| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
|
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
| I stopped playing games. | ||
| And at any moment, I can just get that yay button. | ||
| I said trust, no man, I'm just gonna hold me in your day, boss, and you gotta come. | ||
| I said change, but girls let you run it. | ||
| My mama said trust, no ho, you's a problem. | ||
| I'm at, but to, start the track. | ||
| I'm at the first, edge. | ||
| See, Ricky said, I don't want to blow you. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Not my words, not my rules. | ||
| I can enforce them, alright? | ||
| Trust no fans, but you have a second. | ||
| Believe your day, boys. | ||
| And a lot of power. | ||
| I'm gonna say, girl, girls, they can never go. | ||
| I'm gonna say, trust no hope. | ||
| We'll be right back. | ||
| Forming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
| Hey, you know my ain't shake, you're petty, shit. | ||
| I've been with your years, way before the star kick. | ||
| Young city, you're going out with just a check. | ||
| With the old bags, let it kick you with the way to drink. | ||
| No, it's too late. | ||
| Yo, what's in the shit, yeah? | ||
| It was pretty sick of boot type. | ||
| Only dropped jewels when we fought that y'all jump up. | ||
| On the way, cause it's ain't the bad thing. | ||
| This one is America's first bitch. | ||
| We're daddy said, Trust to me, put your cover slipping. | ||
| girls Okay. | ||
| I love you too. | ||
| Not my words, not my rules. | ||
| I can force them, all right? | ||
| They say trust no man. | ||
| I'm not saying you'll ever leave your day. | ||
| I'm not saying you're a lot of coming. | ||
| I'm not saying trust no hope. | ||
| Let's go. | ||
| Everybody who dared to vote. | ||
| We're going to be right back. | ||
| You think y'all wasn't in shit? | ||
| It was pretty sick of boot type. | ||
| Only dropped jewels when before they dropped off. | ||
| On the way, cause it's ain't the power. | ||
| This one is the sale. | ||
| America's first bitch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Blacked out with Scott. | |
| Everything. | ||
| Swarming out. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Everybody dare to vote. | |
| Everybody dare to vote. | ||
| On the way, cause it's ain't the poppy take lost. | ||
| This one is the sale. | ||
| 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sick addiction to technology. | |
| The future is so bleak, but that has changed the calculation. | ||
| God is using me. | ||
| He's breaking me down. | ||
| Removing all of the, you know, riches person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
|
unidentified
|
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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
*music* | |
| When I get home, I want you *music* Hello, hello, hello, hello, hello I got places to be. | ||
| Good evening, everybody. | ||
| You're watching America First. | ||
| My name is Nicholas J. Quentes. | ||
| Have a great show for you tonight. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Bye. | |
| We paved the way with our corpseless. | ||
| 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. | ||
| that's not right. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us. | |
| For the creation waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed. | ||
| We know that the whole creation has been groaning, as in the pains of childbirth, right up to the present time. | ||
| Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies. | ||
| For in this hope we were saved. | ||
| But hope that is seen is no hope at all. | ||
| Who hopes for what they already have? | ||
| But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently. | ||
| 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. | ||
| Saying to me he's like this is probably pretty cool for you. | ||
| I'm like, yeah, here it is. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm like, yeah, here it is. | |
| I'm like, yeah, here it is. | ||
| Through him, all things were made. | ||
| Without him, nothing was made that has been made. | ||
| In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. | ||
| The light of all mankind was the light of the world. | ||
| And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers. | ||
| He will crush your head, and you will strike his heel. | ||
| Jesus said to her, "I am the resurrection and the life." The one who believes in me will live even though they die. | ||
| And whoever lives by believing in me will never die. | ||
| Do you believe this? | ||
| I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. | ||
| Therefore, be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves. | ||
| Then Jesus came to them and said, All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. | ||
| Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. | ||
| And surely I am with you always to the very end of the age. | ||
| You can't go back to the past. | ||
| That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
| They say, can we really go back? | ||
| And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right when you're left-wing, 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 conceived. | ||
| Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
| and Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | |
| I can't stand. | ||
| 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 include no. | ||
|
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
|
It's the only way. | |
| We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
| We have to want it more than they do because if there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny, then nothing can stop us and nothing will. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
| Thank you. | ||
| Good evening, everybody. | ||
| You're watching America First. | ||
| My name is Nicola J. Quentis. | ||
| Have a great show for you tonight. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We'll be right back. | |
| You got that vibe, vibe, this is the time to fall. | ||
| Man, you need a dude, man, you need a dude. | ||
| You got that vibe, vibe, this is the time to fall. | ||
| 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
America first is inevitable. | |
| It's unstoppable. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business. | |
| It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
| It's not. | ||
| It's him. | ||
| How you get too much vapor on your side? | ||
| Except for me just want to save your eye, I reply. | ||
| I'm sorry. | ||
| That's a pretty ten chamber, that's the flag. | ||
| I'm glad. | ||
| That's all bad. | ||
| Like Democrats in the dark. | ||
| They're not my arguments. | ||
| And I'm up to. | ||
| You can live if you think you're gonna be. | ||
| Went from one to four to one to three. | ||
| Thirteen of limit in the desert. | ||
| Being a new commander and achievement, fear and love of God. | ||
| When you remove the fear and love of God, you create fear above everything else. | ||
| You're talking to somebody right now that only fears God. | ||
| This is a Christian nation. | ||
| This is a miracle. | ||
| Go home, that's so good. | ||
| Go home, that's so good. | ||
| Come on, man. | ||
| is the free man talking is the free man talking Thank | ||
| you. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Thank you so much, everybody. | ||
| Can I just say, are you trusting me? | ||
|
unidentified
|
I can't. | |
| I'm the lights on the face. | ||
| I'm body. | ||
| Deep to my eyes, I'm gonna flip the face, and I'm crying Deep to my eyes, I'm better like the only one I wish that I'm just getting lost I wish that I'm just getting | ||
| lost, I wish that I'm doing it I wish that I'm just getting lost, I wish that I'm just getting lost I wish that I'm just getting lost I wish that I'm just getting lost I'm a doctor but I'm running out of patience She told me how she's trying to get lost When I get home, I want you 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Have a great show. | |
| 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? | ||
| I'm in the noise, I'm going to break the face, so I'm tiny, deep in my eyes, but I'm getting right to open, I'm getting ready to do it. | ||
| I'm getting ready to do it. | ||
| lightning out of the blue. | ||
| It was a slow and steady, unrelenting stream of blips and blinks, glimmers and blares, 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 Malcolm? | |
| I think it was because I fiercely came out during the Groiber 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 and of course defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We can't be held hostage by this country forever. | |
| When will it end? | ||
| When will any leader put their foot down and reassert American sovereignty? | ||
|
unidentified
|
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? | |
| Do we control our own government or does Israel? | ||
| Do we control our own government or does Israel? | ||
| And who's going to deliver it? | ||
|
unidentified
|
JD Vance? | |
| If they revealed birthright citizenship, his wife wouldn't be a citizen anymore. | ||
| I know no other country. | ||
|
unidentified
|
This is life. | |
| 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 love. | ||
| What he's looking for. | ||
| Want more and more. | ||
| People just want more and more freedom and love. | ||
| What he's looking for. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mind and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mind and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mind and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| If we don't have freedom on the internet in the age of AI, we are going to be mind-raped every day forever. | ||
| Think about anything you've ever said or done in the vicinity of your phone's camera or microphone, everything you've ever put into your phone, and even things that are not necessarily so scandalous, but even things like your favorite restaurants, your geo-location, because your phone also has a GPS. | ||
| They know where you are at all times. | ||
| They know where you go and when. | ||
| They know what you buy. | ||
| They have access to your bank account. | ||
| AI will literally know everything about you. | ||
| Everyone you know, your relationship to them, your tastes, your preferences, your habits, your whereabouts, your routines, your schedule, when you're asleep. | ||
| They know how much REM sleep you're getting. | ||
| They know your resting heart rate. | ||
| They know how many calories you consume. | ||
| Think about the ways that they can manipulate you. | ||
| You have a computer in your refrigerator, computer in your car, computer in your home security system, computer in your everything, computer in your clothes, your watch, your glasses, your VR headset, your alarm clock. | ||
| You have a smart home, economy of things. | ||
| It's like total like rape of everybody by the system forever. | ||
| 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? | ||
| All you need is Jesus. | ||
| All you need is prayer. | ||
| These material appetites will never be satisfied. | ||
| And even if they are, it'll never be an adequate substitute for communion with our Holy Father, with somebody, with the author of the world. | ||
| Every mother and father understands the love for a child. | ||
| And that is how we were made. | ||
| We were designed that way. | ||
| Because through that experience, we could understand by analogy God's love for us. | ||
| It says in Revelation that God will wipe away every tear. | ||
| And that's like to me, it makes me want to cry when I read that. | ||
| People experience these things in their lives. | ||
| We've all been there where you feel like the whole world's against you, the walls are closing in. | ||
| And you read something like that that says that God, like our Father, our Creator, is going to wipe your tears off your face. | ||
| Christianity is love. | ||
| Our God is love. | ||
| They, they see America merely as a vessel. | ||
| I mean, only, only a class of people so rootless in their direction view America in such a way as merely a vessel for abstractions, right? | ||
| We're going to smash your brain and read the Bible, idiot. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I'm addicted to the serotonin rush. | |
| When's it nothing up, babe? | ||
| When's it not enough? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hey, sick. | |
| Just eat a big mac of soup, bitch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Feel like... | |
| You're not allowed to make jokes anymore. | ||
| We're not allowed to make jokes. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's not funny. | |
| Sipping wine, having some hot tab and some pizza. | ||
| I'm weird. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm normal. | |
| I'm the, well, I'm not normal, but I'm sorry. | ||
| I'm working. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm original. | |
| All right, I'm an original. | ||
|
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 his side. | ||
| And at the end of the day, he proved his point. | ||
| Feel like De Niro on Casino. | ||
| Well, they got the sunny for the casino. | ||
| Don't sign it when you're growing on a place. | ||
| What you think, me and the girls. | ||
| She's blowing on the grace. | ||
| And I predict that Sarah Taylor runs. | ||
| I predict that Sarah Taylor runs. | ||
| It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's not. | |
| This is a Christian nation. | ||
| This is America. | ||
| I fear and love God. | ||
| When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
| You talking to somebody right now that only fears God and Jesus has won the victory. | ||
| Bro. | ||
| Life like this is what you like. | ||
| Like, try to live life right. | ||
| Who really know you. | ||
| Like, right. | ||
| This is like the movie. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Like, every single night. | |
| Right. | ||
| Every single fight. | ||
| Right. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I was looking at the camera. | |
| I don't even like life. | ||
| I was screaming at my daddy. | ||
| Don't be in Christ. | ||
| Like, I was screaming at the pepper. | ||
| We just like, Mike. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Looking for a bright light. | |
| Seek with what your life like. | ||
| Ride it on a white bike. | ||
| Selling like a tight bike. | ||
| Pressed on the gas. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Doing over for the night. | |
| Like, screaming at my daddy. | ||
| Don't be in Christ. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Like, but nobody never tell you to meet me. | |
| Like, Christ. | ||
| Only if I see it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Always when they're kidding me. | |
| Like a Tyler Perry. | ||
| Made a movie. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm teaching for a D. Now you want to see it free. | |
| Now you want to see it free. | ||
| Like, you see it free of peace. | ||
| Tell me what your life like. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Turn it down bright light. | |
| Driving with my dad. | ||
| And he told me it ain't Christ. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Like, I'm just trying to find. | |
| I'm looking for a new way. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm just really trying. | |
| Not to reach through the full way. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I don't have a pool. | |
| I'm eating on my test. | ||
| So if I go on a text. | ||
| So that's a tell text. | ||
| So the word, letter, picture, or a test. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Wrestling with God. | |
| I don't really want to wrestle. | ||
| So Spanish was a life. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Like, everything in my life. | |
| Talking with my dad. | ||
| And he said it ain't Christ. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Like. | |
| America first is inevitable. | ||
| Unstoppable. | ||
| And the reason why. | ||
| Is because. | ||
| It's not cool to shill a big business. | ||
| It's not cool to shill for Israel. | ||
| It's not. | ||
|
unidentified
|
This is a Christian nation. | |
| This is America. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I fear and love God. | |
| When you remove the fear and love of God. | ||
| You create the fear and love of everything else. | ||
| I'd like to propose a toast. | ||
|
unidentified
|
To our people. | |
| I'd like to propose a toast. | ||
| To the Voipers. | ||
| To White Boy Summer. | ||
|
unidentified
|
White Boy Century. | |
| To the reaction and the reclamation of the United States. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Cheers everybody. | |
| That's going to happen. | ||
| They kick me off the plane. | ||
| You know what that means? | ||
| White Boy Summer Road Trip. | ||
| They give us lemons. | ||
| We make lemons. | ||
| They throw me behind bars. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I start throwing baseball up against the wall. | |
| And now I'm playing catch. | ||
| Because you know what? | ||
|
unidentified
|
The only time that they win is when they triumphal for our spirit. | |
| But they never can. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They never take that away from us. | |
| Because I believe in God. | ||
| And I believe in America. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I believe in what I'm doing. | |
| We are still enjoying. | ||
| 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. | ||
| America First, bitch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
There's always a way. | |
| There's always a way. | ||
| White people founded this country. | ||
| This country wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
| Wouldn't exist without white people. | ||
| White people are done being trolley! | ||
|
unidentified
|
Done being trolley! | |
| We are the keepers of the American tradition. | ||
| And I think our ancestors smile on us right now while we're doing. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Cheers. | |
| In the beginning was the word. | ||
| And the word was with God. | ||
| And the word was God. | ||
| Through him all things were made. | ||
| Without him, nothing was made that has been made. | ||
| In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. | ||
| The light of all mankind And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers. | ||
| He will crush your head. | ||
| and you will strike his heel. | ||
| Jesus said to her, "I am the resurrection and the life." The one who believes in me will live even though they die. | ||
| And whoever lives by believing in me will never die. | ||
| Do you believe this? | ||
| I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. | ||
| Therefore be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves. | ||
| Then Jesus came to them and said, All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. | ||
| Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. | ||
| And surely I am with you always to the very end of the age. | ||
| We can't be held hostage by this country forever. | ||
| When will it end? | ||
| When will any leader put their foot down and reassert American sovereignty? | ||
|
unidentified
|
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 I get home, I want you. | ||
| Hello, hello, hello, hello, 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. | ||
| 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. | ||
| to our massive vision, our massive and ambitious vision for how we want the world to be. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We can't go back to the past. | |
| That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
| They say, can we really go back? | ||
| And the answer is: whether you're conservative or liberal, right-wing or left-wing, 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 conceived. | ||
| Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
| and Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | |
| Come on, let's go. | ||
| 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 even believe in them. | ||
|
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
|
It's the only way. | |
| We have got to be willing to die for Jesus Christ. | ||
| We have to want it more than they do because if there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny, then nothing can stop us and nothing will. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The White Supremacist slash Holocaust denier named Nick Fuentes. | |
| Nick Fuentes. | ||
| Nick Fuentes. | ||
| Nick Fuente. | ||
| Jesus Christ was our past. | ||
| Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | |
| This century to be the most Christian century in the history of the planet. | ||
| Oh my God. | ||
| I'm not supposed to be here tonight. | ||
| I'm supposed to be here. | ||
| I want that shot of my soul on to a child that I have. | ||
| My voice has nothing where I scream out for help. | ||
| I stretch my hair, but my cup just goes up. | ||
| Oh, oh, oh. | ||
| Oh, oh, oh, oh. | ||
| When I get home, I want you. | ||
| Hello, hello, hello, hello. | ||
| I got places to be. | ||
| You're watching America First. | ||
| My name is Nicholas J. Quentis. | ||
| Have a great show for you tonight. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We got the last night dancing like a pop. | |
| You got that back, dancer like a bump. | ||
| They believed a lion could be brought to heel. | ||
| 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 strings. | ||
| The lion would not care, even if his line died. | ||
| Things have to change, Jay. | ||
| 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, lied. | ||
| I am your voice. | ||
| I'm Ben K. I'm Ben | ||
| K. I'm Ben | ||
| K. The sad thing is, and I know that no one who watches him will believe me, but 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 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
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 love. | ||
| What he's looking for, want more and more. | ||
| People just want more and more freedom and love. | ||
| What he's looking for. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mine and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mine and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mine and senses purify. | ||
| 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Welcome to our massive vision, our massive and ambitious goals. | |
| Let's go. | ||
| Hello, hello, hello, hello. | ||
| 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We have a great show for you tonight. | |
| You better not. | ||
| Listen to the cure. | ||
| And then I cry. | ||
| All I do is cry. | ||
| All I do is cry. | ||
| Run it through my head. | ||
| All the things you're having, all the things you had, running through my head, running in my head, all the things you're fired. | ||
| *music* | ||
| All that's interesting, all that's interesting, all that's interesting, all that's interesting, all that's interesting. | ||
| When can we expect a real victory? | ||
| And who's going to deliver it? | ||
|
unidentified
|
JD Vance? | |
| If they revealed birthright citizenship, his wife wouldn't be a citizen anymore. | ||
| I know no other person. | ||
|
unidentified
|
This is my home. | |
| This is my home. | ||
| How can you call it a movement when you can't go home? | ||
| You can call it a movement'cause you have no motion. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You can call it a movement'cause you have no motion. | |
| You just interviewed Nick Fuentes. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I did. | |
| Or had a conversation with him. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What did you think of that? | |
| What do you think of him? | ||
| 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. | ||
| 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
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 fun 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? | ||
| Who's the poser? | ||
| Who is America? | ||
| I am America. | ||
| Chicago is America. | ||
| That's the American story. | ||
| What makes Christianity and Christ so different from the other religions is that our religion is based on the bearing of suffering for the sake. | ||
| of even those that persecute us. | ||
|
unidentified
|
*music* | |
| An overflowing of love. | ||
| An overflowing of self-giving love. | ||
| So much of it, it cannot be contained. | ||
| An unconditional, absolute standard of love for all of God's children, even those that are misguided, even those that persecute us, even the most heinous among us. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That is what makes us different. | |
| That is what makes us good. | ||
|
unidentified
|
*music* | |
| *music* | ||
| *music* 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 long-standing, 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, and I will never be okay with that. | ||
|
unidentified
|
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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Who are you people? | |
| Do you see the universe matters more than your meaningless swath? | ||
| Without a secure Meaningless, huh? | ||
| What do you know of meaningless? | ||
| Ha ha ha The world's famous of you and I rule my own Watch your wrist twindle to a simple method Tell me what does more meaning than your own strength Let the sky fall I feel like I'm ready I need it as that is Don't move my arms Open my hands You will be cut down the edge right edge The way you are cut down my pride Together I let the sky fall When they come back 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. | ||
| Be perfect. | ||
| I stop playing games. | ||
| And at any moment, I can just get that yay button. | ||
| I'm going to get the first. | ||
| Itch. | ||
| Itch. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Not my words, not my rules. | ||
| I can force them, all right? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Blacked out in the sky. | |
| Everything. | ||
| Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
| And your mama ain't shake. | ||
| Ready to get shit. | ||
| And then with your ears, wait before the snow kick. | ||
| And I was sitting here, and I was just a check. | ||
| With the all day, fit it, thinking with the weight of it. | ||
| And who did it? | ||
| Yo, was it the shit? | ||
| And who's sick? | ||
| Who did it? | ||
| You said, yeah, I said. | ||
| Yo, I get to the first show. | ||
| I go, I only drop jewels way before they drop shadow. | ||
| First, yeah, I'm okay. | ||
| Now I'm okay. | ||
| I'm okay. | ||
| I'm okay. | ||
| I'm here in the first bitch. | ||
| I'm here in the first bitch. | ||
| Not my words, not my rules. | ||
| I can force them, all right? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Laughed out the sky. | |
| Everything. | ||
| Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
| And your mama ain't shake. | ||
| You're petty, you're shit. | ||
| And I'm in with your ears, wait before the snow kick. | ||
| That was sick. | ||
| We got a city, you know, I was just a chick. | ||
| With the all day, I said it, we can't with the weight of it. | ||
| That was sick. | ||
| Who did y'all wasn't the shit? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| We sick, who did you say, I'm upset. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Take me to the first show to stop the whole. | ||
| Only drop jewels way before they drop shut up. | ||
| First, yeah, I'm okay. | ||
| Now I'm okay. | ||
| I'm okay. | ||
| What the weight does it say? | ||
| Be back, break, break. | ||
| No, it's so hot. | ||
| Yes, do you say? | ||
| America's first, bitch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
America's first, bitch. | |
| I'm gonna leave your dream for a second. | ||
| Last time, Scott. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Everything. | |
| Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
| Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
| Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
| 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sick addiction to technology. | |
| The future is so bleak, but that has changed the calculation. | ||
| God is using me. | ||
| He's breaking me down. | ||
| Removing all of the riches person, all of this, so I can serve him. | ||
|
unidentified
|
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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
To be continued... | |
| To be continued... | ||
| To be continued... | ||
| I got places to be Good evening everybody You're watching America First. | ||
| My name is Nicholas Jay Quentin. | ||
| Have a great show for you tonight. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Have a great show. | |
| *music* | ||
| 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
|
I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us. | |
| For the creation waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed. | ||
| We know that the whole creation has been groaning, as in the pains of childbirth, right up to the present time. | ||
| Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies. | ||
| For in this hope, we were saved. | ||
| But hope that is seen is no hope at all. | ||
| Who hopes for what they already have? | ||
| But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently. | ||
| There is something involved where we have to forgive them. | ||
| We do have to forgive them for their ignorance. | ||
| We do have to forgive them for their misunderstanding. | ||
| And we have to embrace them and say, better late than never. | ||
| Welcome to the right side of history. | ||
| Welcome to our massive vision, our massive and ambitious vision for how we want the world to be. | ||
|
unidentified
|
*music* Saying to me is | |
| like, "this is probably pretty cool for you." I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
| I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
| I'm like, yeah, it is. | ||
| Through him, all things were made. | ||
| Without him, nothing was made that has been made. | ||
| In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. | ||
| The light of all mankind And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers. | ||
| He will crush your head, and you will strike his heel. | ||
| Jesus said to her, "I am the resurrection and the life." The one who believes in me will live, even though they die. | ||
| And whoever lives by believing in me will never die. | ||
| Do you believe this? | ||
| I am sending you out like shield among wolves. | ||
| Therefore, be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves. | ||
| Then Jesus came to them and said, All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. | ||
| Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. | ||
| And surely I am with you always to the very end of the age. | ||
| You can't go back to the past. | ||
| That's what people always say, isn't it? | ||
| They say, can we really go back? | ||
| And the answer is, whether you're conservative or liberal, right when you're left when 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 conceived. | ||
| Jesus Christ is our present now. | ||
| and Jesus Christ is our future after we die on earth. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We want this century to be the most Christian century in the history of planet earth. | |
| We want this century. | ||
| We love everybody. | ||
| And we want people to confirm really more than anything. | ||
| But this country can no longer be held hostage by a small minority that doesn't even believe 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 there are thousands and millions and tens of millions and hundreds of millions of Christians ready to meet their final destiny. | ||
| Nothing can stop us and nothing will. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The End of the World | |
| The End of the World 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You got that back, back, dancing like a bump. | |
| Men's a Dina, Dina, Dina. | ||
| You got that back, that's the bump. | ||
| 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So That we are different. | |
| that America was different because we are different. | ||
| Palantir is an AI data analytics company who 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 algorithm, 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
America First is inevitable. | |
| It's unstoppable. | ||
| And the reason why is because it's not new to shift shit for being big. | ||
| it's not I'm a bad. | ||
| That's all bad. | ||
| Like Democrats in the dark. | ||
| They don't know they get my heart. | ||
| And all my brothers like the phone and yard. | ||
| You can still be anything you wanna be. | ||
| Went from one to four to one and three. | ||
| 13 Olympic at it and it just a week. | ||
| Be a new commander and a chief. | ||
| I fear and never come. | ||
| When you can move the fear and love the cry, you create fear above everything else. | ||
| You're talking to somebody right now that only fears God. | ||
| This is a Christian nation. | ||
| It is a miracle. | ||
| I go home. | ||
| That's so good. | ||
| We brainwashed out here, bro. | ||
| Come on, man. | ||
| This is a free man talking. | ||
| This is a free man talking. | ||
| This is a free man talking. | ||
| This is a free man talking. | ||
| And I just say, are you trusting me? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Are you going to have a chance? | |
| Are you trusting me? | ||
| And I saw it for the first time. | ||
| Seems to my eyes on her for the first time. | ||
| *music* | ||
| I'm a doctor, but I'm running out of patience. | ||
| She told me I'd be shutting it up in a face. | ||
| When I get home, I want you. | ||
| Hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, 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. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We have a great show for you tonight. | |
| 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 an innocent? | ||
| I miss the noise, I'm going to break some time, and you see my eyes grow, and I'm like, oh man, it's like a good one. | ||
| My own narrative is not one of some sudden booming bolt of lightning out of the | ||
|
unidentified
|
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 Monty Melkin? | |
| 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 and of course defending Nick Fuentes and so many of the stars of the burgeoning America First movement who, through an increasing amount of activism, are really going to ensure the future and the success of that movement. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We can't be held hostage by this country forever. | |
| When will it end? | ||
| When will any leader put their foot down and reassert American sovereignty? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Do we run the world or does Israel? | |
| Do we even run our own country? | ||
| Do we control our own military? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Can we control our own government or does Israel? | |
| We will be able to control our own government or our own government. | ||
| We will be able to control our own government or our own government or our own government. | ||
| And who's going to deliver it? | ||
|
unidentified
|
JD Vance. | |
| If they revealed birthright citizenship, his wife wouldn't be a citizen anymore. | ||
| I know no other person. | ||
|
unidentified
|
This is my home. | |
| He's got his strawberries. | ||
| 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. | ||
| Mind and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mind and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| Mind and senses purify. | ||
| Freed from desire. | ||
| If we don't have freedom on the internet in the age of AI, we are going to be mind raped every day forever. | ||
| Think about anything you've ever said or done in the vicinity of your phone's camera or microphone, everything you've ever put into your phone, and even things that are not necessarily so scandalous, but even things like your favorite restaurants, your geolocation, because your phone also has a GPS. | ||
| They know where you are at all times. | ||
| They know where you go and when. | ||
| They know what you buy. | ||
| They have access to your bank account. | ||
| AI will literally know everything about you. | ||
| Everyone you know, your relationship to them, your tastes, your preferences, your habits, your whereabouts, your routines, your schedule, when you asleep. | ||
| They know how much REM sleep you're getting. | ||
| They know your resting heart rate. | ||
| They know how many calories you consume. | ||
| Think about the ways that they can manipulate you. | ||
| You have a computer in your refrigerator, computer in your car, computer in your home security system, computer in your everything, computer in your clothes, your watch, your glasses, your VR headset, your alarm clock. | ||
| You have a smart home, economy of things. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our Credo. | |
| It's going to be only America first. | ||
| America first. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The American people will come first once again. | |
| With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
| From this day, always, it's going to be only America first. | ||
| America first. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| You're watching America First. | ||
| My name is Nicholas J. Fuentis. | ||
| We got a great show for you tonight. | ||
| Very excited to be back here with you tonight on Wednesday. | ||
| We have a lot to talk about tonight. | ||
| Lots to get into. | ||
| Big show. | ||
| Tonight, we're going to be talking all about the wars in Gaza and Ukraine, which I'm actually glad to do. | ||
| Last night, we talked a little bit about a lot of this like Republican infighting, the Gavin Wax thing, Paul Ngracia's nomination. | ||
| And I said last night it was a very important show, but to be honest with you, that kind of thing is boring. | ||
| It bores me. | ||
| And so tonight we're going to be doing a very important show, big show. | ||
| We're going to be talking all about the major wars that are going on. | ||
| Our featured story, we're talking about the state of the Gaza ceasefire. | ||
| It's not good. | ||
| And it looks like it might be on the brink of collapse. | ||
| There's a number of developments we're going to discuss in connection with that. | ||
| Among them, that there have been no fewer than 80 violations of the ceasefire by Israel since it went into effect last week. | ||
| 80 violations. | ||
| And we talked a lot about the ceasefire last week and the week before that. | ||
| We talked about this 20-point plan. | ||
| And if you recall, although there was all this hype and big international trips and meetings and fanfare, broad agreement apparently between Muslim Arab countries, Israel, the United States, in spite of all this, there is very little that was actually agreed upon by the two parties, almost nothing actually. | ||
| And although there's 20 points, they're only implementing a couple of them. | ||
| And even the implementation of these two or three points, there's no details. | ||
| There's no timeline. | ||
| And so I said from the very beginning, if the deal is short on details, if there's not an agreement in principle on any of the longer term or major points, it's not going to last very long. | ||
| And it's going to be more like a temporary ceasefire than anything like a comprehensive peace or peace agreement. | ||
| And now here we are. | ||
| Among those few points that were actually agreed upon, much of it, there is no agreement, not in principle, not in writing. | ||
| Among the couple of points that are actually being implemented are that the fighting stops, but the fighting hasn't stopped. | ||
| Israel accuses Hamas of attacking the IDF. | ||
| Hamas accuses Israel of bombing Gaza repeatedly, like I said, up to 80 times. | ||
| So even the few things that have actually been agreed to are not being implemented. | ||
| And so this past week, J.D. Vance, Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, they all flew to Israel and they flew there. | ||
| They didn't say this, but this is what everybody understood it to mean. | ||
| They flew there to make sure that Israel is actually going to abide by the deal. | ||
| It was a form of soft pressure on the Israeli government. | ||
| And they had to do that because they recognized that the Net Yahoo regime might pull out at any moment. | ||
| So we'll talk about all that. | ||
| We'll talk about the state of the deal. | ||
| We'll talk about some of these major developments that have taken place since the agreement went into effect. | ||
| We'll give you an overview. | ||
| It almost collapsed altogether this weekend. | ||
| The Israelis said that Hamas attacked them three times in a coordinated way in a single day. | ||
| And then they came in hard and bombed everybody that was near those attacks. | ||
| The whole thing almost came crumbling down just a couple of days ago. | ||
| So we'll talk about that. | ||
| We'll talk about the rest of it. | ||
| We're also going to talk tonight about the state of the Ukraine war. | ||
| Same deal, man. | ||
| Same exact situation. | ||
| There was supposed to be a high-level meeting this week, first between the Secretary of State Mark Arubio and Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov. | ||
| And that was supposed to be the prelude to another summit between Trump and Putin in Budapest, in Hungary. | ||
| And that was supposed to happen this week. | ||
| They canceled it. | ||
| They canceled both. | ||
| So there was no meeting between the foreign ministers. | ||
| There was no meeting between the heads of state. | ||
| And actually, the opposite has happened. | ||
| Trump has put sanctions on Russia's energy companies, their oil companies. | ||
| And apparently, although it's not 100% confirmed, according to the Financial Times, Trump has reauthorized Ukraine to use long-range missiles and strike deep inside Russian territory. | ||
| So Ukraine is now bombing Russia again. | ||
| There are more sanctions against Russia, even than there were under the Biden administration, and the meeting is off. | ||
| So it looks like the war is going to keep going for the foreseeable future. | ||
| Golden Age. | ||
| The golden age is here, we're told. | ||
| So we'll talk about that too. | ||
| Should be a pretty good show. | ||
| I have to say, this administration, it's not going well. | ||
| I don't know how people are coping with this. | ||
| And it seems a little trite to say it. | ||
| Here we are, eight months in, and I've been saying it since day one. | ||
| But when are we actually getting anything that was promised here? | ||
| Across the board, and it looks like not only are the staples, the core promises, not being delivered on, like the war in Ukraine is going on. | ||
| The war in Gaza might come back. | ||
| But there's actually new problems that weren't even in contention. | ||
| You might say these are secondary problems. | ||
| They're now talking about regime change in Venezuela. | ||
| So the foreign policy is in the toilet, the whole thing. | ||
| No peace in Russia. | ||
| McGaza ceasefire gave Trump a little bump in the polls, and I think there's a lot of optimism about it, but very risky, very shaky ground there. | ||
| And then there's a third war that we didn't even anticipate that's about to pop off, regime change in South America. | ||
| So we'll talk about that. | ||
| Well, not Venezuela. | ||
| We'll talk about the rest of it. | ||
| Should be a big show. | ||
| Before we get into it, I want our Mindy to smash the follow button on Rumble, smash the like button, leave a comment. | ||
| Let me know what you think about the show. | ||
| Remember to check out our store, Fuentes.store, to get your hats. | ||
| Order them now in time for the holiday season. | ||
| This month has flown by. | ||
| I don't know about you guys, but I feel like it was just summer and now it's winter. | ||
| It's getting cold out here. | ||
| It's like 50 degrees in Chicago. | ||
| I felt like just yesterday it was 100 degrees here. | ||
| And now it's already November. | ||
| It's already Halloween, Thanksgiving. | ||
| So get the hats. | ||
| We also have a brand new shirt on the store. | ||
| We have a new flag, and people are loving both of them. | ||
| They love the flag. | ||
| It's the know-nothings flag. | ||
| Beware of foreign influence. | ||
| Very cool. | ||
| I love the flag. | ||
| And we have a brand new shirt, white-ass niggas going hard as fuck. | ||
| Check that out. | ||
| That's Fuentes.store. | ||
| Subscribe to the website, AmericaFirst.plus. | ||
| If you're a super fan of the show, become a plus subscriber. | ||
| AmericaFirst.plus, $100 a month. | ||
| You get access to a group chat with me. | ||
| And I was in the group chat all day today. | ||
| I was sending voice memos. | ||
| I'm basically like doing a show in the group chat because I leave these like 30-minute voice notes and I'm just talking about Tim Poole, Tucker Carlson. | ||
| I'm talking about all the inside stuff. | ||
| And I'm giving you bonus content. | ||
| That's the $100 a month club. | ||
| If you are poor, you can subscribe for $15 a month and get access to the entire archive of the show, every episode I've ever done, going all the way back to 2017. | ||
| It's like 5,000 hours of content. | ||
| So check it out, AmericaFirst.plus. | ||
| What else is going on? | ||
| I am back. | ||
| I know I haven't been doing the show a lot past couple weeks, but I'll be here the rest of the week. | ||
| I'll be here all throughout next week. | ||
| So the show is fully back. | ||
| I hope you're excited about that. | ||
| The other thing I wanted to talk about just briefly, and I want to be very intentional and I want to choose my words carefully here. | ||
| Because, look, I don't want to get my ass kicked. | ||
| I don't want to get punched in the face. | ||
| I don't want to get beat up. | ||
| So, I want to be careful about how I choose my words and what I'm about to say. | ||
| Did you guys see Tucker Carlson's appearance at Turning Point USA yesterday? | ||
| And I watched it and it was pretty good. | ||
| He didn't do a speech. | ||
| He just gave a question and answer session. | ||
| He debated some of the students. | ||
| But there was one clip from the appearance that really stood out to me. | ||
| There was this frat bro type guy, a total Chad. | ||
| He's in like a Nike tech suit and seemed like a real bro. | ||
| And the guy comes up to the microphone during the question and answer with Tucker. | ||
| Huge audience, by the way, 3,500 people, massive event, huge audience, really impressive. | ||
| So this frat bro comes up to the microphone and he says, You know what, Tucker? | ||
| He goes, It feels like things don't change. | ||
| We elected Trump, but we're still at war in Ukraine. | ||
| They can't end the war in Gaza. | ||
| They're doing regime change in Venezuela. | ||
| He goes, Your dad is in the CIA. | ||
| He said it just like that. | ||
| He said, So, why does it feel like nothing ever changes? | ||
| It seems like the deep state always wins. | ||
| The wars go on. | ||
| Nothing actually changes. | ||
| What is it going to take for things to change? | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| That seems like a reasonable question. | ||
| It's true. | ||
| All of it is true. | ||
| The war in Ukraine is going on. | ||
| The war in Gaza might resume at any time. | ||
| And we know even if it doesn't, the war in Iran is about to break out again. | ||
| War in Venezuela is ongoing. | ||
| And it is true. | ||
| It's just a fact. | ||
| Tucker's dad is in the CIA, which is true. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| We all know that now. | ||
| Now we all know that. | ||
| And Tucker replies to the question and he says, I agree with a lot of what you just said. | ||
| He said, but if you bring up my dad again, I'll kick your ass. | ||
| I mean it. | ||
| Seriously, don't test me, son. | ||
| And I saw this clip and I'm like, whoa, what's with the reaction? | ||
| That's crazy. | ||
| He goes, my father was a good man, whatever his job was. | ||
| I don't think anybody said otherwise. | ||
| I didn't hear that. | ||
| And I saw that clip and then I saw another clip. | ||
| There was like a left-wing student and he was giving Tucker a hard time, but he said, you're worth $50 million. | ||
| And Tucker said, hey, don't believe everything you read on the fucking internet. | ||
| I'm not worth $50 million. | ||
| Whoa, okay. | ||
| Sorry. | ||
| Sorry, you're worth $25 million. | ||
| My mistake. | ||
| Sorry. | ||
| And, you know, look, I'm sure that Tucker's dad was a good man. | ||
| I read Tucker's eulogy to his father. | ||
| It was very beautiful. | ||
| It was very touching. | ||
| And I don't think that I've ever attacked Tucker's father. | ||
| I don't think this student was attacking the father. | ||
| What does it mean to attack somebody? | ||
| Is it an attack to acknowledge a very powerful person's pedigree? | ||
| Isn't that not relevant? | ||
| Some people might say, no, it's not relevant. | ||
| I disagree. | ||
| I think it's very relevant. | ||
| I think that who your parents are tells you a lot about who you are. | ||
| And I think that certainly if you are somebody that is constantly critiquing the deep state and the wars and all these things, and you yourself applied for the CIA, I think that maybe becomes very relevant if you've got a background with that. | ||
| If you come from that, I think that might be relevant. | ||
| And so I saw these clips from the debate or the QA session, I guess you could call it, this turning point event. | ||
| And I said, why is he so defensive about those things? | ||
| I think those are fair questions, but I saw the reaction. | ||
| And the first guy says, your dad's in the CIA. | ||
| He goes, I'll kick your ass. | ||
| It's like it's a college student. | ||
| It's some like Chad frat bro. | ||
| Whatever, dude. | ||
| You know, and Tucker says, I'll kick your ass. | ||
| The other guy says, you're worth a lot of money. | ||
| Fuck you. | ||
| Don't believe what you read on the internet. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I'm like, where is this coming from? | |
| And I'm going to be honest with you. | ||
| One of my issues with Tucker, although I think both of us are generally pushing in a similar direction, we're both very opposed to war with Iran. | ||
| I think we're both critical of the Trump administration. | ||
| We probably agree on maybe 90% of things. | ||
| But I think a valid critique is if you're going to engage in a structural critique of power. | ||
| And by that, you could say a populist critique of the economic system, a political critique of the permanent bureaucratic state. | ||
| If you're going to engage in that kind of structural critique of power, it just has to be acknowledged that you're from that world. | ||
| In other words, if you're going to rail about the 1%, it's kind of relevant that you are the 1%. | ||
| If you're going to rail against the deep state, it's kind of relevant that you are from the deep state. | ||
| And I don't know why he's so allergic to acknowledging that. | ||
| And there's sort of something actually disturbing about how it seems that there is this facade, which is flip-flops, dog, checkered shirt, navy blazer. | ||
| And okay, I mean, maybe that's authentic. | ||
| But there's a sort of deliberate attempt to say, I'm folksy, I'm plain spoken. | ||
| I'm like you guys. | ||
| But then when somebody says, well, to be fair, you're very rich and you come from that world. | ||
| You come from a government family. | ||
| You get this anger, this wild lashing out. | ||
| How dare you acknowledge that? | ||
| And then, oh, sorry, sorry. | ||
| Whoops, I got a little angry there. | ||
| It's like, okay, I don't know. | ||
| It's like those videos of like when they say a shapeshifter, you know, their face changes and their reptilian form is revealed. | ||
| I'm not saying he's a reptilian, but I don't know why he's not comfortable acknowledging those things. | ||
| Because, and I'll tell you why specifically, I'm willing to believe that he's a class trader, as it were. | ||
| I might be willing, I might be more willing to believe that he's a good faith actor. | ||
| And he says, you know what? | ||
| Look, I'm very rich. | ||
| I come from a government family, but the system's corrupt. | ||
| And the people are right. | ||
| And like, okay, that I can get behind. | ||
| That makes sense to me. | ||
| I don't think it's insane to say that there are rich people and there might even be people from the government that become defectors. | ||
| I don't think that's outside the question. | ||
| But I think people start to get skeptical and cynical about it when it seems like there's some defensiveness or there's a lack of complete transparency. | ||
| Later in the event, he said, you know, I lived in DC my whole life. | ||
| I come from a government family. | ||
| And it's like, wait a second, so you can acknowledge it, but if someone else asks you, there you're going to get punched in the face. | ||
| I thought that was a little inappropriate. | ||
| I thought that was a little inappropriate and a little confusing. | ||
| I don't think that really gels with the rest of the image. | ||
| So I saw that clip and I was a little bit taken aback by that. | ||
| And you had to know that that question was coming. | ||
| If you're Tucker and given, I'm sure he saw my video about him. | ||
| I'm sure, you know, he saw some of the scrutiny about that. | ||
| He had to know that something like that was coming, whether in good faith or in bad faith, whether from the right or from the left. | ||
| He had to know that something like that was coming his way. | ||
| If you're doing a public event where you open it up for questions, it seemed like he was unprepared for that. | ||
| And there was this flash of anger. | ||
| And I thought that was a little strange. | ||
| And I'm not trying to concern troll or tone police. | ||
| I'm not trying to be, you know, insincere when I say that, but it was, it was a bizarre interaction. | ||
| So if you haven't seen it, go watch the clip. | ||
| A little bit bizarre. | ||
| The guy said, yeah, so it seems like nothing ever changes. | ||
| Your dad's in the CIA. | ||
| And he goes, I'll kick your ass. | ||
| And I wish I could. | ||
| I would come down there. | ||
| He said, don't, don't test me, son. | ||
| Okay, like, what's that? | ||
| What is that all about? | ||
| That was a little weird. | ||
| So some people are saying, maybe we'll do a show together. | ||
| Is he going to like beat me up? | ||
| Is he going to punch me in the face? | ||
| Now I'm a little nervous. | ||
| Am I going to get my ass kicked? | ||
| Because I said that in my show. | ||
| So I guess we'll see. | ||
| But anyway, I saw that clip and a little bit bizarre. | ||
| Let me know what you, let me know what you think. | ||
| Obviously, I'm biased and I'm biased because me and Tucker have had this feud, this kind of behind the scenes feud for a couple of years now. | ||
| He's been saying bad things about me. | ||
| I've been saying bad things about him. | ||
| I don't think that's really outside of bounds to say that about his family. | ||
| It's not like people are saying your dad is a jerk. | ||
| People are saying, you know, you come from a government family. | ||
| That's what that is. | ||
| That's fair. | ||
| It's fair to say that Obama's dad was like a communist or whatever, you know. | ||
| It's fair to bring those things in, in my opinion. | ||
| I think that's very relevant to that conversation. | ||
| It wasn't, maybe it was flippant, but I don't think it was derogatory. | ||
| I don't think he said it in necessarily a pejorative way. | ||
| So you tell me what you think if that was an inappropriate reaction. | ||
| I saw some people say that was just a joke. | ||
| It didn't come across like a joke to me, but maybe it was. | ||
| Maybe it was and it didn't play well, but it didn't seem that way. | ||
| Anyway, so that's that. | ||
| But I do want to move on. | ||
| I want to get into our big news for the night. | ||
| We're going to talk all about Ukraine and Gaza. | ||
| I guess we'll get into Gaza first. | ||
| That's the one that everybody wants to hear about. | ||
| And I think that's kind of the biggest news in the world right now. | ||
| We've entered into a new phase of this Middle Eastern conflict where it seems, at least for now, that things are winding down and de-escalating. | ||
| As you know, a couple of weeks ago, Trump announced with the Prime Minister of Israel, Bibi Netanyahu, a ceasefire to the war. | ||
| It's a 20-point plan. | ||
| It was endorsed by most of the Muslim and Arab countries in the world. | ||
| It was agreed upon by both Israel and Hamas. | ||
| And as I said before, the 20-point plan is light on details, which is a major flaw. | ||
| It does not have a concrete timeline or any timeline. | ||
| It does not have any specificity about a Palestinian state, which is the fundamental question which is at stake in the Israel-Palestine conflict. | ||
| It does not have any specifics or details about the day after in Gaza. | ||
| Who will rule Gaza? | ||
| Who will govern Gaza? | ||
| What does the future look like there? | ||
| Very light on details. | ||
| And what's more, the actual points that have been agreed upon by both parties, it's only a few of them. | ||
| And these are the same points that were agreed upon in all the previous ceasefires, which fell through. | ||
| And by that, I mean, throughout this two-year conflict, there have been short-term truces. | ||
| And they look like this. | ||
| Hamas gives up some hostages. | ||
| Israel might give up some of their prisoners. | ||
| And they agree to stop fighting for a short period of time while they work out a longer-term deal. | ||
| That has actually happened three or four times. | ||
| It happened in November 2023. | ||
| It happened in January 2025. | ||
| And it happened now. | ||
| It was close to happening in May of 2024. | ||
| So at least three, but maybe up to four times, there have been agreements about prisoner swaps, short-term truces, partial withdrawal of Israeli forces, but it never goes beyond that. | ||
| And it never goes beyond that because there is no agreement in principle or in detail or in writing on any of the actual root causes of the conflict or the actual future of the Palestinian territories. | ||
| And by that, I mean, Israel wants Hamas to be eradicated and to have no part in the future of Gaza's governance. | ||
| What's more, Israel does not want Arabs or the Palestinian Authority or Hamas or really anybody. | ||
| They don't want Qatar. | ||
| They don't want Turkey. | ||
| They really don't want anybody to have any role in administering the Gaza Strip. | ||
| And so what's implied by that is that Israel wants to control the Gaza Strip. | ||
| And that looks and sounds like annexation. | ||
| If Israel is governing Gaza, if they control security, if they're administering the reconstruction, then that looks an awful lot like they're just effectively seizing the territory. | ||
| On the other side, Hamas wants to continue existing. | ||
| Hamas does not want to give up their weapons and disarm. | ||
| They do not want to leave the territory. | ||
| And they want to remain in some form, maybe by a different name, but they want to remain in some form part of Gaza. | ||
| And in the future, they want an independent, autonomous, sovereign Palestinian state. | ||
| So there is a fundamental disagreement on that. | ||
| Israel wants Hamas destroyed. | ||
| Hamas wants to exist. | ||
| Israel wants to annex Gaza. | ||
| Hamas wants Gaza to eventually form the base of a Palestinian state along with the West Bank. | ||
| And all the previous agreements, right up to and including this one, there's no agreement on any of that. | ||
| All that there is an agreement about is that Hamas gives up the hostages. | ||
| Israel gives up some prisoners. | ||
| They stop fighting for a little while. | ||
| And that is the state of the play right now. | ||
| So everybody is watching and waiting to see if there will be some development of the deal. | ||
| If, and specifically what they're looking for is if Israel will honor the deal and if Hamas will disarm. | ||
| They're looking to see if Israel will actually stop the fighting, if they've actually given up their ambitions in Gaza. | ||
| They don't want to take the territory. | ||
| They will respect the technocratic council that they're trying to build in Gaza. | ||
| And they're waiting to see if Hamas will give up their weapons, lay down their arms, and leave the strip. | ||
| And obviously, both are unwilling to do this. | ||
| Hamas doesn't want to give up their guns because they think that if they do, Israel will reinvade. | ||
| And Israel doesn't want to give up its ambitions because if they fully withdraw and if they don't want to control the strip, then Hamas will regroup or some other Palestinian faction will regroup and they will once again pose a threat to Israel. | ||
| So people are watching to make sure that people on both sides abide by the current terms of the ceasefire, the points that they've agreed upon, and also they're looking to see if there's any actual buy-in and development that the deal will proceed beyond these few points into the rest of the deal, the rest of those points. | ||
| And it's not looking good. | ||
| So the major developments are these. | ||
| Since the ceasefire has went into effect, Israel has repeatedly violated the deal. | ||
| So again, there's 20 points and they're not even good. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| The 20 points are vague, intentionally vague. | ||
| The 20 points, even if they were agreed upon, there needs to be more negotiation on details and implementation and you're probably going to need 20 more points. | ||
| Like the deal by itself is inadequate. | ||
| They've only agreed to a few and Israel won't even abide by the few points they've agreed on. | ||
| You would think after the agreement, okay, Israel's going to stop bombing them, right? | ||
| Israel's going to stop bombing them and humanitarian aid is going to pour in and the people of Gaza will stop starving and they'll get some relief. | ||
| Neither of these things have happened. | ||
| It's been two weeks and Israel has violated the ceasefire 80 times, 80 times in two weeks. | ||
| How is that even possible? | ||
| They are bombing Gaza repeatedly. | ||
| And what's more, Israel claims that Hamas is violating the deal. | ||
| So in response to this, they have prevented humanitarian aid from getting into the strip. | ||
| So they've agreed on a couple of the points, and those are already out the window. | ||
| There's no ceasefire. | ||
| Israel's definitely violating it. | ||
| There are claims that Hamas is violating it, which might be plausible. | ||
| The humanitarian aid's not getting in. | ||
| So out of your two or three points, we're like, oh, and three. | ||
| And this is the story. | ||
| This is from the news. | ||
| It says, quote, two IDF soldiers were killed in clashes in the Rafah area of southern Gaza on Sunday, according to Israel's foreign ministry. | ||
| The IDF claimed that terrorists fired an anti-tank missile as well as gunfire towards Israeli troops, accusing Hamas of violating the ceasefire. | ||
| The Israeli military said it had carried out a series of strikes in response to the violations. | ||
| In response to that, the Hamas government media office accused Israel of committing 21 violations on Sunday, bringing the total of alleged violations by Israel to 80 since the ceasefire began. | ||
| Hamas alleged on Sunday that 97 Palestinians had been killed and over 230 had been injured as a result of the violations. | ||
| So they violated it 80 times. | ||
| There's 300 new casualties. | ||
| How is that a ceasefire? | ||
| Israel on Thursday accused Hamas of not complying with the ceasefire terms to return all the hostages from Gaza. | ||
| Well, all of the live hostages have been returned. | ||
| Israel is awaiting the handover of the bodies of the deceased hostages. | ||
| Hamas has reported difficulty in locating the remaining bodies with the group citing that it needs special equipment to retrieve those buried under the rubble, which sounds valid. | ||
| So Hamas has no more hostages. | ||
| There are no more living hostages. | ||
| That is a moot point. | ||
| They're not there anymore. | ||
| Israel's waiting for Hamas to give up the bodies of the dead hostages, which are under the rubble of the buildings that Israel has destroyed. | ||
| And for this reason, Israel is justifying more attacks. | ||
| Are saying, well, you haven't given over all the bodies, so we get to keep attacking and stop humanitarian aid. | ||
| Now, what's interesting about the claims of violations is that there's some details that are disputed here. | ||
| There was a lot of coverage on Sunday that Hamas launched this coordinated attack on the IDF, that the IDF was being ambushed in a few different locations in Gaza. | ||
| And in particular, there was this claim made that Hamas fired an anti-tank missile at the IDF and killed some of the soldiers. | ||
| But there are alternative sources that say that actually Israel just stepped on unexploded ordinance. | ||
| They stepped on a mine or some other unexploded ordinance that they had themselves dropped. | ||
| And that is the source of the casualties. | ||
| So in other words, Hamas did not renew the offensive on Israel in violation of the deal. | ||
| Rather, this was a mistake. | ||
| This was an accident. | ||
| And by the way, the United Nations verifies there's tons, tons of unexploded ordnance in Gaza. | ||
| Israel has dropped so many bombs on Gaza. | ||
| There are some that have not been detonated. | ||
| There are a lot of bombs that have been dropped that have not exploded yet. | ||
| And so when you go and clean up the strip, or you have Israeli personnel operating in the strip, these are things that will happen. | ||
| That still poses a danger. | ||
| That's a risk. | ||
| So there's competing claims here. | ||
| The IDF says they were shot at. | ||
| Other sources say the IDF just was blown up accidentally by unexploded ordinance. | ||
| Either way, they're using that to justify more airstrikes. | ||
| They keep going. | ||
| And this is the problem when you make a deal with the Israelis. | ||
| What the Israelis actually are after, if you pay attention not just to what's happening in Gaza, but all of these theaters, all the different fronts in the war, the Israelis are very clear about what they want. | ||
| And what they want is complete freedom of action. | ||
| What they want is to be able to violate a country's airspace, drop bombs on that country wherever, whenever they see fit, whoever they want to target, and they want to be free from retaliation. | ||
| If you follow the conflict in Lebanon, in Syria, in Iraq, in Yemen, in Iran, in the West Bank, it is very clear that that is what they are after. | ||
| When they operate in Lebanon, they want, and they call this a doctrine, they call this a political or military reality. | ||
| They want to be able to fly their jets over Beirut or over Dahia, the suburbs of Beirut where Hezbollah operates. | ||
| They want to fly in southern Lebanon, and they want to bomb however many times and wherever and whenever and whoever they want. | ||
| They want to do that in Syria. | ||
| They want to bomb Damascus. | ||
| They want to occupy southern Syria. | ||
| They want to bomb the popular mobilization force in Iraq. | ||
| They want to blow up ports in Yemen. | ||
| They want to be able to fly into Iran and make Iran like Syria, which is to say that they can bomb Iran whenever they want. | ||
| They destroy their air defenses, their air force. | ||
| They completely control the airspace and they effectively have air superiority. | ||
| They control the ladder of escalation and they could do whatever they want to these countries. | ||
| And that is their real vision for Gaza. | ||
| This is why you can't make a deal with them. | ||
| This is why you can't trust them. | ||
| Because let's say the deal says, all right, the IDF ground forces will withdraw to a certain line. | ||
| They're still in Gaza. | ||
| They still control 50% of Gaza. | ||
| They control all the border crossings. | ||
| They control the entire perimeter of Gaza. | ||
| Nothing gets in or out without the Israelis say so. | ||
| So they're going to maintain complete security control. | ||
| They've quarantined or you could say blockaded the strip, but the ground forces are not operating. | ||
| They don't have tanks and bulldozers and major ground offensives happening. | ||
| And so people say maybe that's a maybe that's a suitable truce. | ||
| That's a suitable cessation of hostilities. | ||
| The Israelis have pulled back. | ||
| Relief is coming in and the war has ended. | ||
| But that is in no way, shape, or form what Israel actually wants. | ||
| What Israel actually wants is to maintain something like a low level of conflict forever. | ||
| They want to maintain a state of conflict. | ||
| And this has been true throughout the history of Israel and its conflict with all of its neighbors. | ||
| They're not at war, but they're also not at peace. | ||
| They're not in full-fledged war, which means they have military objectives that are limited and strategic and time-sensitive, but they're also not at peace where there's zero projectiles or zero hostilities. | ||
| They like to do this, whether it's with Egypt or Syria or Iran or any of these non-state actors. | ||
| They like to maintain a low level of conflict where there's not a complete peace, not a total war. | ||
| And why is that? | ||
| It is to maintain their freedom of action so that they can constantly go in and suppress the power of their neighbors or these other groups. | ||
| That's the whole point. | ||
| You might think, okay, they're going to pull back. | ||
| They're going to release the hostages. | ||
| Peace will blossom. | ||
| But if there's actual peace, what is the next logical step for Palestine? | ||
| It's very obvious. | ||
| If there's an actual peace, if there's an actual peace agreement, an end to hostilities, then that means that Palestine can start to rearm. | ||
| They can start to re-fortify. | ||
| They're going to expect that Israel leaves completely and they have territorial integrity. | ||
| And that means no occupying army, no violations of their airspace, no raids, no special forces. | ||
| There's not a threat of reservists being called up and sent in on a moment's notice. | ||
| And if that happens, that means that they can rebuild their infrastructure. | ||
| It means that they could petition the United Nations for statehood. | ||
| It means that they might organize with the Palestinian Authority or Saudi Arabia or Qatar or Iran for that matter, and they could start to build up a sovereign government. | ||
| And then they could build a security force. | ||
| They could start to rearm themselves. | ||
| And that's the beginning of sovereignty. | ||
| And that means if they have all these things, that Israel can't really do as much to them. | ||
| Because if Palestine has territorial integrity and a security force and they're rearmed and they're at the UN, then there's something like a tripwire. | ||
| And if Israel violates their airspace or violates their territory, then there's going to be political condemnation. | ||
| Then there's going to be economic consequences. | ||
| Then maybe Palestine will be able to defend itself. | ||
| And that's not what Israel wants because that would imply that Israel has to coexist with its neighbors and Israeli influence will end where Palestinian sovereignty begins. | ||
| And that's effectively the same problem for Israel in all of these different fronts. | ||
| In Lebanon, in Syria, in Iran, in Yemen. | ||
| Israel does not want peace because the second that a permanent peace takes shape, then that means that Israel can't do whatever it wants. | ||
| They can't take territory in Syria and make claims that they're defending the Druze. | ||
| They can't do airstrikes in Beirut and claim that they're killing Hezbollah. | ||
| They can't, at a moment's notice, deploy bulldozers in Gaza City and start destroying buildings again. | ||
| And on and on and on with all these other countries. | ||
| So Israel, it's actually their foreign policy that they want to be in a permanent state of war. | ||
| And so much has been said about truces and ceasefires and peace agreements. | ||
| These are words that matter in the UN. | ||
| These are not words that matter on the ground. | ||
| These are not words that matter to Israel. | ||
| These are semantic games that are being played. | ||
| A truce, a ceasefire, a peace, root causes. | ||
| These are semantic games. | ||
| The reality is that Israel is in a ceaseless state of low-level conflict with all of them. | ||
| Recognizes no borders, recognizes no sovereign airspace or sovereignty of a particular government because their long-term objective is to keep all of these countries unstable, divided, off balance, because Israel's long-term plan is to expand as much as possible. | ||
| They have their sights set on annexing Gaza and the West Bank. | ||
| They have their sights set on annexing parts of Jordan, parts of Lebanon, parts of Syria, parts of Egypt. | ||
| They have their sights set on regime change in Yemen, in Iran, in Iraq, in all these countries. | ||
| They want to keep them permanently divided, off balance, militarily weak, politically, ineffectual, because they have plans to someday, one day, on a timeline, confront and destroy in detail, systematically, all of these countries. | ||
| That's their military doctrine. | ||
| So it is a complete fool's errand to say, well, hey, guys, we got them to agree to a ceasefire. | ||
| They're pulling back to this line. | ||
| They recognize no lines. | ||
| You can draw lines around the map. | ||
| They don't care. | ||
| You can make them to agree to 50-point plans, 6 million-point plans. | ||
| They don't abide by them. | ||
| They make things up. | ||
| They claim there's violations where there aren't any. | ||
| They don't negotiate in good faith. | ||
| They lie. | ||
| Their real agenda, like I said, is to constantly wage conflict against all of them so that all of these countries are in a state of stagnation. | ||
| You can't attract investment. | ||
| You can't stabilize politically. | ||
| You can't unite a country and become strong if you're constantly being bombed. | ||
| And that's the case with all of them. | ||
| So Israel wants to keep all of them suppressed, weak, divided, ineffectual, while Israel grows stronger. | ||
| Well, Israel attracts more investment while they get more weapons from the United States. | ||
| While they fight their battles systematically and take more land and fortify and consolidate their gains. | ||
| That's the long-term arc of Israel. | ||
| It always has been from 1948. | ||
| And this is why, by the way, Israel's interests are completely hostile to America's. | ||
| America thinks that if Israel could just behave itself, if we could just get Netanyahu to stop, then Israel's going to make agreements with Saudi Arabia and Qatar and the Emirates, and they're going to become a normal country like Germany. | ||
| And they're not going to invade anybody, not going to fight anybody. | ||
| They're just going to kind of keep the peace. | ||
| And that's going to let us offload the security responsibilities to them and this broader alliance. | ||
| And then we can go fight China. | ||
| That's like the idea that we could still work with Israel. | ||
| Israel's our ally. | ||
| They're holding down the fort with the other countries. | ||
| And if we could just constrain them with deals and investment and things like that, then they'll play nice and they're going to enhance stability in the region. | ||
| But that is completely blind to the reality of Zionism, which is an expansionist ideology. | ||
| They're like the communists. | ||
| The Soviets were not content to build their socialist paradise in one country and leave everybody alone and say, hey, you know, we're doing our thing. | ||
| You do your thing. | ||
| It's fine. | ||
| No, they wanted to expand. | ||
| They wanted to export their ideology. | ||
| They had global ambitions. | ||
| They wanted to confront all their adversaries. | ||
| The same is true of Zionism. | ||
| They have these long-term ambitions. | ||
| They will never be a normal country. | ||
| They will never normalize relations with anybody. | ||
| They will always be expanding. | ||
| So their interests are completely hostile to ours. | ||
| And that is why it is America first, not to say, let's get Israel to sign up to a truce. | ||
| okay, they signed on the dotted line. | ||
| We're good. | ||
| Now we could do something else. | ||
| They must be fundamentally confronted by the United States. | ||
| And they must be effectively impaired. | ||
| They must be made unable to do these things. | ||
| And at the end of the day, the reason why that is extremely difficult, it's two things. | ||
| Why can the United States never impair Israel, never really control them, never really restrain them in a systemic way? | ||
| There's two reasons. | ||
| Israel's control over our political system. | ||
| If any American government tried to impose restrictions, tried to circumscribe Israel's freedom of action in the Middle East, there would be hell to pay from the Zionist lobby in America. | ||
| We have elections every four years. | ||
| The money's open. | ||
| The media is open. | ||
| The political system is open. | ||
| So if you're Obama and you impose an Iranian nuclear deal on Israel, which is how they see it, they're going to be coming after Obama from Fox News. | ||
| And they're going to be coming at Obama because of Citizens United. | ||
| Sheldon Adelson will pour $100 million to the coffers of the Republicans. | ||
| The Republican Jewish Coalition, the Jewish lobby on the Democrat side will come out in America against those types of policies. | ||
| It's extraordinarily difficult to make that play with the powerful Jewish lobby domestically in America. | ||
| That's one. | ||
| Two is that Israel has a nuclear arsenal. | ||
| So if the United States tells Israel, if you don't do what we say, we're cutting you off, Israel will literally take out the nuclear bombs for everybody to see. | ||
| They will, and when I say that, I mean it in the most literal way possible. | ||
| They will open up their nuclear facilities and they will display for all the satellites, all the eyes of the world to see, their nuclear-capable missiles. | ||
| And the implication will be: if you don't do it our way, we'll just nuke them. | ||
| If you don't do it our way, we'll nuke our adversaries and we may nuke you too. | ||
| Maybe we'll nuke Europe. | ||
|
unidentified
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Maybe we'll nuke America. | |
| This is the problem. | ||
| And I'm telling you, people say, Why was I the only one that was right about war with Iran? | ||
| Why was I the only one that was right about Israel's ambitions in the Gaza war outside of Gaza? | ||
| It's because I'm the only one that understands, or maybe the only one that's honest, about what Israel's real foreign policy is. | ||
| Their real ambitions, the real raison d'être of Israel's government, which is greater Israel. | ||
| Israel exists because they want to have something like a Davidic kingdom that is at the center of global relations. | ||
| That sounds insane, but that is what they believe. | ||
| Contrary to people, some that founded Israel, some not all, they do not just want to have a normal country that happens to be Jewish among the other nations with normal relations. | ||
| That is not what Zionism is about. | ||
| Their ambitions have no limits. | ||
| We have to get serious about confronting them. | ||
| That's bad for America. | ||
| A pariah state in the Middle East that is expansionist, that is aggressive, that is at war with all its neighbors, that does not respect international law, or more than that, does not respect American primacy that makes them hostile to our interests. | ||
| They're a destabilizing force. | ||
| They're a future strategic competitor. | ||
| They're a national security threat to America. | ||
| They're also effectively then a rogue state with nuclear weapons. | ||
| And America is not, they're not ready to hear this. | ||
| The leadership, I think, maybe does not want to confront that reality because it's the reality that we are effectively bound at the hip to something like a North Korea. | ||
| Israel is our North Korea. | ||
| They're this nuclear country, but they're worse because they control our political system. | ||
| They want to invade all their neighbors. | ||
| And maybe they're more willing to use nukes than North Korea. | ||
| It's like, it's terrifying the level of blackmail they have over the entire planet. | ||
| So anyway, maybe that's a rant that goes outside of the scope of the discussion about the ceasefire agreement. | ||
| But it's important to understand this because if you understand this, you realize that you can get Netanyahu to make a phone call to Qatar because they say that that was the beginning of the peace process. | ||
| Israel bombed Qatar. | ||
| It infuriated the United States. | ||
| Trump demanded that Netanyahu make this apology to Qatar. | ||
| And everybody said, this demonstrates that America has gotten the better of Israel. | ||
| We now control this relationship again because we got Netanyahu to say he's sorry. | ||
| They'll say anything. | ||
| They will say anything. | ||
| They will sign anything. | ||
| They will agree to anything. | ||
| And people are drawing lines on maps and they're drafting 20-point plans and they're creating subcommittees for subcommittees, technocratic councils, call it whatever you want. | ||
| We all know how this ends, which is that on some timeline, Israel is going to restart all of these wars, all of them. | ||
| There is no peace between Israel and Iran. | ||
| There is no peace between Israel and Gaza. | ||
| There might not be a full-fledged war, but there certainly isn't a peace. | ||
| There is only this state of perpetual low-boil hostility that at will and in an orchestrated and systematic way, they will increase or decrease according to their tactical and strategic priorities. | ||
| That is their foreign policy. | ||
| So now, in the midst of a potential collapse of the ceasefire, J.D. Vance and Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff have gone to Israel to put some diplomatic pressure on them. | ||
| They're there to lean on Netanyahu, make sure he doesn't break the deal. | ||
| This is a story on this. | ||
| It says, quote, the administration of President Trump is growing worried that Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu could jeopardize the Gaza ceasefire deal with Hamas. | ||
| The New York Times, citing anonymous White House officials, said Vice President Vance's visit to Israel aims to put pressure on Netanyahu to abide by the ceasefire and, quote, add an extra symbolic layer to illustrate the administration's commitment to keeping the deal intact. | ||
| Yeah, okay. | ||
| I'm sure the Israelis are reading this and they're laughing. | ||
| Netanyahu and Smotrich and Ben Gavir, and they're reading this and they are laughing. | ||
| I mean, read that again. | ||
| Vance, Vance's visit to Israel aims to put pressure on Netanyahu to abide by the ceasefire and, quote, add a symbolic layer to illustrate the administration's commitment to keeping the deal intact. | ||
| Symbolic layers to show how committed we are symbolically. | ||
| Symbolically, commitments, illustrations. | ||
| It's bullshit. | ||
| Israel does whatever it wants. | ||
| Fuck you. | ||
| You're drawing lines on maps. | ||
|
unidentified
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All right. | |
| So the IDF is going to pull back here and then they're going to go to the purple line and then the red line. | ||
| And hey, we showed up. | ||
| Hey, you know, they put their hands on their hips. | ||
| Hello, Mr. Prime Minister. | ||
| I hope you're abiding by that deal. | ||
| Oh, they're adding a symbolic layer of importance. | ||
| They're showing him he means business. | ||
| It's bullshit. | ||
| They do whatever they want. | ||
| They'll violate the deal a thousand times. | ||
| They'll kill a thousand more people. | ||
| And they'll say, hey, well, you know, we're still in the deal. | ||
| Until they're not, until they feel like they're not again. | ||
| The article goes on. | ||
| That says, U.S. Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and President Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, already landed in Israel on Monday for talks with Netanyahu and other officials on the implementation of the deal. | ||
| A senior U.S. official told the U.S. Daily that both Witkoff and Kushner believe the ceasefire deal is, quote, in danger of falling apart. | ||
| The two envoy strategy in Israel is to try to keep Netanyahu from resuming an all-out assault against Hamas. | ||
| Israel launched a series of deadly airstrikes across the Gaza Strip on Sunday, killing at least 44 Palestinians after alleging that Hamas had attacked its troops in Rafah. | ||
| The Palestinian group denied any involvement and reaffirmed its commitment to the ceasefire. | ||
| Trump has already affirmed the Gaza ceasefire remains effective despite the Israeli strikes. | ||
| So even though there's quite literally not a cessation of firing, even though no one has stopped firing, the ceasefire is still in place. | ||
| Everybody's still shooting at each other, but I can assure you, we have a very real ceasefire. | ||
| Now, here's how you understand what is happening: Israel is having a very difficult time on the ground in Gaza. | ||
| There are two things that Israel excels at: they have a formidable and superior air force, and they have superior intelligence capabilities. | ||
| Those are the things they're good at. | ||
| So they can fly airstrikes. | ||
| They could do sorties against Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Yemen, Gaza. | ||
| And none of these countries have air defense systems or an air force that can combat, or they're not willing to, that can shoot down or fight Israel's air force. | ||
| So Israel can drop a lot of ordinance. | ||
| They could drop bombs really well. | ||
| And Israel's Mossad and Shin Bet has infiltrated all these countries. | ||
| So they can do, for example, the Pager attack on Hezbollah. | ||
| They can go inside Iran and launch missile and drone strikes from inside Iranian territory. | ||
| They can do a cyber attack and disable their radar, their detection systems. | ||
| Those are two things they do really well. | ||
| They do not have an adequate ground force. | ||
| And that's because they don't have a big population. | ||
| It's a country of, what, 8 million people? | ||
| So they don't have a huge standing army. | ||
| They don't have a giant army like Turkey or like China or like Russia. | ||
| And their ground forces are made up of reservists. | ||
| Israel is a country where every citizen has to do involuntary military service. | ||
| So when they go into Gaza, they're calling up something like the National Guard. | ||
| They're calling up the reserves. | ||
| And it's ordinary citizens that have regular jobs that they're calling up. | ||
| Okay, get your uniform, get your guns, and now it's time to go fight in Gaza. | ||
| So when they go into Gaza on the ground, this is very difficult for them. | ||
| It's not like they could drop bombs all day, and they could do things like the Pager attack, and they could do things like cyber attacks. | ||
| But when they actually have to go in on the ground, it's a whole different story because their forces have low morale, not very skilled. | ||
| They don't really want to be there. | ||
| They don't have a lot of them. | ||
| And when they go into Gaza, they're encountering improvised explosives. | ||
| They're encountering networks of tunnels underground. | ||
| It's urban warfare. | ||
| It's something like a counterinsurgency. | ||
| So it's very difficult fighting combined with a not very good all-reserve ground force. | ||
| So when Israel actually invades Gaza, this is extremely taxing on the country. | ||
| Casualties are high. | ||
| Morale is low. | ||
| Like I said, they're not a very strong force. | ||
| The fighting is logistically difficult. | ||
| And so the way that you look at this conquest of Gaza is that Israel likes to starve the Palestinians, bomb the Palestinians, bomb their infrastructure to make them weak. | ||
| Starving you, depriving you of supplies. | ||
| We're going to literally make you exhausted and weak, physically weak. | ||
| And then they go in for a short time with these ground offensives in the urban areas. | ||
| They go city by city. | ||
| They've never controlled 100% of the Gaza Strip, very densely populated. | ||
| And what it looks like is they're devouring Gaza in small bites over a long period of time. | ||
| A lot of bombing, a lot of starvation. | ||
| And then they'll go in in these short spurts and they'll clear out a city. | ||
| Then they go to the next city. | ||
| Then they declare a ceasefire. | ||
| We're all good. | ||
| Take back some hostages, do more bombing, more starvation, get more weapons, refresh the reserves, get some reprieve. | ||
| Then they go back in. | ||
| That's really what this looks like. | ||
| So why has Israel agreed to a ceasefire? | ||
| It's pretty obvious. | ||
| They agreed to a ceasefire because one, it gives relief to their ground forces. | ||
| They had this plan where they were going to send in the ground force to take all of Gaza. | ||
| Then they revised that and said, you know what? | ||
| We're only going to take Gaza City in the north, which they consider to be a big stronghold for Hamas. | ||
| So they go into Gaza City, they clear many of the suburbs and then bulldoze them. | ||
| They're not just bringing in tanks, they're bringing in civilian construction equipment to literally bulldoze all the buildings. | ||
| So they go in and they destroy everything piece by piece, bite by bite, and then they declare a ceasefire. | ||
| So they get some hostages, they refresh the ground forces, maybe they get more equipment from the United States. | ||
| The other reason is that it takes some of the pressure off from the international community. | ||
| Everybody's starting to hate Israel a little bit too much in America. | ||
| At the United Nations, the pressure is increasing on Israel to recognize Palestine or to stall their offensive in Gaza. | ||
| So it buys them some time with that as well. | ||
| But they still ultimately have designs on the rest of Gaza. | ||
| They're going to come back in. | ||
| They're going to keep devouring Gaza piece by piece, bite by bite. | ||
| They just want to buy themselves some time. | ||
| Here's the other part of the story that once again, nobody is talking about. | ||
| At the end of the day, this is not really about Gaza. | ||
| Gaza is a part of the much larger plan. | ||
| Hamas is fundamentally seen as a proxy of Iran. | ||
| And they're not the only one. | ||
| It's also Hezbollah in Lebanon. | ||
| It's also the Revolutionary Guard in Syria. | ||
| It's the popular mobilization force in Iraq. | ||
| And it's the Houthis in Yemen. | ||
| This war is not just about annexing Gaza and the West Bank, which involves clearing these territories, pushing the people out, destroying the infrastructure, making it impossible for the people to stay. | ||
| It's also about creating a pretext to confront Iran directly and all of its other proxies. | ||
| And so something else that Israel has been doing is that when it winds down the fighting, which is extremely intensive in Gaza, it then tends to wind up the fighting everywhere else. | ||
| So last year, when Israel slowed down its offensive in Gaza, they reorganized their forces north and they began an all-out assault on Lebanon. | ||
| And they went after Hezbollah with the Pager attack. | ||
| Then they bombed Hezbollah a thousand times. | ||
| Then they invaded Lebanon. | ||
| And once that had been finished, then they went right back into Gaza. | ||
| So they're not just taking Gaza piece by piece, bit by bit. | ||
| They're also defeating all their other adversaries in the region in a systematic way, in detail. | ||
| And the big element of this that no one is talking about is the state of diplomacy with Iran. | ||
| Let's not forget that earlier in the year, Israel launched an all-out war on Iran, which they dragged the United States into to neutralize Iran's nuclear program. | ||
| After the war, there was an effort by the Europeans and the United States to restart diplomacy with Iran, to get them to give up their nuclear weapons, or at the minimum, to get inspectors back into Iran's nuclear facilities. | ||
| It was only a couple of weeks ago that that was, that Iran made it clear that that was off the table. | ||
| It was just today that Iran's foreign minister said, we're not going to negotiate over our nuclear program anymore. | ||
| What do you think the strategic calculus is in Israel? | ||
| It's been four months since Israel and the United States went to war with Iran. | ||
| Since that war, Iran has expelled all of the inspectors. | ||
| They've turned off all the cameras in Iran's nuclear facilities. | ||
| They've made it clear that Israel and the United States did not destroy all of their centrifuges, did not destroy their stockpile of enriched uranium. | ||
| As a matter of fact, Iran says we're not even aware of all of their nuclear facilities and the extent of their nuclear program. | ||
| They're also saying the inspectors are not coming back and that they have closed the door to any future negotiations. | ||
| So what is the strategic thinking of Israel? | ||
| If all of that has taken place and it has been four months since Israel and the United States went to war with Iran, then the Israelis must assume that in this time period, Iran has been rearming themselves. | ||
| They have continued enrichment of uranium. | ||
| They have gotten more weapon systems from Russia, air defense systems, maybe air force. | ||
| They're getting stronger. | ||
| They're rooting out Mossad operatives that have infiltrated their country. | ||
| And if Iran has gotten stronger, you would have to argue that Israel must assume that Iran is closer to a bomb now than they were four months ago in the immediate aftermath of the strikes, then it's not hard to see where Israel is going to take the fight next, which is that we're overdue for another Israel-Iran war. | ||
| And could that be the reason why Israel has stalled the fighting in Gaza? | ||
| Temporary ceasefire so they could prepare to challenge Iran all over again. | ||
| To me, those are the reasons that we have the ceasefire. | ||
| And so, in other words, it is in America's interest to denuclearize Iran without toppling the government. | ||
| That is technically America's strategic objective. | ||
| Maybe that's not my idea of what our foreign policy should be, but that is logically, and that is what our government has promulgated. | ||
| That is our strategic doctrine. | ||
| Denuclearize Iran through diplomacy without toppling the government. | ||
| And in Gaza, our objective is to end the war and make sure that Israel does not annex the territory while also making sure that Hamas does not come back into power. | ||
| That's our strategic objective. | ||
| And so we are trying our best. | ||
| America's trying our best to make sure that Israel backs off of Iran and backs off of Gaza. | ||
| And we're trying to get them to agree to hold themselves back. | ||
| But if you understand Israel's strategic objectives, you understand that this is impossible. | ||
| It's only a matter of time before one day they go back into Gaza, one day they go back into Iran. | ||
| And the reason they have agreed tenuously to these peace agreements is because it's part of a broader strategic timeline, which is that eventually, once they've regrouped and reorganized, they're going to take the fight to another country. | ||
| And then once they're done with that, they're going to go back into Gaza. | ||
| And then the process will start all over again. | ||
| They'll go back against Iran and either finish the job or they'll stop, get a ceasefire, and then go back into Gaza. | ||
| And they'll either finish the job there or they'll get another ceasefire, take the fight somewhere else, regroup. | ||
| This has been the cycle for two years. | ||
| In some ways, it's been the cycle for 70 years. | ||
| This is how they operate. | ||
| So I think it's really telling. | ||
| It has not been two weeks since the deal came through, and Trump had this big ceremony with all the world leaders talking about a Nobel Prize, his triumph, front page of Time magazine on the cover, and the deal is already falling apart. | ||
| It's just been two weeks, and the deal is already at risk of collapsing. | ||
| They're sending over a high power delegation to oversee the implementation because everybody knows it's not going to hold. | ||
| And what an embarrassment that'll be for this administration. | ||
| And when the ceasefire collapses, I hope that proves once and for all for people that only read the headlines, who's really in control of this relationship here. | ||
| If Trump is begging our own ally that we pay, please come to the table and make a deal. | ||
| And they continually make an ass out of him by leading him on, signing on to deals they never intend to follow through with, it will be obvious that we have no control over this country. | ||
| So that's that. | ||
| But I do want to move on. | ||
| I want to get into Russia. | ||
| We're not going to have a ton of time to talk about Russia. | ||
| We spent a lot of time talking about Gaza. | ||
| And we've been at it already for an hour. | ||
| So we'll spend a little bit of time on Russia, but not a ton of time. | ||
| There's some other big developments in the war in Ukraine. | ||
| And here we go again. | ||
| I mean, it's the same story, which is that, and it's almost funny at this point. | ||
| Last week, Trump announces there's going to be another meeting between him and Putin in Hungary. | ||
| He's optimistic again. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Every other week, it's a new policy. | ||
| You know, so two weeks ago, he was saying, we're going to take back all of Ukraine. | ||
| We're going to give them tomahawk missiles. | ||
| We're done playing around. | ||
| We're going to put a 6 million percent tariff on India. | ||
| Like that's where he was two weeks ago. | ||
| Then last week he said, no, we're not going to give Ukraine tomahawk missiles. | ||
| And I get along great with Russia. | ||
| And maybe we'll give them Donetsk. | ||
| And we're going to meet again in Hungary. | ||
| And we're going to finally bring this war to an end. | ||
| Now, this week, that's all off. | ||
| There's going to be no meeting in Hungary. | ||
| There's more sanctions on Russia. | ||
| And they've greenlighted missile strikes against Russia all over again. | ||
| What are we doing? | ||
| What's the play here? | ||
| What's the strategy? | ||
| So like I said, last week, Trump said that there would be a meeting between our Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, our top diplomat, and their foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov. | ||
| Rubio and Lavrov were supposed to meet this week. | ||
| And then on the heels of that meeting, Trump was supposed to meet Putin again, another summit in Budapest to negotiate the end to the war in Ukraine. | ||
| And it looked like Trump was leaning back towards favoring Putin. | ||
| He had a meeting with Zelensky. | ||
| And in that meeting, Trump declined to give Zelensky Tomahawk cruise missiles, which have a much greater range than all the other weapon systems that Ukraine has and might allow Ukraine to strike deep into Russia's heartland, deep into their core territory. | ||
| So Trump shut that down and Trump announced this big meeting. | ||
| Another breakthrough occurred. | ||
| And if you've been following the negotiations, this will mean something to you. | ||
| The Russian government intimated to the United States that they might be willing to make concessions in Kherson and Zaporizhia, which are the other two oblasts that Russia is in in southern Ukraine. | ||
| They might give up some of that territory. | ||
| And in exchange, they would take all of Donetsk from Ukraine. | ||
| And it looks like they're coming down from some of their positions because earlier they said they want all four of these territories. | ||
| They want Kherson, Zaporizhia, Luhansk, and Donetsk. | ||
| They want, and they only fully control Luhansk. | ||
| They want full control of the remaining three, and they want everyone to recognize their claim over those four territories. | ||
| And that, as of August, when Trump and Putin had their summit in Alaska, that was Russia's big demand. | ||
| They want all that territory, Ukraine to stay out of NATO, among other things. | ||
| That was their demand. | ||
| Well, last week, the Russian government suggested, well, maybe we'll give up a little bit of the territory that we've conquered in the South in exchange for more territory in the East, in the Donbass. | ||
| And it was claimed that when Zelensky met with Trump last week, that Trump asked Zelensky if he'd be okay with that, if he might give up some of that territory in Donetsk. | ||
| And Zelensky said no. | ||
| That's where it stood as of last week. | ||
| So Trump was going into this week, a Rubio-Lavrov meeting, and then a summit in Budapest. | ||
| And they were going to, they might, with the current contact line as the starting point for negotiations, they might have an imminent ceasefire. | ||
| Well, now, all of a sudden, all of that is off. | ||
| And so the big developments this week are that the Rubio-Lavrov meeting has been postponed a week. | ||
| The Trump-Putin meeting is canceled. | ||
| There's no word on whether that's been postponed, whether there'll be another meeting. | ||
| It's just off. | ||
| And the biggest developments are these: that Trump has authorized Ukraine to strike inside Russian territory, and that Trump is now putting sanctions on Russia's energy companies. | ||
| And this is a story from the New York Times. | ||
| It says, quote, President Trump announced on Wednesday that he was imposing significant new sanctions on Russia for the first time in a second term, underscoring a new degree of frustration with President Putin after a plan for the two leaders to meet in Budapest fell apart. | ||
| The sanctions targeted Russia's two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil. | ||
| Mr. Trump's irritation with the Russian leader was evident on Wednesday. | ||
| He said, quote, every time I speak with Vladimir, I have good conversations and then they don't go anywhere. | ||
| He explained his decision to scrap the Budapest summit that had been planned for some time in the coming weeks. | ||
| He said, it just didn't feel right to me. | ||
| It didn't feel like we were going to get to the place we have to get. | ||
| So I canceled it. | ||
| The sanctions are among the most significant measures the United States has taken against the Russian energy sector since the beginning of the war. | ||
| The Biden administration avoided levying sanctions against those companies to allow for legal purchase of Russian oil by American allies. | ||
| Targeting the companies could make a meaningful dent in Russia's oil revenues. | ||
| Here's the story about the missiles. | ||
| It says Ukraine's military said on Tuesday that it used British-provided storm shadow missiles to strike a chemical plant inside Russia's Bryansk Oblast, signaling that the United States is again supporting Ukrainian missile strikes on Russian territory. | ||
| A massive combined missile and airstrike was carried out, including with air-launched storm shadow missiles that penetrated Russia's air defense system, said the general staff of Ukraine's armed forces in a statement according to Reuters. | ||
| Storm shadows are produced jointly by the UK and France and have a range of about 150 miles. | ||
| Ukraine first began firing them into Russia last year, along with U.S.-provided ATACOM missiles, which can hit targets up to 190 miles away. | ||
| In August, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump administration was not allowing Ukraine to fire those missiles into Russia, a policy that also applied to the storm shadows, since the Ukrainian military requires U.S. targeting data to fire either of the missile systems. | ||
| Another report from the outlet this month said that President Trump reversed the policy and signed off on providing Ukraine with intelligence for long-range missile strikes on Russian territory. | ||
| So another reversal. | ||
| It's always back and forth. | ||
| One month we're going to meet with Russia. | ||
| Rubio is in Saudi Arabia meeting with Lavrov. | ||
| It's going great. | ||
| They're normalizing relations, the rest of it, opening up the embassies again. | ||
| Then the next month, it's more sanctions, secondary sanctions, more missiles, more intelligence, more military aid to Ukraine. | ||
| And then the next month, it's another peace agreement. | ||
| It's another summit. | ||
| So now we're on the other side of it again. | ||
| The United States is authorizing Ukraine to bomb Russia. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| And by the way, these are effectively American strikes on Russia. | ||
| These are American-provided weapon systems. | ||
| They require U.S. intelligence to launch them. | ||
| In many cases, it is Americans that are operating the systems. | ||
| And it's happening off the books, but make no mistake about it. | ||
| You've got French, British, German, American officials inside Ukraine coordinating with Ukraine, training up their soldiers, demonstrating how to use the systems, providing the coordinates, providing the intelligence. | ||
| This isn't effectively an American operation. | ||
| So Ukraine is bombing Russia with American missiles. | ||
| Americans are literally entering in the coordinates. | ||
| And now the United States is sanctioning Russia's oil companies. | ||
| And what that means is that eventually we're going to be enforcing these sanctions. | ||
| So if there are Russian tankers that are providing the energy, we might be put in a situation like NATO was a few weeks ago, where we have to actually interdict these ships. | ||
| Russia's operating a shadow fleet where they're bypassing the sanctions. | ||
| China is helping them do this. | ||
| In some ways, Europe is complicit in this. | ||
| Are we prepared to interdict Russian oil? | ||
| Are we prepared to put secondary sanctions on India, China, maybe European countries? | ||
| This is a major escalation. | ||
| And at the end of the day, it comes down to the fact that we are not willing to pull the plug on Ukraine. | ||
| Ukraine still thinks they're going to win this war, but they're not going to. | ||
| Ukraine and the Europeans still think they're going to win. | ||
| They still think they have some card to play here. | ||
| They still think they have leverage. | ||
| They're saying, we're not going to give up any territory. | ||
| We can't let Russia. | ||
| What do you mean, let Russia? | ||
| Russia's taking it from you. | ||
| There's no let. | ||
| You have no control over this situation. | ||
| Kiev does not. | ||
| Paris does not. | ||
| London does not. | ||
| Berlin does not. | ||
| And so this is the state of the negotiation. | ||
| It's very clear. | ||
| There is panic and alarm in the West because they know that Russia is unstoppable. | ||
| Ukraine is not going to be able to hold the line much longer. | ||
| They're losing this war badly. | ||
| They're running out of manpower. | ||
| Russia is preparing to mount a winter offensive. | ||
| And they haven't been making huge gains. | ||
| They've been struggling, for example, in Pokrovsk. | ||
| I think I'm saying that right, which is a major city they fought for for years. | ||
| They control half of it now. | ||
| They might at any moment break through. | ||
| And if they win one of these major cities, they might make a mad dash to the river. | ||
| Ukraine is preparing for this. | ||
| Europe is preparing for this. | ||
| They know that they can't stop Russia. | ||
| And so now, if you paid attention, their demands have changed. | ||
| And so under the Biden administration, the rhetoric was, and the demands were, we're going to take back all the territory that we've lost. | ||
| We're going to take back Crimea. | ||
| We're going to take back the Donbass. | ||
| We're going to take back all these other territories. | ||
| And we're going to send the Russians home. | ||
| That is out of the cards now. | ||
| That's off the table. | ||
| So now, now that Trump is in office, the message has changed. | ||
| And now they're saying they're raising the white flag and saying, just stop. | ||
| They just want Russia to stop. | ||
| That's why they're saying ceasefire. | ||
| They're saying freeze the line of contact. | ||
| And why are they saying that? | ||
| It's obvious. | ||
| They know Ukraine has no ability to counterattack. | ||
| There's going to be no more counteroffensives. | ||
| There's going to be no more counterattacks. | ||
| They can barely hold the line. | ||
| They barely have enough soldiers. | ||
| So why have the demands changed? | ||
| They used to be so bold saying, we're literally going to push the Russians back. | ||
| We're going to mount this counteroffensive, the spring counteroffensive, and we're going to shove them back over the border. | ||
| Now they're waving the white flag and saying, just stop. | ||
| Just stop the Russian advance, freeze the line of contact. | ||
| And the reason they're saying that is because they want to rearm. | ||
| They want to give Ukraine the opportunity to give their soldiers a reprieve. | ||
| They want to mobilize more men, train more men. | ||
| They want more equipment from the United States. | ||
| They want to rebuild their defensive line. | ||
| Russia has beaten back a series of defensive fortifications that were laid down over the past 11 years. | ||
| And so Ukraine and the West wants an opportunity to build all of that back up. | ||
| More manpower, train more soldiers, more equipment, more drones, missile defense systems, and they want to build another trench. | ||
| That's the goal. | ||
| And Russia knows that. | ||
| That's why Russia is not agreeing to a temporary ceasefire, because they know that if there's a temporary ceasefire and fighting resumes, it's just going to be more difficult for Russia. | ||
| And who knows, on a long enough timeline, maybe Ukraine pushes back. | ||
|
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So this is the state of the play. | |
| Now, the big concern among the Ukrainians, why will they not agree to give up this territory? | ||
| They want concessions actually from the United States. | ||
| If Ukraine cannot join NATO, and if they have to give up this territory, they're very concerned that Russia might restart the war. | ||
| Let's say we give up all this territory. | ||
| Ukraine is out of NATO. | ||
| Even if they're able to rebuild their defensive fortifications and retrain their armed forces, they're worried that Russia, without a NATO commitment, is going to start the war all over again to take more territory. | ||
| Both sides will get a reprieve. | ||
| Russia will get sanctions relief. | ||
| Russia will be able to rebuild their economy, get more credit. | ||
| They'll be able to rebuild a little bit on their side. | ||
| And then who knows? | ||
| In a long enough timeline, in years, maybe a decade, Russia will restart the advance and they'll be back to take more territory. | ||
| They'll have the element of surprise. | ||
| So what Ukraine wants are security guarantees. | ||
| Well, how do you finesse this? | ||
| That's sort of the whole point. | ||
| Russia wants Ukraine out of NATO. | ||
| If Ukraine agrees not to be a NATO, they're saying, well, we want a security commitment. | ||
| Well, that's what NATO is. | ||
| NATO is a security commitment. | ||
| So how do you give Ukraine a NATO-like security commitment without giving them NATO and effectively that form of a security commitment? | ||
| So there's all kinds of creative solutions that are being put out there. | ||
| Like, for example, that the United States will take a stake in Ukraine's minerals and energy resources. | ||
| Because if Americans are put in the way of the Russian military, that serves as an unofficial tripwire. | ||
| Russia cannot restart the war without killing Americans, which would bring America back in. | ||
| And that's how you get a form of a soft security guarantee. | ||
| You don't have to put American soldiers and bases and equipment. | ||
| You just put Americans there as almost like a human shield. | ||
| And Russia knows that if they invade, they're attacking an American economic partner. | ||
| Maybe Ukraine's in the European Union. | ||
| It's like a soft guarantee that doesn't involve a ton of American security personnel and equipment on the border. | ||
| That might be an effective tripwire. | ||
| But this is not good enough for the Ukrainians and the Europeans. | ||
| They're saying that's not going to do anything. | ||
| Russia might invade anyway. | ||
| So what Ukraine wants is they want a defensive pact. | ||
| And Europe wants America to bring in a defensive pact. | ||
| But here's what's funny about this. | ||
| America doesn't want to do this for Ukraine. | ||
| Europe doesn't even want to do this for Ukraine. | ||
| This is what Kiev wants. | ||
| Kiev wants security. | ||
| Europe wants to provide it, but they are not willing or able to provide it unless the United States provides it. | ||
| So Ukraine and Europe are saying, we need to do more to protect Ukraine, but Europe is not willing to do it unless we are there. | ||
| In other words, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom, they will not put their personnel in Ukraine unless we do. | ||
| And why is that? | ||
| Because they know that collectively, Ukraine, Germany, France, and the UK, they stand no chance against Russia. | ||
| So they're begging us, please defend Ukraine. | ||
| Please defend even our guys in Ukraine. | ||
| And they're trying to boss us around, telling us what to do with our own military to serve their interests. | ||
| And Trump is telling them, well, if you want to protect yourselves from Russia, why don't you build a military then? | ||
| Why don't you spend some of your GDP? | ||
| We're already maxing out our military. | ||
| We're running out of money. | ||
| We have a trillion dollar interest payment. | ||
| We're defending Taiwan. | ||
| We're defending Israel. | ||
| We're defending all of you. | ||
| Now you want us to commit to fighting Russia. | ||
| You won't spend 2% of your GDP on your own military. | ||
| You want us to provide the continental defense while you have free health care and free education. | ||
| Why don't you build a military and then you can have your own security guarantee for yourselves and for Ukraine? | ||
| Because that's ultimately what it's about. | ||
| The Europeans are alarmed by this because they know that if Ukraine falls, that makes them less secure. | ||
| If Russia's breaking through in Ukraine, they probably won't invade the rest of Europe, but they could. | ||
| And if they could, then you have to assume that they might. | ||
| And so Europe is wholly unprepared to defend themselves against Russian drone warfare against any of it. | ||
| They just don't have the personnel or the will or the money or the equipment or the productive capacity. | ||
| And that's why they need the United States. | ||
| That's why they're begging the United States, please put boots on the ground in harm's way in Ukraine to uphold any kind of peace agreement. | ||
| At the end of the day, that is the diplomacy. | ||
| It's a three or four-way diplomacy between Russia, the European Union and Ukraine and the United States. | ||
| And as long as the United States is unwilling to commit to security guarantees, as long as Europe and Ukraine are unwilling to give up territory unless America gives security guarantees, and as long as those security guarantees go against Russia's ambitions in the war, then the war will go on. | ||
| And it will go on. | ||
| It will be decided on the battlefield. | ||
| Russia will keep advancing. | ||
| Gradually, the United States might escalate and make it more painful for Russia. | ||
| Russia's wartime economy might be slowing down. | ||
| The sanctions might damage them. | ||
| If Ukraine is launching missiles inside Russia, that might create problems also. | ||
| But Russia, they can mobilize more too. | ||
| They can resume their energy in electrical warfare against Ukraine. | ||
| They can bombard Ukraine harder. | ||
| There's more that they can do too. | ||
| And so at the end of the day, the war will keep going on until one side is going to be exhausted, until it's clear that Russia has made a breakthrough and they can't be stopped in Ukraine. | ||
| And at that point, they'll be able to impose a peace. | ||
| Or on the other side, maybe Russia will find it very painful to continue the war and then they will have to back down from some of their maximalist demands. | ||
| But that's where the war sits right now. | ||
| Either way, when you look at it across the board, it's clear that Trump does not have the magic wand that he said that he did. | ||
| And there's something interesting about that. | ||
| Trump was elected on the premise that all these wars were the result of Biden and the Democrats and these neocon war mongers, and yet he finds himself in all of them. | ||
| Regime change in Venezuela. | ||
| We're doing more sanctions on Russia than Biden. | ||
| We're doing missile strikes on Russia that were authorized under Biden. | ||
| The peace in Gaza is falling apart. | ||
| We already bombed Iran. | ||
| In many ways, World War III is inevitable unless you get an administration that is truly America first, that is actually willing to give up, actually, on some of the most, you could say, the biggest and broadest claims of American empire. | ||
| Maybe it's time to give up Ukraine. | ||
| Maybe it's time actually to give up on some of these things. | ||
| Maybe it's time to recognize that some of these commitments are not actually doing anything for America. | ||
| We have overcommitted. | ||
| And let's just be honest with ourselves. | ||
| People talk about projecting strength. | ||
| What strength? | ||
| Look at our supply chains. | ||
| Look at our insolvency crisis. | ||
| Look at our own cities. | ||
| We have a very serious problem, which is that people are talking about we need to project strength abroad. | ||
| First of all, we're overcommitted. | ||
| That's to begin with. | ||
| We're committed to defending Taiwan against China, Europe from Russia, Israel from the entire Middle East. | ||
| We're trying to overturn all of the governments in Central and South America. | ||
| And we're doing it from a very weak position. | ||
| The commitments are increasing, but our ability to finance them is decreasing. | ||
| The supply chains that create the productive capacity for our wealth, for our power projection, is in jeopardy. | ||
| China is putting restrictions on rare earths. | ||
| We have this enormous appetite for electricity, for silicon wafers, for chips. | ||
| The cities are exploding with political violence, racial violence. | ||
| We have a $1 trillion interest payment every year. | ||
| We have a $30 trillion debt. | ||
| We have inflation. | ||
| So if there's going to be a way out of this, we are going to actually have to do a managed retreat. | ||
| And you can call it whatever you want. | ||
| You can call it something else. | ||
| But if we don't do something like that, there's going to be a collapse. | ||
| And by that, I don't mean it's going to be like a post-apocalyptic wasteland, although it might be, but I'm saying that something has got to give here. | ||
| We actually can't defend Taiwan, Ukraine, and Israel simultaneously while we're at war with Venezuela, while there's major civil instability in the cities, while our supply chains are in jeopardy. | ||
| China's doing all the rare earths processing. | ||
| Taiwan makes all the advanced semiconductors and chips. | ||
| We can't pay for anything. | ||
| We have inflation. | ||
| We have these economic problems. | ||
| People talk about projecting power. | ||
| There's going to be no more power if we don't get our own house in order. | ||
| And if all of our commitments to every country, if those commitments are tested, the whole thing is going to collapse like a house of cards. | ||
| Because right now, our ability to defend these other countries is theoretical. | ||
| Could we win a war with China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, and Venezuela simultaneously? | ||
| That's all theoretical. | ||
| We could maybe defend Taiwan from China. | ||
| We could maybe defend Ukraine from Russia and so on. | ||
| Can we do them all simultaneously for a prolonged period of time? | ||
| Probably not. | ||
| If that were tested, if those commitments were put to the test, probably you'd find out very quickly that we could not do those things. | ||
| And we would be undermined from within. | ||
| So this is a real problem. | ||
| And I think that Trump is making it worse because Trump is not who he said he was. | ||
| These commitments that he made, we're going to end all the wars, no new wars, et cetera, wasn't true. | ||
| America first, bring in people that are against the deep state never happened. | ||
| So we're in a lot of trouble here. | ||
| This does not feel like a good situation. | ||
| And I would urge a lot of people that are delusional about this, people that are, you know, these faggots online that are talking about, don't chimp out. | ||
| First of all, you're fucking 40 years old. | ||
| That's not funny. | ||
| People say we shouldn't chimp. | ||
| Don't chimp out on Trump. | ||
| Trust the plan. | ||
| First of all, that's not funny. | ||
| Those are stale memes. | ||
| You're 37 years old. | ||
| You're a faggot. | ||
| You know, for people that are online, you know what I'm talking about. | ||
| People that are on Twitter, it's not about chimping out or trusting the plan. | ||
| We have to stop being delusional and in denial. | ||
| We are headed towards serious problems. | ||
| Anybody that has their finger on the pulse can see this. | ||
| There's an ominous, foreboding, dreadful feeling that we are headed towards a seismic inflection point. | ||
| We're talking 1917, 1945, 1989, all rolled into one. | ||
| And I don't think that's an exaggeration. | ||
| It's this multipolar shift. | ||
| It's this monetary system which is coming down. | ||
| The diversity problem and all the associated political problems in the U.S. and Europe. | ||
| We are undergoing a convulsion of everything at once, a revolution, truly, in every domain. | ||
| And what we need now is better leadership, more tactful, more strategic, thinking longer term. | ||
| This president does not think strategically, thinks tactically. | ||
| And that's why it's schizophrenic. | ||
| That's why one week rolling out the red carpet. | ||
| The next week we're saying we're going to win the war against Russia. | ||
| One week he's saying, I don't know what the fuck they're doing. | ||
| And then the next week he's in Israel saying, pardon Netanyahu. | ||
| He's really tough. | ||
| Like, where's the consistency? | ||
| Is there a strategy here? | ||
| Do you think deeply about these problems? | ||
| Does anybody, are you just on the phone all day? | ||
| Trump is on the phone all day like a fucking girl, kicking his feet on his bed. | ||
| I'm the best. | ||
| I'm on top. | ||
| I'm the man. | ||
| He's 100 years old. | ||
| He's losing his mind. | ||
| The people in his government are fucking incompetent. | ||
| Brooke Rollins, Christy Noam, Pete Hagsett, these people are idiots. | ||
| These people are idiots. | ||
| Trump is out to lunch. | ||
| He's surrounded by idiots. | ||
| Like, it's not good. | ||
| Seriously, mark my words. | ||
| This is not going to end well. | ||
| And I have not always talked like this, but this has been a crescendo for 10 years. | ||
| It started in 2015. | ||
| Arguably, it started before then, and it has been a slow crescendo. | ||
| And you look around at all these problems. | ||
| You're getting worse and not better. | ||
| The political violence, the wars that are unraveling all over the world, the economic problems, all these things are getting worse and not better. | ||
| They always have been. | ||
| And now they're coming to a head all at once. | ||
| So not to be a doomsayer, but we're in a lot of trouble here. | ||
| So anyway, so that's that. | ||
| We're going to move on. | ||
| We're going to take a look at our super chats. | ||
| We'll see what you guys have to say. | ||
| I'll get set up here. | ||
| We'll take a look. | ||
| But it's not good. | ||
| And what Trump should do, in my opinion, we need someone that's truly America first. | ||
| We need someone to really take control and use this opportunity to go after the left, take control of the cities, deport the illegals, put this economy on a wartime footing, okay? | ||
| Subsidies, tariffs, get people working in factories. | ||
| This like chip ecosystem, the TSMC project in Arizona, redouble your efforts on that. | ||
| Scale it back in Ukraine. | ||
| Scale it back in the Middle East. | ||
| Like we have to kind of hunker down. | ||
| We have to fortify the center if we can project power. | ||
| But there's, it doesn't seem to be a lot of seriousness. | ||
| There's not, there doesn't seem to be a whole of government totalizing approach that's comprehensive. | ||
| It seems like we're kind of fucking around with all these different things, short-term thinking on all of them. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So, all right, but anyway, let's take a look. | |
| We'll take a look at our super chats. | ||
| Reasonably guy sent $20. | ||
| You're so blue pilled on the state of technology. | ||
| It's a joke. | ||
| I further elaborate on this in the email I sent you, but you refuse to read it. | ||
| Do not show or read the email out loud on stream. | ||
| Trust me. | ||
| I'll get right on that. | ||
| We'll take a look. | ||
| Shelf sent $25. | ||
| Spooky Phasma season cometh. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| And AF Inevitable. | ||
| Phasmophobia. | ||
| Should we do another Phasmophobia stream? | ||
| You guys, people always ask for the gaming streams and then you never watch them. | ||
| People are always asking me, do a gaming stream, and then, you know, nobody watches it. | ||
| So if I do a Phasmophobia stream, will you watch it? | ||
| I did a Phasmophobia stream with Keith Woods last year and he didn't talk. | ||
| In retrospect, it was a terrible idea because bro doesn't talk. | ||
| We're doing a we're playing a Halloween game, which is as boring as possible. | ||
| The game is very boring. | ||
| And I'm with Keith, who doesn't talk. | ||
| So it's like a boring game with a guy that doesn't talk. | ||
| So I was doing all the heavy lifting there. | ||
| Andy doesn't know how to play. | ||
| So I don't know. | ||
| Maybe we'll do it again this year. | ||
| We'll see. | ||
| Problem solve sent $20. | ||
| Have you ever been to Europe? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Up the RA sent $20. | ||
| And it's like that nigga. | ||
| The army is nothing but hard-ass white niggas made. | ||
| Tucker Carlson, do you even thug Shaker Max? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Porker sent $20. | ||
| Billow. | ||
| Romantic face emoji. | ||
| Oh, is that the real poop fart porker? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Are you back? | |
| Bro, Hyper General 1488 sent $50. | ||
| You know, the room smelled like complete unfettered ass for Diwali. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| Well, I would imagine they clean up for the White House, but who knows? | ||
| Who knows what it smells like there? | ||
| Smells like Harry Sisson in Times Square, right? | ||
| Matthew P. sent $25. | ||
| This is repackaged. | ||
| Formulaic. | ||
| Just add heat. | ||
| That's how we know their next move every time. | ||
| Alex Jones. | ||
| So true. | ||
| So true. | ||
| Matthew P. sent $25. | ||
| Matt Walsh is never leaving Daily Wire. | ||
| He loves being humiliated, which Shapiro provides him. | ||
| Lots of white guys are like this. | ||
| And the only race that gets off to women talking shit to them is the white race. | ||
| I don't think it's that with him. | ||
| I don't know what it is because he won't ever address it, which is kind of pathetic. | ||
| He will not address the fact that he works for Ben Shapiro and Shapiro's Israel first. | ||
| And there's something deeply sick about that. | ||
| You know, like we're in the middle of this moment where everybody's questioning the Israel lobby. | ||
| Shapiro is on the wrong side of it by far. | ||
| And Matt Walsh has completely recused himself. | ||
| Like he's deliberately ignoring it. | ||
| The whole conversation. | ||
| And that's really fucked up. | ||
| So I don't know what else to say about it anymore other than he like he has to do better and he can't know peace. | ||
| And I don't mean to attack him or anything like that, like violently or anything. | ||
| But in his comment section, on his Twitter, at his events, it's like, yeah, we can't clap for you talking shit about immigrants until you talk about the fact that we have a hostile occupation. | ||
| Our country is occupied in two ways. | ||
| Don't you understand? | ||
| We are being occupied by immigrants. | ||
| We're also occupied at the top by the Jews. | ||
| You can't talk about one and not the other because in principle, they are the same thing. | ||
| What is the problem with immigrants? | ||
| It's not just that they lower the quality of life. | ||
| It's that they're taking away our sovereignty. | ||
| If they have citizenship, if they have power in our country because they have land and presence and buying power and voting power, they're taking resources. | ||
| They're depriving us of our sovereignty. | ||
| They're butting in. | ||
| And that's also happening at the very top from a political point of view, which is maybe more nefarious. | ||
| Because the Jews are, they're buying influence. | ||
| They're subverting our government. | ||
| They're taking up space in the universities, teaching our elite human capital that are at the selective schools. | ||
| And they control some of the critical supply chains. | ||
| It's a sovereignty issue. | ||
| And we just basically need to create new categories. | ||
| I was thinking about this the other day. | ||
| I think it would be a reasonable compromise to say, because there are valid arguments about the economic benefits of immigration. | ||
| There are some arguments to be made. | ||
| And before everybody gets crazy, let me be clear about what those are. | ||
| If there are legitimate, if there's a legitimate need for certain kinds of labor, maybe you bring in these foreigners to be Uber drivers. | ||
| I'm okay with that. | ||
| Maybe you bring in these foreigners to do the most difficult jobs or to do highly specialized jobs that we legitimately have an opening for. | ||
| You could create a labor policy that is America first, that involves temporary foreign labor. | ||
| And let's be very clear about what that means. | ||
| It means that they come in on a temporary basis that is strictly enforced. | ||
| And they are here in a limited way, in a limited capacity to address a short-term need. | ||
| And in the meantime, we actually train up their American replacements. | ||
| So let's say, for example, there's a certain kind of software engineer that we need that we don't have. | ||
| On a short-term basis, maybe we bring in some Indians and say, you're here for two years, and these are the strict criteria. | ||
| And then the day the visa expires, you go home, like we're knocking on your door. | ||
| And if you're there, we're rounding you up and kicking you out. | ||
| And in the meantime, we're going to give scholarships to as many Americans to take your job when you go. | ||
| Like that's not unheard of. | ||
| This has been done throughout history. | ||
| In England, they brought in foreign labor to train them up in the business of making clothes, in the business of weaving cotton. | ||
| This was done in England. | ||
| They brought the best people that were already doing it on the continent, and then they kicked them out. | ||
| They built up a domestic industry and then they kicked those people out. | ||
| This has been done throughout history. | ||
| And I don't think that could be a compromise. | ||
| That's not ideal, but that could be a compromise. | ||
| But that is not what we have. | ||
| What we have is a system where an unlimited amount of people are coming here completely abusing. | ||
| The system's not even being abused. | ||
| It's a scam. | ||
| They're being brought in not because there's a need, but because it's cheaper. | ||
| They're not being brought in because there's not enough Americans. | ||
| It's like, no, they're bringing these people instead of Americans because they're like slaves. | ||
| And people might say, well, they're a slave class. | ||
| Okay, but then they have kids and they vote. | ||
| Then they get a green card and they have kids and their kids are citizens and then they become the governor of Ohio and they vote. | ||
| And then they start to say, America's for everybody and it's not for you. | ||
| And it's like, hey, aren't you a fucking guest worker? | ||
| Aren't you like migrant labor? | ||
| Aren't you a transient working class, slave labor class? | ||
| That's really the big problem. | ||
| That's the bigger problem. | ||
| And the same, by the way, goes for the Jews. | ||
| If you want to have Jewish people in certain positions, I don't think anybody necessarily would have a problem with that. | ||
| But the problem is they're lobbying on behalf of Israel. | ||
| The problem is they're wearing their IDF uniform. | ||
| The problem is they start to say America's for everybody. | ||
| America's not Christian anymore. | ||
| And we basically need to create a new category that says, look, we can have Jews and Indians and immigrants in America, but we can never get it confused that they have the same latitude as the rest of the Americans. | ||
| The second that a Jewish person starts to say, We need to go and fight and die for Israel. | ||
| You forfeited your citizenship, actually. | ||
| The second that you start to abuse your citizenship and take advantage of the system to buy out our political system so that we go to war for Israel, you've kind of forfeited your rights here. | ||
| You forfeited your rights to participate in the political system. | ||
| Maybe you forfeited your citizenship itself. | ||
| And it's difficult. | ||
| How do we create that category? | ||
| But a new category needs to be created because it can't be like you either you're here and you have all the rights and you get it's a free for all. | ||
| You do whatever you want or you're outside. | ||
| There needs to be something in the middle. | ||
| There seems to be a new category. | ||
| So. | ||
| Really, you sent $20. | ||
| Jackson Hinkle should do all us a favor and join Huthies as a suicide bomber. | ||
| Just kidding. | ||
| Maybe not. | ||
| Well, I don't think you should be a suicide bomber, but this guy has never found an unsucked third world cock that he has not fallen in love with Burkina Faso. | ||
| Really? | ||
| Jackson Hinkle's in Yemen. | ||
| He's in Burkina Faso. | ||
| He says, Molly and Niger next. | ||
| And he's there at the foot of a giant statue of some warlord black. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They're so awesome. | |
| Oh, my gosh. | ||
| General General whatever. | ||
| General Watermelon has won the red the communist revolution of Burkina Faso. | ||
| Oh, my goodness. | ||
| I don't know how this guy. | ||
| Well, you know what it is. | ||
| He doesn't have an American audience. | ||
| His audience is all brown and black people. | ||
| His audience is literally made up of towel heads, blacks. | ||
| Mixed mystery meat, mixed up communists like that's his audience. | ||
| No white people, no white people, no white men. | ||
| That's disgusting. | ||
| Not a Nick Blazer sent $30. | ||
| Why does everyone forget about Gen X when talking about generations? | ||
| We are 45 to 60 now. | ||
| Most of my X generation are struggling with bills, kids, mortgages, jobs, health care. | ||
| So much of society today is us versus them. | ||
| Why are we so divided and not just focused on AF for all of us? | ||
| Because powerful people profit from division. | ||
| Okay, you're an idiot. | ||
| Whenever somebody says something like, the powerful profit from division, like, that's how you know you're talking. | ||
| You might as well just get a tattoo that says, idiot, on your forehead. | ||
| Why are we divided? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Is it because of powerful? | |
| No, it's because people are, like, the idea that billionaires made whites and blacks hate each other, like, billionaires made men and women. | ||
| Like, we're always set in opposition against each other because of nature. | ||
| That's a natural, the natural state of human affairs is conflict. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So, what about Gen X? | |
| Gen X is poor, too. | ||
| Is the billionaires dividing Gen X? | ||
| Like, you're an idiot, dude. | ||
| You're a fucking idiot. | ||
| No offense. | ||
| Thomas Cruz sent $90. | ||
| Went to confession after being away from the church the last 15 plus years as an atheist. | ||
| Took me the last few months to work up the nerve to do it. | ||
| Just a ton of shame and embarrassment from living to generate. | ||
| Confession took an hour and a half. | ||
| I was sweating like crazy. | ||
| Went to this past Sunday mass and got to accept the Eucharist. | ||
| Really felt good. | ||
| Man, I appreciate you. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| Well, God bless you, man. | ||
| I love to hear that hour and a half confession. | ||
| That is intense. | ||
| You must have really had every single one. | ||
| I did confession after a very long time, some years ago. | ||
| And I think 2020, maybe it was 2021. | ||
| I'm not sure exactly, but it was three or four years ago. | ||
| And mine wasn't that long. | ||
| I was like, I was kind of general about it. | ||
| It was a good confession, but how do you do it for 90 minutes? | ||
| 90 minutes? | ||
| That's a lot. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I was just kind of like, okay, did this, this, this, this, this. | |
| And the guy was like, okay. | ||
| That's pretty intense. | ||
| I don't know how you do it for 90. | ||
| You must have had a pretty degenerate. | ||
| You must be right about that. | ||
| Pretty degenerate life. | ||
| But good for you, man. | ||
| It's a difficult step, but I'm sure you feel a lot better. | ||
| So God bless. | ||
| I love to hear it. | ||
| Super base admin sent $20. | ||
| Do you know who James English is? | ||
| He's pretty big in the fitness Instagram space and seems to be an uncovered groiper. | ||
| One of his comments on a viral Instagram post of 250k likes has 16k likes calling for you to be galactic emperor. | ||
| I saw that. | ||
| That was awesome, dude. | ||
| That was awesome. | ||
| That's awesome. | ||
| or they're in government or they're billionaires so that was awesome huge endorsement the final endorsement yeah that was great big shout out to him seems like an awesome guy real challenge Dude, the Chad Incel thing. | ||
| Very real. | ||
| Connor MC Groi percent $20. | ||
| How does America become a multicontinental empire while also preserving its ethnic homogeneity? | ||
| If we become a multi-continental empire, it's going to be diverse. | ||
| It's just that we're not going to let people move around like that. | ||
| We'll have America will be the capital. | ||
| The Americans will have the most rights. | ||
| And then everybody else will have less rights. | ||
| Fewer rights. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's how. | |
| KC said $100. | ||
| Appreciate the work you're doing. | ||
| Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
| I appreciate it. | ||
| Matt Walsh Groi percent $20. | ||
| Got my white shirt last week and been wearing it at my job in front of all the Jews and digs. | ||
| Don't wear it to work. | ||
| Don't wear it to work. | ||
| If you want to keep your job, you should probably not wear it to work. | ||
| In my humble opinion. | ||
| Can you do a hack five in Fargo, North Dakota? | ||
| So I don't have to travel away from my city, thanks. | ||
| RB 8035 sent $20. | ||
| When Trump got shot, the Red was calling for arrests for people on the left who called him a Nazi, claiming it's inciting violence without actual death threats. | ||
| The same could easily be done to you and others with far-right critiques. | ||
| Where do we draw the line? | ||
| How do you determine inciting violence when it's not blatant? | ||
| That's idiotic. | ||
| Dante sent $25. | ||
| What are your thoughts on the DHS Twitter memes? | ||
| That's just like a look. | ||
| Some of these questions are so low IQ, I could answer them, but it's really just like a midwit conversation. | ||
| It's like some cocksucker from Vice or not Vice. | ||
| What was the other one? | ||
| Vox. | ||
| It's like some cocksucking liberal from Vox says, so where exactly do we draw the line? | ||
| So where exactly you get one of those, you get like an explainer video from now this, and you get some stupid fucking bitch who makes a video that says, so where exactly do we draw the line when calls to violence aren't exactly explicit? | ||
| And it's like, hey, fuckface, it's really not that difficult. | ||
| You would just have to think about it for about five seconds. | ||
| And people think it's really deep and interesting and provocative. | ||
| It's not, I promise you, it's not that complicated. | ||
| Okay, dummy. | ||
| Where exactly do we draw the line? | ||
| Isn't that a slippery slope? | ||
| Shouldn't you be killed for being stupid? | ||
| Shouldn't you like be in a mine somewhere? | ||
| Shouldn't you have a pickaxe and be in a minecart in a mine shaft somewhere, toiling away for copper or coal or something? | ||
| Dante sent $25. | ||
| What are your thoughts on the DHS Twitter memes? | ||
| It's radicalizing the leftists in my hometown. | ||
| I can't help but imagine a Jorge Floyd event with ICE. | ||
| I think that's inevitable. | ||
| I hate to say that, but there was another attack on ICE. | ||
| Another vehicle attack. | ||
| Where was it again? | ||
| Happened just the other day. | ||
| My hair is a disaster. | ||
| There was another vehicle attack. | ||
| I think it's inevitable that someone's going to get shot or ran over or something. | ||
| It's a matter of time. | ||
| Benjamin sent $100. | ||
| Hey, I love you. | ||
| Hey, thanks. | ||
| Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm going to be able to do that. | |
| You were just sent $40. | ||
| We love you, Nick. | ||
| Don't listen to all these dude that are telling you to work out and get married. | ||
| Mentally, you are a philosophical prodigy, which means physically, you are allowed to be a piece of shit. | ||
| Tawawa. | ||
| God bless you, Nick. | ||
| Christ is king. | ||
| Okay, fuck off. | ||
| Don't need that. | ||
| Hooper Wizard sent $20. | ||
| There's been lots of talk on the show, especially recently, about trying to get Groi Perin to power eventually. | ||
| In the meantime, though, are there any people off the top of your head that you think would be good in a position of power? | ||
| Love the show from Michigan. | ||
| Chicago has always been special to us over here. | ||
| It's a great city. | ||
| Dumbest question ever. | ||
| I am Gosling Type Beat sent $25. | ||
| I have been watching you for a few months. | ||
| I have increasingly become a fan, which is funny considering I'm related to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, albeit a little removed. | ||
| Praying for you and your family. | ||
| Viva Christa Ray. | ||
| Okay, thank you. | ||
| Unbearable Groipp sent $20. | ||
| Greetings, Nick. | ||
| I'm a representative of the Goyai Corporation. | ||
| Anne Clank is interested in having you play her game Kanye's Dynamine3D on a pump fun livestream from her attic studio and Goyai HQ. | ||
| You can preview it at Goya.net. | ||
| We are offering 6 million Goyai tokens as a general and big Japan sent $50. | ||
| Did you hear Tucker call Bitcoin a creation of the CIA and not to buy it? | ||
| What's your thoughts on crypto overall? | ||
| I did see that. | ||
| Thoughts on crypto? | ||
| I'm neutral on it. | ||
| It's a technology. | ||
| It has a lot of potential to benefit the system. | ||
| You might have a central bank digital currency. | ||
| You might have a private digital currency. | ||
| But it also has benefits if you have a privacy coin like Monero. | ||
| Bitcoin arguably is a store of value, is a good asset. | ||
| So I don't really have a lot to say about it, to be honest. | ||
| JS sent $20. | ||
| She had Wang in her dating profile. | ||
| Told me no simping. | ||
| Man crossing arms emoji. | ||
| Now we're in the best talking phase, just sending each other racist agreels. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay, die. | |
| Freedom of Authority sent $50. | ||
| Jay Dyer has been asking for another summary of the AF movement plan and what the outcomes are of that. | ||
| He's also skeptical of whether or not it'll end up preventing any further corruption of the Vatican since there's evidence for that happening based on what is told. | ||
| Would you be a nice guy and address those concerns? | ||
| Pretty please? | ||
| No, no. | ||
| Jay Dyer's an asshole. | ||
| He's in no position to ask for anything. | ||
| Get an audience. | ||
| Then he could ask for, do anything productive. | ||
| And by the way, Jay Dyer, let's just be honest. | ||
| Jay Dyer would not talk about the Jews in Israel for years, for years. | ||
| And now that it's popular, now he wants to talk a little bit about it. | ||
| But the entire time, constantly attacking the Catholics, constantly attacking the Catholic Church. | ||
| So I think he's a coward. | ||
| He is a coward who would not talk about the Jews in Israel because it benefited his career. | ||
| And he has basically admitted to that in private for many years, telling people, hey, well, I got to pay the bills. | ||
| Hey, well, I want to keep my channel. | ||
| This guy is a straight-up coward. | ||
| Ask him about it. | ||
| For years, he would never talk about Jews in Israel because he knows that's actually controversial. | ||
| But he never pulled his punches on Catholics. | ||
| Always attacking his fellow Christians, always attacking Catholics because that's easy. | ||
| And you're not, that just speaks to, yeah, the Vatican is all powerful. | ||
| That's why you're able to talk about Catholics with impunity, right? | ||
| And not Jews. | ||
| Now he wants a piece of me. | ||
| For years, he wanted nothing to do with me. | ||
| Want nothing to do with that conversation. | ||
| Now he wants a piece of me. | ||
| Now he wants a shoehorn in. | ||
| Oh, it's the Jews and the Vatican. | ||
| Fuck off with that. | ||
| If you're not, if you're about that, fuck off. | ||
| Honestly, not wasting my time with that. | ||
| Alan sent $50. | ||
| When will there be another FPAC? | ||
| Hey, Nick, have you ever thought about writing down a public declaration that outlines the beliefs, intentions, and goals of the movement? | ||
| You know, Fresh Prince of Zamuna sent $20. | ||
| All this time you were shitting on CanDask just to gatekeep your triple chocolate cheeks. | ||
| This whole bro Ibercuck sent $20. | ||
| Does PBD hold his guests a gun point when he makes them join the next and do a net? | ||
| No, they're just very pushy about it. | ||
| But I mean, it's fine. | ||
| I mean, I like it. | ||
| It's just like a super chat thing. | ||
| But yeah, they're really, they really want you on Manect. | ||
| I was like, whatever. | ||
| True Facasel sent $25. | ||
| Make a little honey off of it. | ||
| Whatever happened there. | ||
| Mohamed and I don't know what that is. | ||
| I made Cookie sent $20. | ||
| Nick, the great recent agenda 2033 are clearly a globalist coup to erase national identity and enslave the United States. | ||
| What are we doing? | ||
| Cameron sent $55. | ||
| Been trying to tell my 60-plus-year-old long Republican mother about Israel's influence on our politics and how much control they have on our media, but she thinks I'm crazy. | ||
| In your opinion, is there any chance I could end up actually getting through to her? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| Mason Gostomsky sent $50. | ||
| I literally dumbassed him. | ||
| Do you think it's safe to say that I may see an influx of human feces up here? | ||
| Brody Hall sent $30. | ||
| Hey, Nick, hope you're having a good week. | ||
| Did you see Rand Paul saying there's literally no fentanyl being made in Venezuela? | ||
| Fucking retard. | ||
| Also, watch us getting closer with India. | ||
| H-1Bs are turning North Texas into India 2.0. | ||
| That's true. | ||
| The idea that Venezuela is a huge hub for drugs, it just isn't true. | ||
| Okay, that's just not what they say about the drug trafficking originating in Venezuela. | ||
| There's some drug smuggling in Venezuela, but it's not on the order. | ||
| It's not on the same level as some of these other countries in Central and South America. | ||
| He's right about that. | ||
| It just isn't true. | ||
| Bibi Minyah, who sent $22, newer listener, first time super chatter. | ||
| For HS slash college guys without family connections, consider a customer-facing job at a high-end country club. | ||
| Doing this in college, I got contacts and built relationships with multimillionaires and industry leaders, one of which hired me into a hiring power sales role, WA Fortune 500. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, if you're dumb, I guess. | |
| Try to get into a good college. | ||
| Instead of carrying bags for rich people, try to get into a good college and become a rich person. | ||
| I did the caddy thing for one day. | ||
| I went to the training for the caddies, and the caddies were the biggest faggots ever. | ||
| I went to the LaGrange Country Club when I was in high school, and I went out to be a caddy. | ||
| And the guy that ran the caddy program was a real asshole. | ||
| He's one of these real, he's one of these gruff old guys, had his real chip on his shoulder. | ||
| You know, he thought he was a real no-nonsense guy. | ||
| We did the training. | ||
| I did the training for one day. | ||
| I got the t-shirt. | ||
| I got the job, whatever. | ||
| And I rode my bike there. | ||
| I got there late, as always. | ||
| I wasn't able to get out. | ||
| And all the caddies were such faggots. | ||
| You know, I'm an A caddy. | ||
| I'm a B caddy. | ||
| I'm the top caddy at the country club. | ||
| I'm a big shot. | ||
| And I went there one day. | ||
| I didn't get out. | ||
| And I said, you know what? | ||
| Screw this. | ||
| I'm not carrying bags. | ||
| I'm not carrying bags for rich people. | ||
| Please, can I get a tip, sir? | ||
| Please, can I get some? | ||
| Can I get a $100 tip? | ||
| Can I polish your balls? | ||
| Maybe that's just me. | ||
| Maybe I have a problem with authority. | ||
| Maybe I have personal problems. | ||
| But I said, that's not for me. | ||
| And I remember a really good friend of mine in high school, he got the big scholarship that the Caddy program gave out. | ||
| If you were the best ball washer, if you were the best ball washer at the Caddy Shack, you got the Chick Evan scholarship and you got a full ride. | ||
| And he won it because he was the biggest shit-eating brown-noser in the entire school. | ||
| And he was for the Caddys also, for the country club. | ||
| And I just thought that was the lowest, most pathetic thing. | ||
| And don't get me wrong. | ||
| I mean, it's probably a good job. | ||
| Like, it's fine. | ||
| You carry the bags, you get some sun, you get to work a little bit. | ||
| But me, maybe I just have a problem with authority. | ||
| I had this. | ||
| I went there one day. | ||
| I didn't get out. | ||
| And I said, you know what, man, fuck this. | ||
| I'm not carrying bags for rich people. | ||
| I'll do any other job, but I'm not, I'm not going to do a job where I have to, I have to suck up to the rich as some poor ethnic for a tip. | ||
| You know what I mean? | ||
| Like, there's, I would rather work at McDonald's. | ||
| I'd rather clean toilets than do that. | ||
| Maybe not clean toilets, but you know, I'd rather do anything than that. | ||
| So that was just, but that's me because I have problems like that. | ||
| I've told the story before on my show, but maybe that runs in my family. | ||
| We're like that. | ||
| So I did the caddy thing one day and I just said, nope. | ||
| No, no, thank you. | ||
| I just had a problem with that whole dynamic because you were, you would go out with these rich assholes from LaGrange and Western Springs and Hinsdale and all these affluent whitebread types. | ||
| And you'd literally be carrying their bags. | ||
| Hey, sir. | ||
| So you're going to want to use an eight-iron on this hole. | ||
| And if you do a really good job kissing their ass, hey, son, here's a nice tip. | ||
| I was like, not for me. | ||
| I don't think so. | ||
| So I worked at UPS. | ||
| I worked at UPS. | ||
| I worked in a warehouse for my dad doing filling orders in a warehouse with industrial parts. | ||
| That's what I did. | ||
| But yeah, I mean, you're probably right. | ||
| If you kiss enough ass, you could probably get a good sales job or whatever. | ||
| But I'm telling people to get into a highly selective school, get a law degree, get involved in politics, do something entrepreneurial, get involved in business. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, you could be a caddy, I guess, if you can, if you could do that. | ||
| But I wasn't into that. | ||
| Not my SSRIkos are sent $20. | ||
| Would you go to A. Dean Ross Streamer Awards event in LA or Vegas if nominated? | ||
| 07. | ||
| Oh, yeah, if I was nominated, sure. | ||
| Insurgent DS sent $100. | ||
| Morning routine replay gang. | ||
| I subscribed in hopes of exclusive GC audio files and you haven't disappointed. | ||
| Oh, I'm glad to hear that. | ||
| Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
| Glad to hear it. | ||
| Jason Chambers sent $20. | ||
| Hey, Nick, got my wife shirt today. | ||
| Love it. | ||
| You are slash were a huge part of me developing my relationship with God. | ||
| Keep up the good work, brother. | ||
| Generational run. | ||
| Praying for me. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
| I appreciate it. | ||
| Glad to hear it. | ||
| I just got my blue AF hat and wanted to show it off, so I wore it this past weekend all three days at F1 in Austin. | ||
| There was a total attendance of at least 430,000 people. | ||
| Some chick came up to me and said she loved my hat. | ||
| Lol. | ||
| America first is inevitable. | ||
| God bless. | ||
| Let's go. | ||
| Great. | ||
| Eleguamo sent $21. | ||
| I see you got a few mentions on Rogan the other day with Andrew Schultz. | ||
| Fuck that guy, but the generational run continues. | ||
| Flexed bicep emoji. | ||
| Well, I don't know. | ||
| I don't know that much about Andrew Schulz. | ||
| I would talk to him. | ||
| RBA 1035 sent $20. | ||
| I don't think anyone else pisses me off more than Ilhan Omar and Medi Hassan. | ||
| If you're so pro-Islam, pro-Muslim, why don't you go live in an Islamic country? | ||
| How about you stop bitching about what's wrong with our country and go back and fix yours? | ||
| Ilhan found one of the pirates from Captain Phillips, making him run for mayor. | ||
| Totally agree. | ||
| Dante sent $25. | ||
| Israel can kill a total of 100,000 Palestinians in two years. | ||
| At this rate, 6 million Palestinians will be dead by 2030. | ||
| Very good. | ||
| Giant Dune sent $20. | ||
| Dear Nick, I'm an Akadu, but you still ain't calling. | ||
| I left my cell, my Twitter, and my YouTube at the bottom. | ||
| I sent two minutes back in autumn. | ||
| You must not have got them. | ||
| There probably was a problem with a Wi-Fi or something. | ||
| George sent $30. | ||
| What's the best way to combat feminism that taken over the Republican Party? | ||
| Feminism is DEI and another name. | ||
| It's not America first. | ||
| It's female first. | ||
| A truly cancerous ideology. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Holy hot. | |
| I told Roy for sent $60. | ||
| On one hand, October 7th led to the Great Noticing, but it also went to waste strategically with the fall of Syria, neutralization of Hezbollah, and further isolation of Iran. | ||
| October 8th was the day for all of them to double down and choke Tel Aviv. | ||
| Opportunity lost. | ||
| Now the Middle East is cooked. | ||
| Iran is our last hope. | ||
| Where do you see things going? | ||
| Well, I already talked about it. | ||
| You know, it did go to waste strategically, but I don't know. | ||
| The way you're saying it is all wrong, but I think it's inevitable the Middle East is going to fall because they can't unify. | ||
| They have no balls. | ||
| Realistically, they lost the moment that Israel got the bomb. | ||
| Israel has the jump on all of them, but they're spies. | ||
| So yeah, I think it's over. | ||
| It's going to, the whole Middle East will fall in slow motion. | ||
| Brent Peterson sent $100. | ||
| Pee-pee-poo-hoo. | ||
| Keep up the good work, my nicker. | ||
| America first. | ||
| Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
| I appreciate it. | ||
| Bookbook sent $25. | ||
| Regarding what you said about Carlson potentially being a class traitor, why do you think he wouldn't use it as a talking point to validate his other viewpoints instead of attacking people for mentioning it? | ||
| You know, I think he does sometimes, but then when other people mention it, he gets weirdly defensive. | ||
| Because he's not, like, he admits it. | ||
| He has admitted it. | ||
| I come from that world. | ||
| I'm atoning for supporting the Iraq war. | ||
| But then other people mention and he gets weirdly, he gets weird about it. | ||
| I don't know why. | ||
| That's that's the thing. | ||
| Pragmatic Culture sent $50. | ||
| Shout out to a top J Aquarium droiper. | ||
| Congrats on the marriage big dog. | ||
| Wait, lockdown, you're all roy pet. | ||
| Oh, so you're talking to some other droiper? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
| Irishman has sent $20. | ||
| If I hadn't found you in June when I ran popped off, I'd still be stuck watching John Doyle like a rehard. | ||
| Literally brought me out of the cave. | ||
| You are completely and indubitably luminous. | ||
| Sensational run. | ||
| Hey, thank you very much. | ||
| Yeah, John Doyle. | ||
| What does he have? | ||
| Three fans now? | ||
| Yeah, it's too bad what happened to him, but he doesn't work hard. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So. | |
| Savannah sent $50. | ||
| Love you, Nick. | ||
| Red Hard emoji. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you, man. | |
| KB sent $25. | ||
| First time Super Chat. | ||
| Love the show. | ||
| Kim Dylan has been talking up MPG as a potential 2028 presidential candidate lately. | ||
| Do you have any thoughts on why he's pushing her? | ||
| Hope you have a good night. | ||
| God bless you. | ||
| I think it's harmless, probably. | ||
| I don't think there's. | ||
| I don't know him personally. | ||
| I don't think there's some hidden reason. | ||
| Probably because she criticizes Israel and she's conservative. | ||
|
unidentified
|
She's very conservative, but she's obviously an idiot. | |
| So that's why. | ||
| Grassroots Roy President. | ||
| That's why I don't support him. | ||
| 067. | ||
| Also, yesterday when someone said you have a lot in common with Tony, they were calling you gay. | ||
| WHATE. | ||
| Great show. | ||
| Wait, is Tony gay? | ||
| Is Tony Hinchcliffe gay? | ||
| I had no idea. | ||
|
unidentified
|
How do you spell his name? | |
| No, he's straight. | ||
| This is what AI says. | ||
| According to news and commentary, he is straight. | ||
| His gay personas are a recurring element of his humor. | ||
| He has been in a past relationship with women, short-lived marriage to okay, come on. | ||
| So he's not gay. | ||
| I was going to say, that would be really surprising. | ||
| He doesn't seem gay to me. | ||
| But anyway, thanks for that. | ||
| Text season sent $20. | ||
| You were Keaton yesterday while discussing people abusing the new window of online free speech. | ||
| When you were unbanned on Twitter, you said no more unforced errors. | ||
| All grow episodes should be thinking similarly. | ||
| Shout out to Wamp Tomp on TikTok. | ||
| Very true. | ||
| Very true. | ||
| Grass-fed Grover Permilk sent $100. | ||
| Hey, Nick, love the show. | ||
| I see a lot of people ask you how you feel about Protestants, but how do you feel about the Orthodox Church? | ||
| From my understanding, they basically have the same beliefs as Catholics, but they don't recognize the authority of the Pope and believe the Holy Spirit only proceeds from the Father. | ||
| Excuse my ignorance if that's a gross oversimplification. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I do not support the Orthodox Church. | |
| I support the Catholic Church. | ||
| And that's not true. | ||
| I mean, they're just different than us. | ||
| They're Eastern. | ||
| They're mystic. | ||
| It's a completely different tradition. | ||
| And they're very defiant against Rome. | ||
| So, I mean, look, I don't hate East Orthodox people. | ||
| We agree on a lot, but they're always antagonizing Catholics. | ||
| And they're always trying to start a religious fight with everybody. | ||
| So they're very annoying on the internet. | ||
| The Ortho bros are very annoying. | ||
| Jason, 94762 sent $50. | ||
| I've been considering the jump into Christianity. | ||
| Growing up, I was raised by twice a year, Christians. | ||
| And as a result, I have lived an agnostic and rather secular life. | ||
| How have you dealt with struggles in your belief? | ||
| I feel like if I'm going to do it, I need to jump in fully. | ||
| No half-assing. | ||
| I considering just showing up to mass and seeing what's up. | ||
| Yeah, you should do that. | ||
| Struggles with my belief. | ||
| Well, you're implying I have struggles with my belief. | ||
| I don't really. | ||
| I don't really have struggles with my belief. | ||
| I'm Catholic. | ||
| I believe in Jesus Christ. | ||
| I don't really struggle with that at all. | ||
| If anything, everything that I encounter makes me believe more. | ||
| My encounters with evil, my encounters with atheism, my encounters with Protestants, Orthodox, Muslims, Jews, it makes me re-fortifies my belief in Catholicism. | ||
| So I don't struggle with it. | ||
| And yeah, you should just go back to church. | ||
| That's a good start. | ||
| That's a good idea. | ||
| Wank Greup sent $25. | ||
| Nick, what are your thoughts on the new hot controversy of importing beef from Argentina? | ||
| I'm a third general California farmer, and although we don't have beef, this seems like a huge betrayal to the farming community. | ||
| It also worries us feed prompt farmers on prices plummeting while profit margins are already tough. | ||
| Thanks. | ||
| It is a huge betrayal. | ||
| They're doing that because they want to shore up the Malay government, because Millay is a pawn of Washington. | ||
| He's really crucial to this new Monroe doctrine strategy. | ||
| They want to keep him in power. | ||
| So it's like a form of foreign aid, basically, to shore up that regime. | ||
| And it is a betrayal of the soybean farmers, the ranchers. | ||
| It's a major betrayal. | ||
| And Trump basically acknowledged that. | ||
| Totalitarianism, $20, $20. | ||
| If you had to guess, where the richest suburbs in America are located. | ||
| Nova. | ||
| I would say Manhattan, probably. | ||
| I mean, you know, all the richest cities, probably. | ||
|
unidentified
|
New York, San Francisco, LA, D.C., Chicago. | |
| Archaea Common sent $20. | ||
| America should have built their caste system using Indians from India instead of blacks and mestizos because Indians are as white as Vietnamese or Chinese. | ||
| Most half-Indians look southern European anyway, which means we Indo-Europeans are all on the same team. | ||
| Yeah, okay. | ||
| John sent $20. | ||
| Out of all the geniuses throughout human history, you were lucky enough to exist at the same time as Paul Town. | ||
| W. Grupper. | ||
| Yeah, Major W. America First Assyrian sent $20. | ||
| Money. | ||
| NP Creon KJV sent $25. | ||
| No message. | ||
| Thank you for all that you do and everything that you've done. | ||
| God bless. | ||
| Thanks. | ||
| Stock account sent $20. | ||
| What do you think about Graham Plattner covering up his SS tattoo? | ||
| Spineless or based? | ||
| Would you support an anti-Israel candidate like him? | ||
| No, he's a communist. | ||
| Isn't he the same guy that got outed for going on Reddit and saying he's a communist and all white people are racist? | ||
| So, no, absolutely not. | ||
| Gasolina 420 sent $100. | ||
| Hi, Nick. | ||
| I've been watching for two months now. | ||
| I am here to humbly submit my apology form with a paper clip attached. | ||
| You were right about everything, as usual. | ||
| I have decided to listen to you rather than what the internet tells me about you. | ||
| And that really changed my perspective. | ||
| Sorry for listening to the Jewish media. | ||
| I genuinely don't know what I was thinking. | ||
| Thank you for the big super chat. | ||
| I appreciate it. | ||
| You know, people don't think. | ||
| That's the problem. | ||
| Everybody is kind of mindlessly and passively consuming a very curated media diet. | ||
| And they don't, they don't think. | ||
| Like they're not actually thinking deeply about these issues. | ||
| They don't really know very much about these issues. | ||
| And they don't know that they don't know. | ||
| They think that they know, but they don't know. | ||
| And they don't know that they don't know. | ||
| And that's really the issue. | ||
| People watch 60 Minutes. | ||
| People watch the nightly news. | ||
| They think they know what's going on. | ||
| You know, they might venture out and watch a conservative podcast and they think they're eating their vegetables. | ||
| They think they're doing their homework. | ||
| They watch something that's a little bit political. | ||
| They read an article and they think they're doing their due diligence. | ||
| They think they're being a good American. | ||
| And they don't know that they're reading a regulated press. | ||
| They don't know that they know nothing. | ||
| And maybe that's what it's there for. | ||
| But yeah, I don't take it personally, I guess, as long as people come around. | ||
| But people, it's just amazing how confident people are in their ignorance. | ||
| People are so confident. | ||
| People that don't know anything. | ||
| They're not reflective. | ||
| They don't think about the issues. | ||
| They're not inquisitive about the issues. | ||
| They're not looking at the issues with an open mind. | ||
| They're ignorant, but they speak with authority. | ||
| You get on the one side these piece of shit liberals that think you never thought, wouldn't it be nice if everyone got along? | ||
| You know, but shouldn't everyone just be nice? | ||
| And then you get dipshit conservatives that they've never examined their beliefs either. | ||
| And they say, Nick Fuentes, he's a real racist, though. | ||
| He's a straight-up white supremacist. | ||
| That's like, you are a mindless NPC. | ||
| You're a numbskull. | ||
| So I just hate ignorance. | ||
| If you, I appreciate people that, at the minimum, are curious, inquisitive, even if they don't know everything or anything. | ||
| I appreciate people that are inquisitive, open-minded. | ||
| They're willing to entertain an idea, even if they don't accept it. | ||
| They're willing to see where it goes. | ||
| But some people are so confident and they know nothing. | ||
| That's why. | ||
| Kathy Hiyabashi Groiper sent $25. | ||
| No message. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Kyle Miller sent $20. | ||
| Bear money for hitting one mil on Twitter. | ||
| Clinking Beer Mugs emoji. | ||
| Thanks for watching. | ||
| Well, we're not there yet, but I appreciate it. | ||
| Son sent $100. | ||
| How could America first not be an enemy of the Catholic Church? | ||
| I've seen you celebrate the subversion of Catholic South American countries on behalf of a Jewish, and to a lesser extent, a Protestant-controlled regime, as the U.S. Empire is. | ||
| The Anglo has always persecuted the church in the former Spanish Empire dominion to weaken solidarity and facilitate exploitation. | ||
| No? | ||
| What are you talking? | ||
| None of these are arguments. | ||
| What are you talking about? | ||
| Celebrate the subversion of Catholic South American countries in what way? | ||
| When have I ever said that? | ||
| What are you talking about? | ||
| It's the opposite. | ||
| I'm against Bolsonaro. | ||
| I'm against Millay. | ||
| I'm against a regime change in Venezuela. | ||
| What the fuck are you talking about? | ||
| That's one. | ||
| You're an idiot. | ||
| Two, the Anglo has always persecuted the church and the Spanish Empire to weaken solidarity and facilitate. | ||
| Okay, so you're, what are you, a Marxist? | ||
| You just sound like an idiot. | ||
| You have no idea what you're talking about. | ||
| Juan Gay Inward sent $25. | ||
| You can reschedule the Cheeser collab with a Halloween stream. | ||
| Play with Cheeser and Cuthum. | ||
| They talk a lot. | ||
| Hippo Bumpa sent $20 on how Tucker presents himself. | ||
| In interviews, I've heard him say that growing up, it was deeply infused into him to not flaunt himself or betray any sense of extravagance. | ||
| It's some uppercrust was pie thing. | ||
| You know how repressed Protestants anglos are. | ||
| You can see it in how our government disguises itself as a giant DMV. | ||
| Yeah, and I get that. | ||
| I don't know that I even believe that, but to the extent that that's real, then you can't get defensive when people point it out. | ||
| You can't get weirdly defensive. | ||
| And by the way, there's a big difference between being an upper crust wasp and like being in the CIA. | ||
| Those are two different things. | ||
| If you're someone that is like wealthy but modest about it, that's different than you're in the CIA and you don't tell anybody about it. | ||
| Like those are two different things. | ||
| Brigitte Kestenbaum sent $20. | ||
| Do you empathize with the receiving end? | ||
| Very good callback. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
| I remember when I said that. | ||
| $20K sent $20. | ||
| It's believed out here in France. | ||
| This country is way too small for the sheer number of migrants that are let in. | ||
| If 10K come through, you'll be able to feel it almost anywhere. | ||
| Just a few months ago, an 11-year-old girl was murdered by a migrant, and the very first thing her hashtag Open Borders Family did was disavow the far right. | ||
| Damn, that's crazy. | ||
| Dilios, name changer, sent $25. | ||
| Started going to mass because of you. | ||
| Hoping to become a practicing Catholic. | ||
| Have you heard of Fortnite Friday with Connor 8's pants? | ||
| Gavin Newsom did it a couple weeks ago. | ||
| Would be cool to see someone like you on there. | ||
| No, I don't know who that is. | ||
| Just a due day I sent $20. | ||
| America, where cyberbullying gets you extradited and charged with a felony while soliciting a minor gets you sent back to your country as a free man. | ||
| Well, in fairness, he was threatening to kill people. | ||
| So I do actually think that should be illegal. | ||
| If you're on Twitter and you're replying to multiple people, I'm going to kill you. | ||
| Like, yeah, that is definitely a crime. | ||
| That's definitely not cyberbullying. | ||
| If somebody's saying, I'm going to kill your family in front of you, we're watching you. | ||
| We're going to get you. | ||
| You're going to hang. | ||
| I'm going to kill you. | ||
| Like, that's a crime. | ||
| And as far as he's soliciting a minor, I mean, the guy did get charged. | ||
| They let him evade law enforcement. | ||
| So it's not like he didn't get charged, but for political reasons, they let him go. | ||
| Luke sent $20. | ||
| I read an article in the Uns Review that argued sanctions against Russia are nearly useless. | ||
| Do you think sanctions are a useful tool or just posturing? | ||
| They're useful. | ||
| UNS review is very pro-Russia. | ||
| It's very suspicious. | ||
| Everybody on UNS is like a pro-Russia hack. | ||
| Dawson Hickey sent $25. | ||
| Hey, Nick, just wanted to say I love the show and all the grow hipers. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
| Internet boy. | ||
| Internet boy sent $20 here to support the show. | ||
| If you sold stickers slash decals, I'm sure a lot of people would buy them and the cost-to-profit ratio would benefit you as well. | ||
| I hate, if you use stickers, I think you're gay. | ||
| What are you going to do with stickers? | ||
| What are you going to do with stickers? | ||
| You're going to put them on your laptop? | ||
|
unidentified
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You're going to put them on your laptop to express yourself? | |
| So this when you go to Starbucks or the study hall and you open up your laptop, everybody knows your favorite brands and your favorite band and your favorite internet show. | ||
| You fag it. | ||
| You're going to put them on a stop sign and vandalize the city like an asshole. | ||
| I hate stickers. | ||
| We need the world needs less adhesive. | ||
| The world needs less adhesive covering everything. | ||
| Less adhesive, less decals, fewer stickers. | ||
| We need a lot less of that on the planet. | ||
| So, no, I will not be selling stickers or decals. | ||
| I will not be doing it. | ||
| Not going to happen. | ||
|
unidentified
|
No shit. | |
| But I had never heard of you until that day. | ||
| I looked you up and turns out you were my president in HS when I was a freshman. | ||
| Really? | ||
| You're at Lions Township? | ||
| That's crazy. | ||
| When you were a freshman, huh? | ||
| Wow, that's crazy. | ||
| It's a long time ago. | ||
| Polish Grow I for $97 sent $20. | ||
| Been following you since 2017. | ||
| I was at the American Renaissance Conference in 2018. | ||
| I go to a parish in Oak Park. | ||
| Would be great for you to join for Mass. | ||
| Most of the young men there are fans. | ||
| Fun fact, I'm close friends with the mystery Ltty Emily girl from a few weeks back. | ||
| I also went to LTE, but the OG one in the city. | ||
| Yeah, that'd be great. | ||
| Nothing I love more than showing up in public where everyone is expecting me. | ||
| And nothing more than I love to have people hang out after Mass and wait for me to get a pic. | ||
| You know, I'm trying to go and do Mass. | ||
| Oh, great. | ||
| A fan meetup. | ||
| Oh, you all want pictures and you want to tell me your opinions? | ||
| Oh, great. | ||
| Well, I'm a captive audience. | ||
| Please talk my ear off. | ||
| I'd love to do it. | ||
| I'm a public service. | ||
| I'm like the bus. | ||
| Yeah, yeah, feel free. | ||
| Everyone, take a ride. | ||
| Tell me what you really think. | ||
| I'm here for you. | ||
| I'm here to listen. | ||
| I'm here to just take it all in. | ||
| I'm not here for mass for my own reasons. | ||
| I'm here to provide a public good for the masses. | ||
| No, but I love to hear that, but no, I will not be joining you. | ||
| I don't want to get shot in the face. | ||
| I don't actually want to hear your show. | ||
| No offense. | ||
| I'm there to get the Eucharist and then I'm there to move on. | ||
| You know, I'm there to keep it moving. | ||
| I pull up. | ||
| I get my weekly commitment in. | ||
| And then I like to go home. | ||
| I don't like to hang out. | ||
| I don't like people expecting me there with loaded firearms or, you know, anything else for that matter. | ||
| I appreciate that you like the show, but I can't be in the era of Charlie Kirk's death. | ||
| I can't be doing that. | ||
| Also, you know, I'm just really there for Mass. | ||
| I'm not there for the meetup, you know. | ||
| And I've been to Mass where people, everybody always says, I've never seen him in Mass. | ||
| That's not true. | ||
| People see me at Mass all the time. | ||
| And I know that because they're always looking at me. | ||
| They always are looking. | ||
| And it's very uncomfortable because I'm sitting there and trying to focus. | ||
| And I see out of the corner of my eyes, people are like geeking. | ||
| And then I know when Mass is over, I got to get up and run out the door or else someone's going to confront me and it's going to be good or bad. | ||
| So people always say, I never, I've never seen him in Mass. | ||
| Is he a real Catholic? | ||
| People see me at Mass all the time. | ||
| And if you're local, you know that. | ||
| And people are coming up to me. | ||
| And look, if people come up to me, I'm nice about it. | ||
| I get it. | ||
| But like, I'm not going to set up a fan meetup. | ||
| That's not really what it's there for. | ||
| And I'm really there for one reason. | ||
| So, but yeah, I've seen that. | ||
| And out of the corner of my eye, I see people gawking at me. | ||
| And then I see them, you know, making their way over when mass when they play the final song. | ||
| I see them making their way over, pushing people away. | ||
| Hey, I'm just want to say I'm a huge fan. | ||
| It's very nice, but like, I'm always like, it's uncomfortable. | ||
| People are trying to make their way to the exit. | ||
| You know how it is. | ||
| Everybody's pouring out, trying to get their bulletin. | ||
| And we're blocking traffic. | ||
| Hey, I'm a huge fan. | ||
| And people are looking. | ||
| So I just like to keep it moving. | ||
| But anyway, but I appreciate it. | ||
| Love to hear it. | ||
| A local Groiper, local group of Groipers would be great for you to join us all. | ||
| Yeah, that sounds like it would be really fun for you. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| I don't know how much I'm into that, though. | ||
| Larry Silverstein is a piece of shit that will cut sent $20. | ||
| Cool. | ||
| You told your story about how you were a patty, and you see how these rich motherfuckers were. | ||
| And he was like, fuck this shit. | ||
| I'm out. | ||
| It's because you know you're worth my nigga. | ||
| Also, now our national debt raised from $37 trillion to $38 trillion today. | ||
| Our founding fathers would be fucking pissed off. | ||
| Massey 2028. | ||
| Oh, man. | ||
| Yeah, that's great. | ||
| That's $10.50. | ||
| Hi, Nick. | ||
| Thoughts on tariffs? | ||
| We import machines and as a small business, we can't shoulder the cost and the manufacturer doesn't either. | ||
| They tell us China will pay, but at the end of the day, it's the U.S. consumers that will absorb these blanket tariffs. | ||
| Additional taxation. | ||
| Thanks for your show. | ||
| That isn't true. | ||
| Isn't true. | ||
| After Trump's tariffs, did prices go up? | ||
| How much did prices go up? | ||
| We have a higher effective tariff than at any time since the Smoot Holly tariff. | ||
| The effective average tariff rate is higher than it has ever been in 100 years. | ||
| Are you really feeling that? | ||
| I don't see prices going up 20%. | ||
| Tariff rate went up 20%. | ||
| Did prices go up that much? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No. | |
| And that's because, yes, the costs are largely being absorbed. | ||
| So, I mean, if you have proof for that, I'd love to see it, but it's not there. | ||
| It didn't show up in the first term. | ||
| It hasn't showed up in the second term. | ||
| In the first term, there were tariffs on steel and aluminum, on Canada, on European Union, China. | ||
| Prices didn't go up then. | ||
| They didn't go up now. | ||
| So that's not true. | ||
| Totalitarianism, $2,200. | ||
| You believe the real money in California nowadays. | ||
| People are saying, yes, prices went up. | ||
| Yes, in general, prices have gone up because of inflation, which has a variety of different causes, but they didn't go up as much as the tariffs. | ||
| The tariffs are higher than ever. | ||
| Prices did not go up in proportion to the tariffs, which means that the consumers are not taking on all the cost of the tariffs. | ||
| That's the point. | ||
| Not that prices didn't go up at all, and prices are going up because of a variety of factors, but they did not go up in proportion to the increase of the tariffs. | ||
| This guy is saying the consumers are paying the whole cost of the tariffs, despite the rhetoric or the argument that the burden would be shouldered by the suppliers or by the distributors. | ||
| That's not true. | ||
| Prices did not go up in proportion with the tariffs. | ||
| So that's just not true. | ||
| Totalitarianism, $2,200. | ||
| You believe the real money in California nowadays is in the Bay Round of Tech Giants and not LA? | ||
| Is Hollywood a sinking ship? | ||
| And I Tucker was saying Mom Daniel will destroy NY thoughts? | ||
| Will wealth flee? | ||
| Hollywood does seem to be failing. | ||
| And I don't think that Mom Dani will destroy New York. | ||
| New York has had socialist mayors before. | ||
| No, I don't think it'll be over for New York. | ||
| Really, it's sent $20. | ||
| New York is coming down, though, because of commercial real estate. | ||
| That's a real problem. | ||
| Really, it sent $20. | ||
| People can't call you fake because you literally roast the people supporting you and giving you money. | ||
| Supper chat, which would be stupid if all you care about is money, et cetera. | ||
| That's very true. | ||
| Don't have a question. | ||
| Just wanted to say love the show. | ||
| And what is your favorite music genre? | ||
| Probably indie, Indian alternative is my favorite. | ||
| Okay, all right. | ||
| That's our last super chat. | ||
| That's going to, sheesh, rough super chats tonight. | ||
| You guys got to get smarter. | ||
| You got to start taking some no tropics or what do they call them? | ||
| Nootropics. | ||
| You guys got to start taking some pills or something. | ||
| Because you guys are idiots. | ||
| These super chats suck. | ||
| Oh, we got one. | ||
| We got one more. | ||
| Recent $20. | ||
| I've been fighting homosexual organs now that I'm a Christian, but I can't help but give into temptations when I watch your shows. | ||
| Okay, great. | ||
| So that needed to be said. | ||
| So with that, so with that, on that note, what was I saying again? | ||
| Yeah, these super chats are rough. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Well, that's our last super chat. | ||
| That's going to do it for me, as always. | ||
| Smash the follow button, smash the like button, leave a comment, buy the hats, buy the hats, Fuentis.store, subscribe, AmericaFirst.plus. | ||
| I'm on the air Monday through Friday. | ||
| As always, thank you to our top super chats. | ||
| Huge thank you to our top super chatters, Insurgent AF, KC, Benjamin, Brent Peterson, Grassroots Groiper, GrassFed Grouper Milk, Gasolina 420, Gasolina, Syme and Thomas Cruz. | ||
| Thank you to them. | ||
| Thanks to all our super chatters, everybody that watches. | ||
| We love you. | ||
| I'll see you tomorrow. | ||
| Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our Trido. | |
| It's going to be only America first. | ||
| America first. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The American people will come first once again. | |
| With respect, the respect that we deserve. |