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Sept. 20, 2024 - Stew Peters Show
01:01:25
Logos Academy Episode 6: Interview With a Pro-White Fabrications Entrepreneur
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Ladies and gentlemen, we are live.
Welcome, everybody.
We are with Aquarius Fabrications.
Let me actually just fix the screen over here on the Odyssey channel.
I see we got a little bit wonky.
There we go.
That'll fix it.
Okay, we're joined with Aquarius Fabrications.
He is a pro-white entrepreneur.
I think that would be the best way to describe him.
He's a very nice fellow.
He's been a viewer in my streams for quite a while.
And he's here to promote a product of his and a message that I think comes along with it.
So welcome, brother.
It's nice to have you on the show.
We've talked a couple times before.
Yeah, I appreciate you having me.
So, I'm a, I'd say relatively small and blossoming metal fabrication facility out in Northeast Ohio.
And, uh, it started in the year 2020, but I've been in metal fabrication my entire life.
And, uh, I guess being a metal fabrication requires a lot of keeping your head down under a helmet and you're listening to stuff constantly just to basically entertain yourself keep your mind occupied and that usually goes to you know listening to things that you know are censored and now that kind of information is becoming substantially more available shows like
yours And I'd say without getting into the weeds of all of that, it kind of prompts a response, a way to get proactive and engaged.
And with everything being, I mean, we're sold this multiculturalism lie when in actuality everything is just, it's anti-white, it's anti-European.
And so when People can be jailed in, I believe, England for putting a sticker up that says it's okay to be white, which I think is just a very milquetoast kind of, hey, it's okay to be us.
And if that kind of message isn't acceptable, well, then I think it's time to bulldoze with a stronger message.
Not only is it just okay to be white, It's fantastic.
We're an awesome people.
I mean, to be told that everything that we obtained was from ill-gotten gains and we're basically thieves and America was built on slavery and these kind of tropes that are going around.
And here I am over here Innovating all this stuff.
And it's like, well, I guess I'm just chopped liver over here.
So I think it's time to innovate something new.
And it's just the beginning.
And then introduce that to, I'd say, a pro-white audience that is about the truth, regardless of what that is.
And basically build business relations with And promoting pro-white things.
So kick us off.
Tell us a little bit about the product that you have.
I actually have one myself that you were kind enough to send to me.
And I tested it out this morning.
I thought it was very nice.
So let's hear a little bit about the product first, and then I'll give the audience my opinions on it as well.
But I'd like them to hear what it's about from you first.
Well, being in metal fabrication and welding and whatnot, it gives you the ability to, when they say that problems are solutions to problems, I'm going to butcher that, but necessity is the mother of all creation.
So, starting off, my, you know, wife, we were like, okay, we would take showers.
And, I mean, nothing intimate or whatever.
We'd just both hop in the shower.
Well, of course, being the man, I would make sure that's like, well, she's going to have all the shower water.
Well, I'm a metal fabricator.
And you have this cross member already existing in most showers.
Even if you have a glass slider, you mean...
You have this cross member.
Why not make that to where it transports water to the opposing end of the shower?
So I made that probably about 15 years ago.
And the thing about stainless steel is that there was a show a long time ago on the History Channel.
It's called The Life After People.
And it goes into how feeble everything is and how things break down.
And stainless steel, basically it's carbon steel that has elements added to it that make it to where it would last 10,000 years out in the elements before the sun broke down the oxides and whatnot, and then it would start to corrode.
So I've had this shower for about 15 years.
It's just the same as the day that I installed it.
And I mean, it's just I could go to a fancy hotel or whatever and take a shower and it's just not the same as when I come home and I hear that from other people that have enjoyed the product too.
And so I'm glad that, I mean, finally as a metal fabrication facility and a dream that I've had for a long time that something that came from my mind is something that other people can enjoy.
Great.
That's wonderful to hear.
It's a nice family-driven product, which is something that I hold a high regard for.
I'm very happy that it seems to be pleasant to your wife, and I hope my wife will feel the same.
We'll find that out very soon.
I wanted to ask you, so the name of the shower is the White Power Shower.
That's the name that you've chosen.
So describe that for the audience.
Why such a name?
Because some might hear that at first, and it might be a shock to them.
And some might hear it and go, wow, that's awesome.
I really like that.
So why that name?
Why did you go with that choice?
Well, just like you see behind me, this massive titanium sword and...
And kind of going back to my previous statements in the opener is that it's kind of like it's bodacious and kind of in your face.
And I mean, most people that I tell them about the white power shower, the kind of response that I get is usually a chuckle.
And that's kind of what I'm going for.
But I mean, if people choose to be outraged about it, again, if the message that it's okay to be white is Doesn't cut it, then now I think it's time to flex a bit.
And more so than that, I want people that purchase this to take a sense of pride that, hey, I consider one of your fellow white people made this for you.
It's a new innovation that doesn't exist out there.
And I have seen something similar, but it's cheap.
It's plasticky.
And of course, in the commercial, they have to have this interracial couple.
And it's not going to last.
This is something that, okay, you get it from me.
Anything that I make, anything that my company makes, I want to make things that it's an investment that Not only are you purchasing for yourself, but you could hand down to your children and your children's children could inherit it as well and be just the same.
I mean, yes, it's like trying to bring the price down and make it marketable in a way that is...
I mean, it's just, it's like new sprouts that grow, that a new growth of things have to be planted in the soil of where we are now.
And I mean, there's certain challenges with that, but it's nothing that can't be overcome.
And of course, I expect that this product may bring up the ire of the powers that be, but I mean, we can't really care about that anymore.
We've tried being nice and that hasn't gotten us anywhere.
And, you know, I think it's just time to move on and move on upward and upward.
And I'm just getting started.
There's many other things that I'm looking forward to creating and interacting.
And as this grows, basically, I'll go about getting advertising together to interact and start.
Because I keep on hearing from broadcasters, maybe not so much yourself, but I've heard it many times where it's like, well, we just can't find the companies that would advertise through us.
And I'm sitting here saying, hey, you know, I'm interested.
Of course, I'm just getting started, but I mean, hopefully that creates some sort of effect where mutual success can be achieved for both the customer, the advertiser and the producer.
And then that will encourage other companies to do the same.
Yeah, I like that.
It's a grassroots version of creating some kind of community.
That's a start, right?
We're circulating our business with each other and our ideas with each other at the same time.
And this isn't a foreign concept.
I mean, it's more publicized than our concept here, but you've got plenty of organizations and groups advocating for only purchasing from Black-owned businesses, advertisements.
I'm a Black entrepreneur.
I only buy Black-owned.
So for us to say that, you know, we want that same right and we want to advocate for our people and share our products with each other, I think that's a fantastic thing and a very solid message.
So let's get into the product a little more so people can get an understanding of what it is they're getting into.
So obviously it's a dual-headed shower.
So if someone is to pick up one of these online, say they order one from you, what can they expect out of this?
What are they going to receive?
What's the product like, you know?
Well, it has to be something that's made to order.
So essentially someone would message me and I would need to know the approximate measurement of what their shower curtain rod is or would be.
And then what they would get is a stainless steel crossmember that has two threaded nipples, one at a 90 degree angle where you would have a three-way diverter and it has to be a three-way diverter.
Now those kind of kits can be found at any hardware store.
And I'll get into the challenges with all that, but essentially the three-way diverter would allow for the water before it comes out the typical spray nozzle, it would go into the cross member, which would be your shower curtain rod, and then at a 45 degree angle would spray out the other end of your shower.
Now, I can't count on your measurement being exact.
And the one that I have for my house, for instance, doesn't have, I put an adjustment slider on the opposing end where the 45 degree angle is.
And I do that so that, I mean, for the one up at my house, I can just bring it back down to the shop if I tack it up and the fit isn't perfect.
In this way, basically, if you say it's 58 and a half inches, then I'll basically give it A few inches to where you basically put up the one end that has the slider.
And again, this is all made out of beefy stainless steel.
I'm not going to make...
Most of the stuff that you get that are bathroom components are made out of the thinnest stuff possible.
And it's not usually stainless steel.
And it's basically like either nickel plated or chrome plated carbon steel.
And, I mean, so cheap that, I mean, you could knock it over your knuckles and dent it.
I mean, what I'm making out of is like eighth-inch wall, stainless steel.
And they'll have two base plate flanges, one for the slider and then one for the opposing end, made out of three-eighths stainless steel plate or quarter-inch.
Either one, I mean, it's still beefy plate.
That has nice bevels on it and countersunk holes to where you basically just, it's four screws.
And then you, I mean, without getting into the logistics of how it's installed, but from what I understand, you said it took you like 10-15 minutes to put in?
It was a very simple installation for me and it actually worked out quite perfectly because the way that those screws worked, I didn't have to drill them into the wall myself.
They already fit into the slots of screws that I already had.
So I literally just put it up against the wall, pop the screws in and it was good to go.
So it was a very easy process.
I do want to mention as well, one of the features that I really liked was that extending bar, because that was really convenient, first off, for the setup, and secondly, just for the sake of measuring.
It was a very convenient thing, which made the setup process a lot easier as well.
I think I really had that thing up in 10 minutes.
It was pretty fast.
It worked on the first try.
I didn't have to readjust anything or check anything out.
It functioned great.
I took my first shower this morning.
I found it quite refreshing.
The water was coming out good.
The pressure was great.
It was coming out of both sides perfectly.
Obviously, when you first turn it on, it takes a little bit longer to come to the second side at first because it's got to run through.
Once it runs through, it ran through smooth on my end.
The shower heads had some nice adjusters on them as well to change the flow that's coming out.
I like that.
I thought it was great.
I'm excited to be using it more in the future.
Well, you'll be showering in white power now.
But in terms of the challenges, so initially in the realization of this idea to start marketing this, someone that's very business savvy told me, he's like, you have to trademark this.
And it's like, Are you serious?
And he's like, yes, you better.
And so in the process of doing that, first off, I donated and approached Red Ice Radio, and I actually ended up getting my first customer.
And not only did they pay full price, they gave me a couple custom silver coins and a thank you letter.
And I think there's a lot of...
Enthusiasm and heart in the pro-white communities that are kind of waiting for a return on investment from a fellow white European.
So I went and funneled...
I had to pay for a legal team to basically go over...
Because there's a whole thing with this.
There's a tractor going by.
Hopefully that's not too loud.
I don't hear it at all.
You're good.
Okay, fantastic.
So...
A legal team goes over the entire thing for the trade market and it's this whole process.
And obviously it's like, you know, I could tell that, I mean, you just have to expect it.
It's whatever.
You can't care.
But for all I know, on the government end of things, they might find some way to, you know, knock it down for who knows what.
But other than that, the kit itself is something that For instance, the kit that you have, I was able to go to Lowe's and buy a standard three-way diverter shower kit.
Now, I've approached that company, and I'm looking to approach other companies, and I try locally, but I mean, for a three-way diverter, even buying, not retail, I'm trying to think of the term for it, Escapes me.
But basically, you buy in bulk, and then you buy it for resale.
Yeah, so wholesale.
So even for wholesale, they want $75 for these things.
Well, that's the cost of the entire kit that you get at retail at Lowe's.
So I would be kind of remiss to be like, okay, well, it includes the shower components, which a lot of people may end up using their original showerhead, which you only need the three-way diverter and the other showerhead.
Yeah.
My thing is that, okay, I want to be clear and upfront that that's something that...
Like, if someone wants one now, it would come with a stainless crossmember, and then I'll see if I can work out something with a three-way diverter.
But even if it doesn't have that, you essentially just go to any hardware store and you pick up a shower kit.
And then, obviously, the price for the crossmember that I make, which essentially is the white power shower...
Would be at a price that wouldn't include the kit.
Because, let's face it, I would get something at wholesale and then I would have to bump it up a little bit.
And, I mean, if I was to do it now and let's say that without getting...
Because, okay...
Who's to say that I don't just say, like, well, it's the Walters Power Shower, and this starts getting traction, and then this company finds out that their brand name is attached to this, I might get some sort of, you know, how they are, the legal ramifications and whatnot.
So I want to be clear and upfront that that's just a challenge that we can expect, but, I mean, you know, we'll figure it out.
It's not a big deal.
So what can someone expect, say someone is interested in the product?
What's a price range that someone's looking at?
And also, when they get this product, is this something that they can expect as a one-time purchase?
It's going to last them for 20, 30 years?
Or is this something that they're going to have to replace?
They'll never have to replace it.
It'll last multiple lifetimes.
It'll never corrode.
It'll never rust.
It's made out of 300 series stainless.
And I would probably want something close to 400.
I know it sounds like a lot, but it's something that's a key component.
You're showering just about every day, I'd hope, and it'll last you the rest of your life.
It has to be at a price range to where, one, I'm motivated to do it and I'm not gouging my fellow brothers and sisters.
So, I mean, I think at that price range, I mean, and that's the only thing I can promise is that I'm thinking it's going to be $375, $400.
And that's not including what the kit would be.
And that might be something to where if I get it wholesale, we might not be looking at much more.
Maybe $425, something like that.
Uh, but right now, as it is to the public eye, uh, right now it is the stainless steel cross member that I would make myself along with the hosing and the brass nipples.
and then someone would just have to basically be like they go to a hardware store and get a shower kit of their choosing but it has to be with a three-way diverter not the two-way diverter which is very common I think it's a very reasonable price range again you know when you're considering that this is something that's a one-time purchase you know how many people spend four, five, six hundred dollars on a television that they're going to replace in eight years right so I think that's a very fair price so
I'm very curious to go maybe to the understanding of your business itself.
How long have you been...
I know you've been doing fabrications your whole life.
You said, how long have you had this specific company or trademark, I guess we'll say, Aquarius Fabrications?
How long have you been under this name?
Well, it started in 2020.
And before that, I went through the vocational program in school and then I went to the Navy and And did welding and firefighting for that.
And then when I got out, I got this job in Northeast Ohio.
And it just so happened that they're making these scrubber components for these massive cruise ships.
And essentially what they do is it cleans the diesel.
It scrubs the diesel, so to speak, which a lot of them, if it's not a closed loop system, wind up just pumping it out into the ocean.
So I don't know what good that does.
But they were made out of these specific tech alloys and then I would go and either weld some of them up on these cruise ships or facilitate the supervising to make sure that the welding was done correctly.
And so our company was working, the company that I was working for was working with this guy down in Australia.
And during COVID, it was before I was actually ready to launch my business.
I would say that a lot of times if you set an intent to do something, and if the business came about in the way that I wanted it to be, I would probably still be waiting for the day to where I cut the ribbon and said that, you know, I'm ready to start my business.
It's officially open now.
But that's not how reality works.
I think when you set an attention and put one foot in front of the other, sometimes they'll come at you sooner than you anticipate.
And this guy gave me an offer I couldn't refuse.
He said, you know, he's like, well, name your price to go on and fix these ships as a private contractor.
Excuse me.
And I said, okay, well, 75 an hour.
And he's like, okay, great.
And I was like, alright, well, it's official now.
I am now Aquarius Fabrication, which I had the business cards several years ago where it's like, I'm going to start my own metal fab business.
Like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because it's expensive.
I mean, this equipment and whatnot, I could have made three food truck businesses in the time that it takes to make a metal fabrication business.
But once you really start gaining momentum, then the sky's the limit.
But the first years, obviously, as you can imagine, well, the thing that I didn't consider is that, well, hey there, guy, are you going to get your vaccination?
You're going to be going on these cruise ships and these freighters and whatnot, and you're going to need to get your vaccine.
And it's like, well, I'm not doing that.
And here I just left a company that I've been with for 14 years as one of their lead welders.
And I've got this house and, you know, a family to support.
And, I mean, it was a real struggle the first couple years.
But, you know, as it is in the industry, since, I mean, good welders are hard to find.
And I've proven on multiple occasions that I'm probably one of the best in the state.
But, I mean, a lot of welders, they, you know, they think they're the best.
I probably think I'm one of the best.
I mean, And that's good.
There's a bit of egoism or whatever in this kind of trade.
But a lot of these companies that do production, they can't find the people that do the quality welding that they need.
And so, I mean, a lot of big fish parcel out there work to me.
And it's been quite lucrative.
But I'm still learning because I'm a metal fabricator first.
Not like some...
A savvy businessman guy that knows all the ins and outs and the brass taxes and whatnot.
So there's that whole kind of thing to learn, but I'm getting the hang of it, and that's why we're here now having a discussion, because now I think it's time to expand and kind of flex on the things that I've come up with.
I'm very excited.
I think it's a good endeavor that you have chosen this path.
It's a more expensive path and it's the more difficult one.
Typically, the harder route in life always tends to produce the best results.
That good old struggle is what strengthens us.
I like that.
I think it's a pretty big moral ground that you're standing on to Choose to do this with the shower.
You could easily name the shower something completely different and try to target a mainstream audience with it.
But I think you're holding the principles here more than anything.
And you're going for a target audience that you specifically feel near and dear to and that you care about deeply.
I think that already makes you above any other product.
In my personal eyes, I could care less about getting a shower rod over at Ikea or...
Or, you know, wherever the hell they're selling them.
Some, you know, big Jewish corporation.
So, it's nice to hear that you have this...
I'm curious, what gives you a conviction like that?
Because not many people would choose that path, right?
Much like not many people would maybe choose to be like myself and try to put this message out there with the social risks that come from that and the backlash that people get.
Why are you choosing to do that?
Why are you choosing to put your face and your name behind a message like this?
Well, There's been a bifurcation in society.
I'm sure that everyone kind of picks up on that.
And I interact with people every day that I could ask them who Alex Jones is, or even Stu Peters.
I've been doing that, and it's like, well, I don't know.
And it's like, you know, the guy that's, they're turning the freaking frogs gay.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
And the problem with those people, and I'm not saying necessarily that's a problem, but they still have opinions, and they still have a vote.
And even with the people that, let's say, listen to mainstream media, I mean, they're still, I mean, back in 2012, 2010, I caught on that the mainstream media lies, and I mean, I haven't had cable in So long, and it's always been this alternative information.
And now I think the divide, the chasm has gotten so wide that it's almost pins and needles to talk to a normal, you know, just like a lay person that isn't, I mean, finding out this stuff, it's not that, I mean, there's people that think that's like, oh, well, it's just the world.
And it's like, they think that everything that's going on is due to maybe incompetence or Oh, that government, they're just not going to get it right.
It's this epic battle for two opposing ideas.
I spend so much time contemplating it, but life is epic.
It's not this boring thing that Depending on which idea ends up prevailing, we'll kind of decide what the future is going to be.
For instance, I've got a LinkedIn profile for my business and I don't even care about it because...
Most of the corporate drivel that's on there, they have all these kind of plenitudes about, oh, well, you know, we care and safety, this and that, and inclusion.
And it's just so fake.
And when I started interacting with this community, and I would say that it's a pro-white community, and it's also a reality-based community.
This is the censored information where I don't see people challenging the talking points.
I just see people trying to shut it down or avoiding it altogether.
And with that chasm being created, there's going to be some people that, well, it's going to take circumstance to draw them.
Like, for instance, what's going on with, well, now Pennsylvania.
And Ohio, you know, Springfield, that's not far from me.
You know, these businesses, there's this one guy, and he was bragging about how he was a fabrication facility of some kind, and he was bragging about, like, well, the Haitians come here on time, and they work hard, and, you know, Trump's saying that we're going to need more immigrants than ever because of AI innovations, which is such a contradiction because...
With some of these new welding platforms, because it was a welding and fabrication facility, and they were making axles or something, how long before we bring these low-skill, you know, trademans, these new Americans, they're as American as apple pie now, and they're no longer needed because their job got outsourced to a robot.
And then what's going to happen with these new, mostly primarily male fighting age Americans?
And those business owners, they're hiding behind...
For one, they're doing it for profit.
And I'm tired of people hiding behind monikers of this fake pretend love and compassion bullcrap.
Because it's not real.
You want to make money.
You don't actually care.
If I hire someone, I bring someone in here, some young kid and everything, and I train him up, it's going to be incumbent of me as he starts making me money.
Because yes, make no mistake about it, if you're in here doing work for me and I'm training you, especially starting out, you are making me money and it should be that way because you're incentivizing me to grow and bring more people in here.
but it's also incumbent of me to pay them a fair wage, which is what a lot of these employers that are bringing these new Americans over are doing.
They're paying them bottom dollar.
A lot of times their salary is covered by government subsidies.
So they're profiteering in a dying empire, or at least they're betraying their own folk for, you know, it's just like, well, that's business.
And just because it's legal doesn't make it moral.
And just because it's moral doesn't make it legal.
I mean, not that I'm saying people should go out and do illegal things, but I mean, you can't just draft something into paper and say like, okay, well, that's, it's now law and this is legal.
So therefore, like we can do it and there's nothing wrong with it.
I think there's going to be a story arc with some of these business owners that betray their countrymen and their fellow white Europeans because they didn't want to actually pay them a good wage.
I mean, what happens when these people from these other cultures decide that they've been wronged?
I mean, are they going to come to the factory with a bunch of pitchforks and everything or who knows what?
I mean, these people operate different.
I just think there's going to be a story arc.
That's a good assessment.
And, you know, the notion that we need some kind of foreign help to build our things, or even Trump's statement of we need more immigrants because of AI, right?
Meaning that we need them to control the AI. Why don't we teach our own people AI? Why do we need others to come in where they have a lower IQ bell curve?
Probably less expertise in the category because they don't have school systems over there that teach them about these things.
Why do we need them?
We don't.
It's a fallacy.
There's a lot to be said about these people that are willing to sell out their own people, sell out their...
They're fellow workmen and they're fellow American in that sense.
For cheap labor, we see Bethlehem Steel is actually a really good example of this.
Bethlehem Steel was the number one steel production company in the United States.
And they built the Golden Gate Bridge with Bethlehem Steel.
I mean, they built a lot of fantastic structures in this country.
And a lot of the labor got outsourced and they sent the manufacturing overseas.
They started making all of the steel over in China.
So it's because it's way cheaper.
Right.
And they just they sent it all overseas.
And now Bethlehem Steel closed.
I think it was 98.
And how many people were put out of a job?
Hundreds, thousands of people that had really solid jobs with a solid income and a nice pension and benefits and the whole nine yards.
And now those people, they were left barren.
And they literally got a departure check.
They just caught them a departure check.
And here you go.
We're closing.
We're done.
That's it.
Now all those people have to go find a whole other line of work.
And I think that's where we get people like yourself who feel that this system is not advocating for us fairly enough.
It's literal own people that helped to build and create all the things around us today.
It's not advocating for them.
And you're going to get people like yourself who say, well, if the corporations aren't going to do it, I'm going to do it.
And again, I think that's a very commendable journey that you're on.
Well, certainly it won't be easy, but I mean, I'm looking forward to it, and it's heartfelt, and I really like that I'm interacting with people that I feel are integral, and they understand.
They know the score.
They know what's going on for the most part.
I mean, I'm learning more every day.
I like listening to shows like yours because it makes my brain neurons tingle as I'm working.
It's very insightful, and having the truth on our side, I mean...
It's powerful.
And I would say rather than...
What my product is and what I intend to do is basically just to forge on.
I don't want to fight the system.
I want to get whatever with the system.
And I know that there's going to be other people just like me doing completely different things that are going to start doing the same thing.
And society that we're always waiting...
For the people that are never going to get it, or it's like, why don't you care?
And it's like, you know, I've been there too, but, you know, it's time to just move on.
Like, why wait for these people?
You know, I want people to enjoy the benefits of having things made for them by, you know, someone that hopefully that, you know, that I'm a white European.
I'm not saying that no one else can buy my products, but I'm not going to change the name.
I've had that suggested before.
It's like, I could appeal to a wider market.
It just doesn't feel like I don't want to ever lose the soul in what this is.
You'll find that with businesses a lot to where it might have started with all the best intentions.
I think You know, story...
What is it?
Papa John.
The owner of Papa John's.
He was passionate about...
He wanted to make pizzas and everything with his brother.
And they started it out of a closet and this and that.
And then he went public in the stock market where, you know, basically you're catering to a bunch of investors that they want to see a return on income no matter what.
And now pretty soon you don't even own your own company.
And if you say the wrong word in this dystopian, what's becoming like a communist dystopian hellscape, then you might just be uprooted from the very thing that you created.
So maybe we don't do that now.
Yeah, that's a really good example with Papa John's.
McDonald's is another good example.
A small company started up as just two guys with a burger shop and they just wanted to sell burgers to their fellow Americans.
And then some guy comes in and he's like, hey man, you could really franchise this thing.
And he wasn't doing it because he wanted them to have something bigger.
He was doing it because he wanted to weasel his way in there and try to make money off of the franchising piece of it.
So, you know, we see this process run time and time again where a company starts up on this kind of small little startup.
It's sole-owned and it's brick and mortar.
And then all of a sudden they go into this franchising and they become soulless.
They lose their original guidance and their original way of thought that they came with, the soul of it, like you said.
And I think that's really important is when you have a soul and a message and a character to your product and to your business.
I think it adds a lot more to that business.
Even just a small example, and it's not necessarily the soul of it, but look at Walmart as an example.
Walmart, when they first started up, again, it was a sole-owned thing.
It was just one little guy owned this little corner store, and he franchised it.
And now they're so beholden to these corporate interests, they're willing to say, oh, well, it's politically correct to get rid of guns now.
No one likes guns now.
I mean, people used to go buy hunting shotguns and hunting rifles and all this stuff at Walmart.
Now they don't sell it anymore.
They physically don't sell those things.
They pulled it all off the shelf.
They even pulled the ammo off the shelf for political reasons.
It had nothing to do with them not wanting to make the money.
And I'm sure actually there's probably some red lining in here and I'm sure one of their big investment firms like BlackRock or something of the sort cut them a pretty large check to make that decision.
So they're ending up making more money through those corporate financiers than they are through the actual American consumer themselves.
This is something we were touching on on the show a couple of days ago.
And again, it's why I personally in my local area, I support local businesses.
I go to the farmer's market for my meat.
I like to go and go to the local bakery if I want to get a loaf of bread or something of the sort.
I think it's very important that we're doing things like that.
And I think you, doing your product from the ground up and building your brand for yourself, with a message and a soul behind it, I think anybody supporting you is supporting exactly that.
I would consider it like a local business because it's From our people, of our people, and for our people.
I think that's very good.
I agree with you on the local shopping thing.
For instance, we have a food market or a farmer's market downtown every Saturday.
And the people that stage up a meat truck down there and they sell beef jerky is some of the best beef jerky I've ever had.
I mean, so not only are you supporting most predominantly white, small businesses that operate on a very moralistic basis, I mean, you're getting a better product.
But I think in this reality, for some reason, it seems like there's more than ample opportunities for people to sell their soul for their 30 pieces of silver.
And You know, we had Rubbermaid up here and that was a huge company that right now is just a husk of a building that's used for, you know, various corporate offices or whatever.
And that was a huge contributor to the local economy.
And they ended up selling out for their 30 pieces of silver and moving down to Mexico because they'd rather prefer the top decided like, well, I'd prefer to be You know, they might have been incredibly wealthy as it was, but I mean, that wasn't wealthy enough.
And so we have plenty of our own, not to mention just, you know, the JP situation.
We have our own folk that are, several of them, are more than willing to, you know, sell their soul.
And so I don't want to be that.
And I know that there's plenty of other business owners like myself that feel the same way.
Yeah, I completely agree with you.
This isn't an organic thing that these independent businesses are having such a hard time.
Being a sole-owned thing at the moment It's so difficult, especially if you're doing something like you are, where the message is something the system will hate.
They're going to want to tamper down on that.
It's even harder.
It's bad enough with all the red tape and owning a business on your own.
The fees and all the legal stuff, the paperwork and all of the regulations and restrictions and all this stuff.
Things that our founding fathers would have never even imagined would become a thing.
All of the red tape that comes with it.
And then, you know, you look at this COVID scandemic, right?
Where they close down the whole country and all the franchises get to stay open because they're essential.
But the little man is not essential.
The little man doesn't matter.
And they had to close down.
And I watched it in my local area.
I watched a couple people go out of business, one of which was a local hot dog shop we used to go to.
We have a corporate hot dog chain that's not far away.
I don't go to the corporate one.
I used to go to this local guy.
He ran this nice little shop.
It was beautiful.
You walked in, he remembers you by name.
It's reasonably priced.
The hot dogs were better, too.
It was a home recipe.
They were better.
And he was an overall outstanding and great guy.
And when the restrictions hit on the masking stuff and the distancing and all this and the hours that you could and couldn't be open and this, he lost his business through all of this.
And I actually physically went and I helped him carry the stuff out of the business, the shop, when he was moving all the items out.
And it was a horrible thing to witness.
I mean, you're watching a man's livelihood taken away from him by a system that doesn't care about us.
Again, it just speaks to the power of us supporting these smaller businesses.
The system's not going to do it for us, so we have to do it for ourselves.
If we truly care and we don't want everything to become this corporate, satanic, demonic entity, it's not only about boycotting those bigger businesses when they put a bad message out there.
It's also about supporting these smaller businesses when they're putting a better message out there.
Yeah, during COVID, you know, we had an opportunity there, collectively.
And it's much like the same thing that did away with alcohol prohibition, where essentially, towards the end, it got to the point where the system, the legal system, would have some of these gin runners or whoever is producing it dead to rights.
They'd have all the evidence, they'd have the still.
And the people...
There's a thing called jury nullification, where essentially the jury, even though it's like, well, yeah, he clearly did it, but we don't agree with the law, so not guilty.
And then what that did is it made the state look weak, and they're like, okay, well, fine.
You know, it's legal now.
And we could have done that.
We could have peacefully, if we had the gumption and that freedom philosophy...
You know, we could have said like, no, and some people did, but they took a lot more heat than they needed to because they're, you know, they were outliers rather than part of a large majority that said like, I mean, let's, and not to go into the whole thing with what COVID may or may be or whatnot.
The government doesn't have that type of authority.
It pretends to.
Now, I mean, if there really was like this deadly thing going around, I mean, all that, you know, I'd say idealistically the government should be able to do is like, okay, guys, listen, you know, this is this thing going around and here's what we suggest.
And I think that they probably, if it truly was a government that cared about us, you know, and we knew that the government cared about us, they probably would have gotten a lot more compliance for Some of these ridiculous things, if it truly was coming from a place like, hey, we really are concerned.
But it was an L on our part, but it was also a W because that also woke a lot of people up and like, hey, for some of us, I'm sure it's never again.
I've been kicked out of so many businesses because it's like, well, hey, You know, even, you know, fellow white people or whatever.
I mean, not even bringing race into it.
It's just, there were so many people that went along with that and they wanted to be the authoritarians.
Now they had authority to tell people to put a muzzle on your face.
And I just could not believe that, I mean, that Orwellian nightmare actually took place.
But I mean, certainly now it's like, I'm just, it's, It's over for me.
I'm never doing that again.
I remember those businesses that even suggested that I put that stupid muzzle on my face or social distance.
I'm never giving you a dime again.
Yeah, I think that's a good conviction to hold.
I had the same take with this whole masking nonsense.
Again, if somebody's going to get sick, you wearing a mask is not going to prevent other people from getting sick.
It's just ludicrous.
It's absolutely insane.
If the mask is that effective, it should be protecting them against you.
It shouldn't matter if you don't want one.
I never wore the mask.
There was quite a few times where I walked into a business and someone would say, Sir, mask please.
And I'd say, no.
And they'd go, you have to wear a mask.
You can't shop here without a mask.
I'd say, okay, then I'll take my business elsewhere.
I don't need to come here.
I'm fine.
Thank you, though.
It just goes to show how much they don't care about the consumer anymore.
Your freedom doesn't matter.
Your money as a consumer doesn't matter.
The corporate investors, that's what matters, right?
Again, I talked about this on my show the other day with my chat, so it probably sounds like a broken record, but the whole thing in America used to be the consumer is always right.
That was the staple of American culture, was the consumer is always right.
And that's how a capitalistic society runs, with a form of community.
And that's gone.
I mean, we saw it with COVID. Did anybody say, oh, you're the customer, you don't want to wear a mask as long as you feel cool, as long as you feel safe?
They have this stupid restriction.
I'll never forget.
I was at a restaurant one time with a buddy of mine.
And we sit down.
And they want you to wear a mask when you walk in.
Then when you sit down at the table, now you can take the mask off.
So, whatever.
I put the mask on to go to the damn table.
I go to the table.
I take the mask off.
The fucking busboy comes up to the table.
Excuse my French.
And he's like, Sir, you have to keep the mask on until you get your drinks.
I'm like, no, I'm okay.
Thank you, though.
Like, good advice, but I'm alright.
Like, what kind of insane backwards...
So the drink, the liquid pushes off the COVID fumes?
I mean, like, what do you mean I have to sit...
I sit here with a mask on until I get my drink.
Then I take my mask off, and now all of a sudden, COVID isn't in the air when the drinks are on the table.
I mean, it's just absurd.
It's...
And people fell for these things, man.
They just, they went, they complied with some kind of authority.
And we need to stop doing this.
We've seen, like you said, the government clearly didn't care.
It wasn't from a place of genuine interest.
Because if it was, they would have stepped back and they would have reneged on what they said and said, hey, you know, these vaccines do seem to be a little bit dangerous.
Maybe we should have tested them a little bit further than we did.
Or, hey, we were wrong to lock down in this and that area.
It didn't prove to be any more effective.
They didn't apologize for anything.
They haven't reneged on a single thing.
Instead, they've actually doubled down.
They've insulted us even more for being against it.
So...
Now, with this in mind, knowing that your government doesn't care about you that much, knowing what they've done to the small businessman, knowing what they've done to the consumer themselves, it's time that the small man has to bind together and they have to create, again, a form of community.
And this starts with Businesses like yourself supporting other people, whether it's a mutual deal or you're promoting them or you're helping put some of your profits into them.
And then they have to support you and they have to try to help push your product so that we're now putting all of that power, all of the money that would go into the system, we're putting it back into ourselves.
So it's that good old thing.
I know for some people, The price range might feel a little high, right?
$375, $400 for a showerhead.
That might feel high, right?
But the thing is, when you go to the farmer's market, the meat there is a little more expensive than what you get at Walmart, too.
And it's because that's what the system has done to our people.
They've made it so that the small guy...
Physically can't get the things as cheap as the corporation can.
It's a very backward situation, but we have to deal with that in our own way.
So put less money into the system, more money into our people.
And again, I can guarantee you with a product like the shower, I installed it myself.
I felt the bar.
I know what it's like.
You're not buying another one in your lifetime.
I can guarantee your grandkids will be using that showerhead, provided we still have civilization.
Well, that's the thing, right?
If...
A business like this, or any business, can exist, grow, and thrive.
It's really a testament to said business.
Like you were talking about before, it's kind of hard to have a realistic form of capitalism when really it's just a facade of capitalism.
When you have companies like BlackRock, State Street, Vanguard, that can Basically holds so much potential capital investment into places like Target, Dick's Sporting Goods, Walmart, to make them to where they fear the ramifications of not going along with a lot of these DEI or D-I-E agendas with the LGBT blah, blah, blah.
I mean, that's why they're doing it because, I mean, they don't care how many customers they lose potentially.
I mean, not completely.
I mean, Lowe's was going to start doing that.
And I mean, I spent a lot of money at Lowe's and it's like, Lowe's, are you going to do this?
And they're like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Like we, we changed our mind.
We're not, no, we're not going to do that.
But some of them have gone like all in Harley Davidson.
It's like, well, peace out.
You know, you sold your soul.
Like maybe there's still some good people.
And that's another thing too.
I mean, we just got to try to forge ahead.
It's like being in the eye of the storm.
I actually went through Hurricane Katrina.
And I was stationed down in Pasagula, Mississippi.
And so that was when I was on my...
Not to get into the whole military thing.
I was on the shore duty.
And I was in Ocean Springs.
And the whole community was concerned.
Like, we were out in the street talking.
It was so surreal.
Because we never talked before.
And I think going forward, like, kind of get used to that kind of circumstance where it's like, you know, the community that you never talked to before, you know, who knows what's going to happen in the future, but it's like you're out there talking and like, well, what do we do?
And I knew that we were probably going to be okay where we were.
We were inland enough, you know, I mean, it was like a 10 minute drive to the Gulf of Mexico.
And someone suggested that's like, well, we've got a house that's just above Highway 10 further west.
And I knew that the hurricane was coming further west.
And I wanted to go through the eye.
And so I'm like, well, I'll go.
I want to go.
Yeah, it should be better there.
And boy, it was not.
I mean, it was, I mean, just the most brutal thing.
And then, so in the eye...
You're seeing all this chaos going on all around you.
You can see the clouds out there and you see how bad it is, but you're calm.
Your head's together.
And that's really what we have to be in all this.
We have to be in the eye of the storm because we have to forge ahead.
No matter what, we're going to need some sort of financial system.
I mean, right now, this is kind of getting back to what I was saying earlier.
It's the worst type of fight.
I mean, it's not Weimar Republic, but I mean, we're kind of heading that direction.
You certainly have to work substantially harder to make the same type of buying power.
But that doesn't mean that that's always what it's going to be.
And we can kind of have a, like, well, I don't know how it's going to turn out.
We always get off into the weeds whenever it's like, I just don't want people to think that the circumstances that are now are always going to be.
We're going to weather through this.
And we have, I want to have the attitude that we're forging ahead, making things better than they were before.
I don't, I love being white.
And I love being white European and I love me.
The system's never going to convince me to hate myself or hate my people.
And not only do I want to preserve some sense of that for my kin, I want to make sure that's even better.
Yeah, I think that's a really good message.
And I don't know if you're ready to close out.
If you had anything that you wanted to add on your product or your views or anything like that?
No.
So essentially what I'm going to end up doing is once everything is up and going, then I'll probably approach people like Logos.
I'll probably approach other pro-white broadcasters with the message of business opportunity.
And then that's me basically saying that I'm up and running, which I technically am now, but I'm busy.
And I want to make sure I care about you people.
I care about the people that I'm making this product for.
I want to make sure that if I accept money from you, that you know I'm working on it and it's going to be a quick return because these things have to be made to order.
I'm not going to cheap seat this kind of stuff.
But I do have an email.
If people are interested, they could get a hold of me at AquariusFabrication14 at AOL.com.
And eventually, it might be next couple of weeks, it might be next month, you might get a response where it's like, you know, I do have a payment processor.
But right now, I'm just kind of putting the idea out there.
I wanted to bounce the product off people like Zach here to see if it's something that And other broadcasters, too, to see if it's something they actually like.
Are people going to like this?
Are they going to like the other things that I make?
And it seems like a resounding yes, so I'm going to move forward, and I look forward to doing business with you in the future.
Well, I hope to see more streamers promoting your stuff as well.
I think you're a good dude.
You've called into the show quite a few times.
You've always had good things to say.
You've always been very positive.
And I think you're genuine.
Your product is certainly genuine.
I got that right off the bat.
I learned that very quickly.
And just one more thing.
I think you do have a website that's in the making.
I think you said you're working on that behind the scenes as well.
I don't know if you have a name for that yet or you're still waiting on that.
It'll likely be under the same moniker.
Everything, I mean, I'm not hiding from anybody.
My business is available.
You punch in Aquarius Fabrication, LLC, you'll find me.
I do have a fantastic security system.
If a mouse farts on my property, I know about it.
And that's just, you know, I'm not talking about, I'm just talking about any malicious actors out there.
The technology these days is incredible, but...
No, I'm not hiding and I'm not malicious.
I'm not out to get anybody.
I just want to love and support my fellow white people.
Good.
Awesome.
Great message, brother.
Thank you again very much for coming on.
It was a pleasure chatting with you.
And I'm going to stay live for a little bit.
We'll close out the show, kind of outro with some people.
But thank you.
It was a great encounter.
And I wish you the best with your product.
Hopefully we can get you some sales and get some people to take some interest in what you're doing.
I think you're doing a great job, man.
I appreciate you having me on.
Thank you.
Alrighty.
I'll talk to you soon.
Alrighty, folks.
That was Aquarius Metal Fabrications.
Great guy.
Again, he's called into the show quite a few times in the past.
He's always said good things.
He seems...
Well, now it seems.
He is a genuine guy.
I think that's very clear.
I think there's no mistake about that.
So make sure that you guys do check him out.
Send him an email if you're interested in the product.
And if you're interested in him, I mean, he'll probably be up for a conversation if you really want to just talk to him about a conversation.
So...
I think that's about it for today's show.
It's a little bit earlier.
We figured...
I had talked to him prior.
We figured it would go for about an hour, maybe an hour and a half, and it wouldn't be anything too crazy special.
So...
We'll probably close up here.
I don't have anything of importance to add.
I know it's an early show.
We typically do two hours.
I didn't get a lot of sleep last night.
I just did a show before this, and I got a lot of housework I'm doing.
I'm in the process of painting, and it's taking far longer than I would like it to.
We're in the process of doing all of that.
So, the schedule for the rest of the week.
This is the second to last show of the week.
I'll be live again tomorrow at 4 p.m.
Eastern.
We're interviewing Laurent Goyne.
He is the author of The Unspoken Kennedy Truth, one of the best books on the JFK assassination.
Really goes into the Jewish involvement in Israel as well, and their motive behind doing such a thing, which is pretty standout-ish when you actually look into it.
The motive is pretty strong.
So I think we'll close it at that.
And I want to say thank you again to Aquarius for coming on.
He's always been a good guest when he calls into the show.
And I did.
I truly can vouch.
I received the product myself.
I hooked it up this week.
I gave it a use.
And I'll tell you, it did exactly what you would expect the shower to do.
And that bar is seriously sturdy.
So you're really not going to ever need another one of those.
You know, it's like not like having like a plastic shower rod or, you know, a lot of these other shower rods kind of are made of this like metal that you can basically bend.
It's like so weak and flimsy.
So highly recommend it, folks.
All right, guys.
So with that said, we're going to close up for today.
Don't forget to follow me on all my platforms.
Odyssey.
It's O-D-Y-S-E-E dot com at Logos Revealed.
Follow me on Twitter.
It's at Logos Revealed I. And you can obviously find me on Rumble on the Stu Peters Network, which we're live on right now.
And you can also find me on my own Rumble, which is Logos Revealed I. So...
Make sure you guys follow me on all those platforms.
I was just on Blonde in the Belly of the Beast podcast yesterday.
You can find that on my Twitter feed.
You can also find it on her YouTube channel.
We went on the Lily Gattis podcast like two weeks ago.
We've got a lot more important and very exciting shows coming up in the future here.
So stay tuned.
Keep your eyes open.
There's going to be a lot of nice stuff coming up.
So...
Thank you, folks, very much for watching.
And lastly, if you guys do want to support the show, keep this running.
Help me keep this going full-time or long-time or whatever the hell you want to call it.
All the options are in the description below.
We've got Entropy.
We've got Odyssey, which you can donate directly through those.
And then we also have crypto wallets as well, and I think those are pretty self-explanatory.
So thank you again, folks.
I really do appreciate it.
And I will see you guys tomorrow at 4 p.m.
Eastern.
Looking forward to it.
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