Speaker | Time | Text |
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Good afternoon, Rumblers. | ||
This is Tate Brown here holding it down for Tim Poole. | ||
Yeah, the voice, the voice is, it's rough. | ||
He's not quite RFK territory yet, but it's sounding pretty bad. | ||
I mean, you probably saw on his Twitter, he had to go to the hospital this last weekend. | ||
So he's taking it easyy this week. | ||
I think he's come to the determination that, you know, it's going to be better just to rest a few more days to get back to 100% rather than keep pushing it and risking, you know, further inflaming it. | ||
It makes total sense and it's all right because we'll hold it down in the meantime. | ||
As I said, I'm here, taking you into the afternoon here on the Rumble morning lineup. | ||
Steven Crowder ratings, we appreciate that from the Crowder team keeping this lineup on the move. | ||
Yeah, we're here. | ||
It's a nice overcast day, not quite rainy, just a nice little overcast. | ||
It's a nice mood. | ||
It's a really moody weather outside here outside of our nation's capital. | ||
We got a lot of great news today. | ||
We have obviously the, you probably saw on the headline, the Trump Smithsonian battle is still going. | ||
There was the executive order six days ago where Trump, you know, demanded that the Smithsonian ceases with this anti-American crap that they've been pushing. | ||
Well, you probably saw his truth social yesterday. | ||
He went in on him. | ||
He went in. | ||
He's not pulling any punches. | ||
We also have, also we have big news involving Trump. | ||
He is introspective. | ||
He's talking about heaven. | ||
Will he make it to heaven? | ||
Will he not? | ||
And it's created a really interesting discourse aroundse around that whole conversation. | ||
We're going to get into that and we'll see what's going on there. | ||
Elon Musk is, it looks like he's done with the America Party project. | ||
We'll have to get into that and see what the future of that looks like. | ||
And then also the admin is going to start screening migrants for anti American views. | ||
It's about time that we did that. | ||
It makes total sense. | ||
And if we have time, we'll get to that. | ||
And also we have Elijah Shafer joining us at the half hour mark. | ||
So that's going to be exciting. | ||
Obviously, he's a legend. | ||
So it's going to be great having him on to chat. | ||
We'll break down everything. | ||
We'll break it all down. | ||
But before we do that, we got to check out today's sponsors. | ||
We have Cass Brew Coffee. | ||
One second, let me frame this. | ||
See, we do things on the fly here. | ||
Boom. | ||
Look at that. | ||
Now we're framed. | ||
Now we're here. | ||
See, Tim would have done that so slick and so quick. | ||
You know, we're still getting there. | ||
It's gonna, it's a slow process. | ||
But anyway, first up, we got Cass Brew Coffee. | ||
We love Cass Brew. | ||
You know, my first few shows I filled in, people said I was low energy. | ||
They said I needed some Cass Brew myself. | ||
And, you know, I agree. | ||
So I started drinking some Appalachian Knights pre show, fire me up, and you know, I do feel a lot more energized. | ||
So anecdotally, it works very well for me, so I would recommend heading over to Casprew and trying all these different flavors. | ||
You never know. | ||
You never know which one will end up being your go to. | ||
I mean, we got the Colombian blend, the Stand Your Grounds, we have Ian's Graphene Dream, which is a smash hit. | ||
We had the live events these last few weekends, and the Ian's Graphene Dream flew off the shelves. | ||
So yeah, head on over to Casprew, grab you some coffee, and you know, while you got the browser open, you might as well head to Boonies too and grab you a skateboard. | ||
I mean, right? | ||
You might as well do a little double dip, as they say. | ||
We have some great boards over here at Boonies. | ||
We got the Declaration of Independence. | ||
We have the Uncancelable Board, which, I mean, I've gone into the story many times. | ||
Super cool. | ||
Super cool story. | ||
And it's, in short, I'll say, buying a board is like buying a ticket to a war with cancel culture. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I need to workshop that a little better. | ||
But it's fantastic. | ||
We have the be gay and don't be gay boards. | ||
There's a lot going on there. | ||
A lot to unpack. | ||
The 28th Amendment board. | ||
If you like chickens, if you're pro chicken, then I'd recommend picking one up even if you're anti chicken. | ||
I don't know who is, but maybe take a look at that. | ||
The chickflay cows, I think, are anti chicken. | ||
Anyway, I digress. | ||
Let's get into the news. | ||
And we got first from the New York Times, Trump said Smithsonian focuses too much on how bad slavery was. | ||
That's not a direct, that's not a great characterization of what he said, but we'll read the New York Times, we'll see what they have to say first, and then we'll get into the truth post itself. | ||
From the New York Times, President Trump accused the Smithsonian Institute on Tuesday of focusing too much on quote how bad slavery was. | ||
and not enough on the brightness of America as his administration conducts a wide ranging review of the content and its museum exhibits. | ||
The Smithsonian is out of control, so true, where everything discussed is how horrible our country is, how bad slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden have been. | ||
Nothing about success, nothing about brightness, nothing about the future, mister Trump said in a social media post. | ||
This country cannot be woke because woke is broke. | ||
We have the hottest country in the world, so true, and we want people to talk about it. | ||
including in our museums. | ||
And that was from this post here, this truth social post. | ||
This was yesterday in the afternoon. | ||
I mean, it's so Trump just has a way with words, man. | ||
He's just a poet. | ||
And of course, the only thing they extrapolated from this look, this big long post was this line right here and chuck that in the headline. | ||
Anyway, mister Trump made the comments a week after the White House told the Smithsonian that its museums would be required to adjust any content that the administration finds problematic in tone, historical framing, in alignment with the American ideals within one hundred and twenty days. | ||
Taken together, the administration's examination and mister Trump's post Tuesday were the latest example of mister Trump trying to impose his will on a cultural institution and minimize the experiences and history of black people in the United States. | ||
That is obviously the New York Times analysis of anti American rhetoric. | ||
I guess they're saying anti this is the New York Times suggestion. | ||
They're suggesting that anti American rhetoric is synonymous with the history of black people. | ||
That's kind of a racist conclusion to make, but that is what the New York Times are suggesting here. | ||
Here's a quote from Douglas Brinkley, a presidential historian that I've never heard of. | ||
It's the epitome of dumbness to criticize the Smithsonian for dealing with the reality of slavery in America. | ||
It's what led to our civil war and is a defining aspect of our national history, and the Smithsonian deals in a robust way with what slavery was, but it also deals with human rights and civil rights in equal abundance. | ||
Obviously, that was mister Brinkley, a presidential historian sounds nice, non partisan, neutral voice, obviously. | ||
The epitome of dumbness may be some editorializing there, I don't know. | ||
Anyway, since taking office, mister Trump has led an effort to purge diversity, equity, and inclusion policies, aka DEI, from the federal government and threaten to investigate companies and schools that adopt such policies. | ||
He has tried to reframe the country's past involving racism and discrimination by deemphasizing that history, preferring to instead spotlight a sanitized, rosy depiction of America. | ||
So I mean, just take a look here at Trump. | ||
This is not consistent. | ||
Trump here is saying nothing about success, nothing about brightness, nothing about the future. | ||
Because what's the point of examining American history if you're only going to put a spotlight on its worst traits, its worst moments, its lowest moments? | ||
I mean, the thing about Trump, the thing that makes him so compelling to Americans is you got to remember, like when he came down that escalator, right? | ||
The culture we were in was the culture of Obama, which was the culture of apologizing, the culture of making you feel bad for being American. | ||
I mean, infamously, he had an entire media tour where he went to all these different countries and just apologized for things we had done in the past. | ||
It's like, I mean, he apologized to Japan for the atom bomb, which is crazy. | ||
And so the entire, the entire vibe of the Obama years was just, was just embarrassment. | ||
It was like, we were embarrassed to be American. | ||
You always had this, July 4 wasn't a celebration, it was supposed to be this day of introspection, right? | ||
It wasn't a day of joyous. | ||
I mean, we built the greatest country in the world. | ||
Shouldn't we celebrate this? | ||
This is a wonderful thing. | ||
No, actually, we need to think about, you know, every little thing that we've done that may have been wrong because, you know, I guess the standard is perfection. | ||
Anyway, if the standard is perfection, America is probably the closest to it because this is the finest country, the most powerful country. | ||
Americans are fantastic people and Trump recognizes this. | ||
And again, I love this. | ||
Nothing about success, nothing about brightness. | ||
Brightness is such a great word to use. | ||
That's such a word that you wouldn't expect to be in the arsenal of a president. | ||
And seeing him deploy that is beautiful because that's what Americans need. | ||
I mean, we're in such a nihilistic time. | ||
We're in such a the time where the average person just feels like dirt and they're soul searching at all times. | ||
They're lying awake at night wondering what's going to happen when they die. | ||
We could use a little brightness. | ||
We could use a little optimism, and that's what Trump brings to the table. | ||
Obviously, we're going to let's get into the Smithsonian situation a bit more, maybe less in the abstract. | ||
This was great from Charlie Kirk today. | ||
He was commenting on the truth social culture matters, history matters, museums matter, real. | ||
There's a reason immigrants don't assimilate and why young kids hate their country. | ||
They're taught to disrespect this country. | ||
Americans have so much to be proud of. | ||
This is the greatest republic on the planet, the Smithsonian, the National Museum of Ar our capital city should reflect our national greatness. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I made this point on IRL a few days. | ||
I've traveled to a few countries. | ||
And what I love doing when I'm visiting a new country is I like visiting their national museum. | ||
I like to see how the people of that country conceptualize themselves and typically the government will reflect that in their national museum. | ||
Obviously, the West is a bit of a different story, but countries that have a bit of self respect will do this. | ||
Like, for example, I went to Qatar, which no disrespect. | ||
to Qatar, but their history is not really that interesting. | ||
They're just a desert peninsula. | ||
And they were, you know, they didn't really have much going on. | ||
I mean, most western maps didn't even know that they were there until like the 1800s. | ||
Not, you know, so it's not the it's not dripping with the richness of, you know, Qatar doesn't have a lot to work with. | ||
I guess I'll put it that way. | ||
I mean, they weren't even independent until like 1971, I think the British the British ruled over Qatar. | ||
So all this to say, it's not like they're working with much. | ||
You know, again, no disrespect to Qatar. | ||
You know, I thought it was a lovely, lovely country. | ||
But their museum, the way they conceptualize themselves, I mean, you would have thought that they were, you know, China or something. | ||
I mean, like, the place is huge. | ||
It's dripping with artifacts. | ||
Every exhibit was just like glazing, like someone from their history, you know, talking about how like this boat that some guy, you know, invented in, you know, 1820s, like the greatest thing ever made. | ||
Like everywhere you turned, it was just the guitar show. | ||
And they weren't necessarily minimizing any bad aspects of their history. | ||
They talk about it, but they were just like, I mean, this is our national museum. | ||
Like, this isn't the the national struggle session, right? | ||
I mean, that's ridiculous. | ||
And the same thing happened in Kenya. | ||
When I went to Kenya, their national museum, which surprisingly was actually in really good shape considering the state of the country. | ||
Again, it was just it was a healthy self conception, they didn't hate themselves, which is coming as a Western is so rare because the United States and by extension the UK, France, Germany, the Netherlands, all of these national museums in the West are just like self deprecating. | ||
It's like they hate themselves. | ||
And it's basically just thousands of square feet of apologizing. | ||
That's all that's really going on in these national museums in the West. | ||
And you go to the National Museum in Kenya and it's just like, this is great. | ||
Check out this art. | ||
Check out this little trinket over here. | ||
We have elephants in this country. | ||
It's a great place. | ||
You'll love it here. | ||
It's just a healthy self conception. | ||
It's like, it doesn't feel like suicidal. | ||
Like when you're going through the Smithsonian, like if the United States was a person, the Smithsonian would be like, it's suicide letter. | ||
I mean seriously, I know I hate to be grim, but that's exactly what's going on. | ||
Is it just like profusely apologizing for everything? | ||
Like, just, you know, oh, I invented slavery basically. | ||
Like everything is just sad and depressing. | ||
There's no brightness, like Trump said. | ||
I mean, I went to the National Museum in Zambia. | ||
That place was falling apart. | ||
And they just threw like, you know, a jacket up on a wall and they're like, Oh, our president, you know, 30 years ago wore this and gave a great speech with it. | ||
I mean, Zambia has a lot, a lot going on, a lot of sadness there. | ||
It's not, you know, it's not the most pleasant country in the world. | ||
But they figured, you know what, little kids from schools and whatever foreign tourists we do get are going to visit the National Museum. | ||
So why do we want to emphasize the worst qualities of our country? | ||
I mean, this is this is supposed to be the greatness of our country on display. | ||
So anyway, I mean, look, we know all about it. | ||
We know what the Smithsonian's been up to. | ||
It's an academic institution. | ||
So none of this is a surprise. | ||
This was obviously, this went viral. | ||
This was an infographic that the Smithsonian had put out. | ||
The aspects and assumptions of whiteness and white culture in the United States, I'll just I'll breeze through it here. | ||
You can dive into this deeper. | ||
We also dove into it on IRL recently as well. | ||
I don't remember which day that was. | ||
But here are some traits of white culture, you know, take from this what you will. | ||
Maybe we'll analyze it afterwards, but here are some traits of white people, broadly speaking in the United States. | ||
Rugged individualism, family structure, emphasis on scientific method, history, Protestant work ethic, religion, status, power, and authority, future orientation, time, aesthetics, holidays, and here's some of the holidays, justice, competition, communication. | ||
Now obviously a lot of these are describing the subject and then they break down the specifics of it. | ||
But some of the stuff like right here, follow rigid time schedules. | ||
Now this infographic was produced during the George Floyd era, so it was kind of an attempt to tear down white people. | ||
And this infographic, I guess, was supposed to make you self aware of your whiteness. | ||
And at the time whiteness was a pejorative. | ||
Obviously this has evolved a bit. | ||
People don't really feel bad for being white anymore. | ||
But at the time, it was deployed as a pejorative, and some people still do. | ||
But some of this stuff is like, I mean, you could go to some certain corners of the internet and see this exact same infographic with a different logo on it, and it would be like a pro-white culture infographic. | ||
I mean, saying ridge, following, so being like punctual is now white culture, I guess. | ||
I mean, there is some truth to that, I suppose. | ||
Anyway, the Smithsonian, the fact that they thought this was like a dunk on white people, just shows you that they had it they have an act and still do have an axe to grind with with white Americans who obviously make up like a foundation of the country specifically those from like England and Scotland and the Netherlands, etc. | ||
And this is still a domain you can go to. | ||
So this is the Smithsonian. | ||
We're what? | ||
This is seven months, eight months? | ||
This is actually eight months into the Trump administration. | ||
Seven months. | ||
Anyway. | ||
Our shared future. | ||
Reckoning with our racial past. | ||
An initiative for... | ||
And this is the Smithsonian. | ||
This is our national museum. | ||
Here's from their official website. | ||
An initiative for social change. | ||
Our shared future reckoning with our racial past emerges from self-sufficiency centuries of Systematic racism and its urgent present day reality. | ||
With this new initiative, we seek to spark positive social change and build a more equitable future through interdisciplinary scholarship, creative partnership, dialogue and engagement. | ||
So these are all buzzwords that mean we really don't like white people and we want to make some exhibits that just dunk on them all day long. | ||
And that's exactly what's going on, reckoning with our racial past in Los Angeles. | ||
Do you think they're addressing like, you know, Asians? | ||
Do you think they're asking Asians to reckon with their racial past? | ||
No, this is for white. | ||
I mean, look what's going on. | ||
Like this guy here. | ||
This is just a white struggle session. | ||
They want you to feel bad. | ||
I digress. | ||
You know, you're probably in the know on this kind of stuff, what's going on. | ||
But there's a lot on this website that's just craziness that needs to be, and this is what Trump is talking about for the record. | ||
The New York Times is sitting there scratching their head. | ||
I don't know what he's talking about. | ||
It's this. | ||
This is just like arbitrary. | ||
This is just one of many, many examples on the Smithsonian website of just nonsense that you can find. | ||
Of course, this whole thing is bankrolled by the Bank of America. | ||
So they act too. | ||
You see these people on the left where they act like this sort of stuff is somehow, is somehow like part of the resistance you're resisting. | ||
something, like it's countercultural, like it's anti-institutional. | ||
And then every single time, it's always bankrolled by these major institutions. | ||
The Bank of America is behind this. | ||
So I mean, just ridiculous stuff. | ||
This was the Smithsonian. | ||
Also, they have this Latino exhibit. | ||
You know, this is from Heritage Foundation. | ||
Here are some of the assertions that were made in the Latino exhibit at the NAMAH. | ||
The United States stole one third of Mexico in 1848. | ||
You know, I've previously covered why that's false. | ||
Also, the territory that Mexico controlled that we won in the Mexican-American War was controlled by them for 30 years at most. | ||
So that's not a very great claim to begin with. | ||
Cubans came here seeking economic opportunity, not escaping communist barbarism. | ||
No, they're escaping communism. | ||
Ask, I mean, you can just ask a Cuban, like they'll tell you. | ||
Actually, they'll probably tell you before you even ask because they're patriots often. | ||
I should say they hate communism, which you should, and they know why. | ||
The Texas Revolution was a defense of slavery against an abolitionist Mexico. | ||
Yeah, well, that's, I mean, once again, just ask a Texan and go to the Alamo. | ||
Obviously not the case. | ||
Also, Mexico was not this hotbed of progressivism in the 1800s. | ||
That's for another show. | ||
Here's some of the crap going on at the Smithsonian recently. | ||
This was established on December 2020, 27, 2020, the National Museum at the American Latino. | ||
You know, what are we doing? | ||
I mean, what exhibits would you even have in this? | ||
Like, like, what, like, you know, used Nissan Altima exhibit or something? | ||
I don't know.. | ||
Anyway, the Smithsonian American Women's History Museum. | ||
The history of women, that's just history. | ||
It's like half, half of history. | ||
They've been around. | ||
It's not like they're new around here, women. | ||
I mean, hello, they're like in Genesis. | ||
Do we really need a, I guess this is American women's history? | ||
I mean, all right. | ||
This was created, by the way. | ||
These two museums were created and the appropriations, I don't know if you remember near the end of Trump's first term, they rammed through this COVID relief bill, this omnibus package. | ||
I think it was like one point six trillion or something. | ||
Well, it was this. | ||
They snuck these two museums across the finish line in that omnibus package that passed. | ||
And that was a Republican. | ||
I think it was a Republican. | ||
So it's like, you know, what are we doing here? | ||
Anyway, this is from Katie Pavlovich. | ||
Here's some other nonsense going on at the Smithsonian. | ||
This is how the Smithsonian marks the 50th anniversary of Title IX and defines the legislation. | ||
Not a single use of the word woman. | ||
Outrageous rewrite and manipulation of history then and now. | ||
Even as okay, so we'll read here, the exhibition marks the fiftieth anniversary of Title IX, federal legislation championed by Congresswoman Patsy Mink and signed into law by President Richard Nixon in nineteen seventy two. | ||
Love Nixon, we're not perfect. | ||
You make mistakes, it happens. | ||
The Act unintentionally boosted longstanding efforts to open male dominated arenas of sports, male dominated arenas of sports also known as sports. | ||
Anyway, even as Title II protections have been expanded over the years, most recently under the Biden administration, athletes continue to face sexism, racism, transphobia, and other forms of bigotry. | ||
The stories of athletes before and after Title IX are part of a larger narrative of the struggle for equality in the United States. | ||
And almost on Q, there's a Spanish translation below it. | ||
Anyway, yeah, so as Katie pointed out, woman is not mentioned in this. | ||
So even if you're pro Title IX, there's a lot of problems with it. | ||
They don't even mention woman, like the whole point. | ||
That was the whole gist of the situation. | ||
Yeah, and then apparently the pressing issues of our time are transphobia, racism, bigotry, sexism. | ||
Yeah, young people can't even really buy a house or start families. | ||
The birth rate is in the dumpster. | ||
We might go extinct because we can't procreate. | ||
And the issues facing our time obviously are sexism and racism and transphobia. | ||
Anyway, Captive Dreamer here, he broke it down perfectly. | ||
The problem with institutions like the Smithsonian is probably not too dissimilar with what has happened to classics departments across the country, controlled, curated, and run by people who harbor a deep seated resentment towards not only our history, but the West more broadly. | ||
That is the problem that I mean the rot goes so much deeper than the Smithsonian. | ||
It's obviously, you know, buried in our universities. | ||
It's just people that have a chip on their shoulder. | ||
It's people that, like he said, are just resentful against the West, presumably because they haven't really done much in their lives. | ||
They're kind of losers when you meet these people. | ||
They don't really have much going on and they hate their fathers. | ||
And typically when you have that sort of grudge, you're going to, like I said, have a chip on your shoulder and they often take it out on the West. | ||
They view the West as a stand-in for their father. | ||
And they view patriots as stand-ins for successful people that they want to rage against and blame for everything. | ||
And like he said, it's across the West more broadly. | ||
I mean, if you think the Smithsonian situation is bad, the most toxic museum situation is the British Museum. | ||
I was looking for an article because people love to dunk on the British Museum. | ||
How many artifacts in the British Museum are actually British from the Euro News? | ||
When I looked up British Museum criticism, there's like an article every day of like leftists like crashing out over the British Museum because if you know anything about British history, they had a large empire.. | ||
And when you have a large empire, you do a lot of exploring of your empire. | ||
And when you do that, you're going to find a lot of cool stuff. | ||
And you want to bring that cool stuff back to Britain and show it off. | ||
And people are upset about this basic fact of history. | ||
Like I see, as you see here, I mean, they're just complaining. | ||
I don't even want to bother reading this because it's just like whining. | ||
Well, the British took these artifacts because they weren't really treasured by the original holders. | ||
I don't even want to call them holders. | ||
Wherever they found these artifacts, they were typically, they found them. | ||
They rediscovered them because I would just say they discovered them because they weren't really being utilized or admired or even acknowledged. | ||
The most infamous, oh sorry. | ||
Well, I was reading the article, the Wikipedia article, so I was down a bit. | ||
The most infamous example is the Rosetta Stone. | ||
I mean, obviously, the Rosetta Stone was a huge deal. | ||
It was how we were able to start deciphering Egyptian scripts and that sort of thing. | ||
But let me find rediscovery here. | ||
So when Napoleon invaded Egypt, he had a squad of French with him. | ||
And they spotted the slab with inscriptions on one side that the soldiers had uncovered while demolishing a wall within the fort. | ||
Obviously they're being a bit vague here. | ||
To read in between the lines, the Rosetta Stone was being used as a part of a wall in Egypt. | ||
So I mean that kind of explains the situation surrounding these artifacts when they were discovered and brought back to, I say brought to Europe. | ||
There's so many more examples. | ||
This is just a famous one with the Rosetta Stone. | ||
You see here the French, the English, you know, took it off the French's hands a little later. | ||
That's neither here nor there. | ||
But yeah, hilarious. | ||
Like I said, that was just one example. | ||
There's plenty of examples of these artifacts not really being utilized by the locals or admired in any way. | ||
There was also, was it Lionsgate, I think, was being scattered and used for flooring. | ||
Anyway, another big story here from the Wall Street Journal, Trump administration to screen immigrants for anti-American views. | ||
The new guidance builds on the agency's policy of vetting social media for evidence of anti-Semitism. | ||
This is, again, just kind of building off of the Smithsonian thing, is just reshifting the priorities of the government towards pro-America policy and pro-America ideology. | ||
This is a great example of it. | ||
A few months ago, let's see, well, I'll just read here. | ||
The Trump administration plans to scrutinize social media for quote anti-American ideologies when deciding to grant visa or green card applications. | ||
No brainer. | ||
ICE, the primary agency in charge of legal immigration, said Tuesday that its officers should give significant weight to evidence that an immigrant has quote any involvement in anti-American or terrorist organization when reviewing residency work and visa applications. | ||
Again, this is a no brainer. | ||
spokesperson said, If you hate America, don't try and live in America. | ||
It is that simple. | ||
So true, it really is that simple. | ||
Let's see here. | ||
This is the good part. | ||
Yeah, this is what I wanted to talk about right here. | ||
The latest directive builds on the agency's April announcement that it would screen immigrants' social media for evidence of anti Semitism. | ||
As part of that shift, many immigrants, including those applying for tourist or student visas to the US, must now submit their social media handles and make their public profiles public for officers to review. | ||
It's a no brainer. | ||
Rainer, I mean, like when you look, you know, unfortunately, your Twitter typically is good insight into your mind because people tend to just fire off what they're thinking, which is again, probably not a great thing, but it makes it very useful because if people can't even, I mean, contain themselves on Twitter and contain their anti-American views on Twitter, then who knows what they're harboring deep in their hearts and the resentfulness they have against Americans. | ||
And that kind of is the problem, as you're seeing with the Elon Omar's of the world, is you have a large chunk of the country that despises Americans, that despises Heritage Americans specifically. | ||
They put out these types of Smithsonian pamphlets here as an attempt to dunk on Heritage Americans or White Americans, whatever you want to call them. | ||
Also, I remember people freaking out in April about this on Twitter. | ||
They were like, oh, you know, we're screening for anti-Semitism, but we're not screening for anti-American rhetoric. | ||
Which I actually kind of said the same thing. | ||
I was like, okay, it's true. | ||
We don't want people coming here that are, you know, filled with hate. | ||
That's obviously, if you hate Jewish people, you wouldn't like the United States very much because we have a lot of Jewish people. | ||
So, you know, it wouldn't be a great fit if you just have that going for you. | ||
But it is, you know, at the time I was thinking, yeah, but what about people that hate the majority of the country, right? | ||
People that hate Americans and specifically people that hate white Americans because that really is kind of the big, pressing form of hatred in the United States right now. | ||
And it has been over the last few years for a few decades, really. | ||
So it's a relief. | ||
It's a relief to see the Trump administration screen immigrants for anti-American behaviors. | ||
I honestly, they could just whip this out. | ||
They could utilize the Smithsonian's little piece here, and they could just rattle these off and say, what do you think about individualism? | ||
What do you think about, you know, family structure? | ||
What do you think about the Protestant work ethic? | ||
That would actually get a lot of people on Twitter in trouble too, but that's neither here nor there. | ||
Anyway, no, like you should like Christianity, right? | ||
I mean, that just seems like a good start. | ||
I've always said the test to enter the United States to see if you'll be compatible with America is if you can eat a bacon cheeseburger. | ||
I think that would be the optimal way to do things. | ||
So with that, thank you for watching this portion of the morning live show. | ||
we are we will be back tonight for tim castirl at 8 p.m be there come hang out thanks for watching we'll see you later bye um anyway for anyone still here anyone still hanging out we do have our interview with elijah shaffer so i'm going to get that pulled up well first let me let me tee it off right we got to tee it off we got to do it properly uh the justice department this is from the washington post is investigating dc police over alleged fake crime | ||
data uh we've seen the lockdowns here the crackdown the national guard is in the metro system they're holding things down it's looking like the Bukele strategy is being Kaley's strategy is being deployed. | ||
So I do want to bring Elijah Shafer in. | ||
I want to chat with him about this, maybe about the anti white stuff going on. | ||
So I'm getting this fucked up. | ||
I'm solo today. | ||
We don't have Producer Surge in the cut, but it's all right. | ||
Elijah, can you hear me? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
Can you hear me? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
How are you doing today? | ||
Dude, a little rough man. | ||
Just flew in from El Salvador. | ||
Let's go. | ||
So I had a little bit of dysentery, some, a little bit of food poisoning there for the last 48 hours, but I'm back and everything's good, man. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Well, I mean, I imagine the overwhelming majority of our viewers know who you are but maybe you can uh give a quick intro for the people that don't yeah so what's up so uh my name is elijah schaefer people just call me e online i uh run a new network called rift tv you can find it riftv.com also you should follow us on youtube we have a brand new channel just started about four weeks ago called rift official rift tv or rift tv you can type it in uh get a lot of shows um and uh we got people like sarah stock braden sorbo hercules' son uh joel webin jordan conradson | ||
our white house show launching and um check it out because it's based it's red pilled and uh we got all the truth and i'm appreciative to be here man let's go well awesome well i wanted to bring in and chat specifically because you said you had just come back from El Salvador. | ||
Obviously there's a lot of people freaking out over the DC crackdown. | ||
I think it's brilliant. | ||
I mean, you're seeing pictures of National Guard in the subway. | ||
That seems like a great way to deter crime. | ||
Do you think that Trump is just taking a page out of the Bukele playbook here? | ||
Yeah, that's actually a good question. | ||
So let's talk. | ||
Let's let's let's go down this rabbit hole into what Trump's doing because I think I have a pretty unique perspective. | ||
Because I've been working hand in hand with expatriates and the sort of community that's reinventing El Salvador. | ||
Now El Salvador is a small country, right? | ||
About as many people live there as Jews died in the Holocaust, they say. | ||
That's literally what they say. | ||
About six million people, exactly. | ||
It's true. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So it's a small number comparatively to a large country, right? | ||
Meaning, theoretically, you could wipe the whole population out and it wouldn't really be significant to the rest of the world. | ||
So why is this country so important? | ||
Why is Trump friends with this leader? | ||
Why is this place so important to billionaires, millionaires and the world's elite? | ||
They're all meeting there, right? | ||
The Bitcoin, the International Bitcoin Conference, the biggest one in the world is going to be held in San Salvador. | ||
Why are the people there seeing El Salvador as such a significant place because when I write about it online, it seems like most of my audience, probably your audience, is just like, dude, it's a bunch of brown people in a crappy country. | ||
Why do I care about them? | ||
Well, I'll tell you. | ||
El Salvador used to be the most dangerous country in the whole world. | ||
It was the murder capital. | ||
It was more deadly than Baghdad, more deadly than Jalalabad. | ||
I mean, this was a place where the crime was so bad that the phrase nickel and diming was daily life. | ||
You'd get onto a bus, you'd pay the fare, and MS thirteen would. | ||
would come onto the bus with a jar and make the poor people give their nickels and dimes into the jar just to be able to go on the bus, but they would kill them. | ||
I mean, it was so bad. | ||
They would, if the government revolted, they would light buses on fire and burn 30, 60 people alive inside of buses. | ||
I mean, this was a, this was a horrible, horrible place. | ||
No one visited there. | ||
And it was so bad for Westerners to visit that even though Cuba was cut off, Westerners, they never had any visitors that I talked to a guy that ran a textile business down there. | ||
He said, you had to have armed security to get from the airport. | ||
And when you got to your hotel, you couldn't leave your room or you'd get mugged or kidnapped. | ||
So this is what this place was seven years ago, by the way. | ||
It was the capital of crime. | ||
Now today, it's the safest country in all Central, South, and North America, and all the Americas, the safest country, lowest homicide rate, much safer than the United States. | ||
How did that happen? | ||
Well, we could talk about that. | ||
So I want to talk about it happened because of authoritarianism, because of a dictator who cared less about looking good to the media and more about doing what's right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, like you said, it was hostile to Westerners. | ||
I mean, part of the problem with DC is DC is hostile towards Westerners in more ways than one. | ||
I mean, you have the crime situation, obviously, and it seems. | ||
to really specifically target white Americans that are there. | ||
There's obviously a disproportion there. | ||
And then even the museums, I was talking earlier in the show about the Smithsonian, where there's just this vile, clearly just resentfulness against the West and white culture. | ||
The whole museum is just attempts from the curators of the museum to get revenge on their father. | ||
They clearly are just full of resentfulness. | ||
So yeah, you start to look at people like Bukele and you say, actually, I want a little piece of that. | ||
I don't know if this dooming over authoritarianism, or I should say, I don't know if authoritarianism is any more dangerous than what's going on now whatever we're experiencing now with these bureaucrats no dude you're completely right man i mean first of all i appreciate you uh breastfeed tim pool i heard he died at 9 54 a.m this morning so that's unfortunate um no i'll be i'll be at the funeral no no i know tim's not doing well uh health wise it takes a toll remind him to somebody who travels internationally remind him | ||
to take to take some rest sometimes i was actually supposed to be off today uh and i you know, I was told that you were hosting. | ||
I'm like, all right, let me go on with my boy. | ||
Let's talk. | ||
So I'm happy to be here. | ||
But yeah, so let's deconstruct what's going on in El Salvador and what's going on in D.C., the parallels and where they're different. | ||
So let's talk about the truth about El Salvador and DC. | ||
So one of the things in El Salvador that the critics say, and we'll just give the critics their credit right now. | ||
Yes, Bukele did waive the human rights of close to 100,000 people. | ||
Some say 60,000. | ||
Yes, he did. | ||
Yes, he did put people in prison without proper international trials. | ||
Three, Yes, it is a police state. | ||
Four, he even calls himself the world's most generous or benevolent dictator. | ||
He kind of rules like a dictator. | ||
And five, there is an alignment between the private sector and the general government that some people might call fascism. | ||
I don't think he would use that phrase, meaning like the minister of education is also like a general and military kind of thing, something like that. | ||
So there's that. | ||
However, listen to me. | ||
Let me bring this down. | ||
That all sounds bad, right, to a Westerner. | ||
That all sounds evil. | ||
Because when we think of dictators, we think of, you know, we think of South American, Central American dictators. | ||
We think of Venezuela. | ||
We think of Cuba, right? | ||
We think of, you know, these communist revolutionaries, Che Guevara or something like that. | ||
However, check this out. | ||
What if a system is so bad that there's only two ways to fix it? | ||
You either have a civil war that results in a revolution or you have a civil war that results you avoid the war and you have a revolution without the war yeah Right? | ||
So everyone knows the system was broken in El Salvador. | ||
A lot of Americans don't realize the system's unfixable. | ||
Trump is not going to fix this stuff in America. | ||
He's bought out by by Adelson, right? | ||
He took $100 million from them. | ||
And, you know, and, by the way, I was meeting with some Trump officials there. | ||
They're sick of APAC, by the way. | ||
They're sick of Netanyahu and what he's doing. | ||
He's really dividing their base and they're not happy about it. | ||
I want to tell that it's a truthful statement from inside the White House. | ||
You will see some firings going on in the next four to twelve weeks of some staff members because Netanyahu has a little too much control, as they say. | ||
Is Trump's not going to fix it? | ||
What do we do? | ||
We could kill each other in a war, which would be horrible, right? | ||
That's not good. | ||
I know we're on YouTube. | ||
I'm not saying to kill each other. | ||
That's a bad idea. | ||
We could kill each other. | ||
We did it before. | ||
We're disavowing the war on air. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, I'm saying we did. | ||
We killed 500,000 of our people in a civil war. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Right? | ||
That wasn't a good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That wasn't good. | ||
It wasn't optimal, though. | ||
I don't think it's good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
I mean, some would say it was an invasion from the north and the south. | ||
It's possible. | ||
I don't think it was a civil war. | ||
Honestly, it's more base take. | ||
But we did kill each other, and that was bad. | ||
We could kill the entire government like the French did in the revolution. | ||
Also, not the best option, you know. | ||
These things might both work. | ||
But here's the problem. | ||
If we kill each other, we kill kill the government you know it's not a movie this isn't hollywood right uh when you when you look at you know the revolutions not in France, but, you know, is France better off not being under a monarchy? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, if you look at Paris, when you look at, you know, the revolution in Russia, is Russia better off after the Soviet revolution? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Is China better off after Mao's revolution? | ||
Economically, yes. | ||
After they stole all our trade secrets and architecture, yes. | ||
But, you know, I've worked there. | ||
The society isn't amazing. | ||
So we look at this and it's like, okay, those are the two options. | ||
What Kayleigh said is, what if we just stop for a second? | ||
What if we don't kill each other? | ||
Because, you know, they were in a civil war. | ||
What if we stopped killing each other? | ||
And they had a Democrat and Republican party there, just like us, the left and the right, right? | ||
So they had the Unit party there that worked together. | ||
And what if we don't kill the Republicans or Democrats? | ||
Because they're equivalent to the Democrats or Republicans, right? | ||
The Democrats say kill the Republicans. | ||
Republicans say kill the Democrats. | ||
That's what we got to do. | ||
That's why they had a civil war, you know? | ||
And I said, what if we don't do that? | ||
What if we just – They're trying to create a united Central America like the United States. | ||
I don't know if you know about this. | ||
They're creating an entire empire down there. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
It's fascinating stuff. | ||
And he goes, what if we just raise the wages of the police and the military when we don't have the money so that they can't be bribed? | ||
and they can provide for their families. | ||
We stop paying cops like in America 60 grand a year and troops like 30, 40 grand. | ||
What if we give them 100 grand a year? | ||
A U.S. soldier. | ||
What if we give police $120,000 a year? | ||
What if we give them real wages so that we tell them., we're serious about your job, but your job's about to get serious. | ||
We don't give people parking tickets. | ||
We're going to need to go in block by block and city by city, and we're going to grab the bad guys that make our society unsafe, and we're going to throw them in one of the most secure prisons to ever exist. | ||
I think the most secure prison to ever exist, and say, sorry, we don't care about rights and human rights. | ||
You're done. | ||
And so what they did is they gave them money. | ||
They gave the military money. | ||
He won. | ||
by the way, he comes in, he was the mayor of San Salvador, becomes the president with over 80% approval rating. | ||
By the way, do you know Bukele is the highest approval rating of any world leader? | ||
I think in, well, it's the highest approval rating of any world leader right now by his own people in independent polling in the world right now. | ||
Second highest ever in history. | ||
So he's the second highest approval rating. | ||
So let me tell you how popular it is to do this. | ||
He creates a third party called New Ideas that is a common sense podcast party independent of right and left-wing politics so you know right wingers left wingers won't arrest people without without due process he goes nope you have a tattoo on you if you're related to a gang in any way you have any gang tattoos We don't, we don't, because the critics, the communists there were like, yeah, but you know, you're going to arrest innocents. | ||
He did arrest a few, but they let him go. | ||
And maybe there's a few in prison now. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But he said, there's about 100,000 of these bad guys in our country. | ||
And we have about six, seven million people here. | ||
Why should six to seven million people have a bad life? | ||
so that we respect the rights of 100,000 people. | ||
Why don't we disregard the rights of 100,000 people? | ||
Fuck them. | ||
Let them rot and let them. | ||
So we're going to do something worse than death. | ||
We're going to put liberate our people. | ||
And you know what? | ||
They went in block by block. | ||
I think they paid people off also to rat on people, but the people started turning over their family members. | ||
They got MS-13 tattoos. | ||
You know, we got Trendelioagua, whatever they had, you know, gangs down there. | ||
There was another gang. | ||
I can't remember the name. | ||
It's not in America. | ||
And you know what's crazy? | ||
All of a sudden, people. | ||
People were being taxed so much by the crime was causing such a problem. | ||
This is so crazy. | ||
The crime was causing such a problem. | ||
Because they didn't even know this, I think. | ||
that by putting the money into the military and police and going and grabbing everybody with tattoos and putting them in prison, like billions of dollars return to the economy. | ||
Now, when you're talking about millions of people and billions of dollars, these gangs were extracting so much money through extortion and racketeering schemes from the economy that the government budget, it paid for itself. | ||
Getting rid of these guys paid, it was a net neutral zero cost venture. | ||
And it's so powerful that all the countries, a lot of countries, I'm going to say all, I won't even say which ones because it was a technically closed door meeting, but a lot of countries are building these prisons, they call them C seacots, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And they're planning on doing the same thing. | ||
And now a lot of MS-13 fled to Nicaragua, down there, Panama. | ||
They're in the forest. | ||
And they're also building these prisons and they're going to raid and they're going to extradite them back to, to, to. | ||
And that's why Trump is working with El Salvador to deport our people because a lot of people left El Salvador to come up to LA. | ||
You know, you saw why do we have Trendy Alaragua? | ||
Why do we have a bunch of MS-13 spikes in our country? | ||
Because they were running away from Bukele. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And Bukele is like, why don't we send a message to all the criminals of the world, you can't run, you can't hide from from justice. | ||
So, you know, it's so, so the U.S. is working now with them too. | ||
So people want to know how serious it is. | ||
We're sending our criminals that are their people down back to them to do what we all should do. | ||
Now, so why is Trump militarizing DC? | ||
I was with some some insiders. | ||
I don't know if you saw, but there's a lot of people been in El Salvador from our government in the last few months. | ||
I've been with a lot of them. | ||
I've been with a lot of people I don't like, by the way. | ||
You know, I know people don't know what I've been doing. | ||
I've been really making content. | ||
I just run a network and I've been like working government and lobbying and just like international stuff that I can't probably talk share on the show. | ||
I probably talked to Cher on the show per se, but I've been trying to I've basically been doing this. | ||
I saw what happened in El Salvador and I see what's happening in our country. | ||
And I'm like, why can't we do that? | ||
Why can't we be an authoritarian police state and just get rid of these people that suck the living shit out of our country? | ||
Why can't we just like you go into Dallas, which is by the way, 28 percent white now. | ||
I don't know if you know, but the most the most non-white state in the union, I think right now is now Texas, the bastion of freedom. | ||
So it's like we've replaced the population. | ||
White replacement already succeeded in Texas. | ||
In Texas, I know, no, no, no issue with brown people. | ||
There's no issue with Mexicans and Venezuelans or anyone. | ||
Like I don't have any issue with these people. | ||
I employ some of them. | ||
They're not, they're not, it's not, it's not, it's not an issue, but white countries need to remain white. | ||
That's just, just period, right? | ||
El Salvador should remain El Salvadoran. | ||
Like it's not a supremacist statement. | ||
It's just Western countries are white. | ||
Western means white, WW, to win, win. | ||
It's like that's, that's who we are. | ||
So some people live in our countries. | ||
We're not white anymore in America, unfortunately. | ||
I think they're lying about the stats. | ||
I think we're minority white now. | ||
Certainly. | ||
The illegals, probably. | ||
I think so. | ||
I think, I think, dude, come on, man. | ||
Do you ever go into cities and uh do you ever go into cities and ever see a majority white city in the entire country because I've never seen one. | ||
No, or maybe Portland, Oregon. | ||
That's probably it. | ||
Well, I don't know if we're counting lesbians as white people. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Yeah, that's a good salient point. | ||
Sorry. | ||
Has there been any straight cities that are only white? | ||
And no issue with the queers either, you know, like it's the same thing. | ||
Like you got a few queers in a city. | ||
that they call that a city. | ||
You got a few browns in a city or blacks in a city. | ||
It's a city, but you got a everyone's queer. | ||
You call that Portland. | ||
unidentified
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Like, yeah, like it's like, you know, everybody's brown. | |
That's just called Los Angeles. | ||
Right. | ||
So, you know, and black, well, we call that Atlanta. | ||
But, yeah, but look, what's the white city in America? | ||
Maybe Maine, maybe, maybe, maybe Maine, New Hampshire. | ||
But they're busy voting in liberals to, they're destroying themselves. | ||
Whites are a self-destructive, you know, race, and it saddens me. | ||
But, yeah, so what I found is that with the militarization of DC is you can just do things. | ||
You know, I've been talking with a lot of really brilliant minds, Max Kaiser, Dr. Jack Cruz. | ||
I don't think I can say anybody else's name because. | ||
You know, Tim had a closed door meeting with Netanyahu and stuff, and that technically means you're not allowed to talk about who was there, what happened, and I don't want to bother, you know, these people, but I had one with sort of like the opposite people, right? | ||
It's like he's like a Zionist. | ||
Netanyahu is like a Zionist. | ||
He's like, he's Israeli, and he's about, you know, he's a neocon. | ||
He's a neocon ally. | ||
These guys I met with are the opposite. | ||
They're basically, they've gotten to a room of people. | ||
that meet under a name of the greatest thinkers and minds who meet up in El Salvador to find out why we can't do that in our countries. | ||
Germans are there. | ||
The French are represented. | ||
The White House was represented. | ||
There's White House officials there. | ||
And it's because there are people in Trump's White House that are very based and it's giving me a lot of hope. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Right. | ||
There are people that are in Trump's base that are exactly who the Democrats say they are. | ||
Trump's not. | ||
Vance is definitely not that person. | ||
Right. | ||
Vance is Vance. | ||
I'm scared about Vance. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Scared about Vance. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
I don't think I'm, we can touch on that later. | ||
I don't, I don't have a good feeling about that guy at all from what I know on the inside. | ||
That's not a good thing. | ||
That's Peter Thiel's puppet and Peter Thiel's no bueno, as they say, right? | ||
So, you know, you have an opposite force and they can't meet in any Western country because these meetings would be illegal. | ||
And in most of these countries, you'd be arrested for having these conversations, right? | ||
Basically like, you know. | ||
There was an Austrian painter that once tried to change Europe. | ||
And then he was, I mean, he died in Argentina, I think, or Venezuela. | ||
I forget where it was. | ||
Yeah, I think he was an expat. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Yeah, he was an expat as well. | ||
So he left. | ||
And you go down there and do you know how many European and white people are down in these countries that lived from that era that believe the same thing? | ||
They believe the West lost World War II. | ||
I think that's a very, very common trait of the mean. | ||
That's what we'll say. | ||
Everyone lost, right? | ||
Germany lost. | ||
America lost. | ||
Look at it. | ||
Nobody won World War II, man. | ||
Nobody won. | ||
It was a disaster, yeah. | ||
Like, yeah, it's like, look, I'm not going to say Hitler was a good guy or, you know, Patton was bad or, you know, whatever. | ||
I'm not going to play to the narrative. | ||
My point is, is i'm looking at the effects of world war two a bunch of white people killed each other and our cities are now full of muslims yeah Yeah, you can literally get Zoran if you want a war decisively. | ||
Correct. | ||
It's like, it's like, yeah, this isn't a Lord of the Rings, right? | ||
There's no Return of the King. | ||
Like, it's like everyone's atheist, gay, and genuinely mentally retarded. | ||
It's like we won a war and then our victory was like 60 million abortions. | ||
I mean, what are we doing here? | ||
Well, dude, exactly, man. | ||
So jokes aside, I mean, it's like, Europe and America lost World War II. | ||
That's a universal thing that people don't want to admit. | ||
But man, I'm tired of it, man. | ||
My colleagues, the people I'm. | ||
around, man, they're all taking money. | ||
Man, I got offered even just a week ago, got offered Israeli money again to attack Iran. | ||
That's all I can say to attack Iran. | ||
I was like, I can't, I feel uncomfortable. | ||
Like, I can't, I can't attack Iran. | ||
Like, why are you like, I don't like that. | ||
I don't want to do that. | ||
I even wrote them like, I'm like, did you got to pay me a lot more money to do that? | ||
I'm not being serious. | ||
I didn't do it. | ||
But I was like, this isn't the first time I've been offered money. | ||
And I don't, I don't mind, you know, it makes me mad because Lauren Chen, you know, gets busted for tenant when she wasn't as innocent, by the way, in my opinion. | ||
And then gets, you know, shit on for taking quote unquote Russian money when Russia is white Western Christian people. | ||
Why is their money dirty? | ||
That's stupid. | ||
But I could take money from a non-Christian secular state like Israel and my friends all take it, you know? | ||
And I got the people in my DMs trying to get me to take the trip and go out there and go to the cookbooks and go to the sites and, you know, I'm off. | ||
I mean, I'm not going to, I never out anyone because I'm not like that. | ||
I'm very professional. | ||
I always keep things private. | ||
I always keep things confidential. | ||
But, you know. | ||
Those are the biggest names out there I know have been trying to convince me to go take that trip. | ||
And why? | ||
Because they want to give me what the 16 influencers just took that money to go do. | ||
They're out there right now for Prager U and different organizations, it's lie to the American public so that we can keep our taxes from helping our country so we can fund those forever wars for the Israeli neocon regime, the U.S. and the regime, you know? | ||
So I kind of get into a point where I want to know, you know, why are we spending our money in America funding wars in countries that quite frankly are we're displacing their populations and then we're importing them into our country yeah and you know you see Randy Fine being like, we need to deport all Gauzans. | ||
Why are Gauzans coming to our country, buddy? | ||
It's because we're funding a war to displace them and then we have to take on the burden. | ||
So what I'm seeing is, here's the difference. | ||
In El Salvador, who's coming to El Salvador? | ||
It's rich white people and their own people. | ||
The El Salvadorans are moving back. | ||
Ethnic El Salvadorans are moving back into the country because it's getting better. | ||
And why? | ||
It's their home. | ||
El Salvadorans don't want to live abroad. | ||
come to America to have a better life. | ||
But if the better life is back home, then be among your own people. | ||
And they're coming back. | ||
So we're seeing in El Salvador, the reversal of what we're seeing in Western Europe and the United States. | ||
It's a country, this is why I want to change everyone's minds here. | ||
Stop thinking about third world or first world or second world countries. | ||
Think of it as ascending versus descending countries. | ||
There are nations that are ascending, aka Georgia, El Salvador. | ||
There's a couple others. | ||
I don't want to get into it now. | ||
there's descending countries. | ||
China's ascending. | ||
It's getting stronger, mightier, greater. | ||
The West is getting weaker, less influential. | ||
You know, just to remind you, at one point, the Mexican police one time looted a pastry shop of a French citizen. | ||
And the French citizen asked the Mexican governor of the region to give him the pesos to repair his shop from their police that looted the shop. | ||
He said, no, basically you're French. | ||
You're not even Mexican. | ||
He wrote a letter to the French king. | ||
The French king. | ||
wrote to the to the Mexican governor hey I think it was the the I don't know it was the Mexican governor I don't know what they call it at the time but I wrote him basically give him the money also owe us 300,000 pesos adjusted for inflation today is, you know, hundreds of millions of dollars. | ||
You know, you owe us also a war debt. | ||
The governor basically said no. | ||
And the French sent their Navy, blew up all the Mexicans' Navy and leveled the town and then made them pay the war debt and fix the shop. | ||
So like there was a time in history where white people were cool and we didn't take shit from anyone. | ||
And now we're crying. | ||
We're crying. | ||
We're letting black people punch us in the face because we say a word they don't like. | ||
We're chopping our children's dicks off. | ||
And we're, you know, repenting for what sins? | ||
Oh, I'm sorry for giving you the entire modern world for giving you everything that you have 97 of inventions we invented you're welcome so you know i'm tired of this and i got two beautiful boys you know i got two beautiful boys a lovely a lovely wife and i look at them in the face and it's like my family was here before the revolution they they settled philadelphia and also the midwest my german family settled the midwest my english | ||
family settled the the east coast and They came here with nothing. | ||
I read their journals. | ||
They fought in the Civil War, not the correct side, you know. | ||
But they fought for this country. | ||
And technically the Germans fought against the English side. | ||
But still, they intermarried. | ||
We created a new Anglosphere. | ||
They did all this several hundred years. | ||
You know, my family's, you know, government, you know, intelligence slash defense contracting. | ||
Like my grandfather helped develop the stealth technology. | ||
He helped develop the B-2 bomber. | ||
That's crazy news. | ||
But it's like, you know, he helped develop the B-2 bomber. | ||
My mom helped develop the B-2 bomber too. | ||
You know, they work for Northrop Grumman. | ||
To this day, I don't know what they did because my mom told me they'd have to kill me if they told me. | ||
So I don't know what they did. | ||
but he just said you know your grandpa's level one security clearance and he works for the white house and you know congress and that's just what he did right and i whatever he did he made a ton of money because he owned lots and lots of houses, had eight kids and still left a lot of money to each of his children. | ||
So, you know, even adjusted for inflation, he probably left a couple hundred grand to each of his kids back in when he died in the 90s and houses to all of his kids and stuff. | ||
So the guy did well for himself. | ||
But as a heritage American, I don't like what I see. | ||
And I'm not okay with this. | ||
And I'm not telling people to flee to El Salvador. | ||
I'm telling people that our people. | ||
We bring the Anglosphere with us. | ||
And they speak Spanish in El Salvador, which is a European language. | ||
So Europeans, but fuck this and went out and settled new land and figured out what to do because it was bad where they were or they didn't like their situation. | ||
Americans speak English, which is what? | ||
English. | ||
It's from England. | ||
You know, it's like, we don't speak German. | ||
We don't, we, we, we, this is like, oh, what if you spoke German? | ||
I wouldn't even care. | ||
But it's like, we speak English. | ||
There was no England here. | ||
You know, I imagine if their ancestors were like, why, why'd you go to America? | ||
You know, it's not England. | ||
It's like, well, because, because, because the brilliance of our white people has been destroyed by the corruption of the king or the Anglican church or whatever they thought at the time, right? | ||
So it's like, our, our country is being muddied with mass non-white immigration, uh, Indians who make U-turns and kill families, you know, in semi-trucks. | ||
The best thing to come out of 2025 is the hate for India. | ||
That's the best thing to come out of 2025. | ||
That's a good trend, yeah. | ||
Yeah, it's a good thing. | ||
It's a very good thing. | ||
However, I'm just reminding people that there's a third option. | ||
And I think what Trump's trying to do is, I think Trump is talking to Bukele and he's realizing, you know, like in El Salvador, they had a civil war, they killed each other. | ||
They had revolutions, they killed their government. | ||
And the third option, which is, you know, running away, people left, they fleed. | ||
In America, you don't have to leave yet, but Israel owns our politicians, whether you support them, maybe you like that, right? | ||
That's the key thing. | ||
Some people don't like that. | ||
Some people like that. | ||
Israel owns a lot of our politicians, not all of them, but a lot of them. | ||
Marjorie Taylor Greene is being very vocal about this. | ||
This isn't me being anti-Israel. | ||
I'm not anti-Semitic. | ||
I'm actually pro-Semitic in a lot of ways and pro-Israel. | ||
The fact that, you know, I think I'm a meritocracy guy. | ||
I think land belongs to those that conquer it. | ||
And if Israel conquers that land, then they can stay there and they can stay there as long as they can defend it. | ||
But I don't want to fund it anymore. | ||
And I think that if people like that place, they should go live there. | ||
So to every American, I like this country. | ||
You know, I'm happy to be home. | ||
But I'm being honest with you. | ||
People aren't having kids. | ||
So they're pussies. | ||
They're not having children, right? | ||
So they don't understand the responsibility that a man has. | ||
We have to fix this because my kids are disadvantaged right now. | ||
If my kids grew up in El Salvador as white boys, they're advantaged. | ||
In our country, the only advantage you have is if you're white is maybe if you if you're transgender or gay or something Right? | ||
Like, I'm being honest. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And, and, and if you're not white and you're watching this, this isn't like a white, some white supremacist rant. | ||
I'm just being honest. | ||
When the country is not white, it's no longer the West. | ||
And it will become something that you don't recognize. | ||
And, and I, and I, I think what's significant about, about El Salvador is El Salvador is run by the Palestinians. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
It's true. | ||
Completely run by no, dude. | ||
Complete, do not trust me, man. | ||
He's got a lot of brothers. | ||
I believe. | ||
It is, it is, it is an authoritarian state. | ||
So I'll say this. | ||
Not good to talk bad about Bukele in El Salvador. | ||
Don't do it. | ||
Yeah, why would you? | ||
There's not much material anyway. | ||
No. | ||
No, I know, but just don't do it. | ||
Don't do it. | ||
It's not a democracy in the way that America is. | ||
So, however, people don't realize that if you do want to talk poorly about him, you know, you can. | ||
You can criticize him, but I don't have a lot to criticize. | ||
And what Trump's realizing is you can just deploy the military. | ||
You can just. | ||
You can just do things. | ||
And I spoke to some people in DC who have said that, dude, in the last few years it's gone out of control. | ||
I was there a year ago in one of the nicer districts near the W Hotel. | ||
There was a shooting across the street. | ||
You know, when you're having shootings in nice areas that's a it's a big freaking problem i am i am both worried and excited uh because on one hand i think that the military is a powerful weapon and that the national guard is an extremely useful weapon that can be used in a way to clean up the streets of dc but as we saw during covet um in illinois with uh our you know almost vice president, you know, deploy the National Guard to kick people back in their homes. | ||
Or I saw, you know, and people don't know, I, you know, if you'll ever wonder why I'm like, have like a droopy face, because I have no nerves in the left side of my face. | ||
I got the shit beat out of me by a group of black guys at gunpoint in Philadelphia during the riots. | ||
And I had to have plastic surgery and I got like necrosis. | ||
I have no, so it's just numb. | ||
So I have like a droopy face. | ||
I've seen a lot of things and I've seen, you know, the National Guard not deploy as well in the way that they promised. | ||
Right. | ||
And it lead to chaos. | ||
So I think it's great. | ||
The question is, though, with El Salvador, you know, this is a Palestinian. | ||
People say, oh, his wife's Jewish. | ||
His wife, I think, is a little bit Jewish. | ||
bit Ashkenazi but She's a practicing Catholic. | ||
She's like a quarter or something. | ||
But, you know, Palestinians and Jews used to intermarry for many, many years. | ||
You know, it was a normal thing there as well. | ||
They're Semites. | ||
They're the same. | ||
ethnic uh i don't think she's askenazi actually she's whatever the semitic side was um sephora it's like something like that yeah yeah i think so i could be wrong someone could correct me but i know that she's not religiously or like fully ethnic his kids won't be jewish ethnically because she's not enough jewish you know um and i know that they're not it's it's it's dude they're so crazy number one they use the usa from influencing him You know, | ||
he made the national currency Bitcoin, which this is where I want to get people's minds off this. | ||
You know, you got this argument going on, you know, you got like. | ||
Tim Poole, Charlie Kirk, Brandon Tatum on one side, pro-Israel. | ||
And then you've got like Canis Owens, Tucker. | ||
He's not so open about it. | ||
Tucker, Nick Fuentes, and a few others that are just like anti-Israel stance. | ||
We have this big argument going on of like, are we pro-Israel or anti-Israel? | ||
Are we anti-Semitic or are we philosemitic? | ||
I think Elon Musk said the word philosemitic. | ||
He says philosemitic. | ||
I'm not seeing this as being a constructive argument, really. | ||
You know, I don't really see these fights as really getting us anywhere. | ||
And ironically, I've worked with all these people. | ||
It's like I literally have Nick Fuentes on my show. | ||
I'm on Tim Poole's network right now. | ||
I've gone on Candace's show and we talked privately. | ||
I've made a movie with Tucker Carlson. | ||
I spoke on main stages and tours with Charlie Kirk and they invited me back for Amphest as well. | ||
So I'm not like, I'm not like, you know, on one side of the aisle here. | ||
I just get, I get everyone. | ||
I know them personally. | ||
And I get, I get why they're mad at each other. | ||
I get why Tucker's mad at Nick Fuentes. | ||
I mean, he called out his dad for being CIA. | ||
His dad's dead. | ||
You're going to get defensive of your family. | ||
I get why Candace Owens doesn't like Nick Fuentes. | ||
You know, he talks from smack on her. | ||
I get why Nick doesn't like Tucker and Candace or I don't know if he doesn't like him, but at least why he's calling him out on their bullshit because, you know, let's be completely honest. | ||
They lied about him and said he's a gay fed, you know, and he's not gay. | ||
He's not a fed. | ||
That's just not. | ||
It's just stupid, you know, it's just stupid. | ||
I think that really backfired. | ||
And then obviously, we know why he doesn't like Charlie and he doesn't like Tim. | ||
I mean, Tim, when I was on, was basically calling him a gay fed too. | ||
And Charlie also, you know, calls him a bad faith actor or whatever and refuses even like, let him in a room. | ||
So, I mean, I get why all these people, I get why, you know, I get why Tim doesn't like, you know, Fuentes, he says his audience is trollish and, you know, ruins things and Charlie says the same thing, whatever. | ||
I get, I get the fight. | ||
I get it. | ||
I'm in it. | ||
I get it. | ||
it i get it but the fight you know i got boys that that are disadvantaged in my country and okay so so so i look at this way okay so both sides are saying the jews are in power and they do control things one side is saying that it's a good thing the other side is saying it's a bad thing but they're both agreeing that's the way i look at it tucker candice tucker candice fuentes charlie pool I don't know if Pesobic's waited on this. | ||
I'm thinking of like other big names. | ||
I'm a little guy, right? | ||
I'm like a nobody. | ||
But like those guys are basically basically saying Israel and Jewish power is real in America, but one side saying that it's good, either Charlie Kirk for religious reasons, you know, Tim's more like maybe a libertarian. | ||
It's like it's a good democratic society. | ||
It's not authoritarian. | ||
And maybe, you know, Fuentes and, you know, saying that it's bad because it's anti-Catholic. | ||
It's, it's, you know, bringing degeneracy and canis is maybe the same way, but maybe Tucker's more just like, they have control of the CIA and our government and it's not letting us be Americans and they don't, you know, they yell all these speech laws going in from Christy Noam and whatever, yada, yada. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
All right. | ||
So what am I hearing? | ||
Everyone's agreeing that there's this foreign nation that has too much power in our country. | ||
And. | ||
And of all the people, I think Fuentes is the most correct. | ||
However, I also think that when I hear all these conversations generalized, like pro-Israel, anti-Israel, I think it's reductionist or pro-Jew, anti-Jewish. | ||
It's all reductionist in my thinking. | ||
My thinking is, what does that mean? | ||
What do you mean by that? | ||
What do you mean these people have control of whether it's good? | ||
What's happening? | ||
Let's look at the medical industrial complex. | ||
Let's look at the military industrial complex. | ||
Let's look at the governmental systems, the three branches, the judiciary, the executive, the legislative. | ||
Let's go down to the governmental bodies and the Association of the States. | ||
Who are these people and what control do they have and who are they paying off? | ||
And let's talk about that. | ||
That's a real conversation Americans need to have. | ||
is that should that even be legal, right? | ||
So the way I look at it is I think Trump is in a tough position because he took $100 million alone from a... | ||
I don't know if she is. | ||
Is Adelson a dual citizen? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I don't know. | ||
Do you know? | ||
No, I don't know. | ||
Well, it could be. | ||
But here's the worst part. | ||
It's not even about Israel. | ||
What I'm worried about, so I'm taking it down, is what is the real thing I'm worried about? | ||
I'm worried about Peter Thiel and Palantir. | ||
Because JD Vance is a product of Palantir and Thiel. | ||
Palantir is a CIA company that is also an Israeli intelligence agency. | ||
It was just given... | ||
This is granted by the government. | ||
And the entire government, Trump's government and regime is about creating a technocratic control center. | ||
That's why Christy Dome started her DHS, who's placed and started with ensuring that real ID took place. | ||
Real IDs are about creating a database of Americans and starting this collection of our data. | ||
And, you know, people even think that the legislation against pornography in Florida is about Christianity. | ||
And it was actually about seeing how we can coerce companies using, you know, basically using IPs, how we can control companies. | ||
Now, obviously, it's good they pulled out. | ||
I don't think that's a good idea they pulled out. | ||
However, it's not good why they did it, right? | ||
It's the same reason why they say, you know, they're putting. | ||
digital IDs in Australia to prevent kids from accessing harmful adult material. | ||
But really, it's about making sure that you have to use your ID to connect to your IP when you sign on so that you have a digital ID so they can prevent you from accessing things like this show, which will be banned. | ||
by the way, my show was already banned in Australia. | ||
I'm banned from Australia. | ||
People don't know that. | ||
I just got banned from Australia thanks to Albanese and Chris Mins, the Prime Minister and the Australian Jewish Coalition lobbied and got me banned, even though I'm a legal resident of the country, by the way, which is unfortunate. | ||
Shout out to the Senator who's probably going to give me a diplomatic visa and get me in. | ||
Candice Owens, by the way, is going to win her case. | ||
She's banned as well. | ||
She's in the Royal Court. | ||
She spent, I think, $400,000 last time. | ||
she told me uh already on the on getting her visa reinstated but um i got banned by the way from there for promoting nationalist i think they said someone did they said something nationalist ideals so i'm like promoting white australians to to love their country and fly australian flags which is considered racist anyway um but on a side note it's like uh you know you look at all this stuff and you look at what's going on and you go you know The World Economic Forum, | ||
who just got, you know, put as the chair, I think it's, was it Larry Fink, right, of BlackRock just got put in charge, right? | ||
It may have been. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
I haven't kept up, but. | ||
Yeah, so I know that BlackRock just got control of the World Economic Forum. | ||
And I don't know if you know, but the border between Haiti and the Dominican, man, I sound bad if that's those, I think those are the two countries. | ||
Yeah, they border. | ||
It's like Israel Palestine. | ||
Correct. | ||
But BlackRock just got, bought control of, they just got control, the American company got control of the border, which is a Jewish company, by the way. | ||
And because now they're testing border surveillance and border control. | ||
So all the companies, including Palantir, are going down there and they're testing like basically for Israel, how to control their borders better using illegal technology that the West would condemn. | ||
But it's an American company that has sanctions from the US government. | ||
government to do what they want with testing American technology, Israeli technology, and European technology at the border. | ||
So they bought up this port and then by the port to Prince is also owned by like a Jewish billionaire as well, which is where they do all the trafficking for the Clinton Foundation. | ||
But all that aside, you know, you're looking at all this and what makes me nervous is that Palantir is a deep state, you could call it, right? | ||
It's a Mossad CIA. | ||
invention. | ||
I think they only got like $150 million seed funding and now they're what several hundred million. | ||
I mean, you got Palmer Lucky, right, down in California as well with his startup, which makes me nervous. | ||
And, you know, these guys are essentially, back in the day, they tried to pay me, you know, to go with Blake Masters, you know, J.D. Vance. | ||
You know, I got the emails when I was with Blaze TV to go, you know, speak at some of these events. | ||
I was weary of Peter Thiel then and Alex Karp. | ||
I didn't think I wanted to, you know, associate with the intelligence community. | ||
I didn't think that Vance would become the vice president because I knew he was an intelligence asset. | ||
He's changed his name multiple times. | ||
He's married to an Indian woman. | ||
And no, hey, I employ an Indian guy, but he's not Indian. | ||
He's ethnically Indian. | ||
He's British. | ||
And his name's Edward. | ||
And he's a White House, you know, journalist. | ||
And he identifies as British. | ||
is British. | ||
But, you know, he named his kids Vivek. | ||
Like, you're a white guy. | ||
You name your kids Vivek. | ||
People talk about assimilation. | ||
Look, I'm not being racist here. | ||
So you're going to marry an Indian woman, but assimilate, right? | ||
Like, naming your kid Vivek when you take an Indian wife is the equivalent of saying that you're a real man and you take on your wife's last name. | ||
It's like, like, it's like, oh, I'm a man, but I took on my wife's last name when we got married. | ||
It's like, oh, you're a bitch. | ||
That's what you are. | ||
You know, so Vance isn't this American guy. | ||
You know, Hillbilly Elegy was a good movie, good book. | ||
Why do you think it got promoted freshman senator you know they didn't win uh teal's money didn't win across the board um and teal's been trying to get me too because he knows that i'm like friendly with them and like not like i was just with curtis yarvin again recently but it's like i i don't i just gonna let you know you know peter teal doesn't think humanity needs to exist. | ||
You could go watch his interviews. | ||
He doesn't think humanity needs to exist. | ||
He's a huge Zionist. | ||
And he put a Jewish guy as the CEO of Palantir, which is, if people don't know what it is, it's essentially a major intelligence operation, which is meant, basically meant to control our United States government. | ||
And then under Trump, they gave them all our or basically every government contract they wanted. | ||
Now they have unlimited funding like the CIA. | ||
So it's not good. | ||
It's not good. | ||
And Vance, they're saying this to me, Vance Marco Rubio in the 2028 ticket. | ||
Now, Trump already told us in 2016, before he got bought out by the Israelis, you know, he said, he said, you know, anybody who takes money from the Adelsons, you can't trust them, right? | ||
Now, Trump took 100 million in this election from the Adelsons. | ||
He had to. | ||
I get it. | ||
And he also said that Marco Rubio wasn't trustworthy because he took money from the Adelsons and that, you know, he's an Israeli asset, basically is what he insinuated on the debate stage back in 2016. | ||
I remember that. | ||
I watched it live. | ||
And he basically said that Mark Ruiz is the most corrupt politician alive. | ||
And now he's in his cabinet. | ||
And Vance also is from the same financing. | ||
So that is not real. | ||
And I voted for Trump three times. | ||
I almost went to jail for it. | ||
I employed Jay Sixers, who got pardoned. | ||
I'm a big, big, big. | ||
I lobby for the Republican Party to this day, a paid lobbyist. | ||
I push campaigns. | ||
I push politicians. | ||
I'm the only lobbyist I've ever met in my life that's transparent about that, that I lobby. | ||
I even lobbied for some immigration reforms recently at Mar-a-Lago. | ||
I won't get into it, but I'm trying to get the H1Bs turned into H2Bs so that they can't get residency because we don't need any more Vivex in this country. | ||
Let's just be honest. | ||
Nobody wants them here. | ||
Nobody wants them in Canada. | ||
Nobody wants them in Australia. | ||
They have their own country. | ||
There's a billion of them. | ||
If there's two million of them went to every country in the world, they still have a billion people in their country. | ||
Please, for the love of God, no more Vivex in this country. | ||
And they're running this platform we're on, YouTube. | ||
They run everything. | ||
It's just, it's just. | ||
Yeah, they're, and you know why? | ||
By the way, for YouTube to ever say that I'm being racist against Indians, I'm not. | ||
You know what? | ||
You know what it is? | ||
Indians are the most racist people, I think, on the planet. | ||
I'm not, again, I employ an Indian and he's admits this to me. | ||
They're so racist. | ||
They're so racist. | ||
This is not a joke. | ||
They're so racist. | ||
And that's why I don't like them. | ||
If you watch, go online, look at Indians talking about how their plan is because they have a caste system to eventually expel whites from their own countries. | ||
That's their plan. | ||
They're trying to take over all the jobs because they're not stupid, right? | ||
They're not low IQ. | ||
Indians are not retarded. | ||
They're not, they're not, I'm not being racist. | ||
I'm not saying they're bad or they're dumb or they're this or they're that. | ||
I'm not saying the Indian race is like dumb people. | ||
It's the Indian race is, is, are smart people. | ||
They're, they're intelligent. | ||
And in fact, the people that come here are some, some very intelligent people. | ||
But if you go, I lived in, uh, North, North Dallas and, uh, you know what? | ||
You know, Dallas is all Indian, right? | ||
So I lived in Frisco and they were very racist towards me as a white guy, very racist. | ||
Elijah, by the way, I'm not getting the call from India or anything, but we are over time a little bit. | ||
Okay. | ||
We just got to close out here. | ||
I just wanted to give you a heads up because I knew you're cooking there, but No worries. | ||
I'm not going to say who, but whoever booking just said, just speak the whole time or so. | ||
She was like, just say as much as possible. | ||
We got to kill you. | ||
Just say a bunch of stuff. | ||
I was like, all right. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
No, no, no. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I didn't get the call from India or anything. | ||
I was just, I was looking at the clock. | ||
I'm like, all right. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Frumble. | ||
I get upset if I'm over time. | ||
But, yeah. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
I mean, did you do want to wrap that? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
I'll say this. | ||
I'll say this. | ||
So everyone's competing for power in this country. | ||
You know, that's what I'm saying. | ||
I don't want to break it down. | ||
It's just the Jews, right? | ||
Like I think that's a reductionist argument. | ||
India's coming for power. | ||
Israel's coming for power. | ||
China's coming for power. | ||
And who's not coming for power? | ||
White people, because white power is a negative word. | ||
I think I'm doing something about it. | ||
I'm traveling internationally. | ||
I think Trump's realizing that his base realizes that being so pro-Israel while not following through on your campaign promises is making people mad. | ||
So he's doing performative things instead of releasing the Epstein files, like doing what he's doing in DC. | ||
And we'll have to wait and see. | ||
I'll just end on this. | ||
There's a revolution going on within the Trump administration right now. | ||
And our enemy to Mag, I want to tell you this, to people that are mad at Trump, our enemy is not Trump. | ||
Our enemy is Susie Wiles and the people that he owes his campaign to that are controlling him. | ||
Our enemy is Adelton. | ||
Our enemy are the people that he owes his promises to. | ||
And I don't want to say Vance is our enemy because I might be wrong, but I'm more worried about Vance, the happy go lucky guy who eats donuts like a normal person than I am about Donald Trump, who's always been a friend of Israel and a friend of Jews. | ||
He's from New York. | ||
But if you want to get your country back, then don't look at what people are saying. | ||
Don't get caught up in the internet fights. | ||
Don't be, you know, team this, team that. | ||
Look at the people who are getting shit done. | ||
Look at Bukele. | ||
Look at governments that are actually accomplishing what they say they're going to do. | ||
And maybe ask your government to do some of the same things here. | ||
And when Trump does something good, like militarizes, you know, DC, maybe give him a little bit of credit and ask him to do the same things in other states. | ||
Just make sure that Israel and Palantir aren't the ones. | ||
on Palantir aren't the ones in control of those departments when and if they do deploy. | ||
So I appreciate that. | ||
If anyone wants to watch my show and hear this crazy ass talk every day, I make content every day. | ||
Go to Rift TV on Rumble RFT TV. | ||
You can type in the Rift TV or Rift TV. | ||
It should pop up just Rift TV. | ||
You can watch on YouTube. | ||
We're on X. Elijah Shafer on social media. | ||
And you can also get us on audio podcasts. | ||
And again, we are live tonight at 7 p.m. Eastern time, right before Timcast, 7-8 p.m on Rumble. | ||
Again, follow us there if you're watching and on YouTube for a brand new channel. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
And thank you so much. | ||
Cool. | ||
Thanks, Elijah. | ||
Well, I appreciate it, man. | ||
Have a good rest of your day. | ||
Cheers, man. | ||
Appreciate you, sir. | ||
All righty. | ||
Here. | ||
Let me exit out of Ninja here. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Well, that was a wild one. | ||
We're a little over time here. | ||
About twenty minutes over time. | ||
He was. | ||
Yeah, he was riffing. | ||
There wasn't much room for pushback either. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of there's a lot going on, a lot being said. | ||
But no, it's always great to have a guest come in and speak their mind. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of good stuff in there, obviously, but maybe, I don't know, we can get him to culture where, you know, I'm a MAGA guy. | ||
I like Vance. | ||
He's a good dude. | ||
But yeah, anyway, thanks for watching. | ||
We'll be back tonight for Timcast IRL at 8 p.m. | ||
You can follow me on X and Instagram at RealTapeBrown. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
We'll see you tonight. |