Episode Transcript
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0:19
FTN imitated, never duplicated.
0:22
This is the one and only Fash you're
0:26
guiding light in a sea of degeneracy.
0:41
Hello, and welcome to FTN five
0:44
thirty. This is the
0:46
show that is the sworn enemy of unchut line
0:48
mount. Its true hypocrisy, ruggedness, and think
0:50
will think will count on a loan. From doctor
0:52
Gerbals bring you excellence FTN antisemitism right
0:54
in the middle of Shabbat each and every week. Although,
0:57
We're gonna be on the night before Shabbat
0:59
pretty soon. I think we're gonna be doing the show
1:01
on Fridays now, Warren.
1:04
That's the official word. Yes. So
1:07
looking forward to that. We'll
1:11
we'll have FTN earlier show, so all the people
1:13
that get excited when it comes out on Saturday might
1:15
coming out on Fridays, maybe not right away, but
1:17
it is gonna start coming out early and earlier
1:19
until we get it, like, down to coming
1:21
out on
1:21
Fridays. Right. Cool.
1:24
Is a I still forgot, see, I forgot
1:26
to send. I I have this pattern where I send,
1:28
you know, I do the prep today, most of the prep
1:30
today, and then I think of the art design
1:32
and I send it to Kyle. Sometimes Kyle does it
1:34
on his own. But if we're trying
1:36
to do the show today, I forgot totally
1:38
forgot to email Kyle. So now we're
1:40
gonna be waiting on art. That's fine. That's
1:42
okay. But I'm glad to be
1:44
doing the show early. It's it's
1:47
we have a lot to talk about today. A
1:49
lot of things have been going on and
1:52
just a few things I wanna plug here at the
1:54
beginning. Of the show, Greg
1:58
Conte, published the
2:01
second edition of Russian socialism
2:03
that I did with him on Romania
2:06
and Transylvania and the
2:08
Transylvania Saxons. So
2:10
check that out. It's on his telegram. Really
2:13
great episode. We broke it into two
2:15
parts. There were so much to talk about
2:18
and and look into. So definitely
2:21
check that out. I don't know whether
2:23
it's also on he does post it
2:25
on
2:25
TRS. Too does.
2:27
Yes. He does.
2:27
Yeah. Yeah. I only I only see it on telegram.
2:30
So Yeah. Cool. Yeah. Yeah. And
2:32
that's great. It's a really good show. Really
2:34
enjoyed doing that with Greg. In fact, we recorded
2:36
that on the eve
2:38
and the morning of the last NJP
2:41
event. So very,
2:43
very cool because we're together and And
2:46
so, yeah, I'm I'm looking forward to doing more
2:48
with Craig. In fact, we talked about doing
2:51
the next one, and I think it's gonna be
2:53
a lot to give topics away. I think we're gonna talk
2:56
about the the more ish occupation of
2:58
Iberia is the is the next topic
3:00
that we're gonna talk about. So and
3:02
that will be that would be a a very cool
3:05
topic because I have a lot to lot to say about that
3:07
one. But I heard you had a
3:09
Nathan on
3:12
Mike Warren Fash night. Yes. Yes. We
3:14
did. Yeah. Yeah. I wanted to plug that as
3:16
well. People should go listen to
3:18
it. We Nathan
3:21
was walking the earth, like
3:23
jewels and pulp fiction, you know, traveling,
3:25
going from place to place, meeting people, getting
3:27
adventures. And I already made that joke
3:29
on the show, but it was really kind of true. It's it's
3:31
like, what happened in Nathan Domingo? He's just gonna
3:33
walk the earth. But
3:36
yeah. So he stopped by here in the mountains,
3:38
and we we had a nice visit. And I'd never
3:40
actually met Nathan before. I'd seen him many
3:42
times like he was right next to me when Charlottesville,
3:45
all kinds of stuff going down. But
3:47
I had never actually met him and talked with him.
3:49
And so we spent the
3:51
whole day before we recorded talking
3:53
and a whole bunch of interesting topics came
3:55
up stuff about the Iraq War, his
3:58
anti Nathan has taken a turn
4:00
to hard anti
4:02
capitalism, which was I
4:04
I guess he was always kind of there, but
4:06
it was great to handle not very kind things
4:09
say about the Republican Party and many
4:11
other topics. So it was terrific.
4:13
And, yeah, we did about a three hour show
4:15
with Mike. So it was very good to check-in
4:17
with him. And to get to know him
4:19
better. And if he's listening to this, thank you,
4:21
Nathan, for for coming on. It was a
4:24
a great show and we wanna have you on again.
4:26
And and he told me he was a big FTN
4:28
fan and and was on FTN before. I
4:30
didn't realize I just asked him because it was a Thursday
4:32
he was
4:32
here. I'm like, let's do the let's do on the show with me
4:35
and Mike. But let's get him on
4:36
FTN. One of our first guests on
4:39
the show. Yeah. I'm trying to
4:41
think who that well, actually, no Jesse
4:43
Dunston is the first guest on
4:45
the show. He was on the
4:47
second episode of FTN where
4:49
I was, like, driving in a car and the audio is
4:51
horrible. Mhmm. The
4:53
That's a less memorable FTN, the
4:55
second episode. The pilot is always the one
4:57
people like with the crickets. But yeah. Now,
4:59
Jesse Jesse technically is the first guest,
5:01
and then But Nathan was not far
5:03
after that because he's he's one of the first people
5:06
that I really got to meet in
5:08
in the movement and
5:11
spent some time with him and and
5:13
actually met Mike not long after that and FTN
5:15
a bunch of other people. So it
5:18
you know, there's a lot it feels like so long
5:20
ago coming up on almost a decade
5:22
ago, actually. So I've known known
5:24
Nathan for a really long time and Really
5:27
good guy. And, yeah,
5:29
I'm looking forward to having him on
5:31
again, and we'll be
5:33
seeing him soon. I I think
5:36
because there's an event
5:38
coming up. In Florida, we didn't plug we
5:40
haven't plugged this in a while in Florida FTN
5:43
early February for NJP. So
5:45
if you wanna go, you have to get vetted
5:48
and probably time is running
5:50
out for that, but you could probably still go.
5:52
Don't throw your hands up and say, oh, I'm not even gonna
5:54
bother There's a lot
5:56
of discount airlines if you have to fly.
5:59
Chances are you're in a place that's very cold.
6:01
Right now, maybe snowy, maybe icy,
6:04
and, you know, come to Florida. Come to
6:06
an event. Hang out with some guys.
6:08
You know, it's a nice mid winter
6:12
get together. A lot of times in the
6:14
winter, people just sort of shut down. Don't get together.
6:16
Don't have a lot of events. And we
6:18
we must keep doing that. And so
6:20
it's a nice break, then then you can go back to
6:22
your cold abode, and it's
6:24
like the groundhog comes and sees his
6:26
shadow. It's like the white nationalist comes out and
6:28
sees NJP. And then six to
6:30
eight more weeks of winter. Right? And then
6:32
it's springtime. Is that how that works FTN and something like
6:34
that? I think something something. I think it's the same weekend.
6:37
Right? Because isn't it, like, February second or
6:39
February, like, when does when
6:41
does the groundhog see a shadow? It's like this is
6:43
beginning of February. So -- Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. --
6:45
it's, like, lined up the same way. Yeah. Yeah.
6:47
So the event is not February
6:49
second. I'm not gonna tell you when the event but
6:51
but it is literally the same time on the
6:53
groundhog. Punks of Tony Phil. That's his name.
6:56
Yes. So we're gonna have Punks
6:58
of Tony Fash going on in Florida.
7:00
So and it's
7:02
gonna be either six more
7:04
weeks of winter or crystal
7:06
knocked is right around the corner. So
7:13
anyway, pressing forward. Oh, the
7:15
one thing I did wanna say, if people
7:17
are interested in this
7:18
topic, you're gonna say something else before No.
7:20
No. I was just gonna say it's like I guess I
7:22
guess with this, it would be are we gonna
7:24
get, like, six more decades
7:26
of dog or is revolution, like,
7:28
gonna be, you know, in the next week.
7:31
You could do a thing like Yes.
7:34
The the the the revolutionary Fash
7:38
groundhog who who, you know, did he see
7:40
a shadow? He didn't, you know, the system
7:42
about to collapse, yay, or no
7:44
shit. We're gonna have this totalitarian system
7:46
for six more six more years or six
7:48
more decades or whatever it would be anyway.
7:51
Yeah. Well, that I think that's what we're gonna
7:53
find out. You have to come to the event to
7:55
find out whether we're gonna have six more
7:57
decades of dog or crystal knobbers right around
7:59
the corner. Yeah. I like that. Six
8:01
more days. Because that's
8:03
literally, like, an entire
8:04
lifetime. Like, for anybody who is
8:07
listening right now, it's like, It's like,
8:09
is it happening in
8:10
my life? Sorry, folks. Six more
8:12
decades of so. Yeah.
8:15
He didn't see his shadow. Right? Isn't that
8:17
how that goes? Yeah. So
8:20
so, yeah, the one thing I wanted to say, we're
8:22
talking about this a little bit this morning because
8:24
of my frustration with
8:27
Windows eleven, not
8:29
displaying the fucking seconds on
8:31
the clock. And talking about how
8:33
that is you know, indicative of
8:35
just a society and decline is
8:37
that when you get rid of the precise
8:40
measurements of seconds, because,
8:42
well, who cares who cares about being on
8:44
time? Who cares about having decimal
8:46
precision on a clock? You
8:48
know, this is a white invention. This
8:50
is something that that has been all over Europe
8:52
and town squares forever.
8:55
And one of the things about
8:57
the Prussian socialism that I did
8:59
with Greg and that we didn't even get to talk
9:01
about. But what are just the many
9:03
fascinating things about the German
9:06
presence in that part of Europe?
9:08
Which Greg, I hadn't
9:10
even thought of this, but had compared that
9:12
to essentially the wild west
9:14
of Europe because it was a relatively
9:17
uninhabited place the dachons
9:19
and some various peoples that were there were
9:21
not no offense to the people who
9:23
like dachons, but they're not they were not very
9:25
advanced compared to the people of Western
9:27
Europe. And so it really
9:29
was people occupying lands that
9:31
nobody was living in and even the dachshunds
9:33
weren't living in these places. And so where the
9:35
Germans were we
9:37
we kind of focused on the the
9:39
the saxons and the people and a
9:41
bunch of other things. We didn't have time to
9:43
get to things like the
9:45
clock tower of Siggy Schwara,
9:48
which sort of mentioned all these
9:50
citadel towns that are still intact. The
9:52
the amazing thing about if you ever get
9:54
a chance to go to Transylvania, I recommend that
9:56
people do for a couple reasons.
9:59
The the things that are left intact
10:02
are incredible because
10:04
Romania was not bombed heavily
10:06
during World War two. And
10:08
people would think, well, why would I if you don't know
10:10
much about Transylvenia, you would
10:12
not really understand that they're entirely
10:16
intact like German villages from
10:18
the thirteenth and fourteenth century.
10:20
Which don't exist in Germany anymore. There
10:22
are some, but they're very they're very hard to
10:24
FTN. But and they're even
10:27
harder to find in kind of their original
10:29
configuration. Because even if you do find them
10:31
in Germany, they've been, you know, that maybe
10:33
part of the village is still there, but they've, you
10:35
know, and they've preserved it, and it's got kind
10:38
of the designification of
10:40
that becomes kind of like almost a
10:42
little bit too touristy,
10:45
whereas the stuff that's in Pennsylvania is
10:47
very well preserved, but also
10:51
in some states of disrepair because
10:53
they haven't been able to keep it
10:55
up. But I would prefer that where
10:57
everything's intact than, you know,
10:59
having like an Apple store on the
11:01
first floor of like some fourteenth
11:03
century building. So This this
11:05
Siggy Schwara, the the name of the town,
11:07
it's it's got a different name than
11:09
Germany or in Germany. I think it's
11:11
it's not crunch that. It's got a different name. I can't
11:13
remember what it is off to look it up. But anyway,
11:17
the the there's a clock
11:19
tower in in
11:21
oh, it's it's That's right. It's Schausberg
11:23
is the name of the town Schausberg.
11:25
They have a big clock tower in the
11:27
center of this Citadel town,
11:29
walled city. And I was
11:31
sharing these photos with Warren before he started
11:33
recording the show. Talking about windows
11:35
eleven can't even be bothered to have
11:37
seconds on their clock meanwhile, in
11:39
thirteenth and fourteenth century,
11:41
Wild West of Europe, Transylvania,
11:43
the Germans were building I
11:46
don't know how tall this tower is, but
11:48
ten or eleven story high
11:50
clock towers that didn't
11:52
just tell the time accurately, but that had,
11:54
like, animated figurines that
11:57
are as tall as you or
11:59
me that would march out of the clock
12:01
tower on various days
12:03
of the week. And mark
12:05
different hours of the day. Like, they
12:07
had figures for Saturday, figures
12:09
for Sunday, a lot of them were if
12:11
you look at some of these pictures, they're
12:13
like German teutonic
12:15
knights. They're people from German
12:17
mythology that come out when when
12:19
the clock strikes these different hours. And
12:21
this would have been on the frontier in
12:24
in what would have been the frontier of
12:26
of Germany at that point. And
12:28
so we didn't even get to talk about this
12:30
stuff, but that tower still exists. You can
12:32
go up in the tower and just
12:34
to sort of complete the thought I highly
12:37
recommend people go visit
12:39
because people look at going to Europe as a
12:41
really expensive endeavor and it usually
12:43
is the flight is anyway. But
12:45
if you if you pony up
12:47
the money to go to at least get to
12:49
Transylvania, going
12:51
around in Transylvania is about one
12:54
quarter of the cost of
12:56
traveling around in some of the cheapest parts of
12:58
the United States. And you might think,
13:00
holy shit, how is that possible, but it is. Like, you
13:02
can get a hotel for like thirty bucks. Like a
13:04
nice hotel for thirty bucks. You can
13:06
get a really nice steak dinner for like ten
13:08
bucks. And so
13:10
you can live very very cheaply for
13:12
a couple weeks and see all this stuff.
13:14
Problem is getting there, but, you
13:17
know, you can find some cheap flights. So if
13:19
anybody's ever planning a trip and you wanna
13:21
go someplace, this is
13:23
this is somewhere you could go on
13:25
a budget and have a really good
13:27
time and and see some old
13:29
old German architecture,
13:31
old German history that was not bombed
13:33
by World War two and has
13:36
been largely preserved by
13:39
Chokescu decided not to tear this stuff
13:41
down. So
13:43
probably because he realized that people would have been
13:45
very pissed off if he did
13:46
that. So Yeah. Well, yet another
13:48
example of where communism actually
13:50
left more of traditional
13:52
Europe intact than
13:54
liberalism in many cases, you
13:56
know, on a cultural level and sometimes
13:58
in a in a I
14:01
mean, FTN it I I should say
14:03
in a, you know,
14:06
the the culture of a of a country
14:08
and then and then, like, on an architectural level
14:10
or other levels as well. So
14:12
it's it's weird. Everything that was behind the
14:14
bubble or the the iron
14:16
curtain It's like stands
14:18
better preserved than the stuff
14:20
in the west. In many
14:22
cases, it's really horrible. But Yeah.
14:24
I would much rather get the authentic the
14:26
authentic experience that's a
14:28
little not quite as perfect
14:31
tourist picture perfect repair then
14:33
then get the one
14:34
that's, like, perfect tourist everything
14:36
and, you know, like you said, the Apple Store or
14:38
whatever. Or it's been
14:41
reconstructed and it's then then you read the
14:43
little plaque and the fine print and it's it's
14:45
a modern rendition of
14:47
the original structure. It's not true
14:50
to the actual form because
14:52
they were either lazy or they didn't want
14:54
to do, you know, we tore it down
14:56
and now we don't know how to do it. Right? Like
14:58
the -- Yeah. The thing with the notre
15:00
dame cathedral burning and they they were
15:02
like, well, how are we gonna rebuild this? Because,
15:04
you know, we don't have trees that are as
15:06
big as the were in the ceiling that
15:08
just burned in France anymore. It's like,
15:10
well, I mean, come on.
15:12
One little thing about this tower though, and
15:14
I forgot about this part of it too,
15:16
which because people think that nazism,
15:18
the national socialism was just
15:20
a thing that happened in Germany
15:22
in a period of time, and it's not it's
15:24
like foreign to Germany and foreign to the
15:26
way the German people are. But it's not It's
15:28
it's really an extension of
15:30
of how these people have always operated
15:33
their societies. And let me give you an
15:35
example. So this clock tower, like all
15:37
clock towers in in these
15:39
cities, And actually, if you think of
15:41
all the Transylvania towns that were
15:43
founded by the Germans, they all have
15:45
clock towers like this. And
15:47
their they were always the
15:50
city administration centers. And
15:52
before they were the city administration centers,
15:54
they were essentially the clock towers were
15:56
not owned by a single person and like
15:58
FTN in today's world like a Jew would own the clock
16:01
tower. But back then, it's it was
16:03
owned by all the different gilts in the
16:05
city. And then each guild was responsible
16:07
for defending that clock tower too
16:09
because it's not just a clock tower. It's got like
16:11
turrets and battlements and
16:13
everything. This is like a fortified clock
16:15
tower. That's really cool thing about it. But it
16:17
was a shared it was a
16:19
shared piece of property that everybody
16:21
had skin in the game defending.
16:24
And it was considered a
16:26
part of the public good. So when
16:28
you think about tying it all together, it's
16:30
like, well, they they obviously think
16:32
telling time is important. And
16:34
they obviously think reminding
16:36
people about the aspects of their heritage
16:38
is important, so they have these little
16:40
figurines marching out on the different
16:42
days and different hours. And
16:44
then they defend they use this. It's the
16:46
tallest structure in the town, and then they
16:48
defend it. And so
16:50
then it became the place to host
16:52
the public administration of these cities.
16:55
It's where the city orchestra
16:57
would store all of its stuff. It's where they would store
16:59
all the weapons for the town. It's like the
17:01
center of of everything. It's also the
17:03
observation point for everybody, but it's
17:05
the the keeping of
17:07
time and following a schedule and
17:09
the rigor of building a rugged
17:12
society, a an advanced civilization
17:14
connected with this is
17:17
a shared a
17:19
shared piece of property in the town that
17:21
we're all responsible for.
17:23
Right? That's the way things
17:25
should but you know, think about in
17:27
America? Like, does that work in America? No. Is
17:29
that how American is American business
17:32
answer to the people? No.
17:34
It doesn't. It answers to a few Jews, and
17:36
that's it. It's not shared as part of the
17:38
public good. And because it's not shared by the
17:40
public good, it ends up being invariably
17:42
against the public good. And
17:44
that's sort of how that unfolds. So
17:46
anyway -- Yeah. Yeah. --
17:48
it was also also a place to store water
17:50
too, to keep safe so that people had a a
17:53
clean supply of water if there was
17:55
ever a
17:56
ever a
17:57
siege. So kind of like a castle keep in
17:59
the same way. So Anyway.
18:01
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Now it's funny how
18:03
how the shared public
18:06
good idea. He
18:08
just makes me think of the the
18:10
the this conservative
18:12
or liberal or libertarian concept that
18:14
we society is just a collection of
18:17
individuals. And or or you would take that
18:19
further individuals like
18:21
all striving for their rational self
18:23
interest. I mean, there's no place for a shared
18:25
public good in that in that worldview. And it's just
18:27
completely irrational and ahistorical.
18:29
Like, no society could function
18:31
with a and we would not have what we
18:33
have today. We wouldn't even have, like, what it
18:35
took to get to the point where you can have
18:37
people theorizing about things like
18:39
that. If you didn't have AAA
18:41
sense of the shared public
18:42
good, the common wheel and all all the rest
18:44
of it.
18:45
So Yeah. I mean, it's
18:47
true. And and it's just a natural
18:49
extension of the way that these people have
18:51
kind of always been. It's a community effort.
18:54
Yeah. And and national socialism
18:56
is just a community effort
18:58
to defend itself against
19:01
Jewish power on a national scale.
19:03
But it isn't just about defeating
19:07
hostile foreign occupiers. It's
19:09
a tool for getting rid of them, but then it's
19:11
also a tool for sustaining the society
19:13
after you get rid of it. Because a lot of people
19:15
think, like, We just do fascism for
19:17
ten years until we solve all our problems. And
19:19
then we'll go back to the constitutional
19:21
America stuff. And it's like, no,
19:23
because then you'll just have Jews again.
19:25
Like -- Yeah. -- I don't know if people -- Yeah. -- we have Jews
19:27
because that system allowed us to have Jews. Like,
19:30
we're not going back to that guys. So,
19:32
you know, I remember
19:35
Well, I remember early early on
19:37
because I you know, with Nathan Dubigo coming
19:39
on your show, it has me thinking about the
19:41
early guests of the program, and we did I
19:43
remember going on Christopher Cantwell's show.
19:45
Very, very early on, radical agenda.
19:48
And we all have this mindset back
19:50
then of you just tweak the
19:52
constitution and everything
19:54
will be fine. You know, right? Because you're
19:56
like, well, let's just go with what we have because it's just
19:58
a few things we have to change. And I remember having
20:00
I don't know why it's all flooding back now, but
20:02
being on radical agenda and talking to
20:04
to Chris Cantwell, and he was even
20:06
a little bit reticent about Fash. Because
20:08
you're still doing you know, it's still libertarian and whatever. And
20:11
I was just like, no, Chris. We
20:13
need we need to have like, we can't rely
20:15
on just the, you know, the the system as
20:17
it is to fix our problems. So
20:19
at least, you know, I was trying to convince
20:21
him with fascism and convincing
20:23
myself too. We need just a period
20:25
of time where we come in
20:27
authoritarianism and we clean
20:29
up the trash. And then we can go
20:31
back to everybody has free dumb
20:33
and individual liberty. You
20:35
know, don't tread on me shit. And that was
20:37
that was acceptable to both of us at the
20:39
time, but not anymore.
20:42
Well, you know, the the thing problem with that has always been, in
20:44
my opinion, that it it was through
20:46
that system that we got here. You know,
20:49
like, always the people that wanna go back. It's gonna go back
20:51
to the earlier area. Yeah. They wanna go back to the earlier
20:53
like, even that the the citizenship the
20:55
original citizenship law where it was the only
20:57
white man of
20:59
character, you know, I mean
21:00
Free White
21:00
men if good Maryland. Yeah. Yeah. It's like it's like
21:02
if at any point you think that
21:05
this constitutional republic
21:07
or whatever had it
21:09
just right at that time. And
21:11
then since then it got off track, it's
21:14
like that system people
21:16
don't think about the supreme court today with
21:18
the three Jews sitting on it or or the Biden
21:21
administration. Were are there
21:23
through this the the process that was in place, the
21:25
process that was put in
21:26
place. I mean, you can make a difference.
21:27
All day long and say, oh, you know, the
21:30
the the the supreme
21:32
court you served it or Abraham
21:34
Lincoln expanded the powers of the
21:36
federal
21:36
government, but it it all went off the rails
21:39
with Marbury verse is
21:41
Madison. I've even said that. So I'm
21:43
mocking my the old jazz hands.
21:45
Right. Right. Yeah. Yeah. But
21:47
it's like and it did, like Marbury versus Matt did
21:49
put power in the hands of the judges, which
21:51
we call rule by judges as criteria. We haven't used
21:53
that in a long time. But but
21:55
yeah, it did. But that was
21:57
because they gave in with the bill of rights and
21:59
they felt like they they overindulged FTN
22:02
giving the people too much power. And
22:04
why did they give the people too much power?
22:06
Well, because of whiskey
22:08
rebellion and Shay's rebellion because people
22:10
actually fucking snapped when they found out they weren't
22:12
gonna get paid for the fucking
22:14
enlightenment revolution. And -- Right. -- they come back. They're
22:16
not gonna get paid. They don't have any money. And
22:18
Washington and all these FTN Robert Morrison,
22:20
all fucking high end Solomon are
22:22
doing, like, fucking financial
22:24
schemes with like land speculation
22:26
and fucking devaluing the currency. And
22:28
it's like, you know, they're not paying anybody.
22:31
And people fucking flipped the fuck out. And so they're like, alright.
22:33
We'll staple bill of rights on for people. And it's
22:35
like, what, two decades later, and they do Marbury
22:37
versus Madison. It's basically like,
22:39
a a judge a a court decision that
22:42
basically says, yeah, I mean, the people can pass
22:44
whatever laws they want, but we're gonna have
22:46
ultimate judicial authority over
22:48
everything. So That's a nice little
22:50
congress you have there, but go fuck
22:52
yourself Fash essentially what it is.
22:54
But but free white men of good
22:56
moral character always
22:58
included Jews. So when
23:00
you say blah blah, immigration of
23:03
seventeen blah blah blah blah blah blah. Just
23:05
remember, included Jews.
23:07
Okay? It included Jews.
23:10
Thomas Jefferson FTN the
23:12
quotes, in in George Washington in
23:14
their letters, worse because it was an
23:16
enlightenment value. Or so it
23:18
was talking about this the other day because
23:20
there's somebody found a diary entry
23:22
about, like, how enlightenment, one component of
23:24
enlightenment was specifically about
23:28
social sort of
23:30
redress for Jews. And and you
23:32
see it in the letter from Jefferson where he's writing
23:34
to, I think, Mortikai,
23:36
manual Mortikai Noah, and he's saying something
23:39
like It is such a
23:41
wonderful thing to have Jews
23:43
allow your people allowed
23:45
on the seats of science and the halls
23:47
of science because Jews were prevented from
23:49
being part of Academia in science. I wonder why. Why would
23:51
our ancestors have come up with that
23:53
fucking rule? But the enlightenment
23:56
era gets rid of it, and
23:58
Jefferson says, It's so great to have you
24:00
back in the halls of science. I look
24:02
forward to the day when you can join us
24:04
at the seat of government. This is the
24:06
fucking thinking of these people at
24:08
that time. So we're not going
24:10
back. We're not going back. If we're going
24:12
back and we're getting into Dolorian and we're
24:14
going back, we're gonna fucking get
24:16
rid of all those people while we're there
24:18
and hope change get out of
24:20
this, like, alternative two thousand
24:22
twenty three that we're FTN. But
24:24
we're just, like, Like,
24:27
we're not going back to, like, shake their hand
24:29
and thank them for doing the bill of rights and
24:31
all that shit. It's like, no. No. No.
24:33
It's it's gonna be to to do
24:35
the program that always should have happened way back
24:37
then. Well, they weren't doing it. We've talked
24:39
about this before. Governor
24:42
Stuyvesant and there are many heroes. William
24:44
Bradford deported Jews from
24:46
the colonies regularly because Jews were
24:48
not permitted in fifteenth and sixteenth
24:51
century, colonial America.
24:53
But, you know, it's like United States,
24:55
there's nothing bad about our land. I love our heritage.
24:57
I love our country. I always get accused
24:59
of oh, your jazz hands hates America,
25:01
burns it all down. It's like, oh, you're you're a
25:03
retard, who loves it, who thinks that that's the model
25:05
we're returning to. You're the guy who
25:07
spends many late hours at night coming
25:09
up with Nazi imagery
25:12
that some that like, American
25:14
patriotism, like, shoe
25:16
horned into it. But nobody wants,
25:18
nobody asked for that, nobody wants FTN, and
25:21
the German American Bund already
25:23
did it. They've already done it
25:25
and it didn't work FTN a very
25:27
very white country. It was an admirable
25:29
effort what they did, but we're not gonna do that
25:31
now. We're moving forward. So I you
25:33
know, I I'm getting, like, really spun up because I see, you know, I see
25:35
you see and you hang around in the
25:37
dissident circles for long enough,
25:40
you see. The flags discussion happen. And then what
25:42
kind of this are we gonna have? What kind of
25:44
that are we gonna have? And it's I love the
25:46
NJP because it's like
25:48
We're just moving past all that shit, and
25:50
we're gonna actually have a platform and talk
25:52
about ideas and do speeches. We'll worry about the
25:54
flag later, and NJP has a logo and a flag, but
25:56
we'll worry about all what kind of
25:59
uniforms and things are we going to do?
26:01
It's like the the the moment people decide
26:03
to form a thing. It's like that's the first thing they
26:05
decide on. It's like a fucking It's like
26:07
women having a tea party. I'm sorry if
26:09
you're insulted in your
26:09
hand. It's like
26:12
grow up, man. Like, fucking, you know I
26:14
I will say I will say I will say
26:17
that when you just when you when
26:19
you understand the nineteenth century
26:21
and nineteenth century romance Thank you
26:23
for reeling it back it. Sure. No problem. Nineteenth
26:26
century romanticism and
26:28
nineteenth century nationalism. You
26:31
know, nash nineteenth century nationalism, romantic
26:36
nationalism was the
26:39
firmware update for the enlightenment. You know? It was
26:41
it was basically it wasn't we're
26:44
gonna roll back all the
26:46
great things about the enlightenment and
26:48
go back to a time of of
26:51
superstition and of of,
26:53
for instance, just giant, you know,
26:56
conservative reactionary monarchies that did
26:58
have these these multi ethnic
27:00
empires under one dynasty. That's the straw
27:02
man that they do. Yeah. And and
27:04
and that's where, you know, you have people
27:06
that that there used to be a lot of
27:08
the neo reactionary thing and all that, which is
27:10
not and it was never a serious movement. But the
27:12
idea that the real problem is
27:14
the French revolution. The real problem is the
27:16
enlightenment. We gotta go back to something
27:18
before that. It's it's
27:20
nineteenth century nationalism and
27:22
romanticism, romantic nationalism updated
27:24
the firmware with science. So
27:27
instead of it just being now
27:29
you have national groups and
27:33
and tribes and
27:35
ethnicities, and now it's like you up dated
27:37
with race science. That's what came out
27:39
of the enlightenment nineteenth century
27:41
view of nationalism and the
27:43
folkish movement. Was informed by
27:46
discoveries in ecology, discoveries of, you
27:48
know, the discoveries all around the world
27:50
of of different peoples and races
27:52
and race science, earns tech alerts,
27:54
and Charles Darwin and so many of these others.
27:56
So so it's really that's
27:58
that's another reason why we can't go back because
28:00
it's like that that system,
28:02
you know, the way
28:03
I think about the American system
28:05
as it was founded,
28:07
and and why we used to have this discussion all the time with
28:10
Libertarians is that the system
28:12
that that was developed in
28:14
that at that period was
28:15
a late eighteenth century model for a
28:18
late eighteenth century time
28:21
and a lot changed between then, you know, I
28:23
mean, they had the industrial revolution
28:25
also. So so it's like yeah. It's it's
28:28
not it's not jettisoning
28:30
every jettisoning everything
28:32
from the enlightenment or ever
28:34
anything from the period of classical liberalism,
28:37
but it is building on it, you
28:39
know, and and taking into account all
28:41
the things we've learned since then,
28:43
for instance, the Jews. And that's where that's where
28:46
if you look at the old antisemitism,
28:49
pre enlightenment, the
28:51
old antisemitism and banning
28:53
Jews and everything was not
28:55
race and science based. It
28:57
was more religious based. And
28:59
then we have the enlightenment, and then you
29:01
have everybody all around the world. Napoleon and everybody
29:03
else is is saying, oh, wow.
29:05
Okay. Well, enlightened thing is Jews
29:07
are are human beings, Jews
29:09
are citizens, so we should we should get rid
29:11
of this superstitious idea that
29:13
there are there some kind of different people
29:15
and we should incorporate them as citizens of
29:17
the Republic and give them full and equal
29:20
rights. But then you add to that
29:23
race science, which comes out of the
29:25
enlightenment, and then comes out of the period of
29:27
romantic nationalism. And now it's like, oh,
29:29
wow. The religious Fash on
29:31
antisemitism were actually right for kind
29:33
of the wrong reasons. Now we've, you know, we've
29:35
jettisoned the superstition. We know the
29:37
science of it. These are totally
29:39
people. They're a completely different biologic the biological
29:41
Jews used as Mullins. You know, they're a
29:43
different race. So now we have to have
29:45
citizenship laws and and
29:48
laws dealing with these people on the condition
29:50
of race. So so, yeah, it wasn't just rolling
29:52
back to an old superstitious traditionalism,
29:55
reactionary traditionalism. Of
29:57
before the enlightenment. And that's that's
29:59
something that I mean, no. I'm being you know,
30:01
I'm preaching the choir here. No one I think
30:03
listening to the show thinks that's what we need
30:05
to do. But that's why we don't need to do it. You know,
30:07
we're we're we're moving forward with everything we
30:09
learned since the enlightenment and
30:12
incorporating all the realities of
30:14
of romantic nationalism and race
30:16
science, and that's how we arrived to the twentieth
30:18
century. And national socialism, the other thing I'll
30:20
just say is national socialism
30:21
and fascism. If you wanna think about
30:24
this, they
30:26
didn't play themselves out. Like,
30:28
they, you know, they didn't they were destroyed.
30:30
They were destroyed by war. They were
30:32
bombed into oblivion, not because
30:34
they weren't working, but because they were
30:37
working, because they were reconciling all
30:39
these conflicting problems of socialism
30:41
and and the industrial revolution and
30:43
of different races and racial groups
30:45
of national
30:46
borders. All those problems were being
30:49
evolution of solving all these these
30:51
efficacy. Well, the thing I wanted to say about
30:53
enlightenment stuff is, like, people, you know,
30:55
people get really high on their own
30:57
supply. And that's kind of what they were
30:59
doing at that period of time. It's
31:01
like, oh, well, yeah, especially with the Jew,
31:03
like welcoming the Jew and and all of this
31:05
stuff because they
31:07
they they discover like, they make one scientific
31:09
discovery of and this is really gonna
31:11
send probably the dissident movement
31:13
into, like, a tailspin, but they discover
31:15
that the earth is not flat. They
31:17
discover that the earth is round, and they do this based
31:19
on space. And, you know,
31:21
a number of other reasons. And these these and
31:24
and it's the church that has
31:26
had this stranglehold on people for FTN so
31:28
long with with, you know, you're not
31:30
allowed to think this way and it's like, well,
31:32
they prove one scientific thing.
31:35
And then they they they make these discoveries. And it's
31:37
almost like the enlightenment period is like
31:39
almost like a form of
31:41
red pilling of of the
31:43
era. Right? Because they're discovering that
31:45
there's actually you know, they've been told you about it.
31:47
Redfield on the germs question.
31:49
Redfield on the bacteria question.
31:51
Redfield on the I have any
31:52
question. Red pill
31:53
on, like, blood blood letting is, like, not
31:55
something that you actually need to
31:56
do. Hey, man. You don't wanna take the
31:59
red pill on the blood letting question.
32:01
Well, there's so many of these things and that
32:04
that happened like that where, you know, it's like in
32:06
our thing when you discover the Holocaust
32:08
is fake. But then it becomes
32:10
dangerous when it's dangerous
32:12
for your brain. When you start
32:14
then, like, literally everything
32:16
is Fash. Right? Like,
32:18
all the women that you see in
32:20
movies are actually men who
32:22
cut off their penises. The,
32:25
you know, nano bots and fucking
32:27
like all the other goofy shit like
32:29
all of the, you know, fake societies and
32:31
fake civilizations like the the
32:33
Romans weren't even real they were just lying to
32:35
you about all that. That's all fake. Like,
32:38
you end up going down this road and
32:40
that's kind of what the enlightenment did. Where they
32:42
were just like they make all these scientific
32:44
discoveries and they were like, well, if we
32:46
were wrong about blood letting,
32:48
then we were definitely wrong about keeping
32:50
Jews out of our society. And it's like no, no,
32:52
no, no, no, you were actually correct about
32:54
that. Like, don't do that. It's like the the
32:56
person that gets this, like, zeal of
32:58
the apostate where suddenly it's like, I
33:00
was wrong about this. I must have been
33:02
wrong about everything. It's like, no. No. No. No.
33:04
You you just easy
33:06
easy bro. Like, your doesn't mean you have
33:07
to, like, throw the baby out. We're board
33:09
water. Yeah. We're worshiping the goddess of reason,
33:12
you know, in the in the FTN the
33:14
French revolution. You know, I mean, you could see with the French
33:16
revolution where it's like a classic
33:18
case of over correction, you know. Some some
33:20
things are improved, some things
33:22
are changed some ridiculous things of the past or gotten rid
33:24
of. And then in in in a
33:26
in a few years, in the space of
33:28
a few years, that ropes Pierre and
33:30
the the terror and they're chopping everybody's heads
33:32
off and they're worshiping reason Fash,
33:35
like, god. And
33:37
then and then and then, you know, and then
33:39
Napoleon came -- This is
33:40
shoot. -- shooting. Shoot. Shoot.
33:42
Coming to power. It's like no no coincidence
33:44
that they've been let back into all these
33:46
countries where they were kept out of. I
33:48
mean, it's like, how was England
33:51
prior to Cromwell? Yeah.
33:53
And after after the tower of
33:56
York? Pretty good. It was pretty good.
33:58
Why why is history so quiet? I mean, they
34:00
had battles and wars and whatever, but why
34:02
is it that when Jews get let back
34:04
into all these places that there's big wars
34:06
between these countries. Suddenly England
34:08
is used to go to go fuck
34:11
with Spain because Spain has to pay a
34:13
price for fourteen ninety two. It's like, why
34:15
is all of a sudden this is
34:17
a problem? It's it's their presence
34:19
in these countries. Has been a a major issue. And
34:21
the way that the best way to think about national
34:24
socialism is a is a
34:26
course correction. On all of
34:28
this stuff. It's it's saying no, no,
34:30
no, we're we're actually gonna put some of this
34:32
back in the box because it wasn't supposed to
34:34
come out. And effectively Hitler and
34:36
National Socialism was a
34:38
much needed dose
34:40
of chemotherapy on
34:42
a Jew Cancer World that has
34:44
been metastasizing ever since. And
34:46
it was attempting to
34:49
to cure that issue to flush out the illness, and it
34:51
is a disease. Oh, Jasmine's is
34:54
engaging in classic anti
34:56
Semitic tropes today. Yes,
34:58
I am. Because it was a
35:00
disease. There's no there's
35:02
no it's not a coincidence
35:04
that we see many similarities
35:06
between the degeneracy of the
35:08
Weimar Republic. And where that was paused for a little bit
35:10
and then just continued
35:12
again. It's no coincidence
35:14
that when you look back into biblical
35:18
texts, and historic text that you find stories
35:20
about the kind of degenerate shit that
35:22
is plaguing our society
35:24
now and was in Weimar, but
35:26
it's also back, way, back when
35:28
too. And we had very, very
35:30
old laws to stop this
35:31
stuff, anti siding me and
35:34
everything else. And I've said
35:36
before, when I when I the summer
35:38
of two thousand fourteen, when I was first
35:40
discovering the alt right as is as
35:42
opposed to the old one point o
35:44
movement that I'd I was known.
35:46
I read Alexander Dugan's book,
35:48
The Fourth Political Theory, because he
35:51
was scheduled to
35:51
speak. No. Seriously, he was scheduled
35:54
to speak. In -- I'm just putting in as a Spencer's
35:56
event. -- as a -- Yeah. -- as a time
35:57
stamp. Warren admits that he's a dukiness thirty
36:00
five. Yeah. Well well, that
36:02
was the thing is. I'm I'm about to say exactly the opposite. I've said
36:04
this before, but, you know, it's it's
36:06
actually a good
36:06
book. The fourth political theory is a good book,
36:09
but fourth political theory itself is ridiculous.
36:10
It's bunk. You've really done it. You've really
36:13
Fourth political theory itself is ridiculous.
36:16
It's bunk. I mean, he goes through
36:18
and says, First, there was
36:20
liberalism, then there was communism,
36:22
then there was fascism 123.
36:24
And then and then finally, now
36:26
there's my dukiness theory.
36:28
And it's like, One of the things
36:30
you realized is that the first three
36:32
parts of the book, it's like,
36:34
yes, there was liberalism was
36:36
the big, big change from
36:38
everything that had proceeded it in
36:40
the traditional reactionary, pre, you know, pre enlightenment,
36:44
pre science world.
36:46
And it had a lot of that had served us well the traditionalism of
36:48
the of the going back to
36:50
the medieval period and even before that.
36:53
Had served us well for a very long period
36:55
of time, and there was a lot that was good in it
36:57
and right in
36:57
it. But then the the age
37:00
of liberalism with the enlightenment, a lot was
37:01
updated, a lot was fixed, a lot was improved, but
37:04
there were certain very big problems
37:06
with it. And
37:08
then and then communism, the age of communism, and of
37:11
and of socialism, non communist
37:13
forms of socialism updated
37:16
that, and then fascism fixed the problems with that.
37:18
So fascism was the final I
37:20
really believe this jazz that and I felt
37:22
this way for years that
37:24
fascism and national socialism were kind of
37:27
the last idea the
37:29
last new ideology. And
37:32
the one that finally reconciled all these problems and
37:34
got everything right. And they
37:37
were just destroyed physically. Annihilated
37:40
with napalm and bullets and
37:43
bombs, just
37:46
physically annihilated And
37:48
now we are living in a
37:50
in a FTN a time where we we, you know,
37:52
the people that are trying to go back are the
37:54
Joe Biden's of the world and the and
37:56
the FTN
37:57
desantis. They're the ones that are trying to keep
37:59
alive a
38:00
On the Jews. The Jews there because
38:02
they don't really have free will these people
38:04
that in them.
38:05
Well, I mean, if we will enough to definitely. But yeah. Yeah. Best.
38:07
And they're, like, locked away in a box, and they
38:09
just would love to be
38:12
anti semite too. So, you know,
38:14
realm of idea. Other like, Rhonda Santos and Joe Biden, if if
38:16
Hitler had won would have just
38:18
been, like,
38:20
people living in some sort of national socialist country
38:22
at some point. Yeah. We FTN normal.
38:24
We fix the deluriant and we go
38:26
back and and hear Joe
38:29
Biden
38:29
is, like, janitor, you updated timeline where the
38:32
Lunchale Joe. He's a lunchale Joe in in
38:34
the American in the
38:36
American fascist bond
38:38
of Eastern Pennsylvania and
38:40
Scranton. That's where he would be from.
38:42
And Rhonda Santos
38:44
would be
38:45
I don't know where he's from. If he's actually from Florida, something tells
38:47
me he's a carpet bagger, but I
38:49
think something tells me too. But but Yeah.
38:51
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's it's
38:53
And think of, you know, when you hear
38:56
somebody say, like, oh, it's the final
38:58
ideology. And
39:00
people will wanna, like,
39:02
critique that by saying, like, well, how,
39:04
you know, how do you know that it's gonna be the thing
39:06
your thing is going to be the thing
39:08
that is the the It won't be
39:09
forever, but it will
39:10
be for maybe, like, the next thousand years. Well, let
39:12
me let me finish my let me finish my
39:13
let me finish my Sure.
39:16
So
39:16
it it it can be
39:18
because the world like,
39:20
the why only only a Jew
39:22
would say that we have to keep
39:25
evolving into different things, and the world is always changing,
39:27
and society is always changing. Because
39:29
what is the excuse that
39:31
people say when you
39:33
bring up like, well, what about all these faggots? What
39:36
about the drag queen story hour? What
39:38
about all these fucked up, you know, kids
39:40
who can't even, like, do this and that. And
39:42
so society, is changing.
39:44
It's like it's it's as though it's the weather,
39:46
as though it's just like a normal
39:48
state of affairs, the things degrade, and then
39:50
then we have to figure out a way to fix
39:52
them and that's what America makes it great. It's like, no, we don't have to
39:54
do that. Why would you do that? You can just
39:57
you can have a system where
39:59
it doesn't fall apart like that all the time. It's like
40:02
it's almost like you're just
40:04
okay with, I don't know,
40:06
having having like some like a
40:08
leaky roof. Like, you don't ever
40:10
do the thing you need to do to repair the roof so
40:12
that every time it rains, it stays dry
40:14
inside your home. You're just like,
40:16
bug, time to get the buckets out. The roof just
40:18
leaks, that's just how it is.
40:20
Society is always a change and it's like fix
40:22
the fucking roof. Fascism
40:24
is fixing the leak in the roof.
40:26
And we don't need to do we don't, like, we don't need
40:28
to do all this stuff. So people think of, you know, fascism brown shirts. Fash.
40:31
It is that. Because that
40:34
that is the that is the mode that it was in when it was
40:36
addressing a problem. Right? Like --
40:38
Right. -- when when when
40:40
something is acting
40:42
in defense of of something. It's it's in a different mode. Right?
40:44
I'm looking at I still have the picture
40:46
of this German village Schosberg
40:48
pulled up. And thing and
40:50
FTN fits in perfectly with this.
40:52
So just follow me with this. But so I
40:54
said the clock tower is the place where everybody in
40:56
this town has to defend it. Right?
40:59
Everybody collectively goes to the
41:01
clock tower. That's only partially correct because it's
41:03
a Citadel town. The clock tower was
41:05
at the center, but there was a wall
41:07
around the entire city. And
41:09
along the wall, at least in Schaumburg, there were
41:11
nine different towers. Each
41:14
tower was constructed by
41:16
the gills from the city. So each
41:18
guild was responsible for constructing a tower, and they were all
41:20
named after the different guilds, Tim Smith,
41:23
butcher, bootmaker, tailor, furrier, Iron
41:25
Smith rope, rope maker. Out
41:27
of them in my tower. Tanner's tower, face
41:30
tower doesn't exist anymore, and then the clock
41:32
tower. And you would go to your
41:34
stations and defend
41:36
the city from these different areas.
41:38
So do you think the guy who's at his post in the butcher's
41:40
tower defending an attacker Does
41:44
that his normal state when he's doing that? When he's got his
41:46
battle armor on and and whatever? In
41:49
peacetime? No. He's
41:51
in the city. Creating
41:54
meat for the people in the
41:55
city. Maybe that's a bad example because you're a vegetarian.
41:57
But with the bootmaker, everybody wears shoes. Right?
41:59
Warren? The bootmaker. But but sometimes If
42:01
I
42:01
lived back then, I would've meeting me. Yes.
42:03
You would like you would like to meet that, then I'm
42:05
sure. Well,
42:06
maybe not because there were ancient Greeks that didn't were
42:08
vegetarian anyway. Go ahead. Go ahead. Where are you going? I'm
42:10
sure you would have been loving the the Hungarian Goulash.
42:13
That they would have had back then from that area. Although,
42:15
that would have been a foreign food
42:17
in Shasberg. They would have been, like, get that
42:19
Hungarian shit the fuck out of
42:20
here. You haven't even talked
42:21
We haven't even about the anti Hungarianisms baked into
42:24
that Russian social Fash a partner. Oh
42:26
my god. Alright. Alright. We gotta stick.
42:28
It's all in good. It's all it's all in good
42:30
fun. But my point is is that sometimes
42:32
the tin smith, the
42:34
butcher, the butcher, the bootmaker, the tailor,
42:36
the furrier, the iron smith, rope maker, and
42:38
the tanner, have
42:40
to put on their armor, and they have to go to war, and they
42:42
have to defend their city. And it
42:45
was so important that they built
42:47
this around the town to
42:49
keep these people out. And they and we haven't
42:52
learned that lesson. We don't have, you know, Donald Trump
42:54
o going to depart the mall and build a wall build a wall
42:56
and depart the
42:58
mall. Well, That's what that's what they're doing in Pennsylvania in every village. We're build
43:00
a wall around our town and deport anybody
43:02
who's not there. But
43:05
sometimes you need have all hands
43:08
on deck to to
43:10
spurn an enemy. And right now,
43:12
we just let the enemy in. We we
43:14
let them in. We're comfy with them. Not
43:16
all Jews, like all this stuff. So everybody gets it, but I
43:19
think when you get to
43:21
a state of existence, like
43:23
things don't need to really change
43:25
and evolve. I mean, I think thing that would change and evolve with fascism
43:28
is maybe
43:30
technological advances we're with
43:31
fans. The approaches to things,
43:33
but but that's, like, we don't need to
43:36
just be like, going back to the enlightenment
43:38
thing, just because we discover
43:41
light speed spaceflight.
43:44
That doesn't mean like, wow, we have a new
43:46
scientific advance. Let's let all the Jews
43:48
back in. It's a low. We don't need
43:50
to do that. Like, we can just make the
43:52
scientific advance and change
43:54
it within the parameters of the society that
43:56
we've created and move
43:57
forward. That's it. So it came I made on the old joke
43:59
I made on Facebook in twenty
44:02
fifteen, the all
44:04
rightists people were discussing various things and there
44:06
was this
44:08
thing of What what would we change about
44:10
national socialism if it came in the twenty
44:12
first century? III
44:14
respond. People were varying, you know, different
44:18
suggestions and solutions. And I was like, oh, man, we'd have
44:20
to change almost everything. We'd have to have
44:22
updated tanks, planes, bombs,
44:24
you know, all these different things,
44:28
different you know, all these different computers, you know, all the
44:30
all the technology, some of it, you know, the person who
44:32
posts the poll. No. No. I mean, like, what would you change about
44:34
the ideology? I'm like, no. I I get
44:37
a question. But but, yeah, it's
44:39
it's there's a reason why Hitler talked
44:41
about a thousand year wreck
44:44
because Hitler was far seeing enough that
44:46
he he realized that this is not, you
44:48
know, forever for all time, for the next ten thousand years, fifty thousand years. This
44:50
isn't gonna be the way we do
44:54
things. But it probably will be good for the next thousand
44:56
years. So III actually I always
44:58
take that as a cue. That's a good
45:00
that's a good idea for about
45:02
how long week,
45:04
week, and then and then whatever would come after that would be FTN
45:07
would evolve, but then it would be -- Oh.
45:09
-- would
45:11
taking the original precepts of it and
45:13
expanding it in different I really don't think that we've progressed that
45:16
much since the why
45:18
wouldn't you think
45:18
in those terms? I mean, you know, it's like
45:22
our our ancestors have thought in those terms for
45:24
a long time. The Chinese think in those
45:26
terms -- Yes. -- and you even hear, like, regular, you
45:28
know, normies, like, oh, you know, the China
45:31
he's thinking three and four hundred year
45:33
increments. It's a yeah. Because they're they're
45:35
building something to last. They're not
45:37
doing they're not doing planned obsolescence.
45:39
They're not doing like stream, like,
45:42
exponential growth and startups and
45:44
all this retarded. This is like what I posted on
45:46
telegram this week with that
45:48
MIT study that discovered, like, the true secret of
45:50
Roman era concrete that they always thought
45:52
was, like, the -- Yeah. -- the pa the
45:54
Bosolanic Fash, like
45:56
the volcanic ash is why the Roman
45:58
concrete was so strong. It's like,
46:00
they just mixed ash in. And it's
46:02
like, of course, you, like, tell us story
46:04
where it's like the Romans weren't that
46:05
advanced. They just had like Just by accident, they just
46:07
got rid of these. Yeah. Yeah. It's like
46:09
it's like no asshole. They they
46:11
they mixed the concrete at
46:14
very high temperatures, which means that they would have done
46:16
an extra step with the concrete, and then
46:18
they blended the concrete with lime, which they
46:20
do today, but they didn't blend it
46:23
the way that they do today, they left
46:25
these large chunks of lime
46:27
in the concrete, which then
46:29
became large pieces of surface area within the concrete. And
46:31
they knew that concrete was gonna what's gonna crack?
46:33
Like, all concrete cracks. Even with
46:35
reinforced concrete, it
46:38
cracks eventually. And they knew that it's
46:40
gonna crack eventually. But when it cracks
46:42
and water gets into those cracks, it's gonna
46:44
flow to the areas that have the largest
46:46
surface area. Which would be the lime. And when the lime touches the it's
46:48
gonna form this calcium carbonate, which is
46:50
the equivalent of fucking concrete glue, and
46:54
it heals the concrete back
46:56
together and it effectively makes it stronger
46:58
as it cracks which is a natural
47:00
condition of concrete it's gonna crack. So we're gonna make
47:02
it crack and then it glues itself back together
47:04
and becomes stronger. Almost like they they like baked into
47:06
the concrete that would be water activated
47:08
over time eventually making the
47:10
structures stronger. Because when they built
47:14
it, They built it with the intent of it being there for a thousand years.
47:16
Did they know that it was gonna be there for
47:18
two thousand years? Did they know that the pantheon
47:20
FTN in Rome, that largest
47:24
unreinforced concrete structure, that
47:26
entire like dome roof is entirely
47:30
unreinforced concrete. Have somebody build that today? They
47:32
can't. Unless they figured out how to do the concrete
47:34
exactly like the Romans did. They can't
47:36
do it. they
47:38
built things to last. When the Romans
47:40
built things, they're like, why When we're building this
47:42
temple, we're building this
47:44
to last forever because we don't wanna repair
47:47
it again. Right? But when a road
47:49
company builds a road in America,
47:51
they build it actually to only
47:53
last a few years. Because
47:55
they want the contract to repair the
47:57
road. And they wanna build it again and build it again
47:59
and build it again. That's the only way that they make money. Right?
48:01
I mean, this is how the whole society
48:04
in America and many places around the world is constructed, is
48:06
about maintaining the budget that you
48:08
had the year before, so then you
48:10
build things a shitty way, so you
48:12
always have to repair them. That's fucking retarded. I
48:14
use this example all the time. The way
48:16
they build roads in America, it's like these
48:18
temporary, oh, we'll build it to last a few years, but then we
48:20
wanna come back and fix because we want the
48:22
job. Right? But in
48:24
Europe, you get a road contract
48:26
to build the road, but then the same company
48:28
that builds the road also as the
48:30
contract to maintain the road. So if you
48:32
have to maintain the road out of your own
48:34
pocket as the company, are you
48:36
gonna build the road to last a long time? Are you
48:38
gonna build really nicely to
48:40
last a long time are you gonna build it in a shitty
48:42
way? Which one's gonna work out better?
48:44
Right? Like all this all this stuff
48:46
that still standing. It's like these people built it with the intent of it lasting
48:48
forever. There's still images of this
48:50
in America. A lot of the, you
48:52
know, the buildings that are around the National Mall
48:54
in DC were built in a time
48:56
where, you know, like, the White House or the Capitol.
48:58
We're gonna build the or the Washington Monument.
49:00
We're gonna build this to be here
49:01
forever. They don't do
49:04
that anymore.
49:05
Yeah. And III wanna comment on that
49:08
that's a great point you just made
49:10
about
49:10
the just the idea of
49:12
why why aren't we planning
49:14
for centuries ahead. I mean, when do you hear any American
49:17
politician? Any American, you know,
49:19
I would say statesman, you know,
49:21
leader, but we don't have
49:24
statesman. Obviously, that's like almost a joke to even say, but just a
49:26
politician, when do you hear anyone
49:30
talk about the centuries
49:32
to come, the next century
49:34
whatever. I mean, it's never,
49:36
never. And that's that's crazy. That's
49:39
insane. I mean, you're all over this thousand year. Right?
49:41
You know, delusions of grand. It's
49:43
like, why why do you never hear
49:45
that? And and,
49:48
you know, Well, yeah. You go ahead. What were you gonna say? We're like a
49:50
we're like a quarter away through the
49:52
twenty first century. And I don't
49:54
even hear people talk about the twenty
49:56
first century. I don't talk
49:58
about the twentieth century. They used to. Ten or
50:00
fifteen years ago, you hear that more often. But we're
50:02
a quarter of the way through the twenty first
50:05
century. And I've never heard I mean, five hundred years ahead,
50:07
a thousand years ahead, I haven't even heard them talk
50:09
about the next decade. They don't talk about the
50:12
only thing they talk about you here in those
50:14
terms is like, the climate
50:16
shit. Like, we need to do this by
50:18
twenty forty four. It's like, how about
50:20
why don't we talk about, like, getting rid of black
50:22
crime by next twenty twenty four or twenty
50:24
forty or whatever. Like, how about ridden
50:27
poverty by this year? No. They never talk
50:29
about that. We're only gonna stop we're
50:31
only gonna stop using coal by a certain time. Like, that's the main
50:33
problem. We can't stop doing something else.
50:35
If we can't stop you
50:38
know, degeneracy and everything else. Like, that those are the goals that
50:40
I think we would have as a society. But it's like,
50:42
you don't even hear people talking about the
50:45
twenty second century, which is
50:48
only seventy six years away. I mean, that's a long time from,
50:50
you know, from our perspective. But
50:52
but we can't only be thinking
50:56
about things within our lifetimes or things --
50:58
Yeah. -- I think the the time
51:00
horizon for everybody has gotten
51:02
so short And
51:04
part of it is because, you know, of people FTN their
51:06
propensity to, like, worship their own
51:08
assholes. Right? They're like -- Right. -- what
51:11
what's in it for me? What's in
51:13
it for me in the next five minutes? What's in it for me on my next social
51:15
media notification? Like, people aren't thinking
51:18
about what's in it
51:20
for me ten years from now.
51:22
What's in it for me, for my grandchildren? You know, it's it's and
51:24
people don't think in those terms anymore. So
51:26
if everybody's just in it for themselves,
51:30
then who's who's in it for the
51:32
long term? It's like, well, who who is
51:34
thinking about things in the long
51:36
term? Jews. Yeah.
51:38
Jews are planning in the long term. And they're
51:40
even using a different calendar. They have the
51:42
their years are thal you know, what is
51:45
it? Like, the year five thousand in Jew, Jew World or
51:47
something, who knows. But No. I don't know.
51:49
We don't know. But but we don't we
51:51
don't think about that. And I think those
51:53
I mean, can you imagine the reaction of a
51:56
politician or a puppet, you know, like the
51:58
Santa's? You know, what's your
52:00
plan? What what what should
52:02
America's plan be for the next century
52:04
to solve this this this
52:06
initiative. I mean, can
52:06
you imagine, like, the eyeballs just, like,
52:09
doing, like, cartoons of America look like in a I
52:11
mean, just what should be what should
52:13
the racial demographics of America
52:15
be a century from
52:17
now? Like, what's the goal that we're gonna well,
52:19
you know, the world is changing and we're
52:21
becoming more you know, no. But but pick
52:23
a number. Like, just how non white should
52:26
we be? By that point. Like,
52:28
should should there be no more white people? Should we
52:30
all be beige? Is that I mean, is that what you
52:32
think? Is that what or or are you
52:34
gonna say that there should be some white people
52:36
left? A hundred or hundred years from now.
52:38
And then if there are gonna be white people,
52:40
how many white people?
52:41
Like, what percentage of the population
52:43
should be white people? I mean, that's I
52:45
can't even answer, like, simple that's an important question, and I don't
52:47
wanna sound cocky. But even if you ask
52:49
the question of, like, what
52:51
is your vision for American
52:54
society in the year two thousand and
52:56
seventy
52:56
five. What does America look like in the
52:58
year --
52:58
Yeah. -- just on a basic level, least on the rate side
53:00
of it. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, demographics, you know,
53:02
included in that question. But let let's just say you asked
53:05
the question of, like, what what does America look
53:07
like? Now we know you can't
53:09
predict technological advances.
53:12
So this may seem kinda silly. It's like asking somebody in the eighteen twenties.
53:14
What does what does eighteen seventies
53:16
America look like? Well, they
53:19
could you have predicted, like, steam
53:22
locomotives and telegraphs and everything else,
53:24
probably not. But maybe
53:26
getting there, I don't know. But but people
53:28
had a vision, like even Ben Franklin.
53:30
And we did, you know, we did a really good
53:32
really good deep dive on Ben
53:34
Franklin where we talk about a lot of positive
53:36
things about Ben Franklin. And he
53:39
one of the things with him was he was a he was a
53:41
scientist. He was really believed in, like, these technological advances
53:43
and electricity and the
53:45
story about him frying turkeys
53:48
with electricity, and kind of a cool
53:50
dude, he would have been able to answer the
53:52
question about what does America look
53:54
like in a hundred years. And he would have probably had
53:56
a very very important vision for that.
53:58
But, you know, the people today
54:00
don't. And they can't answer
54:02
that question about what
54:04
America would
54:06
look like. And they would probably try to say, oh, well, technology will change
54:08
and all this stuff. It's like, okay. But what
54:10
is your goal? You have to have goals. Right.
54:12
Sorry. He
54:14
has problems. Do you have goals to
54:16
fix the problems? Like, what is your five year plan? What is your ten year plan
54:18
to address these issues? And part
54:21
of the problem with America being
54:23
able to address these problems is the two, four, and six
54:26
year cycles of of
54:28
having people cycled in and out
54:30
of office.
54:32
And III hear the argument made by elites
54:34
and people in power for a
54:36
long time of, like, well, we we don't
54:39
want to have term limits because
54:42
it takes time to develop in government and then
54:44
you have to specialize in all this. It's like,
54:46
no, it takes time for you to become corrupt. And
54:48
then once you become corrupt, you
54:50
wanna keep sucking on that
54:52
tit. You're not actually specializing in
54:54
any problem solving because
54:56
I agree that people should be in power for a
54:58
very long time to be able to solve
55:00
a problem. But that's not why these people are in power for a long time. They're in a
55:02
long they're in power a long time to ensure
55:04
that other people don't get into power and
55:06
disrupt the the
55:08
apple cart. That's actually why Jews like these long term members
55:10
to be in power because it's somebody
55:12
that they have by the Bulls
55:16
that they can trust, that they can rely on and are gonna be very
55:18
financially insecure if they fuck up.
55:20
So that's why they like it.
55:23
Don't like disruption because it could be somebody else that
55:25
comes in and does something different. But part of the
55:27
problem is, you have all this churn and the swinging
55:29
of the pendulum and everything
55:31
else. It's like, Even if you could get somebody to
55:33
say, this is my vision for the next hundred years. That guy's gone
55:35
in three or four years. Like
55:38
Yes. Exactly.
55:39
That's why we need a national vision
55:42
for what we're going to do.
55:44
And when you have Thinkalthink
55:46
and Team Red versus Team
55:48
Blue and just like fees. And we'll get this
55:50
later, but the fucking fake fight
55:52
over gas stoves and everything else. The longer
55:54
we're talking about gas stoves, the
55:57
less we're gonna be talking about
55:59
bringing back Roman concrete to fix all of
56:01
our infrastructure in America, right,
56:03
as an example. Yeah. You know, well, like, we
56:05
have scientists. Like, why don't we like, now that we
56:08
know, now that MIT knows
56:10
what was in
56:12
Roman concrete. Why aren't we why
56:14
aren't why isn't that immediately being
56:16
proposed? Like, I'm convening a
56:18
panel to figure out how to
56:20
make this the type of concrete I mean, if a
56:22
law that says, build American. Right? There's there's
56:24
regulations within the construction industry
56:26
to do certain things a certain way.
56:29
A serious government would say, well, now that we know how
56:31
to build concrete that never cracks, or
56:34
that heals itself, or that is
56:36
impaut like, then then that
56:38
means that if you build something with the
56:40
old way of doing things where it's gonna fall
56:42
apart, and you have like the Interstate
56:44
thirty five
56:46
bridge collapse in Minnesota and there's been so many bridge collapses
56:48
because of this
56:49
stuff. Why it
56:49
would be criminal to build it the old way?
56:52
Why wouldn't you make it your
56:54
national law to build it the
56:56
new way so that you prevent
56:58
gifting and people, you know, doing
57:00
doing planned obsolescence and everything else.
57:02
Like, I would make planned obsolescence fucking
57:03
illegal. Like, if it were to me. Yeah.
57:06
This is a waste of of of resources.
57:08
But anyway, I will keep going
57:10
if I don't No. No. No. I I well, I I just
57:12
I this actually ties into the one
57:14
article about debt because
57:16
I wanted to mention, you know,
57:18
you're talking about the yeah, the
57:20
planned obsolescence and the and the idea
57:24
of things being what we what
57:26
you're talking about is things being made and destroyed
57:28
and made and destroyed and made and destroyed and made
57:30
and destroyed over and over and
57:34
over again. And this the idea
57:36
there is it's not just so we have jobs. It's so that we
57:39
have growth, you
57:41
know, economic growth the growth
57:43
model that you you always talk about, Jess. And it's like,
57:46
well, we need growth. We need economic
57:48
growth. And that's why, you know,
57:50
disposable
57:50
plastic, you know, just
57:52
build it and destroy it, it falls apart, and get a new
57:54
one. You know, one of the things that's like a pet peeve
57:56
of mine is when I go on Google News and
57:59
you scroll down, there's always this technology
58:01
section that's supposed to be, oh, these are the latest
58:04
advances in science, and it's just
58:06
basically an
58:08
add for all the new smartphones that are gonna be released, you know.
58:10
It's just advertisements, articles advertising, whatever
58:12
is the latest, like, consumer gadget.
58:16
That they want the people that are on top of that. reason why and
58:19
and and it's ironic, you were talking
58:21
about how people the only thing
58:23
where they talk about
58:26
decades and centuries is and they don't even talk about centuries,
58:28
but they talk about decades is climate change.
58:30
Yet, what
58:31
could be worse for
58:34
the planet? Then constantly gobbling up and
58:36
consuming more resources only
58:38
to destroy them and turn them
58:40
into waste and dump them or
58:43
spew them into the atmosphere so that you can get
58:45
to the next batch of stuff.
58:48
And that's the reality of what's happening.
58:50
That's why we're the planet is
58:52
experiencing its sixth a mass
58:54
extinction. It is this growth
58:56
model of neo liberal
58:58
capitalism and the thing that we always try
59:00
to emphasize size that's the the critical component. And this is you could
59:02
say it's is it the Jews? Yes. It's the
59:04
Jews. Because at the root
59:06
of the endless
59:08
growth model, is
59:10
bottomless debt. Bottomless
59:12
debt is what is fueling. That's
59:14
the final. That's the the bottomless black
59:17
hole. Did he eating up all of this
59:19
stuff. And that's why we have to have endless debt. And so
59:21
what this Well, you know who we can thank
59:23
for
59:23
this. Yeah.
59:26
Go
59:26
ahead. We can thank one one person who was raised a
59:28
Jew may not have been an ethnic Jew, but
59:30
was raised a Jew who
59:33
constructed the system that
59:35
was adopted by the United States and then
59:38
adopted all over the fucking
59:40
world. Alexander
59:42
Hamilton, I can -- Yeah. -- thank
59:44
Alexander Hamilton for this in his bank, and he was the one that
59:46
took the American government off
59:48
of a system that was
59:51
that was financed by, like, their actual,
59:53
like, gold and treasury that they
59:55
had. And saying, no. No. You know, you can't afford
59:57
to pay these soldiers and you're
1:00:00
having riots. So let's just do big loans
1:00:02
from Jewish financiers in
1:00:04
France and England. All
1:00:06
you know, with with Ben Franklin and Robert
1:00:10
Morris, we'll secure those loans. It's funny the same people who did
1:00:12
the French revolution also
1:00:14
funded the American revolution.
1:00:16
It's like you fund the
1:00:18
revolution, so now there's a debt. How
1:00:20
do we get out of debt? Well, we I'm
1:00:22
not saying the only reason for the revolution was
1:00:24
to put these countries
1:00:26
into this this debt financed model.
1:00:28
But if you look at
1:00:30
history, it well, America was the one that
1:00:32
was, like, taking this great leap into
1:00:34
this debt finance enhanced model.
1:00:36
And then every but but the people
1:00:38
themselves were still not doing that. I
1:00:40
mean, he had it a little bit with, like, you know,
1:00:42
the the guy who would supply things in your town or whatever, maybe you
1:00:44
you run a little bit of a tab with him and then
1:00:46
you settle up at the end of the month.
1:00:49
But there's not like onerous. It's not
1:00:51
like you're a slave to that guy. In some cases, that
1:00:53
that might have been the case. But the
1:00:55
point is is that once
1:00:58
once government got onto this debt financed model,
1:01:00
and then it became, like, in like, the the
1:01:02
debt is never gonna be paid off. Like, it's just
1:01:05
accepted and you make I mean, you make it's
1:01:07
a mortgage, but it's forever. It's like the
1:01:09
thousand year Hitler had his thousand
1:01:11
year right, and America has its like a
1:01:13
thousand year, like, debt obligations, twenty trillion,
1:01:15
thirty trillion, forty trillion dollars. And I get FTN,
1:01:18
the money printer, like, quickly
1:01:20
FTN whatever. But
1:01:23
Like, this is fueling the problem.
1:01:26
And it's it's it's once it was
1:01:28
adopted here, and then America
1:01:30
became the empire that was
1:01:32
dictating the terms all over the world, and
1:01:34
England shared a role in
1:01:36
this. Everybody is now on the same
1:01:38
system, and the people of those
1:01:40
countries are now on that
1:01:42
same system. And the important thing that you said is that, you know,
1:01:44
it's it's fueling the debt is the thing
1:01:46
that is undergirding the consumption of
1:01:48
all the
1:01:50
resources and buying the next product and build you know, getting the next
1:01:52
thing and doing the next event.
1:01:54
You never hear This is how you know that
1:01:56
the conversation
1:01:58
about green
1:02:00
and environmental and all that stuff is just bullshit.
1:02:02
And it's not that because
1:02:04
see people hear that and they think, oh,
1:02:06
well, jazz hands are saying that
1:02:09
green stuff in environmentalism is bullshit. No,
1:02:11
it's not. The the there is
1:02:13
a true green There is
1:02:15
a true environmentalism and we're not
1:02:17
doing
1:02:17
it. Like none of the shit that they're talking about has anything
1:02:19
to do with it. Almost all of it is about
1:02:21
owning geopolitical FTN dog
1:02:24
foes like
1:02:26
Venezuela, like Russia, like China, because
1:02:28
Russia is the largest exporter and
1:02:30
the largest producer of natural gas
1:02:33
in the world And so
1:02:36
they don't want people using natural
1:02:38
gas because then that hurts Russia. If
1:02:40
you get people off a gas, then
1:02:43
Russia is is in pain. And they've been
1:02:45
doing this for a while. And so the if you
1:02:47
if they really cared about the
1:02:50
state of the environment and the state of
1:02:52
the planet, then you would
1:02:54
have Al Gore giving
1:02:56
presentations on anti capitalism
1:02:58
and on anti planned obsolescence
1:03:00
and on anti consumption, and
1:03:02
on anti exponential growth models everything else.
1:03:05
But show me somebody
1:03:07
in the mainstream, Larry
1:03:10
fucking think and is ESG and everything else, show me somebody
1:03:12
who's saying that we have to
1:03:14
stop this or else. Right?
1:03:17
Right? Nobody's doing fear mongering over
1:03:20
you buying Apple Watch
1:03:22
two or Apple Watch five or Apple Watch five or
1:03:24
Apple Watch. Right. Right. Right. I
1:03:26
mean, right. Nobody is telling you that that's bad. It's just like but
1:03:28
but when you look into
1:03:30
the the, you know,
1:03:34
America talks the
1:03:36
double standard with its human rights.
1:03:38
Like, we're the number one human
1:03:40
rights shut the fuck up. Look what
1:03:42
look at what they're doing to countries
1:03:44
that have ingredients for lithium ion batteries right now.
1:03:46
Look at what they're doing to the people that live in
1:03:48
those countries just to get access to
1:03:50
the lithium.
1:03:52
To supply all of these fucking products. Yes. And
1:03:54
in the mining and
1:03:55
all the thing because they tell you, oh
1:03:57
electric cars, it's
1:04:00
like, Yeah. Electric cars are cool when you have the ability to charge
1:04:02
them that doesn't impact the fucking
1:04:04
planet, but we don't have that. We're just
1:04:06
moving to electric cars right now.
1:04:09
Because Russia has gas, and because the
1:04:11
Middle East has gas. And we
1:04:13
want people to stop using those products
1:04:15
because if you use those products, you're enriching
1:04:17
people who don't like Jews. So
1:04:20
that's
1:04:20
why they do this. If I'm on
1:04:22
I don't know. Just to give people an example, always just
1:04:24
look at this. That's a terrific point.
1:04:27
Top stories on Google news right now,
1:04:30
you know, political news,
1:04:32
Russia, Ukraine war, and then
1:04:36
there's topics. And then there's US topic. And they're talking about the Idaho
1:04:38
killer. They're talking about the
1:04:40
world Russia market watch.
1:04:42
They're talking
1:04:44
about JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, beat earnings
1:04:47
expectations, sports, entertainment.
1:04:50
Lisa Marie died fifty four
1:04:52
years
1:04:52
old. Then you go to technology.
1:04:54
She had boosters, Warren.
1:05:01
It's like, you to other day? I don't wanna go on to the
1:05:03
the Yeah. Let's not let me
1:05:05
just say that if George
1:05:08
Floyd had
1:05:10
happened today
1:05:10
or this year or last year, it wouldn't have been
1:05:13
because of the drugs in his system. It wouldn't
1:05:15
have been because nigga because
1:05:17
blacks have the they
1:05:20
they they have the what is it? The the hypertension? Like
1:05:22
permanent hypertension where their where their resting heart
1:05:24
rate is like one fifty over two hundred all
1:05:26
the time. I know that's a fake heart
1:05:29
rate. It would have been because he took the fucking backside. It's like
1:05:31
-- Right. -- not because he took it. But
1:05:33
but but technology
1:05:35
section here. Is be that
1:05:38
as it may. Technology section. The top one is leaked Samsung
1:05:40
Galaxy s twenty three pictures
1:05:42
show off new camera design.
1:05:46
How is that a news article? That is not a news article. That
1:05:48
is a fucking advertisement. The next
1:05:51
one. CNN, why are you finally
1:05:53
embracing this phenomenon
1:05:55
for a while? Yeah. It it just it just but it's always
1:05:57
the same and it's like it's No. I'm not trying to
1:05:59
say, like, oh, this is boring. I've known this about this
1:06:02
before. No. It's actually, like, when
1:06:04
you discover that that
1:06:06
there are news articles that are written
1:06:08
as like a breaking news
1:06:10
piece, but then it's really about like
1:06:12
the product. And then there's
1:06:14
smartphones. The technology section is -- Yeah. --
1:06:16
with all the technologies going on in the because
1:06:18
people are addicted to the new
1:06:20
thing. They're addicted to the next thing.
1:06:22
Like, we all love technology. Right? Like, if a new computer comes out
1:06:24
or a new TV comes out with, like,
1:06:26
double the resolution that it had before.
1:06:28
I mean, look, I'll admit When
1:06:31
I'm standing in front of FTN an OLED,
1:06:33
the organic LED televisions
1:06:36
that they have with the eight k resolution, and
1:06:38
I'm standing in front of one of those looking
1:06:40
at a picture, I am like a bug
1:06:42
on a fucking light, man. Like, I'm telling
1:06:44
you -- Right. -- like, there is something mesmerizing
1:06:47
about that kind of technology.
1:06:49
Like, If you put a nice SLR camera
1:06:51
in my hands that's like twenty
1:06:53
four megapixels and I can take
1:06:55
some beautiful pictures, like, I am like, I love it.
1:06:57
I think it's amazing. But does that mean
1:07:00
that that like, I have to have a new
1:07:02
camera, like,
1:07:04
they they you know, they design these products, like, they could build
1:07:06
the product in a very advanced way
1:07:08
so that they don't need to build
1:07:10
a new one every every five minutes.
1:07:13
They could just have the model that's there for ten years, but
1:07:15
they intentionally don't build out
1:07:17
the like, they could do sixteen
1:07:19
k televisions right
1:07:22
now. And just say, this is the standard we're going to have for twenty five
1:07:24
years. But they don't. Because
1:07:26
it's more profitable when you
1:07:28
plug it into a model,
1:07:31
to do two k and
1:07:33
four k and sixteen k and then pause
1:07:35
and slow it down and then do
1:07:37
this version and that version and here's the
1:07:39
new model. It's a thousand more dollars in last year's model, buy
1:07:41
the new one, sell the old one. Like,
1:07:43
that's insane to do it that
1:07:45
way. So it's not I don't want I
1:07:47
don't want people to this idea Yeah.
1:07:49
Yeah. We're not
1:07:49
advocating getting a a lute right. But, you know, it's funny because it's
1:07:51
it's like, you you know, you scroll -- We're not
1:07:54
being excited --
1:07:55
Yeah. -- about like,
1:07:57
new advances. Apple's micro LED
1:08:00
dream. What it means for the Apple Watch and
1:08:02
beyond? Like, everything here because here's
1:08:04
my my point is that how many of the
1:08:06
people who click on and
1:08:08
read the technology section of Yahoo
1:08:10
News are bug men
1:08:12
who are all about climate
1:08:13
change, who signal about climate change in the employment of climate change. You know
1:08:16
what I mean? Like, no one who's clicking
1:08:18
the the the type of button that is
1:08:20
clicking a lot. It's
1:08:22
like you why don't Liberals care about the iPhone factory working conditions
1:08:24
in China. Fash never knew. And and I and it's
1:08:26
and then it's used as a way to own China, but
1:08:28
why don't they care about the working
1:08:30
conditions of any of the people
1:08:33
supply any of their products. They don't And that's one of the things Planet of the Humans. Planet of the Humans
1:08:35
covers like what is done to make these batteries
1:08:38
and all the the microchips and all the
1:08:40
rest of So
1:08:43
it's just like, shows that this consumerist thing. So how
1:08:46
do you how do you pay
1:08:48
for your new iPhone? This is
1:08:50
I wanna touch on this article. This
1:08:52
was from January tenth, so a few days ago,
1:08:55
from NerdWallet, but it's a good it's
1:08:58
a good article. Two thousand twenty two American household You
1:09:01
gotta have a website called spur spurg
1:09:03
wallet. Spurg wallet. Right. Two
1:09:06
thousand twenty two American
1:09:08
household credit card
1:09:10
debt study. Credit card debt surges as Americans
1:09:12
cope with the
1:09:15
rising cost of living. So
1:09:18
some of the findings of
1:09:20
this shows that the household
1:09:22
have reached a total debt of
1:09:25
sixteen point five trillion dollars, a seven point
1:09:27
six five percent increase
1:09:32
from the year before. It means
1:09:34
that on average, the average US household owes more than a hundred
1:09:36
and sixty five
1:09:39
thousand dollars in debt. Student
1:09:42
loan debt is somewhat down, just a fraction of a percent, I think, slightly down. But
1:09:44
mortgages, auto
1:09:45
loans, and overall debt
1:09:47
are way up.
1:09:51
And let me dig into the details here because it's really it's
1:09:53
insane. Credit card debt so the
1:09:56
percentage changed.
1:09:58
Get this. Percentage of change for the total
1:10:00
owed between twenty twenty one
1:10:02
and twenty twenty two. For
1:10:05
any type of debt seven
1:10:07
point six five percent increase. For
1:10:09
credit cards, total, which includes revolving and transacting
1:10:12
balances, is plus
1:10:15
fifteen point seventeen percent. But
1:10:18
credit cards revolving calculated
1:10:20
using the average of
1:10:22
the past five years of percentage of credit card debt
1:10:24
considered revolving, carried month to month. The
1:10:27
revolving is what's bad, is
1:10:29
up twenty eight point seven three percent over twenty twenty
1:10:31
one in twenty twenty two. Twenty eight percent and revolving debt for
1:10:34
people who don't know how it
1:10:36
works revolving
1:10:39
debt is is three or four
1:10:41
times harder to pay off than any
1:10:43
kind of fixed fixed
1:10:45
rate. Debt. Mortgages are up eight point five four percent. Auto loans, five
1:10:47
point three one percent and student loan. So the worst kind of
1:10:49
debt. Credit card debt is the worst kind of
1:10:51
debt there is. It's
1:10:55
the most parasitical, and it
1:10:58
is up the highest.
1:11:00
And it's some of
1:11:02
their statistics that they found key findings, prices are
1:11:04
rising faster than
1:11:05
incomes. Median household income has
1:11:08
grown just four
1:11:09
percent. In the last year. The
1:11:12
overall cost of living has jumped
1:11:14
eight percent twice that. Nearly half
1:11:16
of employed Americans, forty five percent
1:11:18
say their pay has not past up
1:11:20
with inflation inflation. Now here you'll love
1:11:22
this jazz. By now, pay later services
1:11:24
may mean deeper dead for millions,
1:11:26
close to one in five America
1:11:29
One in five
1:11:30
Americans, eighteen percent, say that they have used a buy now pay later service in the past
1:11:33
twelve months. One in five. I think
1:11:35
it surpassed credit card debt.
1:11:39
Think it's surpassed card debt in terms of, like, size because
1:11:42
a lot of the people that do the
1:11:45
buy now pay
1:11:48
later stuff don't do credit cards because
1:11:50
it's like micro it's micro financing, which we've talked about for a very long time as the
1:11:52
as the way
1:11:55
that they essentially fund immigration
1:11:58
into America. All the caravans and all the migration is funded by microfinance.
1:12:04
Microfinance loans in these third
1:12:06
ward countries that they get in the country and then they pay they use that money to pay the the
1:12:08
coyote to come into America. Because you
1:12:10
wonder, like, how do these how do these
1:12:14
fucking squats pay fifteen thousand dollars to a
1:12:16
coyote. Well, they get into debt. Right? They get the
1:12:18
the coyote, they get a loan and then they
1:12:20
pay back the coyote, that's not at work. You
1:12:23
think the Coyote is gonna take fucking do a loan to them?
1:12:25
It's like, no. The Coyote wants fucking cash. They get
1:12:27
the cash from a micro finance
1:12:30
bank. We did James and I did a deep dive on this whole, like,
1:12:32
many years ago. It's a bit mind
1:12:34
blowing. And then and then and and
1:12:36
see when see when Jews saw how success what
1:12:38
this was, then they then they expanded the
1:12:40
system all over Latin America
1:12:42
and now into into Africa.
1:12:44
That's how it's financing all of the migration
1:12:47
into Europe too. It's the same thing. And and I know Stryker and Mike has talked about this as well. It's I think
1:12:49
they focused on
1:12:51
the organizations, but the,
1:12:54
like, the HIS types. But microfinance
1:12:57
is the the engine
1:12:59
that does that. And it's
1:13:01
also now the engine that
1:13:03
is is in America and
1:13:05
FTN keeping people totally fucked
1:13:08
because they're there
1:13:11
when when you do a payday or buy now pay later,
1:13:13
it's it's effectively what they've done
1:13:15
is they've taken the
1:13:17
bad reputation of payday
1:13:20
loan places. And they've just created a
1:13:22
new system for doing payday loans. Because effectively, like, why are you doing buy now pay later?
1:13:24
Because your paycheck
1:13:27
hasn't come yet. Everybody's living paycheck to
1:13:29
paycheck or an an FTN amount of people in America are living paycheck
1:13:31
to paycheck. Because with that debt number that
1:13:34
you're talking about warrants increasing year over
1:13:36
year, I
1:13:38
bet if you looked up right now because I don't remember what it is. But
1:13:40
if you looked it up, the number of the average
1:13:42
number of people that are living paycheck to
1:13:46
paycheck has also rapidly
1:13:47
increased. Yeah. I don't think I don't think it says that here, but
1:13:49
it does say that that the huge
1:13:51
numbers of Americans, like most
1:13:53
Americans are are now
1:13:56
feeling 530 pressure, financial pressure,
1:13:58
people are worried about so yeah. Okay. Here it is. Consumers
1:14:00
are anxious about
1:14:03
finances over the next
1:14:05
year, nearly seven FTN ten Americans, sixty
1:14:07
nine percent, have financial concerns about the next twelve months. The number one worry is
1:14:09
having to go
1:14:12
into debt or
1:14:14
more debt to cover necessities. That's
1:14:16
the number one worry. Thirty one
1:14:18
percent -- Right. -- followed followed by
1:14:20
having to pay higher interest on
1:14:22
their debt. Twenty seven percent. So think of this. Thirty one
1:14:25
percent saying their number one financial
1:14:27
worry is having you go
1:14:29
into more debt and then
1:14:31
the second is having to pay higher interest on
1:14:33
their debt and they add the two
1:14:35
together, and it's it's over fifty percent. So
1:14:38
if you think about that, Man, why why is
1:14:39
antisemitism coming back -- Yeah. --
1:14:42
national sentiment -- by, like,
1:14:44
social magic -- original
1:14:46
thing was, yes, the original all national you know, we have our own version of it
1:14:48
in the NJP, but the original point of
1:14:50
national socialism, one of their critical points
1:14:53
of the twenty five points was abolition of incomes unearned
1:14:56
but unearned by work and the
1:14:58
and the destruction of usury debt
1:15:00
slavery
1:15:02
that was, like, one of the main things driving the
1:15:04
the party driving the rise of national socialism in
1:15:06
the third right. And they've done it again. And this
1:15:08
is what I'm talking about, like, they picked up right
1:15:10
where they left off because If you went into nineteen fifties America,
1:15:12
there were no credit cards. There were
1:15:15
people that used credit, like but
1:15:17
it was mainly businesses were
1:15:19
operating on credit. Americans, like, you
1:15:21
know, FTN their, like, daily households, again, might have had a tab that
1:15:24
they ran with, like, the local
1:15:26
hardware store or the local grocery
1:15:28
store. But
1:15:30
that it was paid off every month because that
1:15:33
business had to pay off. They had to
1:15:35
keep running. Right. You couldn't just keep
1:15:37
running your fucking pad forever
1:15:39
because the bartender would eventually be like, hey, guy,
1:15:41
you're gonna pay me for all the beers from last month. I mean, you
1:15:43
can't come into the bar in January
1:15:46
and just keep drinking your tab from
1:15:48
December. It's
1:15:50
like, you know, it's and I
1:15:52
know this because, you know, one of my ancestors, one of
1:15:54
the first things he did when he came to America's
1:15:56
Disease started a bar. I've we have pictures
1:15:58
of the guy. Long time ago, I won't say where it is, but and it's not gonna don't worry, Antifa,
1:16:00
you're not gonna figure out who I am
1:16:02
by saying. Oh, I know. It's just
1:16:06
around the bar once. No. It's the first thing he did. Guy fucking he
1:16:09
was a proud. Proud his fuck guy standing in front
1:16:11
of the bar with his with his
1:16:13
arms crossed. And I'm sure that that
1:16:15
guy, that ancestor of Mcfeals,
1:16:17
had people that came into
1:16:20
the bar that he would essentially
1:16:22
lone beer to. And they would pay him back. And I'm sure there are people who didn't
1:16:24
pay, but most of the people did. And
1:16:26
so it was fine. But he wasn't
1:16:28
like grifting off of
1:16:31
everybody. He understood that people couldn't afford
1:16:33
to do it. They only get paid maybe once a month back then.
1:16:35
But the point is is like the condition The
1:16:39
financial health of the of the average
1:16:42
working class American has deteriorated
1:16:48
significantly from from back then. Because
1:16:50
I don't think it's a problem to have a run a tab with the hardware store, run a tab with the grocery store.
1:16:56
Honestly, Maybe that is a problem because the people
1:16:58
should have been paid more so that they didn't have to run tabs at these places. I'd be interested
1:17:00
to know if
1:17:03
in, like, Germany in the eighteen hundreds,
1:17:05
did people have to run tabs with all these businesses or not? Because
1:17:07
America's always been renowned for
1:17:10
the land of the the
1:17:12
dirt cheap labor
1:17:14
and lack of workers' rights and everything, but but it's just gotten And
1:17:17
the the payday
1:17:20
loan stuff is is
1:17:22
a way of it getting much worse.
1:17:24
And let me explain this just really quickly so
1:17:26
people can understand how this is so much more
1:17:28
corrosive Like,
1:17:30
if you go get a mortgage, you
1:17:32
know, they do a very deep
1:17:34
financial investigation into your ability to afford the
1:17:36
mortgage because of the two thousand eight
1:17:39
financial crisis. No consequences for everybody else, but for you,
1:17:41
they make having a home
1:17:43
even more unaffordable. You know,
1:17:45
the debt to income ratio
1:17:47
stuff and all that. Credit cards take
1:17:49
debt to income ratio into account too when when you apply for a credit card.
1:17:51
It's like, well, is this your
1:17:55
sixteenth credit What is the likelihood that you're gonna pay
1:17:57
this back. Right? And then those eventually just say no. But with payday loan stuff, they
1:17:59
are keep calling FTN payday loan
1:18:02
because it's really what it is.
1:18:04
These now pay later schemes. They advertise
1:18:06
themselves as it won't affect your credit and it won't impact
1:18:08
your credit and
1:18:11
whatever. And that's true. They
1:18:13
do do a credit check because
1:18:15
they're gonna you have a of But they
1:18:20
don't do a debt to
1:18:22
income ratio check on you. They just wanna know, you know, how
1:18:24
many of these
1:18:27
you have, I suppose. But
1:18:29
they'll give you one even if you're already in difficult financial straits.
1:18:31
And so and they don't
1:18:36
check with each other. Right? Because the
1:18:38
the payday buy now pay later shit, they don't check,
1:18:40
like, Klarna and all the
1:18:42
different companies. They don't check within
1:18:46
each other. So you could effectively get a bunch of them and put yourself
1:18:48
in a really
1:18:51
difficult financial situation And
1:18:54
then they just like, if you read the terms
1:18:56
and conditions on these things, they will come and fuck
1:18:58
you. Like, if you if you I
1:19:01
mean, if you don't if you don't pay them.
1:19:03
Right. other this you know, with a credit card, you
1:19:05
pay on time and they give you a
1:19:07
little green check
1:19:10
that shows up on your credit report. Right? Right? PACE has agreed, PACE on time,
1:19:12
whatever. Great. Good for this guy. But and
1:19:14
then you get better credit score by
1:19:17
the more debt you take out. Right? The better
1:19:19
score you get by Yes. Yes. But they but
1:19:21
but the thing with these buy now
1:19:24
paylators is they
1:19:27
none of them report payments
1:19:29
on time to the credit bureaus. So you don't get
1:19:31
good credit for these buy now
1:19:33
paylators, but they will
1:19:36
report you If
1:19:38
you don't
1:19:39
pay, so you get negative credit if
1:19:41
you don't pay on
1:19:42
time. Head headshot. Headshot entails you lose. Yes.
1:19:45
And so and then and then
1:19:47
they it's it's a way of, like,
1:19:49
people were prior to buying out paylators and prior
1:19:51
to to payday loan. Credit
1:19:53
card debt was already becoming absolutely insane. But it wasn't for from
1:19:55
the Jews perspective, it's like, yeah. But the
1:19:57
the Goyam are are able
1:19:59
to with than
1:20:02
this. They just work even harder. They slave
1:20:04
on our system even harder to pay off the the credit card debt,
1:20:06
and they've overcome it. We've we've squeezed more productivity out of them.
1:20:11
Right? Yeah. More products don't work. That's yeah. So so now so
1:20:13
now we're gonna strackle them even
1:20:16
more. And we're gonna put
1:20:18
we're gonna come up with oh, Congress made all these payday loan places
1:20:20
illegal because of the imagery of
1:20:22
of blacks and Mexicans in
1:20:25
line a check cashing stores, you know, with four hundred
1:20:28
percent interest and we're hurting all these brown
1:20:30
people. Okay. Well, Congress finally makes this shit
1:20:32
illegal, and they just go and
1:20:34
and do it another way. Right?
1:20:36
Right. And and they just fuck people even harder. They've they've
1:20:38
come up with a new way to screw people. And and, you know, it's
1:20:43
like, I forget I forget what the average is, but it's not article you have Warren,
1:20:45
but it it's something like a very
1:20:47
high percentage of zoomers have more than
1:20:49
two to three of these buy
1:20:51
now pay later. Loans.
1:20:53
Right. On on things that are, like, more than three to four hundred
1:20:56
dollars. But they're even doing this. And
1:20:58
I said this a long time ago,
1:21:00
Halber Trump
1:21:02
said this back in twenty fifteen. He said, listen
1:21:05
man, and this is gonna make
1:21:07
people laugh because the dollar menu
1:21:09
has gone away at all s two restaurants
1:21:11
at this point. Right? Yeah. They still had a
1:21:13
dollar menu. And Albert shouldn't be like,
1:21:15
when the dollar menu finally goes
1:21:17
away, guy that's gonna be indicative of
1:21:19
a society really going off the rails. And dollar menu has been long, fucking gone, and we're
1:21:21
still here. So collapse bros on
1:21:23
suicide watch. But the
1:21:27
the dollar menu was gone. And one of the things I
1:21:29
said like a year ago is, like, wait until they
1:21:32
start doing
1:21:35
payday loans for A pizza, and groceries. And
1:21:37
that's exactly what happened during COVID. You can now finance your groceries, you
1:21:40
can finance
1:21:44
airline tickets, you can finance all kinds of shit as
1:21:46
long as it costs more than a hundred dollars. And eventually, they're gonna finance
1:21:48
stuff that's even smaller than
1:21:50
that, I'm sure. But like, it's
1:21:53
literally everything is on this system. And But this is
1:21:55
driving everything because this is this this black
1:21:57
hole, this black pit of
1:21:59
usury. I mean, One
1:22:03
of the statistics here is US households that carry credit card
1:22:05
debt will pay an average of one thousand three
1:22:07
hundred and eighty dollars in
1:22:09
interest this year. Which is the average. So, you know,
1:22:11
the people that are that are
1:22:13
having the most difficulty keeping
1:22:15
up with their
1:22:18
bills for whatever reason would be the ones paying more.
1:22:20
So, you know, it's the thing of well,
1:22:22
it's just pray on the week, you
1:22:25
know, like the one that's the one that's
1:22:27
I mean, this is why, you know, the the richest people don't
1:22:29
pay don't have to deal with. Like
1:22:32
like, for instance, they don't pay income tax,
1:22:34
you know, corporations that don't pay income tax.
1:22:36
But one thousand
1:22:38
three hundred and eighty dollars. When you
1:22:40
think about that, you know, think about what's the like
1:22:42
with the NJP, you know, with our supporter platform.
1:22:46
If you wanna do the the elite
1:22:49
tier, the black, you're
1:22:52
giving less than that, I
1:22:54
think, per year. Like, a hundred dollars a month. So imagine
1:22:56
you're you're paying on your
1:22:58
credit card and you're contributing higher
1:23:02
than the than what the the the
1:23:05
higher tier supporter of the NJP
1:23:07
is contributing. You're contributing that to the
1:23:09
Jews. Like, that's what's take that's what's
1:23:11
coming out of your of your paycheck and
1:23:13
going to keeping the Jude financial system going. And that's
1:23:15
and that's everybody. That's everybody. So, you
1:23:17
know, I use the NJP as
1:23:20
an example. But whatever
1:23:22
cause, you you you you know, environmental causes, your church,
1:23:25
whatever it is
1:23:28
that you something you believe in
1:23:30
that you're passionate about, that you think is good, that does some social good, and you're contributing to it.
1:23:32
At the same
1:23:35
time, now you you would have to
1:23:38
if it's the average, you'd have to give more than a thousand one thousand three hundred and eighty dollars to just break even.
1:23:40
So this is how these
1:23:42
people are staying in power. Because
1:23:45
they don't you you're not saying, oh, man. I I really I really love
1:23:47
the dog. I really love the dog. I really love those Jews,
1:23:49
man. They're doing such a great job
1:23:51
running my races society
1:23:55
into the ground. I'm gonna just cut them a check. I'm gonna make
1:23:57
a monthly donation without a hundred dollars or
1:23:59
more, you know, to
1:24:01
to the dog, to keep the dog going. Know,
1:24:03
you're already doing that with your taxes, but then with this debt, this goes
1:24:05
directly to the Jews that then run
1:24:08
everything. And this
1:24:10
is it's driving climate change. It's
1:24:13
driving it's driving the destruction of the environment. It's
1:24:15
driving immigration. It's driving everything. And and and
1:24:17
that's why people who are
1:24:19
not talking about this issue
1:24:22
are not serious about anything. Any other issue that they're that they're discussing? I mean, I'm looking at this
1:24:24
chart. I don't know if you're seeing it
1:24:26
as the cost of living versus income two
1:24:28
thousand twelve
1:24:31
to two thousand twenty two. And it's it's yeah.
1:24:34
Very, very bad. Very,
1:24:38
very bad. Statistics. It says debt making Americans
1:24:40
feeling 530 anxious overwhelm. This
1:24:42
also, think of what the
1:24:45
trickle down effect. That this has
1:24:47
on, for instance, marriages. You know?
1:24:49
How many marriages break only
1:24:51
because of debt? Yeah. Family
1:24:53
formation. How many families are not
1:24:55
says -- Think of the effect it has on alcoholism
1:24:56
and deaths of despair. We talked about --
1:24:58
Death of despair. -- time. Yes. Opiant.
1:25:01
Opiates. Yes. Exactly.
1:25:03
It says that according to the survey.
1:25:05
Over the past year, nearly three in ten Americans say their overall debt
1:25:07
has increased. Fourteen percent of Americans saying
1:25:10
on they've taken medical debt during this
1:25:12
time, and
1:25:14
it's taking a toll. According to the survey, forty
1:25:16
one percent of Americans who currently
1:25:18
have debt feel anxious about
1:25:21
it, thirty five feel overwhelmed, The feeling of
1:25:23
being overwhelmed is more prevalent among Americans with
1:25:25
annual household incomes under seventy
1:25:27
five thousand dollars who currently have
1:25:29
debt. Forty four percent of this group
1:25:32
miserable. You know, Joe Biden's out
1:25:34
there talking about our democracy and
1:25:36
our beautiful system
1:25:39
and, you know, these Jews like
1:25:41
the the ones with the American Enterprise Institute are saying
1:25:43
how in in the election, democracy FTN, authoritarianism,
1:25:47
was put away. And and
1:25:49
look at the actual state of of
1:25:51
Americans. And then yeah. Here's your here's your shoes.
1:25:53
Okay. Like, if you if
1:25:56
you sense a
1:25:58
bit of disharmony between messaging from
1:26:00
your politicians and messaging in in how
1:26:03
you feel about your daily life.
1:26:05
It's because those are Jews celebrating
1:26:07
their victories. They're not celebrating yours. When they say
1:26:09
it's a beautiful system, they mean it's a
1:26:11
beautiful system for perpetuating their
1:26:14
power. And this system
1:26:16
of debt that they've had in place,
1:26:18
they know that it's dangerous. They know
1:26:20
that it leads to nazism. That's
1:26:22
why they are the about antisemitism and
1:26:25
naziism Fash they're putting
1:26:27
back into place the
1:26:29
things that they've done
1:26:31
because they know Even if there FTN another,
1:26:33
there is naziism. There is national socialism. There is anti Semitism. But they're almost like,
1:26:36
they're saying that it's it's even
1:26:39
they they act as though It's
1:26:42
the only problem that America faces
1:26:44
right now. Is is racism, bigotry, anti Semitism. Because
1:26:46
they are doing the things that lead to this.
1:26:51
Right? There's an essence of, like, they're afraid of it because it's what
1:26:53
opposes them. But they're also they
1:26:55
have plans that
1:26:57
they don't tell you about of putting people more into
1:27:00
dead. They don't have see, it's there no
1:27:02
one can answer the question of what do you plan
1:27:05
to do next century because not only they don't have any
1:27:07
plan they don't have any plans of of
1:27:09
solving it. And it's not like
1:27:11
DeSantis doesn't know what
1:27:13
the plan is. It's like he doesn't know, like,
1:27:15
what the ultimate goal is. They know they know
1:27:17
that, like, the plan is not to help
1:27:19
people. It's not to make people's
1:27:21
lives better. You don't get into It's like the mister Smith
1:27:23
goes to Washington. Remember, story written
1:27:26
by a Jew. That goes
1:27:28
to that goes to Washington and all
1:27:30
bright eyed. I'm gonna fix and resolve the
1:27:32
system. Those people all those people
1:27:34
in Washington, they're not there to fix the system. They know what the shot is. So they're never gonna tell you what
1:27:36
the long term plan is.
1:27:38
They have no plan on helping
1:27:41
the little guy out. Like, oh, you know, if you ask a
1:27:43
politician, like, what are you doing to make home ownership more affordable? Well,
1:27:46
some Democrats might say,
1:27:49
we're gonna work with HUD to give blacks
1:27:51
more money to buy home. Yeah. But that's it. Right? But that's It's it's that's
1:27:53
that's the terms of, like,
1:27:55
how do we it's
1:27:58
make it shittier for everybody, but then
1:28:00
how do we adjust the system
1:28:02
to, like, make sure that blacks can still
1:28:04
buy some stuff? Like, it that's
1:28:07
kinda like The system is there to make sure that all of the
1:28:09
Jewishness of the system isn't, like, too
1:28:11
hard on minorities who
1:28:14
will think that it's why people who are doing this to them. Right? It's
1:28:16
it's just yeah. It's fucking hilarious.
1:28:18
But yeah. The nobody has
1:28:20
any plans on
1:28:23
on resolving these issues you would think
1:28:25
I think this is this is a point
1:28:27
I was gonna make. Is they You would think Like, if
1:28:29
you get burned by
1:28:32
a stove, once, like really
1:28:33
badly, then you're very careful not to get burned by the stove again.
1:28:35
But but Jews, they saw what
1:28:37
happened in World War two, and
1:28:39
they saw what happened many
1:28:42
times thousands of years, four
1:28:44
thousands of years. But they're
1:28:46
doing the very same stuff
1:28:50
again. And It's it's a force of habit.
1:28:52
They don't know how to do
1:28:54
anything else. Corrosion and destruction is
1:28:56
is the name of the game.
1:28:59
This is what they do. This is what they've
1:29:00
done. It's a parasite. It's a parasite.
1:29:02
It's a parasite that doesn't learn its
1:29:04
lesson. You know, there is a section
1:29:07
actually. If you scroll this is your your
1:29:09
your thing here. BNPL, buy now pay later,
1:29:11
maybe hiding additional debt. Just -- Mhmm. --
1:29:13
here's the here's the here's the breakdown
1:29:15
on the on the
1:29:17
generations. It says that our annual household debt analysis looks
1:29:19
at traditional debt types such as
1:29:22
credit cards, mortgages FTN student
1:29:25
loans. Robust data about such debts is collected and reported by government sources like the Federal
1:29:27
Reserve Bank of New York. But the
1:29:30
debt problem may go deeper,
1:29:34
because of the proliferation of short term
1:29:36
loans made by buy now pay later
1:29:38
services such as Afirma. VNPL services allow
1:29:40
you to buy something now and then
1:29:43
make payments in installments off in twenty five percent at the
1:29:45
time of purchase and twenty five percent every two
1:29:47
weeks until paid off. Longer
1:29:50
term, PL options usually charge interests like
1:29:52
traditional installment loans. According to our
1:29:54
survey, nearly one in five Americans,
1:29:56
eighteen percent have used a BNPL
1:29:59
service in the past twelve
1:30:01
months. This situation is more
1:30:03
prevalent among younger Americans. Twenty
1:30:05
five percent of Gen Z's ages eighteen to
1:30:07
twenty five and thirty percent of
1:30:12
millennials. Ages twenty six to forty one
1:30:14
have used these services in the past year, compared with eight
1:30:16
to sixteen percent of Gen Xers,
1:30:18
ages forty two to fifty seven,
1:30:22
and seven percent of baby boomers, fifty
1:30:24
eight to seventy six. Since some
1:30:26
Americans rely on BNPL services to
1:30:29
pay for everyday necessities, things that are
1:30:31
used up before they're even paid for. Pizza.
1:30:33
According to a September twenty twenty
1:30:35
two report by the
1:30:37
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, usage for every
1:30:40
day. Oh, jazz. Get
1:30:42
this number. Usage for
1:30:44
every day
1:30:47
or like gas groceries and
1:30:50
utilities, uses of by now, paying
1:30:55
later, was up four hundred and thirty four
1:30:57
percent between twenty twenty and twenty twenty one and up
1:31:00
one thousand two
1:31:02
hundred and seven percent up
1:31:04
one thousand two hundred and
1:31:07
seven percent between twenty nineteen and twenty twenty. So that's
1:31:12
that's insane. It says BNPL services are
1:31:14
often interest free, but they may charge late fees for those who missed payments.
1:31:16
Ten point five percent of BNPL
1:31:18
borrowers were charged at least one
1:31:22
late fee in twenty twenty one. While late fees tend
1:31:24
to be small, the report highlights
1:31:26
possible downsides of these services that
1:31:29
could become financially unhealthy over extension taking
1:31:31
more loans than you can reasonably handle. But this is
1:31:33
this is I mean, people
1:31:35
are scraping bottom, people are struggling
1:31:37
to get by, and people are
1:31:40
bringing the it says the
1:31:42
financial anxiety into the New Year, you know, this is the state of things
1:31:44
right now in But
1:31:47
if your policy is
1:31:50
to offer people some sort
1:31:52
of short term relief in
1:31:55
the form of stimulus
1:31:58
payments or the Biden,
1:32:00
which is a good thing. I mean,
1:32:02
people wanna trash Biden, but the Biden
1:32:05
child tax credit, which was
1:32:07
immediately turned off by Congress. Right?
1:32:09
Because then Biden gets to pretend
1:32:11
like he's the guy that tried
1:32:13
and, you know, it's Congress is
1:32:15
the bad guys. But
1:32:15
it's he has no problem with them
1:32:18
doing it. It's the same with the student
1:32:20
loan stuff, which
1:32:22
what I predicted and people didn't agree with at the time that it's turned out to be correct,
1:32:24
which is that Biden does the student
1:32:26
loan thing and then Congress the
1:32:29
in the judges turn
1:32:31
it off. Right? It's good that Biden did it, but
1:32:33
Biden does it cynically knowing that they're gonna shut it down and
1:32:36
then he
1:32:38
doesn't fight it. Because there's people that wanna, like, believe
1:32:40
too hard and, like, Biden, like, being
1:32:42
true, blue, good guy that is
1:32:44
shackled by bad system.
1:32:47
It's like, no, he up. He's part of
1:32:49
the system. So it's not that he's good at all. Trump, you
1:32:51
know, Trump.
1:32:51
Oh, yeah. I'm past
1:32:52
a new immigration measure
1:32:54
up. The courts blocked it.
1:32:56
Oh, no. Well, I guess we'll have to pass
1:32:59
a big task. Well, there was some element of of that, but eventually, like, there was some element
1:33:01
of, like, they were trying to
1:33:03
do some of it. But
1:33:06
then it became the system was just like it when you know that the system's gonna shut it down, then
1:33:08
there's there's an element of like, look
1:33:10
how big I can make these promises
1:33:15
and then I don't have to deliver on them. It's like we're gonna do
1:33:17
even more because, you know, as we pointed out
1:33:19
on our show, as we
1:33:21
pointed out on our
1:33:23
show, ethnart found black letter law black
1:33:26
letter US law that said that any president, any president threw
1:33:28
a certain loophole in the
1:33:30
system that has been around the
1:33:34
nineteen fifties, post world war two,
1:33:36
can get access to unlimited
1:33:38
money from the Pentagon to
1:33:40
build whatever they want. Can be
1:33:42
a wall, could be a highway system, it
1:33:45
could be whatever, and they
1:33:47
could use it. And Trump could have
1:33:49
used it, and he didn't. So we we
1:33:51
did all the shutdown and all the garbage
1:33:53
and all the, like, you know, fucking
1:33:55
game playing with,
1:33:57
like, Congress give me five billion.
1:34:00
McConnell says, I'm not giving you more than five
1:34:02
dollars, and it just ends up being this retarded
1:34:04
thing. It's he can just do this thing.
1:34:06
And we were proven
1:34:08
people were like, oh, but that's so that's
1:34:10
so, like, obscure and, like, is that
1:34:12
even real? It's like, you don't
1:34:14
trust my research? Retired. Because guess what? Guess who
1:34:17
used that law which hadn't been
1:34:19
used in four motherfucking decades
1:34:21
to fund all
1:34:23
the COVID shit? Biden.
1:34:25
Biden used the fucking law that we said they could have used to build the wall
1:34:27
to get unlimited funding to go
1:34:30
around Congress to get as much
1:34:32
money he
1:34:35
wanted to fund co COVID under a national
1:34:37
emergency. Because we said, if you declare
1:34:39
a national emergency, then you
1:34:41
get access to this funding if you you if
1:34:43
you invoke the law and bay and
1:34:45
Biden invoked the law. He invoked the
1:34:47
law that we did a
1:34:49
podcast on two years before for a wall.
1:34:51
So -- Right. -- proved that Trump could have done
1:34:54
the wall. He could have done
1:34:56
it and
1:34:58
it's important because people are like okay, it's twenty
1:35:00
twenty three and you're still railing on Trump. What's the
1:35:02
point of this? And it's like, I always wanna
1:35:04
smack people like that because here's
1:35:06
the point of it. It means
1:35:09
that if we take power, that at least if you took power or anybody that
1:35:11
takes power in
1:35:16
this system, The system FTN
1:35:18
currently configured with the law because we always often say if you just enforced black letter law that's
1:35:20
already on the books, Mike says
1:35:22
this all the time, things would get
1:35:26
so much better. Now we have a much broader
1:35:29
vision than just enforcing black letter
1:35:31
law, and that's in the NJP
1:35:33
platform. But just for the
1:35:35
sake of argument, Anybody in power,
1:35:37
if Mike if Mike became the president tomorrow and had to work within the
1:35:40
existing laws and has
1:35:42
the judges in the system
1:35:44
whatever, this
1:35:46
law is there for anybody
1:35:49
to use, to use it for
1:35:51
whatever they want, and they
1:35:53
should. And we have an example of
1:35:56
them using it for
1:35:58
COVID. So it's a
1:36:00
proof because Mike talks about this
1:36:02
a lot too, is one of the reasons why they don't do big
1:36:04
fundamental legislative changes. They
1:36:06
don't like doing it because
1:36:08
they don't like people seeing
1:36:10
that the government can actually do
1:36:13
things that are beneficial for people. Well, they can work, but just that the government has the power
1:36:15
to do things that are beneficial
1:36:18
for you. Like student loan
1:36:22
forgiveness would be given that they've
1:36:25
given billions and billions of dollars
1:36:27
to Zelensky in Israel and all this
1:36:29
stuff. And they make loans to Israel all
1:36:31
the time and then forgive them is
1:36:33
this something people that our audience doesn't know about? All the
1:36:35
money that we give to Israel are are loans that they
1:36:37
just the United
1:36:39
States just forgives they
1:36:41
just -- Right. -- they make a loan, and
1:36:44
they tell they tell you very publicly that it's a
1:36:46
oh, or loaning is real
1:36:47
money. They're gonna pay after we loan them
1:36:49
We're only giving them three or four billion dollars in aid. The rest will be loans. They're gonna pay Right. It's
1:36:51
all loans. They must have can. A
1:36:54
year later. A year later, it's
1:36:56
forgiven. And
1:36:58
it's very quietly forgiven. So it's the shout, the
1:37:00
lie, whisper, the retraction. It's like shout,
1:37:02
the lone, whisper, the forgiveness. They
1:37:04
do this all the time. And if
1:37:06
they But does this system forgive anybody's threats
1:37:08
anywhere? Yes. Correct. They could easily
1:37:11
sorry. The I think the the
1:37:13
the we're both, like, I think our audience, our
1:37:15
gates are, like, cutting each other off. Like, I hear
1:37:17
you, like, breaking through, but I know sorry.
1:37:20
Go
1:37:21
ahead, Lauren. No. No. No. It's okay. I was just saying
1:37:23
it's like, when does when does this system forgive anything? Right.
1:37:26
FTN doesn't, but but they could
1:37:29
do it for us. Like, student loan
1:37:32
forgiveness, they they make it seem in the
1:37:34
Thinkle fight arena. They make it seem like,
1:37:36
we can't get we can't forgive
1:37:39
these rich kits twenty thousand dollars. We can't forgive all the nah blah
1:37:41
blah blah blah. It's the big argument. Why don't
1:37:43
you have that argument
1:37:46
about kikes though?
1:37:47
Conservative. Why don't you have that argument up? You
1:37:49
know, when because this is what I
1:37:51
was getting at. Whenever anybody proposes
1:37:53
a solution to
1:37:55
just help people, in the
1:37:57
meantime with this stuff. It's as or And it's done
1:38:00
with conservatives
1:38:04
specifically to inoculate them against socialism because it
1:38:06
allows them to become, like, Jingo as, like, Patriot
1:38:08
Guard, whatever, but
1:38:11
not combined with socialism.
1:38:14
And of course, I don't think we want American jingoism and, like, you know,
1:38:16
go get the hodgy kind of stuff
1:38:18
married up with socialism anyway. We want, like,
1:38:23
white racial nationalism married up with socialism. Because
1:38:25
there's really nothing wrong with it.
1:38:27
And socialism, again, with the
1:38:30
with nationalism in the Nazis,
1:38:33
A lot of that help, just
1:38:35
like brown shirts in in authoritarianism, is required to get the
1:38:37
to to rid the society of
1:38:40
its ills. Some
1:38:43
aspects of socialism of getting people help
1:38:45
that conservatives always say and
1:38:47
Jews specifically say, like, oh, well, if
1:38:49
you give people this money, they're just
1:38:51
never gonna work. Well, the idea isn't
1:38:53
to give people, like, blank checks for the rest of, like, the thousand year
1:38:55
Reich. It's to dig them out of the
1:38:58
hole that Jews put them in. But
1:39:00
eventually, our
1:39:02
societies and we have plenty thousands
1:39:04
of years of evidence of this. We
1:39:06
build things that are very efficient.
1:39:09
Going back to the concrete question, is
1:39:11
a million dollar a is a is a a million dollar
1:39:13
bridge that you have to rebuild every five fucking
1:39:15
years or every
1:39:18
ten
1:39:18
fucking years. Is that as efficient as building a bridge that you only
1:39:20
have to build once every thousand
1:39:22
years? So all of this money
1:39:25
that we spend on planned obsolescence and making
1:39:27
sure that everybody gets the next five
1:39:29
year contract and blah blah blah
1:39:31
blah could be spent on making
1:39:33
society a lot more efficient which means that the
1:39:36
government can afford to
1:39:38
build a country that
1:39:40
people wanna live that
1:39:42
they're proud of, all the pictures that you see of these, you
1:39:44
know, beautiful parks and images and and
1:39:46
things that we used to have could
1:39:49
be had very easily.
1:39:51
They they make it seem like,
1:39:53
oh, well, we can't possibly afford to do all these things now. It's like, well,
1:39:55
yeah, because you're doing everything in the most inefficient
1:40:00
way possible. So that you can continue to satisfy
1:40:02
Jewish middlemen with interests and everything else. We don't need to do it
1:40:04
that way. We can build things that
1:40:06
that are better in when society
1:40:08
FTN COMES VERY
1:40:10
Efficient AND IT, YOU KNOW, A NATIONAL SOCIALIST SOCIETY WOULD BE EXTREMELY ENVIRONMENTAL and
1:40:16
would be very green, but it would be that
1:40:18
way because it's trying to be efficient, not because it's trying to own Russia
1:40:23
and China and you know, because of like
1:40:25
some gay fucking retard shit. It's because we care about the home that we live on
1:40:27
and we want to make
1:40:30
a best use of finite
1:40:32
resources. Period.
1:40:34
Why would you -- Right. it's just fundamental thing of, why would why would you
1:40:40
waste things. Like, if you
1:40:42
you know, why would you waste things when
1:40:44
you
1:40:45
could, like, make a point of not wasting them?
1:40:47
Yes. I mean, what? Exactly. Yeah. Yeah.
1:40:50
But it's funny to you. It's it's like Yeah.
1:40:52
Especially get the at the at the
1:40:54
end of this the very end
1:40:57
of this article was talking about,
1:40:59
you know, the future interest rates
1:41:01
going up and how the Fed's actions
1:41:03
have pushed the average credit card
1:41:05
interest rate on accounts incurring interest to
1:41:08
eighteen point four three percent.
1:41:10
That's insane. As of August
1:41:13
twenty twenty two, And this is
1:41:15
the highest average rate since the
1:41:18
St. Louis Fed began tracking
1:41:20
this data in
1:41:22
nineteen ninety four. And then, finally, it ends with
1:41:24
what Americans can do. Take
1:41:26
steps to prepare for a
1:41:28
potential recession. Add
1:41:31
money to your savings. I mean, how
1:41:33
do you do this to people? This
1:41:34
is, like, the thing of Potter's saying -- It's really -- -- wait and save their money. Yeah. It's like -- Yeah. --
1:41:36
it's like you're it's
1:41:38
like your money to
1:41:39
your parents saying, water
1:41:41
just live within your means. Right. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Pay now. Pay
1:41:43
now rather than later if you can. Avoid big
1:41:46
financial moves if possible.
1:41:49
Understand how high your interest rate. I mean, how about what you do is throw the Jews out
1:41:51
of power? Like, that's what Americans can do. Is is organize get
1:41:54
with the NJP or organize your own
1:41:56
thing. And
1:41:59
and and knock Jews out of power. Anything that drives this system,
1:42:02
because that's the other thing. What you just said,
1:42:04
if you fix
1:42:07
the one problem, this is at the root
1:42:10
of it. This Jewish financial, you know, finance udunum, as Hitler said, inter international
1:42:15
finance udunum. Finance jewelry. If you fix that problem,
1:42:17
then all these other problems
1:42:20
like the social stuff
1:42:22
we're talking about, deaths of
1:42:24
despair. You know, the the the divorce
1:42:26
rate and marriage is breaking up and people can't, you know, family formation, household
1:42:28
debt, people being able, you
1:42:30
know, the cost of living the
1:42:33
medication that people need hospital services, you know, going into debt for for, you know,
1:42:36
because you have all kinds of
1:42:38
medical bills, all these, and then the
1:42:40
environment. And
1:42:43
then immigration, all these other problems, just not
1:42:45
only are they fixed, but
1:42:47
they sort of are
1:42:49
all in alignment. With the with the with the fixes
1:42:51
that you're doing with everything else. You know?
1:42:54
So it's like, you're saving the environment
1:42:56
without throwing people out of work
1:42:58
and breaking down industry. You know? Like, you're you're you're you're improving
1:43:00
families and and family formation
1:43:02
without Fash like jamming up
1:43:04
the economy or screwing up productivity.
1:43:06
Because if it's if it's actually
1:43:09
productive, creative wealth creation. It's it's in line with with our type of system.
1:43:11
But if it's just
1:43:15
it's not actual production.
1:43:18
It's just debt slavery. It's just it's
1:43:20
just you're being sucked dried by parasites. So, I mean,
1:43:23
we can move
1:43:23
on. But but that that's my final
1:43:25
word. Why don't they ever make the argument?
1:43:27
That giving money to Israel and giving all this aid. Because if
1:43:30
you look at the amount of money that is
1:43:32
given out by the United
1:43:34
States government in terms of foreign
1:43:36
aid, all over the world.
1:43:38
Why don't Why isn't the argument ever made that giving money to Israel
1:43:44
is socialism? Or giving money to Africa
1:43:46
is socialism, or giving money to any of these countries is socialism. Why isn't the argument made
1:43:48
that why doesn't Israel
1:43:51
live within its means? Why
1:43:53
can't Israel only make do with what they can afford? Why do they need to take money from the government? But if
1:43:55
my government gives
1:43:59
money to you, if the government
1:44:01
does a child tax care credit, that conservatives say, oh, it's just spending all this money.
1:44:04
Socialize. Yeah. But people are
1:44:06
having babies. There's socialism. It's like,
1:44:09
okay, then cut off money Israel then. It's like, I mean, why isn't that argument
1:44:11
ever made? And it's it's you know, and the the but
1:44:14
what they do, you know, the very the very
1:44:19
intelligent. That fit TFW and two intelligent
1:44:21
conservative NeoCon phase. Well, because
1:44:23
we have to
1:44:26
give money, to Africa and Israel to make
1:44:28
sure that the people over there don't
1:44:30
come here and fight us and do
1:44:32
terrorism against Israel and terrorism against
1:44:34
America. We have to fund these people and make the world better and help them.
1:44:37
It's like it's cheaper to spend money
1:44:39
on all these countries than
1:44:41
it is to fight a war with them. It's
1:44:43
like, No. You you just, like, don't you just don't let them into your country, and you
1:44:45
just don't deal with
1:44:46
them. Like, that's how you do it. You don't have to,
1:44:48
like, pay -- Payroll. -- create
1:44:50
a create a battery for your
1:44:53
for for the for the smartphone that
1:44:55
can be the the battery can just be recharged, you know, for a
1:44:59
much longer period of time. And and then you
1:45:01
can you can put that instead of you know, I remember when they got rid of removable
1:45:04
batteries because it's like
1:45:06
removable batteries is something that
1:45:09
allows you to keep your phone for much longer. You know, if if when your battery runs out,
1:45:11
you can always replace it. But
1:45:14
it's like, why not
1:45:16
have have the
1:45:18
battery be the thing that stays the
1:45:20
same, and
1:45:20
then you replace
1:45:20
the model on the outside the shell. You know, if it's an upgraded
1:45:22
camera, you can upgrade your camera. I mean, people
1:45:27
people talk about
1:45:27
New lenses, modular,
1:45:28
you know, pieces. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. People
1:45:30
have talked about the decline in FTN
1:45:35
repair services, just how repair services used to be
1:45:37
a
1:45:37
thing. You know, you fix something. You you Yeah.
1:45:39
You will walk into some
1:45:41
guys workshop and it's like just a
1:45:44
storefront and you go inside and he's got like
1:45:46
all these tools and all these parts and all
1:45:48
this shit inside. It's like, whether with
1:45:50
the television, why don't they
1:45:52
just make a screen with a
1:45:54
new a new new fucking resolution
1:45:57
that just snaps
1:45:57
in. You just snap in the news screen. Keep the housing in the court and in the the microchip and everything.
1:45:59
Like, why why they do that? I mean,
1:46:02
there's a there's a nice thing
1:46:04
about this jazz of
1:46:06
the right right to repair laws. You know about that. Right? It's a it's a whole thing. I just discovered this recently, actually.
1:46:12
It's government legislation that would allow consumers the ability
1:46:14
I'm looking on Wikipedia. They would allow consumers the ability to
1:46:17
repair and modify
1:46:20
their own consumer products, eG electronic, automotive
1:46:22
services, or farm vehicles such as tractors, where otherwise the manufacturer
1:46:24
of such products requires the
1:46:26
consumer to use only their offered
1:46:29
services by restricting access to tools and components or software barriers put in place to hinder independent repair
1:46:32
and modification.
1:46:36
And this is a big thing. It
1:46:38
says that these obstacles often lead to higher consumer costs or drive consumers to replace devices
1:46:42
so fucking very hard.
1:46:44
While the global community is
1:46:46
concerned over the growing volume of the waste stream, especially electronic components. The
1:46:51
primary debate over to repair has been centered in the United
1:46:54
States and within the European
1:46:55
Union. But
1:46:58
this Oh, that's that's the other thing. You can't Like, if I wanna throw
1:47:00
away a TV or a monitor
1:47:02
or something that's broken, I only
1:47:04
throw shit away that's broken.
1:47:06
It's I can't be repaired. You
1:47:08
can't put it in your normal trash. You have
1:47:10
to fucking pay to throw it away. And so it's like like on top of
1:47:13
everything else with planned
1:47:15
obsolescence, then they then they make you pay
1:47:17
for the new product but also pay to throw the old one away. It's like why are we filling up
1:47:19
Lego because it's dangerous
1:47:23
all the components? Well, why isn't
1:47:25
there a political movement to stop building all the shit that becomes dangerous in
1:47:27
landfills? There's nothing left
1:47:30
FTN, you know, we
1:47:32
can criticize conservatives all the time.
1:47:34
But let's criticize leftist. Why aren't you speaking up and saying something about this?
1:47:36
You're the ones, you know,
1:47:39
beating the drum about fossil
1:47:41
fuels and all the things. It's like talk about the fucking trash. Why don't you talk about
1:47:43
the Mexicans fucking abandoned washing
1:47:46
machines all over the
1:47:48
land gape of
1:47:50
rural California. You don't fucking say a word. Right. You just say, oh, it's white people littering. Shut the fuck up. This
1:47:52
is gonna be a very expletive laced
1:47:54
to f the end because of all
1:47:59
stuff. Yeah. Yeah. But I I wanted to make an important point because
1:48:01
this is true -- Sure. --
1:48:03
about computers. Because the laptop that
1:48:05
I have is is older. It's
1:48:07
from twenty eighteen. And, you know, according to
1:48:09
planned obsolescence, I should've gotten a new one by now. It's been it's been five
1:48:11
years FTN laptop's
1:48:15
ancient. Well, Mine's made in China. And it's made
1:48:17
in China because China wants
1:48:19
to be competitive with
1:48:22
gay, faggot, US Apple
1:48:24
who decided to start soldering the CPU
1:48:27
to the motherboard and start soldering the fucking
1:48:29
ram to the motherboard and
1:48:31
soldering all the shit
1:48:34
that used to be able to replace yourself or upgrade
1:48:36
yourself. And now they solder all that
1:48:39
shit to the motherboard so that
1:48:41
if you buy a three thousand dollar
1:48:43
MacBook Pro, then you can't the
1:48:45
only way that you can upgrade any
1:48:47
of it is you can buy
1:48:49
exciting tools that plug in. Yeah. Is is well, not even the motherboard. You have to upgrade the whole goddamn
1:48:51
thing because the motherboard isn't gonna work with
1:48:54
a new monitor and all this
1:48:56
shit. But the the
1:48:58
laptop that I have and this is
1:49:00
why I love these laptops is that
1:49:02
China made a a competitive decision to
1:49:05
not do the soldering. And what's funny is they did it in a
1:49:07
few of the earlier models like they were like
1:49:12
thinking oh, we can go down this role,
1:49:14
a bit more profitable, and they decided to do it for like a couple models, but it pissed
1:49:19
people off. And so they they were like, okay, we won't do that. So they they
1:49:21
you can replace the battery. Like,
1:49:23
good luck trying to replace the battery on
1:49:25
your math book yourself. Like, good luck with
1:49:28
all that. But with a
1:49:30
computer, you can order a new battery. You can order a cheap battery much cheaper than the oh, it's
1:49:32
an Apple branded one. And this
1:49:34
is not Apple versus PC. But
1:49:38
the the RAM you can upgrade and everything else. So why
1:49:40
do I have a five year old laptop that I'm
1:49:42
gonna keep for another five years? Because this laptop
1:49:44
has two RAM slots that allowed me
1:49:47
to go up to six sixty four
1:49:49
gigs of RAM and it came with eight. And so I got rid of the
1:49:51
eight. I paid a hundred bucks, went to sixty four gigs. It they
1:49:53
they they put an extra fucking
1:49:55
hard drive slot in
1:49:58
this thing. So I got a hard drive. I did all this Black
1:50:00
Friday shit. So I did it did a hard drive.
1:50:02
So I got completely off of any
1:50:05
sort of fucking cloud because I put four terabyte fucking
1:50:07
solid state drive in this thing. And
1:50:09
then I did an update update to
1:50:11
the video card, and I didn't bother
1:50:13
with the the CPU because it was
1:50:15
party AI7. So this laptop that is
1:50:18
five years old is faster than
1:50:20
anything out on the market today,
1:50:22
and it's gonna be fine for another
1:50:24
year. No. Another
1:50:26
five years. I'm gonna see if I can
1:50:28
go longer than five years. Like, imagine anybody today? Like, is
1:50:30
your laptop ten years old Warren? Maybe? Possibly. No.
1:50:33
No. No. But hardly anybody is. Like
1:50:35
hardly anybody is. So you have to buy a laptop from a country that is basically making
1:50:39
a business decision to
1:50:42
say fuck you to, like, Steve's job.
1:50:44
Because the other thing that Apple did was
1:50:46
they were changing the the connector types all
1:50:48
the time. Like, look at the look at the
1:50:50
charger for your iPhone. Like, why is an iPhone -- Yeah. Oh, yes. -- to use a USB connection because they wanna
1:50:53
make you pay for the charger and the
1:50:55
connection and all this fucking retarded.
1:50:59
It. It's like, this is idiotic. It's stupid. Yeah.
1:51:01
So anyway -- Yeah. -- there was
1:51:03
a
1:51:03
vox article recently
1:51:05
that was talking about why stuff is made shittier
1:51:07
now, and it was going through all
1:51:09
the things. But it was talking about, like, clothing, how
1:51:11
like you can buy clothing, and it just falls
1:51:13
apart, you know, and and so many others
1:51:16
and III
1:51:18
it was basically talking about I think something all experienced in
1:51:22
the last five years
1:51:25
or or ten years, but mainly, like, the
1:51:27
last five years, is how it seems to be harder to get decently made anything, you know, like
1:51:29
-- Yes. -- buy anything, and it's
1:51:32
and it's shittier.
1:51:35
Manufacturing is shittier. Stuff falls apart
1:51:38
faster. You know, it's
1:51:40
the wrong size or it's
1:51:42
the wrong. Even even clothing. Clothing was one
1:51:44
of the big things. Yeah. In this article, when clothing was one
1:51:46
of the big thing and they went through all
1:51:49
the reasons, and it's it's not people's imagination. Like stuff
1:51:51
is made. Shittier now. But again, this is this is right at
1:51:53
the when when the waste stream, as
1:51:56
they say,
1:51:58
the the the trash is is worse than it ever is.
1:52:00
And when having more and more
1:52:02
and more immigrants, I mean, this
1:52:05
is the absolute peak. Of migration
1:52:08
into the United States. A million, you know,
1:52:10
two million people a year are being brought
1:52:12
in. So it's just it's Yeah. Every
1:52:14
part of the system is dysfunctional. just I if you a that anything like n
1:52:20
s, everything, all the solutions not only
1:52:22
work, but they all fall into alignment with each other. It's the same
1:52:24
thing with this society
1:52:27
where all the problems align
1:52:29
with each other, and every problem exacerbates
1:52:31
all the other problems. Like for instance, the the anxiety
1:52:33
that people feel over
1:52:35
this, it makes harder.
1:52:38
You know, I was just talking with Nathan about
1:52:41
how under the system,
1:52:43
what a powerful suppressor
1:52:47
of popular descent, economic anxiety
1:52:49
is. You know, when you don't
1:52:51
have any kind of social
1:52:54
safety net, and people are just scrambling to
1:52:56
to, you know, people lose their job
1:52:58
and and they're scrambling to find their
1:53:00
next job because they have
1:53:02
nothing to fall back on. You know, they they
1:53:05
were living to paycheck to paycheck, and they don't they
1:53:07
qualify for, like, the most meager benefits that don't
1:53:10
even pay their basic bills. That
1:53:12
is a factor of capitalist totalitarianism. That
1:53:14
is a factor in suppressing political dissent. It
1:53:17
always has been and
1:53:19
it always will be. And
1:53:21
so so that's yet another thing, you know. I mean,
1:53:23
talk about rigged elections. Look at the amount of
1:53:25
money that goes into
1:53:27
our election system. And
1:53:30
then and then look at what people average people
1:53:32
are dealing with in their financial
1:53:34
lives, in their economic lives. I mean
1:53:37
Oh, yeah. Like, it was it was, like,
1:53:39
approaching billion dollar now a billion dollar presidential campaign is
1:53:41
just like, well, yeah, that's I mean, that's
1:53:43
a basic bit shit. But like
1:53:45
it's an insane amount
1:53:48
of money, And I remember in two
1:53:50
thousand eight when it was Obama versus McCain, and
1:53:54
it was the citizens united versus FEC's supreme
1:53:56
court decision had just
1:53:58
happened. And campaign finance
1:54:01
was actually a big talking point
1:54:03
of that campaign and taking public money and
1:54:05
switching to only taking public money
1:54:07
so that it would
1:54:10
be more balanced in terms of the election. And and Obama was
1:54:12
actually for that because he was
1:54:14
anti FEC versus citizens united. Conservatives
1:54:18
were pro FEC versus Citizens United because what they
1:54:20
were trying to do is, you know, the
1:54:22
Democratic party got along with me
1:54:25
from from unions,
1:54:27
obviously unions and a lot of different
1:54:29
kind of institutional places and conservatives wanted to have
1:54:31
dark money in politics because they wanted
1:54:33
-- Right. -- to flood it with
1:54:36
Jewish money. So 530
1:54:38
versus Citizens United, which was pushed by Arthur Finkelstein. We've done many deep dives on that too, that there was ultimately
1:54:40
a crowning achievement of
1:54:42
of Arthur Finkelstein was getting
1:54:46
all this Jewish money into politics. If
1:54:49
you go back and
1:54:51
look, Obama dropped his
1:54:53
opposition to private
1:54:56
campaign He dropped his position to being only for public financing.
1:54:58
I remember when he did that. Yeah. Because he it was supposed
1:55:00
to be a decision that he
1:55:02
made. Right? He couldn't just say He
1:55:05
couldn't just say what he's gonna do. Jews had to figure out whether this
1:55:07
is gonna work. And it took him forever to to actually say,
1:55:10
like, and he dropped
1:55:12
it. He dropped it because they were
1:55:14
gonna make a decision about only being public finance because this was during the two thousand eight financial crisis.
1:55:16
It was like if there
1:55:18
was ever gonna be a time
1:55:21
with public interest and attention to drop this, they could have done it, but no. And and
1:55:23
what happened was
1:55:28
Democrats even dropped their opposition to FEC versus citizens, United. What
1:55:30
was the last time here, especially if you're newer to politics? Have
1:55:33
you ever heard
1:55:35
of anyone mention except for me. Yeah.
1:55:37
Yeah. You think nobody talks about anymore, but they used to from twenty ten onward.
1:55:40
They would talk about it all the
1:55:42
time. Yes. I remember. And it it
1:55:44
it it's
1:55:46
now it's like because the big
1:55:48
why? Because Democrats now do
1:55:50
the big super PAC shit now
1:55:52
too. So
1:55:53
-- Yes. -- it's everybody is on everybody's on the
1:55:55
same the same game. And this Sam Bankman freed. How did Sam Bankman freed? Fash
1:55:57
he enabled to do
1:55:59
what he did? Because
1:56:02
of citizens united. Otherwise, the only way that a Jew to donate money in politics would
1:56:04
have been publicly
1:56:07
or illegally. Public or
1:56:10
illegally. But because of this, now they can
1:56:12
do it privately and behind
1:56:14
a smoke screen totally legally. And
1:56:17
they don't have to do it illegally anymore.
1:56:19
And this is what it enabled. It enabled them to erect a
1:56:21
curtain in front of the financing of American politics. So you can't
1:56:23
see the puppet strings.
1:56:26
Essentially, people could see the puppet strings because they
1:56:28
could follow the money. Right? That was always like, follow
1:56:30
the money. You could follow the money. Yeah.
1:56:33
But you can't follow the money. It's a good
1:56:34
luck. It's like, I mean, citizens, you know, you can follow some
1:56:37
of it. You can follow some of it enough to get an
1:56:39
indication of, but but Yeah. There's sort
1:56:41
of an idea. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. There's so much of it.
1:56:43
That yeah. Like Sam Bankman Free, that you you just you have no
1:56:45
idea where it's coming from or who it's coming from
1:56:47
or who it's
1:56:49
going to. And by the time you do, and then it turns out
1:56:51
that all money was was ill gotten gains.
1:56:54
It's like too late. Right? The
1:56:56
election's done.
1:56:58
Yeah. And But but again, it's like, why would people invest in
1:57:00
a Republican party or a Democratic
1:57:02
party? When none of them have
1:57:05
any of our vision, None of them are advocating
1:57:07
for any of the things that
1:57:10
we want. Biden does it
1:57:13
a little bit because there are people
1:57:15
within the Democratic Party still demanding
1:57:17
workers' rights and student
1:57:19
loan forgiveness and, you
1:57:21
know, child tax care But all of the
1:57:23
people that are arguing for those things, because people
1:57:25
sort of like get mystified and delude
1:57:28
themselves into thinking like
1:57:30
there's some aspect of Democrats
1:57:32
that are good or that they're more
1:57:34
intelligent or something. It's like, no, they're advocating all of these issues on the basis of
1:57:39
helping brown people. And it's not
1:57:41
it's not like a smokescreen for look Robro, they're seriously help they're secretly helping white
1:57:44
people. It's like, no. No. When they can figure
1:57:46
out that it's gonna help too many white people,
1:57:48
like student
1:57:51
loan forgiveness, then they shut it down. When they realized
1:57:53
that white people were were benefiting from
1:57:55
the child tax
1:57:57
care credit, they shut it down and they get try
1:58:00
to get the money to the minorities in a way
1:58:02
where whites don't have access to it. The whole
1:58:05
system has been created in this way. So
1:58:07
Anyway, I think people get a point. We we have to take a break,
1:58:09
and we have some things we didn't get to in the first
1:58:11
half that we got FTN hit. Right.
1:58:13
Right. So
1:58:14
yeah. Okay. Any parting thoughts on
1:58:17
on this, Warren, before we No. Just -- Oh, yeah. -- this system's
1:58:19
gotta go, man. This whole
1:58:23
system's gotta go. That's it. If
1:58:25
you if any of these things
1:58:27
are problems, you know, you gotta you
1:58:30
gotta be for a complete change of
1:58:32
system. Yeah, we cannot we cannot just tweak this
1:58:34
thing. And we can preserve our history.
1:58:35
I mean, there's there's a lot of about American history
1:58:39
that is is really good. And as we said
1:58:41
on the Ben Franklin deep dive, the things
1:58:43
that are good about
1:58:45
American history are the people It's it's, you know, with
1:58:47
poor Richard Zalmanac and all the things that
1:58:50
Ben Franklin wrote about, the the good
1:58:52
nature, good
1:58:54
humor, honest hardworking aspects of American culture,
1:58:56
which is an extension of European
1:58:58
culture, and German culture, and English
1:59:02
culture. That's That's what's good. That's what made America good. That's
1:59:05
what's being destroyed. So when we
1:59:07
say the whole system has
1:59:09
to be changed,
1:59:10
Yes. But with the caveat that we're going
1:59:12
to preserve what made us great. That
1:59:15
doesn't mean the gulf of
1:59:17
Where the gulf of you? Yeah. For the sake
1:59:19
of the blood and soil, land and people. For the sake
1:59:21
of the land because that is the
1:59:23
nation. It's the
1:59:26
blood and soil entity. For that for the sake of that,
1:59:28
we must change the
1:59:29
system. We must overthrow the system.
1:59:32
Yes. Exactly. Yeah.
1:59:34
Because because the system the system one
1:59:36
other thing I'll say is the system this
1:59:38
is goes to your article too that
1:59:41
you had about why people just
1:59:43
wanna oppose one another. The type of people that
1:59:45
Ben Franklin wrote about in Port Charlotte and Zalmanac,
1:59:47
these were people who didn't I mean, now
1:59:49
you talk about, oh, I live in a neighborhood where
1:59:51
I don't lock the
1:59:54
doors at night. Well, people people back then, it's like locks on your doors. Well, I mean, for for what? Like, why would you do that? Like,
1:59:56
a little colonial town. Why do
1:59:58
you need to lock the fucking door?
2:00:03
People were sharing with each other, like friendly with each other was much
2:00:05
more of a community thing because it's how white people
2:00:07
have always kind of been. And we
2:00:09
wanna go we wanna go back
2:00:11
to that where your friends with with people
2:00:13
in your community. You get to know the people around you. You have a common bond
2:00:16
with people.
2:00:19
But but because of the way the system has been constructed and very like,
2:00:21
to the nature that it is, like,
2:00:23
very corrosively competitive. Where
2:00:27
it's a zero sum game. Everybody's in it for themselves.
2:00:29
And you have FTN, like, step
2:00:31
on people's heads in
2:00:33
order to get ahead. It's like you just end up hating
2:00:35
everybody around you because they're they're after what
2:00:37
what you have and it's just like
2:00:40
it it's not
2:00:42
functional. And then that makes it so that we can't band
2:00:44
together to stop the
2:00:46
bigger problems. So Yes.
2:00:49
Yeah. There we go. As we crest
2:00:51
the two hour mark, we will be right back with a few words from Hill
2:00:55
Publishing. Right here on
2:00:58
FTN. See you guys after the break. You're
2:01:04
listening to the show
2:01:07
that changed your
2:01:11
weekend forever. Fash nation, mash
2:01:17
the nation.
2:01:31
Team at Annalope Hill is proud to
2:01:34
announce the release of a new translation.
2:01:36
Leontogrel FTN exile by
2:01:38
Jose Luis Jerez Rayskoy. Readers of the
2:01:40
burning souls will already be familiar
2:01:42
with Daugrell's life. Before enduring the
2:01:44
second world war, his service on
2:01:47
the eastern front and his involuntary post war
2:01:49
exile in Franco Spain. This new work tells the story of his
2:01:51
life and exile in detail, replete
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with firsthand accounts from Spanish nationalists and friends of Degrille. During his
2:01:57
time in Spain, Degrille did not wallow
2:01:59
in sadness. Despite the atrocities
2:02:02
inflicted upon him and his
2:02:04
family the victorious allied powers. He stayed remarkably
2:02:06
active in European nationalist politics and left the lasting impression
2:02:09
on both his
2:02:12
personal friends and those from around the
2:02:14
European world who took inspiration from his tenacious idealism. DeGram's enduring
2:02:16
legacy in Spain
2:02:19
is well deserved. Such a legacy also
2:02:21
deserves to be spread to both sides of the Atlantic and beyond. Antelope Hill is proud to be
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the first to bring this
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unparalleled biography to the English
2:02:28
reader. Getley
2:02:30
undegrell in exile today at analog fill publishing dot com.
2:04:49
The team at Antelope Hill
2:04:51
Publishing is proud to present their
2:04:53
second annual short story in poetry
2:04:56
compilation titled small
2:04:59
victories. Our history is full of stories of
2:05:01
great heroes and great battles FTN, but
2:05:03
this collection explores what it means
2:05:05
for our generation to fight
2:05:07
the daily for duty, love, and faith that add
2:05:09
meaning to our lives and spur us on toward greater victories to
2:05:12
come. The authors featured
2:05:14
in this collection were selected
2:05:16
from hundreds of submissions with special honors
2:05:19
going to only the most exceptional selections. They responded
2:05:22
to this quest cannot get anywhere 530,
2:05:25
a testament to the enduring strength of
2:05:27
character that will guide our
2:05:29
people through the
2:05:31
difficult times ahead. Small victories was made
2:05:33
possible by a host of tremendously talented authors and poets from across the dissident
2:05:36
right. Analog a
2:05:39
pill is proud to offer you their contributions in a form that can
2:05:41
be preserved for generations to come. Get
2:05:43
small victories today
2:05:46
at FTN olopil publishing dot com.
2:06:45
The team at Antelope Hill is proud
2:06:47
to announce the release of a new historical translation. Yara Biography
2:06:50
of Sir Guts Funbur licking in a night of the Holy Roman
2:06:52
Empire. This
2:06:55
legendary sixteenth century warrior who was immortalized by Gute
2:06:57
and who gave his name to a
2:06:59
famous division of
2:07:01
the Waffin SS, remains an eternal symbol of
2:07:04
honor, bravery, and daring. The story is
2:07:06
both a deep dive into the history
2:07:08
of Renaissance Europe and a class
2:07:10
of tale of adventure and camaraderie.
2:07:12
Sure to offer something to academic and
2:07:14
casual readers alike. Gutz's tale was carefully translated by
2:07:17
our team from
2:07:19
the original manuscript written in an
2:07:21
old Swabian dialect from sixteenth century Germany to give the reader the best
2:07:23
possible experience while remaining true
2:07:26
to the author's earthy personality.
2:07:30
Annelope Hill is proud to be the first publisher
2:07:32
to bring this work out of obscurity
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for the English reader. Get the autobiography
2:07:36
of Kutz, von Berlikkinen today at analog
2:07:39
pill publishing dot com. And
2:08:07
now back to
2:08:09
Fashion Nation,
2:08:11
heard only on
2:08:14
the TRS unit
2:08:15
work. Oh, welcome back
2:08:18
on a FTN. We are
2:08:20
here and we have things to discuss
2:08:23
that we did not FTN get
2:08:25
to discuss. See, I I like doing
2:08:27
shows with this kind of like a prep free show like we did before Christmas. Yeah. And
2:08:32
sort of just let it go where it's gonna go. I didn't
2:08:34
know we're gonna spend so much time on debt, but that's fine. It was it
2:08:36
was very good conversation. There are so many
2:08:38
other things to say about it, but
2:08:41
we only have Warren has to hit the
2:08:43
old dusty trail here pretty soon. So we only have a few a little bit
2:08:45
more time together today,
2:08:48
unfortunately. But I
2:08:51
wanna hit on some of the things that I meant to talk about in
2:08:53
the first part of the show, which was
2:08:56
the HD, handsome
2:08:59
Truth on FTN. People are like,
2:09:01
oh, you didn't even bring it up in the first two hours of the show. What we meant to, very
2:09:04
well received show,
2:09:06
very happy to have H.
2:09:09
T. ON, very warmly received by our audience.
2:09:11
I was telling talking to Tony last night, Tony
2:09:13
HoVatar of the National
2:09:16
Justice Party. That
2:09:20
that it was, you know, the kind of the reactions
2:09:22
that we got. And it was really like three different
2:09:24
reactions. It was
2:09:26
so glad that you guys
2:09:28
had HTN, been paying attention to them for
2:09:30
a while, really like what they do,
2:09:33
awesome that you guys are collaborating.
2:09:35
There were people who were like, I0I
2:09:37
thought this guy was bad news. I
2:09:39
heard he was bad or fed or
2:09:41
Jew or whatever. Like, all the gay
2:09:43
shit that people say. Right? Like,
2:09:45
the people make these accusations of anybody actually standing up the Jews.
2:09:47
And so glad that
2:09:50
that's not the case. So I'm really
2:09:52
happy that you guys had them on.
2:09:55
And then the third one, which I
2:09:57
found to be really the reason well,
2:09:59
we did it for many reasons. Because
2:10:01
we like the guy, but also admire his work. But also
2:10:03
because there are an unknown number of
2:10:05
people, and I would
2:10:08
say it's about a third
2:10:10
of the comments that I saw of I had no idea who HT was. I had no
2:10:12
idea what GoYM TV
2:10:14
was or any of this.
2:10:17
I didn't even know in Omega
2:10:19
but this really cool people doing a different
2:10:22
flavor of activism out
2:10:24
there. And
2:10:26
I and I do think it's cool because, you
2:10:28
know, going what we're talking about in the
2:10:30
first half of the show, going back in
2:10:33
time to twenty fifteen, If you could get
2:10:35
in a delorean, a fascist delorean, and go
2:10:37
back to the year twenty fifteen, and look
2:10:39
at the landscape, the political
2:10:41
landscape of our movement, at the time when I
2:10:43
met Nathan Domingo for the first
2:10:45
time. There was no NJP.
2:10:48
There was a
2:10:50
very very fledgling TRS. With two podcasts,
2:10:52
FTN andtedious. And
2:10:55
there was no
2:10:58
omegal. There was no handsome
2:11:00
truth. He might have been he probably was gearing
2:11:02
up for Bernie Sanders running for office back then. And
2:11:07
and that's that's not a big. That's just, you know, boots
2:11:09
where people come from. And you would
2:11:12
have been like,
2:11:14
well, Obama would have been finished. then.
2:11:15
doing fifteen Warren? Do we wanna know? In
2:11:18
twenty fifteen, I was I was some
2:11:21
I was pretty I mean,
2:11:23
I was focused on Yeah.
2:11:26
I was focused on the burgeoning alt right. And I was I was finally, always
2:11:28
hated Donald Trump, but this thing
2:11:30
he said about immigration was really interesting.
2:11:35
Maybe I need to take a second look at this guy. You're like That was that was
2:11:38
where I was in twenty fifteen. Yeah. You're like,
2:11:41
I'm
2:11:42
gonna go to
2:11:44
NPI. I'm
2:11:44
going to
2:11:45
become who we are.
2:11:46
I'm gonna become who I
2:11:50
am. Yeah. Yes. I'm becoming who I am. Was the
2:11:52
the motto? Yeah. Because I'm remembering all
2:11:54
this nostalgia coming back like the the
2:11:56
art show competition that
2:11:59
we did on FTN to raffle off
2:12:01
tickets to NPI and and all all of
2:12:02
that. You're you're a great I mean, NPI, you know, I
2:12:04
mean, it
2:12:04
it was Well, I'm not knocking it. I'm
2:12:06
just Yeah. Yeah. FTN wasn't good. It
2:12:10
was a fun FTN organizations and then the things
2:12:12
that are
2:12:13
here. So it's like, yeah. I have to say
2:12:15
this probably the best thing Richard
2:12:17
Spencer ever did was
2:12:18
Yes. But
2:12:18
but, you know, there were a lot of other people involved, including Greg
2:12:21
Conte FTN organizing those. And
2:12:23
and also, I have to say it's
2:12:25
one of the proudest things so far with
2:12:27
and JP, although we have much bigger things the horizon. But
2:12:31
very well put
2:12:33
together white nationalist
2:12:36
events that's incredibly important where people can meet and and
2:12:38
and meet new people and exchange
2:12:39
ideas. I mean, so much like almost everything that
2:12:41
I can think of that's good in this movement has
2:12:43
come out of that. And
2:12:47
I'm I'm happy that we are
2:12:49
continuing and I think improving because I
2:12:51
think pretty much almost all the NJP
2:12:53
events have been better and higher
2:12:55
energy and more camaraderie and everything than
2:12:57
the the old suit and tie think
2:13:00
tank suit conferences of the
2:13:02
past. But yeah. That's what I was saying. They didn't really have an
2:13:04
organizing model, and it's not a
2:13:06
critique around NPI. It's just that
2:13:08
you can't have NJP you can't
2:13:10
have an NJP event without NJP. You
2:13:12
can't have any kind of event like that
2:13:14
without an actual, you know, the ideological or gonna you know, think it's not
2:13:18
a think tank stuff doesn't work. I mean, so -- Right. -- mean, I think a
2:13:21
think tank would be valuable. And I
2:13:23
think at some point, it
2:13:25
it may make sense to to have that. But,
2:13:28
you know, that's right now Of
2:13:29
course, Bill Regnery. And Bill Regnery, of course, we have
2:13:31
to give him credit. It was
2:13:33
the one who founded NPI and and and, you know,
2:13:36
Richard Richard was associated with that, but there were
2:13:38
a lot of other people that that that was
2:13:40
coming out of a longer
2:13:41
tradition. So you have to pay tribute to that. But, yeah, that's what
2:13:43
I was focused on FTN twenty fifteen. I think
2:13:46
a lot of people were. Yeah. Yeah.
2:13:48
Well, and I was looking in
2:13:50
one of these old folders for that that some of
2:13:52
the old memes you and I were talking about before the show.
2:13:54
And I actually the thing I think I think
2:13:56
the trip down memory lane was going
2:13:58
into that meme folder because I saw
2:14:00
the cover art that we had for
2:14:02
the show for the the raffling off
2:14:06
of that art or traveling off of the NPI tickets twenty
2:14:08
fifteen bikes submitting art for the
2:14:10
contest. So it's kind of funny
2:14:12
seeing seeing all that stuff. But
2:14:15
but -- Right. -- anyway, the
2:14:17
the point is is that the
2:14:19
the landscape has has gotten so much better back then.
2:14:22
And no criticism to
2:14:24
those organizations that were there
2:14:26
before. But, I mean, things have just improved so much. And and, you know,
2:14:28
it's mainly because people have
2:14:30
evolved and have learned. Right? Like,
2:14:34
We're talking in the first half about how fascism
2:14:36
was an evolution of previous ideologies.
2:14:38
And it and it was an
2:14:40
improvement and FTN had gotten better. And
2:14:42
things were progressing because they were
2:14:45
trying to solve the problems that
2:14:47
these other ideologies, I guess,
2:14:49
were stating that they were trying to solve,
2:14:51
but, you know, when Jews get involved, they're not really actually
2:14:53
solving the problem. And so they're actually creating more problems. This is
2:14:55
usually the case. But
2:14:58
it was having HT on
2:15:01
the show was Long
2:15:03
overdue. But the fact
2:15:05
that people didn't even know who he
2:15:08
was. That means that and I
2:15:10
know this from talking to HT. Because
2:15:12
the feedback that that he got
2:15:14
was so glad that you guys finally did
2:15:16
something with FTN and the NJP
2:15:18
guys. So glad that you did this.
2:15:21
It's been a long time coming or
2:15:23
they were like, I thought those guys were bad. I thought those guys
2:15:25
were feds. I thought those guys were Jews. Glad
2:15:27
to see that they're cool.
2:15:30
Or I had no idea who these guys were. Now the
2:15:33
case of FPN, everybody knows who we
2:15:35
are. I'm just kidding. Actually, a
2:15:37
lot of people a lot of people don't.
2:15:39
Or they see what's what's an interesting phenomenon about
2:15:41
our show is that people
2:15:43
tune out at
2:15:45
various points and sometimes it's tune out a
2:15:48
long time ago. People usually don't tune
2:15:50
out now, but you get a phenomenon
2:15:52
and I'm, you know, I have the balls
2:15:54
to admit this. I don't give a shit. People have
2:15:56
tuned out of our show because we were either too pro
2:15:58
Trump or too negative Trump or focus too much on this or
2:16:02
focus too much on that. But, you know, the war and era
2:16:04
of the program and the program really since
2:16:06
twenty nineteen. Whenever anybody's new to FTN and
2:16:08
they're like, bro, like, let me go
2:16:10
listen to your old podcast. I'm like,
2:16:12
Go listen to episode one because
2:16:14
of the nostalgic feeling of recorded on iPhone on like a a
2:16:17
back porch with like loud ass
2:16:19
summertime crickets in the background. But
2:16:22
then don't listen to anything until twenty
2:16:24
nineteen because it really I mean,
2:16:26
we were talking about Jews. We're talking
2:16:28
about blacks. We're talking about immigration. But it was all
2:16:31
within the vein. It was never, like, pro Republican party in the sense that,
2:16:35
like, we wanted were Republicans. We
2:16:37
were, like, Donald Trump is the chance to to change things. Let's
2:16:39
see where it
2:16:42
goes, and then that slowly withered and
2:16:44
died on the vine. Until it was like we have
2:16:46
to do something that is by us and for us. And
2:16:50
until that happens, we're gonna be talking about
2:16:52
how bad the system is. That's what we did until
2:16:54
NJP came along. But we have other groups out there.
2:16:59
There are people that are fellow
2:17:01
travelers. You hear that a lot. And there there really truly are fellow travelers. There are
2:17:03
other people out
2:17:06
there doing a lot of good work. You
2:17:09
know, we had a very good conversation with
2:17:11
in the second half of the show. First half the show was basically him telling
2:17:13
his Red Pill story and then
2:17:15
you and I reacting to it
2:17:17
and talking about a lot of
2:17:20
different things. But then we
2:17:22
sort of had an opportunity you really
2:17:24
were in explaining what NJP's mission
2:17:26
was and what we're all about. And
2:17:28
then reacting to that. And the culminating aspect
2:17:30
of that conversation was what I thought I
2:17:33
mean, the whole show was really good, but
2:17:35
the last part where we were talking about collaboration and banding together
2:17:37
and working with other people and strong
2:17:39
you know, the I know it's
2:17:41
the is it the was
2:17:44
it Biden's
2:17:45
slogans stronger together? It must have been. Wasn't
2:17:47
it stronger
2:17:48
together? I think it was Hillary, actually. Maybe. Yeah. I mean, it
2:17:50
really it's a great slogan because I mean, what do you call afashees?
2:17:55
Stronger together. Right? I mean, it
2:17:57
really is. But there's nothing fascistic about Hillary Clinton or the Democratic
2:18:00
Party. Anyway,
2:18:03
So Republicans would disagree,
2:18:05
but Yeah. Republicans would disagree. Yeah. There we go. And Democrats would say
2:18:07
that the Republicans are the real So
2:18:13
he did never. But yeah. And
2:18:15
and so I think that, you know,
2:18:17
that part of the conversation, if you
2:18:19
didn't catch the show, a lot of
2:18:21
people did because are are listen stats
2:18:23
are enormous. I
2:18:27
would say fifty
2:18:30
percent seventy five percent more than than they usually are. And I'll publish them. I've been saying, I'm
2:18:32
gonna do that every fucking week, but
2:18:34
I'm gonna do it because we had
2:18:36
we had it up on Odyssey, we
2:18:39
had it up on YouTube, and, of course,
2:18:41
the traditional lipson. But
2:18:43
what's interesting is all
2:18:45
these people on I have this this channel on YouTube that I've used
2:18:47
for live streams and I don't use it for
2:18:51
really much of anything. It's kinda like a sleeper
2:18:53
channel. So I published the show there first in video format because
2:18:56
Odyssey was taking so fucking long
2:18:58
to process YouTube beat them. So
2:19:00
I was like, alright, I'll put
2:19:02
the YouTube link up first. And it
2:19:05
sent a notification out to the to
2:19:07
the thousand followers of that channel who hadn't
2:19:09
gotten notification that any new videos had been
2:19:11
posted in a year and they
2:19:13
get this FTN five twenty FTN time
2:19:15
amigal off and posted. And just the comments were like,
2:19:18
holy fuck, how do you guys stay on YouTube and whatever?
2:19:20
It's still
2:19:23
up. I'm surprised that it hasn't come down. It's
2:19:25
like eight thousand views. It's still up. And I think it's because they did they put a
2:19:27
lot of money into getting people off of YouTube. And
2:19:32
they invested a lot into, like, these
2:19:34
little pods of pajets that, like, monitor whatever. I don't know whether people just aren't reporting it. Antifa is not out there
2:19:41
reporting it or those it's still there. So I
2:19:43
don't know, like, it's it's a
2:19:45
mystery to me. I I was only hoping
2:19:48
that would be up there for maybe twelve
2:19:50
hours to cover until Odyssey finished its fucking processing, but it's still
2:19:53
up there. So cool. Got a lot of
2:19:55
views there. Got a lot of views on
2:19:57
Odyssey. People didn't even know we were FTN, honestly, because I'd only posted one BlackRock video.
2:19:59
We're gonna start doing more
2:20:02
videos. We're gonna start
2:20:04
posting more stuff to
2:20:07
these channels. But then the same, if
2:20:09
not more, people downloaded the podcast.
2:20:11
And what I was saying to
2:20:13
Tony is nobody's listening to or watching Audacity and then going to watch it again
2:20:15
on YouTube and then listening
2:20:18
to it a third
2:20:20
time on on the,
2:20:23
like, the traditional format. So these are I
2:20:25
think are all distinct different people watching the show.
2:20:27
So it's a lot of people, a lot of
2:20:29
eyeballs, a lot of people interested in seeing what
2:20:31
is going on. And it's I wanna underscore. It's not about us or the clout
2:20:33
of FTN. When you hear
2:20:35
me, like, say, you know,
2:20:37
we're right or we got
2:20:40
this right, it's about, like, we're glad that we didn't
2:20:42
get it wrong more than about getting it
2:20:44
right, but it's also about, like, we want it's
2:20:46
important because of what's at stake to get it right.
2:20:49
But it's also important to have outreach
2:20:51
and it's also important to get as
2:20:53
many like HT said forever and this is true for us too. Before
2:20:55
your red pill And
2:20:59
then once you get red 530, you
2:21:01
feel like this urge inside of
2:21:03
you that you have to save other people from being blind.
2:21:07
As long as you were. Right? You know,
2:21:09
people get religion. It's it's like a it's like
2:21:11
a missionary zeal that people get. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yeah.
2:21:14
And and do you feel the need
2:21:16
to tell people? And so I don't
2:21:19
like working in a silo. I don't want to become an echo chamber. I can it's
2:21:23
funny. We talk about this all the
2:21:26
time, but I consume you you go from consuming media because that's mainstream media because that's all
2:21:28
you know. To
2:21:32
being like, no, fuck the media. I'm
2:21:34
only gonna consume the things that talk
2:21:36
about white people and our problems and
2:21:38
whatever. And then you go back to
2:21:40
consuming the mainstream media in addition to the, you
2:21:42
know, our own media, because you need to understand
2:21:46
what they're saying. Because what they're saying
2:21:48
-- honoring enemy broadcast. Yeah. Yeah. What what
2:21:50
they're saying is still getting people. Because if you if you don't understand
2:21:55
the language of your enemies, then your
2:21:57
enemies have an advantage over you because they're able to trick
2:22:00
your people
2:22:02
into becoming like them and becoming
2:22:04
more like one of them in staying stuck
2:22:06
in their propaganda. So that's the risk
2:22:09
of an echo chamber. And I know it
2:22:11
feels good to say, you know, I'm only
2:22:13
about white media and people that are only talking about pro
2:22:15
white stuff and anti juice
2:22:17
stuff. And it's
2:22:18
like, that's good. You should support all those
2:22:20
things. But if you're doing propaganda like we
2:22:22
are, then you have to keep an
2:22:25
ear out for what they're saying because
2:22:27
their landscape, their evolution of how they
2:22:29
do propaganda is always changing. A lot of the rules are old, a lot of them were written a
2:22:31
long time ago with Edward Bernays and and all
2:22:34
the others, but a lot
2:22:36
of them are evolving because
2:22:38
they're trying to counter what we're
2:22:40
doing. And so we have to counter their
2:22:42
counter. Right? We have to stay one step
2:22:44
ahead of it because people still fall for their shit. Even
2:22:46
people who are who are, like, walk on our politics.
2:22:50
Still fall for the tricks. And it's okay.
2:22:52
I mean, it's okay. I fall for shit too.
2:22:54
But you you have to you have to don't step on the rake
2:22:58
and don't let other people step on
2:23:00
the rake and then move forward. And
2:23:02
I think we're stronger together when we're working with other people who are
2:23:06
they don't have to be doing important point
2:23:08
from the show too. They don't have to
2:23:10
be doing exactly what we're doing, exactly the way that we're doing it, exactly the tone that we're saying it,
2:23:16
and check every single policy box. I
2:23:18
think it's a mistake when we get
2:23:20
hung up on minor differences. When you're
2:23:22
sit when when like, if
2:23:24
you just imagine a juice, sitting in a room with like
2:23:27
piles of money all around him in a little green eye shade. Is
2:23:32
the Jew laughing and cackling and howling
2:23:34
with laughter when white nationalist groups are in fighting with each other. What
2:23:36
do you think that Jew is doing
2:23:38
when we're working together? Well, I'll tell
2:23:40
you what the Jew did when we
2:23:43
had FTN on the show. They did a
2:23:45
massive DDoS attack of of Goyam TV
2:23:47
and shut it down for a
2:23:49
long period of time. It's back
2:23:52
up. But they are angry. They are doing this
2:23:54
to fuck with us. They are very
2:23:56
angry. They wanna stop our message from
2:23:58
getting out. And somebody posted this quote from the very
2:24:04
honorable Cornelia Zeilia
2:24:06
Corderiano leader of the Iron Guard the day that we did the show, and the quote
2:24:11
is nothing frightens the Jews more than
2:24:13
a perfect unity in others. The unity of feeling in a
2:24:15
movement in a people. That is why they will always be
2:24:17
for, quote, democracy, which
2:24:19
has but one advantage
2:24:21
and that one for
2:24:23
the nation's enemy. For democracy will break
2:24:26
up the unity in the spirit
2:24:28
of a people. And I said, in contrast,
2:24:30
nothing pleases the Jews more than division and infighting
2:24:32
mumps groups
2:24:34
that would otherwise unify to put an
2:24:36
end to their evil murder state. And that's
2:24:38
true. And so part of what you and I have been talking about with New Year's resolutions is to try
2:24:44
to find more common
2:24:46
commonality between other groups than
2:24:49
than finding differences. And it's
2:24:51
not that we're out, like,
2:24:54
causing riff and disharmony, but it's just kind of like the attitude of
2:24:56
like, well, they're not doing exactly what
2:24:58
we're doing, so we're just gonna do
2:25:00
our thing and ignore everybody else. It's
2:25:02
like, well, we sort of to mean, I think
2:25:04
it's important for us where we can find common
2:25:06
ground because it's detrimental to Jewish power to do so. But
2:25:09
we should also work together because we're white people who are opposing
2:25:11
Jews. Like, why would why would
2:25:13
we do that. Well,
2:25:14
we're not
2:25:15
we're not we're not like we're not like
2:25:17
companies, like, fighting each other for market share on the market. And, like, you know, it's like, we
2:25:19
don't have to do that. So
2:25:23
anyway I I liked what HG said
2:25:25
about also. I mean, you know, we don't even have to be working together, but we can check-in with
2:25:28
each other. You
2:25:31
know, and keep the lines of communication open. I
2:25:34
I thought that was very good. He said that
2:25:36
towards the end of the show. It's it's not
2:25:38
like because, you know, people have
2:25:40
different approaches and are focused on
2:25:42
different objectives and there's different personalities involved. And that's why Mike
2:25:46
you know, Mike Pupu, the anime team up idea
2:25:48
on Mark Colette, and it's not if you listen to what he said
2:25:50
and peep because people were joking we had on each immediately
2:25:55
after that, and then we
2:25:57
had on we just had
2:25:59
on Nathan. But it's not what Mike is is against is not checking
2:26:04
in with people or even working with people, what Mike
2:26:07
is against is the sort of
2:26:09
mindset of, you know, super chat putting him
2:26:11
or someone else on the spot and being,
2:26:13
like, why don't you team up with this person, or why don't you do that? Well,
2:26:15
anyway, this is a specific
2:26:19
language of the person who asked the question,
2:26:21
which was when is HT going to get a seat at
2:26:23
the table? And the thing
2:26:26
is Yeah. And I think from
2:26:28
knowing Mike well and knowing how Mike
2:26:30
thinks, it's it's it's even more than what you're saying. It's it's the implication that
2:26:36
Mike has the power to
2:26:38
give HTA seat at the table and is denying him a seat at the table because
2:26:44
of some arbitrary decision making, like, whatever.
2:26:46
It's like, The way that question is asked is it's not just a, hey, man,
2:26:50
when are you guys gonna hang out? It's,
2:26:52
when are you going to allow him in the room because he
2:26:54
has prevented from being in the room. It's kind of like
2:26:59
you're you're like projecting a negativity onto onto
2:27:01
Mike, and it's like, there is the anime team up aspect of it. But
2:27:03
it's also like, why
2:27:06
aren't you allowing this guy in the
2:27:09
room? It's like, like, my corrections, like, I mean, it's
2:27:11
not your business, and I'm also, like, not
2:27:13
preventing him from being in the
2:27:14
room. Like, what I mean, what's your, like,
2:27:16
what's your issue here? Well, and and and, obviously,
2:27:18
now now now we can say
2:27:21
that, you know, you and others were
2:27:23
were talking to HD here and there
2:27:25
was some back and forth there. While that question was
2:27:27
being asked, but that was the other thing that Mike said. So long
2:27:31
that's very important. Yeah. Well, that was that's
2:27:34
the other thing that Mike said is that think
2:27:36
people should have that
2:27:38
should have that attitude
2:27:41
because there's a lot
2:27:43
more involved with with
2:27:45
politics, then just, oh, you know, I
2:27:48
like this guy. I like this guy. I wanna see him
2:27:50
together. You
2:27:50
know, like like the like the Marvel of Marvel or
2:27:55
FTN amazing team of whoever said I will say.
2:27:57
I will say. And I said this to you in a private message, but I I wanna reiterate it here because
2:27:59
I think it's important to say too is So
2:28:04
the feeling that you get when you go out
2:28:06
because I don't wanna poo poo that
2:28:08
attitude too
2:28:09
hard, like, the people that, like, wanna see
2:28:11
people
2:28:11
working together. I understand it. I think it's motivated.
2:28:14
Some of it is there is the extremely online,
2:28:18
like, why can't I see my
2:28:20
podcast characters hypersimulated friends getting
2:28:22
together? And doing things. That that's the attitude Mike's poo poo poo
2:28:23
ing, and I agree. Like, that's, like,
2:28:28
goofball shit. But the they're deep within
2:28:30
that is rooted a positive aspect because
2:28:32
for those of you who have decided
2:28:35
to get vetted and go out and
2:28:37
do things in
2:28:38
meat space, everybody is gonna know exactly what I'm talking about, the feeling when you're driving
2:28:42
home from your first meetup, the feeling when
2:28:44
you drive home from the second meetup, the
2:28:46
feeling you home from an NJP event, the feeling you drive home from doing activism. is that
2:28:52
feeling? It's elation. It's feeling great. You're
2:28:54
feeling connect didness with people. You've done something good. You felt like you've done something productive. And lot of that
2:28:57
I would say is because you
2:28:59
got offline and did things. Because
2:29:01
you don't get the the the
2:29:03
dopamine of the Internet simulates
2:29:05
a fake version of that, which is why
2:29:07
you keep opening your phone every five minutes, and it's
2:29:09
they say, you know, you know, Warren, they say the phone, your your
2:29:12
cell phone, has
2:29:15
more contaminants bacteria and is
2:29:17
more disgusting than a public toilet seat. Did you know that
2:29:19
I'm not surprised at all? It FTN
2:29:23
is. Yes. It's disgusting. Just to just to underscore,
2:29:25
you know, how they show people a animal slaughter to get them to stop eating meat. Well, let me tell you how disgusting
2:29:27
your fucking phone is. Because
2:29:32
you touch it all the time,
2:29:34
because you are addicted social is fake.
2:29:40
The feeling that you get from spending time
2:29:42
with people, IRL, is real. And so
2:29:45
there is an element. I think the
2:29:47
the part that Mike is pooing is
2:29:49
the the fake part where you see your digital anime
2:29:51
characters getting together on
2:29:53
a podcast. The real part is when
2:29:56
h t and I hang out. And
2:29:58
I hang out with HT's guys. And we have a good time together, and we
2:30:03
do fun activities. And we, like, I've
2:30:05
actually built, like, a community break bread together. Right?
2:30:07
That's real. That's connectedness. And I think what
2:30:09
is deeply rooted in, I
2:30:12
wanna see these two people
2:30:14
that I like work together is
2:30:17
this sense of, well, they're
2:30:19
they're they're fighting against the
2:30:21
same power structure. And I
2:30:23
wanna see them cross pollinate. Right?
2:30:25
Like, you get together with guys
2:30:28
FTN your NJP supporter group to
2:30:30
cross pollinate. You have common interests
2:30:32
Maybe some of them are political. Maybe that
2:30:35
some of them are apolitical. Maybe you both
2:30:37
have children. Maybe your wives have things in
2:30:39
common interests. Maybe they're members Evergreen. vetted Evergreen have woman your life. And
2:30:45
so I think that is what's rooted in it. And I think the people that that feel
2:30:47
that way that doing the
2:30:52
anime character shit who just want us to work
2:30:54
together and they wanna see us talking to each other, it shows
2:30:58
it it's it's more than just, like,
2:31:01
yeah, those guys are cool. I mean, they can do what they
2:31:03
want. It's more than that. It's we broke, like, broke bread on
2:31:05
a podcast, but I I think
2:31:07
it's important also to know that
2:31:09
we're doing it in real life
2:31:12
and that it is building some connection
2:31:14
with people. Does that mean that
2:31:16
we have to get married? Does that
2:31:18
mean that we have to form like
2:31:20
you know, legal partnerships. I mean, who knows
2:31:23
what the future holds? But at least we can check-in
2:31:25
with each other and say what's up because I
2:31:27
mean, you might marry H. D. Yeah.
2:31:30
Jesus. No. He's he's actually a
2:31:32
very like Warren, you have a reputation
2:31:34
for being, like, one of the nicest
2:31:38
most genuine people in the movement, and it's
2:31:40
true. I'll say it hands down. You know it from the moment that
2:31:42
you meet you. And everybody says that about you, especially when they meet you. And
2:31:48
the people that haven't met you yet, they're like,
2:31:50
I like Warren. I love his NJP speeches. We'll wait till you see how he is as a human being. He's really
2:31:52
nice Not
2:31:56
that that's in contrast with
2:31:58
your speeches, but people get what I'm saying. H t has has that as well. Like,
2:32:00
he's he's
2:32:05
different from what you see on Amigal. That
2:32:07
was the the most, I
2:32:09
guess, not shocking, but sort of like,
2:32:11
oh, wow. This is you know, he
2:32:13
has a he has a propaganda performance like
2:32:15
what he's doing for
2:32:17
the public, but, you know, he's
2:32:19
a very genuine God, like, you know, when
2:32:22
you're talking to him, he's just not sitting there talking
2:32:25
about himself. He's asking you about you and,
2:32:27
you know, you can tell when you're
2:32:29
talking to somebody who's genuinely interested in talking to you and having
2:32:31
conversation versus, like, thinking of what they're
2:32:33
gonna say next about themselves.
2:32:36
Like, everybody, you you know,
2:32:38
you have these conversations with people. And
2:32:40
so I I that's a bonus
2:32:42
on top of everything else. Now, the the
2:32:44
showering, praise, and sick ofency. We don't have to
2:32:46
keep keep going on and on forever. But
2:32:49
I think it's important that we
2:32:52
do that. The contrast to that
2:32:54
is when you stay extremely online and
2:32:57
when we sort of touched on this with
2:32:59
h t, but it's important to talk about
2:33:01
it again. When you don't check-in with each other and
2:33:04
you don't you ever
2:33:06
have any contact at all, then
2:33:08
the because of the nature
2:33:10
of the Internet, the most minor
2:33:12
misperceptions about things said and done
2:33:14
online. And everybody does this, and
2:33:17
this is just what makes people
2:33:19
so sick, I think. Is it
2:33:21
it becomes it festers and
2:33:23
becomes resentment, and then it turns
2:33:25
into something people stew over. It's
2:33:27
like, that guy saw my post, but he didn't like it. He he saw
2:33:30
that I shared something,
2:33:32
but then he didn't
2:33:35
share it too. You know, like, you know,
2:33:37
other people and other organizations aren't sharing
2:33:40
my stuff. That means that they
2:33:42
don't like something about what I'm doing.
2:33:44
And it's and it's then it's perceived as
2:33:46
like I'm bad or I'm not you know,
2:33:48
every week we start talking about this with each
2:33:50
other and everybody has the kind of Same
2:33:53
thing. But if you stay in touch with
2:33:55
people and you're talking to people and you're
2:33:57
checking in with them, then there then there it eliminates the
2:33:59
ability for bad blood. Jews
2:34:02
do so well with
2:34:05
online DNC, divide and
2:34:07
conquer campaigns. Because they predicate
2:34:10
that on these people only maintain
2:34:12
contacts online, and there are very easy
2:34:14
ways that we can disrupt them by
2:34:17
stirring dissent, stirring disagreement, causing problems. And
2:34:19
the fake gas stove shit is an example of a Finkle
2:34:21
fight where they just do this shit and distract people. And we're
2:34:24
not gonna go
2:34:27
down a rabbit hole with that. But that's fake,
2:34:29
just so people know. That's all fake. Like, they they wanted they they we we could be talking about that. We could be talking about antisemitism. We'd
2:34:31
talk about all these other things. We're
2:34:37
gonna talk about gas yes, gas stoves or no gas stoves, the
2:34:39
blood blue red
2:34:42
versus whatever. And getting people to to be
2:34:44
at each other throats is very easy if the only
2:34:46
way that you contact each other and keep in contact is
2:34:50
online. And by preventing white nationalists
2:34:52
and anti semites from uniting around
2:34:55
a common cause, you
2:34:57
know, ignoring the minor differences
2:34:59
don't throw the baby out with the
2:35:01
bathwater. And, you know, trying to trying to just work with each other where we can, support each other's efforts where there's a
2:35:04
common good. And
2:35:09
leaving all the the nitpicking aside,
2:35:12
then that's overwhelmingly positive
2:35:14
for us and negative for
2:35:16
Jews. Now, I will say,
2:35:18
Whenever you start building unity, like if that's our goal to start building unity,
2:35:20
which was done in twenty
2:35:22
sixteen, twenty seventeen, that's what
2:35:24
unite the right was, culmination
2:35:26
of trying to unite people. People.
2:35:29
You will get Jews doing
2:35:31
DDoS and doing now
2:35:33
it's gonna increase people' Jewish
2:35:36
presence and gay ops and whatever
2:35:38
else. We can expect that, but we know
2:35:40
how to handle them. We've been around for a long time. And,
2:35:42
you know, to the Jews that that hate listen to this show,
2:35:47
It's like, we we know you're coming when we
2:35:49
see we see you coming from a mile away. When
2:35:51
somebody shows up in our chats and tries to cause descent and cause all this proud like
2:35:55
we know who you are and you're
2:35:57
removed. So you're not gonna you're not gonna succeed. We're gonna band
2:35:59
together and we're gonna fight. And
2:36:02
we're not gonna we're not gonna just sort of
2:36:05
be in our own separate thing. Like, we're we're trying to, like, steal market share from each other, and it's
2:36:07
a zero sum game and all that shit. Because it's not gonna work. It's
2:36:13
not gonna work. And one of the things
2:36:15
that I wasn't expecting with
2:36:18
this with HD Fash
2:36:20
having him on and and talking about this
2:36:22
stuff, which is was just genuine. This
2:36:25
is not a marketing strategy. Again, I
2:36:27
wanna say it. It resulted in people
2:36:29
from other groups getting in touch with
2:36:32
me and wanting to have a conversation.
2:36:34
And I have, like, an hour long
2:36:36
phone call with a guy on Thursday night,
2:36:38
I think. And it was for another group I had heard of, but didn't
2:36:43
didn't know much about. And I had
2:36:45
to talk with him and found
2:36:47
out we a hell a more in common we that's different. And not just
2:36:49
about ideology, about, like, you
2:36:52
know, how we how we
2:36:54
organize, how we do things the
2:36:57
the safeguards we take. I thought one
2:36:59
of the funniest things when I met
2:37:02
FTN the first time was a couple hours into the conversation, we started comparing
2:37:04
notes. FTN
2:37:07
the different types of online tendencies that
2:37:09
you see with people, and the people that you have to you
2:37:11
have to sort of like you
2:37:14
know, the the all the gay ops
2:37:16
that you see, but also just like the
2:37:18
the types of, you know, negative, I don't know, attributes that sort of develop when people spend too much time online.
2:37:24
And he's like and you guys even have a
2:37:26
name for them, Lightswitch Brain. And I was like,
2:37:28
yeah. Exactly. Like, and, you know, once you learn what
2:37:30
it is, then you then you don't do it anymore.
2:37:32
But It's just There's so much about this and there's
2:37:34
no reason. It's something you said a long time
2:37:37
ago Warren. It's like, you know, you're a
2:37:39
second generation in this. And there's no reason
2:37:41
why you have to learn, relearn all the
2:37:44
lessons that your father learned. Like,
2:37:46
you don't need to start from zero.
2:37:48
Nobody needs to start from zero. Were building a
2:37:50
thing. As soon as I said that the HTs, like you see, that's exactly right, brother.
2:37:53
That's what we have to do. I want my son
2:37:56
to stand on my shoulders. Just like you're standing on
2:37:58
your father's shoulders and so on because that's that's the
2:38:01
only working together is part of it.
2:38:04
But also working together multi generate generationally
2:38:06
and FTN passing things
2:38:08
on. The guy that I That's
2:38:10
how the Jews did it. I mean,
2:38:12
like, I hate go there, but that's that's like,
2:38:14
they everything that they do, Jared Kushner, you
2:38:19
know, is is generations of Jamie
2:38:21
Raskin. He's a great example. Of of that's why
2:38:23
they're so good at what they do because they they don't have to
2:38:27
relearn the same lessons that they've learned over and
2:38:29
over again. I'm sorry. Keep going. Oh, no. It's
2:38:31
true though. I mean, there's a reason why Jared Kushner would around
2:38:36
with Charles Kushner, his father,
2:38:38
Afhelan, on speakerphone in his pocket because his father was listening to
2:38:42
all the conversations that were taking place
2:38:44
and then giving Jared advice on what
2:38:46
to do. Jared really is a retard. I mean, if you hear him talk, he's a retard. He's a Jew. And
2:38:48
he's he's got Jewish instincts, but, you
2:38:50
know, his father is really the you
2:38:53
know, and then Jews always have this
2:38:55
problem with, like, you know, passing the nepotism.
2:38:57
And because if there's to be a genius
2:38:59
FTN be powerful and effective, that's the
2:39:02
thing about, like, like, for instance, are
2:39:04
having a problem with the newer generation
2:39:06
never having to fight or work hard
2:39:08
for
2:39:08
anything. So They got diaper baby
2:39:11
shit. So it's like They are. But my my point is that my point is that it's
2:39:12
like yeah. My my bone
2:39:14
bone is with me. It's like,
2:39:16
I I used to have an
2:39:18
attitude when I was much
2:39:20
younger. I
2:39:21
I thought especially at the
2:39:22
start of the well, not even when I was
2:39:24
that much younger, but at the start of the old right, I
2:39:26
had an attitude. Sometimes I would have, like, an attitude, like,
2:39:29
Oh, yeah. Oh, you what? You just discovered
2:39:32
Rockwell. You just discovered Hitler. I knew about this shipper. And
2:39:34
then, you know, I outgrew that pretty quickly where I was like, wow. Holy
2:39:36
crap. All
2:39:39
these guys are coming going
2:39:42
through this Red Pill process that my father went through. Yes. And and I I
2:39:44
never went
2:39:48
through it because I didn't have to go through it. So,
2:39:50
you know, people like what I have to say and
2:39:53
a lot of insights sometimes that I have, but
2:39:55
there are things that I cannot take whole credit for
2:39:57
them, and they're not just things that my dad told me either. This
2:39:59
stuff that he and I
2:40:02
discovered together, you know, or that he discovered through
2:40:04
a process, or I discovered through a process, But
2:40:06
that's the thing is when you have hopefully, you
2:40:09
know, all our are you I
2:40:11
guess, we can't call a red die
2:40:13
diaper babies, but I don't wanna call them brown diaper
2:40:15
babies either. But
2:40:18
when you have a a whole
2:40:21
generation of young people, that will bear up and coming in
2:40:23
this baby boom we're experiencing right now. And not all of them
2:40:27
are gonna stay with us, you know, politically, but
2:40:29
or a world view wise, but The more people that are exposed to these things
2:40:31
and these ideas and don't
2:40:33
have to unlearn. One of
2:40:36
the things Nathan and Demigo
2:40:38
and I were talking about we we
2:40:40
talked about this last night
2:40:43
privately is just how long
2:40:45
it took him to
2:40:47
unlearn the basic like, inhibition against racism. And
2:40:50
and how long it took him?
2:40:52
How many books he
2:40:53
had?
2:40:53
You say Nathan or h t?
2:40:55
Nathan. Domingo. Oh. This is
2:40:55
too. Yeah. but we weren't yeah.
2:40:57
What what Nathan and I were talking
2:40:59
about this, and he said how many
2:41:01
books he had to read before he
2:41:03
really Fash, like, convinced.
2:41:06
Yes. Race is real. And and and
2:41:08
racism is sort of, you know, it's kind of a
2:41:10
natural thing. And it was funny because I said, like, any
2:41:14
two year old child can see that
2:41:16
race is real. I mean, it's one
2:41:18
of the most basic obvious things the sky is blue. But
2:41:22
but the the the prop again
2:41:24
and brainwashing is so thick. So
2:41:26
if you scrape all that away and then you have
2:41:28
intergenerational knowledge. It's
2:41:30
passed down. Everyone doesn't You
2:41:32
don't have to depend on Jesus, and
2:41:34
you can have a guy like Sherrod
2:41:38
Kushner FTN leaving aside Jewish Dynex and the
2:41:40
fact that there are these Jews that are that are kind of,
2:41:42
you know, not as sharp as they once were leaving that aside. A
2:41:48
Jew like Jonathan Greenblatt. Jonathan
2:41:50
Greenblatt's not stupid. He's not like the Napoleon of Jews.
2:41:55
You know what I mean? He's not
2:41:57
wasting his time. Jared were a pro
2:41:59
a prodigy, Charles would still be on speakerphone in his pocket.
2:42:02
Because -- Yeah. -- the dad would need
2:42:04
that they would want to make sure that
2:42:07
I mean, why would you if you if you had the ability to double check
2:42:11
stuff and make sure that it was exactly
2:42:13
what you wanted when the whole or
2:42:15
like your whole existence on wouldn't take the extra step? Right?
2:42:19
Yes. I mean, exactly. That's the lesson there.
2:42:21
And and that's the thing. It's like our existence let me put it in
2:42:24
these terms. Our
2:42:27
existence and our ability to
2:42:29
succeed depends on the decisions that we make today. And the
2:42:31
decision to unify and unite with
2:42:36
other people, the decision to make
2:42:38
sure that this information gets passed on
2:42:41
to the next generation. Those are make
2:42:43
it or break it fundamental things. Now
2:42:45
people can choose one of those and then do a purity spiral on
2:42:47
whether or not you
2:42:50
should or should not do this, and then
2:42:52
it just becomes retarded. Just like you're doing a
2:42:54
purity spiral on fake stones or not, when the the
2:42:58
narrative there is really very simple. But
2:43:00
you have to act as though you
2:43:02
won't have another opportunity. Right? You you know, the the they always to
2:43:06
keep you involved sort of invested in finkle
2:43:09
thing, they always tell you. This is the most important election
2:43:11
of our lifetimes. How many times have you
2:43:14
heard
2:43:14
that?
2:43:15
Exactly. Central threat,
2:43:16
yeah, to democracy, and this will this
2:43:18
will determine the whole future of everything. Yeah. Yeah. Right. and whether or
2:43:24
not Tuesday and powers what what they really
2:43:26
mean. Right? It's because if they if they have a successful election in democracy one, then it's like,
2:43:28
well, yeah, then Jews one.
2:43:30
When democracy loses, that means
2:43:32
the Jews didn't get a
2:43:34
say so in the process. That's what
2:43:36
we're going for because they shouldn't have
2:43:39
a say so. So ultimately, I think I
2:43:41
think this is a a good thing. I
2:43:43
think it's positive and we're
2:43:46
looking forward to future engagements and endeavors
2:43:48
throughout the
2:43:48
year. It's good you had Nathan. We're gonna
2:43:50
have more guests on this show. Yes.
2:43:53
We're gonna He's gonna be
2:43:55
a big guest year. Yes. Yes.
2:43:57
Big guest year. And very positive. And
2:44:00
this is because as we're wrapping
2:44:02
up here, we don't have much more time. We don't have
2:44:04
time to go into the study, but we'll end on a white pill. I like
2:44:06
we were gonna start with a white pill but what end on a white
2:44:08
pill. And
2:44:10
the white pill is this study that came out from
2:44:12
the ages. We can cover it for let's let's if
2:44:14
we can can we take I can take
2:44:17
five minutes to cover this if you want. Let's let's
2:44:19
I won't talk about
2:44:20
it. You just tell the good news. Oh, Brett. I just wanna give the I'll
2:44:22
give the preamble and you react react to it. So we'll we'll do five minutes to this.
2:44:26
So anti Semitic attitudes in America,
2:44:29
top line findings. Well, TLDR, it's getting a lot worse for them
2:44:31
and a lot better for us. Over
2:44:36
three quarters of Americans, eighty five percent,
2:44:39
believe at least one anti
2:44:41
Semitic
2:44:41
trope. Let me say that again.
2:44:43
Eighty five percent of
2:44:45
Americans. And it's not over three quarters. It's it's actually what
2:44:47
is that? Over five
2:44:50
sixths. Is that how that goes?
2:44:52
Yes. Five sixths. So I'll take five, six, over
2:44:55
three fourths, believe at least one anti
2:44:58
Semitic troop as opposed to sixty
2:45:00
one percent in twenty nineteen. Twenty percent
2:45:02
COVID has not been good for people, not been good. People sat
2:45:06
at home. I said this. People sat at
2:45:08
home. They got they were not on the hamster
2:45:10
wheel. They were not focused on other things. They got to focus on the Internet
2:45:15
and shit on the Internet. And, you know,
2:45:17
it was Was people becoming red pill during lockdowns part of your
2:45:20
plan? Jews?
2:45:23
Twenty percent of Americans believe
2:45:25
six or more tropes. Six or more tropes, which
2:45:27
is I love how
2:45:29
they have to create this language. It's
2:45:31
so weird to, like, they believe in tropes.
2:45:33
These people believe in tropes, and these people believe in
2:45:36
more tropes, and then these other
2:45:38
people believe in even more tropes. It's like, you
2:45:40
know, it's just easier to say that eighty five
2:45:42
percent found out one thing that's true about Jews, and
2:45:46
that's up from sixty one percent.
2:45:48
Well, twenty percent of people believe in six things that
2:45:50
are found about or they found out about six
2:45:54
that's not believing because that implies you have faith
2:45:56
in something that you can't prove. Right? I have a
2:45:58
belief. It's like, I don't have a belief in antisemitism. It's something I know. It's
2:46:03
something I've experienced. I see it. We
2:46:05
all see it. Nobody has been Nobody except Jews themselves
2:46:07
have been immune to this. Actually, that's not true. Jews
2:46:10
are so corrosive
2:46:12
that they even
2:46:14
destroy their own people. This
2:46:17
is what a lot of the
2:46:19
fighting that's going on in Israel
2:46:21
is about as well because too
2:46:23
much homosexuality, too much of this
2:46:25
has led to collapse and birth rates and
2:46:27
drug problems and everything else. So Jews are even corrosive to the
2:46:29
they're they're even bad. There's such a cancer that they're even cancer to
2:46:31
their own people. And
2:46:35
so this this is eleven percent
2:46:37
which is up significantly more than eleven percent that the ADL
2:46:39
found in twenty nineteen. And
2:46:43
they have findings going back to the
2:46:46
nineteen sixties. I would love to see going back to the nineteen forties and the nineteen thirties. What am
2:46:48
I would
2:46:52
have looked like during the the the
2:46:54
only true America first movement that there's
2:46:57
ever been. But this is fantastic. I
2:46:59
just wanna reiterate what I said
2:47:01
on telegram about this is that, you know, because I think, you know, I
2:47:03
could we could say
2:47:06
and say, this is all because of us
2:47:08
and what we've done our organization and we're
2:47:10
the ones we've been waiting for and all that stuff. And I mean, obviously,
2:47:14
we support ourselves. We like the ideas
2:47:17
that we've come up with and this is what
2:47:19
we're
2:47:19
doing. So, obviously, that's like a priori. Everybody understands that. But what
2:47:23
I said on telegram is is also
2:47:25
important because I think
2:47:26
people when they're doing the little steps because they don't see the immediate result
2:47:29
from the little steps
2:47:31
because people have been
2:47:33
conditioned to get immediate
2:47:36
instant gratification. They get discouraged.
2:47:38
And so I just want
2:47:40
to reiterate that this
2:47:42
upswing in antisemitism didn't just happened
2:47:44
because naturally it happens naturally, but
2:47:46
not because we didn't help in
2:47:48
the process and not because you
2:47:51
didn't help in the process. Every comment that
2:47:53
you've made, every person that you've
2:47:55
red pill, every risk that you've taken to
2:47:57
get vetted, to go out, explain your views,
2:47:59
do a protest, gotten
2:48:02
into somebody's tweet and ratio that you
2:48:04
shared a link, you wrote an article, you donated
2:48:06
to a cause, it's all made a difference. And if
2:48:10
think, oh, what difference does my x amount of
2:48:12
dollars make? Or what does my because this isn't really about money, so
2:48:14
I didn't wanna focus on that. But what what difference does me getting into a common and adding another
2:48:20
thing that the pile do. Well, people see the
2:48:23
ratios. You wouldn't have ratios without
2:48:25
people going in and piling on a
2:48:27
common. So people have to pile I
2:48:29
think it's important. And I think this is how you
2:48:31
raise awareness. And the fact
2:48:34
that this has happened in spite of
2:48:36
censorship, in spite of curtailing a
2:48:38
free speech, this is happening in spite of white people having no real political representation
2:48:41
in America. We've done
2:48:44
this together collectively. And
2:48:47
by we, I mean, all white
2:48:49
people who are dissidents who are fighting in
2:48:51
some way, regardless of what are dissident differences
2:48:53
are, not to include gay ops, not to
2:48:55
include bad actor. The people that
2:48:57
are actually fighting this thing. We've all
2:48:59
done this together, and it isn't isolates, it
2:49:01
is the people on the grass roots, on the
2:49:04
ground
2:49:04
level, who do this day
2:49:06
in and day out. We
2:49:07
It's you. It's everyone listening to this. Look to
2:49:09
everybody. Yeah. Too. Yeah. Yeah. And it's so extreme don't take it the wrong way when we say
2:49:12
extremely online. FTN
2:49:15
doesn't mean get offline and never go back.
2:49:17
It means use it to your advantage. Use it so that it's productive. Do things like this
2:49:19
because this is how people learn
2:49:24
about the truth. But don't but
2:49:26
but if it's causing the disharmony and division and whatever, then then then you have to cut that drive cut it off.
2:49:28
But but
2:49:33
this is a huge white pill. They're very upset about this. And
2:49:35
it's This is all this
2:49:38
is all what we've been doing. If we
2:49:40
spent all of this time arguing about finkle fight
2:49:42
shit about gas stoves or fake or not
2:49:44
fake or whatever, none of this would move
2:49:46
the needle. So anyway, go ahead, That that
2:49:48
was
2:49:48
why. Well, well, yeah, I'll just say, you you
2:49:51
the one the best thing
2:49:53
about was the where is it the
2:49:55
headline? What this headline was? From the
2:49:57
Washington Post. Survey finds, quote,
2:50:00
classical fascist,
2:50:02
unquote, anti Semitism views
2:50:04
widespread in US. And it
2:50:06
says that this point in the half century, many many
2:50:08
US anti Semitism experts thought we had
2:50:10
a long time to go through the
2:50:13
old thing. We can actually re we
2:50:15
pick this up again. But many US anti
2:50:17
Semitism experts thought this country could be
2:50:19
aging out of
2:50:20
it. It was fading because younger
2:50:22
Americans held more accepting view than did older
2:50:25
ones. And the big thing that
2:50:27
they found is that one of the
2:50:29
one of the widespread findings of the report is
2:50:31
that anti Semitism
2:50:34
One of the findings of this report,
2:50:36
I'm sorry, is that antisemitism in that
2:50:38
classic conspiratorial sense is far more widespread than anti Israel sentiment. So it's not just anti Israel
2:50:43
and it's young people. Young people are the ones
2:50:45
that are coming to this. And of course, they
2:50:47
because ninety Americans right destroy FTN.
2:50:53
And seventy nine percent agreed Israel is a strong US
2:50:55
ally in the Middle East.
2:50:57
So the propaganda on that is still
2:50:59
true. But then forty percent at least slightly
2:51:01
agreed Israel treats Palestinians like Nazi's treated Jews,
2:51:04
blah blah blah blah. But
2:51:06
then you get to the other stuff
2:51:08
where it's where is it? Where
2:51:10
it's talking about how do Jewish power.
2:51:17
Here it
2:51:19
is. Yeah. The survey found seven in ten Americans believe Jews
2:51:21
stick together more than other
2:51:23
Americans do and that more
2:51:25
than one third think Jews
2:51:27
don't share their value. Use
2:51:29
and like to be at the head of
2:51:31
things. One in five Jews believe Jews have too
2:51:33
much power in the United States. Don't care what happens to
2:51:36
others and more willing
2:51:38
than other Americans to use, quote, shady
2:51:40
practices to get what they want.
2:51:42
You know, these are just like manifestly
2:51:44
true. I mean, these are so self evident.
2:51:46
Anyone who knows anything about Jews or has
2:51:49
studied this issue for one hour knows that
2:51:51
that's true. And four in ten Americans believe it's mostly somewhat true Jews are
2:51:53
more loyal to Israel and
2:51:55
America. So what they're saying
2:51:58
is that all their propaganda about
2:52:00
Israel is still holding
2:52:02
in the United States to some
2:52:04
extent. The United States is an outlier
2:52:06
among almost every country in the world
2:52:09
and that the US still registers,
2:52:11
like, higher opinions of Israel. The
2:52:13
rest of the world hates Israel, even
2:52:15
Europe, even Europeans. FTN Europe
2:52:17
FTN Europe, a lot of even
2:52:19
Western European countries, people who would be very scared
2:52:22
to signal against Jews have no problem saying that they're against
2:52:24
Israel. So
2:52:27
America is somewhat of an outlier
2:52:29
in that respect, but what they're
2:52:31
saying is that keeping artificially Israel
2:52:34
opinions high in America, just opinions
2:52:37
of Jews are deteriorating across the board, which is hilarious.
2:52:39
But I love that headline of classical,
2:52:43
fascist, anti Semitic views are widespread
2:52:45
in the US. Everything they try to do to stop this
2:52:47
makes it worse.
2:52:50
What would
2:52:51
what would a classical antisemitism
2:52:53
be? Well, I'm kind of a
2:52:54
connoisseur of post modern antisemitism. Right. Right. Right. Yeah. Yeah.
2:53:00
Yeah.
2:53:00
I'm more of a I'm not I'm not so
2:53:02
much a classical fact. I'm more of a
2:53:06
baroque. Yeah. I want I want the
2:53:08
headline, the romantic romantic romantic of fascist
2:53:10
views. I am I am actually
2:53:14
AAA an
2:53:16
anti Semitism of antiquity. Enjoy
2:53:18
I am a -- Yeah. -- emperor Titus and the destruction of the second temple,
2:53:23
enjoyer. Right. That is the type of
2:53:25
anti sentimentism that I invited your anti Semitism. Yes.
2:53:27
It's really funny. I guess
2:53:29
classical is like the what they
2:53:31
mean by that in reality is, like,
2:53:34
the the the the usual the usual
2:53:36
things that they say about it. It's
2:53:38
so good. Old
2:53:39
school. Yeah. It's just no. It
2:53:41
just means that it's, like, it's how I
2:53:43
read that is this isn't anti
2:53:46
zionism. You know, this
2:53:48
isn't leftist saying, well,
2:53:51
zionist are bad because they're a form of white supremacist colonialism in the Middle East. And
2:53:53
this isn't, you
2:53:56
know, Christian anti
2:53:58
Semitism of of, like, the
2:54:01
old school where it's like, well, these people need
2:54:03
to back to Jesus. Yeah. They need to. Yeah.
2:54:05
Well, they well, not you know, not even they killed people,
2:54:07
but it's like they need to even
2:54:10
burger converted -- Yeah. -- on numbers.
2:54:12
And they and they call that a,
2:54:14
you know, Jews for Jesus is anti Semitism in their opinion. You know,
2:54:18
So this isn't When when they
2:54:20
say classical fascist and anti Semitic views,
2:54:22
it's not oh, Jews need to convert
2:54:25
Christianity so they can be saved.
2:54:27
It's not, oh, Zionist are white
2:54:29
supremacist colonizers in the Middle
2:54:30
East. This is the Jews are a biologically distinct
2:54:35
group in the United States who
2:54:37
all stick together and have an
2:54:39
agenda to control things and use all the same The intellectual intellectual antisem
2:54:41
FTN is
2:54:44
-- Yeah. -- is what they see. Exactly. And
2:54:46
as as, you know, many of us are some of them that points the finger at them and knows what they
2:54:51
and exactly what the problem is and doesn't
2:54:53
dress it up or confuse it. Yeah. I mean, Charles Bauzmann
2:54:55
said to me one time, a long time ago. That
2:54:59
because when he came out and, you know,
2:55:01
with Fash insider and declared that -- Oh, I remember -- he
2:55:03
was gonna stop talking about he's
2:55:06
gonna stop talking in euphemisms, and they
2:55:08
were just gonna name the shoe. And
2:55:10
it led to a lot of a lot of problems for Charles because, you know, obviously, he's doing
2:55:15
something that was more not not
2:55:17
mainstream, but just, you know, when you when you go from doing euphemisms to
2:55:20
just, like, mask
2:55:23
off causes a lot of problems.
2:55:25
But he said, you know, to me one time
2:55:27
that the the thing is that
2:55:30
Jews fear the most is is
2:55:32
intellectual antisemitism and that we have to
2:55:34
focus on that because it's, you know,
2:55:38
you see it with with HT when
2:55:40
he does Omega. The starting point is the
2:55:42
Jew is the greedy liar. Right? And everybody like, when you start
2:55:46
talking to people about it and he,
2:55:48
you know, HT puts the flyers up
2:55:51
in front of the camera. People know what he means when
2:55:54
they talk about, when he says Jews are
2:55:56
behind this. What are they greedy? Yeah. They're powerful. Yeah.
2:55:58
I get it. They control stuff. Right? I mean, everybody gets FTN, like, without
2:56:02
any a priori? What do you mean?
2:56:04
So they already get it. But it's the
2:56:06
understanding the deeds and what they're doing today and how it impacts you because I
2:56:12
think, you know, because of merit
2:56:14
what is it? Merrittocratic America. People think, well, the the best
2:56:19
should succeed. That means that I can be the billionaire.
2:56:21
It's like, no, you can't be the billionaire, shoes aren't
2:56:23
gonna let you be a billionaire. You're not allowed. You're not allowed to bootstrap yourself, Goy. So
2:56:27
they think, oh, but that's okay. Like, I
2:56:29
don't mind if they're a powerful people in
2:56:31
America. So you have to tell them about the disproportionate aspect of it. And
2:56:35
you have to get into all the evil that
2:56:37
they're doing. It's like, okay, it's not just that
2:56:39
they're using Yeah. dawns on people. So
2:56:44
it's the intellectual antisemitism.
2:56:46
I would say that the nationalism, naziism, that was
2:56:51
where it took a shift
2:56:53
from traditional Christian anti Semitism or opposition to Jews because of,
2:56:55
you know, a nascent intellectual
2:57:00
antisemitism into something that was like
2:57:02
a national movement in Germany. And
2:57:04
that's that's what we we have
2:57:06
to do and people have to
2:57:09
understand because I mean, look what they do. Look what they do with them and look
2:57:11
what they do with Republicans and Democrats and
2:57:14
Democrats and
2:57:15
Republicans. You have to like, Republicans think they
2:57:17
know all of the evil deeds of the Democrats.
2:57:19
Really well. Click okay. Cool. Now do that with shoes. And actually
2:57:23
gonna find things that you can verify and
2:57:25
the things that are happening in real time.
2:57:27
And things that are happening every single day. I mean, you you it's it's
2:57:31
my favorite thing to do is read
2:57:34
Jewish media. And like the Israeli or Israel times of Jewish
2:57:38
Daily Forward and whatever, and
2:57:40
just get confirmation bias. Like, from everything
2:57:42
that they're writing because they tell you what they're doing. It's
2:57:46
really yeah. Once you understand this
2:57:48
thing, it's like you you can't not
2:57:50
see it. And it's not that it's the only thing that we see. It's that, I mean, at
2:57:55
least the thing that is causing a
2:57:57
problem. Typically, it's who who's in power? Who's in charge of it? Right? Yeah. So
2:58:00
Yeah. Yeah. Because I will
2:58:02
say, when things are going
2:58:04
well in a particular industry
2:58:07
or in a particular
2:58:08
policy, and
2:58:09
Jews are not involved, guess
2:58:12
what's always happening? What
2:58:14
is always happening in that
2:58:16
organization? If there's an organization out there
2:58:18
that is not Jewish and is doing well,
2:58:20
what happens? What are Jews trying to
2:58:21
do? I mean, it's a rhetorical question, but what are Jews trying
2:58:23
to do? Trying
2:58:26
to take it over, trying to support control,
2:58:28
trying to get involved, trying to get involved. And
2:58:30
so when things are going bad and there are problems,
2:58:32
What what's
2:58:33
going on? Who's in charge? Yeah. Especially
2:58:36
when the problems are a disadvantage for you, it's
2:58:38
a problem for you and and good for them.
2:58:41
So -- Yes. --
2:58:43
anyway --
2:58:44
Yeah. Yeah. -- Warren is giving
2:58:46
short answers because he's gotta go. I gotta go. Yeah. But, yeah, we can
2:58:51
We will see everybody next week. Good show and Yeah.
2:58:53
We're gonna have this is gonna be a good year. We're off to You thought this was gonna be two and a half hours and we were just gonna get out
2:58:55
of here. Oh, we'll run
2:59:01
of stuff to talk about and then I'll go and yeah.
2:59:03
Yeah. Right. No. No. It
2:59:06
never happens. Alright, guys. See you later.
2:59:09
Have a good weekend. See.
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