
I don't say that for my own aggrandizement. | ||
It suggests that irrespective of your opinion on me or on Tucker and what you think of this beef, this battle between us, the weight of the evidence, the strength of the information was such that almost everybody, no matter what they thought about me and Tucker before or what they even think about us now, it changed their minds. | ||
But upon reviewing more information, I believe you will see after this show tonight and maybe other future developments, I'm not sure, you will be left with the irrefutable conclusion that what I said last week was totally correct. | ||
It may change how you perceive politics entirely. | ||
And I'm not overstating that. | ||
I'm not saying that for marketing or rhetorical purposes. | ||
I seriously, when I was putting together this show, I started to get a little bit afraid. | ||
And I started to think, maybe I shouldn't go through with it. | ||
Maybe I should not do this show. | ||
Because in revealing a lot of this information, although it's all out there, all this information is public. | ||
You can find it on Wikipedia, public sources. | ||
To bring it to such a large audience, to tell it in such a compelling way, and to bring together the information in the way that I'm going to, it just might be challenging to the powers that be, their modus operandi, how they're operating, the manner of control, and their ultimate objectives. | ||
So it's with some trepidation that I'm bringing you the results, the evidence that I trudged up in my investigation over the course of the last week. | ||
And so we're going to begin now. | ||
Before we do, I want to remind you to smash the follow button here on Rumble, smash the like button, leave a comment, give me your feedback. | ||
Let me know what you think about this episode. | ||
And tell me if you'd like to see a third part or an epilogue. | ||
Let me know what you think about tonight, all the information. | ||
Please be objective as possible. | ||
I'm going to bring you the information. | ||
I'm going to bring you the red pill. | ||
The world as you know it is not as it seems. | ||
So first, before we dive into all of the information, I do want to do a quick recap of some of the things that I saw that led me to do this show. | ||
I'm going to show you two clips. | ||
Now, forgive me because they are a little bit long. | ||
One is two minutes, the other is three minutes. | ||
That doesn't sound long, but you know, that's a good chunk of change for me to be sitting here watching the clips. | ||
But I want to play for you a couple of clips. | ||
These are compilations of clips that have been sourced from C-SPAN and various sources by sources like Paul Town, Uncommon Sense on Twitter. | ||
This is really a grassroots effort of a lot of people on Twitter that have scoured the internet for this information. | ||
And they were inspired to do this by the show last week. | ||
It raised some red flags, some alarm bells. | ||
They got inspired. | ||
They went out. | ||
They did the deep dive and they found this information. | ||
Now, it was because of these clips that I did this show. | ||
The first one I'm going to show you is a composite of about a half dozen different clips going all the way back to the 1990s. | ||
Now, last week, when Tucker did his big attack on me with Candace Owens, the big lie that stood out to everybody, maybe the cause for everybody to give me a chance and listen to what I had to say was this. | ||
He called me a lot of names. | ||
He said I'm a weird basement dweller. | ||
I'm gay, all these different things. | ||
He said I'm a bad faith actor. | ||
I'm trying to poison the well of the legitimate America first right with a toxic association. | ||
He compared me to David Duke. | ||
He said a lot of things. | ||
And these are all things that have been said about me before. | ||
All the different attacks. | ||
You've heard them. | ||
I've heard them. | ||
We've heard them for years. | ||
That's not new. | ||
And some people called it cowardly and dishonorable. | ||
Some people cheered it on, honestly. | ||
But the big thing that stuck out from his show last week is something that could not be ignored. | ||
It was a brazen and bald-faced lie. | ||
This is the central problem. | ||
And maybe the central thing that he said, which again was cause for people to give me some consideration and watch the show last week, he said with Candace, and I'm about to play the clip for you just now. | ||
He said with Candace that he did not know that his father was involved in the CIA until his father died. | ||
And his father died in March of 2025, earlier this year. | ||
Not only did he say that he did not know his father was involved with the CIA, he said he was actually shocked. | ||
He was shocked and surprised that he found out very late in his life, his father was appointed by Ronald Reagan in the late 1980s to work for the U.S. Information Agency hand in glove with the CIA. | ||
And they were behind such things as the CIA covert backing of the Contras in Nicaragua. | ||
They were behind the propaganda surrounding Tiananmen Square in China in 1989. | ||
So his father was involved in some serious stuff. | ||
And Tucker says that he did not know again until just about a few months ago that his dad was involved in the CIA. | ||
Well, everybody really had the same thought, which is, I think I've heard Tucker say, though, in the past, that he knew his father was in the CIA. | ||
And it didn't take long for people to find the evidence. | ||
And so last week on Friday, we found the clip from last year. | ||
Tucker Carlson did a show with Sean Ryan, another former CIA officer. | ||
This was in June of last year. | ||
And Tucker said at that time, I knew my dad was in CIA. | ||
I knew he was in that world. | ||
And so everybody said, wait a minute, irrespective of my favorability towards Tucker or my antipathy towards Nick Fuentes, they said something's not right here. | ||
That's a bald-faced lie. | ||
You got caught. | ||
Last year he said he knew. | ||
This year he says he was surprised, shocked to find this information out in March. | ||
So which is it? | ||
Something is not right here. | ||
Something is out of place. | ||
And what's more, the logical next question is, why would he lie? | ||
Why would he lie in such a brazen way about something like this? | ||
This isn't your usual white lie. | ||
If Tucker himself applied for CIA, if his father was CIA royalty in broadcasting, and Tucker's an international broadcaster, this does raise legitimate questions. | ||
And if Tucker is not being forthcoming about this, but is instead lying or obfuscating or concealing, it invites an investigation. | ||
It says, what else are you lying about? | ||
If you lied that you didn't know your dad was CIA, are you lying that you are CIA or the extent of your cooperation with CIA? | ||
That was a natural question. | ||
But we did more digging over the course of the last week and we found about half a dozen other clips that Tucker knew and said publicly that his father was involved in the CIA. | ||
So I'll play this compilation for you right now and we're going to react to it. | ||
This is the first clip. | ||
It's about two minutes and I'll play this right now. | ||
All of this has come to light over the course of the past week and this is a big reason why I did this show. | ||
So here it is. | ||
And he's attacking my dad as a CIA, his dad, you know, CIA or whatever. | ||
And I'm like, well, that's no untrue. | ||
And my father dies and I learn, actually, yeah, you know, was involved in that world. | ||
Completely shocked by it. | ||
So no one has to believe me, but that's just a fact. | ||
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Right. | |
This was in March of this year. | ||
And so when I applied to CIA and I've taken a lot of crap, including from Putin, like, oh, you're from a CIA family. | ||
Well, yeah, obviously my father worked in conjunction with CIA. | ||
I mean, that's what that is. | ||
And I tried to join the CIA. | ||
He had a bunch of them. | ||
He ran the Voice of America for a long time, maybe five or six years. | ||
He was an ambassador in Africa, and then he ran something called the Corporation of Public Broadcasting. | ||
I mean, the guy who took out Mosaddegh lived on my street. | ||
One of the Roosevelt CIA officers. | ||
So, I mean, again, I grew up around this stuff, but that's why it's not happening. | ||
But they seem to be doing so many other things. | ||
I mean, I've worked with the public. | ||
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Exactly. | |
My dad worked with CIA. | ||
I was never against CIA. | ||
I thought only like dumb Liberals were against CIA, you know, and traitors or whatever. | ||
So, my views on CIA have evolved based on things that I have seen and personally experienced. | ||
You took a pretty well-publicized trip with your father. | ||
Was it about a year and a half ago? | ||
How long has it been? | ||
Since we were in Pakistan, down to Nicaragua for the summer and work and get involved in the war, you know, and support the side that we thought was right. | ||
Where you got left behind for a couple days. | ||
Oh, no, that was when I went to Vietnam with John McCain. | ||
Yeah, I had a hassle at the airport. | ||
And are you still traveling with your father on trips? | ||
We spent the summer in Nicaragua trying to get a sense of the war there, and all kinds of hilarity ensued. | ||
But yourself, my father's a great guy to travel with and very amusing and adventurous person who's up for anything. | ||
So I said, Let's go to Pakistan. | ||
Okay. | ||
And we have the internet to expose the lies. | ||
This isn't 20 years ago when you were on CNN. | ||
And we couldn't expose things. | ||
We can expose it now, and they still do it. | ||
Well, it's, I guess I would ask myself, like, I mean, I lie. | ||
If I'm really cornered or something, I lie. | ||
I try never to lie on TV. | ||
I just don't, you know, I don't like lying. | ||
I certainly do it, you know, out of weakness or whatever. | ||
Okay. | ||
So that's two and a half minutes almost of Tucker Carlson over the course of 20 years talking about and getting caught at least in two, maybe three explicit instances saying, my dad was in the CIA. | ||
We live down the street from the CIA officer that overthrew Mossadegh in Iran in 1953. | ||
I went to Vietnam with John McCain. | ||
I traveled to Pakistan with my father. | ||
I traveled to Nicaragua with my friends at the behest of my father. | ||
All these different clips paint a very interesting picture. | ||
25 years, going back to 1999, Tucker is saying, I was traveling internationally with my dad who was in this world, that Voice of America. | ||
And if you pay attention, he says in the Sean Ryan interview, he said, my dad ran Voice of America. | ||
That's what that is, the CIA. | ||
2001, 2002, he says, my dad's at Voice of America. | ||
He's an ambassador from Seychelles, which is a major hub of the super mob. | ||
If you know anything about Seychelles, it's an island off the coast of Africa. | ||
And so I saw this compilation of clips and I said, something's not right. | ||
This is clearly a deep mystery here. | ||
Obviously, I was onto something on my show last week. | ||
Then another clip came to light. | ||
A second clip, if you will, or a second theme. | ||
If these are a compilation of clips, there was another major clip that caught my attention. | ||
We watched it on Monday. | ||
I was going to do this show on Monday, but I had to do a little more research. | ||
And in this clip, the second clip that I want to play for you, Tucker Carlson attacks Patrick Buchanan. | ||
Now, for those that don't know, Patrick Buchanan was an advisor to the Republican presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan in the 70s and in the 1980s. | ||
He became one of the most popular conservatives in America. | ||
He was a very famous commentator, pundit. | ||
He was on very popular talk shows. | ||
In 1990, he was in the middle of a major scandal because of his opposition to the war in Iraq. | ||
George H.W. Bush, former head of the CIA, vice president under Ronald Reagan, member of the Scottland Bone Society at Yale. | ||
George H.W. Bush took us to war in Iraq in 1990. | ||
Many people believe at the behest of the Israelis. | ||
This was after the neocon ascendancy of the 1970s and 1980s, which we'll get into. | ||
George H.W. Bush takes us to war against Israel's arch enemy, Iraq. | ||
Patrick Buchanan, who was again a very famous columnist and pundit at the time, he ran afoul of many of the Jewish neocons and the conservative movement at large at the time. | ||
He said, the only people that want a war in Iraq are the Israelis and their amen corner in Washington who will agree with them on anything. | ||
For this, he was called an anti-Semite. | ||
He was canceled. | ||
He was banished from the conservative movement. | ||
He ran unsuccessfully for the presidency in 1992, 1996, and then again in 2000. | ||
Now, Patrick Buchanan was America First before America First. | ||
The title of this show. | ||
Patrick Buchanan was against the first war in Iraq before there were opponents of the second war In Iraq or opponents of the war in Iran. | ||
The situation in the 1990s, you could argue, was in many ways identical to what's happening in the conservative movement today. | ||
You had constituent elements of the conservative movement that were very skeptical of foreign intervention, very skeptical of going to war, particularly in the Middle East. | ||
At the same time, there were other factions inside the conservative movement that sought to cancel those people, who called them isolationists, anti-Semites, and undertook actions to get those people fired from their jobs, suppressed, get their careers destroyed, so that they could continue to advocate for wars in the Middle East that benefit Israel. | ||
Patrick Buchanan emerged as probably the leader of that former category of conservatives, of the social conservatives, the remnant of the old right in America that said after the end of the Cold War, why are we racing into the Middle East to fight another war for Israel? | ||
And for that, he was attacked. | ||
Now, this was a seminal moment because in many ways it prefigured the current arrangement. | ||
Just as it was then, so it is now. | ||
You have many constituent elements of the right wing that for one reason or another are coming out against the war in Syria, the war in Iran, calling for withdrawal from Iraq. | ||
And just as it was then, you have another element inside the right wing that is suppressing them, canceling them, trying to brand them as anti-Semites and isolationists. | ||
And just as it was then, you have a figure that has emerged, or a number of figures. | ||
I count myself among them. | ||
Perhaps you could say Tucker Carlson is one too, who are speaking out against the wars and against the neocons, this faction in the conservative movement that are pushing those wars. | ||
But 25 years ago, Tucker Carlson took a very aggressive line towards Pat Buchanan, the leader of America First in the 1990s. | ||
When all of the neocons, when others were attacking him, Tucker Carlson joined that chorus and called Pat Buchanan an anti-Semite and a nut. | ||
And his attack against Buchanan then is almost identical to his attack against me last week. | ||
I'll play that clip for you now. | ||
As I said, it's about three minutes, so bear with me. | ||
But it's important to watch the whole thing from start to finish. | ||
I mean, this is part of the sad theme of Pat Buchanan, as far as I'm concerned. | ||
And just to restate, I mean, Pat does raise issues that I think are important. | ||
I mean, I think that, you know, the sovereignty of the American military, et cetera, I mean, these are not just crank issues. | ||
But unfortunately, Pat Buchanan raises them in a way that I think is discredited. | ||
And when attacked, he can always fall back on the line, well, the, you know, the tiny cabal that controls American politics doesn't like me because I speak truth to power. | ||
This is actually, incidentally, almost verbatim what he said the other day, that I offend the plutocracy, that I'm a wanted man by the inside the beltway people, and in every sense, cast himself as a victim who is sort of a Karen Silkwood of politics, someone who's so truthful that he's being hunted down by the conspiracy that runs Washington. | ||
I mean, it's all a bit much. | ||
Maybe Pat Buchanan just says things that are kind of kooky, and that's why he's being criticized. | ||
It's perfectly valid to question America's relationship with Israel. | ||
Israel has a lobby. | ||
It's perfectly fair, as far as I'm concerned, to beat up on Israel's lobby. | ||
But I don't think that's the reason that Buchanan is being labeled an anti-Semite. | ||
It's this kind of, as I've said, this relentless, this relentless bringing up topics related to Judaism. | ||
I mean, famously, Pat always beats up on Goldman Sachs, but never Morgan Stanley. | ||
I mean, it's really hard to, there is no point at which Pat Buchanan has held a press conference and said, you know, I really don't like the Jews. | ||
I think they're a sinister force in America. | ||
But I think, and it took me years to come to this, to this position. | ||
I mean, I'm not throwing the term anti-Semite around, but you reach a point when you say, well, gee, you know, here's a guy who has gone out of his way to defend Demianyuk and other accused Nazi war criminals who's constantly attacked Israel, who's attacked American Jews for supporting Israel unduly, who's implied that American Jews push America into wars in which non-Jews die. | ||
There really is, and again, I'm not hysterical on this subject, But I do believe that there is a pattern with Pat Buchanan of needling the Jews. | ||
Is that anti-Semitic? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, after all, you conclude it is in some sense anti-Semitic. | ||
I mean, Pat Buchanan obviously has a lot of personal and affectionate relationships with people who are Jewish. | ||
So on a personal level, perhaps he's not, but on a different, maybe thematic level, I think he probably is. | ||
I think that people should be allowed to have differing views on immigration. | ||
I think people should be allowed to point out the fact that there is an Israeli lobby, and yes, it's powerful and debate the merits of that, I guess. | ||
I don't think there's strictly speaking anything wrong with that. | ||
But again, I think Pat Buchanan is part of the reason it's so hard to have that conversation because he discredits it by his presence, because he gives people who watch him carefully the sense that he has another agenda that has to do with personal dislike and that he believes in conspiracies and that he believes that the Jews are this sinister, secretly organized force trying to affect American politics. | ||
And those aren't discussions I think normal people, sober people, should be having because I think they're ludicrous. | ||
Okay, so that's the clip. | ||
We're done with the clips for now. | ||
So I'm going to come back to our main screen here. | ||
So the basis of his attack against Patrick Buchanan is that Buchanan is an anti-Semite. | ||
And let's flesh this out a little bit. | ||
Let's tease this out somewhat. | ||
So Tucker says, because it's a very subtle and nuanced and specific thing that Tucker is saying. | ||
Tucker says that Pat Buchanan is kooky, is hateful, he's crazy, he's an anti-Semite. | ||
And because he's an anti-Semite, he's hurting legitimate political actors. | ||
How does Tucker Carlson create that distinction? | ||
What is the essence of that distinction between these so-called legitimate critics of the Israel lobby? | ||
Because if you notice, Tucker says it is okay to attack the Israel lobby. | ||
It is okay to talk about the sovereignty of our military. | ||
And sovereignty of the military means who is sending Americans to die in wars. | ||
Is it a foreign lobby or is it actually the will of the American people? | ||
He said, so those are legitimate conversations to have. | ||
You can criticize the lobby. | ||
You can argue whether we're going to war at the behest of Israel or not. | ||
He said, and that's legitimate. | ||
That's a legitimate conversation that we can and should have. | ||
He said, but Pat Buchanan is different. | ||
He said, Pat Buchanan is kooky and crazy, and he is an anti-Semite. | ||
Why? | ||
What is the difference? | ||
Tucker says it is the insinuation that Jewish Americans support Israel because they are Jewish. | ||
That is the essence of the distinction. | ||
And in a sense, Tucker is acting as a gatekeeper. | ||
That is effectively a description of a gatekeeper. | ||
When Tucker is telling his audience, this is what you are allowed to talk about, and this is what you are not allowed to talk about. | ||
That is what he said. | ||
He said, these are the conversations you can and should have, and these are the conversations that sober-minded people should not be having. | ||
He is, in effect, by definition, a gatekeeper because he controls the gate of acceptable discourse. | ||
What is tolerable, what is acceptable on television, in print, who can be employed and have a job influencing the minds of Americans, and who should not. | ||
Who should be fired from their positions at various newspapers and opinion magazines? | ||
Who should be fired from television? | ||
Who should be listened to? | ||
Who should have any credibility? | ||
Tucker is acting as a gatekeeper, controlling the gate of acceptable discourse, what is legitimate and what is crazy and hateful. | ||
And the basis of that distinction as the gatekeeper, again, is Pat says it has to do with Judaism. | ||
He is relentlessly talking about Judaism. | ||
And it is the Jewishness of the neocons, which colors their bias in favor of Israel. | ||
Now, I want to read to you: this is an article from Ron Uns. | ||
Ron Uns is Jewish himself. | ||
He wrote a fantastic article about this. | ||
I would encourage everybody to read it. | ||
It is about the ascendancy of the neocons. | ||
Ron Uns writes a little summary of the situation that Tucker Carlson is referring to. | ||
Tucker says that Pat is an anti-Semite. | ||
That is based On a couple of specific quotes that Pat Buchanan made in the early 1990s. | ||
Again, and the buildup to this is that George Bush took the country to war in Iraq in 1990, and it was a coalition of what were called paleoconservatives, Pat Buchanan among them, as well as Russell Kirk and Joseph Sobron and Sam Francis that were in opposition to the war. | ||
So this is the summary. | ||
This is from Ron Unz. | ||
This will help give you an idea of what was happening at the time and how and why Tucker was weighing in almost 10 years later. | ||
It says, quote, this is from the UNS Review. | ||
Many leading traditional conservatives expressed very strong reservations about George Bush's Gulf War plans, while the neocons fervently supported the attack against Israel's most dangerous regional rival, Iraq. | ||
Pat Buchanan held important positions in both the Nixon and Reagan administrations. | ||
And then he was a nationally syndicated columnist with a huge television footprint on Crossfire, the McLaughlin Group, and other popular cable shows. | ||
The ADL and other Jewish groups ferociously attacked the pundit when he declared to his national television audience of millions: quote, this is Patrick Buchanan, Capitol Hill is Israeli occupied territory. | ||
This is 35 years ago, Pat Buchanan. | ||
There are only two groups that are beating the drums for war in the Middle East, the Israeli Defense Ministry and its amen corner in the United States. | ||
The Israelis want this war desperately because they want the United States to destroy the Iraqi war machine. | ||
They want us to finish them off. | ||
They don't care about our relations with the Arab world. | ||
This was in 1990. | ||
This is Pat Buchanan in 1990 against the first Bush administration in the first Persian Gulf War, which happened on the Iraqi side of the Persian Gulf. | ||
Notice how prescient what he said was then, 35 years ago. | ||
That was before 9-11, before the war in Iraq, the invasion and overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003, before the global war on terror, before all of it, before social media. | ||
Pat Buchanan said Capitol Hill is Israeli occupied territory. | ||
The only people that want the war, the Israeli Defense Ministry, and notably, he says, the Israeli Defense Ministry's Amen Corner, amen corner, meaning amen, people that will support the Israelis no matter what in Washington. | ||
This comment was singled out and became a national controversy. | ||
And many of the neocons, well, Jews and non-Jews alike, said that when Pat Buchanan said amen corner, he meant Jews. | ||
Pap Buchanan was insinuating, according to the neocons, that all the Jews in Washington were supporting Israel's war, imputing their motivations, saying that American Jews are Israel first. | ||
Imagine that. | ||
The article goes on. | ||
It says, some commentators contended that that latter phrase could be read to mean merely Israel's supporters. | ||
But this more benign interpretation was undermined by some of Buchanan's own columns. | ||
In one column written within days of the amen corner remark, Buchanan named four of those that he had in mind, the amen corner. | ||
A.M. Rosenthal, the former Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Pearl, the columnist Charles Krauthammer, and the former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. | ||
The Jewishness of these names contrasted with those of the American soldiers, who in a subsequent piece, Buchanan said would do the fighting if war came to the Gulf. | ||
He said kids with names like McAllister, Murphy, Gonzalez, and Leroy Brown will die in the war in Iraq. | ||
So, Buchanan says one day, this war is the doing of the Israeli Defense Ministry. | ||
They want America to do our bidding, and they own Capitol Hill. | ||
And the only ones that want this war in Iraq are the Israeli government and their supporters in America. | ||
Everybody says, well, what's the amen corner? | ||
That's a dog whistle for American Jews. | ||
Some people say, no, he didn't mean American Jews. | ||
He just meant like neocons in general, people that support Israel. | ||
Buchanan comes over a week later and says, no, when I'm referring to the amen corner, I mean these four Jews. | ||
I mean, these Jewish writers and these Jewish guys that work at think tanks and the Jewish people inside the Defense Department. | ||
Those are the amen corner. | ||
Those are the only other people in addition to Israel that support the war. | ||
And Buchanan contrasted those names. | ||
He said, who supports Israel's war in Iraq? | ||
Rosenthal, Krauthammer, Pearl, and Kissinger, all Jews. | ||
He said, and who's going to die in the war? | ||
He said, Leroy Brown, McAllister, Murphy, and Gonzalez. | ||
Now, what's the implication? | ||
The implication is these Jews in America that love Israel because they're Jewish, they're pushing us into a war that benefits Israel that Americans will die in. | ||
Specifically, non-Jewish Americans that are Irish, that are white from Appalachia, that are Mexican, people with names like McAllister, Gonzalez, and Leroy Brown. | ||
They're going to die for people named Rosenthal, Kissinger, and Krauthammer. | ||
That was the comment in the early 1990s that got him attacked by the establishment. | ||
Those are the comments that Tucker Carlson was referring to. | ||
When Tucker says that Pat Buchanan is insinuating that Jews push America into wars that non-Jews are going to die in, that's the remark he was talking about. | ||
The amen corner, that's the remark he was talking about. | ||
And to Tucker, that is the line between what is acceptable and what is unacceptable. | ||
Whether you say that Jewishness and Judaism has anything to do with the neoconservatives in America, the Israel lobby in America, and Israel bringing us to war in the Middle East for their benefit. | ||
The distinction is whether you think it's all ideological or whether you think it has to do with their Jewishness, whether it's essential. | ||
That's the distinction. | ||
Now, the article from UNS goes on, it says, Pat Buchanan decided to challenge George Bush in the Republican primaries, a development that seemed likely to spark an explosive public conflict between the heavily Jewish neocons and their traditionalist conservative rivals, very much like what is happening today. | ||
William F. Buckley Jr., who was the founder of National Review, had long reigned as the quasi-pope of the conservatives. | ||
He attempted to preempt this looming conflict by publishing a book called In Search of Anti-Semitism, a massive 40,000-word article that filled an entire issue of his magazine, National Review, and was later released as a book coming down on the side of the neocons and sharply criticizing his erstwhile allies like Buchanan and Sobron. | ||
So this was the episode. | ||
Think about it. | ||
This was the episode in the 1990s. | ||
George H.W. Bush, again, from Yale, from Yale College, from Skull and Bones, George Bush, the vice president from Yale, from the CIA, who became the president, brought us to war in Iraq at the behest of the neocons. | ||
Pat Buchanan, Joseph Sobron, Sam Francis, Russell Kirk, the traditional conservatives rise up and say, this is not America first. | ||
This is a war for Israel. | ||
Capitol Hill is Israeli-occupied territory, and so is the conservative movement. | ||
And the reason they're supporting the war is because they're Jewish. | ||
Pap Buchanan challenges the incumbent president, George Bush, in 1992 in the Republican primary and almost wins in New Hampshire, gets a surprising amount of support and threatens to fracture the movement by serving as a spoiler in that GOP primary in 1992. | ||
Buchanan inspires Ross Perot to run as a third party. | ||
And some people blame Pat Buchanan and Ross Perot for George Bush's defeat in 1992. | ||
Does this sound similar? | ||
Eight years later, Tucker Carlson comes out and says what? | ||
It's okay to criticize neocons and their wars. | ||
It's okay to criticize the Israel lobby. | ||
It's okay to talk about the sovereignty of the military. | ||
He said, what's beyond the pale is this insistence on talking about Judaism, saying that Jewish Americans have to support Israel, saying that non-Jews will die in wars the Jewish push America into. | ||
He said, that is what is truly anti-Semitic. | ||
That is beyond the pale. | ||
This mirrors exactly the situation right now, which is that the Israel lobby once again is pushing us into a war in Iran. | ||
Who is Donald Trump's vice president right now? | ||
J.D. Vance. | ||
J.D. Vance, who went to Yale Law School, who is a protege of Peter Thiel, one of the CIA's most important contractors because he built Palantir. | ||
And as we talked about last week, J.D. Vance would not exist, would not have had a Senate seat, would not be Trump's vice president without Peter Thiel and actually Tucker Carlson. | ||
So just as then, George Bush, head of the CIA from Yale, vice president under Reagan, becomes president, puts us to war in Iraq, as it is now. | ||
J.D. Vance, protege of CIA contractor Peter Thiel from Yale Law School. | ||
Trump is pushing us into war with Iran at the behest of the neocons. | ||
I get up in 2024 and say, do not vote for Trump. | ||
This is Israeli-occupied territory. | ||
The only people that want a war in Iran are the Israelis and their amen corner. | ||
And just as in 1999, what does Tucker Carlson come out and say about me? | ||
He said, there are legitimate critics of the neocons like Joe Kent and Vance, but Flintis is crazy and hateful. | ||
He is kooky and an anti-Semite. | ||
It's the same situation 30 years ago over a different war and the same monologue canceling what is really the same figure, relatively the same figure in exactly the same way. | ||
As I said at the beginning of the show, this is a story of generations. | ||
This story, like all stories, is a story of generations, fathers and sons, and cycles and networks and the rise and fall of nations. | ||
So you could say that in the 1990s, there was a different generation of this battle. | ||
There were the paleocons and the neocons, just as there are now, paleocons, America firsters, and neocons. | ||
But I want to focus a little bit more on William F. Buckley, because as Ron Ons writes in his article, the major attack against Pat Buchanan did not come from Tucker Carlson. | ||
At that time, Tucker Carlson was a very low-level journalist, barely got on television, and was not really into public broadcasting. | ||
And his attack on Buchanan came in 1999, many years after the initial controversy in 1991. | ||
The major attack against Buchanan came from William F. Buckley, who at that time, if you understand anything about the history of the conservative movement, William F. Buckley was considered the intellectual leader of the conservative movement in America. | ||
Ron Ons calls him the quasi-pope. | ||
And it was William F. Buckley who founded National Review in the 1950s at the beginning of the Cold War after World War II. | ||
It was William F. Buckley that throughout the 1960s, 70s, and 80s, he is the one that really created the modern doctrine of conservatism. | ||
He was behind Barry Goldwater in 1964. | ||
He was the intellectual heavyweight behind the fusionist coalition that brought Reagan to power in 1980. | ||
So William F. Buckley was the leader of the conservatives, in many ways similar to Tucker Carlson today, or you could argue somebody like Ben Shapiro or somebody like Charlie Kirk. | ||
William F. Buckley was dominant, I would argue more dominant than any of them today back in the 1980s and 1990s. | ||
As I said, William F. Buckley wrote a 40,000 word hit piece on Buchanan in 1991 called In Search of Anti-Semitism, filled up a whole issue of the magazine, published as a book, and it sought to cancel Pat Buchanan and push him out of the race so that he could not challenge George Bush in 1992. | ||
Now, I want to talk about who William F. Buckley is, because when we work through the biography of William F. Buckley, we're going to discover some startling themes, some startling patterns. | ||
And you'll notice there's many Of these patterns that show up over and over and over again in consistent themes. | ||
Before we get into William F. Buckley, it is important to talk about the CIA and where the CIA came from and how the CIA operates, what its mission is, among other things. | ||
Because again, if you go back to last week, my criticism of Tucker Carlson, the central question is, is Tucker Carlson in the CIA? | ||
We talked about his father. | ||
We talked about Voice of America. | ||
He accused me of being in the CIA. | ||
He attacked Pat Buchanan along the same lines that William F. Buckley did 10 years earlier. | ||
I want to talk about the CIA and establish some important things to understand about how they operate first to understand all these stories. | ||
So where did the CIA actually come from? | ||
The CIA is established in 1947, but it was preceded by an organization called the OSS. | ||
And this was a wartime intelligence organization that was started during World War II in the aftermath of some sabotage attacks in New York City and other espionage that was happening during the war on the part of the Germans and the Axis powers that we were fighting. | ||
So the OSS forms up. | ||
That's the precursor to the CIA. | ||
It's a wartime intelligence outfit. | ||
Now, we're not going to go into all the particulars and details. | ||
There's a couple of things we need to understand about the CIA during World War II and shortly afterward at the beginning of the Cold War. | ||
In the first place, some of the most important sources, confidential sources that provided human intelligence for the OSS during World War II, came through Italy. | ||
The United States invades Italy in 1943. | ||
They take over the Italian peninsula, and this is like their springboard into the European continent to fight Hitler and to fight the European Axis powers. | ||
The OSS rapidly establishes themselves inside of Italy. | ||
And one of the biggest sources of intelligence during the war for the OSS was Jewish refugees that fled Nazi-occupied territory through Italy. | ||
The Nazis occupied a vast suave territory in Germany, in Austria, all over Northern Europe, where a lot of Jews lived. | ||
And when the Jews were fleeing Nazi captivity or persecution, they fled to Italy, where they were not going to be subjected to some of the anti-Semitic policies and ultimately where they were liberated by the United States when the U.S. invaded and landed there. | ||
Now, the Jewish refugees fled Germany and Austria into Italy, and they provided a massive source of confidential intelligence for U.S. wartime intelligence. | ||
And you have to understand why that is. | ||
Those Jewish refugees had information about Germany, about Austria. | ||
What's more, they spoke the language. | ||
They spoke German. | ||
They spoke the lingua franca of the Nazi empire. | ||
Also, they were hostile to the Nazi Empire being Jews. | ||
So these Jews that were leaving Nazi Germany, these are like ready-made intelligence units because they hate the enemy, they speak the enemy's language, and they used to live on the enemy's territory. | ||
So very quickly, in the 1940s, U.S. wartime intelligence is using these Jewish refugees to get information on the Nazis. | ||
They're using Jewish refugees as intelligence agents, penetrating Nazi Germany along the border. | ||
The person that ran this intelligence operation was a guy named James Jesus Engleton. | ||
He was in charge of all of the OSS operations on the Italian peninsula. | ||
And he got in charge a little bit later, but he got there in 1943 with the rest of the Allies. | ||
And it was Engleton who was running this operation. | ||
And Engleton saw the value of these Jewish refugees as intelligence officers. | ||
They were a great asset for what would become the CIA. | ||
This is important to understand. | ||
Now, later on, of course, the Allies win World War II. | ||
We defeat Nazi Germany. | ||
And in the next five years, after the war is won, the United States enters a Cold War with the Soviet Union. | ||
And all of a sudden, the Soviet Union becomes the primary adversary. | ||
1947, the OSS becomes the CIA. | ||
James Engleton becomes one of the founding fathers of the CIA. | ||
And he is put in charge of being a liaison between U.S. intelligence and foreign intelligence agencies. | ||
1948, the state of Israel is declared. | ||
They declare their independence. | ||
They fight a brief war with the Arabs. | ||
The U.S. recognizes them. | ||
And James Engleton begins liaising with Israeli intelligence as part of his job description, founding father of the CIA, running counterintelligence, and working as a liaison with our allied intel agencies. | ||
Pursuant to the emerging Cold War, the Soviet Union became our primary adversary. | ||
But there was a big problem. | ||
An iron curtain had descended onto Europe. | ||
The Soviets were not letting anybody leave the Soviet Union or later on, the warsaw PAC countries. | ||
The Soviet Union was a closed-off society. | ||
Joseph Stalin made it like a fortress. | ||
And so in the early days of the CIA, in the early days of the Cold War, we had no knowledge of what was happening inside the Soviet Union. | ||
We had no human intelligence, no sources that were inside of Russia. | ||
And Stalin had created this impenetrable fortress. | ||
There was no way to get in. | ||
That is until the 1950s. | ||
During the 1950s, there was a major aliyah. | ||
And aliyah is when the Jewish people leave their country from the diaspora and go to Israel. | ||
There's been many waves of aliyahs over the years. | ||
I think there's six or seven major aliyahs. | ||
This is when a Jew makes their pilgrimage, they leave, and they return to the Holy Land to reside in Israel. | ||
In the 1950s, there was a major aliyah of Jews. | ||
Russia had a massive Jewish population. | ||
They left the Soviet Union and went to Israel. | ||
James Engleton understood the value of Jewish refugees as an intelligence source. | ||
Just as in Italy during World War II, Austrian and German Jews were very helpful human sources to tell us secrets about Nazi Germany, and they spoke the language and they carried out operations and they knew about those countries in which they resided. | ||
Engleton, now running the foreign desk at the newly created CIA, he saw the value in Jewish refugees that left the Soviet Union and went to Israel. | ||
And so James Engleton began a working relationship with the Israeli intelligence agencies like Shinbet and Mossat. | ||
And a quid-pro-quo relationship was established. | ||
Israel understood, just like Engleton did, the value of the intelligence that the Jews leaving Russia had for the United States. | ||
And Israel was not going to give that intelligence away for free. | ||
As the Jewish refugees left Russia and came into Israel, the Israeli intelligence agencies like Shinbet would pick them up off the street and interview them. | ||
They would gather all the information and put them under confidence. | ||
They would gather all the information that the Russian Jewish refugees had, and they would go to their liaison from the CIA, James Engleton, and they would offer him a deal. | ||
The Israeli intelligence agencies would say, if you give us American intelligence on our adversaries, like Egypt and Syria, if you give us intelligence on nuclear weapons, then we will give you the intelligence from our Jewish refugees that left Russia. | ||
That was the quid-pro-quo relationship that went from the 1950s until Engleton left the Israel desk in the early 1970s. | ||
So from the very beginning, from the 40s during the time of the OSS and World War II, through to the beginning and the height of the Cold War in the time of the CIA, you have to understand that U.S. intelligence and Israeli intelligence, in particular Jewish refugees, were inextricably connected. | ||
So much so, many people talk about the assassination of John F. Kennedy and the role of the CIA in it. | ||
People point to James Engleton. | ||
James Engleton managed a team of hundreds of people with a black budget. | ||
Many of them oversaw the handling Of John F. Kennedy's assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald. | ||
The people that opened Lee Harvey Oswald's mail and read it. | ||
The people that met with him in real life, they were Jewish. | ||
They were Jewish refugees from Russia. | ||
And they were a part of Engleton's hand-picked team working with a black budget liaising with the state of Israel. | ||
The CIA and Israeli intelligence from the jump were intertwined like this. | ||
And the reason for this is not hard to understand. | ||
This is another thing to comprehend about the CIA before we get into William F. Buckley. | ||
James Jesus Engleton was not Jewish. | ||
He was American. | ||
He came from Idaho. | ||
And you might say, was he Jewish? | ||
Was he secretly Jewish? | ||
What was the motivation? | ||
It was pretty simple. | ||
James Engleton was a virulent and fierce anti-communist. | ||
He would do anything to fight the Soviet Union. | ||
And in the 1950s, when we had no idea what was happening in Russia, he would do anything to get his hands on intelligence about Russia and about the Soviet Union, even if it meant working with the Israelis, even if it meant giving the Israelis classified information about nuclear weapons. | ||
What's more, James Engleton saw Israel as an ally against the Soviet Union in the Middle East. | ||
After 1955, Egypt and Syria were armed by the Soviet Union. | ||
They received weapons, tanks, planes, and over the 50s, 60s, and 70s, moved further and further into the orbit of the Soviet Union. | ||
And on the great chessboard of communism versus capitalism during the Cold War, the CIA and the Defense Department, all these different anti-communists, they saw Israel as a bulwark against Soviet communist influence in the Middle East. | ||
So that was the basis of their cooperation. | ||
Just like in World War II, they wanted to defeat the Nazis so that the United States could liberate Europe. | ||
During the Cold War, they wanted to defeat the Soviet Union. | ||
That's why they backed Israel and used Jews as an intelligence agency, effectively. | ||
Something else was created in the 1950s. | ||
This is the last thing we need to establish about the CIA before we get into William F. Buckley. | ||
What the CIA was really worried about in the 1950s was the ideological battle that the communists were waging on America. | ||
Because in addition to the Cold War being an arms race, a space race, being fought in proxy wars in Asia, Latin America, and in the Middle East, it was also an ideological battle. | ||
And in the same way that the Soviet Union was providing weapons and building nuclear weapons and doing all of these conventional or non-conventional military activities, the Soviet Union was also supporting an international communist element. | ||
They were backing communist political parties. | ||
They were backing communist book clubs, campus organizations, backing communist intellectuals. | ||
And if you know anything about the Red Scare, which happened in the 20s and then again in the 50s, and really was in place throughout the duration of the existence of the Soviet Union, the U.S. government and CIA, first the FBI, then the CIA, were very concerned about communist and Soviet penetration of American society through the use of spies, double agents, pushing communist ideology. | ||
So just like the Soviets, the CIA also engaged in an information ideological war. | ||
The Soviets gave weapons, the CIA gave weapons. | ||
The Soviets fought proxy wars, so did the CIA. | ||
The Soviets developed a space program for the purpose of missiles, so did the CIA with Project Paperclip. | ||
And just like the Soviet Union had communist ideological allies all across the world, so did the CIA. | ||
In the 1950s, the CIA backed a program called the Congress for Cultural Freedom. | ||
And I'll read this blurb about it. | ||
This is from Wikipedia. | ||
It says in 1950, a group of intellectuals founded an organization called the Congress for Cultural Freedom with the aim of consolidating an anti-totalitarian intellectual community around the globe. | ||
The CCF's connections with the United States CIA were definitively established 16 and 17 years later in reports by the New York Times and Ramparts magazine, respectively. | ||
They claimed that the CIA, operating through a series of dummy foundations, had been instrumental in organizing and funding the CCF. | ||
Two people who were critical at the very beginning, and this will be important later, are Irvin Kristol and James Burnham. | ||
They were both there in Berlin in West Germany at the founding of the CCF. | ||
Congress for Cultural Freedom in the 50s and 60s claimed to be an organization of pro-freedom intellectuals, many of them liberal. | ||
Many of them were left-wing or center-left liberal. | ||
And the claim of the Congress for Cultural Freedom is that they were leftists or liberals against radicalism, against communism. | ||
Some of them were even Trotskyites, but they were against Stalinism and against the Soviet Union. | ||
Some of the biggest names in the conservative movement in the 50s and 60s, some of the biggest magazines with the conservative or even liberal ideological orientation in the 50s and 60s received money from the Congress for Cultural Freedoms. | ||
Many names you'd recognize were involved with this group. | ||
And throughout those two decades, nobody knew that the entire time this outfit, which was providing seed money for magazines, radio stations, TV stations, books, book clubs, you name it, it was receiving money from the CIA the entire time. | ||
Many of the constituent projects did not even know about the connection. | ||
The Congress would provide money for a small magazine. | ||
They'd provide a grant for an intellectual. | ||
And the recipients of these grants themselves, in some cases, did not even know that ultimately the money came from the CIA. | ||
That was revealed many years later. | ||
So this is important to understand about how intelligence in America operates. | ||
Again, World War II and the Cold War, they're relying upon Jewish refugees. | ||
They see Israel as a bulwark against communism. | ||
The CIA, even the elements that are not Jewish or even necessarily sympathetic to Israel because it is Jewish, they were very pro-Jewish because of what they believed they could gain in their fight against the Soviet Union with the organized Jewish community in the world and with the state of Israel. | ||
And then, and aside from that, the CIA is fighting an ideological battle against totalitarianism, against Stalinism. | ||
And so they're backing a lot of conservative intellectuals, liberal and conservative, that are saying, you know, even if they're not conservative, they're against radicalism. | ||
They're against the turn of the American left to full-fledged socialism and communism. | ||
And that is so that they could fortify American democracy and democracy even in Europe. | ||
Now we got to get into William F. Buckley, understanding these things. | ||
So William F. Buckley is the head of National Review criticizing Patrick Buchanan in 1991. | ||
But where does William F. Buckley come from? | ||
I'll read to you a little bit from his bio. | ||
William F. Buckley enrolled at Yale University after World War II. | ||
Very important that he was from Yale. | ||
He joined the Skull and Bones Secret Society. | ||
If you recall, so did George H.W. Bush about a year before he did. | ||
And so did other prominent people too. | ||
He edited the Yale Daily News, a student newspaper. | ||
In 1951, he was recruited into the CIA and worked with E. Howard Hunt in Mexico City, where his father had an oil company. | ||
While with the CIA, he published a book called God and Man at Yale, The Superstitions of Academic Freedom. | ||
Later, he left the CIA and became editor of the American Mercury. | ||
He continued to be active in right-wing politics. | ||
In 1953, he established the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists. | ||
So he's at Yale University after the war. | ||
He's recruited by one of his professors into the CIA. | ||
He allegedly leaves the CIA, and then he forms up this group called ISI, Intercollegiate Society of Individuals, which was created to counter a group of the same acronym of a similar name that was formed up by communists to support socialism. | ||
Then in 1955, he hits His big break. | ||
He founds National Review with Leo Bozell. | ||
The early senior cadres of the journal included Yale professor Wilmore Kendall, who, as the chief CIA recruiter at Yale, was responsible for recruiting William F. Buckley into the CIA. | ||
It also included James Burnham, who was working for the OSS during World War II and was active in the Congress for Cultural Freedom. | ||
He was also reputed to have had a hand in the successful plan to overthrow Iran's Mossadegh and install the Shah in 1953. | ||
Also on the original board was William Rusher, formerly a hard-right captain in Army military intelligence. | ||
Marvin Lieberman met William F. Buckley in the 1950s and also helped to found the National Review. | ||
He was active in CIA projects internationally, including the Committee for a Free Asia, the World Anti-Communist League, and the American Chilean Council. | ||
Another OSS officer, William Casey, drew up the legal documents for the National Review. | ||
So William F. Buckley is at Yale. | ||
He gets recruited to the CIA by his professor, Wilmore Kendall. | ||
Then, after allegedly leaving the CIA, he forms up a society for free market individualists, a campus group, then starts up the National Review with no fewer than five former OSS or former CIA officers, | ||
including his professor that recruited him into the CIA, who was the head recruiter of the CIA at Yale, including James Burnham, who was at the founding of the Congress for Cultural Freedom. | ||
So it is obvious from the very beginning that William F. Buckley has a very similar story to Tucker Carlson. | ||
He's at an Ivy League university in New England like Tucker Carlson. | ||
He's recruited by a professor to form up a student newspaper, write a conservative book against the communists, and to start up National Review, a publication that he had the help in founding with five other CIA officers, including ones that were involved in the Congress for Cultural Freedom, which was providing grants and money on behalf of the CIA to anti-communist projects. | ||
This is William F. Buckley. | ||
But he wasn't the only one to attack Patrick Buchanan. | ||
What is the basis of attacking Patrick Buchanan in the 1990s? | ||
Tucker Carlson then, just like now, and even William F. Buckley too, they said the problem with Pat Buchanan is that there is a legitimate fight against certain neocons. | ||
William F. Buckley eventually endorsed Pat Buchanan. | ||
Tucker Carlson considers himself an adversary of the neocons. | ||
They said the problem with Pat Buchanan and people like me is not that we're working for the neocons. | ||
It's not that we're the enemy. | ||
The subtle critique by Buckley and Carlson, two creatures of the CIA, is that both of us are herding the real battle against the neocons. | ||
And they take issue at the fact that me and Pat Buchanan did not treat this as an ideological phenomenon, but as a Jewish phenomenon, as an ethnic or religious phenomenon. | ||
It's important to establish now who the neocons even are. | ||
If that is the battle between the America Firsters and the neocons, if we can all agree on that, but there is a battle within America First about who's really fighting the neocons. | ||
And we look at who's on either side of that battle. | ||
It's William F. Buckley and Tucker Carlson against Pat Buchanan and Nick Fuentes. | ||
It's Buckley at Yale recruited in the CIA, founded National Review with the CIA. | ||
Tucker Carlson with his dad running Voice of America against Pat Buchanan and Nick Fuentes, the cranks, the crazies, the anti-Semites. | ||
Well, it might help elucidate who the real enemy of the neocons are to take a look at the neocons themselves. | ||
This is a blurb from Ron Uns talking about the neocons from the same article as before. | ||
It says, quote, the term neoconservative had originally appeared in the early 1970s, applied by critics to a small group of social scientists and other intellectuals who had rejected The radicalism of the 1960s and gravitated towards more moderate positions. | ||
In 1965, Irving Kristol co-founded the Public Interest, a semi-academic quarterly journal focused on matters of social policy. | ||
Many of these individuals were Jews originally from New York City, often with deep personal roots in the non-Stalinist left, including Trotskyites. | ||
Also around that time, Commentary Magazine, edited by Norman Potheritz and based in the same city, New York, moved in a similar direction, replacing its enthusiasm for the radical new left with sharp criticism, becoming the leading American publication associated with the early neoconservative movement. | ||
In those pre-internet days, professionally produced print publications with a national circulation were an extremely scarce intellectual resource, and as such, could serve as the focal point for a nascent ideological movement. | ||
Okay? | ||
This is an important point to understand. | ||
In the 2020s, how do people get their ideas and information? | ||
We get it from social media. | ||
15, 20, 30 years ago, how did people get their information? | ||
Cable news, television. | ||
But in those days, in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s, the policymakers, the politicians, the intellectuals, they were influenced by intellectual magazines. | ||
Now, even if the magazines did not have a huge readership, even if they were not read by millions of people or even hundreds of thousands of people, even if they were read by a small audience, it matters who that audience was. | ||
And in those days, that audience was the opinion makers, the tastemakers, the policymakers, the intelligentsia. | ||
So what UNS is talking about, and this is critical to understand the influence of the neocons, is that the Congress for Cultural Freedom with the CIA is funding all these small magazines. | ||
And you might not understand the significance of it, but these small magazines, these radio stations, these international television programs, like we talked about last week, as Dick Carlson himself said, this is the lifeblood. | ||
This is the bread and butter of political movements domestically and internationally. | ||
This is the intellectual juice behind them. | ||
This influences them. | ||
So the article says, in the pre-internet days, it is these professional publications, which were scarce, the national circulation professional publications that would be the focal point for an ideological movement. | ||
And that's how the neoconservatives got started. | ||
It says, but Commentary, one such magazine, again, edited by Norman Podhoritz, was also the flagship publication of the American Jewish Committee. | ||
And Podhoritz himself deeply identified with Jewish issues. | ||
Those factors impacted his editorial line, which naturally included a major focus upon Israel and the Middle East along the plight of Soviet Jewry. | ||
Partly for such reasons, a hawkish foreign policy, including heavy emphasis on the Cold War, became important neocon concerns. | ||
So think about how this develops. | ||
We got to back up and talk about the history again. | ||
So in the 1950s, we are in a Cold War with the Soviet Union. | ||
And very quickly, it becomes clear that Jews are going to be the intermediary between the Soviet Union and the United States. | ||
It is going to be Jews, Jewish spies, Jewish double agents. | ||
They act as the mediators. | ||
They're conducting arbitrage between the Soviets and the Americans. | ||
I'll give you a few examples. | ||
In 1949, the Soviet Union detonates an atomic bomb. | ||
How did the Soviet Union get the bomb when the Americans developed it in secrecy? | ||
How did the Soviets get it before the British, before the French? | ||
They got it through Jewish spies like Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were Jewish communists in America that passed the secrets to Soviet spies. | ||
In 1956, Nikita Khrushchev, the general secretary who succeeded Joseph Stalin after his death in 1953, Khrushchev gave a famous speech in 1956, de-Stalinizing the Communist Party. | ||
For the first time ever, he destroyed the cult of personality around Stalin by criticizing the excesses of the purges and other policies like the five-year plans that Stalin inflicted on Russia. | ||
It was so secretive, it was called the secret speech, and it was only delivered to the Communist Party. | ||
But the United States got their hands on it. | ||
How? | ||
Because of Jewish refugees that left the Soviet Union, gave it to Shin Bet, the Israeli intelligence agency, who gave it to the CIA. | ||
So how do the Soviets get the bomb? | ||
Jewish spies. | ||
How did the Americans get the secret speech? | ||
Jewish spies. | ||
If the United States is fighting a spy war, an intelligence war with the Soviet Union, Jews are going to be a very big part of that. | ||
And why is that? | ||
Because Jews live in Russia, Jews live in the United States. | ||
They live in Germany. | ||
They live in France. | ||
They live in the United Kingdom. | ||
They live in Italy. | ||
And they don't have allegiance to their home countries. | ||
They might have allegiance to Israel. | ||
They might have ideological affinity with communism. | ||
They might have ideological affinity with capitalism. | ||
But because they're not, strictly speaking, American or Russian by ethnicity or Italian or French, because they are stateless, they become free agents and they could pick sides depending on their ideology, depending on their ideals. | ||
So an American Jew could be a ideological communist in their heart and betray America. | ||
A Russian Jew could be born in Russia but betrayed the Soviet Union because they're American in their heart. | ||
They're capitalist in their heart because they flee to Israel and they want to support Israel. | ||
Okay? | ||
So during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, you have Americans that are engaged in a Cold War with the Soviet Union. | ||
But American Jewry, Russian Jewry in Israel are somewhere in the middle. | ||
Now, the Americans are fighting with the Russians in Cuba, in Korea, in Vietnam. | ||
We're in the middle of an arms race, a space race. | ||
And for those that don't know, the space race is really an arms race. | ||
Because when we're building rockets that are ostensibly supposed to do satellites and go to the moon, they also have a dual use, which is as intercontinental ballistic missiles. | ||
So in the 50s, 60s, and 70s, Americans are going crazy. | ||
The American leadership is going crazy because we're saying, how do we defeat this enemy? | ||
They seem to be everywhere. | ||
These countries are falling like dominoes. | ||
And the Soviets have a bigger conventional force in Europe. | ||
They have a bigger nuclear arsenal. | ||
They might have the advantage. | ||
This is what's happening in America. | ||
And so the Americans are funding these magazines to stall and to forestall communist influence in Europe and the United States. | ||
But there's something happening at the same time, which is that Israel is fighting a war for independence. | ||
Israel declares its independence in 1948. | ||
They fight a war with Egypt and Syria. | ||
Jewish organized crime in America runs guns illegally to Israel, which helps Israel decisively defeat a coalition of Egypt and Syria in the war. | ||
And an unsteady peace breaks out. | ||
In 1955, Israel does a major raid on Gaza and kills 35 Egyptians. | ||
Egypt is not receiving arms from the United States in Europe, but Israel is. | ||
So what does Egypt do? | ||
President Nasser turns to the Soviet Union. | ||
And the Soviet Union begins supplying weapons to Israel's enemies, Egypt and Syria. | ||
In 1956, Israel goes to war with Egypt. | ||
Throughout the 50s and 60s, Israel's at war with its neighbors, with the Palestinians, with terrorist groups. | ||
Israel is fighting for its very survival. | ||
And as time goes on, Egypt and Syria and all the other Muslim countries are moving closer to the Soviet Union and Israel is moving closer to the United States. | ||
By the mid-1960s, when Lyndon Johnson is installed in the United States, we start pouring weapons into Israel. | ||
Whereas up until 1963, we were not giving Israel a lot of weapons. | ||
And that was in the pursuit of balance between Israel and the Arabs. | ||
All of a sudden, we were giving them tons of guns. | ||
And we really made the decision that Israel was going to be our country. | ||
They were going to be our bulwark against communism in the Middle East. | ||
Something very important happens in 1967. | ||
In 1967, Israel sees an opportunity to strike a crushing blow on Egypt and Syria, its prime adversaries, its most powerful adversaries on its southern and northern border. | ||
In the Six-Day War, Israel flies into Egypt and destroys its air force. | ||
Then Israel flies into Syria and destroys its air force. | ||
With total air superiority, Israel invades Gaza. | ||
Israel invades the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt. | ||
And then Israel in the north takes the Golan Heights and nearly sieges Damascus in the north inside of Syria. | ||
And in six days, the war is over. | ||
Israel is bigger than ever. | ||
It now occupies not just the entire Mandate of Palestine, the West Bank and Gaza, but it also occupies the Sinai and the Golan Heights. | ||
Israel is massive. | ||
Now, in response to this sneak attack, the Soviet Union begins giving more support to Egypt and Syria. | ||
The left wing in America, the American political left, has a harsh reaction. | ||
They view the Israeli war as aggression, as provocative. | ||
They view it as an occupation of these third world countries. | ||
And so the American political left and the Soviet Union turn against Israel. | ||
In 1973, Egypt and Syria have their revenge. | ||
They launch a surprise attack on Israel. | ||
Egypt invades the Sinai Peninsula from the Suez Canal. | ||
Syria invades the Golan simultaneously. | ||
Israel is caught totally off guard. | ||
They are almost overrun and defeated. | ||
They come very close to the brink of annihilation. | ||
The United States initially is reluctant to bail them out. | ||
Israel threatens to use nuclear weapons. | ||
The prime minister of Israel at the time, Golda Meyer, calls up Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger and says, if you don't give us support, if you don't bail us out, we will have to take extraordinary measures, implying nuclear weapons. | ||
And they begin taking their nuclear warheads and putting them in public view of satellite imagery to send the message to Nixon and Kissinger. | ||
Nixon and Kissinger bail out Israel with a massive airlift of weapons. | ||
And there's a very contentious period of negotiations between the Americans and the Soviets, the Israelis and the Egyptians, but eventually the war is settled. | ||
In 1975, the Soviet Union goes to the United Nations and they pass a resolution saying that Zionism is racism. | ||
The Soviet Union is now fully against Israel. | ||
And they're against Israel because they are backing Syria. | ||
They're backing Egypt, which Israel has just invaded, attacked, at war with, violating the terms of the ceasefire. | ||
The Soviet Union is backing Israel's enemies and passing resolutions in the UN objecting to Zionism itself. | ||
And the Soviet Union's allies in America, the American political left, is also decidedly against Israel. | ||
They say that Israel's colonizers, racists, they take the side of the Egyptians and the Syrians. | ||
And this is where many of the Jewish left-wingers that were supported by the Congress for Cultural Freedom in the 50s and 60s. | ||
Now, remember, they themselves were communists. | ||
They were from New York. | ||
They were liberals. | ||
They were leftists. | ||
Remember, the purpose of the Congress for Cultural Freedom was to beat back the ideological influence of the Soviet Union by steering the left away from communism and Stalinism and towards a more moderate form of left-wing politics. | ||
And many of those intellectuals were part of a Jewish New York intellectual scene in the 50s, 60s, and 70s. | ||
All these guys were left-wingers. | ||
And the neocons, like Irving Kristol and Norm Pothoretz, they were left-wing too. | ||
But when they saw the American political left's reaction to 67 and 73, when they saw the Soviet Union's resolution at the UN, when they saw the Soviet Union go firmly behind Egypt and Syria, that is when the Jewish neocons flipped. | ||
And this is what they had to say about it. | ||
These are the two preeminent neocons, Irvin Kristol and Norm Podhoritz. | ||
Irving Kristol, in a Wall Street Journal essay titled Notes on Yom Kippur, said that he admitted to a Jewish instinct for impending disaster. | ||
He wrote, I care desperately. | ||
I sense deep down that what happens to Israel will be decisive for Jewish history and for the kinds of lives my grandchildren and great-grandchildren will be leading. | ||
In such a war, not only is the whole of the Jewish past at stake, but also the whole of the Jewish future. | ||
That's Irvin Kristol, the godfather of neoconservatism. | ||
That's Irvin Kristol, the godfather of neoconservatism, who founded what was at the time the most influential neocon magazine in the 1960s, which is the public interest. | ||
He said in his notes on the Yom Kippur War that the whole of Jewish history is at stake. | ||
He sensed it. | ||
Norm Podhoritz, who founded Commentary Magazine, which is arguably the second or first most influential neocon magazine after public interest, Norm Podhoritz had this to say about the 1975 resolution by the Soviet Union. | ||
He said, quote, the resolution did not merely condemn the state of Israel for alleged crimes against the Palestinians or for discriminating against its own Arab citizens. | ||
What the resolution did was to denounce the state of Israel itself as an illegitimate entity. | ||
The very idea of a sovereign Jewish state in the Middle East, let alone the actuality of one, no matter what its boundaries might be, was by definition declared criminal. | ||
In the eyes of this resolution, Israel could only cease to be criminal if it ceased to be both Jewish and sovereign. | ||
If, in other words, it ceased to exist. | ||
Returning to the boundaries of 1967 or even the boundaries of 1948 would make not the slightest difference. | ||
For the resolution did not concern boundaries or occupied territories. | ||
It concerned the right of a sovereign Jewish state of any size or shape to exist in the Middle East. | ||
In a profile of Podhoritz, it said, quote, he felt deeply betrayed by the American left, and not to mention the Europeans, who became critical of the Jewish state after the 1967 war, and even more so after the Yom Kippur War in 1973. | ||
Podhoritz later wrote that after the war, he would direct commentary to become more aggressive than it had ever been before in defending Jewish interests, both at home and abroad. | ||
So you have these Jewish leftists in New York. | ||
They're being funded by the CIA, these Jewish intellectual leftists, they're being funded by the CIA to curb the radical tendencies, the Stalinist Soviet sympathetic tendencies of the American left wing. | ||
And they're working hand in glove with the CIA, who's also against the Soviet Union. | ||
But as Israel progresses in its own story, Israel finds itself at odds, in peril with its Soviet-backed neighbors. | ||
And in a series of wars starting in 67, leading into 73, American Jewish leftists realize the Soviet Union is really the enemy. | ||
Because the Soviet Union and the American left, if they had it their way, they would make it so that Israel doesn't exist. | ||
The Soviets are backing Israel's enemies, and the American left is backing the Soviets' claim that Israel has no right to exist. | ||
And so the two preeminent neocons, they would become the preeminent leaders of the neoconservative movement, Irving Kristol and Norm Podhoritz, they are liberals, they are leftists, they say, we are no longer of the left. | ||
We feel betrayed. | ||
We are no longer supporting the European left. | ||
We feel betrayed by Europe, by the American left wing, to some extent by our fellow liberals, leftists, even communists, because they have no sympathy for Israel as Israel is being destroyed. | ||
And this is why they turned to the right. | ||
This is from PBS. | ||
It says, quote, the neoconservatives were mostly former leftists who deserted George McGovern's Democratic Party in protest against its opposition to the war in Vietnam. | ||
While it was true that many neocons were Jewish, so too was the Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. | ||
The turning point for them came in 1973 with Israel's near defeat at the hands of the Arabs. | ||
It was Kissinger himself who observed in his memoirs that the Yom Kippur War, quote, completed the neocons' conversation or conversion to geopolitical realities. | ||
Henceforth, they agitated in favor of a U.S. foreign policy that melded fervent anti-communism with uncompromising support for Israel. | ||
Now, I want to get into their biographies. | ||
That is what made them neoconservatives. | ||
What did they do as neoconservatives? | ||
This is the New York Times on Irving Kristol. | ||
It says, quote, Mr. Crystal exerted an influence across generations, from William F. Buckley to the columnist David Brooks. | ||
Through a variety of positions he held over a long career, including executive vice president of basic books, the contributor to the Wall Street Journal, and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. | ||
He was commonly known as the godfather of neoconservatism. | ||
In probably his most widely quoted comment, Mr. Crystal defined a neoconservative as a liberal who had been mugged by reality. | ||
Mr. Crystal translated his concerns into a magazine. | ||
In 1965, with a $10,000 contribution from a wealthy acquaintance, he founded the Public Interest Magazine. | ||
Its founding is considered the beginning of neoconservatism. | ||
For more than six decades, beginning in 1942, when he and other recent graduates of City College founded Enquiry, a journal of independent radical thought, his life revolved around magazines. | ||
Besides the public interest, Mr. Crystal published, edited, and wrote for journals of opinion like Commentary, Encounter, The New Leader, The Reporter, and The National Interest. | ||
All were little magazines with limited circulation, but Mr. Crystal valued the quality of his readership more than the quantity. | ||
He said, with a circulation of a few hundred, you could change the world. | ||
So he wrote for commentary, founded the public interest, and also edited Encounter. | ||
Norman Podhoritz, his close friend, served as Commentary's editor-in-chief from 1960 until his retirement in 1995. | ||
He is still its editor-at-large. | ||
From 1981 to 1987, Podhoritz was an advisor to the U.S. Information Agency. | ||
From 1995 to 2003, he was a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. | ||
American-Israeli journalist Benjamin Ballant and former editor at Commentary described the magazine as the contentious magazine that transformed the Jewish left into the neoconservative right. | ||
Historian and literary critic Richard Pels said no other journal of the past half century has been so consistently influential or so central to the major debates that have transformed the political and intellectual life of the United States. | ||
This is Irving Kristol and Norman Podheritz. | ||
Now, again, according to Ron Ons, according to Irving Kristol himself, according to the New York Times, it is these little magazines that they were founding which are changing the world. | ||
It's Irving Kristol at Encounter. | ||
It is Norman Podheritz at Commentary. | ||
These are two magazines that they say are changing the world. | ||
What is the basis of their influence? | ||
What is the conversion? | ||
How are they changing the world? | ||
What is the basis of the neoconservative movement? | ||
Both Irvin Kristol and Norm Podhoritz, the godfather and the patriarch of the neocon movement at these magazines, they are both Jews from New York City. | ||
They're both left-wing Jews. | ||
They're both deeply involved with the CIA. | ||
And both of them, after Israel was under attack, turned against the American left, against the radicals, turned against the Soviet Union, and gradually, from 1965 until 1975, transitioned from being Jewish leftists to neoconservatives. | ||
Now, Irving Kristol's comment is instructive. | ||
Irving Kristol's most famous adage is that the neocons, the essence of what it is to be a neocon, is that they were liberals who got mugged by reality. | ||
But let's deconstruct that. | ||
Who were the liberals that got mugged by reality? | ||
Irvin Kristol and Norman Podhoritz. | ||
The liberals that got mugged by reality and became the neocons were Jewish leftists. | ||
They weren't liberals. | ||
They were Jewish leftists that got mugged by reality. | ||
In particular, they were Jewish leftists who were backed by the CIA that got mugged by reality. | ||
And how did they get mugged by reality? | ||
What is he referring to? | ||
How did the Jewish left turned into the neoconservative right? | ||
If the neocons or libs that got mugged by reality, what mugged them? | ||
What does that mean exactly? | ||
When Henry Kissinger said they were converted to geopolitical reality, what does he mean? | ||
Well, Irvin Kristol and Norman Podheritz say in their own words, they realized that the left had gone too radical when it turned against Israel. | ||
When the Soviet Union under Leonid Brezhnev started promulgating an anti-Israel doctrine on the basis that Israel was a colonial capitalist power, when the Soviet Union backed Egypt and Syria to the hilt, so much so they almost defeated Israel. | ||
And when the non-Jewish American left turned against Israel and made those same arguments that Israel is racist, Israel is a settler colonial state. | ||
Israel is an outpost of capitalism and colonialism. | ||
That is how they got mugged by reality. | ||
The Jewish left got mugged by the non-Jewish Soviet Union and the non-Jewish American and European left that turned against Israel. | ||
Irvin Kristol and Norm Podheritz said, if Israel goes down, the whole Jewish future is in jeopardy. | ||
And who is pushing Israel to the brink of destruction? | ||
The left, the Soviet Union and the American left. | ||
And both said, both Irving Kristol and Norm Podheritz said, after Yom Kippur, they became increasingly pro-Jewish and they married their intense support for Israel to the anti-communism, anti-Soviet Union, Cold War hawk ideological position. | ||
Now, there's an interesting fact here. | ||
Irvin Kristol founded or worked with Encounter Magazine in the United Kingdom. | ||
Encounter magazine was funded by the Congress for Cultural Freedom. | ||
Irvin Kristol was present at the founding of the Congress for Cultural Freedom in the 1950s. | ||
So that CIA effort to back left-wing anti-Stalinist intellectuals to curb left-wing radicalism, to curb the Soviet intellectual penetration of America, Irvin Kristol was there at its founding in Berlin in the 1950s, and his magazine Encounter got money from the Congress for Cultural Freedom through the CIA. | ||
That's the godfather of neoconservatism at public interest, who, according to the New York Times obituary, created the neocon movement when he founded that magazine. | ||
And Norman Podhoritz, who founded Commentary, he's the patriarch of the neocon movement. | ||
Norman Podhoritz hired Irvin Kristol as a writer at commentary. | ||
And Commentary is a project of the American Jewish Committee, which is the representative, that is the head of all the American Jewish groups. | ||
It goes back to 1904 and is involved deeply with the early Zionist movement, the state of Israel, and American Jewry. | ||
Are you starting to see? | ||
So the CIA from its very beginning is working with these Jewish refugees from Nazism, from the Soviets. | ||
The most ferocious Cold Warriors see the Jews and then later Israel as an asset against the Soviet Union. | ||
They start backing Jewish left-wing intellectuals, paying them to start up these magazines to curb their Stalinist pro-Soviet tendencies. | ||
But as the Cold War goes on, Israel becomes entrenched as an American ally. | ||
Israel's enemies become entrenched as Soviet allies. | ||
And as Israel comes into its own, as it develops a nuclear weapon, as it becomes armed by the United States and becomes something like a regional power, it comes into confrontation with Syria and Egypt, who are pushed into the corner of the Soviet Union, which supplies them with more and more weapons. | ||
And that makes the Soviet Union more and more anti-Israel. | ||
And finally, in 73, when this leads to a catastrophe, which is the Soviet Union backing an Arab invasion of Israel that almost destroys Israel, the Jewish left, backed by the CIA, gets mugged by reality. | ||
And they say, now it's personal. | ||
Before, we were moderate leftists, backed by the CIA, generally pro-Jewish, but somewhat ambivalent about Zionism. | ||
They said they had this awakening. | ||
If Israel goes down, we all go down. | ||
And if Israel goes down, it'll be because of the communists, the American left, and their allies, the Arabs. | ||
And we have to redouble our efforts to defeat all of them. | ||
The American left, the Muslims, the Arabs, and the communists. | ||
And it is Irving Kristol and Norm Potter. | ||
It's the leaders of neoconservatism through their influential magazines paid by the CIA that influence the Jewish intelligentsia to abandon nothing about their liberal ideology other than their pacifism. | ||
The only conversion to speak of, they're still liberal. | ||
They're still center-left liberals, pro-immigration, pro-free markets, all this kind of stuff. | ||
The only thing they change their mind on is we got to destroy the Soviet Union because it's going to destroy Israel first if we don't. | ||
Now, returning back to the original point here, William F. Buckley and Tucker Carlson say, you can attack the neocons all day. | ||
But if you, like Pat Buchanan, say that there's an amen corner in the U.S. that's all Jewish, the Jews want the Gentiles to die in their wars, if you say it has anything to do with Judaism, you're a real anti-Semite and that's a problem. | ||
But the essence of neoconservatism is its Jewishness. | ||
And when you read the godfathers of neoconservatism, they're not ambiguous about it at all. | ||
Irving Kristol said, notes on the Yom Kippur war. | ||
I sense deep down, whatever happens to Israel is decisive for Jewish history and for the lives of my grandchildren and great-grandchildren. | ||
The whole of the Jewish past and future is at stake. | ||
That's the godfather of neoconservatism on why he founded neoconservatism. | ||
And the why is that if Israel is destroyed, then my Jewish grandchildren will not live healthy, prosperous lives. | ||
And you're telling me neoconservatism has nothing to do with Jewishness? | ||
Norm Potteritz, his magazine was created by the American Jewish Committee. | ||
And he said the same thing. | ||
After Yom Kippur, he said he would become more aggressive than ever in defending Jewish interests at home and abroad. | ||
These are indisputably the godfathers of neoconservatism. | ||
They each founded the most important publications that created the neocon movement, public interest and commentary. | ||
And they say they went from Jewish left to neocon right because Israel was almost destroyed by the Soviet Union. | ||
That's what makes them neocons. | ||
And that's why they want America to fight the Soviet Union and the Soviets' client states in the Middle East. | ||
Egypt, Syria, and then later Iraq, Iran. | ||
Hello? | ||
And you're telling me that if we say that the amen corner, Rosenthal, Krauthammer, Kissinger, if we point out that they're all Jews, we're anti-Semitic, that's what it is. | ||
Now let's take it even a step further. | ||
You have not seen anything yet. | ||
You have seen nothing yet because I am about to blow your fucking mind. | ||
Okay? | ||
So Irving Kristol was there at the foundation of the Congress for Cultural Freedom in the 1950s. | ||
That's the CIA's program to fund these intellectual movements. | ||
Later, he's the godfather of neoconservatism. | ||
He creates a magazine called Encounter, which gets money from the CIA. | ||
He claims he'll defend Jewish interests at home and abroad after Yom Kippur for the sake of his Jewish children and grandchildren. | ||
His buddy James Burnham was at the founding board of National Review when Bill Buckley, who is also CIA, founded that magazine. | ||
Irving Kristol also undertook another project. | ||
Do you remember I talked about the Intercollegiate Studies Institute or the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists that William Buckley founded in 1953? | ||
Well, Irvin Kristol did something very similar in 1979. | ||
Okay. | ||
How was William F. Buckley recruited? | ||
He was recruited at Yale by his professor, who was a CIA recruiter at Yale. | ||
That was his job. | ||
And when William F. Buckley graduated and created National Review, he hired his CIA recruiter, professor, on the board of National Review, as well as a Congress for Cultural Freedom founding member at his conservative magazine in the 50s. | ||
This is how the CIA operates. | ||
If you're the CIA, how do you find precocious intelligence assets? | ||
How do you find people that have a skill for intelligence? | ||
You go to the elite schools. | ||
Where do you find the smartest people? | ||
Where do you find the smartest, most high-statused, most elite people in American society? | ||
The Ivy League schools. | ||
You go to Yale. | ||
You go to Dartmouth. | ||
You go to Columbia. | ||
And you go to these 18-year-olds, 20-year-olds, who are conservative-leaning. | ||
And you get their professors who teach them in their classes to pay attention and read their papers. | ||
Oh, William F. Buckley seems conservative. | ||
He would be a good fit for the CIA. | ||
He will help us win this intellectual Cold War. | ||
So the CIA gets faculty at the universities, at the Ivy Leagues, who teach the best and brightest, to monitor them, to groom them from a very early age, to watch their careers with great interest. | ||
This one's smart. | ||
This one's precocious. | ||
This one's conservative. | ||
He'd make a good CIA officer. | ||
And they groom them over time. | ||
They encourage those ideological tendencies. | ||
They encourage them to write. | ||
Bill Buckley wrote at the Yale Daily. | ||
Bill Buckley founded the National Review and a campus group with his CIA recruiter, professor. | ||
This is how this stuff works. | ||
Now, Irvin Kristol, his contemporary, who again is godfather of neoconservatism, they're at the founding of the Congress for Cultural Freedom with James Burnham, who is at the founding of National Review, Bill Buckley's paper. | ||
Irvin Kristol, who founded Encounter, funded by the CIA. | ||
Excuse me, Irving Kristol. | ||
Irvin Kristol, who said, I'm a neocon now because of the Yom Kippur War and my Jewish great-grandchildren. | ||
In 1979, Irvin Kristol founds an organization called the Institute for Educational Affairs. | ||
This is the story about that group from Wikipedia. | ||
They responded to a request by two University of Chicago students for startup funding for a conservative newspaper called Counterpoint. | ||
Do you know who founded that magazine? | ||
John Podhoritz, Norm Podhoritz's father. | ||
So Irvin Kristol and Norm Podhoritz found the neocon movement in the 1960s. | ||
In 1979, Irvin Kristol starts up an educational group called the IEA Institute for Educational Affairs. | ||
And Irvin Kristol provides the startup money for Norm Podhoritz's kid, John, to found Counterpoint at the University of Chicago in 79. | ||
It gets better. | ||
By 1980, this grant program expands and is called the Collegiate Network. | ||
In 1990, the Madison Center for Educational Affairs merges with the IEA. | ||
They fund 57 conservative student publications. | ||
It takes them 10 years. | ||
Would you like to know which student newspapers this group founded? | ||
This group of Jewish neocons led by Irving Crystal. | ||
Would you like to know which student newspapers they helped found with their seed money, with their funding? | ||
Well, the first was Counterpoint by Norm Potteritz's kid, John, at University of Chicago in 1979. | ||
Then the Princeton Tory at Princeton University, founded by Yoram Hazzoni in 1984. | ||
Yoram Hazoni. | ||
Then in 1987, the Stanford Review, founded by Peter Thiel. | ||
And the coup de grace, the Dartmouth Review, founded by Dinesh D'Souza. | ||
These are four of the publications that Irving Crystal's Institute for Educational Affairs provided the seed money for. | ||
Counterpoint by John Potteritz at UChicago. | ||
Princeton Tory by Yoram Hazzoni at Princeton in 84. | ||
Stanford Review by Peter Thiel in 1987. | ||
And Dartmouth Review by Dinesh D'Souza at Dartmouth University. | ||
Irving Crystal provided the money for all those student newspapers. | ||
And as we've established, Irving Crystal is a CIA asset. | ||
He is there at the creation for the Congress for Cultural Freedom. | ||
He's the godfather of neoconservatism. | ||
He founded Policy Review or the Policy Journal. | ||
He's at Commentary with Norm Potteritz. | ||
He founds Encounter with money from the CIA. | ||
But it gets even better because in 1995, this network, the Collegiate Network, the Institute for Educational Affairs, the Madison Center, they're overtaken by ISI, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. | ||
That group that William F. Buckley founded in 1953 to bring it all the way home. | ||
Okay? | ||
So William F. Buckley is at Yale, like George Bush before him, like James Engleton before him. | ||
Bill Buckley's recruited by his professor into the CIA. | ||
They found ISI, Institute, what is it? | ||
The Intercollegiate Studies Institute. | ||
William F. Buckley founds National Review with Bill Burnham, who was there at the creation of the Congress for Cultural Freedom, an intellectual group paid by the CIA to fund campus groups, newspapers, radio stations. | ||
He's there with James Burnham, who is also there with Irving Crystal at its founding in Berlin in 1951. | ||
Later in the 1950s, he founds National Review with James Burnham and his professor and three other CIA agents. | ||
Irving Crystal starts up these CIA-funded magazines. | ||
They're Jewish left-wing publications that turn into Jewish neocon publications. | ||
They're funded by the American Jewish Committee and the CIA. | ||
And then Irving Crystal provides the seed money for Peter Thiel, Yoram Hazzoni, Dinesh D'Souza, and John Potter at student newspapers. | ||
After all that, in 95, it folds into ISI, which Bill Buckley founded in 1953. | ||
That's where it all starts. | ||
Now, what's interesting about Irving Crystal is that in the 60s, it was discovered that this was going on. | ||
Left-wing publications found out that the Congress for Cultural Freedom was backed by the CIA. | ||
So Irving Crystal quits and joins the American Enterprise Institute. | ||
Now, as I said before, this is a story about generations, generations over time. | ||
You could say that was generation number one. | ||
Let's talk about generation number two. | ||
So, if William F. Buckley got to start at Yale in the 1950s, let's now talk about Peter Thiel, Yoram Hazoni. | ||
Let's talk about Dinesh D'Souza. | ||
Let's talk about John Potteritz. | ||
Let's talk about generation number two, which is of course funded and spawned from generation number one. | ||
In 1995, Irving Kristol's son, Bill Kristol, founds the Weekly Standard. | ||
And it becomes the new preeminent neoconservative publication that Tucker Carlson writes for. | ||
Irvin Kristol's kid, Bill Kristol, starts Weekly Standard. | ||
It's founded with the help of the News Corporation. | ||
That's Rupert Murdoch's company. | ||
And Tucker Carlson in 95 begs Bill Kristol to hire him at the magazine to write for them, where they pushed the Iraq war, the Second Iraq War, in 2003, and become the most influential publication in favor of the war in Iraq. | ||
Let's talk a little bit about Yoram Hazoni. | ||
Yoram Hazoni gets money from Irvin Kristol in 1984. | ||
Yoram Hazoni is an Israeli Jew. | ||
He's from Israel. | ||
He studies in America, and then he goes back home to Israel. | ||
He founds the Herzl Institute, the Shalom Center. | ||
These are Jewish nationalist think tanks. | ||
This is Yoram Hazoni. | ||
Yoram Hazoni wrote an article in the 1990s about a figure named Kahana. | ||
Kahana was a Jewish extremist in Israel. | ||
I'll read to you some of his views. | ||
This is from his Wikipedia. | ||
It says, during his lifetime, Meyer Kahana publicized his Kahanism ideology throughout the United States. | ||
In Israel, he proposed enforcing Jewish law as codified by Maimonides. | ||
While serving in the Knesset in the mid-1980s, Kahana proposed numerous laws, none of which passed, to emphasize Judaism in public schools, reduce Israel's bureaucracy, forbid sexual relations between Jews and non-Jews, separate Jewish and Arab neighborhoods, end cultural meetings between Jewish and Arab students. | ||
He went so far as to demand that non-Jews in Israel either become slaves or face deportation. | ||
This is a Jewish figure in Israel named Meyer Kahana. | ||
Yoram Hazzoni had this to say about that figure in 1994. | ||
He wrote this. | ||
He wrote, here was a man who said what he meant and meant what he said. | ||
It was the first time we had ever seen that in a political leader. | ||
We were 17 years old, American Jews, children of Orthodox rabbis, educated at Zionist schools and yeshivas, students of the best Jewish institutions in the United States. | ||
Yet I don't believe any of us had ever heard the things we heard that day. | ||
If someone comes to kill you, kill him first. | ||
There is no such thing as innocent civilians in a war. | ||
Jewish lives come before those of non-Jews. | ||
A Jew should never be ashamed of being a Jew. | ||
This is Yoram Hazoni on Meyer Kahana. | ||
Kahana's message wasn't sophisticated, but it was clear. | ||
It was passionate. | ||
It affected us in a way nothing else ever had. | ||
He said that we had nothing to be ashamed of, that Jewish pride and strength were good things, that we could be proud of who we were, that we had a past worth knowing and a future worth building. | ||
We never adopted his political views, but he was the only Jewish leader who seemed to understand how much we wanted to be proud Jews. | ||
Kahana didn't tell us to be proud of someone else's interpretation of Judaism. | ||
He said Judaism was for us. | ||
We didn't need to hide it to apologize for it, to downplay it in public. | ||
We didn't need to water it down. | ||
The Torah was ours. | ||
Our traditions were good. | ||
If we learned them and love them, we would be strong. | ||
For the first time, we realized our schools had never taught us what it meant to be proud Jews. | ||
We'd been taught to fit in, to get along, to apologize for what we were, and we had done it well. | ||
Kahana's books made us want to be better Jews, stronger Jews. | ||
Jews who could live by the Torah without fear. | ||
Jews who would one day be fathers who Would teach strength and dignity to their children, not hatred, but pride. | ||
Now, for those that don't know who this figure is, Yoram Hazzoni, I'll give you some name drops. | ||
You might understand who he is after this. | ||
So, Yoram Hazzoni, as I said, in 1984, got funding from Irving Crystal to start the Princeton Tory. | ||
10 years later, he writes this article about Meyer Kahana, who said that non-Jews should be enslaved by Jews or killed by Jews. | ||
And Hazoni says, This guy's the real deal. | ||
This guy's awesome. | ||
Yoram Hazzoni is the mentor of Bari Weiss. | ||
After Bari Weiss graduated from Columbia University in 2005, she went to Israel to study at Yoram Hazzoni's Shalem Center. | ||
Yoram Hazzoni is the founder of the National Conservatism Conference, which was started up in 2022 with money from Peter Thiel. | ||
And it hosted J.D. Vance, Marco Rubio, Peter Thiel himself, and later Tucker Carlson. | ||
That Yoram Hazzoni. | ||
So when you see the National Conservatism Conference, which has been going on for the past three or four years, which aimed to be the nationalist alternative to CPAC, where Vance, Josh Hawley, Ron DeSantis, Marco Rubio, Peter Thiel, and Tucker have sought to promulgate a new doctrine of nationalist conservatism. | ||
This is the founder of that group. | ||
This is the mentor of Barry Weiss. | ||
He is a Jewish extremist who says that this radical rabbi that wants all Jews to die or be slaves to the Jews is a really great guy and made us proud to be Jewish and all the rest. | ||
And he got money from Irving Crystal, probably as a grooming mechanism in 84 at the Princeton Tory. | ||
But it gets better. | ||
In 1987, the other student newspaper that got funding from Irving Crystal was Stanford Review by Peter Thiel. | ||
Now, we all know a lot about Peter Thiel. | ||
Peter Thiel, 10 years later, goes on to start PayPal. | ||
How did he start PayPal? | ||
Well, he worked with the Israeli Jewish professor at Stanford University, who is the head of the cryptography department, because the big question for how to create a peer-to-peer payment system in the age of the internet was solving the privacy question, solving cryptography. | ||
So PayPal was created by Peter Thiel and Max Levchin, another Jew, overseen by the Israeli Jewish head at Stanford University of Cryptography. | ||
And thus PayPal was born. | ||
Peter Thiel banks his millions of dollars from PayPal. | ||
And just a year later, after they sell it, he founds Palantir with Alex Karp, who is Jewish, and Joe Lonsdale, who is Jewish. | ||
And Palantir's exclusive contract for the next seven years is the CIA. | ||
Over a period of two or three years, they make 300 visits to CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. | ||
After 2007, they branch out. | ||
They take on some new customers. | ||
They are the NSA, the FBI, the DHS, even the Department of Health and Human Services, the CDC, Center for Disease Control, all of it. | ||
Later on in Peter Thiel's life, he begins to fund all of these national conservative candidates. | ||
He hires J.D. Vance at his venture capital firm. | ||
He provides the seed money for J.D. Vance's independent venture capital firm. | ||
He funds J.D. Vance's Senate run to the tune of $15 million. | ||
And of course, among other things, Peter Thiel gives money to Yoram Hazzoni to found the National Conservatism Conference that J.D. Vance, Peter Thiel, and Tucker Carlson speak at. | ||
That's Peter Thiel, who got money from the same group as Yoram Hazzoni. | ||
Peter Thiel also did business in PayPal with Mark Andreessen, who then went on to fund Barry Weiss's Austin University and did a podcast with her not too long ago, shortly after Peter Thiel himself. | ||
This is the network. | ||
And then, of course, we have to talk about J.D. Vance himself. | ||
If J.D. Vance is this arch political project, then we have to talk about J.D. Vance as maybe the third generation after the Peter Thiels and Yoram Hazzonis. | ||
We already talk about J.D. Vance's connection to Tucker Carlson. | ||
We already talked about J.D. Vance's connection to Peter Thiel, Yoram Hazzoni. | ||
I'll remind you some things about J.D. Vance. | ||
In 2016, J.D. Vance did not vote for Donald Trump. | ||
A lot of people know that. | ||
He was a never-Trumper, an anti-Trumper. | ||
But he took it further than that. | ||
Vance did not just not vote for Donald Trump. | ||
He didn't not vote altogether. | ||
He voted for a third party candidate. | ||
Vance voted for Evan McMullen. | ||
And for those that don't know, Evan McMullen was a former CIA officer who was hand-picked by Bill Kristol, Irving Kristol's son, to run as a spoiler against Donald Trump in 2016 in the state of Utah. | ||
Bill Kristol, founder of Weekly Standard, who Tucker Carlson worked for. | ||
Bill Kristol, the son of Irving Kristol, who provided the money for Peter Thiel and Yoramazoni to found their student newspapers. | ||
Crystal hand-picked the CIA officer, Evan McMullen, to run against Trump, and J.D. Vance voted for that guy, voted for Evan McMullen. | ||
And then, when Evan McMullen lost and Donald Trump won the election in 2017, Vance got together with David Frum, a writer at the Weekly Standard, a member of the American Enterprise Institute, to plot out his comeback tour to take over the conservative movement. | ||
Vance is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and also a graduate of Yale Law School, very much like William Buckley before him, like George Bush before him, and like James Engleton before him. | ||
To bring it all home, there's a last part, there's a last part of information or piece of information I'll introduce here. | ||
I want to read to you what Yora Mazzoni said about racialists. | ||
This was in an interview last week that was conveniently released by Ezra Klein at the New York Times last Friday, shortly before my episode, the first installment in the series last Friday. | ||
This is what Yoram Hazzoni had to say about the future of the right wing and racialism. | ||
He said, quote, let's talk about other people in the Trump administration, figures like Michael Anton at the State Department, David Goldman, Bridge Colby at the Defense Department. | ||
There are many others like Stephen Miller. | ||
All these individuals are, to one degree or another, national conservatives. | ||
They attend our conferences, contribute. | ||
They're part of our movement. | ||
Notice who isn't part of it. | ||
From the beginning, we distinguished ourselves in two directions, from libertarians, essentially the liberal Republican wing to our left, and from racialists, anti-democratic movements to our right. | ||
Both sides have generated friction. | ||
The key question is whether there is a clear border between national conservatives and those to the right. | ||
I believe that border is clear. | ||
From the beginning, we said we do not admit or invite people whose platforms are racialist. | ||
There was a major internal conflict involving a publication called V-Dare, which I would describe as at least racialist, if not outright racist. | ||
At a minimum, it is happy to publish racialists, and for us, that was unacceptable. | ||
We do not support politics based on blood. | ||
Blood and soil is a literal Nazi term. | ||
We reject nationalism rooted in blood. | ||
The debate with those to our right is real, but national conservatism is not racialist. | ||
This is Yora Mazzoni, founder of national conservatism. | ||
In a conversation with Ezra Klein, a Jew at the New York Times, he says That the NatCons, the national conservatives are J.D. Vance, Marco Rubio, Bridge Colby, Michael Anton. | ||
These are our guys. | ||
And what we are is not racialist. | ||
We are not blood and soil. | ||
We are not like V-Dare. | ||
For those that don't know, Virginia Dare was founded by Peter Brimelow. | ||
Pap Buchanan was published there for decades. | ||
Virginia Dare is immigration restrictionist. | ||
They're barely even critical of Israel. | ||
And here is Yoram Hazoni, that second generation of neocon leadership, saying racialism is outside of the picture. | ||
It is Nazi. | ||
Blood and soil is literally a Nazi slogan, and that is not what national conservatism is. | ||
But think about what Yoram Hazoni and Irving Kristol and all these guys are in favor of. | ||
Yoram Hazoni himself said that Meyer Kahana is inspiring, a hero, made us proud to be Jewish, made us believe in Jewish tradition that Israel should be Jewish. | ||
But Hazoni says national conservatism is not based on blood and soil. | ||
Israel is, but America can't be. | ||
Israel is based on the blood of the Jewish people and the soil of their promised land. | ||
But America is not. | ||
America is not about the blood of the Europeans. | ||
It's not about the soil of this land that they settled. | ||
But Israel is. | ||
He says, and in our national conservative movement, we are not racialists. | ||
We don't believe in blood and soil. | ||
We're pro-Israel. | ||
We're pro-Netanyahu. | ||
We're in favor of Jewish nationalism and blood and soil Israeli nationalism, but not so much for America. | ||
And who do we count among our ranks? | ||
J.D. Vance, who spoke at NatCon, Tucker Carlson, who spoke at NatCon, Josh Hawley, who spoke at NatCon, Marco Rubio, who spoke at NatCon. | ||
Bridge Colby, endorsed by Tucker and hangs out at NatCon. | ||
And what did Tucker Carlson say? | ||
You're a kook and a crank if you say that neoconservatism has anything to do with Jewishness. | ||
What did Joe Kent say? | ||
I'm an inclusive populist. | ||
I don't want to talk about whiteness or Christianity, and I'm pro-Israel. | ||
What have these guys been saying from the start? | ||
Bill Buckley called Buchanan an anti-Semite because he said that Jews were making us fight their wars. | ||
But they are. | ||
And they always have been. | ||
Going back all the way. | ||
When Tucker talks about the neocons that me and Pap Buchanan are allegedly discrediting, who are the neocons? | ||
Over generations, I'll tell you who the neocons are. | ||
They are Jewish leftists from New York in bed with the CIA doing arbitrage on behalf of Israel that only became right wing because Israel was threatened by the American left. | ||
That's who they are. | ||
And if you read what they write themselves, they will tell you it's not liberals that got mugged by reality. | ||
It is those Jewish leftist intellectuals from New York that were surprised when the Soviet Union turned on Israel. | ||
And they realized after the Soviets passed that resolution in 75 saying that Zionism is racism, they realized the left wing in America, the left wing in Israel, would never let Israel be a Jewish state and therefore would never let Israel exist. | ||
And if Israel cannot be a Jewish state and Israel ceases to exist, then their Jewish children and their Jewish grandchildren will be imperiled because they will be at the mercy of the communists in Russia, the Arabs in the Middle East, and the Europeans in America or the Europeans in Europe for that matter. | ||
And that is why they undertook a multi-generational campaign to subvert the think tanks, the national security apparatus, the Republican Party, to use it and marry anti-Soviet, anti-Muslim extremist, anti-Iran revisionist power, Cold War, war on terror, unipolar war, to Israel's national interest, which is all they ever really cared about. | ||
And anybody that notices or recognizes or acknowledges that this is the case, that it's Pothuritz and Crystals and Hazonis and Weisses and Alamarus and Yarvins and Beaties, If anybody recognizes how many Jewish people are supporting it and why and read between the lines on what they're saying, | ||
they will tar that person as an anti-Semite, not because they hate Jews, but because they see what Jews are doing. | ||
And Tucker Carlson said, if you get called an anti-Semite, you can pretend to be a victim of the cabal that runs Washington. | ||
Well, what else would you call it? | ||
When Bill Buckley got recruited out of Yale and James Engleton went to Yale and George Bush went to Yale and they're in bed with Jewish leftists like Irving Kristol and Potteritz, whose heart is in Israel, launching wars in Iraq and Iran, in Syria and elsewhere on Israel's behalf. | ||
What else would you call it other than that cabal that will seek to destroy you if you just begin to piece this story together a little bit? | ||
Now, who's crazy here? | ||
I don't think either of us are crazy. | ||
Who's hateful? | ||
I don't think either of us are hateful, actually. | ||
But Bill Buckley and George Bush and Tucker Carlson clearly represent a faction of the CIA and the U.S. security state. | ||
They are married to a mercenary intelligence outfit of Jews in Russia, Israel, and America. | ||
And this relationship goes all the way back to the 40s. | ||
It goes back to the beginning. | ||
The American and British intel services, the Jewish refugees, the early Zionist movement, the eventual Israeli intelligence agencies, these two factions have been inextricably connected for as long as they have existed. | ||
And the Americans believe that we're getting the good end of the deal because the Jews are helping us fight communism, helping us fight Islamic extremism, helping us fight Iran and the rogue revisionist states today. | ||
But all along, the Jews have been very straightforward about their intentions. | ||
These Jewish intellectuals in New York, the Jewish refugees recruited by Angleton, people like Yoram Hazoni, the modern NatCon Wright, they always knew that they were using the American security establishment, | ||
purporting to help America in the Cold War, purporting to help us in the war on terror, purporting to help us in Iran, but all the while giving us false intelligence, lying about their motivations, maintaining a carefully calculated facade that they care about American liberalism, when in reality what they care about is Jewish nationalism. | ||
And when somebody like myself or Patrick Buchanan or Sam Francis or Joseph Sobron or Russell Kirk gets up and starts to upset the apple cart by rallying traditional conservatives against both the CIA and the Israeli Mossad, then those factions team up to call us anti-Semites. | ||
When a Pap Buchanan gets up and says it'll be Murphys and McAllisters and Gonzalez's that die in Israel's war, then it's the job of the CIA and the Israeli Mossad to get together and beat him down and call him an anti-Semite. | ||
When Nick Fuentes gets up and says, no, it's not just the Zionists. | ||
It's not just the neocons or the nation builders. | ||
It's their Jewishness. | ||
It's their affinity with their own nation and with the state of Israel that makes them do this. | ||
It is Tucker and Candace Owens. | ||
It is the ADL and the SPLC. | ||
It's Ben Shapiro and Mark Levin that are going to call me the anti-Semite, a crazy, a nutjob, a hater, because I'm simply pointing out the connections. | ||
But based on the weight of the evidence tonight, I think you understand how all of this works. | ||
The CIA recruits its officers from these Ivy League universities, gets them to start student newspapers, commentary newspapers, radio stations to propagandize against America's adversaries, whether they're communists, leftists, revisionist powers. | ||
And the CIA has always been in bed with these Zionists and the Jews, because the Jews, as the free agents of the world, they are the go-between between all the countries. | ||
If you want to get a sneak peek behind the Russian curtain, you got to talk to a Jewish person. | ||
But at the same Time, the Jews have always been self-interested. | ||
And they articulated explicitly over and over again that what they care about is the Jewish nation, the Jewish community. | ||
And if they're Jewish, their kids are going to be Jewish. | ||
Their grandkids are going to be Jewish. | ||
And they see the destiny of themselves and their descendants and their people as bound up with Israel. | ||
And that's why they want America to be Israel's air force. | ||
That's why they want America to fight Israel's wars. | ||
And they will lie, cheat, and steal to make that happen. | ||
And the coup de grace is that when all is said and done, they're also massive hypocrites. | ||
While they are telling us about the essential Jewish identity of the state of Israel, Jewish blood and the promised land, they then turn around and tell us: if you're a white racialist, if you talk about Jewish essential identity, you're a bigot. | ||
You're a genuine white identitarian or white nationalist, you're racist. | ||
You're not a real national conservative. | ||
If you say there's something up with Judaism or Jewishness has anything to do with it, you're a crank, a crazy, and anti-Semite. | ||
They cancel you and then gaslight you and say you didn't get canceled because the cabal went after you. | ||
It's because you're crazy. | ||
And you see that if you know the first thing about any of these characters from Bill Buckley and James Burnham and James Angleton to Irvin Kristol and Norm Potteritz to their next generation, Irvin Kristol to Bill Kristol, Norm Potteritz to John Potteritz, Peter Thiel and Yoramazzoni, who are all working together to produce J.D. Vance. | ||
And the next act, just how George Bush from Yale and the CIA succeeded Reagan to take us to war in Iraq, J.D. Vance, Peter Thiel's protege from Yale Law School, will be delivered by Yoramazoni and Peter Thiel to give us a war in Iran, as he said he would at the Quincy Institute. | ||
That's the long story. | ||
That's their long march through the institutions. | ||
And my next project, if any of this was unclear or rambly or disorganized, is to take all this information and put it in a documentary. | ||
And the only reason that I'm telling you this now is because if anything happens to me, this is what you need to do. | ||
The project of the free people of America, the project of American sovereignty, of Christian nationalists, of anybody that cares about our independence, as the 1776 movement, as the new American revolution, is to, just as they started newspapers and campus groups and book clubs and publish books and made movies, we need to expose what they are doing in the same way. | ||
And the reason I'm telling you all this now is so that you can finish it if I can't. | ||
Because I won't even let death stop me from bringing attention to what is going on here. | ||
It's that important. | ||
So that is the long story. | ||
That is the prequel in the series. | ||
That is our second iteration in the series, our investigation into Tucker Carlson. | ||
I think we clocked in at about two hours, 15 minutes, just under what we did on Friday. | ||
But that's our show. | ||
That's all the information. | ||
We're going to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our super chats. | ||
And I'm going to read the big ones. | ||
I'm going to try to read most of these tonight. | ||
But that is the whole story. | ||
So I hope you learned something. | ||
I know some of this information we have talked about on the show before, but just as was the case last week, what matters is to bring all these threads together. | ||
And when you start to spell it out, you see how these things rhyme. | ||
It's the same people doing the same things in the same way in the same institutions over generations. | ||
And that's what they don't want you to pay attention to. | ||
They want to obfuscate the conversation and they want to say it's about neocons versus everybody else. | ||
You know, Tucker Carlson said Mark Levin is a neocon. | ||
No, Mark Levin is a Jew. | ||
And he's a neocon because he's a Jew. | ||
Just like Yoramazoni is a neocon because he's a Jew. | ||
And Irvin Kristol and Norm Potteritz, they're neocons because they're Jews. | ||
And along the way, they have had non-Jewish Allies like Tucker and William F. Buckley, and they have at various times turned a blind eye to the Jewish nature of it for their own agenda. | ||
But that's obviously what's going on. | ||
And that, according to Tucker, is the dividing line between legitimate and illegitimate, between not crazy and crazy, not hateful and anti-Semitic. | ||
I think that's just reality based on what we've read tonight. | ||
But that's it. | ||
That's all I got for you. | ||
Okay, but we're going to dive in. | ||
We're going to take a look at our super chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys have to say about all this. | ||
I'm losing my voice. | ||
Okay. | ||
Well, let's see. | ||
It's Groip percent $100. | ||
No message. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Street sent $20. | ||
This dude in front of me at works at Ovade. | ||
I started laughing my ass off. | ||
I thought that was an America first show thing, but apparently they say it. | ||
I almost got in trouble. | ||
Had to pivot. | ||
Yeah, they do say it. | ||
That's not just like a meme. | ||
I mean, that's a real thing that they say. | ||
White Malcolm sent $15. | ||
You're breaking the matrix. | ||
Watch out for Agent Smith's hein. | ||
Why do you think basketball Americans can't hear to fire a large number of people? | ||
Frankfurt sent $88, but they never call you a liar. | ||
Happy August 8th to all the wipers out there. | ||
Well, and I would really like to sit down with Tucker Carlson and talk about all this. | ||
If Tucker talked about Jeffrey Epstein with Daryl Cooper, if he's talking about the neocons and the Jews, why won't he talk to me about this? | ||
He called me out. | ||
He called me a CIA agent. | ||
This is the case that I'm making. | ||
This is the case I'm making about the CIA. | ||
This is the case I'm making about the neocons. | ||
If they'll have on Daryl Cooper to talk about Winston Churchill and Jeffrey Epstein, and he's going to call me out and make accusations against me, this is the show that Tucker and Joe Rogan need to have. | ||
Everybody knows Epstein worked with Mossad. | ||
We need to know the whole story, though. | ||
That's the part they don't want to talk about. | ||
Tochi Fushigairo said $100. | ||
How should the U.S. adjust their strategy in the Middle East? | ||
Assuming our bed Philippe overlords are no longer being blackmailed and paid for Israel. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I think that we need to, I've said it before, we need to restrain Israel. | ||
That's the overriding priority because the U.S. interest in the Middle East is balance. | ||
We want to leave the Middle East, but we don't want any one country to dominate the Middle East. | ||
Right now, America has hegemony over the Middle East. | ||
And the play right now is that we're going to increase Israel and integrate it with Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, the Gulf countries, Egypt, so that we can hand over our hegemony to Israel. | ||
And then they are the major power there. | ||
And I think that's a mistake. | ||
I think that some division is actually good. | ||
If Iran is powerful and not allied with Israel, but normalized with the United States, then there is balance. | ||
Turkey, Israel, Iran, the Gulf countries are all balancing each other. | ||
And that way the United States can push and pull. | ||
And we can calibrate playing different countries off of each other to our liking. | ||
But if we overthrow Iran or let Israel overthrow Iran, then Israel with no adversaries will dominate the region. | ||
And that's not in our interest. | ||
So we don't necessarily want to be deployed there forever. | ||
And we don't necessarily want Iran to have a nuclear bomb and to hate us. | ||
We need to prevent Israel from taking out Iran, normalize with Iran, so that then there is this 50-50 split. | ||
And as long as it's contentious, then we maintain an edge over the region. | ||
Israel will rely upon us, and we will always be the force multiplier for every country there. | ||
That would be my program. | ||
Streets and $20. | ||
Why don't we make your super chats $20 name? | ||
They used to be five anyways. | ||
As you get more popular, you're not going to be able to keep up. | ||
Yeah, I think I might change it. | ||
There's just too many these days, and they get 99 cents, $25. | ||
Hi, Nick. | ||
Tucker's recent attack shows the system now openly acknowledges you as an adversary. | ||
I'm praying for your safety. | ||
Stay strong, brother. | ||
The truth will always prevail. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Yeah, yeah, legitimately. | ||
That's what freaks me out because, you know, everything that I've talked about tonight and last week, that's all real. | ||
And I'm kind of blowing up his spot and exposing him. | ||
And they don't like that. | ||
So for him to call me out by name, it does make me a target because what they're trying to do is to corner and isolate me and say, oh, there is this Israel critical movement, but Nick isn't part of it. | ||
He's way out there. | ||
And the only reason they're saying it is because they're worried that I'm Becoming too influential in that side of the equation. | ||
You know, they're basically trying to beat a tactical retreat, acknowledge some of the criticisms of Israel and kind of move their fortifications backward and say, okay, we'll admit maybe Israel sucks a little bit. | ||
But the compromise is they want to keep me out. | ||
They want to move 10 paces backward to encompass some of the criticisms I've made in the past so that I don't have narrative control over them. | ||
And then they butt me out and say, it's okay to criticize Israel. | ||
And Nick does that, but he's also this evil guy. | ||
So it's like this weird tactical maneuver they're doing. | ||
Minecraft Roy per sent $10. | ||
I'm going into the Coast Guard because college isn't going the way I planned. | ||
I'm not happy about joining the military. | ||
But since CG is under Homeland Security, I'm hoping it will open the door for me to get higher up jobs in the department. | ||
Hopefully so. | ||
Silent sent $10. | ||
He's lonely. | ||
He's weird. | ||
He lives in a basement. | ||
That's a lot of people that you claim to care about. | ||
Do you care about people going into debt order pizza and homeownership being impossible? | ||
Or do you. | ||
It's a good monologue, right? | ||
Riley Miller sent $15. | ||
Hey, man, love the show. | ||
Keep doing what you're doing. | ||
Also, just got the American first hand. | ||
Can't wait to wear it. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's go. | |
Payable Brown sent $300. | ||
Hi, Nick. | ||
Love the show less than three. | ||
I went to a conference this week and I encountered a lot of retarded and Jewish slop slash agenda and psych research. | ||
I want to have a career in this field, but I'm getting discouraged at the direction this field takes. | ||
I know if I ever speak out against it, I can lose my academic standing and career easily. | ||
Do you think speaking out was worth it? | ||
Regrets? | ||
Etc. | ||
Thanks for everything. | ||
You're resilient. | ||
Thank you for the huge super chat. | ||
You know, look, it's hard for me to weigh in on these personal situations. | ||
In many cases, I don't think it's worth it. | ||
It depends on your situation. | ||
You have a stomach for that because getting canceled really sucks. | ||
And also, you have to weigh the risk and reward. | ||
Are you a spokesperson? | ||
Are you going to be able to reform everything? | ||
Because what I tend to see happen a lot is that a lot of people think that they're going to be these truth tellers. | ||
They're going to lead the charge. | ||
And what often happens is they're not really good at it. | ||
They don't really have the stomach for it. | ||
They're kind of like a flash in the pan. | ||
Maybe they make the news and then they get utterly annihilated. | ||
And then it destroys their life. | ||
They either spiral into life ruination. | ||
They apologize. | ||
You know, so with a lot of people, it's like, hey, man, don't be a hero. | ||
If you have a family, if you got a good thing going, I wouldn't, I wouldn't upset the apple cart too much, unless that's what you want to do. | ||
I mean, it's hard for me to say because what I did in my life is I just went all the way and that's just who I am. | ||
And I never look back. | ||
And everything they threw in front of me, I just, you know, tried to bypass it as best as I could. | ||
But not a lot of people have the metal for that. | ||
A lot of people are non-confrontational. | ||
They're not good under pressure. | ||
They feel self-conscious. | ||
They don't like being attacked. | ||
It bothers them if people don't like them. | ||
And for those people, they just do not have the fortitude to stick it out. | ||
And that's really what's required if you want to achieve any kind of influence or make a difference. | ||
So if you can't do that, I would advise against it. | ||
But I don't know your situation. | ||
You have to make a decision how you want to live. | ||
It's about your life. | ||
Patriot Booster sent $50. | ||
God bless. | ||
Thank you for the super chat. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Forgetable Fire sent $25. | ||
The final layer of feminists are married tribe wives refusing to leave the space. | ||
They are Jezebels and much more of an obstacle than blue-haired Democrat feminists because they're saying the right things to remain in men's faces. | ||
If your wife is online giving opinions, she's a feminist and you're a sim. | ||
Yep. | ||
Well, we've talked about it a lot before. | ||
It's totally true. | ||
There's really no difference between a trad woman and a liberal woman if she's like on Instagram mouthing off. | ||
I've said it before. | ||
I don't know why that's controversial. | ||
But it's a costume. | ||
It's like you get a trad woman and she's, we've done this rant a million times, but she's just as rebellious, just as disobedient, just as opinionated, sarcastic as any other liberal woman. | ||
But she puts on this literal costume. | ||
But I'm wearing a veil, but I'm wearing a sundress. | ||
That makes me traditional. | ||
It's like, yeah, you're really traditional when you're biting my head off over nonsense. | ||
Yeah, it is what it is. | ||
Melee said $100. | ||
Embarrassed it's taken me so long. | ||
But over the last 18 months, I've spent countless hours unfucking myself. | ||
Not nearly enough, considering the years I've been asleep. | ||
Grateful to you. | ||
Thank you for your uncompromising fortitude. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Glad to hear it, man. | ||
I don't know what you're referring to specifically, but I hope it's going okay. | ||
James 100 sent $50. | ||
Dude, it's got to be said. | ||
You get a little joking about Canvas. | ||
Every show is fucking gay. | ||
I'm not joking. | ||
I mean, the sexual tension is not a joke. | ||
I didn't even, I didn't want to bring it up. | ||
I didn't want to say anything, but it just kept coming up in the comments. | ||
Everyone was saying, yo, the sexual tension's out of control. | ||
They kind of forced me to talk about it. | ||
You could cut it with a knife. | ||
I mean, let's not deny what's out there. | ||
We could pretend like that's, you know, projection on her part, but it's mutual. | ||
It's there. | ||
So, I, but I'm with you. | ||
We should be professional. | ||
We should stop talking about the sexual tension between me and Candace Owens. | ||
That's not really relevant. | ||
What's relevant is the deep state lore, the CIA, the red pills. | ||
I'm trying, you know, but the heart wants what it wants. | ||
I mean, I know we should really stick to the matter at hand. | ||
Let's talk about this stuff. | ||
But that damn smile, it gets me every time. | ||
You know, when I went out to go and do her show in Nashville, my buddy said, you have one job. | ||
I said, what? | ||
What is it? | ||
He said, don't fall in love. | ||
And I said, I said, who do you think you're talking to? | ||
Of course I'm not. | ||
You know, but then the woman in red, the lady in red, but then the lady in red came down the stairs and my world changed. | ||
And it changed me in profound ways. | ||
And I think it changed her. | ||
I think it touched her as well. | ||
Black Behavior said $100. | ||
Praying for you. | ||
Thank you for what you do. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Citizen Cage sent $10. | ||
If anti-Semitism keeps rising. | ||
Will Tucker and the Linda hang out types feel the need to grant us more of the narrative to appease us? | ||
How far can they go? | ||
What is the line they will never cross? | ||
These are stupid questions. | ||
Roman Command762 sent $25. | ||
Bought some merch today. | ||
Was my first time using crypto. | ||
My bank locked crypto purchases, so I had to go to Bitcoin ATM at a corner store. | ||
Made her pain in the ass, but I'm getting my damn hat. | ||
Now I understand you ran from the other day. | ||
Getting around without credit card processing must be a bitch. | ||
That's insane. | ||
I hope they unbanned me. | ||
I know Trump just signed that executive order on banning people from the banks, but I have a feeling, why do I just have the sneaking suspicion it won't apply to me? | ||
You know, Trump does this big executive order saying that not only is de-banking against the law now, but they're ordering the banks to get in touch with those that have been debanked and like reinstate them and make them whole. | ||
You know, hey, so knock on wood. | ||
I hope it happens, but why do I feel like they'll just leave me out? | ||
Pete turned Teal sent $20. | ||
What's the story behind why Wasps opened up the country clubs and handed off power in America? | ||
Well, we kind of talked a little bit about it. | ||
I don't even think it was a handoff so much as it was. | ||
We were just infiltrated. | ||
There were quotas in the Ivy League universities. | ||
They were banned from the country clubs and all the rest. | ||
And then during World War II and afterward, they threw open the gates on all that stuff. | ||
I think a big part of it is the society got very liberal, very multiracial, multicultural. | ||
And these Jewish people, look, they did excel, but they were also working together. | ||
And so they just steadily marched through the institutions and eventually they were the top guys. | ||
So I don't know that it was so much of a, okay, the Jews get to run society now. | ||
So much as it was that that's how it happened naturally over time. | ||
Blues have sent $25. | ||
Hey, Nick, had a rough day today. | ||
Had a full pressure today because of stupid family drama. | ||
Decided to finish the super chats. | ||
I missed and heard your bit on Candace. | ||
Made me cry laughing. | ||
I love you, bro. | ||
Keep doing your thing. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Rocky Raccoon sent $15. | ||
Wonder if Trump's debating before he ordered you an account again. | ||
Got it. | ||
They're such pathetic grand standards. | ||
This should have been dealt with a decade ago with all of their fights. | ||
I know. | ||
Well, it should have all of it should have been solved in the first term. | ||
The censorship, the debanking. | ||
They did nothing. | ||
And that's the frustration. | ||
If you can move the embassy, if you can bomb Iran, if you can do all these things, why can't you just give us our Twitter accounts back? | ||
People forget that Elon gave us their Twitter accounts back, not Trump. | ||
Trump did nothing for us as far as tech censorship goes. | ||
He did nothing for us as far as up until this week, debanking goes. | ||
And you're right. | ||
I mean, it's a little bit too late. | ||
I'll take it, but Jerome Bayesh said $100. | ||
Nick, your message that we support can't be ignored. | ||
The PPD YouTube channel debated your response back against Candace and Tucker and they said you brought the receipts. | ||
I saw that. | ||
I'm 47 years old. | ||
I'm here to support the young guns. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Yep. | ||
Yeah, I saw that clip. | ||
I was a little surprised because Adam Sosnick isn't even like my biggest fan. | ||
But I think he thought, well, one, they already don't like Tucker Because they think Tucker's like an anti-Semite. | ||
So I think that's part of it. | ||
They're like willing to admit I'm right because I'm going at the bigger fish who is criticizing Israel. | ||
And maybe they don't realize that Tucker is really on their side in many ways. | ||
But yeah, I think it also speaks to the strength of the argument as well. | ||
Centoria Barina said $100. | ||
Sarah Stock gets engaged. | ||
Worst catfight in history. | ||
Centurion Northwill gets hit with a scandal. | ||
White cannot forever. | ||
We forgive you. | ||
He lays the foundation in the pipe. | ||
Guys win again. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Yeah, what's going on with all that? | ||
Sarah Stock gets engaged and it's like World War III with every e-girl. | ||
It's like Avengers Endgame when they start coming through the portals. | ||
You know, Sarah Stock did the Doctor Strange and fucking Emily saves America and Ariel Morgan and literally every e-girl and Matt Walsh comes in. | ||
Everybody's coming in on the debate. | ||
That ring is too small. | ||
Fuck you. | ||
You're materialistic. | ||
No, fuck you. | ||
A man should have a big ring. | ||
You have an STD. | ||
Yeah, well, you had sex with a black guy. | ||
Oh, yeah, well, you're a single mom. | ||
And it's like, damn, I think Squidward's taking that one personally. | ||
That one had his clarinet in it. | ||
I haven't even been following that. | ||
I've been just doing other stuff all week. | ||
And look, I like Sarah Stock. | ||
Emily Saves America follows me. | ||
It's hard to take a side on this one. | ||
You know, Sarah Stock, I have to say, I'm probably closer to her than the others. | ||
So I'm probably coming down on her side. | ||
I don't love the ring photo, if I'm being honest. | ||
I don't want to pile on, but I don't. | ||
Here's a question. | ||
Here's a little, here's a little interesting question. | ||
Why does an e-girl post a picture of her hand with her ring, but not with her fiancé? | ||
That's a little riddle for you. | ||
Here's a little riddle. | ||
Here's a little piece of advice. | ||
Here's a little riddle. | ||
Why does the Trad e-girl post a picture of the ring on her hand, but not her fiancé? | ||
Why didn't that one make the cut on Twitter? | ||
Anyone know why? | ||
So I'm not a big fan of the ring finger because the ring, the ring picture is sort of like parading around. | ||
I'm Trad now. | ||
I'm married. | ||
Look at my ring. | ||
Sorry, fellas. | ||
I'm taken. | ||
And yeah, I don't know how in favor of that I am. | ||
I sort of hate the ring photos. | ||
Look, I'm just being honest. | ||
I hate the ring photo. | ||
People are saying Mudshark. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
That's not the reason. | ||
It's not because her fiancé's white. | ||
That's not why. | ||
It's because e-girls kind of intuitively, I'll tell you why, because you're not getting it. | ||
E-girls intuitively know that if their simps see the guy, they're going to be turned off. | ||
That's why. | ||
Why do they show the ring and not the guy? | ||
Because all the simps are going to see the picture of the guy and they're going to go, I hate that guy. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, that guy, you married that guy? | |
And all the simps are going to run away. | ||
And I think e-girls kind of know that implicitly on some level. | ||
So they don't post the guy, they post the ring because the ring is not a deal breaker because guys are going to say, oh, who's the lucky guy? | ||
Oh, man. | ||
You know, but if they see the guy, if they visualize the guy, then they go, dah, what does he have that I don't have? | ||
If they see the ring, they're like, oh, man, of course she's taken. | ||
Of course, she's so beautiful. | ||
But if they see the guy, then there's like this immense feeling of inferiority. | ||
So to answer the question, you could not. | ||
That's why. | ||
So I don't love the ring picture. | ||
Now, by the same token, people that are saying the ring is small, that's not nice. | ||
Okay. | ||
That's not very nice either. | ||
And in fairness, none of these e-girls really have a leg to stand on. | ||
You know, I saw there was one exchange. | ||
It was a tough watch. | ||
Emily Saves America's laying down the fire on whoever. | ||
Pearl jumps in and says, you have chlamydia and you're a whore. | ||
And Emily Saves America jumps in and says, yeah, well, you sucked a black guy's dick and did something else. | ||
And then Pearl denied the second thing, But not the first thing. | ||
And then she goes, My boyfriend's Dominican, actually. | ||
And you're like, oh, gosh. | ||
Oh, my gosh. | ||
What are we doing here? | ||
In an e-girl war, nobody wins, man. | ||
Nobody wins. | ||
It's like Albert Einstein. | ||
I don't know how e-girl war will be fought. | ||
All I know is that e-girl war 2 is going to be fought with sticks and stones. | ||
No, no woman will be left standing. | ||
No trad thought will be left standing. | ||
I'm kind of loving it. | ||
It vindicates me. | ||
Because here I, everybody says, oh, you're not married. | ||
You're gay. | ||
You hate women, unironically. | ||
You're not a gentleman. | ||
And all I'm sitting here saying is like, women need to shut the fuck up. | ||
That's all I'm saying. | ||
I'm saying men should marry women and stuff. | ||
I'm just saying women need to shut up. | ||
Like, that's my, that's honestly my position. | ||
It's like, get married, but women shut up. | ||
And I think anyone can agree. | ||
Women need to be told that. | ||
It's not like you can never talk again, but like women are talking too much now. | ||
Like it's enough already. | ||
Women are talking way too much. | ||
They're making faces. | ||
They're acting like bitches. | ||
You know, and it's like they just need to shut up. | ||
And everybody, and then I get this backlash. | ||
Everybody's yelling at me. | ||
I'm like, whoa, hey, I'm just, this is just common sense. | ||
But now this war breaks out. | ||
And it's like, yeah, serves you right. | ||
You trusted a fucking e-girl every single time. | ||
So, you know, who are my favorite e-girls? | ||
I'm going to take sides. | ||
Pearl is one of my favorite e-girls. | ||
Sarah Stocks, pretty good. | ||
Those are my faves. | ||
Emily Saves America. | ||
I don't know her, but she follows me. | ||
Do you think there's a chance? | ||
She follows me. | ||
unidentified
|
Who else is there? | |
Oh, Kimberly Klasich. | ||
She's one of my favorite e-girls, rapidly becoming one of my favorites, a queen. | ||
And God help anybody that disrespects my queen. | ||
Who else is out there? | ||
Who else is an awesome? | ||
Yeah, there's a lot of them, but yeah, but you can't trust them. | ||
You know, they're like Jews. | ||
You could be friends with them, but you can't trust them. | ||
Because at the end of the day, they're women. | ||
So anyway, yeah, that was crazy. | ||
I've been loving the mayhem. | ||
And I just liked it for once. | ||
I'm not in the middle of it. | ||
I just GT popcorn and they're going at it. | ||
You're race mixed with a black guy. | ||
You're a single mom. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
You're a whore and you have chlamydia. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Well, your ring is small. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you're a bitch. | |
And I'm like, yeah. | ||
Yeah, this is awesome. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And this is awesome. | ||
I'm just in the stands with a foam finger. | ||
Who you got? | ||
I'm making bets. | ||
All right, who we got, everybody? | ||
I got $300 on Pearl Davis. | ||
I have a Pearl Davis foam finger. | ||
unidentified
|
This is awesome. | |
And we just like to see the different stuff come into the ring. | ||
You know, they start talking about STDs. | ||
You're like, oh, shit. | ||
No way. | ||
You know, Pearl jumps in. | ||
You admitted you have chlamydia. | ||
You're like, ooh, oh, that had to hurt, JR. | ||
Yo, Taz, what do you think of this fight? | ||
Well, JR, I got to tell you, I've been in this business 30 years. | ||
This is the biggest main event in history. | ||
So I fucking love it. | ||
AF PAC 5, we got to do like a hell in a cell match. | ||
We got to do an AF Divas match. | ||
It's going to be like the elimination chamber. | ||
Every three minutes, a new one is going to enter into the chamber. | ||
And there'll be weapons. | ||
Falls count anywhere. | ||
No disqualifications. | ||
Weapons are allowed. | ||
No interference. | ||
Well, maybe we'll do interference. | ||
Maybe like the boyfriends could jump in. | ||
You know, the boyfriend's theme music starts playing. | ||
They slide into the ring. | ||
They start bounding. | ||
Pearl's Dominican boyfriend slides into the ring, grabs Emily Safe America. | ||
Michael Cole is freaking out. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
What just happened? | ||
Kimberly Klasic comes in with the ring bell. | ||
Ding, ding. | ||
She's hitting one of them over the head. | ||
That's how we got to play it. | ||
I don't know about you, but I would pay to see that. | ||
Now, that is something you should see. | ||
So, yeah, I like it. | ||
I love the e-girl warfare. | ||
Serves them right. | ||
They should be at home. | ||
Why are they on Twitter? | ||
If they're on Twitter, this is what happens. | ||
You should be at home. | ||
And like Matt Walsh jumps in and he's got some gay little monologue. | ||
Here's why tradition and marriage is still an obligation. | ||
Dude, shut up. | ||
unidentified
|
Dude, shut up. | |
Like, we don't need to hear to get married for the hundredth time. | ||
We need someone to tell these young men to put these bitches in their place. | ||
Anyway. | ||
So, yeah, so we're loving this. | ||
We're loving this stuff. | ||
We're love. | ||
It's good stuff, guys. | ||
I got to tell you, as a spectator, this is some good stuff. | ||
Yeah, but I was just like floored. | ||
It just kept getting more and more intense. | ||
It was like the Royal Rumble. | ||
It was literally like the Royal Rumble. | ||
It started like she posts this ring picture. | ||
It blows up. | ||
And then people just keep coming into the fight. | ||
You're like, what? | ||
No way. | ||
She came out of retirement. | ||
And then guys are getting into it, like Xavier DeRusso and Rob Smith and Matt Walsh. | ||
And everyone's jumping in. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like World War III. | |
I like it. | ||
I'm having a good time. | ||
I love the shit flinging, dude. | ||
So good. | ||
Emily Saves America. | ||
That car video came back where she's like, I'm going to have drugs and party and fuck. | ||
And you can't tell me what to do. | ||
Dude, she ate. | ||
That's so degenerate. | ||
But she low-key ate with her shameless defense of hedonism. | ||
And then the whole like STD thing, that was scrumpch. | ||
That would is this Culver's? | ||
Because welcome to Delicious. | ||
That was fucking scrumpch. | ||
You know, Pearl comes in. | ||
Oh, yeah, you got Chlamydia. | ||
Oh, yeah, bitch. | ||
You sucked a black guy's dick. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
You're a single mom, bitch. | ||
So it's what, man. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
Yeah, the year of vindication, the vindication does not stop. | ||
You know? | ||
The reactionary $10. | ||
I didn't know how even really existed, but I do. | ||
And people are starting to notice. | ||
Yeah, so true. | ||
So true. | ||
That's how I feel. | ||
African American source said $1,000. | ||
No message. | ||
Thank you for the absolutely massive super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Oh, he emailed me today and said it's Niger Saurus. | ||
I was pronouncing it the other way. | ||
Niger Saurus. | ||
Thank you for the absolutely massive super chat. | ||
07's in the chat, please, for our sponsorship. | ||
Good show. | ||
Here's $10,000. | ||
Now Momoland beership holds wipe Perdib. | ||
Kirk Petman sent $25. | ||
I just found out Ben Shapiro won't debate you because he won a lifetime in GTA 5. | ||
Raw. | ||
That's unironically his justification. | ||
Bald Grubber sent $25. | ||
Nick, I'm sorry. | ||
I know you have to disavow this, but it must be said. | ||
Hashtag Grave Charlie Kirk. | ||
That was crazy. | ||
Did you see that clip today? | ||
He was literally twitching. | ||
Some caller calls into the Charlie Kirk show and says, Why won't you debate Nick Fuentis? | ||
And his whole face is twitching. | ||
He's like, He goes, Well, you said you wanted a call about turning point events. | ||
I guess you lied about that. | ||
Deceit. | ||
I guess deceit is what you like because you lied about, you lied your way into the call. | ||
And I was like, Whoa, dude, just take it easy. | ||
Hey, man, just take it easy. | ||
That was crazy. | ||
And then he deleted the video. | ||
That was a live stream. | ||
Someone ambushed him asking about me. | ||
And then Charlie Kirk, the second the stream went down, he deleted it, which he never does. | ||
Weird stuff. | ||
He goes, I don't debate bad faith actors and trolls who blame the Jews for everything. | ||
Oh, yeah, you just debate communists, socialists, Democrats, the governor of Canada or of California. | ||
Brain fart. | ||
That was crazy. | ||
He lives in fear. | ||
Rent free. | ||
Rent free, buddy. | ||
We're coming for you. | ||
We're coming for you, globalist. | ||
We're coming for you, globalist. | ||
We got your number, pal. | ||
We're coming for you, shabbous boy. | ||
That was insane. | ||
It's always $2,200. | ||
Love all the shows and content lately. | ||
The fire rises. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, man. | |
8 and 26, $10. | ||
Lord Nick, please wish my friend Danica happy birth. | ||
No. | ||
Care Zero Sent $50. | ||
I have a cute sister. | ||
Age, 18, height, 5 feet 4 inches. | ||
Kibbuthei, theatrical romantic. | ||
Figure. | ||
Hourglass. | ||
Bust. | ||
32cc. | ||
Eyes. | ||
Green. | ||
Hair. | ||
Brunette. | ||
Genetics. | ||
English. | ||
Scottish. | ||
German. | ||
Only 0.2% Cypriot. | ||
Helping our dad out of his memoirs. | ||
Only strong opinion that she worships that. | ||
Looks very good. | ||
Donald Duffy and Dem shirts. | ||
Virgin. | ||
So what is this? | ||
You offering her to me? | ||
Oh, it sounds pretty appealing. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not going to lie. | |
But I don't know. | ||
I don't know about all this. | ||
Met Niknick sent $25. | ||
One one hit Nick. | ||
Sounds like a honeypot. | ||
Met Nikonic sent $25. | ||
Sounds too good to be true. | ||
Shout out to my sister Jessica. | ||
She loves watching your shows every night. | ||
She's actually pretty into you. | ||
She just turned 19. | ||
She has C cups. | ||
What are we doing? | ||
That's disgusting. | ||
That's got to be bait. | ||
Met Nikonic sent $25. | ||
Two halves. | ||
I know it's my sister and kind of weird. | ||
Oops. | ||
Anyway, you guys made a good match. | ||
She hates attention. | ||
No social media. | ||
She isn't a working girl. | ||
She stays at home cooks and cleans. | ||
Let me know if interested. | ||
I can give you her number. | ||
She is Jewish Italian. | ||
Oh, she's Jewish. | ||
I know it's my sister, but who cares? | ||
Okay, so that's a honeypot. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
Do you have an opinion of Deremar Rudolph? | ||
Not really. | ||
Thank you for the huge super chat. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
You sent $50. | ||
Nick, please get to rest. | ||
You are the most dangerous man in America and these motherfuckers know it. | ||
Eat well. | ||
Sleep well. | ||
Get fresh air. | ||
This is spiritual warfare. | ||
I am praying for your continued health and protection. | ||
Well, you know, don't tell me what to do. | ||
What are you telling me? | ||
I know I need to get eight hours of sleep and stuff. | ||
You think you need to tell me that? | ||
Royd My Grape said $100. | ||
Oive, love to see it. | ||
Technical on the fryer and Charlie catching strays. | ||
Congrats on 200K. | ||
Here's how you learn shells. | ||
God bless. | ||
You're doing God's work. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, it's just another day, man. | ||
Christine in Ohio sent me a new day. | ||
I've been thinking about this for days. | ||
I have to get serious lately to you and your parents. | ||
They raised you as an independent thinker, outside the box, striving for constant knowledge. | ||
I love that. | ||
Geography, politics, common sense. | ||
Handsome. | ||
Christian. | ||
Sweet. | ||
It's why I put my full faith behind you, God Groy, before life. | ||
Oh, so thank you so much, Christine. | ||
We love you, Christine. | ||
We're praying for you. | ||
Hope you're doing okay. | ||
No, I had you had your chemo. | ||
We're rooting for you over there. | ||
Hope you're hanging in there. | ||
And I do appreciate that. | ||
I know my parents appreciate that. | ||
Yeah, I mean, look, I give, I will say this: I give them a lot of credit for, well, no, that's true. | ||
They did make me a free thinker in many ways. | ||
I will say, though, they went to war with me to not do this show. | ||
They let me do it. | ||
I'm grateful for them for letting me do it. | ||
But, dude, every night in high school, it was a war. | ||
Do your homework. | ||
You can't drop out. | ||
You have to go to college. | ||
So it was a little bit of a struggle. | ||
I was born a free spirit, but they did give me an environment, I think. | ||
You know, my parents bought me books. | ||
They supported me when I did Model UN, you know, all this kind of stuff when I did my show. | ||
I would say they were reluctant, but ultimately they were supportive. | ||
And I wouldn't have been able to do it if they didn't back me up and support me. | ||
So, so I do appreciate them immensely. | ||
Voice Lop Lover $77,506, $20. | ||
Join the Clash Royale Clan Grove for Clan hashtag GLD2VPTV. | ||
That's right, Nicholas. | ||
Falls to the walls. | ||
Foot slammed hard on the guests. | ||
No breaks. | ||
God bless. | ||
unidentified
|
So true. | |
Anakin's guy growing up percent $20. | ||
Hey, Nick, I hope all is well with you and your family. | ||
My Publics co-workers at a billion dollar employee-owned company have been listening to me and you, and they're becoming slash our red pilled lords. | ||
Good publics will be a funder of our movement one day. | ||
Ha ha. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe. | |
Aquarium growing percent $50. | ||
Very nicely done. | ||
Also, the shirt matches the color palette of the studio exactly. | ||
Yeah, you like this shirt? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, look, I don't have a lot of clothes, okay? | ||
I'm not. | ||
I'd hate shopping, so it's fitting. | ||
Last week we did the red. | ||
This week's the sequel, we'll do the green. | ||
JGO $7,500. | ||
Dear Nick, your recent take on the US India tariff situation linking Russian oil was a master class in geopolitical analysis. | ||
Got a great job. | ||
And I was, was I not correct? | ||
I was vindicated in real time. | ||
Modi comes out and says, we're not going to buy Russian oil, and that's going to be part of a tariff deal. | ||
Like, so I was totally vindicated on that one. | ||
We got to talk on Monday about Azerbaijan and Armenia. | ||
Very interesting. | ||
Venezuela. | ||
Trump is really putting the screws in on these other countries. | ||
He must have said something to Putin through Witkoff. | ||
What I have deduced is that when Witkoff went to Moscow, he must have like hand-delivered a legit threat because Putin changed his tone. | ||
And now, apparently, they're going to meet next week in Alaska. | ||
It's Nuts. | ||
And then right after that, Azerbaijan and Armedia and Armenia agree that Trump is going to police the Zanzer corridor. | ||
That was supposed to be Russia's job. | ||
Armenia basically bailed on Russia because Russia was backing Azerbaijan to invade Armenia so that Russia could patrol the Zangzer corridor. | ||
Now the United States has them both. | ||
Has Baku and Yerevan, and they're going to patrol the corridor, which is totally nuts. | ||
And that diplomatic revolution has been going on for six years. | ||
We'll talk about that. | ||
The Russia thing, they're putting a bounty on the head of Maduro. | ||
Trump is putting the screws in the adversary. | ||
Maduro in Venezuela. | ||
They're disarming Hezbollah in Lebanon. | ||
They're letting Israel invade Gaza. | ||
Trump gave the go-ahead. | ||
They seized the initiative on the Azeri-Armenian conflict. | ||
They somehow compelled Putin to attend this summit in Alaska. | ||
We'll see what results from that. | ||
They got India to stop buying the Russian oil. | ||
Like, so Trump is waging the war here on behalf of this American system on behalf of Washington and Israel. | ||
It's insane. | ||
So I'm honestly in admiration, even though I oppose certain aspects of it. | ||
You have to admire it. | ||
It's masterful. | ||
Even if we don't support it. | ||
Thank you for everything you do for America. | ||
Typically, we pray for your safety. | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
It makes $200. | ||
Go forth and set the world on fire. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
And world 230. | ||
My YouTube feed is full of black people reacting to your content. | ||
I agree with you. | ||
Smiley face emoji. | ||
Quite endearing, I must say. | ||
The blacks love you. | ||
Nick. | ||
Yeah, it's so funny because I got called a racist forever. | ||
And now my monologue about black people is going viral. | ||
And all the black people are reacting to it. | ||
And they're all agreeing with it for the most part. | ||
And, you know, look, it only makes common sense. | ||
I don't, I'm not a racist in the true sense of like hating other races for who they are or what is widely considered to be a racist. | ||
But I came of age in this politically correct period where if you were white and did not hate yourself and were not constantly tripping over yourself to apologize to or cater to black people, you were called a white supremacist. | ||
And I feel like that was the category that I got boxed into. | ||
I was never up here just like preaching hatred. | ||
That was never the case. | ||
And I always got along with black people. | ||
I always got along with Bryson Gray. | ||
I got along with the Hodge twins. | ||
I got along with Myron, Sneeko, Yay. | ||
I always got along with black people. | ||
I have these controversial views, but I believe I was boxed in because again, you know, from the time that Michael Richards did that comedy routine where he said the N-word a thousand times. | ||
And like a few years ago, it was so politically correct. | ||
Again, if you were not a self-hating white person, you're racist. | ||
If you went out there and said, look, I'm white. | ||
I'm proud to be white. | ||
I like white people. | ||
And I have nothing to apologize for. | ||
They would say, wow, you're a racist piece of shit. | ||
They say, you're a fucking white male. | ||
You have no culture. | ||
Step aside. | ||
Your time is over. | ||
And, you know, the inverse of that is if you were not tripping over yourself to not offend black people. | ||
Like, yes, I have said the N-word on the show. | ||
I've uttered that word. | ||
I know it's a crime. | ||
It's practically a blasphemy. | ||
But it's like if you're a white person that doesn't let them control your speech, you're racist. | ||
If you're not tripping over yourself to apologize and pander to their feelings about crime or these other topics, you're a bad person. | ||
I was just ahead of the curve. | ||
I think black and white people have realized that there was this excess. | ||
I think we've all realized, like, hey, Houston, we have a problem. | ||
We had this narrative five years ago that like the police were the new Ku Klux Klan genociding black people by killing them for no reason. | ||
And under that assumption, we started to defund the police and let criminals roam free. | ||
And now everything's a shithole. | ||
And now every night there's a story about an armed robbery, a carjacking, a shooting, a stabbing. | ||
We get these videos on TikTok. | ||
Never ashamed, they say. | ||
And now black and white people are saying, okay, so clearly that was a mistake. | ||
Like, clearly, George Floyd did not get killed for walking while black. | ||
He was part of this epidemic of black sociopathy, which does not characterize every black person, but there are a lot of black people that feel entitled and they menace society or they believe the rules don't apply to them and they commit crimes and they're emboldened. | ||
And I think everybody's coming to recognize that's a big problem for all of us. | ||
Every law-abiding, decent person is going to say, yeah, clearly racism was not the issue. | ||
The issue is that opportunists will take advantage of a situation. | ||
There are opportunists who think they're not going to get in trouble for breaking the law. | ||
What do you think they're going to do? | ||
They're going to break the law. | ||
And so it is. | ||
So anyway. | ||
But you know what? | ||
At the end of the day, what I will say about the whole thing is it is almost emotional because I felt like from when I started doing this, I felt like I was the good guy. | ||
You know, I wanted to be the good guy. | ||
When I started this show, I felt like America was controlled by Israel. | ||
I felt like diversity was ruining America. | ||
It's changing the demographics of our country, changing the texture of our lives. | ||
It's making the country unrecognizable. | ||
White people were under attack. | ||
I think in many ways they still are. | ||
They were being discriminated against. | ||
Our homes were being transformed involuntarily. | ||
Society was being ripped apart by feminism, by pornography, by all this degenerate stuff. | ||
It was getting more hedonistic and depraved as time went on. | ||
And it felt like it would always be that way and it would always get worse. | ||
And if you spoke out about it, you just got lied about and punished unfairly. | ||
If you just disagreed, you were attacked ruthlessly and relentlessly. | ||
You were called evil and people said that because you're evil, we're going to hit you. | ||
We're going to kill you. | ||
We're going to take away your livelihood. | ||
And then we're going to laugh about it. | ||
And so when I got into this 10 years ago, I wanted to be the good guy. | ||
unidentified
|
I felt like the good guy. | |
And for 10 years, for basically just disagreeing, I'm not a hateful person, but for disagreeing, they just shit down my throat and called me the worst things. | ||
I was ostracized from society. | ||
My high school friends wanted nothing to do with me. | ||
I couldn't get a job. | ||
I was banned from PayPal, banned from banks, banned from politics. | ||
And everybody would just say, oh, you're that piece of shit Nazi. | ||
Fuck you. | ||
Someone should kill you. | ||
And it's like, why? | ||
I do a talk show because I disagree, because I think we had too much immigration. | ||
Because I know and say for a fact that Israel is influencing our country. | ||
And they started to make me feel like the bad guy. | ||
And in some ways, I leaned into that, I think. | ||
Not too often, but, you know, there's some unfortunate clips where I think we leaned into being bad because they made us feel like we were bad. | ||
They made us feel like for speaking our minds and saying what we thought was right and expressing our values and our identity, like, look, I'm white, I'm Christian. | ||
This is what matters to me. | ||
We were made to feel like we shouldn't exist, like we should go and kill ourselves or die or that someone should kill us just because, and I don't think my show ever was really hateful or anything like that. | ||
And it wasn't fair. | ||
And we had no megaphone. | ||
I was some kid and the ADL and Fox News and like Daily Wire were trying to get me killed. | ||
And so they started to make me feel like the villain. | ||
And you start then to lose hope in what's good because you say, if I'm doing the right thing, if I'm trying to do the right thing, if I'm being honest and I'm getting lied about and slandered and like crucified for this, well, then, you know, what the fuck? | ||
Maybe there is no such thing as a happy ending. | ||
And so what's been emotional about this whole year is for the first time, I feel like the good guy. | ||
When I get to shine and I get to tell people, when we condemn the genocide in Palestine, which that's my real opinion, that's always been my opinion. | ||
You start to feel like the good guy. | ||
And when people hear you out, even about the race issue, you know, and they might not agree with the whole thing, but they say, I see where he's coming from. | ||
You start to feel like the good guy again. | ||
You start to believe in good again and in people for that matter. | ||
So it's been very compelling. | ||
And in many ways, someone like a Donald Trump, someone like a Nick Fuentes, you get what you give. | ||
And for so long, society was giving a lot of resentment and hatred and cancellation and all this stuff. | ||
And I think not even necessarily myself, but a lot of other people, they were giving that energy back. | ||
And that wasn't in every case. | ||
There are some people that are just sadistic and malevolent. | ||
But I think a lot of people were basically mistreated and abused and made to feel like there was no place for them in our country, made to feel like they had no right to an opinion, made to feel like they had no right to exist. | ||
They were being told literally, like, if you liked America the way it was, fuck you, go die. | ||
If you're not on board with transgender, gay, everything, if you're not on board with endless diversity, endless incoherence, wars for Israel, all this kind of stuff, well, you know, you should just go and die and no one cares about you and you're a piece of shit. | ||
And I think a lot of people became very angry and desperate. | ||
They said, wow, like my life is being taken from me. | ||
My family, my neighborhood, my country is being taken from me. | ||
Fuck this. | ||
That's why people stormed the Capitol. | ||
That's why people went to Charlottesville. | ||
I know because I was there. | ||
And again, it's not to exonerate everybody. | ||
There are some legitimately malevolent people that are just resentful, are just malevolent or antisocial or sadistic. | ||
But I think the vast majority of all writers, Trumpers, Groipers, we are people that it was a reaction to what was going on. | ||
Now, the question is twofold. | ||
Now that censorship and cancel culture has receded, here's the challenge: it is to translate a movement that was reactive and resentful into a movement that is progressive. | ||
And what I mean by that is I'm not satisfied with where we are. | ||
How do we push ahead? | ||
Not based on grievance and resentment and revenge. | ||
How do we push ahead based on building an American society that we all want to live in? | ||
Rather than just being angry, ah, anti-white, ah, black people. | ||
You know, rather than this kind of Matt Walsh, it's just a different flavor of racial resentment every night. | ||
The question is: what is the positive vision? | ||
How do we transmute that resentment into a positive vision for change and let go of a lot of that negative emotion? | ||
And it's not to say that we're not still aiming for a sovereign, independent country with white identity at the forefront. | ||
It's not really like changing the essential ingredients, but how do we make sure that the tone matches the moment? | ||
You know, 10 years ago, we were really under the boot. | ||
And I don't think we should take our foot off the gas, but it's going to be kind of like a tricky thing to do to translate the politics of like a Charlottesville, a Charlottesville or a J6 into a politics of what if the future inventors and innovators and architects, you know, the actual visionaries are going to share our politics, the builders, the progressives, the people that want to move society forward. | ||
How do we keep our foot on the gas without leaning into bitterness? | ||
How do we let go of some of that, some of those emotions, the anger, and treat our former adversaries with a kind of beneficence, with a kind of Magnanimity, which is to say, in other words, like we are the future. | ||
Everyone is a Groiper. | ||
Everyone is America first. | ||
Our former foes, our former opponents, the black people, the white people, the Christians, everybody else. | ||
How do we embrace them as part of our larger agenda? | ||
How do we bring them in in a way that doesn't compromise our values and our vision, but that is magnanimous, that is letting go of some of those negative feelings from before because we have a bigger vision. | ||
You know, the vision is bigger than this cycle of political grievance. | ||
It's about, you know, really fundamentally transforming America in such a way that everyone will wake up one day and say, we're all Groipers now. | ||
We're all America first now. | ||
We've all been won over. | ||
And the new floor, the new consensus is the Groipers. | ||
In the same way that the liberals did, in the same way that other movements have in the past. | ||
That's the question. | ||
Because if the movement cannot move on from the reactivity, if it can't initiate and be proactive, it will not survive. | ||
It cannot continue to merely be reactive. | ||
If it can't let go of some of these emotions, the down, the bitterness, the negativity, can't move forward. | ||
And I see this strain all the time. | ||
I think of guys like Matt Walsh, where every show is like one note, and every show is just like, fuck black people. | ||
Everyone's anti-white. | ||
Everything's racist. | ||
And like on some level, I agree with it. | ||
I get it. | ||
That's how it's been. | ||
That's a righteous, legitimate feeling. | ||
At the same time, the kind of harping in that one note negative way, I don't think that's going to drive the conversation and society forward. | ||
It's too conservative. | ||
And by conservative, I don't mean ideologically. | ||
It's too like dispositionally conservative. | ||
So anyway, people are saying Nick got the call. | ||
If you're saying that, you're not understanding what I'm saying. | ||
What I'm not, I'm not saying we should change any part of our program. | ||
I'm saying that the tone and the evidence is already there. | ||
When people watch my show, even if they disagree, I can play to my audience of core supporters. | ||
I can also play to an audience of people that should hate me. | ||
And they may continue to hate me. | ||
But a lot of them are going to hear my message and say, oh, this is actually uplifting. | ||
This is actually a positive vision. | ||
This isn't what I thought. | ||
This isn't just resentment. | ||
This isn't just a kind of reactive message. | ||
People are saying this, this is a vision that is all-encompassing that I can get behind. | ||
It's holistic. | ||
And so, you know, most people are not going to understand what I mean by that because most people cannot think conceptually, but I will continue to demonstrate what I'm talking about and you will see the results. | ||
So that's sort of what I've been doing all this time. | ||
It's all in the approach. | ||
Everything is in the approach. | ||
So important. | ||
So subtle. | ||
The proof of the pudding is in the eating. | ||
But anyway, so that's that. | ||
DS said $100. | ||
Spending an entire summer in Nicaragua. | ||
Sounds totally normal. | ||
Hope you're slurging on security. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, and going to Vietnam with John McCain and going to Pakistan with your dad. | ||
I mean, yeah, that's all. | ||
Everybody does that. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
That Need Nick sent $20. | ||
Does anyone else not look forward to the weekends anymore? | ||
I used to love Saturday slash Sunday, but now it's like, wait, no Nick tonight? | ||
No America first on weekends. | ||
Weekend stuck now. | ||
Love the show tonight. | ||
Wait, is it Monday yet? | ||
PSU, look at Tonight Nick. | ||
Fucking. | ||
Thanks. | ||
No homo. | ||
Hashtag BND hashtag Monica. | ||
I'm looking a little rough. | ||
I didn't shave, but I appreciate it. | ||
I'm glad you like the show. | ||
Greetcoin sent $50. | ||
Haven't super chatted in a while. | ||
The GoFundMe. | ||
Thank you. | ||
X-Crusader 2025 cent $50. | ||
Okay, no, we're not. | ||
Can't watch live. | ||
I'll be on the replay gang, but I absolutely cannot wait. | ||
Had to come in for a sec with a few sheckles. | ||
No jokes today for me. | ||
WNJF, the goat. | ||
KMD4NJF. | ||
I didn't know about R. We'll see. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
We love Francesco. | ||
Francesco sent $150. | ||
No, we'll do a little raping. | ||
It's called We Do a Little Raping. | ||
Hey, someone's doing the raping, Don. | ||
Dr. Edopa said $100. | ||
Nikhil Hitler. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not going to be a good idea. | |
Oh, we can do a little bit of my own words. | ||
I just some gay basement talking some real ass shit. | ||
Shock the nation grow hipers where real we are truth. | ||
Nick comes to Bachelor Party, goddammit, pussy if you don't. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Thank you for that. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
That needed to extend $20. | ||
Nick, everything you're saying is 100% correct. | ||
But you are forgetting one thing. | ||
Zionist slash Jews are secretly running American politics and American government. | ||
It's all corrupted by a Zionists. | ||
This is the only thing you fail to understand. | ||
You must notice this by now. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Cameron Chair to sent $200. | ||
God tear analysis as usual. | ||
My children will not succumb to Jewish supremacy in this country. | ||
May you know a call to arms will suffice and the people will rise. | ||
No man can stand against Jesus. | ||
No man can stand against America first. | ||
We are an incumbent force of unity with Jesus behind us. | ||
Cry as you will. | ||
Violence is not the answer, but you will feel the wrath of America. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
unidentified
|
Very true. | |
All right. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Pragmatic Culture said $100. | ||
One of the best who ever do it. | ||
They fear you so the pressure is only increasing from here. | ||
God bless them. | ||
I'll keep you in my prayers. | ||
It is. | ||
I appreciate the big super chat. | ||
Thank you for your sacrifices. | ||
I hope they never go unnoticed by him. | ||
God bless us. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
I hope so too. | ||
I think, I hope it's getting entered into the ledger because I'm going to need it. | ||
I'm going to need to bail me out here, but I appreciate it. | ||
Keep it up. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
$44. | ||
Your genius is showing. | ||
America first is inevitable. | ||
Great show. | ||
Thank you, Captain. | ||
P.S. Just listen to this damn song in the type of nigga by the far side. | ||
It's your song. | ||
I've listened to that song since. | ||
$650. | ||
Great fucking show. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Dropping WSS Laura on Casual Friday. | ||
You are. | ||
Well, you know, we didn't do a ton of OSS stuff, but it is just important as an introductory note so people kind of understand the MO of the CIA. | ||
Just as a starting point, but I appreciate it. | ||
Get a full-time bodyguard. | ||
You can hire an off-duty comp for $150 slash hour. | ||
I know you're brave, but be smart. | ||
Oh, $250 an hour. | ||
Yeah, that's cheap. | ||
Yeah, why not? | ||
24 hours a day, $250,000 an hour. | ||
Yeah, that's nothing. | ||
Yeah, why not? | ||
I'll just spend $20,000 a week on security. | ||
Yeah, what the hell? | ||
Thank you. | ||
Nader said $100. | ||
I continue to pray for your safety. | ||
God bless you and keep up the great work. | ||
I'm the Muslim and fully support what you're doing 100%. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I can't get over Tucker's lie about his father. | ||
The blunder seems too obvious. | ||
Can you think of any reason he would let that slip where you convinced he was just laying? | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
That's why we need to ask him. | ||
I want to know the answer to that question. | ||
How am I supposed to know? | ||
It's such a brazen lie. | ||
And he brought it up, which is what's weird. | ||
If he was getting pressed about it and he didn't anticipate it, his back was against the wall and he just blurted out, oh, I didn't know. | ||
That would be one thing. | ||
But he volunteered the whole conversation. | ||
He brought up me. | ||
He brought up the CIA thing, his dad. | ||
And then he volunteered. | ||
Oh, I didn't even know that the whole time. | ||
Did he forget that he said that before? | ||
I mean, maybe. | ||
I don't know. | ||
That's a question for him. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
Brian P. sent $50. | ||
Donight was Palinza-worthy. | ||
You know this book. | ||
Father James Mozley's book, If You Believe Moses, proves the current Jewish events are divine handholding as the church fathers foretold, not mere history. | ||
More importantly, it equips Catholics to accelerate the inevitable, the prophesied mass conversion of the Jews just before the end. | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes. | ||
And James Moxley is amazing, incredible guy. | ||
I've seen a lot of his stuff. | ||
He's got a great YouTube channel, great books. | ||
He's more hip. | ||
He's one of the only priests or former priests. | ||
I don't know his status on that exactly, but he's one of the only Catholic clergy I've ever seen that really has been pushing the whole issue. | ||
The world court in Jerusalem, the enthronement of Israel at the head of this international system. | ||
He's the only one that's really on the ball on that. | ||
Social observer sent $30. | ||
Damn, go deep dive, but you left out any other deeds. | ||
They are being used by Jews to subvert. | ||
Slung sent $20. | ||
What are we supposed to do about Israel pretty much controlling our government, besides spreading knowledge? | ||
It all seems kind of to me. | ||
Yeah, well, obviously, you're not going to be part of the solution. | ||
Pretty fasting will sent $20. | ||
What would be the possibility of you ever speaking with Pat Buchanan on video while he's still alive? | ||
Great video by Wigan Aria Therachar for people to follow. | ||
How would I know that? | ||
I have no idea. | ||
No Pies up sent. | ||
I'd like to do a show with him, but I don't know how to get in touch. | ||
He's pretty scarce these days. | ||
I mean, he doesn't make too many public appearances. | ||
I'd love to meet with him or do a show with him or something, but he's retired. | ||
No Pies up sent $30. | ||
The future candidates' choices after Trump are looking really gloomy. | ||
They are trying to push JD events on us with these podcast appearances. | ||
Glad you are calling out these pros real Yukons out early in the game. | ||
Nice Packer Carlson Costly XD. | ||
You like this, my Matt Walsh uniform. | ||
Real Groypa sent $100. | ||
Thanks for being a beacon of hope for many of us. | ||
Praying for you and for your safety. | ||
We love you. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
unidentified
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Appreciate it. | |
Listen again. | ||
Really let it sink. | ||
As a wee lad in the 90s, I recall how Ross Poke came along and derailed Buchanan's bid as you established the cards were stacked in HW's favor anyway. | ||
I was rotated publicly like many are with Tucker today. | ||
Glad I discovered the truth. | ||
Love you, buddy. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Yeah, I mean, look, this one had a lot of information. | ||
This one was a little trickier because it's like a giant story with like a million people, and it's a lot of things you don't know about. | ||
So, but like I said, my goal is to put it all into like a feature-length production because you really need like visuals. | ||
You need like pictures and diagrams. | ||
It's hard to just convey it all. | ||
That's why I repeat myself a lot because if you don't keep like reestablishing and like, you know, going over the same material, it's easy to go one in here, out the other. | ||
Like, if I just say, oh, Irving Crystal did encounter and this and that, if I mention him again an hour later, you're going to say, what, who? | ||
What did he do? | ||
So that's why it does get a little like, you have to kind of keep calling back and restating some of the arguments. | ||
But I'd like to do something that's a little cleaner, more highly produced. | ||
Secret Groper sent $75. | ||
Can you give King Baldwin Style? | ||
Give us Allah and welcome to Jimmy. | ||
It's his birthday. | ||
No, I'm not going to do it. | ||
Later, sent $30. | ||
Hey, Nick, Neil Patel, Tucker's college roommate. | ||
What's his deal? | ||
Owner of the Daily Caller seems to be in the same bank of this communication strategy you spoke about. | ||
He was chief policy advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney. | ||
Yeah, that might be part thing. | ||
Gabriel Merck sent $30. | ||
Brother, thank you for being the voice for us. | ||
Christ is King. | ||
Hey, Paul. | ||
The complete dismailing of Tucker within hours was a masterclass. | ||
Be cautious. | ||
The more you win, the greater of the opposition. | ||
We stand here and pray for you wherever this goes. | ||
Christ is king. | ||
Well, in this show, we had over 30, we had 32,000 live viewers, 32,000 at like midnight going over the whole story, which is nuts. | ||
So that's why they got to call me out. | ||
I'm getting too big. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
I'm breaching containment. | ||
I'm getting too popular. | ||
Now they got to, you know what's going to happen next? | ||
It's going to be some op, some psyop or something. | ||
Candace is already doing that. | ||
Candace and Milo are already working behind the scenes, calling everybody I know, trying to get them to flip, trying to get them to turn on me, making appearances. | ||
They're trying to rally the troops to expunge me from the space. | ||
And if they keep doing that, I'm going to put them on blast also. | ||
In particular, Candace Owens, I'm going to reveal all of her connections and expose her as a fraud. | ||
I may do it just on account of just on account of she's a fucking bitch. | ||
So oh, fucking play with me. | ||
But that's what it is. | ||
I mean, I'm getting too popular. | ||
Now they're trying to clip my wings. | ||
For years, they censored me. | ||
They lied about me. | ||
They destroyed my reputation. | ||
I'm overcoming all of that. | ||
And now they're panicking. | ||
That's why they say, oh, he's a fed. | ||
Oh, he's this, that, and the other. | ||
That's why they're hitting the pavement trying to dig up any dirt. | ||
You know, and one day they're just going to try and take me out. | ||
But, you know, this is. | ||
I didn't come this far to now just like, what am I going to do now? | ||
Oh, I'm pro-Israel now. | ||
Abolish Jerry sent $30. | ||
This episode slash series must be preserved for generations. | ||
To come down, you really are the best to ever do it. | ||
Thank you, Dean Blanche. | ||
Praying for your safety. | ||
Folded hands on. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Rex Henderson sent $100. | ||
Montreal, you deserve a juice box. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
They want you in a Palantir monitored system, which could cause more trouble for you. | ||
Be careful. | ||
God bless you. | ||
Dude, we're all, hey, fuck Tart. | ||
We're all monitored by Palantir. | ||
We're on Twitter, dip shit. | ||
Who do you think runs Twitter? | ||
Elon Musk? | ||
Hello? | ||
What do you think we're getting away with? | ||
I love when Normie's, you know, Normie's discovering these types of conceits is just like the final boss of Grug brains, of like Pareto principle. | ||
Because you start to introduce these ideas to like 100 IQ normies, and then suddenly everything's a limited hangout. | ||
Like McDonald's brings back the snack rap, and these 100 IQ normies are like, is this some kind of limited hangout? | ||
They'll like watch the Joker with Joaquin Phoenix and they'll say, Joaquin Phoenix is Jewish. | ||
Is this some kind of limited hangout? | ||
unidentified
|
Is this some kind of Palantir operation? | |
And it's like, no, dude, like, you know, sometimes these things just happen, you know? | ||
Like, do you think the federal government cannot see every transaction that you're doing? | ||
Unless you're using Monero. | ||
And Monero, they're making impossible to use. | ||
Monero, like, they're banning certain wallets from even hosting it. | ||
They're trying to control it with on-ramps and off-ramps. | ||
Bitcoin is all traceable. | ||
Signal was probably created by the NSA with a backdoor. | ||
So it's like, you know, you say something like, well, they're just bringing back banking so like Palantir can look at it. | ||
Dude, Palantir controls everything. | ||
They can. | ||
They have Pegasus. | ||
Pegasus can look at what's on your screen on your phone when you're using it. | ||
If you call 911, Carbine is going to hear it. | ||
If you use Twitter, they can hear it. | ||
If you're on Facebook and Instagram, they can hear it. | ||
Okay? | ||
Oh, they're just trying to get you back. | ||
Dude, there's like probably a few dozen people that are genuinely debanked. | ||
And they're spying on all of us. | ||
So, well, they're just trying to get us back on in the... | ||
They already got us, bro. | ||
So that's just like normie shit. | ||
That's just like normie, low IQ. | ||
Everything's a limited hangout now. | ||
John Dave Irving sent 33. | ||
And look, it's not to say they're not real, but you have to know what they actually mean. | ||
John Dave Irving sent $33. | ||
Nick, I have been thinking about it for a while, but I'm ready to start my streaming career. | ||
You will go to the number two spot, but just know 10 to 15% of that is learning from you. | ||
Huge void in the market, for example. | ||
It's still fresh. | ||
Still fresh. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Hey, thank you for the huge super chat. | ||
Hey, YNWA Palestine. | ||
We love you, buddy. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Good to see you. | ||
Nick, I'm Russian. | ||
How familiar are you with the modern Russian history? | ||
Do you know what was the first thing Putin started doing after coming to power? | ||
He took all the Russian mass media from the Jewish businessman. | ||
Then he targeted the richest Russian Jew with political ambitions, the owner of the biggest oil company. | ||
Oh, brother. | ||
Yeah, I know all about Russia. | ||
The idea that Putin is against Russia is just fucking bullshit. | ||
Just isn't true. | ||
This myth that Putin took control of Russia from the Jewish oligarchs just isn't true, man. | ||
Just is not true. | ||
Putin is totally in bed with Israel. | ||
And that's like a red pill that maybe you're not ready for, but that's a total myth. | ||
This idea that it's like Putin in China versus the Jews, false. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely false. | |
But as far as Russian Jewish history, yeah, I mean, it goes all the way back. | ||
John Dave Irving sent $33. | ||
Did Paul Pound Call you? | ||
I was the one to send in those Tucker clips. | ||
I didn't want to post them because I just didn't want you to make me come back to the GCI left. | ||
I know you got that big boy going. | ||
You need to save it. | ||
unidentified
|
Very good. | |
Very good. | ||
$15, $31. | ||
Elizabeth Yad, Jewish, started cultivating rationalism, doomerism, and fear-mongering eye, while at the same time telling Americans, especially white men, not to build. | ||
Jews accelerate ahead. | ||
Whereas Groiper AI, what do you think of people using SNTH like you to promote a populist autocracy versus a Jewish elite run? | ||
Groiper slashik? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Zero swallow, 12 cent $20. | ||
I've followed you since RSB and feel like I grew up with you. | ||
Crazy. | ||
Excellent show. | ||
Praying for you and your family. | ||
God bless. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
You're a merrier. | ||
Top five political monologue of all time, Nick. | ||
Thanks for what you're doing here. | ||
I don't know. | ||
This wasn't the best show of all time. | ||
It was just more of like a companion to episode one. | ||
But I appreciate the big super chat. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
JVO sent $30. | ||
Sup Maniga, URNG. | ||
I am getting married. | ||
Joining the Catholic Church. | ||
Oh, and also, it's my birthday. | ||
Hey, happy birthday. | ||
Going next to $1,438, $50. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
Said Khan sent $50. | ||
More to come to fund the documentary you brought up. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Soon. | ||
You've always been a good guy in my groiper eyes. | ||
Frog emoji. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
I've been in the middle of the morning $25. | ||
Another 8-plus amazing show. | ||
Read The Ghost and Legacy of Ashes recently. | ||
The better you liked and the more you've been traded, the more likely you would be promoted to James Angleton. | ||
When he was dying, he knew he was going to hell for everything he had done. | ||
Well, yeah, and they got an eternal flame for him in Israel. | ||
So discussing the money. | ||
They turned me into the villain. | ||
Jesus wanted to come up with a digger. | ||
Stop. | ||
Stop it. | ||
Hey, thank you for the big super chat. | ||
But it's true. | ||
But it's true. | ||
I'm like Harvey Dent. | ||
I'm Gotham's white knight. | ||
Well, I'm really more like the dark knight. | ||
Because I'm the guy that can. | ||
Well, okay, I was going to say I'm the guy that can take it. | ||
Pause. | ||
Okay, but, you know, it's like in Dark Knight. | ||
He says, they're going to hunt me because I can take it because I'm. | ||
Because I'm not the white knight. | ||
That's me. | ||
That's me. | ||
I will let them persecute me because I got the fucking Batmobile. | ||
I will let them chase me. | ||
They can hunt me because I can take that. | ||
Because I'm tough. | ||
But ultimately, I'm still rooting for society. | ||
I'm rooting for America, even if America's branded me an enemy. | ||
But yeah, but hey, but thanks anyway. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Funky Dog Not sent $20. | ||
Hey, I'm a college student studying political science. | ||
I may be a progressive, but the more I hear about you, the more I appreciate it. | ||
I admire your dedication to the America First Movement. | ||
Count me in. | ||
Smile. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
Hey, welcome all to the progressives. | ||
We might have common cause. | ||
You never know. | ||
Thank you for the show, sir. | ||
Folded hands emoji. | ||
Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Thank you, Red $20. | ||
Hey, Nick, first time donating, been watching you pretty recently. | ||
All I wanted to say is that Tucker and all the other fans are going to have a hard time trying to ignore you after tonight's show. | ||
Keep up the good work, much love from Canada. | ||
It's true. | ||
Very true. | ||
Okay. | ||
I think that's our last super chat. | ||
I'm only going to read 20 and above tonight. | ||
We're trying to keep it. | ||
We might just raise it to 20. | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
I just want to keep it brief, though, because it's a long show. | ||
Okay, that's our last super chat. | ||
That's going to do it for me tonight. | ||
Another long show, but I appreciate everybody tuning in. | ||
Big audience tonight, 30,000 viewers. | ||
Again, you got to look into this stuff. | ||
Take notes. | ||
Some of the information, it's a little hard to digest because it's a lot of obscure stuff. | ||
Maybe you're not used to hearing about. | ||
Give it another listen. | ||
Watch the show on Friday if you need a little companion piece because the show from last Friday and the show from tonight, they work together. | ||
You almost can't have one without the other because they kind of tell the whole story, at least the story up until today, up until maybe 10 years ago, five or ten years ago. | ||
But that's going to do it for me tonight. | ||
Remember to smash the follow button, smash the like button, leave a comment, get your hat at Fuentis.store. | ||
We're selling our America First hats at Fuentes.store. | ||
Free shipping, made in America, super high quality. | ||
We got them in blue, black, and we have them in camo as well. | ||
Get access to the archive of every episode of America First. | ||
It's at AmericaFirst.plus. | ||
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For $100 a month, you also get to be in a group chat with me. | ||
Ask me anything, hang out, talk to me, jump in voice chat, whatever you like. | ||
I might do a voice chat after this. | ||
After the show, I might jump in and do a quick voice chat for these subscribers. | ||
100 a Month Club. | ||
That's Fuentes, or excuse me, that's AmericaFirst.plus. | ||
I'm on the air Monday through Friday. | ||
Big special thank you to our top super chatters. | ||
Special thanks to Niger Soros, Cameron Serda, Pale Drone, Francesco, YNWA, Palestine, Annemalia, John Dave Irving, Sierra, that Nick and Nick, Penis Groiper, Edie's Groiper, Toji, | ||
Fushi Goyru, Melee, Black Behavior, Jerome Bises, Centurion Varinas, Lair Tiades, Groipe My Grape, DS, Dr. Evo Pak, Patrick Groitman, | ||
Pragmatic Culture, Seth Carlson, Steamy Groiper, City Boy Farmer, Thathandiman, Nat Nadir, Real Groiper, half Mexican, half Palestinian, Rex Anderson, Gaba Ghoul, Niall Stanfish, Chad Champion, and Sandy Balls. | ||
Special thanks to all of them. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I'll see you Monday. | ||
That's a lot of stuff. | ||
Until then, have a great weekend. | ||
Have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our Twitter. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
unidentified
|
America first. | |
the american people will come first once again With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. |