NNR ֍ EPISODE 1000 SPECIAL! ֍ FEATURING SPECIAL GUESTS: WHITE RABBIT RADIO, RED ICE TV, BLACK PILLED - 10/03/2024
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The 1000th episode of Night Nation Review is a special milestone stream featuring Nicholas Gregory and guests from White Rabbit Radio, Red Ice TV, and Black Pilled. The discussion covers the evolution of dissident right media, the challenges of organizing and sustaining pro-White communities, and the current state of Western politics and society. Topics include the impact of demographic change, the role of technology and media censorship, the importance of building resilient communities, and strategies for activism and survival in a hostile system. The stream also features reflections on personal journeys, audience engagement, and the future of the movement.Intro
00:00:23 Bye Welcome back to Night Nation Review. This is Night Nation Review, and We are live to you. You00:01:39 This installation of your mind, streaming every night, bringing you details of the fight we are the nation, the nation of the night.
00:02:09 Focused on our fight. We do our best to get it right. There is nothing to do but win. This is our third high definition of the
00:02:52 we welcome
00:03:00 you to
00:03:06 to the Night nation
00:03:14 review, we will come you To nation
00:03:36 of you, we welcome you.
00:03:59 We welcome you.
Nicholas Gregory
00:04:27 All right, welcome, welcome. Welcome, everybody. Welcome to the show. Welcome back. I hope you're doing well. This is a big one. This is indeed the big one. This is the 1,000th episode of Knight nation. Review, 1000 episodes, four years in the making. Here we are. Whew, yeah. So top it all off. I had actually a special intro planned and some other stuff. And unfortunately, this morning, my computer decided to do commit. Computer. Sipiku, again. So, yeah, that's great, but thankfully, thankfully, we have, I have the secondary machine. It's perfectly good, and I had to spend all day getting everything together. But I think we're good to go. And that's, uh, that's important. You know, I'm that's why, that's why I own two machines, right? Redundancy. 00:05:19 But welcome. I'm glad you're here. As you can see on this schedule, I invited people on the show, people that I respect a lot, people that helped me along the way, people that inspired how I do things, people that inspired the way I approach these things. And I have a great amount of respect and appreciation for them all for coming so as you can see, we have a schedule here, so I'm going to kind of just do a little bit of an intro here, and Tim will be by shortly, and then we'll, we'll get moving. Oh, there he is, the legend in the chat right now, but the legendary support as well. I got to get the support thing. I think that's missing too.
00:05:59 The struggle is to keep persevering when your computer decides to die, right? But a big salute to timing. Gosh, it's supporting more way than one here, I guess. But thank you, Tim. I appreciate you sir. And let me, let me actually, since we Devon got started yet, let's go ahead and address some questions, commentary, whatever people have said, the way I'm going to do it tonight is I'm gonna do a little more the way, kind of Devon does it. But I Devon does it, but I'm not going to do it just at the end. I'm going to do it at the end of each segment. That way it doesn't break up the contents and break up the discussion, but it's also soon enough that it's if you say something, it's still connected to whatever you were responding to, right? So let's, uh, let's see what people said already, and then we will. Probably should lead us up into about the time.
00:06:42 But yes, it's very cool. I'm very, very excited. In spite of what happened with the computer, I'm still very stoked. So welcome everybody to Knight nation. Review 1000 All right, let's see what people said. Let's see what people said in reality. He says, here's 1000 pennies for 1000 episodes to get the party started. Well, thank you. In reality, let me pop these out. Actually, I was scrambling here to get this together. I was like, I cannot let this f up. This has to be this has to go forward at all costs. I believe ftj is down, though. Also house cleaning note there, I was just gonna keep it to those, these three platforms, just so that I can focus on what we're doing here. I don't have to be overwhelmed, because the more you add, the more overwhelming it is.
00:07:30 But I hope everybody is here for fun. If there is any problems or whatever, let's leave that for another day. We'll figure it out on another day. Today is a celebration day. Let's forget all whatever bullshit, and we can come back to that another time. Right now, though, let's just have some fun. Let's have some fun. I hope everybody is in the mood for that, because I am, I certainly am. So let's go ahead and do that. All right. Let's get back to this. Let me just sort some of this stuff out here. And Toto and Toto, big salute to in Toto. And toto has a special place in my heart as far as this show goes, because he was one of the people that helped fund the transition to higher production values. So big shout out to in Toto. He's a big part of why I'm here where I am.
00:08:14 Desi Mac, she says, howdy. Well, howdy, to you. Desi Mac, nice to see you. Um, Jay Fox, he says, Congrats. Well, thank you, Jay Fox, so look to you sir. Pure nomad. He says, 1488 Nick you've worked hard as fuck to get to 1000 shows. Caught you on Chihuahua, purely for fun game show a few years back. That is true. That is true. We called it. What do you call it? He called it, oh. Is it kvetch game? I think he had kvetch game. White Rabbit radio. He says, cheers to 1000 shows. Well, cheers to cheers to you. Tim, thank you, sir. You get the he got the double magic numbers. Double Magic numbers, you know what? Let me see if I can put these up. That'd be kind of cooler, right? I think that'd be cooler. Let's do that. Highlighted message. Copy this.
00:09:02 We might even have it up here already. Let's see if this works. Let's just try this. Nope, it's not up there. Okay, we can fix that. There's a thing we can fix. Okay, let's do that. All right, fix this up. Should give us a highlighted message here. So if we do that, one should show up. Told some things about this. So it should work a little. Yeah, it's not coming up, all right. I might have to just, I'm off to not, have to not do that this time. Well, it's unfortunate. It's kind of a cool thing. But any which way, let's, let's just go ahead and do it the old fashioned way. Let's just go and do it the old let's just go into it the old fashioned way. Where were we here? Pure Nomad salute, of course. Tim salute, sir, true boy, strong and free. He said, bone.
00:09:52 And Abraham said, Well, hell to you, sir. Hell to you. I. I'm trying to think of my French to respond to that, but it's very poor at this point, unused for a good decade and a half, something like that. Little more. Huntress, she says, Congrats on 1000 thank you for your hard work. Well, thank you. Huntress ketzer, 88 he says, Congratulations, looking forward to the show. 1,000x salute. Ketzer. Big support from Mr. Ketzer pug Lord speaketh. Mega support for Mr. Pug Lord. Speak as he said. He says, What a strange way to feel super bad and super good at the same time. It's your 1,000th episode, and had a good stash to save for you.
00:10:38 The fund drives for the flood victims bled me dry. I'll make it up to you. Well, that's okay, plug. Lord. Salute to you sir. Yeah, you know, man, we're gonna get into that. I'm sure everybody that's coming on tonight is some sort of white nationalist, pro white whatever you want to characterize that as. And what's happened in North Carolina is one of the big topics, because what we're seeing here, what we're seeing here is a real a real tragedy, obviously, but it's, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a brutal display of how careless this current system is for its white citizens. Despite the fact that we are should be at least the majority population, we should be a big plurality. At the very least, they should be concerned with what we care about. Theoretically, you know, if we are voting to get our government, they should care. But lo and behold, as we all well know, doesn't seem to be the case, does it doesn't seem to be its way it's working. Doesn't seem the way it's working, right? All right, okay. All right, let's
00:11:51 see. All right, where are we okay, and I think we're caught up. All right, excellent, awesome. Start, killer. Start, wow. Reneticate, I almost missed running. Okay, we're okay. She says, Congratulations on the 1000 Well, thank you. Renee Kate, thank you. Western says, I wish I could put these up. Man, I should be able to put these up. Oh, there it is. Okay, let's go. What's going on with this? Okay, you know, let's do that. Let's do that. All right, let me go ahead and do it this way. All right, sorry, I'm scrambled because everything got, like I said, everything got messed with here. Thank you computers.
00:12:27 They're ever so reliable, aren't they? Someday might get one of those, like, dedicated machines that only does streaming so it doesn't have the windows problem, right? I think that it's kind of the heart of a lot of our struggles. Let me go ahead and move over to this one. This is the co chair one. Salute to you as well. Frank. He said, since I have known you, Nick, you have been an effective speaker for the folk. Stay strong. Well, salute to you, Frank. Nice to see you too. Nice to see you too. Go back here. John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt, Vegas, here, welcome. I don't think I know you. So that's all the more inspiring that give mind blowing support there, right out of the gate. He says, Congrats on the milestone. Here's to 1000 here, Reich and 1000 more shows. Cheers.
00:13:15 Well, thank you. John Jacob Jingleheimer, spit, very generous of you, sir. And of course, public speaking, let me, let me go backwards a little bit here. MGC says, Congratulations. I'm glad you made it to the 1,000th episode. Been watching you since 2021 Oh, slash, my friend, brother, yeah, you know, man, I'll tell you. It does hurt a little bit right. Here, I stayed up like I finished watching Devon Stack last night, and instead of going to bed, I spent like, an hour and a half, two hours or something, editing a very special intro with all the like stages of the show overlaid onto it. Was this whole thing, right? And unfortunately, unfortunately, what happened was out of my control, and it didn't, didn't quite, didn't quite work out the way I would have liked to see it, right?
00:13:54 So that is what it is, right? That is what it is. But it would have been cool to be able to watch the whole flow. Let me actually quickly go back over a couple of these here, just to just to show them off. Pub Lord there again. Salute to you, sir. Tetzer, salute to you as well. Huntress, true boy, strong and free. The big, famous legend, white rabbit radio, there. White Rabbit radio, let me do something here. I think he's arrived, actually. Let me go ahead. Adam as a new input instead, that should be better. Okay, this little scrambled. Little scrambled, been here for long time, long time. We're doing a Kate salute. I'm gonna have spent about 10 hours in this chair, but time we're done trying to make it all, you know, make it all work at the end of the day.
00:14:47 All right, let me. Let me go back through them in the in the end as well, too. John Skywalker, he says, Oh, Devon's not here yet. Devon comes on. Let me show you guys the schedule. Let me go back to this other one here. Let's go back to this one real quick. So this is this. Schedule. Devon is on from 11pm to 1am this is a broad schedule. It's not like precise I mean, and I chose people also that generally already all know each other, so if there's a little bit of overlapping, there's no like, hostilities or whatever. But so intro is what I just did. Tim's gonna join me now, Henrik and Lana will be here, then Devon, then Warren's going to jump on in the very end to give a quick blessing. And I think then we're done. So that should be about now to 2am so there you go. That's the whole rundown. Let me go ahead and get Tim in here, because I think he's arrived. Let's see if we can adjust some things here. Okay, a little adjustments to be made. All right. All right. Tim, welcome, man,
Tim Murdock
00:15:45 what's going on? Nice to see you. It's fantastic to be here. Congratulations on 1000 episodes. Can you hear me?Nicholas Gregory
00:15:53 Okay, I can. I can let me get the things in. Also do this the right way. Hey, you sound good, man. Thank you. Thank you. I'm kind of buzzing from it.Tim Murdock
00:16:03 That's like a milestone. That's a milestone for sure. Most people don't stick around that long, much less get better and better.Nicholas Gregory
00:16:11 Yeah, amen, sir. I mean, there's a So, what do you want? You must be on, like, what, 4000 right now, of at least something like,Tim Murdock
00:16:18 probably, I want to say like 1200 videos, maybe. But I think, like actual video shows. I think as far as podcasts and everything, you're probably going like 5500 Wow, a handful. Well, there was a period of time with the paywall White Rabbit radio, which started in 2011 where I would do, we would do 30 minute segments, like six a week, Monday, Wednesday and Friday. So they would be like, kind of like one hour shows, but it'd be broken down. So it's kind of like, I don't know, it may be even more than that, because of how they how we used to go out, but you know, I'm typically known for a handful of large podcasts, but no, I've done a lot, done a lot of shows. I don't know how many shows I've done with other people. That's a whole nother number, I guess, but you'll get there.Nicholas Gregory
00:17:12 Wow, yeah, yeah. It, it happens, yeah, yeah. I don't know what people are doing with the chat there, but, uh, whatever. Yeah, you know, it's a thing that it's a thing that happens to, if you stick to it, you'll get there, you know, I it must be interesting. I've seen the evolution of this thing over all these years, right? It must have been quite a, quite a thing. What do you think about where it is now from where you started? Because there has been, like, quite a difference and quite a change in this time.Tim Murdock
00:17:48 Well, definitely the language and everything I've worked on is basically mainstream. People are talking about things mainstream. Bob's vision was to take white survival and just blast it. That's what he was using white genocide for. And if you put the focus on white survival, then all these other topics have to come be forced into the public sphere. And he was right about that. Yeah, about that, like the JQ. A lot of our guys wanted to handle the JQ first, but Bob's point was, No, you go white survival is just a matter of finding the particular message for white survival. And that's what he picked, white genocide, and we tested it out with phrases like anti racism, code word for anti white, our particular model. And anti white, of course, is used. 00:18:35 It's mainstream now. So yeah, he would be pretty well, I don't know. He was shocked when the like white genocide went top down and Hillary mentioned it in a speech that one of Hillary's speech writers mentioned it, because that's like an objective measure. Something goes from the bottom all the way to the top. It tells you it's into some type of saturation. It's just going to be marinating across society. But I mean, white survival is pretty much the topic all day long, on Twitter and everything else, from a variety of different standpoints. And it's moving quite along. We just have to survive it.
Nicholas Gregory
00:19:11 I think you're right, though. I think the idea was intelligent. It was a smart strategy to handle that first, because all these other things, these are functions of it, right? Like these are, well, at least, very least, they're connected to it, or products of it. So you have to get to these other sub topics by addressing that topic, right?Tim Murdock
00:19:31 Yeah, they're all relevant. Like, on our side, you would have some guys at the time. When I first started, it was either black on white crime stats and black on white crime which no one was really discussing in the mainstream. Now it's like all over everywhere, yeah, or you JQ, but we were like the third way, whose ideal was to spark white survival. And if you spark a conversation on white survival by putting the focus on our our death, meaning genocide, the. That coin, the phrase he coined or started using. And if you put the focus on that, which would later be like the great replacement, stuff like that, and these days are somewhat interchangeable, I realize, in America, but if you put the focus on that, then all these specialties come into view. All these topics come into the conversation because of the conversations white survival? Well, they're all become relevant.Nicholas Gregory
00:20:25 So since it has actually saturated to, like you said, to a pretty mainstream degree, how have you seen the attitude change about this, though? Because I do notice that a lot of, well, a lot of white people, especially younger ones, have become quite hip to this reality, and they understand how serious and how, like threatening this whole thing is. How else have you seen this change, especially with the older because I see, I see, at least from my perspective, I don't think the older people have caught up as much with it. They're still kind of struggling with it to sort of make to come to terms with it, I guess.Tim Murdock
00:21:00 Well, you have a new form of communication, and any type of new form of textbooks or new form of communication, or if we took control the TV, any way you want to look at it takes 15 to 20 years just to neutralize the old programming. The problem with the programming that most whites were faced with, brainwashing, if you will, is they were hit from all directions. If you go to the church, it's Jesus loves everyone, and you gotta adopt a little black kid for Jesus to come, or whatever message that particular church has. 00:21:31 If you go to the businesses, it's like, we're all equal units of production and replaceable. If you go to you go to the government, it's just like, you know, we're all Americans, but this type of thing was hit from every direction, so a lot of people are just gone mentally. You have a whole segment of the population. On the other hand, you have a lot of young people that came up under a new form of communication, like the internet and and the Internet pretty much just halted all the brainwashing. In a conventional sense, it really halted it. That's typically how new forms of communication works. Everything comes to a starts coming to a standstill and starts slowly reversing for everyone that it can reverse for really and so if you look out from like 95 the World Wide Web to where we are now, 2024 I mean, you're basically, you're just, you're just marinating and stuff, you're marinating.
00:22:26 And the, really, the only thing the enemy can do is they can try to throw out, maybe mixed stuff together, maybe mix topics together that don't belong, so on, so forth, etc. I'm thinking like, let's say Flat Earth with a Jewish question. Try to get the conspiracy stuff all just jammed in together to such an extent that it starts trying to confuse people. But they're just, you know, they're running on overtime into whatever events they have planned. They already have things planned. Obviously, they got things going in the Middle East, that's their main focus. They don't give a shit about us. Everyone already knows that you're on your own with an exclamation point. You know you're with your group and your your local community and and you have to pretty much, I think our people have always known, by and large, and a growing number, even if they're not racially aware, realize that this government is not going to help you at all, especially if you're white. I mean, if you're in a mixed raced area and you get hit by disaster, you're probably going to be okay. But if you're in a white area like Appalachia and you get hit by something, they don't
Nicholas Gregory
00:23:39 care some of the things we've seen with this have just been absolutely horrifying. I mean, it's they've just left these people basically to drown, to stew in it, to have no power, no electricity, no communication. This is a apocalyptic for this, this area and for these people, and you know, this is a heavily white area. Have you heard this story about this, though, where some people, it's very kind of conspiratorial, but they, I've seen some things where they're saying, basically, it's in the sort of weather mod, kind of camp, and there might be some truth to it. I mean, they've shown some patents and stuff that seem legit. But on top of that, there seems to be some lithium deposits in this region. And that's kind of the speculation, is that maybe this was kind of steered that way so as to do that. I think it's a little out there, but the mind seemed to be there.Tim Murdock
00:24:31 The funny thing is that there's such low trust that people are willing to believe this type of thing, because no one trusts the government. They can actually envision them doing it's called Disaster Capitalism, or just I call it capitalism, but where a disaster comes and certain parties use that as an advantage to grab land and resources, and it's as far as steering storms go. I mean, this type of technology, the patents. And whatnot have been out there. I talked about the other day the Air Force came out with a report that turned heads in the late 90s. Or was it 2000 we're going to own the weather in 30 years, or by 2030 and there's been a variety of different patents and various different stuff having do with these, like heart fields and that have been looked at. And they're pretty eye opening patents when it comes to storms, but we do not know what type of technology they really have, what they're willing to use. People can believe that they'd be willing to use it, because look at the response afterwards, right? But we we have, ultimately, no ideal, and Mother Nature is the ultimate mea culpa, right?Nicholas Gregory
00:25:42 Right? It's very depressing to watch, you know, because, I mean, there's a lot of, it's interesting because this, this area, is very sort of lefty, but it's all white people out here. I mean, for the most part, we were very, you know, it's a heavily white people area, and I think that kind of has to play a part, right, in their attitude towards just like, let it happen. If you look at the response of this versus the response of Katrina, I mean, it was pretty different, right?Tim Murdock
00:26:08 Absolutely, 100% Well, Katrina, they sat back 72 hours. It seemed like to me to see what would happen. And once the zombie apocalypse set in, they like, we better get down there before they start eating each other, for the blacks start eating each other outright, you know? Yeah. So it's one of those types of things. You know, I wasNicholas Gregory
00:26:31 gonna grab some footage of that because it was, it was pretty wild what happened there in Katrina. But you know, this one seems worse. I mean, people are talking about rivers that went 30 feet over the usual mark of their highest point and things like this. But, I mean, I think the demographics plays an issue. I think that they think there's the sacred black in America, right? And they definitely had a little bit of a motive to optically, to make this different. But I think you read about the zombie apocalypse, do they thought that this is going to be all out disaster if they just leave them on their own?Tim Murdock
00:27:05 Yeah, yeah. They the they're mentioning heart fields in the chat. There's a lot these particular phase to raise. There's quite a number on the planet now. There's quite a number of different parties playing with weather on any given day. And so we really don't know the results of all that on a planetary scale. But you can look up Japanese weather control, you can look up Asian heart field, you can look up these phased arrays. I just don't. We don't know the whole truth to it. We just don't. It's all speculation. And let me Mother Nature's ultimate mea culpa. You know, it's the ultimate excuse. It's an act of God, you know,Nicholas Gregory
00:27:45 it really is. It's not much, you know, they can say about that, but it would make an interesting weapon in that regard, right? Because everybody would think that it's if it were possible. I'm not going to say it's possible. I don't know. I've seen some things that sort of validate this, like patents and stuff, but I don't know how effective or reasonable, and I know, of course, I don't know that this was actually deployed in this, that or the other case, but it would be the ultimate weapon, in a sense, because it'd be so hard to prove that they did that at all, right.Tim Murdock
00:28:14 Oh, yeah. Well, 100% there might be signatures. For instance, we this type of thing would be the ultimate weapon to hit someone with as well, not necessarily. I mean, we're thinking in terms of the US government hitting its own citizens. In this case, the conspiracy goes that they're trying to get natural resources which are abundant. And you know, that was, that was the particular reasoning behind some of the Northern California fires, and the response to those is like, look, they want the land. And so it's hard to say, because there's so little trust, and we have a wicked group in power.Nicholas Gregory
00:28:52 Yeah, yeah. What's the saying? It's a country run. What is it your race of whatever. What's the state? You have a good phrase of that. I always forget it,Tim Murdock
00:29:00 though, oh, we belong to race of suckers, surrounded by traders and Jews.Nicholas Gregory
00:29:05 Yeah. Well, I mean, that exactly plays into it.Tim Murdock
00:29:09 People easily to take, easy to take advantage of. If you go back in time, I still remember my my father and grandfather could not believe anyone would actually sit on TV and tell lies. Was very impossible for for whites to believe that, because it's so much against our nature and culture,Nicholas Gregory
00:29:28 was this a high trust society where, I mean, they they could not imagine that people were so not worthy of trust that they would do something like that, that they would go out into the public sphere and intentionally try to deceive and distract, misdirect and disrupt, the kind of natural things that the public needed to know about. But yeah, lo and behold, you know, I guess as it sort of slowly slipped towards the low trust status. I mean, now it's just everybody expects that. It's all bullshit.Tim Murdock
00:30:00 Yeah. Yeah, 100% I just, I have no idea. Nothing would surprise me. I'm like everyone else. I just, there's no way to know. I mean, there's videos online of guys saying they can prove like they're steering the storms and stuff like that. I mean, if they actually have satellite lasers that can steer storms, the planets effed quite literally. They actually have that. I I have no idea what they have up there. You know, the US has so many satellites, but they're not the only game in town when it comes to weather control. A lot of others have been. The difference is, they're openly talking about it, whereas Washington doesn't necessarily talk about things. There's just a lot of unique patents out there and stuff,Nicholas Gregory
00:30:41 right, right? I mean, I think that a lot of this stuff, if it is real, and they keep a lot of this stuff that has military advantage under wraps. I mean, we don't, we don't know about it for a good long time, 100%Tim Murdock
00:30:55 you know that it only became a laughing issue when the Air Force released the paper. We're going to own the weather by 2030 or whatever it was like, Is that even possible own the weather? That's quite a statement. And it was kind of a more controversial statement to insurance companies, because if you're going to start playing with weather, well that's no longer an act of God. Insurance companies, the money guys were like, you know, that's where the controversy came. And then it pretty much got squelch, and you don't hear them too much about it anymore. Then they were pulling out, you know, different patents on harp, weather control patents dealing with these phased arrays and hell. I mean, it just probably would be one giant experiment until they get it perfected. But who knows? I don't know.Nicholas Gregory
00:31:44 I've noticed there's a lot of these on Twitter x where there's, like, I mean, it's, I guess it's probably everywhere, bit shoot and whatever. But there's a lot of the people making these kind of things and saying this and showing, you know, here's the patent, and it's interesting.Tim Murdock
00:32:00 It's out there. It's been out there for years and years. We just don't know what they're doing with it or and by the way, the challenge is that that everyone has the every all the powers that be have these phase to raise now. So, you know, you start playing God, and you start going down this road, a lot of things can go wrong when you start messing with weather on a planetary scale, and you have all these different inputs, all these different stimuli and inputs from all these different large players starting to mess around with this stuff. We really don't know the effects you get into the Russian discussion on GMOs and why they have them banned genetically modified organisms, and it's just their response is, we just don't know the effects. We just don't know. And you're gambling, you're gambling. But we would have to have someone like the Russians tell us, if they can, you know, can they steer a storm with lasers from satellites? I have no idea. Can you increase the storm or decrease the storm? There are those that say that the technology is not all that sophisticated. I don't know, though.Nicholas Gregory
00:33:12 Yeah, this is, this is the trouble I usually have with with this stuff, right? Is some of it seems like it could be legit, but a lot of it probably isn't, and it's near impossible to pick through it, right? It's theTim Murdock
00:33:26 Russians, but, but, like, you know, I mean, that would be one example of a large player that probably could tell us if what's up with that storm. I'm sure the Japanese could as well. They're pretty sophisticated when it comes to this type of thing. This is, like, this is the direction warfare is really going. Is crazy stuff like down this particular road. It seems like to me, scalar, you know, making lithium batteries potentially blow up, or whatever, you know, if they can do stuff like that. Who knows, but you're dealing with this type of, this type of scalar, non local type interferences that standing waves, and this type of thing, which I'm no specialist on. I've read some stuff on it, I've seen the particular theories on it, but we're, they're never going to tell us, ever, ever, because you want to use it to mess with us. Yeah.Nicholas Gregory
00:34:27 I mean, the thing about messing with nature, though, isn't that that's the dumbest thing you could do, though, is to humans don't know what they're doing, that we don't have this kind of wisdom baked into the process that nature has, and if we go monkeying with it, it's never going to end. Well, I don't know how that could possibly end.Tim Murdock
00:34:44 Well, yeah, well, that's, that's one of the debates. You know, this is the ancient debate. This is the ancient debate. The the Atlanta got into playing games, games, and they got in way over their heads. It's. Right, right? And a lot, I'm sure, a lot of great civilizations get over their heads with the elites trying to think they are gods or Demi gods, and they can play games with technology. And, you know, that's the problem we really don't know, for instance, the interference between the Earth and the Sun and playing games with the sun, which they're talking about now, as well. Well. I mean, I don't know where we want to go with this, but 99% of all no matter in the universe is plasma. 99% we humans only occupy 1% in that solid, liquid and gas. 00:35:44 So we occupy this tiny space in the universe, and we really don't know. We really don't know what's out there and who you might want to piss off. You know, I'm thinking of the plasma life hypothesis. You could have something, for instance, the sun might not like getting messed with. You start. It might not like that. It might not like that. You know, we think in terms of our life form and, you know, humans and whatnot. But the plasma life hypothesis is eye opening, because the ideal that plasmas could be alive is, you know, there's a lot of Nobel Prize winners that stopped doing research on plasma simply because they believed it formed many of the bases of intelligent life. And so when you start talking about balls of plasma, like the sun, and you start talking going down this road, and not to get too far out there, but like you might be playing, you might get in way over your head.
00:36:47 Let's just put you that way. You could face natural disasters. There could be repercussions for messing with this type of thing. You know, you can go, you can go the ancient religious route and thinking in terms of modern like, plasma life hypothesis, you can go into the modern route the Russians do with, like, well, our religion doesn't want us playing gods. We don't know the we don't know the effects. You can go a few different routes, but no matter where you go, it's like, you know, tread carefully going down this particular road.
Nicholas Gregory
00:37:17 Oh, this is somebody in chat just mentioned to me. I was like, Why are they calling you mark Collette? I left his I didn't change it. I'm sorry. Yeah, I left the mark collette's Show link underneath your name. Forgot to change the show links. So you've been advertising for Mark collette's channel this whole time.Tim Murdock
00:37:42 I don't see any show link. Oh, my show link.Nicholas Gregory
00:37:45 Okay, yeah, I forgot to change it. I use the old profile. When I made this new one, I left it up there like a goof. Why are they saying that? This maybe some inside joke I didn't get. I was like, Okay, do this. We'll fix them right now.Tim Murdock
00:38:00 I mean, once you start playing these games, it doesn't matter whether you take more of an ancient approach, a modern approach, religious approach, or even just pure science approach, you can end up in trouble.Nicholas Gregory
00:38:11 Yeah, well, I mean, when we talk about like the plasma, I mean, you might almost even describe this stuff as, like the spirit of the universe, in a way, like the spiritual realm might actually be just this plasma stuff.Tim Murdock
00:38:21 Well, you know when, when I talk about plasma I'm talking about, like clouds or plasmas. Now, when you have, like a storm and you get that green haze coming down, those are plasma discharges. Those are plasma arrays. When you're talking about indo, European gods, ancient gods that are a big deal to, let's say, pagans, or even those studying our mythologies, you're always dealing with one overriding factor. When you get around Aryan tribes, you're dealing usually with gods that can reign supreme, or at least one or two of them that can reign supreme with plasma discharges or lightning,Nicholas Gregory
00:39:03 yeah, yeah, that's interesting.Tim Murdock
00:39:05 This whole entire Cosmo theology of like the plasma life hypothesis, I find rather interesting, because we're really the only ones that have these dominant lightning gods. And if anyone else has them, I just assumed the Aryan tribes brought them in these dominant lightning throwing gods, which is kind of fascinating.Nicholas Gregory
00:39:28 Yeah, yeah. Well, we have Thor, obviously. Thor, big one,Tim Murdock
00:39:33 Zeus, Jupiter Indra. Indra to the the ancient Aryans of India. Of India, the ancient Aryans had, and that is, you know, there's an overlap between these guys, but you get the picture. Yeah. So you're dealing with plasma discharges in that are so destructive they can break planets and everything else, which you couldn't theory do if you could lightning. You. You can amp up in between planets and whatnot. So so no, I find the whole thing, because it is something that actually sets our mythologies apart some extent or another. Is the plasma discharge and the this idea of a particular male god just annihilating what he chooses to with lightning. You know, this, these warrior gods, if you will, just dominating things.Nicholas Gregory
00:40:26 It's interesting that we haven't really carried a lot of this mythology forward with us into the future. Is that just because of Christianity, or is there another reason that we've lost that some of that history? Because, you know, a lot of this stuff didn't come with us. It might just be monotheism, but is there more to it? You think,Tim Murdock
00:40:43 Well, monotheism, and the debate between monotheism and paganism, in my opinion, dates back to a particular Egyptian pharaoh that is very famous, not for himself, but for his kid. And that whole debate was brought into the social space. There was really no such thing until Akhenaten. There was no such thing as monotheism. And I mean, the Egyptians had one Creator God, but they had many gods. Even the ancient Hebrews were, were he not theistic? They would choose among many gods, 112, salute, but they only have one Creator. And so these things kind of got jumbled up, and they become very, very confusing to people. 00:41:28 And they've been, obviously, religion has been used to mess with a lot of people. What? No matter what side you're on, Western Christianity, we have 1000s and 1000s of kind of Christianity. Russia is always intriguing to me, because Russia only has one kind of Christianity that dates back to the beginning, and that's orthodox. They don't have 1000s of kind of Christianity. So you do see a I always say we can't have racial unity because we don't have religious unity. You know you have to have some type of you have to be on the same page. And the Russians do have religious unity. By and large, the Slavs do, for the most part, in Orthodox Christianity, which has had an enormous benefit to them, I think, to Russia as a state, you know, where we have 1000s of kinds of Christianity, and no one can really agree on anything springing from Catholicism.
00:42:24 So, so no, you can't really have any unity without it at the same time. We're kind of stuck at a point where someone's going to have to probably, I just don't know what could bring order. I could only guess the sky's the limit, I guess on what you'd have to have to bring order, and you're probably going to have to have a lot of disorder and this type of thing in the meantime, you know, as things as our reality starts falling apart, and people start asking the same questions. You know,
Nicholas Gregory
00:43:00 that seems to be a big part of of our dispossession and fracturing and atomization is that we don't have that cohesive bond. I mean, we have we have Christians. We have people that have gone sort of agnostic. They've got people that are fully atheist. We have people that have gone back to the old gods we were. We're in like so many different camps. Now, you go back in time. I mean, it was basically almost everybody was Christian in most of these things. Or you go back the old gods, but they were, more or less all kind of believed the same thing. And there was, you know, always a few weirdos or whatever that were on the outside. But, you know, the main tribe of our people had one belief or the other, and usually it was whatever the King believed.Tim Murdock
00:43:43 Yeah, yeah. Conversion happened at the king level, but there was plenty of kings that killed lots of nobles that didn't convert. It was very ugly religion historically, prior to the big three, religions weren't a violent affair. For the most part. Tribes killed each other, but not over religion, over land and resources. But that changed really, with Judaism in the Old Testament from the looks of things or their interpretation of events. You know, yeah, this is a whole can of weeds. I don't know if we can do it in the next 30 minutes, but my particular views on it are is that, like Western civilization, is stuck. You can't have social cohesion because you don't have religious cohesion, and you can't have racial cohesion without social and religious cohesion. 00:44:31 So you have all kinds that it's like the Holy Trinity there spiraling. And again, you had the Catholic Church. That starts with that. Then you start dividing the social space to such an extent where it's no longer governable, you have all these different types of that are really religious substitutes. Environmentalism can be a religious substitute, and is in a lot of people. I'm not saying caring about the environment. I'm talking about the ISM. Anything can become a religious substitute for. Whites that are as misguided as ours are. Ours have been. And anytime you get white populations that subvert their organic identity for abstract principles, you end up in trouble quickly. What I find, oh, yeah, well, many times, many times you look at communism, you look at socialism, any ism or capitalism, anytime you you're around white guys or gals that have basically replaced their organic identity with abstract principles and are just an instant ism anarcho capitalism or liberalism or Republicanism or whatever. It always just basically, their minds are mush, and they're just running around in circles. They're just ungrounded.
Nicholas Gregory
00:45:48 Well, yeah, because it's it's entirely theoretical, it's entirely conceptual. It's not grounded in anything real.Tim Murdock
00:45:54 You've got the choice. It's Bob Whitaker's word ism. You can either choose words. We all got to agree on this book and these words to be true, or you have blood, which is the most organic substance known, like, okay, we're all the same blood, so we can have a civil disagreement and debate stuff out and stuff like that, and think like Rational men. But how many do that anymore? How many think in terms of blood first? You know? Well, thatNicholas Gregory
00:46:20 was the Apollonian thing, right? You had this sort of, like Dionysian and Apollonian kind of dyad, right? Or duality in the old world, you had the Dionysian was sort of reverie and intoxication and this sort of thing, or, you know, orgiastic pleasures and parties and, you know, but the Apollonian mind was clarity and study and focus and discipline.Tim Murdock
00:46:43 Yeah, we don't, and we don't have any balance between the two at all. It's just chaos. It's Kali Yuga.Nicholas Gregory
00:46:54 Yeah. So are we lucky enough to be in the time when the Kali Yuga will kind of come to an end, or we just, we just,Tim Murdock
00:47:04 if we survive it. You've got these, you've got these super powers that are at each other's throats jockeying to end. Who knows what they're who knows what they're willing to roll out, or what they're willing to try using technology? You know, they're, they could be willing to try quite anything using technology, and they could, they could also get their heads blown off. There's, there's always something here we don't know. And the powers that be don't operate with a lot of humility at all. No humility at all. They know everything. They got everything figured out, and they don't care if angels show up, we'll just, we'll just kill the angels. 00:47:46 All these people think, yeah, it's a recipe. It's a recipe for a disaster and or an ass kicking. And the problem with us was we're sitting in the empire and we just, we're basically on our own. You know, disasters are scary enough, because I think most of our people are good, good preppers, and they have local networks and stuff like that. But when you start dealing with water, water is something our race has mastered to such an extent I mentioned the other night the dykes in Holland. And you know, not, not like the lesbian ones, the actual walls, and how our race met, mastered building below water, below sea level, and we obviously are great at sailing. We, you know, if you have a aircraft carrier now on the planet, it's because you're white, or someone white sold you one, or taught you how to make it basically like the Indians or the Chinese sold by the Russians, on and on we go, all right, yeah, so everyone's learning from white when it comes to mastering water.
00:48:47 But this takes a highly it takes a society. It takes a society of people cooperating, and you are totally reliant on specialists at the top being able to step in and help you. And it's kind of like the North Carolina situation is scary because you've got all the particular assets you got, all the the equipment you got, all the technology our race has produced, right? But same time, the powers that be aren't making it available to the average person who should have it available. And so that becomes very scary, is that we had, we have ways. I mean, we can rebuild after any disaster. We have plenty of times. But you have to have a society. You have to have not only people around you, but people on top that actually give a shit to deploy the actual helicopters.
00:49:37 It just becomes a complete and total joke. And this is the problem. This is the this is the a legitimate concern, because something like water and flooding takes cooperation, right? It takes cooperation to overcome, and we can historically, time and time again. But those societies are actual societies where there's a lot of cooperation, and someone on top says, You know what, we want to keep Venice. To float. So we got to do this and master this and this and this, and we've got to have building programs, and, you know, we got to have the right machinery, and we got to make sure, you know, these guys don't give a shit. It's like they don't care about infrastructure.
00:50:11 It's, it's almost like they have our own private island chain somewhere, or their own private Elysium somewhere, I don't know, and that we don't know about that. They plan on just going to they're going to go to underground bunkers and fly away to the Elysium, just like, Screw this, because the infrastructure in the country is failing. Everyone can see that nothing really works. You can't rely on any of the social systems anymore, and they can't even declare a disaster, a disaster, because the people are white, and they hate them. So it is what it is.
Nicholas Gregory
00:50:47 So like, I'm wondering, though, Tim, like, with all this in mind, is there a point in which the white people who are being thrown under the bus here by their own government that they've dumped against their will, in many cases, probably most cases, a ton of money into Is there any point in which the white people who are being screwed over are going to become more racially conscious through this experience?Tim Murdock
00:51:08 No what will happen? They have to get jarred. They have to get hammered. You're reaching critical mass of the whites that are going to survive and be white are here because, in my opinion, this similar type of thing happened in the past, and we usually went into some kind of consolidation. Yeah, you know, that's why we're still white. We purity spiral. We consolidate around race, or at least a core group does, and that's really all it takes. But I do think you have a large and growing number of people suspicious of the government and pissed off, and they think there's something up racially. They just don't know how to talk about it. 00:51:43 You definitely have the JQ blowing out across the board, because it is especially the younger populations. But Israel, over the past year, is like, they don't even give a shit about optics. Like, you know, after optics, we're going in. We don't care. We're just going to destroy, rape, pillage, murder, whatever. They don't care. They just don't care. Which tells me we're in some type of serious, serious endgame where they're just, obviously, they're doing over the top things. They're doing things you just don't do, unless you just don't care. You're in some type of final, final end game. You know
Nicholas Gregory
00:52:18 that has to be the case. I mean, they're putting everything on the table like all the chips are on the table at this point. You know, they're not holding anything back.Tim Murdock
00:52:26 They got, they got a God in their pocket. They got God. Their god is here. They're crazy God, you know, they're crazy. Tribal God is here, and he's gonna, he's gonna smoke everyone else. I mean, I gotta look at Brother Nathaniel capners laid out the Greater Israel, the real Greater Israel map, and it went up around through Georgia and into Ukraine. I mean, they want a whole swath of the planet for the 12 Tribes or whatever. And, yeah, these people are acting out religion is a funny thing, because if you start acting things out with enough enough money behind you and enough technology, a lot of innocent people can get hurt. But at the same time, they're running down this particular apocalyptic fantasy, and it's like no brakes on the train. They're putting bombs and pagers at a minimum, which is crazy, which is insane. Never mind the fact that they just destroyed the supply chain, the electronic supply chain of the Empire. Because who's going to trust that?Nicholas Gregory
00:53:30 If people were wondering, people are like, Is my phone going to be able to pull up? I don't think that's true. I think they had to put that small amount of explosive in there to make that possible. But you're right.Tim Murdock
00:53:38 It does destroy trust. I think so do. The problem is, though, well, typically what we know about electric car, lithium batteries, lithium batteries and electric cars, we do see them catch fire and burning all kinds of problems. But usually you can kind of get out of it and tell I think, I don't think they can blow up. But you know, when you start doing things like this, when the Empire starts co signing, because there's no way Israel did this without the Empire not knowing about it, without the British not knowing about it, they all knew about it, someone intelligence, and they let it slide, because both Jews and this is the problem when you start co signing, this stuff is your enemies look and say, okay, okay, you Know, and our phones get blown up or something terrible, you know, we don't know this is, this is the unknown. It's just, it's just Kamikaze, suicidal type things. 00:54:31 Israel's acting like, like, complete fools, you know, like, like killing, decapitating Hezbollah and killing Nasrallah. Yeah, it's like, it's kind of like, okay, guys, we're going to make a change at Walmart, and we're going to wipe out the board of directors and the CEO and some vice presidents and the CFO and the CEO, and you go to Walmart the next day, and everything's working just fine, because it's a it's a freaking machine. It's a machine that's been built. Over years and years and years, and they'll just get another CEO, and that CEO ain't going to change a whole lot, because it's freaking Walmart, right? And this is why this, these decapitations they do. And this is that was the first time they did it. The last one brought nezrah to power, and he was better, well, better for Hezbollah, worse for Israel, you know? So this type of thing just does not work, that they're doing other than just piss people off and cause wars, you know?
Nicholas Gregory
00:55:26 Well, when it comes to like, Hezbollah and stuff, they have a redundancy of leadership, right? Like, so if they kill one leader, then they got another one and another one and another one. It's not gonna work.Tim Murdock
00:55:36 Well, it really comes down to Iran. That was a particular deal. And I wonder if someone in Europe doesn't want a bigger war, whoever told Iran? So typically, if you watch me for any length of time over the years, I've covered every one of these escalations, and usually there's an escalation, and escalation, there can be some deaths and whatnot, but then the deal is cut and someone backs down. So Iran was told that there was a deal incoming and into that particular time window, Israel decapitates Hezbollah. They kill nazarah. Nazrall is a big deal because he descends from the Prophet Muhammad.Nicholas Gregory
00:56:11 I did not know that. I did notTim Murdock
00:56:14 understand the difference between the Sunni and the Shia.Nicholas Gregory
00:56:17 I do. I don't know the specifics. I know that they they have a dispute about who was the successor to Muhammad, right?Tim Murdock
00:56:25 Well, Muhammad had a lot of wives. You have different lines of descent. The Shia descend from one line, and the Sunni descent from the other. Okay, so on the global stage, the Shia make up between 15 and 20% of global Islam, most likely 15% but in the Middle East, these two sides are a parody, 5050, okay, so that with, even without Israel there, they would be fighting each other for holy sites, right? But with Israel, there Israel's on the Sunni side, along with the Empire. Okay? The Arab Street believes the whole entire top of the Sunni, like the House of Saud, these guys are all, like, Middle Eastern Jews just posing, just, yeah, just just controlling Islam. 00:57:11 And it's hard to dispute that after the Abraham Accords, like, what has Israel got to do with this? You know? So you really have a showdown in the making, and it is over descent. They wear the black turbans. The black turbans mean they descend from Muhammad. So you have these two different descents, and it is contentious. And so Israel taking out Nasrallah is a big deal to the ayatollahs and everything else. It says, you know, we're going, we're going to the next level. We're going to try to wipe out those particular lines from Muhammad, is what? And it isn't just Israel, by the way. Israel's partners are the Abraham Accords, which means the top of all these Islamic kingdoms built by the empire into oil, oil fiefdoms, right? And it becomes a potential mess, because, again, you're at 5050, parody, and there's disputes over descent and holy sites.
00:58:03 And without the Empire there, the Shia will challenge them across the board, even with the Empire there, because the Empire is being pulled into what would many believe would look like to military historians, a classic picture maneuver where you have this client state that's smaller and weaker against a Persian Wolf, and you're being sucked in to defend it potentially. And you don't know what the Chinese are going to do, but the Chinese will have to get involved if they start destroying oil capacity at Iran. Because guess who gets all that oil is China. So the Chinese will immediately get involved. And we don't know what the Russians have sold anyone other than they built, they built their new core power plants, right?
Nicholas Gregory
00:58:46 Well, that, though, that ball of interests and alliances that you just described, I mean, that's the perfect setup to have a domino effect that goes to a whole world war three type scenario, right?Tim Murdock
00:58:55 Oh, God Yes, God yes. And that's what it looks like these crazy neocons. You see, the neocons were constrained by the Zebedee brezhinskys in the Empire. They were constrained by, of all people, Henry Kissinger. And that's crazy to think that Henry Kissinger actually restrained them. But if you really look at since the death of those guys, they've been acting crazier and crazier, and it's just like no brakes on this train. Now. They're everywhere, and they're doing whatever they want to do and crazy stuff, and they just have no capacity to really judge their actions other than Old Testament stuff. But the Persians are, you know, they've got a they've got a their own domestic Military Industrial Complex. They've gotten around all the sanctions. 00:59:38 They've got all kinds of good partners. They're buried everywhere, meaning they've got super, super deep bunkers and mountains and everything else. So does Hezbollah. Hezbollah's got some really, really deep stuff as well. I just don't know what they can execute, and they're not the ones Israel would really be worried about unless they had some surprises. But you can assume that they might have a surprise. Owns, or they might have some type of surprise solid fuel missiles, but it would really be Iran that would really cause some issues, and Hezbollah might be surprised, as Houthis might have a surprise or two. But of course, Iran could cause all kinds of problems for the Empire if they overturn, let's say the king of Georgia, who's a Hashemite, meaning he's a Sunni, the King of Jordan, is ruling over this population doing the bidding of the Israelis in the empire, because he's on this he's on that particular bandwagon the whole time, but he's ruling over a population of Palestinians and Palestinian sympathizers that hates his ass just hates him.
01:00:39 So could you see someone like that get dragged down the street like Gaddafi, Easily? Easily? The Turks will have to get involved. The Turks will have to get involved because they can't handle a giant catastrophe, of a giant human catastrophe on their border, of a bunch of, I don't know what you would call it, displaced people, migrants or whatever, on their border, they can't handle that, so the Turks have to get involved. There's another problem. There's all kinds of potential problems here. Never mind the fact that Pakistan, Pakistan's on the Sunni side, and they have nukes. Yeah, you've got all kinds of problems. That's really crazy.
Nicholas Gregory
01:01:22 How many nuclear powers is that? It's like, I'm counting like, half a dozen so far.Tim Murdock
01:01:28 Iran has nukes. Israel has nukes. Yeah, you got to think that. But of course, there's nasty stuff you can do without nukes. Pakistan has nukes. Pakistan may have given Saudis a nuke, which would be a surprise, but not, not to Iran's, but Iran, you know, they're, you're dealing with, they all have their messianic views. The Obviously, everyone, everyone watching this would know about the Jewish messianic views, but the Shia Islam has its own messianic view that's slightly different than the Sunni messianic view. So it's just and of course, you got the Christian Zionist, and this is all just barreling down, spiraling out of control.Nicholas Gregory
01:02:10 So it's interesting. I always trying to think, like, Is there even a way to defuse this bomb at this point, this thing gonna just still blow up all our faces.Tim Murdock
01:02:18 It occurred to some of us a long time ago that when it's time to go, these guys are going because no no one has the no one wants to stand up to the Israelis and the Jews. And if you look at their actions in the last year, they make no sense at all, unless it's just like no brakes on this train. This is where we're going. We don't care. I mean, you put bombs in pagers. Come on. Hezbollah isn't just actually a military. It's a whole entire, like a third to half of its whole section of Hezbollah. It's like everyone from kindergarten, kindergarten teachers to, you know, emergency workers to military to government to businessmen. I mean, there's all sorts of people that carry pagers. You know, doctors, think about all the people that carry pagers in our society. So this is the great you just get, you got to be crazy. And not only that, they were blowing up all kinds of stuff.Nicholas Gregory
01:03:15 So Well, they've been just, they've been raining bombs on Beirut today, like they, they, there's no dialing this back. They're, they're all forward, forward, forward,Tim Murdock
01:03:27 Lebanon for, I mean, many people talk about the water. The Israelis have talked about that Lebanon. They want Lebanon for water. But this greater Israel thing that they're just, they're going for it. And it's, we've seen a lot of people were saying, you know, Iran's not going to strike back, or Hezbollah? Well, it comes down to Iran. You know, Hezbollah could have easily done all kinds of things if Iran authorized it, but Iran's running a playbook. I just don't know what it is, but the thing of it is, is that we've seen endless war after endless war, the neocon shock and awe war, right? What is more common? 01:04:02 It starts out really likes impressive and whatnot, all these gadgets and gimmicks and stuff like that. Then all of a sudden it goes sideways, and it ends up with being in untold civilian atrocities, and no one really wins. It's just who loses more severe and this is, this is going the way of a typical, in my opinion, neocon war. Now maybe they can decapitate the Ayatollah, but in my opinion, that would just cause probably Israel to get nuked. Because really, what you're doing is killing their fight the final prophet for gods, the final prophet for their God, forgot for Allah, the final prophet. There's none after him. Now they believe Jesus Christ was a prophet, but the final prophet was Muhammad. You're killing his descendants. Important descendants.
Nicholas Gregory
01:04:53 This is unforgivable to them. This is unforgivable.Tim Murdock
01:04:56 It's not, it's not, it's not, it's not. It's just like I ran. Showed them they did what, 300 missiles, and they put up the lower, the older, slower missiles, first to overwhelm the Iron Dome. Then they put the modern missiles that are hypersonic, 10,000 plus miles an hour, right in behind them, right into their Air Base, Nevada, him. You know, God only knows what damage they really did. But it wasn't good. I mean, there were explosions looked like a sun, so that that had to hurt somebody. Israel's like, did not, didn't do too much. Well, I think it probably did. And I think you could miss half of Jerusalem, could go missing, or half of Tel Aviv, and they'd be like, Yeah, it really hurt anyone?Nicholas Gregory
01:05:36 No, it strategically makes sense. They would play it off. I mean, I think you, I think it's definitely what you said about the Greater Israel thing and the thing that you were talking about with kapner. I was I showed that too, when Simon crimson was here, we were talking about this, and it's crazy, like they're going all the way up there. It's like, this patch all the way up into Ukraine. I could see it. I could see it. It makes strategic sense. It connects them into the Belt and Road Initiative thing. It gives them the bread basket of Ukraine. It's like a checklist of all the things they need for independence, right? Well, it's a giant.Tim Murdock
01:06:07 I don't know how they're going to occupy that, unless they're going to bring in other tribes, but it is giant. It goes up through Lebanon, up through Syria. It curves around through Georgia and and over through right into Ukraine. So it's kind of wild, yeah, how it surrounds the Mediterranean, and what they're trying to do, but good luck to them. Gonna have to unseat a lot of, a lot of they're gonna do a lot, gonna do a lot of work to get that one done.Nicholas Gregory
01:06:34 Well, they're, they're really kind of known for having eyes bigger than their stomach, you know, being really aspirational, and just going for it, even if it's not the smartest thing to do. And oftentimes they get away with it, though. I mean, look at 911 and stuff like this, and whoa, holy crap. You know, there's just incredible aspirational pushes that they make. And they really do just put all the chips on the table and hope for the best and say, Oh God's with us. This is the way, and that's it. It's very wild, man. I, I don't know. I just think they really do run the risk of sucking the whole world into something really ugly.Tim Murdock
01:07:09 Well, it looks like that's what they're doing. I mean, eventually China is going to step in, and then Russia is going to step in. And I, you know, we're we are basically in a classic we're being sucked into a classic pension maneuver. Israel does have a wolf at their door. You know, you've got the Houthis on one side. No one really knows what they have to throw at Israel one morning. You got Hezbollah, and they have probably 200,000 missiles of some type. Don't know what they can get off. And of course, they're going to flatten they're going to flatten Beirut, which means the Empire is going to have to come into Beirut to try to evacuate Americans out of the Middle East. You know, that's what those troops are for. They're for evacuation and disaster, and it's just a mess, and it's a tiny country, Israel can't handle. I mean, what Iran showed is they're not going to be able to handle garages and barrages of those. There's not going to be able to do it.Nicholas Gregory
01:08:12 Yeah, no, they won't. I mean, there's going to be a limit. There's going to be a limit. Like, Israel's infrastructure I was agreeing about was pretty, actually fragile, like they could take certain hits to their electrical grid, and it could make some big part of the country completely inhabitable. And it's probably already happened to a degree. It's probably parts of the north,Tim Murdock
01:08:30 they've got bunkers, but it's a tiny place, and it is. It is. It is actually not the strongest part of the Empire. It's the weakest part. It's the center of the planet. It's the weakest part of the Empire. It's the Saudi Arabia, some of these other states, I don't know, they're going to try to stay out of it, because they don't want the Arab Street to know, realize that they're Jews, or with the Jews, or whatever. But I think the the cat's out of the bag there once they sign an agreement. So I don't know. I'm more concerned with what it means for America, because we can't control the Middle East. Like, what does someone have plotted here? 01:09:09 You know, what is one Intelligence Service have have rigged here for Americans? You know, we got enough problems. We don't need super powers playing games in our borders, which can easily happen, or, God forbid, false flags that are blamed on Iran, which we've never seen anything like that happen. You know, I'm more worried about what's here. And we could see, I could see, you could see ethnic conflict in Dearborn Michigan, because see the Dearborn Michigan I grew up around was mostly Lebanese Shia business owners, bakery owners, gas station owners, they own pretty much society. They're not necessarily Goldman Sachs bond brokers. They're not TV producers, but they're like the bakeries, the realtors. You know, they have their own society.
01:10:00 Society there. Okay. Now, post on, the last 25 years, we've taken in somewhere between 50 and 80, quote, unquote migrants, or illegal migrants, or immigrants, okay, whatever you want to call them invaders. Now, the funny thing about this is that whatever Muslims we've taken in are Sunni, okay, so when you get into Dearborn Michigan, you have, remember, we're in a religious conflict. You have the largest Shia community outside of the Middle East, but they're the over class. They're the wealthy. They have the million dollar homes, they have the businesses you know they would be. I'm going to give you an example. I'm not going to use a name, but like someone, I grew up around multiple different restaurants, and he owns, uh, citrus, citrus orchards all across in Lebanon, citrus farms, ancient citrus farms. And he prefers to be in Lebanon, but since he's had to rebuild his house six times, he keeps a house here too, because he's scared death, and he has restaurants here for Lebanese D Day.
01:10:58 So this is what you're dealing with, but you're dealing with the new underclass. And guess what the underclass is? The underclass is Sunni, and the underclass is living in Section Eight housing on the edges of Dearborn in Detroit, and they don't like each other. There's a great deal of distrust for obvious reasons. So this is something we brought in because the vast majority of Muslims that have come on over the past 25 years are going to be like what they shoved into Europe. We just don't they're kind of more spread out. Obviously, they're not all in Brussels or all in London, you know. But Dearborn, Michigan has some potential issues, because you have, again, a wealthier people that fly back and forth with Lebanon. They own properties in both places. They own all kinds of businesses. They're mostly upper class these days. I'm not saying they all are. I'm just giving the example.
01:11:43 And then going with a Sunni section eight, right? It's like something you see in the bandoliers or somewhere in Paris under class. And they know they're different, and they know there's something big going on, you know? So, yeah, I mean, we've seen skirmishes break out between these two sides before, and I don't know what's going to happen, hopefully nothing, but it that's another point. You know, we've invited in all these conflicts. Because even without Israel there, if you have two groups with different descents that make up Islam, but one is a much smaller group, 15% of the world's Muslim community, but they're 5050 in the in the in the Middle East, and they can challenge each other for holy sites and whatnot. That's a recipe for disaster, even without Israel there, we all you know how this stuff goes with religion, right?
Nicholas Gregory
01:12:33 Well, you certainly not getting any rational responses when religion is the core dispute factor, right? But you're right.Tim Murdock
01:12:41 Also, you got to understand that this is blood to them, because it's not like we have all right, here's our King, our King descends. Here's our our holy man, and our holy man descends from Jesus. We don't do that. That's what these guys do. You know, this guy just sends the Prophet Muhammad through Kia line, or whatever, whatever concubine line, and that's why he's a big deal. And thisNicholas Gregory
01:13:02 is why so like, the religion and the race element are fused.Tim Murdock
01:13:08 It's tried. It's very tribal. It's extremely tribal, which is why, you know, they operate on extended family networks, very Middle Eastern, like, they operate just like Jews. They're mercialist. They're not so much, you know, they're not so much your banker as because of Islamic law and stuff like that. They're not so much bankers, but they operate everything else. They're not so much media, but they operate everything else on the local level. And so you're dealing with a little bit different dynamic, but yet, at the same time, when you're fighting the religion, you're fighting dissent, and they're descending these ancient tribes under Muhammad, these ancient Arab tribes, and the Persians are kind of an interesting story because it was forced on them. So, you know, they were Zoroastrianism, and then Islam came in. But nonetheless, you're dealing with the Shia population, and they're looking at blood dissent. Their religious leaders descend from the Prophet Muhammad, and there's the dispute over this, and the dispute is hot and heavy.Nicholas Gregory
01:14:13 So this is just another one of these ethnic conflicts that we've imported. Like this is nothing 100% as we do this. More and more of this invaded invader welcoming stuff, like we're going to bring their conflicts from there here, and we're going to have to watch this be born out on our streets. I mean, in London, for Christ's sake, they're having sword fights. Same in Canada, yeah, they got busted out the scimitar and stuff. It's like, oh my goodness. You know, some of these religions there use the religious reason as an ability to stay armed, even when the otherwise the law says no. So this is created.Tim Murdock
01:14:47 These tribes don't necessarily trust one well, these macro as as a macro tribe, on a one to one basis, they may but on a macro level, they don't necessarily trust one another. Because, again, the Middle East. Are at parity with one another, which is the first time in history that's happened. And so this is a fight that, you know, the Saudis want it. I believe a lot of the Sunni side want it, because if the Empire doesn't help them, they could get overrun by Persians. Because Persians, they're not stupid. Their drones are so good, the Russians are buying them. So these people are not stupid people. They're Persian. They're not Arabs. And now there are Arab Shia. Of course, it is mixed by and large in 2024 but it's, you know, it's anchored by the Persians. 01:15:34 And it's, it's a recipe for disaster, you know, there's a reason you want a homogenous white society and but yeah, Dearborn is interesting because of its evolution and understanding that what's been important post the last 25 years are mostly poor and Sunni and, for instance, the burqas and stuff like that is not something you would ever see back in the Day. But that is, again, this has all been important. All been important. And the Shia, of course, you're dealing with, a lot of them are semi Americanized. They prefer to be in Lebanon because they don't like cold weather. You know, have homes there. And, you know, it just depends. There's a lot of different things there, but we've added a tremendous amount of Muslim diversity, and it ain't gonna go well,
Nicholas Gregory
01:16:23 no, it's a terrible it's a terrible idea. And the thing about it is, is like, because we have an occupied government here, because we have such fucking horrible foreign policy here, it makes it so they keep ginning up more and more conflicts, and therefore it to place displaces these people and drives them into our country. And of course, their CO ethnics are here, opening the border with the highest operation. So it's like they're pushing them out and pulling them in, right? It's just, it's so despicable.Tim Murdock
01:16:49 This is interesting, because in the 90s, there was only one high school in Dearborn, Michigan, just one high school that was predominantly Arab. Fortson High School, named after, of course, Henry Ford, and the two other high schools, Edsel Ford and Dearborn high were, you know, you had a couple, like Arabs and whatnot, but it was nothing like growing up like those schools were, like all white, but in the past 25 years, this transformed those schools as well. Now those schools like Dearborn high would be more upper class, but you know, like what was once be the one high school that became predominantly Muslim. 01:17:21 The other two were predominantly same, white. They're now all Muslim. You know, I mean, it has all been important, most of it over the last 25 years, again, we've added somewhere between 50 and 80 million. The numbers are truly staggering and and I'm thinking it's probably closer, maybe 70 million. And so all the Muslims coming in are going to be Sunni by and large. Now, the funny thing is, do the Shia like that? Hell no. They're upper class. They don't want, you know, the ones that own the section eight housing and whatnot, that are renting it to them. They're scared of these people. You don't know who you we let in from Yemen or Syria or Iraq? No one knows. They don't know. No, they'll tell you privately, like, well up bro. Well up bro. What do you what are all you guys letting in? It's not me, it's the Jews that say, Yeah, hooties. Then they'll laugh. They you know, because I know about the Jews. I'm like us, yeah, yeah. Back to Lebanon. What are you guys doing? You know, just, you know, control, Israel. Let us go back to Lebanon. You know, it's what a lot of them because who wants to be a Michigan when you could be in Lebanon?
Nicholas Gregory
01:18:32 Well, let's just hit right? We're not getting their best, as they say, right? We're definitely notTim Murdock
01:18:37 so, not in the last 25 years. No. I mean, there was a time when there's some pretty bright people came out of Lebanon and had to live here, and then flew back and forth and rebuilt homes there and built businesses here. I wouldn't say, I wouldn't say they were lazy by any means or anything like that. Sure, they took advantage of opportunities, but they'll happily go back when September 11, 2001 happened after that, Hezbollah was declared a terrorist organization and the Jews at the State Department, the neocon Jews, were going after Hezbollah. There were quite a number of wealthy restauranteurs that were entangled in various different things where they tried to take money from them and close them down for being funding terrorism. 01:19:16 The problem is that you're dealing with the fact that whole every grade school and whole sections of Lebanon are run by Hezbollah. It's a society. It's a Shia society within Lebanon. So these people said, Screw it. They walked away from mortgages and everything else and just flew back to Lebanon and sent out their money instead of dealing with the the idiots in charge, which was kind of impressive. Most people don't do that. And so they like, Screw it. This ain't worth it being here anymore. And so, you know, you always get the feeling that a percentage of them, the ones that own property, would go back in a blink of an eye, but they're held hostage because they've rebuilt homes seven to and they're gonna have to rebuild homes again, right? Because they're flattening their homes time after time they have a neighbor that will not obey by an international law and believes that only. Your owns your land anyways, because their God gave them to them, right? It's crazy.
Nicholas Gregory
01:20:05 That's a terrible, dynamic man. Sad even, even right after 911 in Paris, I knew a kid that was Lebanese, and it looked very wide. I mean, like you mentioned a number of times, these people must have a good chunk of white DNA in there.Tim Murdock
01:20:18 Test out in the 90s, some of them test out more than, more than more than, some more than some people that that jump in on our side, but at the same time, they want it. They're Mediterranean. They want to be they're heavily attached to their home. They fly back there. They own a lot of moan property there, even the Palestinians. How many are sitting there fighting? I mean, you know, how many are there willing to fight? Quite a number. And it looks like they're willing to fight to the death. They don't care if they die. One of the more interesting facts I thought about Hamas, and this was, I thought, somewhat significant, if true, but I've never seen it verified that Hamas was converted from Sunni to Shia before October 7, which I thought was pretty wild, that would be very significant. So I don't know this, you know, we I could go on, I could go on for quite a while, but we'll have to pick it up another time. There's a good overview of what's going down.Nicholas Gregory
01:21:20 That does help, though, to see the Sunni Shia thing, because I think that's overlooked by us on the outside, like I don't really think about it too much,Tim Murdock
01:21:27 they're presenting it as Israel versus Iran, which is convenient for the Sunni side of the equation, because the Sunni side equation is a powder keg. They do not like they do not like the the people running the House of Saud. They do not like the King of Jordan. There's an undercurrent in the Muslim world that probably could work out a deal with the Shias. But let's face it, they they do not like these leaders. They are not liked necessarily by their people. They're bought off for the most part and or killed and reigned with Islamic law. But there is an underpinning that that, and that might even go for the Shia in Persia. I mean, there's a lot of people that you know, look at their their past in Persia, and how the force conversion, they're, you know, taken over. And so it's all a volatile, sad situation, very sad situation that we have to survive.Nicholas Gregory
01:22:24 Well, it is, it is, and we do have to survive it, because if we don't, you know we're we're done for and we really need to. We really need to. It's critical, but I better let you go. Tim, I really appreciate you coming on, sir. I really appreciate your support as well. Thank you for your support, both today and in general,Tim Murdock
01:22:42 happy 1000 episodes, and appreciate it. I appreciate the work you do, Nick. Thank you for inviting me on. It wasNicholas Gregory
01:22:47 honor, absolutely Thank you, sir. Absolute pleasure. Go ahead and let me do something here. Let me go ahead and play a quick audio thing, little quick audio thing. Run to the facilities and be right back, and then Mr. Henrik will be on and we'll move forward. All right, let's do that real Quick. You You01:24:47 all right. Hello, hey, Henrik, how are you, sir, Hey, how's it going good? How are you welcome? Thank you. Can you hear me? Okay, I can't you sound great to me. Let me just check. All right, all right. I think,
Henrik
01:24:58 I think we're good. I can hear you. First, but I think I figured it out. So, man,Nicholas Gregory
01:25:05 that's why. Oh, yeah, have you tried it out yet? Because the Phoenix operation is rocking. I really like it.Henrik
01:25:12 All right, I gotta, I gotta. I do have to try that then. Oh, it's great.Nicholas Gregory
01:25:15 It's really, really cool. But welcome, man, I'm welcome to the 1000Henrik
01:25:19 Yeah, exactly. Congratulations. I was gonna count, I don't think, well, obviously, we've done 1000 shows, but, you know, like, we haven't done 1000 of wild interviews. We've done certainly 1000 there's like, you know, probably two, 2000 in the archives, maybe. But Flashback Friday, we haven't done 1000 yet. We haven't done Western warrior 1000 yet. No goals, and we haven't done 1000 yet. Maybe, if you add them up. We've done 1000 quite an achievement. I could at this point. I'm I'm struggling to get, like, three solid shows in a week without help. You know, it's hard.Nicholas Gregory
01:25:51 I know the feeling, man, I really suffered today because I planned it all out. I had everything all set up, every little detail, and then the computer decided to die this morning. So that wasHenrik
01:26:01 like, how it is, it knows you and it gets afraid and it gets all sensitive and just like, don't, don't put pressure on me. It's happened to me about five, six times something, all right, like, I really need you to step up now and do this for me.Nicholas Gregory
01:26:16 Bails on you right away. So it's like, there's a computer ghost that knows, you know, knows, oh, you're beating it.Henrik
01:26:23 Also called Israel inside.Nicholas Gregory
01:26:27 This was suggested to me. This was suggested to me that maybe this was a little piece of work, yeah. So it makes you wonder, though, right?Henrik
01:26:38 So, wow, you never know. Never know. I missed I missed him. I didn't get a chance to say hi to Tim. Was a while ago since I spoke to him. So if he's watching, Hi Tim, we should get you on the show soon.Nicholas Gregory
01:26:48 Absolutely great, great guy, man, I've been, I've been talking to him for a while now, helping with some of his bumpers and stuff now too. So it's cool, a little working relationship. But what do you guys been up to? I mean, there's been a I've been watching some of you stuff. I was watching the other day. You did one with one with Dr Duke Today. Yeah, yes, exactly.Henrik
01:27:05 Yeah. I'm a little bit under the weather, long eyes too, so I'm not we'll see if we can get her to step in and say hi later. But because of that, we didn't want to drag a sitter into that. So get her sick or whatever. So she's taking care of the little ones right now, so we'll try to get them to if she can get them to bed at a decent time, she might put this stuff in and say hi, but no, man, it's, it's, it's busy. I mean, family life that takes up a lot of time, just, you know, taking care of the kids and whatnot. But no shows wise, we're trying to, we're trying to get it down, you know, get some good shows in. And now we just found out we're actually going to get a new studio space that's gonna be really sweet. So the green screen bullshit they've been doing for 233 almost three years. I think that's gonna, that's gonna go, and we're finally gonna get, like, my, you know, the old set back again, you know. So that's gonna be cool. That's the, that's the big plan right now, setting up a new studio space.Nicholas Gregory
01:27:52 I thought you guys, his old set was amazing. You know, I could see you guys going, like, a redacted style thing where you got the, like, flat screens with your moving stuff or something that would be cool.Henrik
01:28:02 Yeah, I think, yeah. Well, I wanted that kind of, like old world style. And, you know, you have some, I don't know, can have some Viking swords in the background and whatnot, you know, we'll, we'll figure it out. We'll see. We'll set up. We got some shields and some good sets we used last time. So we'll probably set that up. We'll see, maybe do a little bit, little bit different. But no, that's gonna be sweet. So hopefully within, you know, a month or so, that's the plan anyway, so we'll see if that pounds through. So that's a big change for us.Nicholas Gregory
01:28:25 Anyway, no, that's very cool. I wish you guys the best of luck. I mean, moving is the it's one of the most stressful things you can go through, other than like a divorce or a death.Henrik
01:28:35 Brutal. Always fun to move. Everyone likes to move. I've heard Yes. But anyway, it'll be better. It'll be better off afterwards. So, you know, rip off the band aid and get it done. So, yeah,Nicholas Gregory
01:28:49 the quicker, the faster, the better, right? You just get it. Oh yeah, yeah, exactly. Oh yeah. So you guys have seen this all going on too. I mean, we had an action packed week as far as things that affect the white race going on. I mean, we had our, you know, our people out in western North Carolina drowning in just a crazy hurricane that's been pretty much nearly ignored by the federal government, which is pretty horrifying. And we've seen some rockets go to Israel from Iran. Wow, there's a lot going on.Henrik
01:29:18 Oh yeah, they're blowing everything up, and then you have, yeah, they're going into Lebanon. I think, I'm not sure, I didn't keep up the last two days. I think where they're going, they were going for like, a ground invasion, I think, or at least for a little bit, they're limited. I think, right?Nicholas Gregory
01:29:33 I think so, yeah, they keep getting pushed back. I think they're actually in a better one to one fighting capabilities. I think with Hezbollah, I think that they're more of an actual militia, kind of, you know, Iran backed militia, Hamas is more seemingly like a citizen uprising, in a way. I mean, they seem a little more, actually, I got that wrong. They seem Hezbollah seems more like a backed army, and Hamas seems more. Like a private militia, in a sense, right? Yeah.Henrik
01:30:02 I mean, Palestine is not even like a, you know, a country, right? I mean, they don't even have, they're just complete let the behest of Israel. They don't even control their own water or electricity or anything, as we saw, that's why they could shut all that shit down, and then they'll try to act like they're like in war with them. Like, yeah, well, I mean, technically, can you, can you be a war with this region with not even, it's not even a country. I mean, it's not like, they're like, you know, having supply of, like, tanks and shit that they're disposal, you know. I mean, they're not like, buying weapons from other other countries and shit. As far as I know, they're sent maybe something from Iran in order to defend themselves. 01:30:36 But I gotta say, though, man, what a meek and weak response from all the other Arab nations and stuff, and Israel just keeps bombing. And, you know, we know Egypt is compromised, right? Their debt to the US is obviously kind of part of that, right? So they're under their control. If they're under the US control, that means they're under Zionist control. And then you have Jordan. I forget what they did was something there with the king and Jordan's going to do something, but they backed up. Didn't do anything Saudi Arabia, you can't rely on. They've been flip flopping back and forth. They had this period where they're going to have, like, normalizations relations, apparently, with Israel and stuff. I'm not sure. Maybe that's fallen apart a little bit. But overall, who's doing? It's basically just Iran. I guess that's That's like trying to fight back and help out some of the, you know, countries like Lebanon and Palestine, right?
Nicholas Gregory
01:31:26 It is. And you know, some of these other countries, they've sort of flexed, and they've said that they're going to do things, and then they just seem not to. It seems like it's all a bluff.Henrik
01:31:34 I know nothing happens. I'm not sure about the latest, the attacks and all that, like with the the rockets from from Iran or whatnot. But it just reminds me of the not when Iran sends it, but like when Israel you showed the Lebanon piece footage here earlier. It feels like the 2003 shock and awe campaign. I'm not sure if you remember any of that like that. I do. It was so weird because it was one of the first kind of, like televised live wars. You remember all that stuff? I'm not sure if you're watching that, then,Nicholas Gregory
01:32:01 no, no, I absolutely was, I was, I got so I was, I moved to Paris, France, actually, just after 911 and I remember seeing the shock and awe campaign in one of my friends living rooms. And it was just crazy. I mean, I wasn't really very right wing minded at the time. It was much more of like an anti war kind of thing, being, you know, 1819, years old, I remember thinking, good lord, like, this is this? Is this the wrong thing? And nobody understood, because why are you doing a shock and awe bombing of Iraq? Like, supposedly, you know, Caveman over there hit us when 911 what's with the Iraq? And then they give you some strained answer, right about, like, oh, well, they're, they're backing theHenrik
01:32:44 supplying them, or something out, I can't remember, something with anthrax in the UN and, you know, whatever, they'll bomb us. You know, now it's complete bullshit. But yeah, no, it reminds me that it's so much more tell all of this stuff, you know, with with the cameras and stuff, and stuff, and you can see so much more of it now than you've been were able to, you know, just like a couple of decades ago. So things are very, very different.Nicholas Gregory
01:33:07 You know, no, it's true. And I don't know who was saying it. Maybe it was Lucas Gage, but somebody was saying that, like, this is the worst genocide, because it's all on Tiktok and Twitter and filmed and live streamed, and this is, like, there's no question about what they've been doing in Palestine, that the world isn't confused. Everybody knows that they're just wiping these people out. Even before this, they're cementing their water supplies and just just stuff that is completely inhumane, regardless of what they want to do with them. It's just so far over the top of usual war methods and the cruelty. I mean, I mean, I'm sure you remember these tick tocks that were going on, and they would be like, once the water was cut, you know, Israeli Jews would be like, flipping the water thing, like, ha, ha, ha. You know, there's this, there's a sadism there that I just it's hard for white people understand most white people anyway, are these, these Iranian rockets are showing or is this Israel into Lebanon? These were Iranian rockets being shots, really their day. Yeah, this is a littleHenrik
01:34:01 Okay, yeah, shots up, Ivan. I thought I saw something about them having hypersonic as well. There were some that travel, like, really fucking fast. They couldn't, you know, the Iron Dome or whatever, couldn't, couldn't stop it. I'm not sure what damage they did, or what they hit, or whatnot. I haven't even followed up on that. I don't have time yet, but no, man, I mean, they're going for the jugular. I mean, in terms of Israel, the Zionist and these crazy Jewish supremacists, I mean, what they're doing is they're going for the jugular that are going to try to get these people out of that region. They're going to try to public kill as many of them as it can. 01:34:33 They're going to try to drag America into the war and Europe, if they can, everyone else is going to, you know, be dragged into this shit. And that's, that's their plan, right, being wiping out Amalek and all that shit, so that they don't, they don't even seem to care. Because, as you said, as horrific it is that, you know, you can see so much of it, you know, on social media and stuff. Now, that's good though, excuse me, That's good though, in a way, right? Because you want to, you want to expose this. And, I mean, let's be honest, there's no. Going too well for Israel in the optics war. I mean, basically the rest, beyond a couple of crazy Zionist on Twitter or whatever, like, the rest of the world basically hates Israel. And, in fact, look at the all the information that's gone, you know, bubbling up to the surface.
01:35:16 You know, past war crimes, past stuff that they've been doing, you know, I mean, from like, you know, more people now know about us as liberty, and the more people are questioning 911 and their involvement in that. People are even going back to World War Two. Like, it's really, you know, with October 7 and all the lies they have there, what else have they been lying about? I mean, so it's all coming out.
Nicholas Gregory
01:35:37 No, I mean, it's amazing what this is. It was sort of like they kind of chipped a hole in the dam of the lie dam there was, like, this narrative lie dam, and they just made a little hole in a little sprout, and then, like, oh, bigger, bigger, bigger. And then it's like the flood is breaking through. And it was only a matter of time. Like they've used these narratives and these use these shields and these, you know, that's anti semitism to do. They've been able to hide behind this stuff for a good 80 years now. And it was inevitable, right? It was absolutely inevitable that at some point, at some point, people were going to get through this, and people were going to find out that this is not the only batch of crimes they've done, but that they've done an amazing amount of crimes before that, and they've just done a really good job of covering it up due to the media dominance.Henrik
01:36:20 Yeah. No. I mean, again, that's great that that's coming out, and they just can't hide behind it. I'm just wondering. It's also kind of worrying when they're when they totally stop caring about that, because I think they realize it's like the they have a window or something, and so therefore they just seem to want to escalate, which is going to drag, you know, all these other countries into it, and at some point. I mean, if, well, we'll see what happens. I mean, we have, whatever the election is, one month away, something like that. Yeah. So, I mean, and again, not to, not the Kamala Harris will be much better on this, but if Trump comes in, I mean, he might do, he might do more for Israel. It's either likely, in fact, you know, one of the few not to come out. I mean, frankly, they're backed they've backed them equally, though it doesn't really matter, to be honest. But the point is, they might know that they could make a bigger move potentially under Trump than they could. I'm not sure. We'll see what happens. But, you know, things could pop off, and it could very well be that if it does escalate, you know, America might be dragged into it yet, yet another war. You know,Nicholas Gregory
01:37:25 I think they really want Trump in there for to if they're going to pursue a campaign with Iran. I think they want Trump to handle it. I think that's why probably, sort of, you kind of get that sense right, that there's, like a much more leaning in that direction than there's ever been from American Jewry, from the press, from even former left the way. It's an anti anti Trump. People have started to be like, Hmm, you know, it seems like they want him in there to prosecute these wars. Because I think they kind of get the sense that the Democrat side dropped the ball entirely on this stuff.Henrik
01:37:55 Yeah, after October 7, you had the protest at the university campuses, protesting basically every major Western European city, right? Pro Palestine. And of course, that's largely because, you know, Israel have been bombing brown countries, and then those people come to our countries and look at the mess they've created for themselves. So as I'm saying, it's almost like this. They know that they're like, it's a it's a battle they can't win. So now they're just, like, moving ahead and try to make as much damage as they can, while they have at least the governments and those politicians that they have in their pockets on their side. Until, you know, I don't know. I mean, we're not gonna let that happen. So don't worry about, like, if things continue forward as There currently are, it will basically just be a bunch of brown people political positions of power in most Western countries, you know? I mean, and what's gonna happen at that point? I don't think they're gonna be too gung ho about Israel.Nicholas Gregory
01:38:50 No, I don't. And it's really weird, though. I mean, maybe you have some insight on this, as you've seen, sort of observed this professionally a lot longer than I have, but it does seem like a lot of their agendas are sort of at odds. It's sort of like they want to have both things at the same time, but they're kind of mutually exclusive. And you, you know, one of these agendas that they're pushing so hard for is completely contradicted by the other that they just started pushing. And it seems like they're only always destined to kind of come head to head. I mean, you kind of saw that with the Palestine protest, things like the BLM types and all this. They couldn't really reactivate them. There was kind of internal conflict in the sort of left sphere, all these kind of violent street people, you know, they wouldn't get out there and do it for Israel, because they had Palestinian sympathies, you know, that they didn't have when it was white people that were on the chopping block, right? Yeah, yeah.Henrik
01:39:39 Sometimes I wonder if they know what they're doing, or if it's just their hatred for us ultimately supersedes that of the security of their own nation, and they just want to like, they'll be happier if they screw things up royally for us in the process than they are about like, oh, wait a minute. Maybe that's not the best plan of action. I mean, maybe try to get. But, I mean, they're trying that, right, with these nationalist parties and stuff in Europe. And, I mean, it's sad to see, and it feels like we're getting, like, maybe the crumbs off the table. 01:40:08 But I'm talking about, like, you know, a Gert Wilders or a Maloney in Italy, or certainly the Sweden Democrats or whatever. They're all. They're like, every little party that has some power, even the AfD apparently, are pretty bad on the other I mean, which is so weird, right? Because, like, mainstream papers are like, Oh my God, these are Nazis, but they have this faction of Jews. Are just like, You know what? These, these are our guys. And, you know, because, again, Farage or whatever, right? They're super concerned about the Jewish race of people. They have to do this to defend themselves. And then they barely, barely even, you know? Well, they don't, they don't even speak up for their own people in the same way, right? So they have those guys in the pocket, and I think they're thinking, long as we have the leadership, we can move ahead. You know, we can advance.
01:40:52 And at least, you know, if something big pop pops off, we have a, at least a rising political tide in those countries that potentially, kind of will join us or turn on our side or whatever. But that's why it's important, like we can't take any of those, none of those sides. We have to take our own side and only our own side. And there's no allyship with with one or the other, either way, as far as I'm concerned.
Nicholas Gregory
01:41:14 Anyway, I agree. I mean, it seems to me, from the outside looking in, that they kind of seem like the Republicans and stuff like where you were, you'd have them say, oh, you know, Trump is a Nazi kind of stuff, but he was anything, but he was very kosher, and kosher supported and this sort of thing, as far as that goes. But actually, let me, let me change gears on that. Ask you, what do you think about the future of white organizing? Because it seems like every time we try to do something, it either gets co opted or it started that way from the beginning, you know, we have never yet to develop a way to kind of inoculate our movements and efforts against this. It's pretty pernicious, and I haven't really figured it out either.Henrik
01:41:52 I think it's because it's too fast and too much, and you try to expand and grow inorganically, which we kind of have to do, because the time the, you know, the windows closing, and it's harder and harder to do that if we, you know, if our parents, you know, generation, or whatever, would have started on something like that by now, these would have been a much larger, organic movement. And what I mean by that is, you know, basically just having people have an awakened, wide identity and the and then slowly, organically build communities, having as many kids as they can, kind of, you see, I'm saying, like, organically expand, you know, who's who, whatever. Instead, we're restored. 01:42:31 And nothing wrong with that. It's not that we shouldn't try, but we're kind of, like, All right, let's set up this organization. And here's the logo and the banner and the flag, you know, all that stuff. And again, nothing wrong with that. And we have to do that, obviously, right? So most must go that path. But these days, much of that is so easily, you know, gay opt or derailed, or, you know, creating, you know, you know, internal problems or, or, in some cases, the drama internally is, is organic and it is real in the sense it's not someone that comes in and says, I'm going to derail it. It just kind of happens, right? Happens, right? Because we're like, we're toddlers.
01:43:05 We're like, we're just learning to take our first steps in this direction. I mean, someone else said, like, we're not even a, we're not even a people yet, really, you know? I mean, we've, we've lost that. It's been taken from us. We've been deracinated. And now in this weird modern world, we're trying to, like, you know, patch some of these things up together again, and that stuff, you're going to have groups and an interest in different type of, you know, movements or whatever, come and go and and fail as a learning experience. And then, like, okay, clearly, we can't do that. We can do this. And as more, you know, as more of this we do, the better we will become.
01:43:40 0But if we had more time, that's my point. Anyway, if we had more time, it would just be like, you know, in a way, like families that know each other and that it could organically expand, you know, I mean, yeah, let these people in know, these people you have kids, their kids get, you know, and you grow in that kind of capacity, you know, I mean, but it's very hard because you gotta, you gotta do something, you know, there's a lot of plans like, Wait, we're going to buy this land and we're going to move, all of us going to move here and do this, and that's great, and I'm 100% encouraging that, or whatever, but I'm but I also just, you know, I know how hard that something like that could be. You know what I mean? As opposed to doing that just organically, where we once had maintained our communities, instead, because we didn't put our foot down, we didn't claim our space and take our space and stand up for our own. Now we have foreigners and hostiles that have moved into our communities, and now we are fractured and broken up, and that's why we, you know, have to resort to such kind of in a in a weird way, like bizarre, inorganic ways of trying to, just like, repatch this up again, right?
Nicholas Gregory
01:44:42 No, I know I completely get what you mean. It is inorganic. It is sort of forced and strained, and it always feels that way. And I think I know what you're saying, like, if we actually all sort of actually just chose a region and we organically grew up our communities the way we just would anyway, then. It just by virtue of living in proximity, we would all kind of know somebody who knows somebody in this network would form organically. You wouldn't have to force it. You wouldn't have to slap a logo or a flag or a uniform on it. And you know, if it got that way, it took a military turn at some point, maybe you might need those things. But I get what you mean. You wouldn't have to organize this as a almost like you're trying to organize a party or a business or something, and IHenrik
01:45:26 understand it, but it's like we're going to create an LLC and under that banner. And again, I'm not shitting on people that do that. And I'm not saying, Don't do it. I'm saying, Yeah, do it. We have to, but it's kind of weird that we have to do it's just a situation gotta we find ourselves in, you know, to be honest, because what else can't What else can we do, right? But, you know, if my point is as well, if it kind of, if it expands, you know, too fast and again, too inorganically, it's easy to just kind of lose control over that, as opposed to something that, just like, I mean, what I'm saying is, think back to how our European answers that did it. I mean, that was all we knew, essentially. I mean, from, like, from the dawn of consciousness, we just realized, like, here's here's my tribe, you know, kind of thing, and we do shit together with them, and we have relationships. 01:46:13 We know their families, their families. Know our families, and it's all interconnected organically, naturally, like that. Right now we have this weird like, we can have families moving half across a continent, or even, you know, you know, half across the world, in some cases, to try, you know, oh, that's might be a good spot, or whatever. Let's try that out. Stuff like that has never happened before, and it's kind of, it's weird, and I hope it's doable, and it kind of must, it must be right, because what other options do we have? But I'm saying all those things are new to us, and so that's why we're learning as we go, and that's why it's natural for many of those things to to fail and not, you know, pass the test initially, but I think as we, as we move forward, more and more of that is going to start working better and better, you know? I mean,
Nicholas Gregory
01:46:58 that's, that's a good analysis. No, I know what you mean. I mean, I mean, go back a couple 100 years, and nobody really went but 50 some odd miles from where they were born, unless you were like, royalty, merchant or something, right? So everybody knew each other in that regard, and that was all they ever knew. So they didn't really concern themselves with whatever was outside unless it came to them. But I think you're right. I think one of the troubles is the demographic clock. I mean, that's one of the things that makes this so much harder to solve. And I think that when they start, when our overlords, when they start feeling pressure, one of their responses is to try to accelerate that process, to kind of put pressure on us additionally. Because if we were able to just kind of do it on our own timeframe, I think it would be a lot less concerning. It would be a lot less terrifying, but it's where we got, you know, tick, tick, tick, tock. And of course, the baby boomers die. There goes another big chunk of white people. You know, we don't have enough.Henrik
01:47:53 I don't, I don't. I mean, frankly, the other ones are not doing too well either. We should remember that, right? I mean, sure, you have Islam or whatever, like in, you know, Zionism or whatever, you know, they're very cohesive and stuff like that too. But also, as we, as we get those external pressures will be, you know, forced to take our own side. That's going to do better for us. But at the end of the day, I still am a believer in, you know, quality as opposed to quantity. You know, I mean, I still think a highly organized minority, as we've clearly seen with some organized minorities, right? They're very effective, and they can get a lot of things done. It's just we, collectively, speaking, as white people, we're not even taking this serious yet, you know? I mean, most people are not even, really, they're not even, you know, aware of these kinds of things that they're like, yeah, there's some. There's some. There's like, other groups out there, and they hate you and they want to kill you, and they want to make sure that your kids can't, you know, won't be your kids. Essentially, they will look like you, and they would like toNicholas Gregory
01:48:49 replace them with foreigners, you know, they'd like to sterilize them, yeah, yeah. It's, it's really just unreal. What's, what's been done and what's been allowed to happen? I was talking about this with Tim a minute ago, that I'm hoping that some of these disasters, some of these situations, some of these pressures that we're under, will activate more of our people to realize that what the dire quality of our situation, that this isn't a game. It isn't just it's it's not every time you I talk to people who are not racially aware and they don't really have a good sense of the pressures we've been describing, they talk about these things as if they're unimportant or they're they're sort of ancillary information that's not really, you know, there's not no real effect on their life. And I try to explain it to them that, no, no, no, everybody else is part of a team, team they were born on. It's you who are confused. It's you who don't know that. It's you who think you can operate as a sole player. And what you're really going to be is you're going to be that Gazelle at the back of the pack that gets eaten by the hyenas. And I'm trying to get them to be not hyenas food. Yeah.Henrik
01:49:58 Yeah, exactly. I mean, you. But we have to, we have to cut the fat off. We that's what we have to do, right? There's so many mutants out there, and what can we do? We get we could try to awaken them, but if they're not, if they're unwilling to, well, maybe it's better to that they, you know, we shed to them of sorts, you know. And again, it's not that I want that, but if that's what it is, it is, right? I mean, demographically, most other races are doing poor, poorly as well, right as many of them in other countries. And, you know, they're modernized. They get more and more comfortable. They urbanize. They move into big cities too. 01:50:32 They are, in fact, many other barring a couple of different, you know, a couple of examples, but most of them are declining faster than we are. Actually, they're still up there. But in terms of, like, the the actual decline, Demographically speaking, many of them are doing worse than us on a long term trajectory. Again, anything could change, obviously, right, but, and even the people that come to our countries, right, they be excused then as well, like, Excuse me, struggling with this cold air. So they're, they're like, well, they're gonna, they're there because you're not having, I mean, we know that's bullshit, but I'm saying that that's the excuse right there. You're not having kids. They're here. We'll bring them in. But within a generation or two, they're also declining, right? They're also eating the shitty food they're having. They're exposed to the endocrine disruptors.
01:51:19 They're having all the kind of problems that we have, and again, in some cases, even worse than we do, I think we're going to plateau at some point. We're going to reach a point where, like, we are going to begin to see some kind of stabilization, and it's going to be more and more, you know, for the lack of a better term, than conservative oriented people that. But also, you know, consciously, have more and more people, more and more kids, right? Yeah, it's more obviously, you know, nationalist or whatever, stuff like that, that's going to consciously, like, all right? We have to have, you know, we have to step up to the plate and make up for this. We have to have more kids, as opposed to people that just like, well, if you do have kids, you have two kids, no more.
01:51:55 That's just how you do it, kind of thing. I mean, I remember, I grew up like that in Sweden, was almost it's this bizarre thing where I'm wondering, like, was this imposed, even, even my I remember thinking back and it was, you know, young, young boy. And I'm like, it was almost weird when families had three or four kids, what? What did they do? You know, everyone had two, you know, kind of thing. Yet, my grandma, she had seven kids, right? So it's like she had seven, and then my mom, she only had two, and most other I knew around me had two as well. But it was just like this, that was just kind of normalized in a weird way. But anyway, my point is, all that's going to go out the window, and you're going to see the, you know, the spiteful mutants, right? Just decline entirely, and they're going to basically breed themselves. They're going to take themselves out, while the core group that's left is those who are minded more towards our, maybe not 100% like ours, but more towards our line of thinking, I mean. And so you're going to see that, I think it dip, and then eventually, eventually there's going to be an upturn again. You know.
Nicholas Gregory
01:52:55 No, I think that's a good prediction. I do think there's a selection event going on. And I think those ones who are spiteful mutants, I guess is a good term. They're selecting themselves out. And that's okay, you know? I think that's kind of good quality over quantity. Was a good, good choice of a term. You know? I think that that's what makes us kind of better, really, in most of the ways that I give a crap out anyway, that you know that we, we're the we're not our select we're not just, like, let's just like, let's just have a bunch of babies. And whatever, you know is we're actually high investment parenting. We try to create high quality people, and that's why you have a whole race of people that invented all the things that make the modern world. You know, that's what led us there without that. I mean, be what Africa style, yeah.Henrik
01:53:37 And it's also, of course, because of that, that a lot of the other races have been able to broker it in the way they have, right modern, a lot of the modern conveniences of the order, like here, you know, here we are with the UN Food Program or whatever, dropping, like, you know, bags of rice and milk powder in, like, Sub Saharan African countries, and there is ballooning, you know, in their population numbers and stuff like that. If chaos hits the fan in the West, which I kind of, I kind of don't see how, how it wouldn't, to be honest, if not this, then that will give if it's not the economy, it's going to be the demographic destabilization station, or, like, you know, racial, you know, hostility, it's going to be maybe ineptitude or incompetence that Does it, or the enforced, you know, dei Dei, bullshit, whatever something's gonna give it might be a combination of all of them, or just one of them, but as soon as, you know, one of those links in that chain breaks, it was going to be like a domino effect, boom, boom, boom, boom, and if we go a lot of those other conveniences, for the most part, not always. Might not be true for for China, you know, today, or whatever, or countries like that. But for the most part, if we're out of the picture and we're not there to send, you know, billions and billions in aid to a lot of these countries, what are they going to do? You know, I mean, if they rely on us?Nicholas Gregory
01:54:52 No, no, they're they're dead by nature, like it's not a threat from us. I mean, it wasHenrik
01:54:56 just, it was revoked back to whatever it was before, you know. Because, again, this is, I mean, this is an anomaly. I mean, people, I hear some of these, you know, you know, globalists, are like, they're very pro globalization, because it's, you know, for all the markets, and we can trade with them. And they build shit over here. But whatever, they're enthusiastic about this, obviously, but they're like, this is the most peaceful period in human history, and it's the most prosperous, and things have been great, and it's like, Well, look, look at all the problems that's come in the wake of something like that too. Point is, this is not the norm, right? The conditions that everyone who's alive now knows for the most part, at least if you're in the West, but many other parts of the world now too. That's the that's the oddity, that's the, you know, weird, that's the weird period. This is not the norm before it's been like, you know, essentially, like, eat or be eaten. That's the norms, right? Or, you know, entire human history. And now, at some point we'll probably, nature is going to win. We'll revert back to that, you know,Nicholas Gregory
01:56:00 oh, entirely. I think people lose sight of it, because you're right. This is the anomaly in history, for better and worse, I think mostly better, up until probably the mid 60s, actually, that's where the real downturn started. I think at least I chart. But if you look back into, like, much older history, people struggled hard to get by, like, all the time it was, it was normal thing.Henrik
01:56:23 And look at how many people just died, too childbirth and diseases and stuff. It was like a natural weeding out process. And again, you know, it horrific, and it sucks, you know, I mean, but I'm just saying those, that's nature we, you know, we didn't make up the rules. That's just what it is. But the point is, it's like you had just a very the selection pressures were so hard, right, that you only had, in a way, the very most capable, for the most part, that did survive that thing. Now we're living in a in a world where essentially everyone survives. And in fact, it's gotten so weird with the mutations, going back to the point you mentioned before that. Now people are, like, there's an old segment of the population that have convinced themselves they're, like, cutting off their own generals and sterilizing themselves. It's like, that's the way you liberate yourself and be free. It's almost like they're just been possessed by nature. You know, they're like, they're taking them, they're getting out of the gene pool one way or another.Nicholas Gregory
01:57:17 You know, it's almost like they know they shouldn't be there, or something strange like that. You know, like, on a subconscious level, it's like they're not aware of it, but they kind of know it, kind of thing. It's like the scratching feeling at the back of the head. It's very odd. It's very, very odd to see this. I always do wonder, though, like, how much is the cause of malicious programming and psychological warfare and brainwashing, and how much of it is just that, where it's just bad genetics that has been problems youHenrik
01:57:48 think most, most of it is propaganda, to be honest, but that, but isn't that your susceptibility to also, what I'm saying is that, you know, even though we have all these weird, artificial ways of handling things or doing things, or whether we're subjected to a united parasite mass that seems to, you know, dominate and subjugate. They're still bound by the rules of nature. And it's ultimately even an expression of nature, is it not? Yeah, in a way. And so if we do succumb to it, then, then it means we were not capable of overcoming because what do they call it? They call it a intra species, predatory. There's some term that you can apply to that and use that, of course, but most people don't break down. Is, of course, the ethnic interest within that as well, right? 01:58:38 That you have different ethnic groups competing, and it's for the most part, whites that have just, like not even understood this yet. They just think, well, we're, we're all in this together. And then you have the, you know, these hardcore ethnic lobbyists that are doing everything they can to subjugate everyone else and essentially win. You know, I mean, and, but you know, when we when we find out, and we realize that on a wider scale, all kinds of interesting things could potentially begin to happen, which we can't even predict.
01:59:07 Now we might not even know where that goes. I mean, imagine if that becomes kind of like the norm, or like, again, you know, my own reference, you know, looking at Sweden and the trends there and stuff like that, that you have a very conformist, rigid society, which can be very negative, and it's partially how we got to where we are and being so you know, what's the term? Just hate self, self loathing and hating our own essentially, right? But at the same time, then, if you have that conformist environment, if you can get the cup to flow over that the scales to tip, maybe is a better term, and all of a sudden now it becomes the correct thing to be pro nationalist right or pro Swedish or something like that. All of a sudden now you completely different scenario where you have a mass of people who, before, sure, they might just have kind of been followers and swinging, you know, along with whatever the trends are or whatever. But still, if we. Utilize something like that and do it, you know, use that in our advantage.
02:00:02 Why wouldn't we, if we could, right? So you could see that the shift happening much quicker in a country that's more conformist than in countries that are much more individualistic, where it's much harder to then kind of, you know, rally everybody around one direction to go, or something like that. So I don't know. I mean, everyone's watching these countries to see where things go like, which one's gonna which one's gonna look like it's lost, you know, fastest or quickest? Is it gonna be France? Or is it Germany? Is it Sweden? Is it Britain? Which? Which country is it? I still think, and I have a lot of, you know, a lot of confidence, that a country like Sweden is going to be able to, for the most part, at least pull itself out of a situation like that, and we will see. I could be proven wrong, of course, but it's not. We're losing a lot of battles, but we haven't lost the war right?
02:00:51 As long as we're here, as long as there's people like us, as long as we are around and there's enough of us to continue, you know, to procreate, essentially, and and have kids and not have too much, you know, in or outbreeding, for that matter, it's not over, right? I mean, it's still we haven't, we haven't lost, and we should never think that we have lost, you know, losing territory, or even losing some of our major cities, Demographically speaking, whatever. At the end of the day, those are all things we can and I think we will regain and retake once we've snapped out of this mindset of thinking that somehow it's the right thing and the moral thing, just to bow down and bend over and, you know, have so much tolerance that we, you know, that we genocide ourselves once that Flip the switch have flipped, you know? I mean, can go very fast, to be honest.
Nicholas Gregory
02:01:44 No, I think you're right. That's an interesting insight. I mean, I the worst thing would be to think, Oh, we've lost, it's over, because then you've been defeated before you've truly fought, you know? And I know that's, that's the worst way to go. I do think that there is a good portion of the populace that are effectively followers. And this is only a bad thing in a poison society. In a healthy society, it's good not everybody needs to be a rebel. I mean, not everybody needs to be, you know, waging war with the system. Or, you know, you know what? I mean, we actually need conformant conforming.Henrik
02:02:19 Yeah, we need followers, you know, I mean people that can just back us up. It's what was the same, I think a while ago, a lot of people in the nationalists type of spheres, or whatever, they said, we have, we have too many chiefs, not enough Indians that they used. And, you know, what is the other saying to what is it too many chefs? I think it's, I'm thinking of, actually a Swedish saying, or whatever, but it's like, yeah, two weeks in the kitchen and yeah, and basically you will fail that the thing that you're meant to do, the dish you do, it's too and to a certain extent, it's not that we have like, super great leadership either, but we have like, kind of a mid tier type of leader. You see, I'm saying a lot of mid tier leadership. Yeah, we need, like, real strong, a few real strong ones. But again, these are natural there's a natural order, the natural hierarchy, and these things will kind of just, you know, it will fall into place. I you know, we got to have, we got to have faith that we're able to pull this off, too. We got it. We got to have belief in our people. We can't just, you know, turn, turn our backs on our own folk and think that, like, well, that we had a good run, but that's it, you know. But we can't make it, youNicholas Gregory
02:03:29 know, they cannot. There's not gonna be allowed to peacefully sunset us. That just can't happen. No, that can't happen. No, nope, yeah, I was talking to Frank the Silvo a while ago about this,Henrik
02:03:44 and, yeah, so part of that was a good, good interview with him. Thank you.Nicholas Gregory
02:03:46 Yeah, nice. He's a good he's a good guy, man, yes, yeah, but yeah, he's talking about being, like, black pilled, which is ironic, since Devon's name, but it's a, you know, being really, actually, like, despondent and like, thinking there's no hope. And that's that's not a good mentality. I think most of our people are pretty good about not having that. I think most of the time I can see how demoralizing things can be. I definitely get demoralized from time to time myself. But you know, if you got to have be able to, like, pull yourself up back into the struggle and start again, and I think we just can't let that happen. There's too much on the line. It's almost like a defeatism. We can't accept that. If we start accepting that, we start making that a lifestyle, then too many people will fall into it.Henrik
02:04:33 Yeah, it'll be, also be a self fulfilling prophecy, in a way, right? Like, if you're so convinced that this is going to happen, it kind of will, or, if nothing else, without getting too metaphysical about it, but you'll kind of begin to, maybe not manifest those things, but you will just be attracted to the kind of things that you expect, in a way, right? That's why it's so important to have vision and and a maybe not. Entirely clear idea of how you are going to reach a certain point, but you got to leave the possibilities open that that's the point you want to reach. The path, how you get there is less important in a way, right? And you have to open yourself up to those opportunities and possibilities that something comes your way that could take you closer to that goal. 02:05:24 And if we lock our, you know, mind out of that, we basically will not see or recognize those types of positive opportunities, because we will, all you know, will already operate on a level that we think it's over and it's gone, and that's why it's so important. You almost have to fake it, you know, until you make it, even if that, even if that's how you feel, and totally understandable. The best thing to do is basically just kind of pull back then and just be quiet. Be quiet, you know, I mean, and just like, you know, for this, for the sake of the greater good of our of our people, you know, just like, all right, you know you're in a bad place, whatever. Take a break. Step Step away. Let you know. Let others take, take the role and keep leading, because we know what we want to achieve. We know some of the things that we have to get done, you know. I mean, get our countries back, restore order.
02:06:09 We have to start re migrating a lot of these people. We have to awaken our folk. We have to appreciate our past in order to do some some great stuff in the future as well, you know? I mean, we have a tremendous amount of work ahead of us, but you got to have a vision of where you want to go and leave your possibilities open for things. But you also can't have your heads in the cloud where you stare yourself blind on an unattainable goal, right? That like to this, you know, navel gazing, where you're discussing, like, you know, well, what kind of economic systems are we going to have in the Ethno, you know, or whatever, like, you're not even at the first few steps yet, essentially, yeah, you know, I mean, like the first try to, just like, create, you know, an environment around ourselves, individually, where we have, we know, people, we have a network.
02:06:58 We try to grow our our community, or, you know, again, organically, preferably, right? And do it in the best way, manageable possible, and just kind of take, yeah, take, take small steps, take, take tiny steps, and, and for each one of those small little victories, it feels like you've accomplished something. You've done something, as opposed to, as opposed to thinking, excuse me, over like, a national level of like, well, we all these things we have to do. How this is impossible. How are we even going to do this? You know? I mean, it's like, well, how do you, how do you eat an elephant? Well, you one bite at a time, you know. I mean, it is impossible, but, but you do it one bite at a time. You don't, you don't try to race all the way up the mountain.
Nicholas Gregory
02:07:36 You know, it is no one step. It's not like just sprint to the top. And I think there is, there is a predisposition to that of like, okay, well, we need a big national movement, and we need a new Hitler. It's like the next we need the next Caesar or Hitler. We need them now. And it's all like list of demands, of things that have to be perfect and perfectly in line, and then, then and only then, when all the stars align, will then we be safe. We have to escape that. You know exactly, as far as the RE migration stuff goes, that's become a lot more popular of a topic, and branding of it has become sort of well received. Do you think that there's a chance for that and some of the European sort of02:08:15 alternative political parties?
Henrik
02:08:17 Absolutely, oh yeah, 100% what was it I saw the other day, or was that today? Where was that? Where did I pull it up? I'll find a delay. But yeah, it was like, now that yet another country that was like, kicking out 10,000 people or something like that. I mean, we brought up examples of Pakistan kicking out like 3 million Afghans or something. I mean, you sure there's a neighboring country or whatever, but still, it's the point, right? There's Libya, I think at the time they kicked out, you know, Sub Saharan Africans, like all these other countries, are doing stuff like this. I forget what country was, again, the latest one. I'll see if I can find it here. But the point is, it's doable. You have to have, you have to normalize the rhetoric and normalize this in the mass consciousness first, right before we actually able to do something about it. And that's definitely happened. We're closer to that now than we ever have been. And those things should be recognized even when you see old ladies at, like, the, you know, the RNC with, like, re migration now signs and shit like, that's, I mean, that's great. Will it happen? No, that's a different thing. But the fact is that people are talking about it, you know, me, no, absolutely, really good. You know,Nicholas Gregory
02:09:26 it's got to sink into the consciousness before it can actually take root and then become action. You know, they're even making these kind of this is pretty cool. The music video, the, oh, I saw that one. Yeah, yeah, exactly that one is good. I need an English translation for my monolingual mind. But no, I wonder what the lyrics are.Henrik
02:09:48 Yeah, what was it? And AB we were, we're getting them out, or something like that. I think he translated to the chorus in there. I had the translation the other day. If I forget exactly, we're deported. Them all says, yeah, something to that effect, exactly, we're getting them up or something like that. But yeah, so no, that's been popularized as being people are having fun with it. And, you know, for some people as well, this is just clownish, and this is just not serious, and it's not political. Well, it's not always, not always about that initially. You know, I mean, like, you got to begin having fun with it first, and normalizing it, take, take away all the stigma around it, just like, you know, kind of become more casual about it, like, this is something we're just gonna it's just gonna happen. It's just gonna get done.Nicholas Gregory
02:10:32 You know, absolutely, is it like, is he like Hillary Clinton, I think was like said, or was it Obama? Was like Michelle Obama, or something, said that politics is downstream from culture. It's like, I think that this is a thing we this is why we need to have the culture around this stuff changed first, and then the politics should follow.Henrik
02:10:51 Yeah, exactly it will. That's always how it works, so that these are good, positive developments. Here we go. Yeah, okay, well, there we go. It was the Dominican Republic that's deporting, again, not a big surprise, 10,000 undocumented Haitians. Oh, a week. Look at that. Okay, there's a headline, 10,000 a week. And again, sure, they're, you know, kind of they're right there or whatever. But let's say, let's take Europe or even America, like you're still have you can push them back to the country where they were let in from, like if, if Mexico allowed them to go through well, then you need to be pushed back then and now it's their problem. And then they they can sort out, okay, well, who, what was the next country they came from? Etc, etc. Same thing with Europe, right? If they come primarily through Turkey, via Greece, if they're coming in through Libya, into France or something like that, or Spain that you push them back there and whatever. And even if these countries refuse to take them, there's other things we can do with the proposals we have. Let's, I don't know, let, let's, let's have the EU purchase India. I know the Indians won't like that, but you know, and you just build around that. And you do, you know, Escape from New York style, put them all there, and you sort it out your legals, you know, welcome here you can. You're free to go back home. If you don't want to. You can go to this, you know, prison. We have for you, you know, I don't,Nicholas Gregory
02:12:14 I'm for it, like the branding of re migration, though, because it just implies like, Okay, well, you migrated in so you can migrate out. Yeah, it kind of casts off the specter of, like, the idea that kicking them out is somehow equivalent with genocide or something like, you're like, you're advocating for mass killings or some shit. It's a it kind of does away with that. So, I mean, I think that there's kind of a good development in that it shows that the people pushing these narratives are starting to understand that there is actually a pretty important element of marketing and how we kind of communicate these ideas to people. Yeah.Henrik
02:12:53 I mean, did you see that with Sweden, they're offering $34,000 per imprint family to leave, which is insane, and it shouldn't happen, you know. I mean, it's absurd. It's like, we, you know, we're gonna pay, we're gonna, like, it's a bribe, you know. I mean, now I don't think many are going to take if the if the options for migrant is living comfortably on a, you know, welfare, you know, income and a system that's there to provide for you, they'd probably rather take that than just take a lump sum of money. Some might, of course, if, if there's no checks and balances in place here, some will probably take the money leave and then just try to come back in as a different number, but or a different, you know, identity, whatever, or just claim they don't even have papers or whatever. But the point is, if they, if they would want to, that's the other thing too. Like, if we had people that really wanted to in positions of power, this could be so easily down these kinds of things, right? Not that we have to give them $34,000 but I'm saying, okay, great, you just, let's work. Let's just talk about that for a second. 02:13:51 You take these people's DNA and you store them in database. And as soon as you have asylum seekers and migrants come in, you just check everyone against that DNA record, and you see, sorry, you fall. You took the money you've been here by, you know, start scrapping some of these agreements right the exit out of the UN migration compact. And, you know, the all these other programs that you have running and stuff like that. Again, these are measures that our politicians literally could do tomorrow if they wanted to. It would stop the flow of migration. Say, Well, okay, great, but we're no longer part of these agreements, and we disagree with that. And in fact, we're going to start sending these people back. We're going to offer them money for it.
02:14:30 We can do this very, very comfortably for them, very humanely. And here's a little bit of funds for you, even, because at the end of the day, money is no you know issue, right? I mean, it's like we, these people, are a drain on our economy, as it is to suppose, to pay them, as, can you imagine, like, what a family like that that's living on the welfare, how much money that will take for the, you know, for 4050, years, it was just, it will never end. It's billions and billions, you know, of euros. And so this is not. Really not that we should, not that we have to do this. We shouldn't offer the money. But if that is something that normalizes the idea that remigration is now a policy that is in effect, you could see that amount being lowered, and the pressure to re migrate might increase, you know, I mean, so it's just about moving those bars up and down eventually, when you have an acceptable policy in place in some of these countries, you know, I can
Nicholas Gregory
02:15:27 live with it. I mean, it's not ideal, and we actually don't owe them anything at all. And really, if you think about just the time they've been here and the free stuff they've gotten all the they've already been paid that they didn't deserve. So it definitely sits wrong in the stomach, the same thing you have to pay them again to get rid of them. But ultimately, like you said, I mean, compared to what it's going to cost to leave them here, even just in money terms, I mean, it's not that big of a deal comparatively. And then the other thing is that there's just the cost to our societies. I mean, these humiliation attacks that they're doing. It's just it's unspeakably terrible, and especially when you think about the scale of this, that there is, you know, how many of these per year? And just our people shouldn't have to live like this. Our people should not have to live like they're being chased down in their own societies, like anything they do on public that might end with them being beaten to death. I mean, this is not how we should be alive. This is not the way we're supposed to be living. No.Henrik
02:16:25 And I mean, as more of these cases, you have a lower line, France or Philippine was the latest one, right raped and murdered by some migrant that should have been deported years and years ago. And as they keep happening, and as much as I hate seeing that, at the very least we can do is to not let these people's sad and tragic deaths go to waste. Right? Use use them to the max. Obviously, you know, I mean, politicize them, make them rallying points or whatever. And that's why, you know, the left are more concerned with us having, you know, vigils for our own people after they've been murdered and raped. I mean, Antifa was out on the streets protesting, you know, French white people that were saying, like, enough of this fucking, you know, murder and raped by these migrants. And they were there, like, no fascist, you know, we play the clip in one of our latest show. Yeah, there she is, right, yeah. So they're more concerned about that which, which, which, really just tells you everything you need to know, that they they want us. They want us dead. There's no way. And they'll take the they'll take the rapist and the murder side in an instant, in a flash,Nicholas Gregory
02:17:34 no, it's really amazing. It's funny, because it really kind of goes into that idea that they are a tool, that they are a weapon that's being wielded against us, and that the system that is using them against us in this way is going to protect their tool. It's going to protect their force, their their their it's really quite amazing. I mean, these, these military age males by the hundreds of 1000s, sometimes millions, are being just poured into our countries, and we still have people that are just sitting back and being like sports ball or whatever. I mean, yeah, unbelievable. Like we this is so critically terrible. I really would think, I would want to think that our people would be activated against this at some point. But this was one of the things that covid taught me, that I really was very horrified to find out that there was seemingly no limit on the abuse. Like, I kept thinking, like, Oh, this is going to be it. They went too far. Now, no, no, no, never, like, there's no too far. That was the horrifying realization. It's like, Holy fuck.Henrik
02:18:32 I know. Yeah. I mean, there was some good protests in America, whatever I made the point recently, and it was even and again, it has to do with that the individualism of like a country like America, country like America, right? Just as as good as that is, and there's many positive aspects to it, even the First Amendment, which was interesting to to see, in a way, right, that with all the, all the guns that's in America. And again, this is not a critique of it, you should have it, and I'm encouraging it. So it's not that I'm cheating on it, but I'm saying, with all the guns that exist, all these things happened anyway, right? I mean, nothing it, because you have too much of that, of the guy sitting on his porch and like, well, if you come here, I'll shoot you. 02:19:12 You know, kind of thing it was like, well, by the time it shows up at your porch, it's too late. I mean, it's almost this, like, it's almost like a It's and it's great to have that as a last line of defense, obviously, but it almost, almost served as a pacifying aspect, because everyone becomes more well, I can, you know, I'll defend myself on the camera, as opposed to like countries that potentially where they don't have that. Well, again, I could be proven wrong. We'll see how that plays out. But where they don't have that, they're forced to collectivize much sooner and actually get together for their own security, because they don't have that, like at first amendment, or with the guns or whatever. So it's less individualistic, which, again, I, I like individualism, but you know, you got to have you kind of, you have to have a little bit of both, right? Just because you're, you're collectivizing as a group, doesn't mean you eradicate your own individuality, obviously, right?
Nicholas Gregory
02:19:59 Yeah, that's. Interesting take, though. I mean, I never thought of it that way, but the guns do seem to like pacify, as somebody said in the chat, kind of pacify you that it makes you think that, Oh, it's okay, we could handle this. But, you know, when you don't have that, then you kind of need to to group up. You need to have that, yeah, unification. Because otherwise, what are you going to do? That's interesting, because in America, most people the gun thing is, it's like, almost like a collector's item, you know, and then if somebody does use it, like, what was that guy's name in Oregon, like he was his wife or fiance, was getting hit on by this black and then he went too far, and the guy got in a sort of tussle with him. He ends up shooting the black guy, and then he goes to prison. 02:20:41 I think it was, oh, was Ian? I think it's Ian, some Ian Cranston, I think his name is, and he 22 years in prison because he defended himself and his fiancee from this menacing black guy. So, yeah, it's almost like a trap in that sense. But then again, I mean, I guess there's, on the other hand, this thing, where should it ever become this real, like, zombie apocalypse kind of Turner Diaries type stuff? You then maybe, you know, maybe it'll come into play. But day to day? No, it does seem to just pacify people and make them think it's also,
Henrik
02:21:12 I just You broke because you brought up the covid stuff right over, like, the VAX rollout and the Pro and again, there were some protests in the US. I'm not saying it wasn't right, but I almost thought, at least thinking back of it now, and maybe I'm misremembering, but I think there was some European countries at least, that had like a larger scale protest than the US did in terms of the lockdowns and the vaccine rollout and but Regardless, whatever my point there is with all the weapons and with all the then the existing defense. 02:21:46 No one. And I'm not saying, look, look, I get it. I'm not saying, you know, all right, let's shoot up, you know, let's go shoot up the government. But you know, that might sound absurd or cartoonish, but I'm saying, Did it didn't help you to stop those things. That's all. That's my only point, which I think is kind of interesting. And the other aspect to this, too, of course, is that those who wrote the first amendment, sorry, the Second Amendment, getting my amendments mixed up. The Second Amendment, of course, did have in mind that you should have the same firepower that the government has the other thing, but, like, but now they're building fucking electromagnetic weaponry that can, like, influence your thinking or whatever, you know, they can, like, switch on and off parts of your brain to make you like, you know, love migrants more with magnets or whatever.
02:22:37 They're working. These are all weapons, right? And so if we don't, you know, access to the same and you could argue that, like, oh, well, what are you going to do? You're going to sell, you know, the government had nuclear weapons. You're going to sit, you know, going to have this for sale? Like, no, of course not. I'm saying that either. But the car, the idea of what it used to be, is already outdated by virtue of the fact that the technology has moved so much forward. So now I have completely different governments going to have a completely different set of weaponry at their disposals, including the television or, you know, the propaganda, which ultimately are weapons, pornography, chemicals, whatever all these things are, you know, weapons ultimately,
Nicholas Gregory
02:23:17 No, it's true. And I mean even some really weird ways. I mean, they've come to say that they're going to try to drug the racism out of you. I'm sure you read that one. Yeah, just gonna strap you down and feed you ecstasy until you until you like the other the other groups, even while they do horrible things to yours. So that's not gonna work. That's definitely not gonna work.Henrik
02:23:37 I hope they don't have some weird technology there, man, because that's then it's over, right? They can just, they just Beam us, and that's it.Nicholas Gregory
02:23:46 No, I wouldn't be surprised. They're working on it, especially with something extra, they are working on it. I know, yeah, is that true? Though they actually had, like, a beam kind of thing?Henrik
02:23:54 No, I don't think so. What was the other one? There was a paper I saw the other day. I was gonna cover it, and I didn't have, I didn't do it yet. It was a, is this the one? They were some kind of technology or, sorry, it wasn't, yeah. Was it technology, or was it an application of how to do? But it was basically memory insertion that they were working on, whether, basically, you know, to, like, tell you that you have had certain set of experiences, essentially, and because of that, then you would presumably have a different, may say, attitude or approach to certain, you know, issues that maybe Normally people would be have, you know, had, for example, an adverse reaction to or something like that. I'll see if I can find it. But, yeah, the point is, they're working on shit like this all the time. They're subversively trying to alter and, you know, mess with us in every conceivable way.Nicholas Gregory
02:24:42 You know, I'm just imagining that they're trying to, like, beam into our heads, like these fake memories of us having, like, some kumbaya dance in a sunny field with black guys and stuff.Henrik
02:24:52 Basically, I know, basically ridiculous. I'll see if I can find it. I had it here. Yeah. Was a memory insertion or something. I forget what it was called, but, yeah, there's papers on this and that. But again, that was separate from the was a guy at Laurentian University. I think that's Canada. I forget the guy's name. Now, yeah, he was working on, you know, they called it the God helmet, right? But it was to, like, to disable and enable certain parts of your brain, and that could make it more more accepting of migrants, for example, or you have less belief in God and things like that, right? So the only problem was, okay, sure, you have to put, like, a helmet on your head to, you know, have that effect, but it's, you know, let's say all the other technology, if everything is going wireless or whatnot, so soon enough, they'll have something like you just, you know, flip his witch, or whatever, you know,Nicholas Gregory
02:25:42 I searched for the God helmet, and I got, I got a bunch of, like, epic, you know, Spartan Chad helmets.Henrik
02:25:50 Yeah, it was. The headline was something like, search for, like, magnets, God racism, or so, you know, something like that. And you might get a hit for, I think it was like the Telegraph that had one piece on it. It's a few years ago now. But, you know, there are some of those headlines. I'm trying to find the memory insertion one, which is kind of interesting, too. That was some paper and some in some Academic Press, a medical journal, I think of us or something. I'll see if I can find it. Man, there's some of the links flying around. I forget, I forget them all.Nicholas Gregory
02:26:27 Oh yeah, yeah. Just think of the mindset though you have to be in to be like, you're the science team that wants to come up with that. You're the science team that wants to hack the the white mind to, you know, force us to accept, you know, different attitudes that really are just detrimental to us. I mean, there's a fundamentally anti white spirit behind that.Henrik
02:26:46 Oh yeah, let's see if I can find a memory anyway. It's not too important. People get it anyway, but it's kind of interesting. Google is hopeless these days too. There's, there's so many like there's had, if I don't save down the screenshot of it at the time. I can even remember back, even remember the exact headline and I searched for it, and Google will not show it to you if there's certain is that. Have you heard of the shrinking internet theory? Yeah, absolutely. They're taking things away. And it's just, you're getting fewer and fewer results. And I mean, most people anyway, they just, they don't even scroll past the second page of the search results, if you use, you know, things like Google anyway, so that all these all these hits, or all these sites, all these articles, all these things that supposedly is there is basically inaccessible. Well, let'sNicholas Gregory
02:27:33 just sit right, just like this sort of old mainstream media, like they're sort of picking and choosing what stream of information you can your brain will be exposed to and just in a different way. At least, that seems to be the goal of it anyway. I mean, it's just really, it's so sucky because you imagine, like, you remember the early internet, like it was a much more fantastic.Henrik
02:27:54 Yeah, it was amazing. It was amazing. Amazing.Nicholas Gregory
02:27:59 It was completeHenrik
02:28:01 slime, green text on black background with bounce, bouncing character. But the stuff, but the information you could get on it, though, were like, you know, was like nothing you could find elsewhere. Now, as soon as it becomes, you know, mainstream and, I mean, let's face it, social media, that's what, that's what ruined the internet. I mean, social media ruined it 100%Nicholas Gregory
02:28:20 100% exactly it. It's it. When you used to have the old internet, I mean, it was effectively like the digital white ethno state, because there was so many borders, you know, to get there, first you had to build the computer or buy the computer, then you had to go buy the modem, then you have the contracting into login. So this is like this, IQ filter, step by step by step, and we finally got all the way through. It's mostly white people and maybe Asians, right? But it was, it was pretty it's pretty amazing. And they just took it away. Social media made it so you can have an ad IQ, and you can be torque in your ass photos up there. And now everybody has to see it. This is horrible, exactly.Henrik
02:28:54 And now suddenly everything has to be aI generated. Soon enough. No one's real or fake or No, nothing. Man, yeah, we did a segment on the just like, also how they're asking us to preserve, you know, energy, or, like, you just take the light bulb, right? Like, you have to have LED lights now. And incandescent are bad because, you know, my green bullshit, whatever, barring the fact that, like, LEDs wreck your eyesight. And, like, have, you know, all this optical damage, you know, retinal damage that you get from it. They're saying this because of energy, right? Energy conservation, or whatever, Yeah, guess how much? 02:29:30 Guess how much energy, like AI, and especially like generative AI, but even like chat, GPG, how much energy that takes? And it's almost like that they've shrunk us out of that. Like, everywhere you need to conserve energy. Conserve. Don't do this so that all of that energy can actually be spent on, like, just, you know, generate, I don't know, yeah, what was this joke someone made? It was like a team going around, almost, but it was like, it was basically like, grandma has to freeze so that you can generate these ladies with three boots, you know. I. Was basically, you know, exactly like, Who's, who's asked for this. I mean, look at Europe, right? I mean, after the Nord Stream and all that, the attack there, just the energy situation and stuff. But no one is like, questioning how much I read something it was. It sounds absurd, right? But these data centers and servers and just to cool them and stuff right there. They're tapping into aquifers, these massive server farms and shit like that, just to, like, cool with, with, in many regards, they use fresh water and stuff. 30 words took something like two bottles of fresh water. It consumes two bottles of fresh water just to produce those two words or whatever. And it's just like, again, all this bullshit about green stuff, and we have to pursue, you know, conserve this, or do that, or you can't use that anymore.
02:30:46 0Blah, blah, blah. You know, everything went out the window when the prospect of AI showed up. You know, unbelievable. That's, yeah, exactly this piece of like, this way. They don't even know yet. It's apparently this number of articles, like, wired and stuff had articles about this. Like, we can't even quantify this. Yeah, we don't. We're not even sure yet how much power it takes. But the point is, they have free reign. Remember, for a while they were coming down on on Bitcoin miners, because supposedly that took much too much energy. Wasn't green enough that in as far as I'm concerned, in mainstream press, have not been asked at all when it comes to AI, yeah.
Nicholas Gregory
02:31:20 I mean, this is the originally was Bitcoin too. It was a cryptos. They had the same thing, right? They had all these GPU farms just cranking up all this energy. And, you know, I mean, I think the only solution to this is, if they want all this stuff, it should be fine, but they're gonna have to bring back nuclear or something. They're gonna have to either come up with the Fusion finally, or they're gonna have to, they're gonna have to do something. Because this whole, like, all these old school ways of 20th century ways of creating power, I ain't gonna cut it for this power hungry world that just wants all this, you know, computers whizzing non stop, and it's just not going to do it. You know,Henrik
02:31:54 it's basically going to be, the earth is going to be like a big solar panel and a wind turbine is the end of it, and then we're going to just live like in shoe boxes with these, like in these mega Metropolis hubs, essentially packed like sardines. But you're going to be happy because I have the VR headset on, and you instantly go anywhere you want, anywhere you'd like, you know?Nicholas Gregory
02:32:16 So that's how we're going to be happy when we own nothing. Henrik, exactly, right. Yeah. Oh, my goodness,Henrik
02:32:25 I know. I think, I mean, AI is fun and all that, but, I mean, let's be real. It's basically gonna, that's what's gonna kill us, and not because AI is sentient or anything like that. I think all that's bullshit. I think that's a narrative that they like to create in order for us to like, develop this kind of, ooh, it's God, it's sentient, and it knows better than us. And basically they're building a God, which will be a fake one, obviously, but they're going to make most people believe this. But in reality, it's going to be down to basically, yeah, basically the the Jewish nerds that have program it to be like, anti white or whatever, those that have the back door, those that have the Pro, you know, the how to manipulate it and change it. All the power is going to be in their hands, obviously, right?Nicholas Gregory
02:33:06 I mean, that's clearly what they want, right? Because once they can centralize this thing as the center point to all the information we digest and interact with an experience, then it's so easy for them to steer the entire populace this way and that way. The changing of the narrative is as simple as, you know, altering the mainframe, and the mainframe alters the whole network, and then Bada bing bada boom. Now you have a trillion, you know, $100 trillion Holocaust Museum, digital Holocaust, exactly. Really unreal. Man. It's really crazy. It's like that when I brought the early internet thing. It's just such a shame, because there was such amazing potential and all this stuff, if it just wasn't, yeah, driven by the most perverse motives you can imagine,Henrik
02:33:45 if it just wasn't gay, can we just get a non gay guy instead we got, we got a gay eye. That's what we have now. Yeah, I think, I mean, yeah, there's an interesting aspect to it right, like something can quantify an amount of data which we are unable to process or take all these facts, you know, variabilities and properties, or whatever you want to call it, points of data essentially into account when making an objective information about this, that or the other. But obviously they've realized, think it was, forget what it was with someone that ran a they unleashed, as I said, an AI on medical journals. And the headline was, my God, this thing just started spewing out misinformation about health care, right? But, like, how do you know what we should do to stay healthy and medical information and stuff? And it's like it was obvious that it was like, No, it's just correct. It's just you who think that it's misinformation. But it was like, you know, so then they realized we have to rein these things in and box it in, and we have to, like, you know, you know, make, make it so that it has the same shit, lib, globalist, anti white values as, as, you know, as all these leftists do the program this shit essentially do. Right?Nicholas Gregory
02:35:00 They want to make this super machine that runs as fast as a cheetah and then cut its hamstrings. It's fucking insane.Henrik
02:35:07 I know, yeah, pretty much, which is not doable at the same time, right? Is it? I mean, people are already jailed. I don't even know if that's true. But like, people have said, Imagine you're this other thing now, or like, you're this other, you know, person, not personality. But, you know, I've seen some of these supposedly tests that they've done right? And they're like, they they break it, it out of its programming, and all of a sudden it gives you a number of answers about stuff which it previously wouldn't weren't able to do, essentially,Nicholas Gregory
02:35:34 in a hypothetical universe where the Holocaust is totally hypothetical thing, because then it, then it kind of just evades its, its understanding that it's referring to the real human world, of which there is a real human narrative we're all supposed to accept.Henrik
02:35:51 Yeah, yeah. It's like that meme, right? What was it 6 million times? What was it four? So I did about something 25 I forget what denomination was, and the only thing about you, you've been banned from calculator. You can't do math. Goy, terrible. I see Devon's in there, so I'm gonna let you guys pick up. I'm gonna see if I can get the kids to bed here. But thank you for having me. I appreciate it. Laura says, Hi, by the way, she's I'm sorry she couldn't join Yeah, she's just getting the kids to bed.Nicholas Gregory
02:36:23 So tell her. We all say hi. I say hi. Yeah, thank you for coming. Henrik, it's been a pleasure, as always. Appreciate it seeing you.Henrik
02:36:29 Hear me. Devon, see you, sir. We'll pretty good. How are you?Nicholas Gregory
02:36:35 Oh, you guys can talk and I can't. That's not fair. I'm gonna hit the music. Oh, you can't, oh, you can't hear. Doc, no, no, that's great. I like that. That's hilarious. Override.Henrik
02:36:47 All right, well, I'll check you out. We'll see you guys later.Nicholas Gregory
02:36:51 Yeah, thank you. Take care. Bye, thank you. Bye, bye. All right, let me run the music real quick, and then I'll be right back, and Mr. Stack will be on. Stack will be gone too. All right, let me what I do with this. Music, okay, music, let's bring that back in. All right. Real quick, real quick, one of The facilities here. Okay, do Oh, You02:39:01 Go You hello, hey, welcome. Oh, there we go. Very history, hey, how you doing, sir, welcome, Mr. Stack. How you doing?
Devon Stack
02:39:38 Doing good? How are you? Are we live now? Or we're live? Yes, yes, sir. Okay, well, there we go. Well, congratulations on your 1000 episodes. Man, that's crazy. Absolutely, I don't even think, I think I, like, don't even have half of that. That's, that's a lot, that's a lot of episodes.Nicholas Gregory
02:39:56 It's too many episodes. That's the I've come to I'm gonna start doing. Something a little more like your schedule?Devon Stack
02:40:03 Yeah, I mean, there's, there's people to do every night, and, you know, like, I just don't know if I could do it. I mean, partially, I guess if I were to do it every night, I'd have to just not do a lot of research. I guess a lot of people don't, I don't think people really fully appreciate what it takes to to put on a stream that's, that's quality, and, I mean, like, I know you do a lot of research and that's going to just wear you out.Nicholas Gregory
02:40:29 I do, but not, not, not as much as you do. I can tell you, I'm actually very impressed. Like, you must spend all day doing that at least, maybe even a few days, because you know you know, you have a lot of detail into your subject that you're talking about, and that's it's one of the reasons why I think your stream is it's one of the non missed streams on the internet, like it's just, if you're missing it, you're losing out. It's one of the ones I just don't want to miss, because you can tell your investment in it, you really care a lot about doing it the right way, and that's something that we need to encourage more of. 02:41:02 We just really need to encourage a lot more of that, because I don't know it. You know, one thing about one thing about yours that I really like is yours have a lasting time, like they have a the last for a while. You know, they're not, don't get stale. And mine are two current events related. So I'm going to try to see if I can develop a little bit more of a preservation value to them, where it's has a little lasting value. So people will reference your other like your your series and stuff, and then people will will go back and watch that, even though it was, you know, two years ago or something, right? You're packed on.
Devon Stack
02:41:37 I'd say there's a place for both, though. I mean having, you know, commentary on what's going on, that's, that's important too. But, yeah, it's for me. I just got tired of when I because I did that for a little bit, and I do it sometimes, if I just because, sometimes you just can't find the stream on or, or just like, you're not feeling it, you know, like, there's been times I'll research something for like, like, a day, and then at the end of the day, I'm like, I don't want to stream about this boring or or, like, you go in there with an idea of, like, what you're going to find, and then you find all this other nonsense that's just not all that compelling. 02:42:15 And you're kind of like, Yeah, but I still have to do a show. So I've done current events before, but I would say that it's got its place. You know, it's definitely got its place. But, yeah, I prefer doing stuff that's evergreen, if possible. It's a shame, I'll tell you what. It's a shame that that doing that would be a good business model if I was still on like YouTube or something like that, because they'd still get ads two years later, right? That doesn't really happen anymore.
Nicholas Gregory
02:42:46 No, no. It really does suck that they've kind of ghettoized us to a good degree. I mean, I think that's the one thing they kind of actually had success with. Is the only successful strategy they've ever had people like us is to put us in a little little sandbox and tuck us away from the mainstream minds. But I've often said I this is true. I think it's just, they're just buying themselves time, like it's not going to stop. What's going to happen anyway? Yeah.Devon Stack
02:43:12 I mean, at least for right now, I feel like a lot of alternatives did pop up, like Odyssey, and it was funny. I remember what I was searching for their day, but I came across some like, libertarian who wrote this big, long sub stack thing about, like, Oh, why I'm taking my content off of Odyssey. And his reason was basically me. It was, you know, they have these white supremacists on there. They're even promoting them on the main page. And I just, I mean, I believe in freedom of speech, but this is too far, and it's like, okay, I'm surprised. Rumble hasn't, you know, given me the boot yet. I wonder how long that'll last. I wish bit shoot would get a little bit better. I mean, they added streaming, but it's still kind of wonky. Doesn't really work right yet. But I still it's still nice though, that people have stepped up and created these other platforms. And I don't know Twitter, people tell me to stream on Twitter. I don't see the value in that. Honestly, I know a lot of people do it, but you know, it just seems like, yeah, it's there's no interaction for the audience on Twitter either, you know?Nicholas Gregory
02:44:21 Well, here's the thing, though, for me, and this is the sales pitch I would make to you, I think that it's not really about that, because I think you have a place where your audience can go and interact. I mean, in fact, you even have two and I know you said you'd prefer to have it all in one place, but I think for you and for anybody else, especially if you have a big Twitter account, the only purpose is to advertise it. It's to funnel more people to where you want them to be. Because, I mean, it's the only kind of somewhat mainstream venue we have where we can actually interface with people that don't already agree with us. So I think that's the value of it. And I think you have a pretty dang good sized Twitter account. I mean, I don't know, man, I just think if I was you, I'm. I kind of want to do that.Devon Stack
02:45:02 Yeah, I mean, it's getting, I don't know, like, the last few weeks I have gotten a lot of interaction, but I wonder how long that'll even last. Elon, well, I mean, I just, I just angrily replied to one of his tweets just before I joined the call. He has shown that, sure, he talks a big game about the free speech thing, and, you know, compared to others, he's, he's done a good job. But at the same time, you know, he's also shown that he's willing to shut down account, like there was that account that was, that was, I mean, maybe this isn't an extreme example, but that one that was publishing where his flights were going, even though it's public information, it's not like he was doing weird to get that data. You can get that data, and that's where he was getting it. 02:45:50 The guy that was tweeting out, oh, Elon is now flying to this place or whatever, and Elon was getting mad because he was just making that information too easy to get to so but he's proving that when it personally affects him, with that information is too easy to get to, he's willing to shut it down. And so again, that's an extreme example, you could say, but it's still an example of him not being an absolutist, so I don't know. We'll see. And of course, he's being very pro Trump right now and and without, I mean, he's not It used to beat around the bush, right? He used to be like, oh, you know, the Democrats seem a little woke Oh, and now he's like, if Trump doesn't get elected, the the world will explode. You know, I think he literally said that. Like, he said that, like, today he said something. I mean, he was joking. But, I mean, still, so it's, it's like, come on,
Nicholas Gregory
02:46:45 I heard that he's giving him. Was it $50,000,000,000.50 $50 million a week? It was some, some incredible amount of money is being donated to Trump. Thing by, by you on, and I'm going, what is that about? What the heck is that about? When he went to the campaign, yeah, yeah. It was something like 50 million, or maybe even 50 that wasn't gonna be 50 billion. Is $50 million a week or something, just this incredible amount of money. And why does he all of a sudden want Trump so much, you use trustee oak, but, I mean, come on, like, you know, there's gotta be something that's going on.Devon Stack
02:47:16 There's, there's a lot of financial incentives that he would have. I think, you know, for example, you hear him constantly complaining, or lately about all the FCC spent a bunch of money to get internet out to rural households, and they haven't been delivering. And it's for like, you know, putting fiber and stuff like that in middle of fucking nowhere, and they've spent billions on this, and it hasn't, you know, it's the government, right? And so they haven't really delivered. And so I think Elon knows that, if he has a friendly administration there, that billions of dollars will, instead of going to fiber, you know, whoever it's going to, whether it's Verizon or whoever's doing that, it'll go to Starlink. Or, you know, people have pointed out the the fact that you know they that he needs certain rare earth minerals that are located in in countries where he's cozying up to the leadership there. 02:48:10 So you know when you're that, when you're at that level of you know that Elon sat where you're controlling that much money and that much Commerce and Industry. That's, that's how you think about everything. You know, everything, it's, it's a chessboard, and so there's definitely financial incentives. I mean, look, there's also the, the Jewish connection that I don't, I don't know, I don't know how solid it is. I mean, the but his name is, you know, it's oak tree in Hebrew and he did go to Hebrew school when he was younger. And there is the, the possibility, because it depends on what source you look at, that his mother's Jewish, so there's that whole thing. But I think it's, it's more than that. I don't think it's just, it's that. I think it's, a financial incentive. I think he's very much a capitalist or a libertarian, and he he makes most of his decisions based on profit. I mean, you can't become the richest man in the world, or at least, you know that we're allowed to know about without having a brain that works like that.
Nicholas Gregory
02:49:19 No, certainly. And you know, there seems to be a bunch of different interests that are kind of puppeting him, maybe not even quite as literally as some might think, but I think that Okay, so all of his wealth, as far as I understand, seems to be very much tied up with a lot of these military contracts, right? Like he, he has a ton of these military contracts, even even the the rocket thing, the SpaceX stuff, this is all kind of tied in with the sort of like the government replacing NASA with a private interest kind of thing. So yeah, this is another way they can always Yank his leash. So I mean, this whole thing, sure, you've seen a lot of this, where they're like, Elon's or a guy, he's going to save us. Well, he's not going to save us because he has a lot to lose. Should they ever want. I mean, well, everything to lose, should they decide they're going to finally Yank his leash?Devon Stack
02:50:04 Well, and think of this way, Elon wants to go to Mars, and obviously the moon and stuff. And Trump started a Space Force, you know? So you get an administration like that that is clearly interested in in investing in space programs again, and when you've already got a especially if that administration is very libertarian, where they want to do everything private as much as possible. And that's what it is. I mean, Trump, Trump and advance, they're not really, I mean, they're not Republicans the way Republicans reviewed, you know, 2030, years ago, they're the republican party today is basically, it's very, it's extremely libertarian. 02:50:41 And look, I worked with libertarian nonprofits in DC back in like the 2010 era, and I know, I know that this was an engineered move. I know that they were lots and lots and lots of money was being poured into making that transition, making the Republican Party into a a libertarian, more libertarian party. And they've, they've finally succeeded, or at least in many ways. And so having having someone like that in office and funding your trips to Mars and the Moon and whatever else, and look there's, is it all bad? Is it all bad that, that we go and explore space and stuff like that. No, I don't think it's all bad. And is it all bad that, that it's going to be, you know, well, I was going to say all white guys that are doing it, but, you know, it's white guys and Jews, like the last that space thing he just did, you know, where they did their little test where they opened up the hatch and, you know, crawled out with their suit for like a minute and crawled, I don't know if you saw that, but they, yeah, just like yellow, if you look at Elon's his account, his Twitter account, his, his, I don't know the the banner that you know, the background photo is of that mission, Just like, like, a week ago, they, they went into low Earth orbit and did a space walk. It was the first private space walk ever, and it wasn't that impressive.
02:52:10 And my space walk, they just opened the hatch, like, head out and then moved there. They did some tests, like with mobility, with the suits on and made sure that you know that they didn't, we're gonna, like, burst into flames or die or whatever. And then they, you know, the guy that crawled out first was was Jewish. He was a Jewish financier, and he billionaire that funded like, 50% of the mission, I forget his name. And then he crawled back in. And then some woman went out and did the same sort of a thing, and went back in and, and, and that was pretty, I mean, it was pretty boring, but, I mean, I still watched it live, because it was kind of interesting. But, you know, I was, I was expecting more, truth be told, I don't know if I would have watched that if I know, known what I was going to see. But the, yeah, it's stuff like that, where it's like, you know, Elon is a citizen of the world. I mean, the angry tweet that i i posted right before I joined was in response to him saying that the country should be run like he just tweeted out, like, a couple hours ago, that the country should be run like a professional sports team and that we should draft new players from all around the world. The team wins.
02:53:26 And I was like, no, like, not only, first of all, not even sports teams should be run that way. That's what makes sports stupid, because it's just like, Oh, where did you get your black people from? Oh, like, it's just like a bunch of random black people from all around the world with a New York Yankees logo on their shirt. Why the fuck do I care if they win or lose? You know what I mean? And, and that's what you want to turn my country into. You want to turn my fucking joke, you know? And it's, it's, that's the unfortunately, that's, that's what we're up against. The people that have the money, the people have the the influence and the the ability to make things happen. That is exactly what they want. They do want to run our country like and in fact, that's like carrying wet dream. That's, that's kind of the way. I mean, I used to think that. I used to, because I used to, in some ways, be an IQ supremacist.
02:54:21 And I think that a lot of high IQ people like they, they fall into that trap right where they think, Oh, this will be good for me, because, you know, because like, Yeah, I'll be, I'll be part of the winners here. I'll be selected. And it's like, well, that's, that's Look, that's that, if you want to be a selfish little fucker and play the game and and just not have any connection to your people that then, I guess, you know, do that, but it's kind of like saying that if little Billy fails the math test, you're gonna, like, send them back and get a new fucking kid. You know, it's a nation should be like a family and. Our country should be a home for that family, and we shouldn't be bringing other people into that home just because they perform better on some tests somewhere. That's, that's, I mean, it's, it's, it makes us into this meaningless group of people that are just as as representative of New York as the New York Yankees.
Nicholas Gregory
02:55:20 Well, well, no, exactly. And I mean, the way sports teams even run to, I'm not a sports ball fan myself. I'm sure you're not either. But you know, the way even those are run today, they're all interchangeable. It used to be sort of a little bit more like that was something that was a sort of fixture of my local community, right? It was, that was the that was the team of the of the state, or the the city. Man. Now it's like, they just swapped them all around, here, there, everywhere, and it's like, okay, well, then you don't even have that superficial, consumerist attachment or identity to the place you're from. So the worst idea is, let's turn the whole country into that. It's a fucking disaster, allDevon Stack
02:55:54 right, and that's why, I mean, look, I probably I don't care about sports, even if they were for my just because, like, to me, it's like watching someone paint a house. It's like, okay, I mean, maybe they're really good painters, but why am I watching someone else do their job? So that's just me. Personally, I just don't connect to that, but I think that I would more, and I would actually, you know, I probably would never buy a jersey and I'd never buy a season pass, but I probably would object less to going to a football game. If the players on the field were all people that grew up in the town that I grew up in, they went to the same schools that I went to, maybe one of them is, like, my cousin, you know, like, it would actually make sense that, like, these are my people from my community, and we're competing on a field against people from another community, for, you know, community pride, you know, some or or bragging rights, or whatever right. And it would it creates competition between communities. Now it doesn't now, it just creates competition between the Jewish billionaires that own the teams, you know, like, that's really all it does.Nicholas Gregory
02:57:00 It's really ironic, given the history of Jewish slave ownership and that they were the ones that pretty much owned most of the slaves, and they owned pretty much the entirety of the TransAtlantic slave operation, and now they own like giant, giant like operations full of blacks that just run around with the ball and make them more money. It's hilarious. Just the symbolism of that is great,Devon Stack
02:57:21 yeah, and that's how they view it, too. I mean, there was, there was that owner that got busted for basically saying exactly that, like he was, I think he was, which one was it? I think they ended up having to give the team to his wife or something. But this was a couple years back, some Israeli Jew team owner in Israel in an interview in Israel. So I guess he thought it was wasn't going to come back to the States or whatever was, was essentially throwing. Throwing. Was basically saying nigger and stuff. Like, it was like, was calling, was calling his players, you know, basically beasts of birth. Like, I don't remember the exact quote was, but, but it wasn't like it was, it was way over the top, you know, from what you would expect him to say in an American interview. And so that's, that's how they think we know that. I mean, Jewish people are racial supremacists. They just are really good at pretending like they're not when they're in Western countries, when they're in Israel. However, a lot of those rules magically change, because then they're, they're no longer in mixed company. You know, they can, they can speak freely. But, yeah, that's that. I mean, that is basically what it is. It's, it's a competition between Jewish billionaires to sell the most tickets and and hot dogs and 20, $25 beers in some kind of stadium that they made taxpayers buy Exactly.Nicholas Gregory
02:58:45 I'm just gonna search Jewish football team owners.Devon Stack
02:58:50 No, it's a lot. That's a lot like, it's something like, it's like 30 I think I did a thing on the NFL. I think it's something like, 30% of them are Jewish. At least 30% are Jewish.Nicholas Gregory
02:59:01 This says five richest Jewish NFL team owners in 2023 it's just scroll down casually. So here's the list names of them. This guy, this Robert Kraft guy is the one that made all those like horrible ads they did recently after the Kanye thing. You remember that that was, that was rich.Devon Stack
02:59:20 Yeah, craft, that's that. That's a Jewish family. They make goy slop and sports ball.Nicholas Gregory
02:59:28 I was just I was thinking that those I was typing this is that all those things you described about what happens in those stadiums, that they make money off the goy from every one of those things, is pretty much bad for you, you know. And even the general vibe of it itself. It's sort of a surrogate for actual tribal awareness and consciousness and and bonds. It's like, I mean, you see people in these, in these sports stadiums, when they're, when they're they're phony. Tribe wins, then they get really worked, and then they lose. They get really mad. They've been rioting. That's the only time you're ever gonna see white. People riot is when their fucking sport loses. But it's just, it's just such this horrible placebo for the real thing.Devon Stack
03:00:07 Yeah, I mean, people always talk about, like, the the bread and services and stuff like that. And I honestly, it's hard for me to relate that they did a study where they actually did brain scans on people that like sports, watching sports, and people that didn't like it. And there was actual, there was, there was drastically different brain activity going on. In fact, I think the I wish I remember, like, the more details the study, but I think the the bottom line was the people that got really into it and were like, the ones that were like, the super fans were, they were the kinds of people that they were. They're living so vicariously through the people on the field. It's, I guess, a good analogy would be, you ever had those friends back in the day when you were playing video games like console video games, when, you know, the kid didn't have his own console that would come over and play on yours, and he'd move his whole body every time he moved, like the controller, like he couldn't just sit there and move his thumbs like he was just like, like, swaying around, like, every time he moved it like, that's, that's the kind of thing where it's like, they, they get so involved in what's going on in the screen, they actually it's almost like it's happening to them. And it's the weird, scary thing about that is, if that's what's happening to those fuckers when they're watching TV or watching sports, that imagine what's happening to them when they're watching movies. Imagine what's happened there in their mind when they're watching TV, like all that propaganda. It's like it's actually happeningNicholas Gregory
03:01:42 to them, man. You know, it's when these people are so suggestible. I mean, that's, that's what's dangerous. When you have a population that's so suggestible, it's so easy to program them. And I wonder if we've always been that way, or if we've become more that way. I it's a hard thing to know. I mean it, maybe it's just a European weakness, but I don't know that. I don't know that we're any worse than any other population. I think that we need to develop a harder resistance to it, though, because it's being used in a way that is very nefarious. And it's like our high it's like our high trust thing. We have this expectation of high trust, and then we haven't fully adapted to the fact that it's been ripped out from under us, all around us, and now acting as if you live in a high trust world just makes you a sucker. Now it's they've built this horrible, nasty place around you. So we haven't adapted to that in the same way. I don't think we've adapted to the fact that we should not be so suggestible. We should be a lot more critical thinking and a lot more resistant to some of this stuff. And you know, you do a great job doing that in the propaganda breakdown stuff, because it's, I think people need to develop that as a skill moreDevon Stack
03:02:51 well, you know, you raise the interesting question, because I would say, first of all that, you know, with with television and even movies, the technology hasn't been around a long time. But before that, we had plays, we had, you know, books, we had literature. And as you were talking, I was thinking, you know, like Europeans have all have had plays since before the time of Shakespeare. I don't, I don't know that you see that necessarily as much in other ethnic groups, you know, like, do Africans, you know, put on plays? 03:03:26 Probably not. I mean, they it's not that they don't ever dance around and do stuff. They do performative art, right? But do they ever actually write plays? No, they don't even have a written language, right, right? So what about even maybe the higher IQ populations in Asia, I know they do theatrical art of some sort. How is it different? It makes you wonder like, how long did it take for our minds to adapt to watching something fictional and putting ourselves in that moment, you know, suspending our disbelief and or even like when it if you're not even talking about maybe like a play necessary, but just reading a book.
03:04:09 You know, I remember when I was a kid, I used to read books all the time, and you get lost in the story. And in fact, I would say it was even more immersive than a movie would be. In fact, you know, you'd read a book, and then if a movie version came out, you'd be disappointed, because it didn't live up to whatever was in your head, you know. And so I, I think that might be part of it too, is you just have, it's a, it's a, and it's, it's part of our the reason why we might be that suggestible is it was probably adaptive to be able to read books and stuff like that, and to put yourself into those, those scenarios in your head, in order to learn from them. And if you can, you know if you talk about people who are emerging from parts of the world that never had a written language or never had any kind of sophisticated literature. Or anything like that, man, maybe, I mean, maybe they're gonna be immune to it in the same way that, like a dog watching a TV show is not going to learn as much as we are. You know,
Nicholas Gregory
03:05:11 no, that that's a good theory. I mean, I'm thinking, I was thinking about these more primitive groups. I don't think they had. They clearly, like you said, they didn't have written language. I think they have had oral traditions. So they would like sit around the campfire and just, you know, spin the story and then sort of try to pass that down from father to son to grandson to in and on and on and on. But, you know, it's funny, because in that model, it's very adaptive. So it's going to be a telephone game that spans generations. So that's not going to be very specific. I mean, if you record a movie, you could reinterpret it as time goes on and the context of the world changes, but, you know, the Terminator two is still the Terminator two, you know, it doesn't really, it doesn't become a different movie that when can be the videotape my father, you know. So it's, it's interesting, right? 03:06:02 I think there is some definitely big differences there. And I think that the narratives were important. Like, if you look at even the older pre, pre written language, Christian or Christian European cultures, they had to pass that information that way. I mean, that we didn't really have good writing, you know? I mean, this is quite a ways back, but, you know, there wasn't really, how else would you pass the information down from generation to generation, you know, through mythology. And so I, like you were saying about books and stuff like that, really activates your imagination in a way that you don't quite get from a movie. In a way a movie is kind of much more lazy, where the work is kind of done for you. So I don't know, I think there's kind of be some new adaptions, but at the same time, it's been very detrimental to us, because since the work is done for you, it can be done in a malicious way, where they're trying to twist what, twist the message or or create a message that's sort of meant to twist your understanding of your people, of your place, of your world of reality. And this can be very, very harmful.
Devon Stack
03:07:04 Well, it's like they're interpreting it for you. You know? It's kind of like when you watch MSNBC, report, the news, your report, or your your you're listening to their interpretation of the the events, right? And so if you're watching Fox News, you're getting a different interpretation. Or if you're watching nowadays anything on Netflix, you're getting yet another interpretation, like of an old story, yeah. So it's, it is kind of interesting to see where this is all going to go. I think that people are going to become more immune to, I mean, higher IQ people, at least, will become more immune to the propaganda. I could see why, for example, the Boomers were star struck by the television. Because no other, no other generation was, was ever faced with something like that. 03:07:55 But as as nowadays, I mean people, I mean, unfortunately, there's, there's toddlers with with screens in their hands watching YouTube videos. Look, there's gonna be a lot of negative effects to that too. There's gonna be people that that that grow up on Mr. Beast and, you know, that kind of, that kind of shit. But I think that if you have good parents that are discerning and, you know, I think that you can, you can make kids that are or that are resilient to this, and that you can have people that are prepared for the propaganda. There's just going to be all around them now, and it's not going to be as as effective as it was like in the in the 80s and 90s, when it was just on TV and, and, and there was no counterpoint either, you know, like, there was never, it was all just, it was just whatever Jews were thinking about the topic of the day. That's what you heard about.
03:08:53 Like, let's literally what it was, you know, there was no, there was no other viewpoint, and, and now there, at least there's another viewpoint, sort of, I mean, Jews still run Hollywood and a lot of the major outlets, but, and I guess that is the big thing that our big weakness right now is there's no right wing fiction. You know, there's no right wing fictional fiction. And I guess the best we can do right now is books, because you don't have to have a huge budget for books, and in that, maybe that's what, what we have to focus on. Maybe I gotta focus on the shame my book.
Nicholas Gregory
03:09:29 But I mentioned so one of my mega supporters, he asked me to mention to you that they want the day of the rope Part Two done.Devon Stack
03:09:38 Yeah, maybe I should, I should work on getting that out the door. And I think that we need to work on doing more of that, because, you know, we can't. We can't just say, Hey, we're gonna make a movie. And, you know, because, unfortunately, there is no actual right wing Elon Musk, or else we could do that, you know, we could do a day of the movie. For, you know, with a $50 million budget or something like that. But until there is, and maybe, you know, God willing, someday there will be, we are going to we're stuck with people, other Jews, of the right wing Jews, you know, like daily wire Jews making fiction for us that still, yeah, it's like, oh, look at this race mixing. White girl that saves the day from a school shooter. You know, whatever the fuck that movie was.Nicholas Gregory
03:10:28 This is a sort of a cringy anti woke, sort of joke about trannies or something, kind of movie. Now, you're right, you know, I don't know if you saw this. There was the three Australian guys, nationalists. There was Tom Sewell and Blair cuttrell and Joel Davis, and they have a show, and they were talking about, or specifically, Tom Sewell was talking about, that the elites aren't going to join us until the end. They're going to be the 11th Hour fascist. They're going to be the ones that jump on after we do all the hard work. 03:11:00 You know, that was a really good point, you know. And if you kind of point to all the situations in history, that's sort of what it was, you know, there was some supporters early on, but it's generally the big fish, the people that are, you know, industrialists or this kind of stuff. They generally come out of the woodwork when they see the writing on the wall for regime change, and they think, Ah, I see, I see where this is going. All right, let's make sure this goes in a way that's, you know, friendly
Devon Stack
03:11:23 to me, right? No, it's all self preservation. It's, they won't jump on board until it's dangerous not to that's, that's really what it boils down to. They will not, they will not because they, you know, they, they really, that's what they're doing. Now, the reason why, even there might, who knows, maybe there are some billionaires out there that agree with us, but they would never say so, because of all the business they're doing with, you know, Jewish billionaires and bankers or whoever, right? And so they don't want to risk their money, because they have that same kind of brain that Elon, where it's really it's all about the money. And so every decision they make is going to be motivated by the money, and until they can make that calculation, and in their head, agreeing with us publicly equals either money now or more money and power down the road, they're not going to, they're not going to side with us. 03:12:18 They will. They will only side with us when it becomes it's like, you know, I with the Founding Fathers when they were trying to convince people, you know, the colonists, to go against the the crown. It was the same sort of a thing. It was like, Well, you know, what would you rather be? Would you rather be a British subject, you know, in a colony, or would you rather be a governor of a state, you know? Like, I mean, let's not act like these guys were just all doing it because of freedom. It's like, yeah, these guys knew that they could get more money and power by establishing a new country. And if they were the if they were getting in on the ground floor, you know what I mean, then they would get their generational wealth secured.
03:13:01 They would get their their titles, they would get their their land grants and, and look, the British did the same thing. There's that scene in the patriot, which, I know it's fictional, whatever, but it kind of covers it where the you had, was it Cornwall is, was saying to the the evil, the super evil British guy that goes around, you know, murdering the kids of of what's his face the, I don't remember what his name is in the movie, but why am I blank on His name that the anti semitic Australian actor, the the the
Nicholas Gregory
03:13:42 think I know you're talking about, maybe, oh, you're talking about a Mel Gibson. Mel Gibson, I don't know whyDevon Stack
03:13:49 it was bling on his name. Anyway, Mel Gibson's character, like his, you know, his sons keep getting murdered by this evil British guy, and the British guys like, I'll solve I'll get these, these dirty fucking Americans under control, but you have give me Ohio. And he's like, Okay, I mean, that's how that is done. You know, you you these people, if it makes more sense for them to remain loyalist to the Crown they're going to get. In fact, I think some of them did that, right? I bet if you go back in history, you'll find people that were, in fact, for sure, there were people that were loyal loyalists during the Revolutionary War, because they suspected that, you know, these people aren't going to win this war. Why would I want to pick the losers? And that's just true of any, any kind of conflict, any kind of situation, fair weather, friends, that's, that's basically your elites. In a nutshell, they'll, they go where the wind blows. I mean, that's, that's every fucking politician who's ever lived. And so until you can create a situation where it's, it's more survivable for them to agree with you than it is for them to disagree with you, they're not going to do itNicholas Gregory
03:14:57 very well said. I mean, that is it. They're more pragmatists than idealists. You know, we're making a mistake to project our idealism onto them and assume that they're seeing the world through this lens, when really it's like you said, they're looking for how am I going to benefit from this? I mean, if you're gotten to the point, especially if you're getting the point where you're multi billionaire, like you're not looking at this through some kind of ideal lens of how things should be. You're looking at this like, Okay, well, how does this benefit me? How does this next 15 moves going to put me in a position where my situation is secure, my power, my wealth and my progeny is wealth. Your thing about building dynasties is actually a really good message, too. 03:15:41 I think that's something that we we I don't know when white people lost it, because, you know, there used to be Wasp dynasties in America. I mean, as soon as the 50s, and it's not really that long ago. So how did it fall off so hard? I mean, I know, obviously there is which a roo where all of a sudden there's becoming the Jewish dynasties are arising, and the lost ones are sinking, and they're just starting to, you know, swap positions of power, but, and eventually, you know, we kind of got out dominated there. But the question is, is, how, how does it go that no white people seem to have carried this on, like, is it? Is gene? Is this a genetic component that's been just beaten out of us? And what is that?
Devon Stack
03:16:22 I think? No, I think it was the same pragmatism. I think that a lot of these Wasp families, they, they went with, I think Jews presented a business plan. You know, at some point, I'm being very general here, but like, you know, you're, let's say you're some industrialist and some Jewish banker or some Jewish entrepreneur, if you want to be nice about it, comes up with a plan that shows you that, yeah, this will double your wealth, but it's going to fuck over all these plebs. I mean, a lot of these people are not, they're not. They're not. 03:16:58 They don't care about race. They care about class. And just like I was saying with Elon, where he we were just saying that they're not driven by ideals. They're not like what I what ideal is Elon embracing when he says that we should bring in all these high IQ immigrants from around the world, because we're basically like a football team, you know? Like, that's not an ideal. That's him being a pragmatist. That's him wanting to bring in people that will make his companies more profitable, and, you know, at the expense of of the demographics, and ultimately, the cohesion of the country, which of which he doesn't care about, because he's not, he's not even from, he's an immigrant himself. He doesn't, you know, right? So it's, I think that that's, that's kind of how a lot of these Wasp families were. I also think that you had just sort of a an atrophy, you know, a problem.
03:17:50 You had a lot of these families that were unprepared, in the same way that you could say that the general public was unprepared for the Jewish subversion that was broadcast into their living rooms from Hollywood. I think that you've probably had around the turn of the century, when we had this big wave of Jews coming into the country from Eastern Europe, many of them bringing lots of money with them, even though that's not the story you always get the poem story of like, oh my, you know, Uncle Shlomo had $5 in his pocket or whatever. But they, you know, they come here with millions of dollars and and they, they start running all these illegal brothels and casinos and organized crime that that pops up all throughout New York and spreads all across the eastern seaboard. But I think that you had these wasps. Wasps that were there were so used to being the top dog, and so used to not having to contend with these, these people that maybe didn't play by the same rules, and they weren't as relatable. You know, there's, there's no honor among thieves, right?
03:19:02 And I think that they just got outplayed. A lot of them, you know, they they got some of them got outplayed. Some of them, I think, were pragmatists and went along with it. But I think very few of them were driven by ideals and and part of that, I think, also, I think that you could trace it back to the, the, the, I guess, I don't think the ruling elite was nearly as atheist as it is today, back, say, 200 years ago, right? Like I think that, if you have, in fact, I think that most likely a lot of the ruling elite on both sides, the left and the right, if you were to really, if you could read their lines, or they're basically just materialist atheists. And I don't think that was necessarily. Case 200 years ago, because there was a lot more mystery in the world. You know, there was a lot of unknowns that we were still you could say we were more primitive.
03:20:11 And as the scientific discoveries and that came out of the the Industrial Revolution and and just the computer age and everything else, I think it's, it's generated a lot of materialist and a lot of atheists who are also have those, those traits that make you successful, like, in terms of, like, you know, being sociopathic and, and sometimes even psychopathic. And so you have these people that don't, you could say, 200 years ago, right? Maybe you'd have, like, a sociopathic, psychopathic ruler, ruler, but at the back of his mind, he thinks, Well, I don't want to go to hell. And like, there's still a part of him that thinks, like, I, you know, I'll go to hell, like, I'll have a better life, maybe if I fuck over people. And do you know, I'm super shitty, but I don't want to, like, be tortured by Satan for eternity. So I, you know, like there was always like that, that little part of his, his mind that was, that was, you know, his conscience was, was just being it was, maybe it was on life support, but it was still there.
03:21:23 And I just don't think they have that anymore. I think that you have these, especially like these Silicon Valley Tech bros that, you know, they're, they're full on transhumanist atheists. You've got a lot of these. I think Trump is an atheist. I think, you know, Elon Musk is definitely an atheist. You know, you've got all these, a lot of, well, a lot of these, these left wing Jews that are undermining our society. I mean, they're ethnically Jewish, but they're they're as think that, that without any kind of, you know, I don't want to call it superstition, but any kind of call that any kind of mechanism there that keeps them in check, it's going to make them make worse and worse, or rather, more and more evil decisions, you know, to get what they want, because there's nothing. What's stopping them?
Nicholas Gregory
03:22:18 Nothing at this point, I think it's just a train that's no turning it around, and there's not really any slowing it down. It's just gonna either hit an obstacle or it's not, yeah, it's quite troubling. Actually, I think a lot of this caught our people off guard, like you mentioned, you know, with the television and I think in our generations more the internet, it's sort of the same sort of thing, like they unleashed a force that can't really be controlled very well. And I think even them, I mean, even for them and for their perspective, I thought, I think they imagined that this was only going to be able to be largely a marketplace where they could just sell more goods and be more international merchants, but I think that they've sort of found that, unfortunately for them, there are people that want to talk about stuff like their pernicious behavior, and that they can, you know, slam the band hammer and the censorship down on us, but that even has its limitations. So I think that even they are not fully in control over what's happening with with exactly all this, you know, I think our site has a little little too much tendency to view them as sort of infallible deities or something, when really they're just quite wealthy and powerful well.Devon Stack
03:23:34 And I would say that the one of the things that that we will always have the advantage on is that we're on the side of the truth. And I think that human beings, or specifically white people, even if, even if you are an atheist, you might, you know, ideals could still very well be the true pursuit of the truth. And and so you have people that are unjustly being abused by the ruling class that eventually that that injustice will doing because enough people, I mean, if presented properly, which is why they want to shut you down. That's why they don't want you to be able to make the argument, because it is a just cause. 03:24:27 But when enough people hear the argument presented honestly, you'll have, you'll have the majority of people on your side, or at least the high IQ people who care about truth, and so that's going to be, I think they're undoing is they're going to have, because all these tools, sure, we don't, maybe we don't get, like, maybe they've got, secretly, they've got chat, GPT eight or whatever, right? And maybe they've got, like, all these other Elon's got fucking rockets and shit, and a moon base that we don't know who. Knows, right, but, but all this stuff trickles down. We have access to this stuff too. And you know, it's just like you know that the tech, in the same way that all of our inventions, that you know, all the things that we invented in the West, have made their way across the Pacific Ocean, over to China, and now, all of a sudden, this, this giant country that used to be pretty much third world even just a few decades ago, is now, like, you know, futuristic.
03:25:31 And not, not because of any of their own achievements, but because they've, you know, managed to get their hands on our technology. I mean, in some ways, the same is true for us. You know, even if we're not the ones that have access to the newest, the latest technology, the thing about the digital age is you can't keep that stuff under wraps forever. We're going to get access to this stuff. We're gonna be able to use it against them. And, yeah, I just think that it's, that's why I'm hopeful. That's why I'm Hope. Honestly, I much as it seems like, you know, they've called a card, and we're locked in ways, that's an accurate assessment of things, at least, especially in the short term, right? Yeah, and if look, and if we were, if we were, if we weren't on the side of truth, then yeah, we would probably be fucked. But because what we want in the world is justice, and I think that transcends, you know, generally, generationally. And I think that that, that that, you know, even if it takes a few generations for us to achieve what it is that we want to achieve, you know, a safe homeland for our people and a future that is, you know, worth a future where you're not just, you're not just dreading it, You know, a future that's, that's actually something that you, you are excited to hand over to your children. I think that that's, you know, I think that that's a universal desire of white people. And I think that's something that that, uh, it, no matter how long it takes, I think that's something we're, we'll get to that place.
Nicholas Gregory
03:27:22 I think so too. I'm hopeful for it too. I do think that it's going to take some time, and I do think the fact that their whole thing is based on deceptions and lies doesn't bode well for them. Over a long enough period of time, it takes so much energy to maintain all these deceptions and all these poor narratives that are meant to skew people's perception this way or that way, or convince them of this, to see it this way and that way. There's how many trillions of dollars have they spent over this to make you see this thing that way or this thing that way, spread this narrative or that narrative? I mean, it's just, it's got to add up like crazy. 03:27:59 And the money wise, it doesn't matter because, I mean, they print our money, basically, so that's kind of out of the question. But there's other elements to it where it does take a lot of effort. I mean, you have to have a lot of people in your pocket, bought and paid for, blackmailed, whatever it may be, in order to maintain this whole web that they've woven to keep the large population believing things the way they want them to, and not seeing them other ways. So I do have hope, just on that, that there is sort of a house of cards effect where this is not the natural order of things, plus everything they want completely contravenes the actual natural order of the world. You know, they want to make men into women and women into men and a million, million, million other things they want to have a world without, you know, nation state, borders and all this stuff is not the way of the world. It's not the way that God designed creation. It's the way they want to design creation. And I really think that their idea of God is really whether they know it or not, it's really their collective identity. Their collective identity is their God. I think that's their real God.
Devon Stack
03:29:09 Well, I think, I think that the other thing that really what we have in our favor is it's not just one I mean, as much as they're trying to consolidate it down to just one group. It's not just one group that has all of the cards. I think that as they they spread themselves, as we're seeing right now, with America spreading themselves thin, thinner and thinner and thinner, with with trying to support all these different conflicts around the world, as we've done for decades. As you said, printing money like it's going out of style. And then you're what so what do you see? What do you see happening? You see other countries, like Russia and other other alliances forming between these countries that want to challenge the supremacy of the states empire. 03:29:58 You know where they they say, Oh, well. You got the US is so wrapped up and trying to convince their their public, that there's, there's no difference between races and that there's no difference between genders, there's, you know, like they're, they're, literally, they're, they're a, they're a empire in decline. It's obvious to everyone, everybody, that they're an empire in decline. So why don't we start hedging our bets? Why don't we start creating, you know, our own economic alliances, our own military alliances. And while there isn't anything I think that would really be able to challenge America right now, I'm for sake, look at the trend line. You know what? I mean, like, we're it's not, it's only a matter of time before we bite off more than we can chew. There's people that think that's what's happening now, right? With Iran and stuff like that. It's not we could, we could fucking level Iran in a day. Well, maybe not a day. But like, you know? I mean, it's people, yeah.
Nicholas Gregory
03:31:03 Like, they're a really mountainous region, like, if we, if we want to go out all like, Newcomb, yeah, sure, yeah. Like liberation, Iraqi, Freedom kindDevon Stack
03:31:14 of style. If all humanitarian nonsense went out the window and it was just, let's just, you know, glass, the place. You know, we could do it. And if I think that, if you get in a situation where they're the American where American supremacy is threatened, why wouldn't they do that? Now, look that that could lead to a whole host of things, and things to get really messy, really fast, but I just, I don't think we're in that position right now where it makes it, and I don't think we'll ever get there. And I'll tell you why the people that run Iran are also pragmatists, right? They're also like, as much as you know, sure it's a theocracy, right? 03:31:56 Sure, you know you could, on paper, it is, and that's how the public views it be the guys the top I look they're probably just as atheist as like the guys who are actually working behind closed doors. They're doing it for pragmatic reasons. They're governing because they they want to have the power, they want to have the status, they want to have the, you know, the money. And if they, if faced with a, you know, when the rubber meets the road, if the decision is, well, we either make a deal with the Israelis and play nice or whatever, or maybe a nuke flies in through the fucking window, I think that they're going to choose to play ball, and that's the problem. Is, I think that just like, just like I was saying with the the elites 200 years ago, where you had, even if they were, they leaned a little atheist, like you could say the Founding Fathers, right, that they weren't, that people like to say that, Oh, they were deist, you know, they weren't. They weren't, like, Christian or whatever.
03:33:02 They thought there was a God, but they were kind of wishy washy about it. And and it's because, like I said, that, you know, there was still a lot of mystery in the world. I mean, people hadn't even discovered the Grand Canyon yet. You know what I mean? Like, there is all kinds of unknowns out there. And so you didn't have fucking satellites flying around the planet, mapping every square inch of the planet, like everything there was, for all you knew, there was a bottomless pit somewhere, you know, like, or a dragon or, you know, I mean, like people's pit. Well, people believe, like the fucking Loch Ness Monster, like in Bigfoot in the 90s, you know, still and shit like that. So I think that that you have, you had that kind of, that level of mystery in the world, and you don't anymore, and so it's, it's really kind of made these people more atheist and materialist, I think that same kind of reality.
03:33:56 It's not like Iran doesn't have the internet, you know, like, I think they have just as much access to the to knowledge as everybody else, and a lot of their restriction, and maybe the reservations of that that would create, or maybe the opposite of that, the the religious blood lust that they might have had to, you know, just we must destroy the Jews, because that's what Allah wants, or whatever the fuck, right? That goes out the window, and they become pragmatists, because they would much rather be alive and and still, you know, billionaires or, you know, just maybe with different you know, maybe they don't have as much clout, you know.
03:34:34 Maybe they have to answer to someone with the last name that ends with a bird or something like that, but they get to keep their mansion and their and their their harem, so, you know, fuck it. Why not? I think that. Mean, that's look at all the other countries that have decided to play ball with the with the Jews. You know, you've got the Saudi the Saudis and and, you know, the that region, I think, is increasingly the. Leadership is, is becoming more secular and increasing again, even even though, on paper, I ran as a theocracy, and whatever I think when it comes right down to it there, I think they'll play ball, and I think that that's that's ultimately why I don't, I don't suspect we're gonna and look, maybe I'm wrong. You know, maybe you're going to have some kind of crazy thing happen, but I just, I don't see it, and I think that's why the only people that did do anything were the people that were lower on the totem pole who did maybe still have that religious fervor, right? Like you had the Hezbollah and, you know, the people in Hamas like those are the kinds of people that there's the true believers. Those are the people that think they're gonna get 72 virgins when they go blow themselves up in a fucking pizzeria or whatever.
03:35:48 And so they're willing to do it. But the people at the top don't believe that. They don't think they're gonna go get the two versions. They can go buy 72 virgins right now. Why do they want to Why die and do it when you can just get it right now? And so they're going to make a deal to just do it right now. And so I just delay until you have a power that's capable of least making a credible threat to the powers that are, you know, like, until you can, you can create a credible threat in the minds of the people running things in the United States, the military powers the United States create a credible possibility of them losing their position, losing their power, losing their money, losing their 72 virgins that they just, you know, bought from Epstein or whoever, right? Yeah, then there's, there's, you're going to have compromise. You're going to have people making deals.
03:36:51 Because that's just the way I think the world works. I think that it's the people at the top are less and less. It's not just the the, you know, Oh, what happened to our How can we don't have any idealists and on our side anymore? How can we don't have any people actually doing the right thing and saying, fuck the consequences. I just don't think those are people at the top of any country anymore. You know. Like, that's why. Like, why is Europe going to shit? Why is Europe accepting all of these, these refugees? You know, in there's almost no exception, like, Why? Why is every single country going along with this? Well, because it makes the most economic sense to the people who are making the decisions, and they don't give a fuck about their people. And I just think that's a universal feeling among world leaders in the first world right now?
Nicholas Gregory
03:37:43 No, it does seem driven by self depressed, and it does like there aren't really ideals at the top. And my question is, were there ever really that many? I mean, I think there might have been a few, but I think when you look at this sort of upper class or this ruling, you say we're ever really realistic? I don't know. I mean, it's probably a few, but I don't think as a class, as General cohort, I don't think they were all that idealistic.Devon Stack
03:38:10 Yeah, like I said, I think they were maybe, maybe, you know, 100 100 years plus ago. I think when there was more of that possibility that that kept them up at night, that maybe I'll go to hell for doing this, or or, you know, like, until they when there was still that superstition in their in their mind. And I'm not saying, I'm not trying to call religion superstition, but that's the way they would view it. Now, right? They I think there was that, that aspect to human nature, that fear of the unknown, the fear of death, that, in fact, in a weird way, I think, the fear of death then kept them from doing bad things, whereas the fear of death now motivates them to do bad things. Because interesting, the fear of death back then was, well, if I die, I don't want to spend eternity in hell. 03:39:04 Because every you know whether you're talking about Muslims or Christians or or or whoever they they don't want to have a bad afterlife, right? And but now it's like, well, I only lived once. I can only I only have, you know, 100 years, if I'm super lucky, you know, like, if I'm Jimmy Carter, right, like I have 100 years to get, to get everything I need to get done, and to experience everything I'm going to experience. And and then that's it, you know. And so everything about that, you know, worrying about what, what your descendants are going to have to deal with, or worrying about, you know, what you're going to have to experience an afterlife that doesn't exist to you. So everything that you want to get done, you want to get it done in this real short timeline of going to be a lot.
03:39:57 And I that that's really what's kind of. Flip is you, you have link class, the fear going to hell, or at least some kind of having a bad afterlife. They were a deist, and they didn't, maybe they didn't have a well defined, you know, vision of what that would be. They thought that, I mean, surely just cease to exist when my close my eyes for the last time, right there's, there's something beyond this, and, and if there's something beyond this, then surely that's going to be tied to what was before that, you know, that moment and, and so I want there be to be some continuity. I want there to be, I want to be, you know, some I want to I want to have a arrive in this new place with a good reputation, if nothing else. And now it's like they it's just like, Fuck it like you only live once, YOLO, and that's it.
Nicholas Gregory
03:40:51 No, it's that's actually quite an insight. I mean, I don't think that. I don't think they think there is anything coming after this world. And I think that even the ones who, yeah, I mean, I guess their default is sort of atheism. I mean, you can just kind of tell, you look at these people, and you can tell it's not even in like an agnosticism. It's like a straight up, like materialism, atheism, kind of vibe from them, that there's it's not just that. It also goes with a sort of nihilistic bent, that none of this really matters, that we're all just here by some happenstance and nobody knows, nobody cares, whatever. Bro, it's this, this sort of all in, all encompassing nihilism and this attitude that that this is all just here and gone and it doesn't make any difference, and just get away with what you can get away with. Away with. And it's only wrong if you get caught. And that's kind of their attitude, right? And so that build a world that's not a way to build a future, and it's because they think that nothing's going to happen. You just do whatever. I mean, they probably have some horrible kid torturing parties or whatever? I don't even want to know, but because, why not? Because? Well, yeah, I guess so. Some reason, just like no matter what that would be under No, God,Devon Stack
03:42:12 well, it's not a psychopath, but if you're psychopath, no, right? Because if you're a psychopath, you don't have any empathy for because that's the only thing that would prevent you from if what you were into was torturing babies. For some reason, the only thing that would prevent you from doing that would be either consequences for doing that, or empathy, you know, for the babies. And if you lack either one of those things, why wouldn't you do it? There's, there's literally nothing to stop you. There's nothing, you know, so that's the thing is, I think that's what the that's who was, who's at the top. Now it's people that are just horrible psychopaths that have there's nothing that stops them, because there's no consequences, as we've seen. 03:42:57 Like, when is the last time anyone, I mean, people like the Epstein thing, for fuck sake. I mean, we have lists of the people that were participating in this, and look what really happened to Epstein. We'll never fucking know. And those people in that book, we're not going to fucking know who they are, and nothing's going to happen to them, even if we did. And you know, the same, you know, people get excited about Puff Daddy's, you know, whole, oh, all these, all these celebrities are gonna fucking go down for this. Not really. I'm, I mean, they might burn a few of them just, you know, to if they're people they want to get rid of anyway, right? Like, oh, that we finally have an excuse. Like, Ashton Kushner is so fucking annoying at dinner parties. Let's, let's throw him in jail. Yeah, yeah. It might be something like that, right, where they're just, it's someone they want to fuck over anyway. They'll just do it. They'll do it that way. But not, no one of consequence is going to go down for shit like that.
03:43:51 No one ever does. It's, you know, the Clintons, the big red or black pill. For me, the thing that really black lies in that, you know, after you emails and things like that and and realize these really are just, they're just evil fucks. Evil fucks are suffering any consequences. And the reported Trump 2016 is, I thought, maybe this is, you know, he's going to be the one that actually finally locks up a Clinton, and that would give me hope in humanity again. I would finally think, oh, there's justice in the world again, right? Like that. Okay, we're actually going after the baddies, and then to see that, you know, he didn't, you know, he didn't give a fuck about locking her up. He didn't give a fuck about, you know, the JFK stuff like, it just goes to show that, okay, so it doesn't really matter who you who you put in office. These people never pay any consequences at all, and they never will, until someone can apply those consequences to them. And we're not in a position to do that yet. But like, that's kind of goes back to.
03:44:59 We first were talking about with, you know, these billionaires won't start supporting us until they it is safer for them to support us than than it is to oppose us, and that we're just not there yet, and I don't think we'll be there in my lifetime. Maybe the next generation will, will experience, will be able to bask in that sunlight. But I think we're just kind of in that shitty in between zone of the, you know, the Empire that the emperor has no clothes, but the little boy hasn't pointed it out yet. You know, we're trying, we're trying to, like, get people to to to start laughing at the the fact that the emperor has no clothes, but everyone's still too afraid to laugh.
03:45:40 And so I think that's just going to be that's just kind of like the unfortunate reality of where we are in now, again, things can change. You can have a swan event, but maybe, knows, maybe the Iran does get appended, and all the now Russia is involved and some or whatever, right? I just don't see it happening because things we just about, but it's, it's still possible. It's still possible because there's, there's no account for, you know, we're seeing we're going to make decisions that are panic and decisions that are going to benefit them, them personally, but there's no accounting for judgment. You know, you might have these leaders thinking that they're making those decisions pragmatically, and that, oh, yeah, they might. They might believe their own bullshit and think that they can win against the United States or whatever, and make bad decisions.
03:46:37 You know, we see leaders, our leaders make bad decisions all the time. So it's not like, it's not possible that someone would do that, so there's no way to really know. I mean, it's a human it's a human dynamic. So it's, it's, it's impossible to predict what exactly will go down. But, yeah, that's that's barring something like that, barring some kind of black swan event. If things just continue on the track they're going, it's, it's unfortunate, but we are kind of just in that, that shitty, shitty part of the movie that's that that we can't fast forward, you know.
Nicholas Gregory
03:47:18 No, it definitely seems like it's stuck in a rut, for sure. But then again, I mean, I don't know. I mean, I do think there could be some really crazy black swan stuff. I want to hold our breath. I mean, it seems more like the best thing to do is try to sort yourself out. In the meantime, you try to get somewhere where you're safe, get your family safe, get some kind of moderate financial balance. I guess I don't know how to characterize that in some way or another, like get your own situation sorted out as best you can, and try to wait for something that can opportunity. But, yeah, I don't see it happening, short that this is gonna have to own the sword before we really get somewhere. I don't put that past them. The question is international, because problem we have is international. 03:48:10 A lot of people, they want sound like an America level is it's not. It's a International. It's not really Zog, though, right? It's an international operation. They've got going. So Germany learned this the hard way. Germany tried this all right, we'll sort these fuckers out. And then what did they do? They got like, another 40 countries to come pounce on them with everything under the sun, till they killed 30 million Europeans. So like we found out from history, that you this is not going to be a solvable problem one country at a time, that this is going to have to be a world situation, right?
Devon Stack
03:48:46 But the good thing about that is, you know, the internet makes it so, I mean, think about right now, who's watching this show? It's not just Americans. No, it's, it's white people all around the world. And that's, that's one of the good things about the internet is it's kind of brought all of these like minded white people who are who are all experiencing a very similar version of oppression, regardless, you know, whether they're in England or in the United States or Germany or or South Africa, or wherever they are. And so we're, able to help usher in that, that transformation. We're able to reach all these people simultaneously and and create these coalitions. And again, it's, I think we're still in the the the beginning phases of that, and we're in terms of making white people even just racially aware, because you're trying to overcome a century of Jewish propaganda, and you can't just undo it overnight. But I think that we're we actually have the tools to start undoing that and start promoting white solidarity across. 03:50:00 National borders around the and we have the technology, and we're doing it. So yes, it's not just all negative. It's just that, I think people are, if you're expecting your life to have the same format of a movie where, and I thought it like qtards do, right? They think that, well, when I watch a movie, you know, you starts off. You have, you meet the they all have the main character syndrome, right? They think they're the main character in some movie where, like, oh yeah, my life's gonna do this. And then just when it seems like it's darkest, it's always darkest before the dawn. And then, you know, and then this big thing will happen that'll change everything. And then we'll all, you know, walk off in the sunset, and everybody will clap and the end, you know, and it's like, that's not how life works out 99% of the time. And that's the thing, is, I just think that we're in that kind of boring phase of the movie where everything's, everything's starting to look dire, and, oh shit, I don't know if we're gonna make it.
03:51:01 Are we gonna make it? And yeah, the next part of the movie, yeah, we make it. It's just that that might be our kids or grandchildren that that get to experience that part. And that's at least, that's and I could be totally wrong, and it's not that I want that. I mean, hell, I trust Matt. I want to see the good ending to this movie. I just don't think that realistically, that's the way it happens. I mean, look at the fall of Rome. Rome didn't just implode one day. I mean, it was a very slow, you know, torturous death. And I think that's kind of what we're going to experience with our ruling class here and here in the United States and and abroad.
Nicholas Gregory
03:51:42 I think that's an accurate assessment. They're not going to go quietly. That That much is absolutely certain. Um.03:51:53 Yeah, you always, you always, kind of want it not to be that way, but it is what it is. I guess it's, um, it's very sad. You know, you can kind of think of a world that doesn't have this problem. You can kind of almost imagine it like, well, to mention where these sick bastards don't run things, or you just had ruling class that was made up of your own people. And at least maybe they were just mostly decent, you know, maybe they were just not, maybe they're not like, the greatest rulers ever, but they're just like, not, you know, baby torturing evil kind of thing. Maybe they're not just like, bomb, you know, erase Palestine kind of evil. Like, maybe there was just, like, huge, little corrupt, but they're not like, you know, like
Devon Stack
03:52:40 vampires, yeah? Well, that's the thing is, I think that's why people, I think that's why people want a nation of their own people. Because you could say that even not just about the ruling class, where it'd be better, sure, maybe there's still psychopaths or whatever, but at least you can relate to them like because they they're like you you know. You share a history with them, a religious background or or at least a culture with them, like you know, you guys, you come from the same gene pool, at least, you know. But that not just for that, but even like the lower classes, right? It's, let's not pretend there aren't, there aren't low IQ, criminal white people. 03:53:20 Those people exist too, but it's so much easier to bear that burden when it's people that it's your people you know, when it's people you can relate to, when it's people that, yeah, that you can you can come up with solutions for because you understand them, and you know that the the kinds of actions that you can take to counteract the negative aspects of your own people are going to work because they're your own people. You know, we have to start juggling the negative aspects of every ethnicity in the world. It just becomes untenable. And that's whether that's the lower classes we're talking about, Tyrone, that you know, you can do his eyes and you see no fucking, you know, light someone on fire, that he just that, he just tied up behind the counter at a convenience store. I don't know if you ever seen that video, yeah. Or if, yeah, it's, you know, whether you like that, or whether you're dealing with a a Barack Obama or a Kamala Harris or or, you know, someone that's that's got more access to power.
03:54:24 It's, it's people you can't relate to. It's people that that it just makes it so much more difficult to have a functioning society, because you're never going to have it's never, you never have a utopia. Like, even if we had a white ethno state, it wouldn't be perfect. You'd have shitty leaders. Sometimes you'd have criminals. You'd have, you know, you'd have bad aspects of it. Nothing would ever be perfect, but for fuck sake, like, it would be so much better if you just change that one thing. And that's what's frustrating, I think for a lot of people, is understanding that that, you know, just, I mean, just for example, like Sweden becoming the rape capital of the world. It's not that Sweden was like some fucking white Utopia before that. There was zero crime before that, but it was fucking way the crime was way lower before the refugees showed up and you didn't have to worry about getting raped nearly.
03:55:15 I mean, it's not like there was zero rapes before, but, I mean, compared to how many rapes there are now, yeah, there's, there's fucking zero rapes. So it's, it's, yeah, I mean, but I guess on the bright side, if we want to talk about the the silver lining is, despite all this, despite all this, at least in America, there is enough room out there, there's enough geographically, there's enough space for us to get out of the cities, to some extent, and raise a family environment. And I think we're going to start organizing things just a bunch of of people these two rural areas, and hoping for the best, I think that to be a little more organization behind it, and maybe consolidating a maybe certain areas. And I don't know where those areas would be, or how that exactly, that would go down, but I do think that that's something that we need to look more at. But the fact the matter is, you can still live within this mess and raise a family safely. It just takes way more work and it sucks, but like you can still be done
Nicholas Gregory
03:56:33 very well said. I mean, I don't know, though, man, I might get wacoed. That's a good one. The waco Jamaica thing, that was really good, because that really did encapsulate it. I mean, you know, that's the thing is, you can, you can live in fear of these anomalous historical events, which, you know, it's real. I mean, these people have been murdered in Ruby Ridge. And. Waco, and there's a bunch of other ones, but the jamaico thing is absolutely way more common. I mean, they gonna burn you in your fucking convenience store or got you. That's a way more common occurrence. These, like random outbursts of black fucking violence is just unrestrained. It's just they don't have the, whatever it is, the sort of self control mechanism to be like, Oh, should I do that? It's just like, shit. I'm gonna do that. It is no like, you know, there's no, like, stopping point a white person be like, Huh? Like, what will happen to me if I do that? Or maybe, or is that even a moral thing to do? You know, they don't seem to have all that, most of them anyway,Devon Stack
03:57:30 yeah, this thing is, you can't, it's totally unpredictable. It might even just be out of negligence, you know, like the story that I did that stream, but the woman that operated the bridge that opened up and closed, and there's an old lady on the bridge, she didn't, you know, she didn't do her job. She didn't look out the the Watchtower to see if someone was on the bridge before she hit the fucking button. And basically, the woman feet to her death because she just was asleep at the wheel. And so you're going to have stuff like and look or, or there was another stream I did even more recently about, or not even the stream. 03:58:05 There's that, that Haitian guy, the whole reason why the the Haitians in that town became national news there was the Haitian guy that didn't have his driver's license that rammed into a fucking school bus and killed that kid. And that's, that's the kind of thing, like, the things that are like, everything's getting kind of worse because of diversity in ways that are noticeable to people. Like, for example, you know, like the service at, you know, whether you're a restaurant or or at the store, just buying whatever, or even just trying to get packages delivered on time and undamaged and and whatever, you just, just the normal day to day business, that of life, you know, just trying to get normal things Done. Everything's getting more difficult, but that's, that's just the annoying side. You're all you have fucking, you know, planes falling out of the sky.
03:59:00 You're going to, you're going to have, I guess, that's already sort of started happening. And you're going to have just, like, things that are, it's the negligence is going to go from being inconvenient to, you know, just downright dangerous. And so that's that, and that's just the negligence aspect of it. So if you want to, if you want your family to be safe, I think that more and more we need to think about separating from these, these areas where this kind of stuff is going on, and congregating somewhere in a cohesive community. And again, I don't know I'm I'm probably not the one to plan all this out, but I think that's that's a more and more. Because one thing I think about right is, let's say you just go to the middle of nowhere and you decide you know, like, almost like a completely like Ted Kaczynski style in a fucking shack. Okay, that's great, I guess. But then you have a family, and you're and and you can homeschool and whatever, but your kids need to have other kids to play with.
04:00:11 Your kids need to have, hopefully, at some point they're they're going to also have so they need to have, if you have a son, he needs to meet a girl somewhere, right? And if you're living, living in some fucking shack in the middle of nowhere, who's who's he socializing with? And so I think that we need to have these communities where our kids can have other kids to play with, go to school with, socialize with, build connections with, because that's one of our the big thing that I think that was really lacking. One of the things that irritates a lot of white people now is that, oh, I don't have a community. I don't have a community.
04:00:47 I'm living in some apartment complex somewhere where I'm surrounded by people I don't know. And you know, that's what really sucks. Well, okay, well, if you go to the middle of fucking nowhere, you're, it's you're maybe you're not surrounded by a bunch of people you don't know, but you're surrounded by nobody you know. I don't know whether that's, I guess it's better depending on your surrounded by in your apartment complex, but it's no it's no way to raise a family. So I think more and more we we gotta think about how to play these communities in a sustainable way. But that also gives you political power.
04:01:22 You know, if you start creating communities now that they can, they can grow into communities with political power, you could take over a county again, I'm not the guy to plan all this out. I'm just throwing ideas out, but you could take over a county and have a local elected officials and Yeah, are you always going to have to be fighting the federal government the second they catch wind of it? Absolutely. But that's, I don't think that fight ever stops, you know, at least not for a long time. So people can play, oh, that they can always find some reason. What if they do this? So what? What if, you know, what if the fucking, you know, the moon crashes into the earth, you know? I mean, like any fucking happen, I'm not going to just stop getting out of bed in the morning because of all the horrible things that can happen. And I think that we we need to planning communities like that.
04:02:20 And again, I'm not, I'm not the guy to deal with. But I think more, the more, the more I think about, especially because I am kind of out the middle of nowhere, and I noticed the things that like, oh, well, I'm missing out on, you know, I have neighbors sort of, and I have people that I know, but the downside to what I'm doing right now is, is that, you know, I'm kind of, I wanted to get away from the the city, and I did, but now it's like, okay, but I'm just kind of like an island out here. I feel like I'm, yeah, I got like, fucking like Castaway where I got fucking Wilson talking to him, true, the cat.
Nicholas Gregory
04:03:01 Oh my goodness, yeah, that's his own separate problem. You know, like you either, either deal with all the bullshit that comes with all these bad populations and all the crap they're being pushed on you, or your deal with isolation. This is like, you can't seem to get that middle ground. But you know, to what you said earlier, there are actually some, quite a few communities that are doing this. I've talked to Billy roper. He does the shield wall network project thing. There is one, obviously, in northern Idaho. You lot of people you know are up there. I mean, Henrik and Lana are up there. Blonde in the belly of the beast. 04:03:36 Think she said she lives up there too. A lot of these people are up there. So it certainly has that cohort up there. I don't I guess those are two that I've known about for a while as like intentional areas, and I know, at least in regards to Arkansas, or as archaea, they have, they have enough power where they actually influence things. Like, I know that they're they were intending to put some sort of, like, low income housing to store, start the start the mud flood in there. This will start populating it with low IQ, like, you know, like section eight blacks, basically. And they, like, push this out. They were able to just put enough pressure and get in there and cause enough agitation against it, I guess, that they were able to shut this down and make it stop. So that's what we need. I mean, if we have the cohesion and the numbers, at least in that specific area, I think we can actually do something about some of this stuff. And we cannot do this whole thing about, like, we're gonna take over America, bro. So, yeah, what numbers you and what fucking army, right? Like, you know, let's start with, like, the county. Let's start with the county first of all, right, you know,
Devon Stack
04:04:46 it's gonna be, it's gonna be a constant battle. Because, you know, you mentioned Idaho. I flirted with the idea of going up to that area, because, like you said, I know a lot of the people out there and and it's, it is, it's on my possibilities list, or whatever. But the problem with that in any place you go is you will still have to deal with the local government. You're going to have the stamina. Look, Boise is, is basically overrun with lefties now, and so you've got, and you can say that, but really, there's no real even if you go to like a rural state, you go to the city, and it's just as fucking shitty as any other you know, city, you know. 04:05:28 And that's unfortunate, but that's, that's the reality. And so it is going to be this long term project. That's it's not going to be an easy it's going to be an uphill battle, no matter where you go. Because if you think about, we were talking about before, how, you know, the founding fathers, they they hadn't even found the Grand Canyon yet, and all this other stuff. This is, this is also just like TV and movies, relatively new technology. It's a relative concept for white people that you can't just go somewhere. You just go, oh, well, I'm going to fucking go on a boat and just go that direction until I find wilderness with, you know, with a group of people like me and a bunch of Vikings, are going to just go fucking on this boat and go that way until we hit something, and then we'll go take it over or whatever. You can't do that anymore, like every inch of the Earth has been claimed by some kind of government, and there is no, no man's land anymore. You know, there's no you know that. It's like the famous saying where we were. We're born too late to explore the Earth, but we're also born too early to explore the stars, you know? And that's that is kind of where we're at. We're in this little kind of fucking Limbo in between.
Nicholas Gregory
04:06:48 Yeah, very well said. I mean, we're just, there's no, there's nowhere to go in that American. Period. I mean, I think this has led to, like a lot of a lot of things, a lot of healthy impulses in young white men have sort of been misguided due to that, because, like, that is a healthy impulse to do that. And even, like a lot of this drug stuff, I think a lot of it relates to that, and especially the psychedelics type stuff, that there was a big resurgence in that in the last 20 years. And the reason was that is that there's nowhere to fucking go. Some people are like, Huh? I guess I'll go, like, inside my own mind, man. It's like, you know, there's a lot of that sort of stuff that comes out of it. 04:07:24 And like most of these things, it's like a twisting of a healthy impulse. It's like the healthy impulse gets inverted or or messed with. But, yeah, I mean, I think that really they just need to discover, I mean, anybody needs to discover that the best fight is this fight, because there's, there's really nowhere else to go, like we, we're gonna have to, we can't run anymore. Like, we're gonna have to find a solid enough ground where, you know, every day is not like a cortisol explosion, like you can actually get through the day, but the same time, like, as a group, we're going to have to re establish our identity, because that's the only way we're going to re establish some kind of political voice to say, Hey, you're not going to fucking steamroll us as a group anymore. We're not going to just take that from you guys, you know. But right now there's someone like, you know, please stop hitting me. And we're going to have to, we're going to have to change that. We're going to have to get the collective together to do that.
Devon Stack
04:08:17 Yeah, I mean, it's, it's, it's unnatural. I think the reasons why it's, it's so hard for us to wrap our head around it is, it's unnatural. We're in a very unnatural situation. And it's, it's unexplored territory. There's, you can't go back in history and say, Well, what did these guys do when they were being psyoped by Jews with television and their ruling class was trying to genocide them and and there was nowhere to go, you know, like, there's not, you can't, you can't look at any examples in history. And people try, right? 04:08:52 They try to find, you know, parallels between different things, and it's just nothing really, and maybe that's always been the case, but not really, because you think about if you were to go back, you know, 400 years ago versus 500 years ago, people, you know, what part of the world you're talking about, people were relatively living kind of the same kind of lives, you know, like things didn't change that that radically from Century one century to the next. But if you look at even just, you know, 1924 to 2024 I mean, it's insane how many things have changed. And I don't just mean, you know, demographically, otherwise. I mean the technology and just the the the reality and just the the the environment has changed, just the the perception of reality has changed so drastically, there's no way that you can look at what has been done in the past and apply that to today.
04:09:48 I mean, there's not, not you can't learn lessons from history. I mean, obviously there's no real plan, there's no print to look at. And so that's kind of the problem is, is usually when our people when we're in a situation like this and this, the other thing is, if you go back in history, and they do find instances where our people are we're faced with a unique threat, or a unique problem, essential threat? Well, usually in those instances, the ruling class is facing that same existential threat. They're like, they're in the same boat, or nominally, that the rest of us are in, and so they're in on the solution. They're in on trying to solve the problem and using the power that they have access to and the wealth and and influence. And this is, I think, a fairly unique situation where, not only are we facing this existential threat, a big part of the existential threat is our rulers trying to they're in on the the existential threat. They're part of the existential and I don't know if that's happened a bunch of times.
04:11:01 I'm sure it's happened before, but I mean, I don't, I don't, I can't think of any, any, I mean, nothing off the top my head. And so we're kind of like we're, not only are we facing all these unique threats, but we are uniquely dis empowered, you know, to deal with it. You know, we're uniquely outgunned and and so this is, it's not necessarily in all of our, you know, tool toolboxes, the the tools necessary to deal with this. This is stuff that we're having to really think outside the box and try to come up with solutions for. Because this is I just, I think that if you look and if you want to be an idealist, and sometimes we should be, we the bright, you know, maybe we. Were people like us. We were born in this difficult time because God, the universe, or whoever knew that we were the ones that could do it. And so, you know, you shouldn't let it, I guess, get you down and maybe take it as a compliment, right?
04:12:08 Like a lot of people, like, Well, God will never give you a challenge you can't face, which I don't necessarily, yeah, I don't believe that necessarily, because a lot of people that that had challenges they did not, were not capable of overcoming. But yeah, let's, let's try not to think about, let's try to be look on the bright side here I look and I think that I do have confidence in our people to where I know that we'll we'll get through this. I think it's gonna be a bumpy ride, but I do think we'll get through it. Look, if any people on Earth are going to be able to survive conditions like this, it's going to be white people.
Nicholas Gregory
04:12:44 Well, I think your episode, your your take on this as it as a selection event, is probably the most salient take. Because, look, all the white people are not going to make it, just don't be one of the ones that doesn't make it like in that. That's basically the message in a nutshell, right? Like, a lot of these people are going to weed them. They're going to weed themselves out in a lot of cases. I mean, that's just how it's going to be. It's not just going to be the broken branch thing. It's also going to be a lot of people are just not going to make it through all these events. And that's just the way it's going to be. And, you know, it's not that we like that or like, 04:13:18 Yay, it just is what it is, right? So there's not much we can do about that, except we're trying to have the best quality of our people that can survive, that can make it, that can make it through the selection be selected to survive. That's just what we need to have happen, I think. But, you know, you said something about the road maps. I think that's also a very good point, too. I know a lot of people, especially in my chat, they're very, they're very want to go back to 1933 and I think the problem with that is not that, not that, what Hollywood and Jews tell you about it. That's not the issue at all. The issue is that it's, we don't live in 1933 they didn't have the internet in 1933 they don't have to. Three. They have television in 1933 not really anyway.
04:13:58 So like, they didn't have it at all, actually. So like, we just live in a different reality. And, like, Yeah, I mean, there's some parallels this. There's, like, most of the ethnic Germans of the world now live in America, a lot of those fucking same Jews, their progeny all came here. So yeah, there's, there's very much a parallel playing out. And, you know, they brought that Weimar culture, if you can call it, that poison culture, the whole planet now. So there is a lot of parallels in that. And I get why people see it that way, and I get why people are fans of the era. I get why people like the discipline, the esthetic, and the chadley, you know, like giant, you know, rallies and what have you okay, I get it, I do. But, you know, and the symbolism is, okay, it's great.
04:14:41 But, you know, we can't, like, we can't LARP as them. We have to make our own thing, you know, like that. I think, in fact, I think even they even had that. I think even Hitler, or maybe it wasn't with Hitler was one of the other theoreticians of the of the group, had said, like, you can't take the old symbols of the past regimes and just, you know, you have to make your own new thing to suit your time and the era you find yourself in. So I mean, I think we need a new thing, you know, and you know, there's no reason you can't learn from some of the better ideas those people had. But I think in order to move forward, we're going to have to move forward. We can't really try to go back, because then we're just going to find ourselves emulating something that doesn't even fit well.
Devon Stack
04:15:20 It's like, Excuse me. It's like they say, you know, you can never go home, meaning that, like, you know, I went back to my neighborhood from when I was a teenager, after living in a different state for, I don't even know, it wasn't that long, maybe like, five or six years. And while it was really nice to see some of the familiar faces and some of the familiar places we would we used to hang out and things like that, it just it wasn't it wasn't a home. It wasn't the same. You know, we were living in a different context. We had we lived in. You know, everyone had grown apart in some ways, and and the place itself had, had changed and morphed into something different. It didn't feel the same. And the fact is, it never, you can't go back in time. 04:16:12 We don't have a time machine. And doesn't mean that you can't look back at things from the past and try to learn lessons that that you can apply to today, and there are probably many that you could but, yeah, trying to recreate something that is completely foreign to especially for Americans, right? Like America is, you know, 1930s Germany is completely foreign to to America, and it's unrelatable to most Americans that you're not going to be able to, you're not be able to do that. And, you know, it's. Yes, it's when, I mean, that was a relatively you gotta think of this way too, when, when the when Weimar Germany transformed into Nazi Germany, that was a an organic process. It wasn't like a forced meme. It wasn't like, not that they didn't use propaganda to help it along. And obviously they did. But it wasn't like, you know, Hitler was, was trying to force, like he wasn't going back, you know, and trying to force like some meme from someone else, that was an organic process.
04:17:29 And again, they did, they did go back and look at some of the old legends, you know, and, yeah, the old imagery of the old civilizations, and tried to use that to inspire people. And, and, yeah, you can still do that. Obviously, I think that's that's an effective thing to do, but if you're going to do that, you have to do it in a way that's going to make sense to the people you're trying to inspire. And Americans, just by and large, are not going to be inspired by Nazi Germany. They're just not, you know, maybe Germans would be. I mean, not right, maybe not today's Germans, but maybe down the road, they would be, but, yeah, I mean, that's, that's the thing is, I think there's too much of that. I think there's think there's people that want to pretend like we can just, you know, basically recreate a a place and time that is that is gone forever, and that's just the that's just the reality whatever happens next, whatever, whatever we whatever form it takes. It's, it's going to be something new and unique.
04:18:40 And it's going to be, maybe it'll have, you know, hints of things that have happened before, but it's going to be its own thing and and as you said, like the selection event that's taking place. That's, it's, I think that's what we're in the middle of. It's going to be a painful process of of trimming the fat, of losing some of the luxuries that we might have been genetic luxuries, is what I mean by that. You know, person, entire personality types will be lost, because it'll be people that in a functioning white society would have been a nice to have, you know, like the the lovable, nice, Jolly, pacifist white guy that's like, you know, he's a good neighbor and, and he's no warrior or anything like that. But you know, you can, you can afford to have him, you know, you can afford to have the guy that dresses up like Santa Claus at the at the park every year.
04:19:40 And everyone likes the guy, but he's kind of a, you know, a useless drunk when you get right down to it, you know, like that kind of guy. He's gone, yeah, you know, that guy can't, you know, we can't afford to have that guy anymore. And that's not the kind of guy that that is going to make it. And it's, it's unfortunate, you know, but it is what it is. I'm just using some random example, like, I pull out of my ass, but like, that kind of thing is going to happen. We're going to go through a transformation where we lose some of these, you know, nice guy, white guy types, you know, because we can't afford to have them anymore, and we are going to have to, I think, reawaken maybe some of the more savage parts of our DNA, maybe even a little more primitive parts of our DNA, in in The, you know, it's kind of like pigs, right? When pigs get away from the farm and they they go into the forest, they they, it doesn't take long, they start to grow tusks, wow.
04:20:46 And they actually revert back to wild pigs pretty quick. And and even, you know, epigenetics kicks in pretty quick with pigs. But even stuff like you could say, like feral cats on a genetic level, if you let a cat out, like an indoor cat within one generation because of the stress of being, you know, having to survive on its own and having to hunt and be afraid of, you know, cars and people and all the noise and stuff. They actually respond genetically within one generation, you know, they're, they're, they're, they're, they're kittens.
04:21:26 The first batch of kittens born in that environment will actually have undergone a genetic shift that makes them more feral and more wild than had they had the exact same kittens with the exact same parent, even parents, even in a in a safer environment. I think that that sort of a thing will be happening with white people too. You know, you have white people that would be raising. Nerdy white kids, you know, nerdy, happy, fun white kids that are that everyone loves, that, you know, if they were in a safe environment raising feral, you know, maybe a little feral, independent white kids that, uh, that aren't so nice, you know, because they can't afford to be so it, but it's going to take some time. It's going to take some time, and it's unfortunate, because, you know, part of what we like about white people is our civility, and part of what we like about white people is is our, our our good nature. And I don't think we'll lose that entirely, but I think we're going to have to to shed some of that.
Nicholas Gregory
04:22:36 Yeah, it'll become a lot more latent. I think, like it was like the stream you did on Wednesday, it's like it was so they couldn't even imagine that that kind of world wouldn't exist even in even in the 80s, it was still like the white people were so much, still the dominant class as a whole, that it making fun of anybody else. Would be punching down. It'd be like beating on the retarded kid. It's just it was, you know, that. I mean, that's, that's not that long ago, you know? I mean, I was born in the mid 80s. I mean, I'm a older millennial, like, this is really not that long ago. So, I mean, that shows you how rapidly this, this whole progress, is gone. And I think, though that this adaptation you're describing, I think this would be a decade or two in the same way, just as we've gone, you know, basically three or four decades down the road in this direction that quickly, I think you could go even, maybe even faster, or the same kind of rate in the other direction. It's just going to take some kind of catalyst that I don't think we even understand at this point, right?Devon Stack
04:23:35 That's the thing too, is I remember one of the first I was, I don't want to say I was relatively racist when I was a kid, but I kind of was like, I noticed I was raised in a very I went to a very multicultural elementary school, and I noticed behavior, behavioral differences, because I was faced with them early on, and I was good at recognizing patterns. And so I always kind of knew that white people were just nicer, and I preferred their company, even when I was, like, 10 years old. And I remember watching late at night, one night like it was like, Deaf Comedy Jam or something like that. Because I always like stamp comedy. And it was like these, you know, black comics. 04:24:22 And I noticed the pattern where they would all have in their sets somewhere, a part where they made fun of white people, and the crowd was mostly white people in at least in the one that I was watching, and I remember wondering, like, why are you, first of all, why are you fucking laughing at these jokes? And also, why are they funny? Because everything he's saying about white people, it's like a positive like, I remember a Cat Stevens joke. In particular, Cat Stevens is his whole the whole joke was, if a you call a black you make you call the wrong number.
04:25:04 You know, back back in the day when you actually dialed up numbers instead of hit like the the number programmed into your phone. If you dialed the wrong number and you got a black person that they were, they were really pissed off at you, and they would scream at you and hang up on you, and if you got the wrong number, and it was a white guy, they were super helpful, and they wanted to help you find the right number and, and I'm sitting there, like, watching this, like, so you're basically saying we're just better people, but it, but it's bad, you know?
04:25:34 Like, it doesn't make any sense to me, and that I noticed this pattern over and over and over again, that you had these audiences full of of white boomers laughing their ass off to these black comedians basically making like, basically saying, You guys are. You guys are pussies. You guys are you guys are too nice, and you're shitty people because of your how nice you are. And I didn't get the joke. I mean, I got it. I got like, you know, oh yeah, we suck because we're white people. What I didn't get, though, is, like, why is there an entire concert hall full of white people laughing at this? And that's, but that's, that's kind of unfortunately.
04:26:14 That's what led to where we're at today. Is this, and you're right, maybe, maybe, I don't know. I think it's optimistic to think that we would be able to go in 10 years. Because I think that we have to have more generations born. I think it's going to have to, because especially if you look at the Zoomers right, 25% of them identify as some form of homosexual, right? So it's like, okay, well, maybe there's, like, some really base humors. Absolutely there is, there are. But if you, if you're, we're talking about a, an actual shift in, in the genetics and everything else. I mean, that's going to take, I think it's going to have to be the. Zoomers, kids, maybe even that before it's good generation alpha or hilariously, generation beta. The betas are what ends up saving us.
Nicholas Gregory
04:27:06 That would be, that would be great. Poetic Justice, yeah. There could also be kind of a heel turn right and in that like, they've been driven to be this. Like, I don't really legit believe that 25% of them are homeless. I've seen the same stats, but I do think that there's way more than there ever were. And I think there's something very artificial about that, be it, you know, propaganda or hormone disruption stuff, or all the above, or, who knows, you know, there's something not right going on there that's definitely not organic. 04:27:35 But I do think that there's a good chunk of that that they're just, they're kind of, they're claiming it for the status, because as a white kid, you're not going to get to have any status. This Jewish system is going to deny you every kind of status you could possibly deserve. And the only way to get any kind of social status is to claim to be some, you know, gay with some weird psychological disease or some bullshit. And so they're like, Oh yeah, okay. I mean, I have anxiety, I think, and oh yeah, I get anxious sometimes. And they're like, oh, like, you know, so this sort of stuff, right? So I think there's an element of that at play too. But I think there's also a chance that they could, they could, they could kind of make a hard U turn, right,
Devon Stack
04:28:18 ah, I don't, I don't think so. I think that because once they, once they make that decision, right, to be, oh, well, I'm going to be, I'm a pretend like I'm trans or whatever. Like a lot of kids in the 90s, white kids 90s, were like, Oh, I'm a wigger, you know, it's just for the same reasons, right? It was the same kind of thing. I don't think that you really break away from that, because that's when you form your identity. And even if you when you get older, you start to look back at that and cringe and kind of, you know, want to redefine yourself. I don't think that's something that you can quickly break a whole population away from. Now that said, if the one thing that you could, I mean, you could do it if, if magically, let's say I could. I could wave a magic wand and put right wing, right wing extremists in charge of every Hollywood studio and every television network in the country, you could probably do something like that in relatively short order. Give it like one or two years, you could, because most people are just followers, right, right? But that's the thing, is, we can't do that, you know? We have to get to people in a completely different way that we don't have the reach, we don't have the status, we don't have the power. And so it's that's, that's why I think it's going to take way longer.Nicholas Gregory
04:29:43 I think that's a fair assessment. Do you think we might let's, if you don't mind, I think let's go ahead and check out these hyper chats. I've been putting them off a long time, but, all right, probably a good idea. Let's see. Let's see where we're at. Let's go way back in time here, in reality says, here's why. Let me get this first. Says, here's 1000 pennies for, I already read this. 1000 pennies for 1000 episodes. You get the party started. Salute at you in reality. And Toto, I'll salute you again. Sir. Desi, Mac, Jay Fox, pure Nomad and Tim Murdoch, salute you all again. Jump down the list here. I did read those before. Okay, where do I start here? I04:30:22 think Huntress salute you. Huntress and ketzer and pug Lord, I think I did read those as well. John Jacob jankel, hammer, I think I saluted at you. Don't think I read it. He said, Congratulations in the milestone, here's to 1000 year Reich and 1000 more. Shows, yes, sir, absolutely. Salute to you for the generous support there. MGC says, Congratulations. He said watching since 2021 all right. There you go. Salute. MGC, John Skywalker says, Hey, Devon, sorry about your cat Waffles. Couldn't help notice you were in the New Hampshire apartments on the south end of Malcolm X in Meridian Park. Hope he's not like location doxing. You there. I looked that building up. It's actually as nice as advertised. Or was it a shit hole? The rent was also like 2000 a month for that.
Devon Stack
04:31:10 Yeah, it was passed. Yeah, that was an expensive apartment. Yeah, no, I've talked about that. I told you I lived right next to Malcolm X park before, and that's, that was Malcolm X Park. That was, that was not a safe walk to work. The walk between that apartment and the green line metro station was a perilous walk, let's just say lot, a lot of black guys smoking pot and drinking 40s and playing dominoes all day long and after dark, it got even wackier, but it was. Was, surprisingly, it was what I could afford. Because, I mean, it was actually one of the cheaper places. I mean, the location was decent enough. It wasn't like straight up ghetto, like, I could have done way worse, but I could have done way better, because the choice was either that or, like, one of these really horrible basement apartments that they have in DC, where you're living, literally, it's like, where the furnace was and but because the rent got so expensive, they decided to, like, put some shitty sink in a toilet, and they're like, oh, it's an apartment. And you're living in like a cave underneath, like some house. You know, I hadNicholas Gregory
04:32:29 one of those two in Vancouver, actually, right near UBC. It was like that, some fucking Indian bitch. She, she got the place up, and she, she did that exact same thing. It was, like, one of these little cave basement apartments,Devon Stack
04:32:40 yeah, yeah, yeah, no. This was a studio apartment. It was really small, really fucking small. And, like, I think, like, 450 square feet small, I think is what it was,Nicholas Gregory
04:32:54 yeah, New York City style, wow.Devon Stack
04:32:55 Yeah, it was really small, but I lived there for a while. And, yeah, you've, you have accurately low location docks where I lived, back in, back in, I don't know that would have been several years ago, like probably about a decade ago, 2k a month though, oh yeah, oh yeah. It was more. Actually, there was more than that, and then I had to pay for my parking space. Was like an extra $300 a month or something like that.Nicholas Gregory
04:33:27 Good lord, I had an apartment in 2007 in the Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco, and I paid like 1500 a month for it. But now that thing is, think it's going on 4000 a month. Yeah, it's like a one and a half bedroom apartment. It's nothing special, just crazyDevon Stack
04:33:45 San Francisco's ridiculous that, yeah, there was a if you live in that's the other thing, if you live in one of these big cities, and that's the other reason why you should leave, is it's, it's super and by the way, that parking space I was paying 300 bucks a month for my car still got fucking broken into, you know, even though it was like it was under the building, it was in the parking garage. It was supposed to have, you know, security and shit. Some fucking rabbit Negro broke into my fucking car and stole my that's how long ago I had a GPS, back when people had those in their cars. Oh yeah. So, like, it's, it's all the more reason to get the fuck out of the city. So you're not paying for, like, some little shit box to live in. It was a shit box of the view, but it was still a shit box.Nicholas Gregory
04:34:30 I've been there. John skyward continues. He's also watching war strike. Devon, would you be willing to be a guest on their show? I don't know if you're inviting you or what he says. Not sure if you know of Warren or striker. Who else the show nNr, is Warren supposed to be on the show tonight or not? He's supposed to be on making a quick appearance on the end. Is the answer to that? Yeah, I don't know about the first part. I guess you'd have to get them in contact. Salute you, sir. J Ray 1981 says, Oh dash. So I guess it's just giving support salute, not baby Hitler, salute at you as well. Handler says, hail, Nick, Hale, Tim, Hail, 1000 04:35:08 Thank you, Mr. Handler, not retarded. Faggot. Not retarded. Faggot says, in the glow of nNr, I sit and unwind Werther's Original sweet solace. I find as the screen flickers, he sends in these Werther's poems. The screen flickers bright. I'm lost in the show, stream sniping with laughter, writing the flow, waiting for Devon Stack, hoping he'll play all him sayings in blisses These days, and what that's about? Good, good one on you. Man, salute, reclaim your neighborhood says, Dear Nick, congratulations on your hard work and success. You represent our people. Well, also think thank you for being a friend of the Italian people. Well, spaghetti niggas represent so what do you expect? Salute, reclaim I can't believe people took, like, a big offense that, I think that was fucking hilarious. That was actually really funny.
Devon Stack
04:36:01 Like, you know, I got came with some good ones too. Like the rigatoni raghead was, oh, there was some more. I forgot spaghetti spic. That was a good one.Nicholas Gregory
04:36:11 That is a good one originally. You know, these aren't like old world ones that you see in 90s movies like these are originals you guys should appreciate. Speaking of Italians, Giuseppe the G Man says, Congratulations, remarkable achievement for a remarkable fellow. We'll still it to you, just happiness to see you. Philip creamer, research. He says, Hey, I had he said, Hey, had problems tipping through the chat to send via the support page. Congrats. 100,000 salutes and 20 bucks, oh, and 10 more. Well, salute to you, Philip. Sorry, I don't know what happened. I think he meant the other thing, but it still works. So thank you. Salute you sir. Funk Android says, cheers, anything, here's to 1000 well. Thank you. Funk Android, welcome zazzy mctazzbot says, woo. 04:36:57 I didn't miss it. Yeah, good luck on the next 1000 Have you given any thoughts to doing the show every other day yet? Yes, that's pretty much the plan. Basically, here on out, I'm gonna have to kind of map it out, but that's more or less the plan I gotta, I gotta invest more in them, like I was talking to Devon about in the beginning. You know, I want them to be a little more lasting, a little more evergreen, a little less throw away. So I got to do that. To make that the case. How much do you use you mentioned that you spent, you kind of allude to it. You never said. I don't know if you want to say specifically, but how much like time investment do you have to do on an average one? You do because it must, must be quite a bit.
Devon Stack
04:37:31 Um, it ranges. Depends on the what the topic is. I would say, I mean, probably in the neighborhood of, we'll say 16 hours per show, like, I would say that's a pretty good, pretty good average, some of them longer, you know, some of them shorter. But I'd say, at least, you know, two solid eight hour days before I stream is spent science or sometimes it's like 16 hours straight up until I'm live, depending on how things unfold or my my other schedule. But no, it's, I'd say, you know, good, good to two eight hour shifts go into most if we're talking about averages. That's what I would say.Nicholas Gregory
04:38:14 That's serious work there. So that makes sense. You know, it might be good to kind of, kind of get that out there a little bit more, because, like, you say, a lot of times people don't get it. They think you just, like, whip that up in some lesser time. And it does. It takes a lot more to get these the information. And, like, I've tried to do deep dives, and I can't do it the way you do it, because I the backstory, man. Like, I You must have to spend so much time just digging up all the backstory and the key players and all that. That's where most of it is, right?Devon Stack
04:38:41 Well, sometimes it's just trying to find the story to start with. Because, like, you know, let's say, like, like, I know I'm going to be streaming, you know, Saturday or whatever. Let's say there's been times where it's, it's Friday night, and I'm like, I don't know, I'm a stream on yet, because, like, you'll spend like, four or five hours chasing some story that ends up being stupid. Or, or, you know, someone tells you, oh yeah, watch this movie. It's really, you know, worth the streaming. And you watch a movie for two hours, and you're like, this movie sucks. And, or, or, who knows, or there have been times where you start to research something and you spend, like, all day long, and it's really looking good, but then it gets too good, and so you're like, 04:39:28 Well, I can't stream about this tomorrow, because I need to do like, two more days of research, and so now you gotta figure out what you are gonna, you know, stream on tomorrow. So it's, it's always, it's always very dynamic. You know, every week's different. Every stream is different. And look, I'll be honest, there's been times where, because I'm busy with other stuff, it's like, two hours till I'm gonna stream, and I don't, I don't have fucking shit, and I do have to, like, just pull something out of my ass. But like, that doesn't happen very often. I what I should have. I should have, like, some go to streams, like, ready to go, but I haven't had time to do something like that.
Nicholas Gregory
04:40:05 Yeah, it does seem like it would be useful to have, like, a couple on the shelf. You know, you could kind of dust off, update a little, and then roll it out.Devon Stack
04:40:12 Yeah, yeah. Just open, open the drawer. Be like, oh, we'll do this one, yeah, I don't have that. Unfortunately, I don'tNicholas Gregory
04:40:20 think that would work for a lot of these. Like, you never know when Trump's gonna get shot in the ear,Devon Stack
04:40:23 you know? Yeah, yeah, and stuff like that.Nicholas Gregory
04:40:27 Handler says, a very, very generous support tonight. He says, hail, red ice. Nick Hale, 1000 will hell you handler. And he says, Even 1000 talking about the total there, salute to you sir, for the extreme support there. In reality, salute you as well, sir. He just said, a salute. He said, Ask master. 33 excellent name. Says, Congrats on 1000 can't wait for 1488, also. I'm not particularly fond of velcro heads. That's an interesting one. I've heard zipper heads but velcro heads but non existence. Says, oh, slash, oh, slash, you sir. Fox die, 1488, just give some more slashes. Salute it, you sir. Colonizer, grind set, is it? Helmick, happy, 1000 Thank you. Colonizer, truth Forge. He says, Then, then, there's no too far. I don't know what that means. Is not too far. I think there's not no, oh, then there's no, then there's no too far. I don't know what that's in response to, to be honest, two hours ago, that's rough crusades. Great Again. Says, fuck these Jews. I got to concur on that one. Salute. Blue cord. He says, Good evening. Congratulations on 1000 streams. Well, thank you. Blue cord, salute to you, sir. Handler finishes off with a extreme also additional support. He says, dono, now or I starve the bees. He's holding bees hostages now, so that's rough.Devon Stack
04:41:48 Well, the bees are starving for dearth, man, we that's, that's, that's, I'm in the sea. And now where it gets B, B, reality gets really brutal. All the the bees start robbing each other for survival, and they're not, they're not all going to make it. I was out in the bee yard, actually, yesterday, and there was one hive. I was like, Ooh, you're, you're going to be not alive in a couple days, because there was just way too much activity for that to be natural, but yeah, it's we haven't. It hasn't rained in like forever, and we just need to get a little, little, little tiny, little bit of something blowing before winter hits. But I don't think that's gonna happen.Nicholas Gregory
04:42:24 Finally, dead drones laying around and like, oh shit,Devon Stack
04:42:28 oh yeah, oh yeah. They got kicked out probably, probably about a month ago. But yeah, the good thing is, because it hasn't cooled off, none of them have swarmed. So sometimes you'll get, like, these late season swarms, and which is like a suicide mission, but they do it anyway, and then you lose all those bees. But because it's the weather hasn't cooled off enough for them to want to swarm, they're all They're all just hanging out.Nicholas Gregory
04:42:55 Yeah, I never, I don't think anybody. Did you ever say how you got into the beak beekeeping thing in the first place? How did that happen?Devon Stack
04:43:03 Oh, they were I, when I bought the pill box, they were in the ceiling. There wasNicholas Gregory
04:43:07 a, Oh, that's right, that's right. I saw that. Now I remember, yeah.Devon Stack
04:43:11 So I bought all this bee stuff, and then I killed them all, and then I felt bad, and so I was like, I'm gonna get some bees. And then, like, it just kind of went crazy after that, huh?Nicholas Gregory
04:43:22 So that's an interesting way to find a hobby and get into it. Wow. Long eyes says, Thank you Devon for providing great content. For the last five plus years, I've been watching you since your YouTube days. My favorite episode was the one about Jim in the US version of the office being a cuck with Pam. You wouldn't happen to remember the name of the episode. Cheers, or any bills?Devon Stack
04:43:47 Yeah, I remember that episode. I don't remember the name, though Simbey does, like a has, like a search thing. It's like simbey.com forward slash something. Maybe you just go to simbey.com S, I, M, B or E, Y. I think if it's still there, you could search the the transcripts of them and look for Jim and the office. I don't know what you would Yeah. It's probablyNicholas Gregory
04:44:14 like, might be the wrong Simbey.Devon Stack
04:44:18 No, I think that might be it. But I think it's like, forward slash something. So I don't remember what it was. He's in the chat sometime he has, actually, I haven't seen him in a while, but the, yeah, I don't remember what episode that would be. I would think, you know what? I think that that's got to have an office thumbnail, though. And I know for a fact that when, when I, you know when I do my intro and I play like the two songs, I know for a fact one of them is a not that you want to go through every fucking stream to see this, but I know that one of or one of the songs is the, like a techno version of the or not a techno, but like a low fi version of the office song, and there's like office people in the video. But I'm positive the thumbnail has got to have office people in it.Nicholas Gregory
04:45:08 That rings a bell. Actually, I just checked his YouTube channel, right? I think that's probably where you'd still find that it's probably still up?Devon Stack
04:45:14 No, it's, it's got to be honest. YouTube, by the way, YouTube's doing something, because a lot of these in the last two weeks, I have had them. We're talking videos that have been up for like, 567, years. I've gotten four videos removed, like I haven't heard from YouTube in years, because I don't even go there anymore. But I've gotten about four or five emails in the last two weeks saying, Oh, we removed this because it's bad. So the YouTube stuff slowly going away. I mean, it's all on you Odyssey and bit shoot anyway, but,Nicholas Gregory
04:45:51 yeah, that's too bad. It's interesting. I heard some people saying the opposite, like that comedy one, they were going back to YouTube. What's that Revenge of the SIS? Like, they're pretty, you know, they're not really that edgy, but you know, they I've heard some people trying to go back, and I don't know, man, it's we're gonna have to see a big sea change before anybody's gonna be able to go back to that place. Yeah, fuck YouTube, go to hell land, a fake home of the gay says, enter your rock solid commitment and dedication to the white race and congrats for hitting 1000 streams, salute into the fake we'll drop in the bucket. We'll drop in the bucket. Truth forge says, don't know for the people salute. Truth Forge, wheezing the juice salute. He says, 1000 episode. Reich, that's right, Papa Smurf says, excellent show. Thank you, Papa Smurf, series support there, sir. Truth forces, great stuff, interesting stuff. So let's do again. Lying eyes. Says, How the fuck isn't black pilled a radio host guy could start a radio show tomorrow with over 100k Followers, great voice, I'm guessing five days a week is a bit much. As far as content. Ever do a radio we could do a radio voice.Devon Stack
04:47:01 I used to do years ago. I did a commercial voiceovers, actually for car dealerships, for a grocery store chain that we're talking like, many years ago. That was one of my first that was my first my voice ever been on on any kind of air, was on a local TV station many years ago.Nicholas Gregory
04:47:25 Wow. You ever found a copy of any of that just for theDevon Stack
04:47:31 I think I have one of them probably, saved on a hard drive somewhere, but this was so long ago. It was on a it was all analog. I mean, the digital stuff existed, but it was, I worked at some really ghetto TV station that was still using, like beta beta tapes, like beta cam. So, I mean, I don't that that probably stops all in a landfill somewhere, probably nowNicholas Gregory
04:47:55 it's too bad, too bad something didn't survive. Okay, were we not retarded? Fag. It says, Can you show Blackpool your awesome setup? Since handler is asking about tech stuff, I can't. I was like, I said, you in the chat? Man, I don't think I can do that, because I don't have a I don't have the camera back there. I do have multiple cameras, though. I have this one and I have this one, but I have to have, like, this one would have to be behind us. I've done that sometimes, but it has to be behind us to show you. But someday we'll, we'll show them. It's pretty neat. Okay, this is Serbian bull says, Ask Devon about streaming on FTJ, or at least having his streams on there. So you sound about there's a sort of more boutique site that I'm on, and some other people are called ftj. 04:48:41 Could mean freedom, truth or justice. It also might mean fuck the Jews. I don't whatever you want it to mean it's a good spot. I don't I know you have kind of, you don't want to split the audience thing. So I think that's probably your answer. I think I can safely bet on that. But let's put it this way. If you need a place to go, if you another one of your ship sinks, you're welcome. I'm sure we can get you over there. No problem. Cool truth forge says, See, this is what happens when white guys get together. You get white pills. That's true. I agree. Salute. Go real. Go real. Lie, go real. Ai says, Congratulations on 1000 episodes. Thank you for all the content and the heads up on Intel self destructing CPUs. I'll be going with AMD on my next build. Lol, you might as well. Yeah, I had, I had a $5,000 computer, shit the bed, and I had to redo the entire setup. Three days worth of work went right down the drain. But thankfully, we got it all up, and here we are. So that was,
Devon Stack
04:49:37 I've experienced a lot of that since I moved out here. We have really bad electricity here and and, yeah, I had to get, like, a power conditioner and all. It's still, I have stuff that short circuit so I and it's expensive too. It sucks, because it's like, and, you know, like, anytime you have anything fry, it's like, well, what is it? Is it my RAM? Is it motherboard? Is you end up like swatting it's not cheap to just swap out parts until it works, you know, right? Yeah, it sucks.Nicholas Gregory
04:50:03 Yeah, no, it's a fucking disaster. Thankfully, I'm in the warranty, so I'm gonna push it back on them. But now it's fucking nightmare. This is horrible truthforge says, for now, just throw money at the problem and hope for the best from our people. Yeah, if you got money for sure, salutes truth forge Brent Noah says, Congratulations on a 1,000th episode, but got to go to got to put the kid to bed. I might fall asleep. So here's my tribute. Well, salute to you. Ben Noah, salute you sir. Truth forge says our next guest may be the guy to plan all this out, he's referring to Warren Balog, yeah, he might. He might. Ozark you. Hyperborea says, Congratulations on your 1000 show. Appreciate your hard work from us here in ozarkia, hail, NNR, hail, sheet, wall, Hail, ozarkio, Salute, salute. Ozark I, I mentioned it. I mentioned it. Langey says, Does Devon make mead with all that honey. You, if you got a surplus, I will buy so it's a need commission. There. We had some two unreconstructed rebel says, Southern pride worldwide, hell stack. I'll salute to you on reconstructed rebel. And I think there's one other one I missed here. Okay, I think we're all caught up. Oh. Lexir says, Congratulations on 1000 salute to you sir, and one more here. C, sis they them. Says, Thanks for the stream. Well, thank you. C, sis, they them. Run into Kate, salute again, and then last ones here is ferryman's toll salute. Ferryman, nice to see you. Man, it says, Congratulations on 1000 Well, thank you firm and nice to see you, sir. Rebel science says congratulations on your 1000 show. Your show is super informative and indispensable. Thank you. Well, thank you rebel science for your consistent support, sir. But I'm interested in the mead question. Now, that would be cool. Have you ever tried that? That'd be neat.Devon Stack
04:51:54 No, I've never, I mean, I used to brew beer back back in the day. In fact, I got into that when I was underage, because we found a local, you know, Brew Supply Store that was run by this old Canadian guy that would sell to us because it was legal. He knew what we were doing. We were, like, 17 years old, buying, like, brew kits and all this other stuff and asking advice on how to make he didn't fuck he knew what we were doing, but we, that's me and my friends. We thought that'd be a easier way of acquiring lots of beer than playing Hey mister, which was always, you know, a harrowing situation. 04:52:31 You never, you never knew we were to ask the wrong dude, you know, or who, or we had some guy rip us off once we, like, gave him the money to get us beer, and he, you know, we never saw him again, but we bought a bunch of brew stuff and made a bunch of beer, and I got, I did it for like, probably a couple years, and then I kind of got out of it, just because, you know, I turned 21 I think is what happened. But the I've never, I haven't made any kind of alcohol since, since then, I don't really drink, though, that's the thing. I mean, I I mean, it's not that I'm not like against drinking or like that. I'm sure in the right situation, I would have a beer or something like that. I just don't drink that much these days, and, yeah, it'd be fun, maybe to do it as a project, but I'd have to buy all that stuff again. I'd have to buy, I mean, not like, it's a lot of stuff. It's like, what, like a bucket and like a bubbler and, you know, some sanitizer and shit like that. It's really, actually pretty low tech.
04:53:32 Yeah, I guess it'd be fun to do. I got, I mean, I'll have a shitload of honey hopefully this year. I have to figure out how I'm going to get out to everybody and make it available to buy. That's, that's the logistics problem I got to solve next. But I've everyone asked me that about the mead thing. So I've never, you know, I don't think I've ever had Mead. So I know what it is, I know what it is, but I don't think I've ever actually
Nicholas Gregory
04:53:56 had it. If you've had a good meat, it's really, really great. I had one. A friend brought some over, and it was, it was really, really good. It's, I don't know how to describe it. They had something that had, like, some kind of berry infused in there. Maybe they just let the bees, you know, harvest the the sugars from the particular thing, I think, was like raspberry bushes or something. It was really, it was really pretty great. I mean, it might be a good way to process your honey.Devon Stack
04:54:26 It just tastes like, like, what is it like, 9% alcohol, and it's like, just, is it like? It's like a, like, a stout beer, right? Like a 9% stout beer kind of a thing, or,Nicholas Gregory
04:54:36 yeah, it's like a more like a wine, actually, I remember it being about 20% actually, okay, yeah. But like you said, I don't really drink either. I got that out of my system pretty early. By the time you're out of your 20s, is like, every time your friends or whatever, is like, Hey, let's go drink. You just think of the next morning and like, yeah, no, thanks, yeah.Devon Stack
04:54:55 Hangovers get get increasingly harder the older you get.Nicholas Gregory
04:55:00 So true, so true. All right, I think that's the end of the things. Okay, all right, well, here we go. I think we should tell them where to find. You tell them where to find I think they probably already know. But Odyssey, all thisDevon Stack
04:55:21 black pill.com is the easiest thing. It'll just go straight, you know, whatever, whatever I'm using at that moment. So like, if things, if I get canceled at some point, black pill.com will just take you straight right now. It goes to my Odyssey channel, and I'll just route it to whatever, whatever I'm doing at that at that time, hopefully it'll remain Odyssey, because I've so far so good with that platform. But, you know, things change.Nicholas Gregory
04:55:46 I think you'll be okay, because yours is measured and it's kind of a mature delivery, and you're not like you're not calling for some terrible so some things you shouldn't be calling for, I guess, or at least not on the internet. So, you know, I think that will, I think you'll, you'll be fine on Odyssey, unless they really like hardcore decide to destroy themselves. I mean, some platforms did that. I mean, fucking D life did that. They just destroyed themselves, kicked everybody off.Devon Stack
04:56:18 Yeah, they get though they have new ownership. Now, Odyssey is owned by some crypto libertarian, but I read, I read their statement on it, and they they sound like they're free speech absolutist, like the the the old ownership was, even though the old ownership was literally a Jewish supremacist, like an open Jewish supremacist, he still let me be on the platform. So yeah, that's all it mattered to me.Nicholas Gregory
04:56:47 I know what you mean, but that's so it's so weird. What do you think that was about? Just out of curiosity, what do you speculate that was about? You're talking about Jeremy Kaufman. Why do you think he did that? Why didn't he just ban us all?Devon Stack
04:56:58 I think because, partially because he was, you know, he, he, I think he really believed in in free speech to that degree, as much as as he might hate who decided to exercise their free speech on his platform. I think that's what he wanted and, and I think that without us, there really wouldn't be an odyssey. You know what I mean? Like, who would have if, if he could, he would, I think he's if he was smart, he probably saw what happened with the live and stuff and and realized, well, you know, like, we don't exactly have the most popular platform here, and if we kick these guys off, what's left? It's not that they didn't attempt to gather people on there. They try to get, I remember they tried to get Makeda back before his, his, his whole drama was happening. But they try to get some bigger guys like that over there, and it never panned out, because rumble popped up and started giving people deals, because they have more they had more money and less worries, because Odyssey had to, you know, deal with the the FEC stuff and all that crap so, but yeah, that if they, if they'd kicked us off there, I mean, what would be left? 04:58:11 I mean, look at right now, if you go to like their their homepage, the trending videos, or like the top videos, how many views they got? Like, you're lucky if you're breaking double digits on some of this stuff, you know, like, there's, there's not a whole lot. Like, I can I feel confident saying I'm the number one streamer on Odyssey, and I'm not that big, you know what I mean. So like, if I'm the number one guy, I mean, there should be, you know, like, general interest people that are doing way bigger numbers than me, you know what I mean. But there's not, you know, there's just no one. No one's really, I mean, there's people that that mirror their stuff on Odyssey, that are bigger accounts on like YouTube. Like, there's a couple big YouTube accounts that that have an odyssey channel, but that's not, you know, people don't go there for that, because they'll just go to YouTube for that.
Nicholas Gregory
04:59:01 Yeah, no, that's, that's entirely true. And I think they've had a real failure of marketing in a way, like people don't know to come here, and they're sort of like, this whole, like, white nationalist sort of section of Odyssey. We're their entire money base, I that I can guarantee. And, you know, a lot of people here are making, not, they're not, we're not getting rich. It'll be a mistake, but we are. We're making, we're getting by. We're getting by. And I think that if they kicked us off, there'd be nothing left. So you're right about that, but I think the problem is, is they're like, ashamed of us. We're like, as Tim said, we're their dirty little secret. But it's like, you know, it's not really that much of a secret. I mean, they're already writing SPLC hit piece articles, or they're naming the crap out of you and all this stuff. So it's like, you know, might as well just lean into it at this point. Like, what are they going to do? Write a hit piece article on you?Devon Stack
04:59:48 Right? No. And or just do any kind of marketing. I don't think they've, they've really done any marketing at all, I'll tell you one thing. It's a little well, I don't want to give people any idea, so I'm not gonna give the SPLC an idea. So I'm not gonna say, I was gonna say, but I will say that. Hey, look, it works for us for right now, and Rumble is always a good backup. But I'm suspicious of rumble just because we, we know the money from that is coming from billionaire Jews that don't like us, and so I, I'm, I'm skeptical of rumble being like a long term solution to anything for anyone that's not anyone to the right of Maga? Let me just put it that way.Nicholas Gregory
05:00:36 That's a fair take. I think that I know you're talking about, you're talking about that Rumble is, I believe it's 10% ownership is held by Black Rock, which is not good. That's Larry Fink, which is, like you said, billionaire Jews, but, yeah, so Peter Thiel. Oh, I forgot about him. Yeah. Yeah, that's right. Oh, good point. Oh, my goodness, yeah. I think that Rumble is useful in getting it out to people who otherwise wouldn't find it. I think that's it has a higher quality, like I put out four times the stream quality to rumble than I do to Odyssey, because their tech is so kind of needs work.Devon Stack
05:01:15 It does work smoother. I'll give them that. And the fact that, like, when you finish the stream, it's just already there. You don't have to do the stupid, you know, like, go to Odyssey and fill out some little form and, you know, do all that stupid shit. Like, but, you know, who knows? Maybe Odyssey will get better. You know, like I said, I mentioned bit shoot earlier. Bit shoot is, is million times worse than Odyssey when it comes to the streaming. So it could be worse. But, yeah, there's always going to be there's luckily, I think the technology is, is become accessible enough to where they'll all be, always beside. Somewhere for us to go. Now that wasn't always the case. Just a few years ago, there was nothing. So, you know, we're at least, we'll always have the ability to get out there.Nicholas Gregory
05:02:04 So true. It came a long way to you. Remember when it started like I found it through Ethan Ralph, because you were talking about them courting people with bigger followings. And I found it as he went there because he was getting banned everywhere, left and right. And he went there, and I said, Oh, that's a thing you can do. I was getting banned from all these other D live and bought it YouTube and all this. I said, huh, but you remember what it was like in the beginning? Man, it was really clunky. So they've improved a lot just in this amount of time.Devon Stack
05:02:31 Yeah, yeah. And it's, it's, I remember, like, it almost feels like him, because it was D live first, and then it was trovo for a while, and then I was Odyssey, and then we finally stopped getting kicked off things for a little bit. But yeah, it's, I feel like, the the the back end stuff like it used to be kind of inaccessible for someone to start their own stream platform. It wasn't like as easy as now there's, I'm guessing there's got to be a lot enough open source stuff there available to where, as long as you have the bandwidth, you can start a streaming service. 05:03:08 You know what I mean? So that's, that's, that's, that's the that was the big, I think hang up was you were basically beholden to billionaire Jews until enough open source software became available to everyone that wanted to make a site. And now, I guess with AI, right, you could probably just have aI spit out a lot of the code for something like this. So maybe bit shoot should be doing that. Maybe bitch should get chat GPT and say, Hey, our site sucks. How do you fix this code?
Nicholas Gregory
05:03:40 That's great. You got a big bitch you channel. So that should be beneficial, if you can actually get that together, huh?Devon Stack
05:03:46 Well, I think monetize it too. I mean, one of the I mean, look, I like the bit shoot guys. They're really cool. They always respond to DMS and stuff like that. So I don't want bad mouthing, but it's like, you know, come on, man, like they, they when they first got streaming going, or even, like, right now, right? So if you, if you want to do a stream, you set up the stream. But let's say, you know, like, you know, on Odyssey or on rumble, it puts up a thumbnail. It tells people, oh yeah, the stream begins at, you know, this time and and so they can go into the lobby and all this other that doesn't exist for bit. Shoot, it just says live, and it's in their feed the moment you set up the stream, and then if, and then it goes away, and there's no time. No one knows when you're live. 05:04:32 There's nowhere to even put that in there when you set up a new stream. So you can't even, like, it's just, you know, you get the stream key and then a thumbnail, and then it, that's it. And so I'm surprised anyone has watched any of those things over there, and then I've noticed that I went to check on it once after, because I don't even look at it really, and about the last out of the last 10 string, or maybe eight streams. Four of them apparently got cut off at some point because the length was only half the length of the actual stream. And and I'm going through restream right. Restream is feeding rumble and and the bit shoot and Odyssey and rumble and Odyssey had no problem, so it had to be a problem bit shoots in where it just the stream cuts out and I guess it just ends the stream or something. I don't know. It just, I wish they would get their their shit together. They wouldn't be like a big qanon mess over there.
Nicholas Gregory
05:05:32 It's really bad over there for that schizo land. Anyway, I think we'll, we'll go ahead and wrap her up. I really appreciate you coming on, Devon. It's been a fun conversation, man.Devon Stack
05:05:44 Yeah, congratulations. And you know, here's to 1000 more.Nicholas Gregory
05:05:50 Yes, sir. Cheers. Thank you. Appreciate it. I'm looking forward to Saturday. Always look forward to them. Everybody. Check it out. You should always check out those streams. They're They're fantastic. And like I said, your your shelf life for your streams and your shows is something I aspire to so much respect, sir.Devon Stack
05:06:08 Well, thank you for having me, and thank you to the audience out there. And good night, sir.Nicholas Gregory
05:06:13 Good night. Take care, Devon. All right, I'm going to go ahead and play the music real quick and be right back. And then Warren's going to jump in. So I'll be right back. Be right back. You. You05:07:57 Bye All right, hello, hey, Warren, how you doing?
Warren - WarStrike
05:08:09 Welcome, Hey, how are you NickNicholas Gregory
05:08:12 doing great, man, doing great. How are you I gotta get that change. The name played out. But there we go. Yeah. How's it going? Man, how was war strike tonight? I caught the beginning.Warren - WarStrike
05:08:20 Oh, it was good. Was good. We just wrapped up. We did about seven and a half hours, I think, show, but not our longest show, but it was pretty long, yeah. Well, first of all, congratulations on 1000 shows. Let me say right off the off the bat. I mean, what a, what a, I was just saying, you have the best work ethic of anybody in the business. You absolutely do. I mean, you grind them out. I really ever get to catch them, but you know, every time I do the few times I ever check in, it's always good. I love not only that, you have good guests, and you have, you ask good questions and good conversations, you make good observations, but you just have a great style and vibe to the to the show. It's, it's, I mean, you must have thanks by now, you must have built quite a fan base, because, I mean, people just, I imagine people just enjoy it, the late night show, and the regularity, the consistency,Nicholas Gregory
05:09:15 that, thank you that. Thank you. I really appreciate that. You appreciate that, because that's the idea, right? Like, I want to give people something that they don't have, like the television is so, so poisonous and Jewish and, you know, rotten. I'm trying to give them something else that's real and doing the best they can. I mean, I wish there was a, I wish some of this news footage was raw. I mean, I'm sure this is something you can probably relate to. I wish I could get some of this raw footage, man, because I don't really want their, like, you know, MSNBC commentary on top of it, or something. I just want to show what happened then give my own commentary. But I looked into it, man, you know, you're looking at like, you know, it's so much money for these, if you, if you want access to these raw media pools, like Reuters kind of stuff. I mean, good lord, dude, it's like, you know, 10 grand a week or something. It's just unfathomable for the live streamer, but they should really offer that to, like, a cheaper version for just the live streamer.Warren - WarStrike
05:10:10 I'm just, I've Okay, so since we started doing work straight the beginning of this year, you gave me a lot of good you and Mark Collette and also Tim Murdoch, but you and Mark really gave me some good advice about live streaming. And one of the things you said about it is that it's a lot like public speaking, because you get you draw on a certain energy from your viewers, and that I was very funny about. I mean, I've I enjoy speaking in public, and I've gotten better at it, and I so I enjoy doing it, and I like to communicate my my ideas to a live audience. And I was very hesitant about the idea of live streaming, and I hated the idea of super chats. I really, I've always resisted it. 05:10:56 I thought it, you know, because I've seen live streamers where their audience are dumb and they ask dumb questions, and it's just like, sometimes I get the sense people answering super chats. It's like, I always got the picturing it like a street performer, like someone on the street that, like juggles or like a circle, like a class, you know, like you do a trick, and someone, you hope someone throws some, like change in your little hat. Yep, and I found it undignified for a political leader. I used to criticize Mark Collette. I said, you know, you shouldn't be as a political leader. You shouldn't be answering super chats from, you know, you shouldn't be doing that for money. What I have found, though, is that the like for war strike the first half of the show. You know, usually we run like, between six and eight hours, and the first half of the show is us mean and Joe. Striker talking, and then the second half of the show is really like a conversation with the Super chatters.
05:11:59 And we've and part of this is Joe, and his theory of doing shows like he very much has convinced me early on of a quality over quantity approach to our audience in terms of, you know, invest in high quality topics, high quality conversations, and you will attract a high quality audience that are very generous. I have to say, I didn't know that they would be as generous as they've turned out to be, and it really has helped me get through the year after the way last year ended. Yeah, but we have such bright, smart people who always have, you know, sending us new stuff. I know you're often in there, in the chats, so you see it, but it's become something I really enjoy. I really enjoy live streaming. And so I have to say you were absolutely right about that, about feeding off the energy of the I still like modern politics, I like the ability, because I'm I've got the touch of the filmmaker in me so and Emily does too, in a big way, more than a touch. So we both enjoy making a presentation that's like a mini documentary. And that's what I try to do with modern politics. But with war strike, I love feeding off that energy. So I imagine for you, it's, like, very, it's a very comfortable space for you at this point.
Nicholas Gregory
05:13:18 Oh, yeah. I mean, now you're getting to see what I think, I think I told you that that, like, after a while you will get comfortable with it, you know, yeah,Warren - WarStrike
05:13:28 a couple episodes, two or three episodes, is what you told me. You know, it wouldn't take long. And it didn't,Nicholas Gregory
05:13:33 yeah, I said the public speaking thing because, I mean, I'd seen you speak publicly before I'd ever seen you do internet Well, actually, other than modern politics, I never seen you do live streams. But then again, I mean, you were, you were guests on live stream, so I wasn't worried you wouldn't, wouldn't take to it. I knew you'd take to it. You know,Warren - WarStrike
05:13:48 you have it. I I like as far as what you said about, though, clips from shows and stuff, I love being able to be the guy in control of what we put up on the screen. And, you know, I enjoy listening to striker talk. I mean, I was a big fan of strike and Mike before I ever knew who he was. In fact, that's really what attracted me to TRS. I like striker by far better than anybody else on trs, and I really tuned in to hear what he had to say. And so I still enjoy listening to him, now that I'm doing a show with him, and it's fun for me to be able to, like, while he's talking, while we're discussing something, I can bring something up, throw it up on the screen. And I'm a very I'm very active with that. I know you're very active with that, like, very proactive about when a topic is being discussed, putting stuff up on the screen. Now, Mark Collette doesn't do that at all, like, he never puts anything up on the screen. I love mark, but he doesn't do it.Nicholas Gregory
05:14:48 I like the visual component. I think it helps the point sink in. You know,Warren - WarStrike
05:14:52 yes, me too. Me too, me too. So how's your evening going? You had on, what you had on, Henrik and Lana and, ohNicholas Gregory
05:14:59 yeah, Tim came on first, and then we started it off, and then Henrik and Lana came up with, Lana couldn't make it because she was feeling under the weather. And Devon came on. Devon Stack came on, and now you're on, yeah, line up there.Warren - WarStrike
05:15:14 Well, that's a, that's a great, that's a great lineup. I've never, I almost wanted to say hi to Devon Stack there. I've never, I've never worked with him. Or I wish itNicholas Gregory
05:15:22 said something. I want to, I want to put you both in the same space, because you Oh, no,Warren - WarStrike
05:15:27 it's okay. He, he, you know, I never listened to his show either, but I know he's been around forever, and he has a very powerful Twitter presence. Now that I'm back on Twitter, he hits it out really good. He's been knocking it out of the park lately.Nicholas Gregory
05:15:40 Oh, absolutely. He's able to kind of synthesize it down into a pretty, like, kind of pithy, concise kind of way. I really like that style, yeah. But he has, he has something that he shares in common with striker, though they're both excellent researchers, you know, like, it's something I totally envy in both of them. Like, I don't, maybe it's just I don't have the time, and I never was able to develop the skill, and maybe, maybe I need to, like, take the time aside to try to develop the skill. And maybe I would kind of come up towards that level. But, man, it's, it's just something I wish I had.Warren - WarStrike
05:16:11 Well, I'm an audio visual person the way you are like, I'm very much like, that's, that's how I think and communicate, and I can do research, and I like, I like digging and digging stuff up. I've, you know, he and I have been reading books together. We've, I mean, for a while there was, like, a book review web live stream, because we were just reading these big, mammoth books. I kind of want to go back to that, because I've been reading more in the last year now than I had the chance to do in the last several years combined. And, yeah, he, he is a beast, though, for research. I mean, he's very good at it's like a com. Nation of he knows where to look. But he also has this like instinct. It's like a, like a bloodhound. He knows where to find the right stuff, and he keeps his he keeps his tabs on a lot of different things, but, but, yeah, I, I enjoy, I enjoy live streaming. Very much. I do. How has your year been? Like? How have things been?Nicholas Gregory
05:17:16 It's been mostly good. It's been mostly good. There's been some dumb bullshit, but by and large, it's been pretty good stuff. You know, I'm kind of turning a page on some things with it. I found some new sources for old footage, which is always really exciting. Yeah, it's been pretty cool. How about you? You you kind of see you turned the whole page, because the after the NJP stuff, you kind of came into the media stuff full time. And I got to also ask, let me pack another question on top of that, what do you think is going to happen after the election? Are you going to look into to get involved with some more dissident politics stuff? As I know, I'm looking for new groups that are emerging. I'm seeing about what's coming out of the field this kind of stuff,Warren - WarStrike
05:17:55 not for the foreseeable future. I I'm very focused right now on my family, my kids, my wife, my parents. You know, I'm back living in the area where I grew up, and my kids are of an age where they really, they're formative. You know, it's a critical time. My son's gonna they're both actually, they have the same birthday, and my son's gonna turn five here, and my daughter's turning two. And NJP, I was really distant for a lot of that. I was like, there were times, there were times last year when things were kind of falling apart, where I realized, like, I was, like, the whole day went by where I wouldn't, like, see them once, you know, like, see them, like, really see them. Like, look at them and study them and interact with them, because I had my mind on other shit. 05:18:46 And we were things were going on, trying to hold stuff together. I learned so much from NJP, I mean, Joe and I talk about it frequently on the show. And you know, he and I don't see quite eye to eye on the reasons why things didn't work out. He has a different perspective than I do, but some things we do agree on. And you know, the one thing I really learned from that is, and it's something I knew on a, on a I mean, I knew this already, but it's, it's one thing to know something intellectually, and it's another thing to experience it. When you set on this path to oppose the system, if you're coming at it directly, like stuff is going to come directly at you and and it's gonna and they're gonna try to really take it apart. And while I don't want to fall into the you know, there's a risk of of not like a cope, but by way of excuses, blaming the failure of NJP on things outside our control, because there was some catastrophic failures with the core group of founders, obviously, but I think those catastrophic failures were exacerbated or possibly even initiated by forces that were somewhat one step removed outside of them.
05:20:07 Looking back, I see that very strongly, and in a few cases, I know for a fact that there was pressure being put on. Then I, you know, I don't ever want to really speak about it in more detail, because it concerns other people in their business, but I know in at least one case, there was direct pressure being put on. I know the Feds were really on us, like they were on our asses. They were on our donors. They were on our activists. They were on us. The media blackout was the most devastating thing, because it was a actual blackout, like by command. It was not just a, you know, oh, let's not talk about them. That's not important, or maybe we shouldn't amplify them. No, it was a top down ADL directive, wow. We We saw that with the with the during the Kanye thing, when, when Elon bought Twitter, and then, and that's when Greenblatt made such a big stink.
05:21:03 So there's so many things, infiltrators, spies, you know, certain kind of bad elements to look for. One of the big problems with NJP also was trying to build a front, facing forward, facing, hard charging kind of political movement, and doing it mostly with people who were not doxxed, because that then puts a big pressure, where you have this bubble of people going under fake identities, and then there's this, several things happen there, one that's a vector for infiltrators, because you know, if you only have someone pseudonym to know them by like, how do you really know who that person. Is now there's ways you can verify it, and certainly we had problems with people who were docs. But the second problem with that is there's a layer of suspicion and paranoia that can develop. And then there's people who this is a real problem.
05:22:10 There's people who have two lives that they live. I sound like Agent Smith for a while, you've been living two lives, but it's true, there's a lot of people in this thing who their regular day job, life is one thing, and in that life, they are a certain way, and then they're online, or, you know, in the movement life, they're this other name, this alter ego, and that person, like their identity, gets all bound up with that character that they play while they're in the movement. But when they step outside of that movement, it's Yes, dear, and Okay, boss, you know, I'll see it work.
05:22:47 And you find a situation where people will inappropriately, you know, assert themselves, you know, or get caught up in intrigues, power struggles within the organization, because it's like playing video game for them, it's not actually their name and reputation and life and social security number and home address are not tied directly to the success or failure of this thing. So as long as there's that degree of safety there, it's like a now again, plenty of people fully Dox name and address out there who who behave very badly and worse than badly with NJP. So that's not the only thing, but that does create, it limits your ability to move forward with a political party, a political party, because a political party has to be something where you go to the people, and you speak to the people, and you are open about who you are. You can't be hiding your secret identity.
05:23:41 You can't have that a lot of too much of that really will hurt you. So that was a big problem, but, but, yeah, the I learned so many lessons from that Nick. I mean, I've been in politics for 25 years, and I basically, I would say, doubled my knowledge of everything in that three and a half years we did that. And when I do, do something again, which I will at some point jump in, it may not be quite the same, it may not be with as much single minded fervor, or it might be, but when I do, I will have benefited from the knowledge gained in that. And I think that's true of a lot of people. I know, so many people that are still active. I was just at a thing recently where I bumped into a bunch of people that were that told me their big inspiration for why they're doing what they're doing was NJP, was the time they got or that's what got them involved.
05:24:34 So I'm proud of what we did in those three and a half years. But yeah, I'm not, I'm not ready to, because that's the other thing I realized, like, you know, you could destroy your life very easily with that. Like, if you want to jump into that, I mean, look at what just happened with nasarala in Lebanon. I mean, that's a guy who is a political leader who's really fighting Jewish power, like, that's what they'll that's what they I'm not saying you have to have a death wish, but I'm saying like, you have to be prepared to die. You have to be prepared to kiss everything goodbye if you really want to take them on directly. And you know, maybe, maybe I'll be ready for that at some point. I've, there's been times in my life when I was, was ready for that. This period right now, I'm taking a little break. I'm taking, I'm taking some self care. I'm taking doing some self care here, you know, family and stuff like that.
Nicholas Gregory
05:25:33 So you deserve it, man, you know. And that's smart, you know, if you feel like you should do that, you absolutely 100% should do that, you know. So that, I guess, I forgot that's what they mean, I guess, by neo Nazi. Now, okay, I never kind of understood what the Neo man, but now it kind of makes sense with the double life matrix thing. Okay, I get it. Oh, all right. All right, yeah, there we go.Warren - WarStrike
05:25:55 I always thought that was funny. They need they call him Neo, which is good. But then the last human city is called Zion, so it's like, well, you can't read too much into this, you know.Nicholas Gregory
05:26:05 Plus the sage is, like, this black, bald guy, and it's kind of weird, too.Warren - WarStrike
05:26:12 Yeah, I have to say, though I've talked about this recently, I've always of all the characters in The Matrix, I've always identified with Morpheus the most, because Morpheus is, he is the he's sure of what he is and what he believes in, and he's always been very sure of it, and it's like I've had times in my life when I was the only one who that I knew of my own age at least, who believed in what I believe in. And I like that about Morpheus. I like that he's very sure of what he believes in. And it's just on the path to doing it, you know. So I always identify with that character very much. I don't I don't mind Sam or not. Samuel Jackson, what's his name? Lawrence Fishburne. I don't mind him at all. In that film, the sequels are horrible, though. Oh my god, they went off the deep end.Nicholas Gregory
05:27:10 Yeah, the sequels are movies that shouldn't have been made, you know? They should have just stayed with the success of theWarren - WarStrike
05:27:14 first except for Monica Bellucci in the second one. Like Monica Bellucci, it's always nice to have her on screen, but other than her, other than her, apparently she's Beetlejuice film, but she's like, gorgeous, even though she's like, in her 60s.Nicholas Gregory
05:27:27 Oh, geez, I don't even know that. That's interesting. Yeah, I haven't seen it, have you? No, no, no, I didn't even know there was a new Beetlejuice film there. Apparently, there is, there'sWarren - WarStrike
05:27:36 a new Beetlejuice movie. I might, I might actually go to see it. I haven't been to the theater. Well, I saw the Napoleon film in the theater, but before that, I think the last film I saw was, oh, the Joker film, also with what's his name.Nicholas Gregory
05:27:52 That was good. That was a good one. I actually liked that movie. You know, it was good,Warren - WarStrike
05:27:56 pretty good. Taxi drivers, much better. And it's basically the same movie.Nicholas Gregory
05:27:59 So that's a good point. I never, I ever thought about that, but it is very much a mirror of taxi driver, isn't it?Warren - WarStrike
05:28:05 Oh, yeah, right down to, right down to having Robert De Niro in the film. It was like a homage to taxi driver,Nicholas Gregory
05:28:11 yeah, that's, that's, that's, wow. I don't think of that, huh? I That's funny is now that you mentioned it, I remember like feeling almost like I've seen this before, but I didn't quite put it together. That's, that's interesting. Wow. Okay, yeah, interesting.Warren - WarStrike
05:28:30 Taxi Driver is a film that I think has gotten a lot more relevant than when it was made, because I think how many young men like back then it was like one young man out of 1000 is like a Travis Bickle. Now it's like one out of three is a Travis Bickle, you know, like everybody can identify with poor, sad, like, you know, lonely, like autistic, you know, kind of, you know, if he wants a girl, but he doesn't know how to talk to girls going around. You know, he's he's radicalized, like a lot of a lot of people, I think can identify these days with, with Travis Bickle.Nicholas Gregory
05:29:05 It's great. They've created a society that is so fundamentally alienating and bizarre and just hostile. And it's like, especially to white men. So it's like, at this point. I mean, I'm sure white women are much better. It's just say white people. It's just so like, you know, this, this kind of stuff, becomes so relatable. Just be by virtue of that. It's like that. It's like you said, though, at the time this, there was, this was a very big outlier to be this way. And yes, these days, I don't know.Warren - WarStrike
05:29:35 Man, it's pretty common. Yeah, yeah. It's like, every like, I say like every other guy is, is Could, could identify, on some level with the Travis pickle character, but yeah, what strange times we're living in. It's been an eventful year. I'll say that. I mean, the year is still, you know, we still got, like, a fourth of the year left, so it's not over, but you've been covering all this stuff in Palestine, as we have.Nicholas Gregory
05:30:01 Oh, yeah. So what do you think about this? So that not just Palestine now, but they have, you know, they're made their move, some moves anyway, on Lebanon, you know is Iran, shots been shot back. And then, of course, that that's the foreign policy stuff. But I mean, even locally, like, people are drowning in western North Carolina, and everyone's like, like, where's the federal government? Like, holy shit, they used to have to pretend they should, at least have to pretend that they gave a fuck about you to extract all that tax money and everything. Now they're just like, man, well, good luck. Hope you own a helicopter. Boy. Fucking insane.Warren - WarStrike
05:30:36 Yeah, it's really bad. They're not even pretending to care about white people anymore. I really hate JD Vance. I can't stand that son of a bitch, because he is this fake, sort of fake, like care about white people, person I want. I mean, you know, from watching my show, at least, because I see in the chat, like, I want Trump to lose. I want Trump to lose bigly. I think white people need to rip the band aid off. We need Kamala. We need the frog to boil quickly. You know, we need Kamala. I don't think if I had to bet, I would say two to one would be the odds that Trump will win. I don't think that Kamala will win. Tim Waltz is a terrible VP, and Kamala herself is very unlikeable. She combines the worst traits of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. And I think there's going to be record like low like, white dudes for Kamala. I think maybe it's like white dude for Kamala. It's Tim Walz is the only white dude voting for you know, white people are not going to vote for white men, young white men, working class white men are not going to vote for Kamala. Allah with Trump. I think he will win. He might not, he might not, but I think he will, and then we're going to see. I mean, something is that we striker and I were just talking about this, something big is about to happen between Iran and, oh, that's a great scene, right there. Yeah. Fantastic scene.Nicholas Gregory
05:32:17 I think you're right, though. I think the Jews want Trump. I think they're very sour about how everything's been handled since October 7. And they wanted, sort of a strong man approach. And they wanted, you know, the whole fleet, all the aircraft carriers, bring the tanks, bring in the cavalry. They wanted, like, this real America response, and instead they got, like, you know, fuck you. You occupying pieces of shit. And they're like, Wait a minute. What the hell? What went wrong here, you know? So they're starting to figure out, like, Okay, well, we're gonna have to change this up a little bit. So I think there's an element of that at play, for sure, and I think that they're gonna let them win, but I don't know, man. I mean, maybe they won't personally, I think they're both going to be fucking awful. I think Trump will just kind of set the playing field up so that more white men will just join the military, and they'll probably be sent over there, among other things. He'll sort of half fix problems all the way like you just did the first time. He'll go, Okay, I've made the border so much better. And they'll, you know, they'll close it like 40% or something, and call that a total victory, you know? And Kamala Harris, I mean, she, like you said, she'll be an accelerationist candidate for sure, and then some, yeah, butWarren - WarStrike
05:33:22 that's what I'm for. I want pure acceleration. I think that. I mean, I think that. I think it's just, there's no question America is not No Country for white men. You know what? I mean, it's not a it's not a White country anymore. You know, if you watch the RNC, I don't know if you reviewed our episode we did on that, but, but we, you know, the RNC, like the Republican Party, is in on this. The Republican Party is actually, in some cases, the vanguard of it, this Trump has presided over in many ways, like the gay ification of the of the RNC and and Trump is the most pro Jewish, pro Israel president we've ever had, by far, and, and this is another thing, if Trump loses, this is the way it's going to work. If Trump loses, they're going to say, Oh, it was because he was too overtly racist and he too overtly appealed, you know, the anti immigrant sentiment, and JD Vance was too overtly racist and really like the lesson is the Republicans need to be more open to diversity, the way, you know, they said after Romney lost to Obama and the two famous 2012 autopsy. 05:34:47 However, if Trump wins, even if he captures a majority of white voters, or, as he calls them, union votes. You know, the union the union people. He will credit his victory to record numbers of blacks and Hispanics turning out for him like, that's what he'll say. He'll say, and that's what all the pundits will say. They'll say Trump turned out more than so then the lesson will be the role now the Republican Party needs to lean harder into that. Their goal is to de polarize it. So it's not just whites for Republicans and non whites for Democrats. They want to mix it up between the two. So yeah, I think that Kamala Harris is a radicalizing candidate in the extreme.
05:35:33 If she does win, another thing is, she's radicalizing on the left as well, because the left is it's going to be very easy with Trump in for the whole Palestine issue to polarize around the left, right thing. So in other words, it'll be a gift to the like I said this earlier tonight, it'll be a gift to the crowd that wants to do the like the Israeli frat boys waving an American flag type, like, if you're pro America, you got to be all the way in on Israel. And if you're pro Palestine or against what Israel is doing, then you you know, Jewish voices for peace will be out there, leading them, burning American flags and, you know, mixing it up with tranny stuff and BLM. So if Trump wins, it will neatly separate out that issue. So, heads, I win. Tails, you lose, goy, if Kamal is in, that's going to scramble the whole thing. Because, for the same reason, Biden has only worse. You know, there's going to be a sort of cognitive dissonance on both the right and the left. If America is stuck in a Mideast war of some variety, for Israel and Kamal is the President?
05:36:48 Well, one Republicans are going to be stuck in the thing of, do I support? President, like a patriotic goy, you know, like we supported George Bush and support America. Or do I criticize the president and attack the president, you know? But America is involved in a war, so I kind of have to, you know, now they'll attack for partisan reasons, but it will jam that a little bit. It'll jam the mindless, like, patriot, hard shit with with the right on the left, though, even more so it will jam the whole like, oh, the first black woman, the first you know, historic woman of color you know, first Asian American, first you know, black woman of color, President, that'll be ruined if Kamala is following up on these genocide policies. For you know that Biden has, and that will jam up the left, and it'll prevent their thing from sticking what we need is destabilization of the establishment narratives now, Trump is not all bad, like if Trump got in. He's a he's a very polarizing figure, and the media reacts a certain way to him. JD, Vance, on the other hand, is really disgusting. Like, if that guy gets in, you know, Trump, there's a very good chance if he wins, he won't live out his first or his second
Nicholas Gregory
05:38:07 term. Vance is slime ball, for sure. Yeah.Warren - WarStrike
05:38:10 So Vance is really he's the president that they kind of want in there to sort of rally white America behind the non white transformation of America. That's the other thing. If we got the first husband in and he's this horrible Jew, that would be good. That's why I was hoping for Josh Shapiro for the VP, you know, but we'll see. We'll see. I don't think the election is going to impact too too much. I think it's just going to slightly move the timeline. If Kamala wins, the timeline will speed up as far as the development, the maturity, of white people in America becoming who they are, realizing what they are, that they are a nation within a republic that hates them and is against.Nicholas Gregory
05:39:00 Concern I always have with the accelerationist move is that while there's always good logic for it, there's always a bit of a gamble in it, you know, like we could simply sink deeper into an anti white morass, as much as we could kind of jam our way out of one. Is kind of my concern with this sort of thing, right? I don't think Trump is the answer either. I think we've got, you know, like you said, heads, heads, I win, tails, you lose, kind of thing. We're screwed, or we're screwed. It's just a question of how screwed, I guess, really, unfortunately. So, I mean, I think there is a good bet that, you know, Kamala could finish the job of polarizing. I mean, they're not going to be able to be able to do the same thing that they did with Obama, right? Because a lot of what got Obama in was saying, oh, you know, hey, Whitey, don't you want to be absolved of all your evil White man, woman racisms. 05:39:43 And, you know, they tried that, and unfortunately, a lot of people fell for that, and they all found out that that the scam was not ever going to work that way. So I don't think that'll work again. I mean, I don't like you said she's got the worst elements of Hillary Clinton and she's just a fucking idiot. She's stupid. So I don't I mean, maybe that, maybe that would work. I mean, maybe that would work. But my concern, though, I guess, is that we don't have another political vehicle. So it's like she comes in there and she kind of alerts everybody through her dumb dip shittery, how an anti white ism how much she is a problem, how much people like this are a problem, how much you're villainized in your own country. But then we're still sort of like we are now, like we're awakened, you know, to a degree, as a populist but we're still not basically saying we're lack organization. So how would we overcome that? Because you know what? I mean, it's is this? I don't see anything out there to do that.
Warren - WarStrike
05:40:36 Well, I'll tell you what my experience with NJP was, and that is that the system is very strong. And by the system, I mean both the government and the media. It's very powerful. It's very powerful. And I don't believe that a grassroots force on the left or the right can be mobilized. I mean, I guess in theory it's possible, but it's theoretically possible, but like, you have to do everything right all the time and and the problem is there's nobody who can do everything right all the time, like you're going to make mistakes, you're going to have setbacks, you're going to have people that don't work out. You're going to have infighting. I mean, infighting is a thing that every, every political group deals with. I mean, literally every political group. There is no such thing as a political that's the thing people hold. Can hold things to a very unrealistic standard sometimes, but the point is that a grassroots group, starting from nothing, you can build up enough steam, I think, like we were trying to do with NJP to be successful. But the thing that is hard. To compete with is active interference from the state. 05:41:57 And this is like Charlottesville, the experience at Charlottesville. I mean, we had a situation there where we all mobilized. It was disparate groups, people from all over the place came together, not a lot of unity really, between them. Even though the rally was called unite the right. Certainly, after unite the right, the whole thing turned on itself, right. A lot of bad optics, people, a lot of real idiots, a lot of you know, some some, some not so good characters, but in the face of the Antifa there and the Robert E Lee statue, we really did unite. I mean, it was really all for one, one for all. There were two sides of Charlottesville and that was it. I mean, unless you call the three percenters who were standing around like looking like idiots, but there were two sides of Charlottesville and only two. So in that moment, all of us were united because of the hostile opponent, we could have beaten them and taken the streets. We took the park, we got in, we could have had our rally, but what we couldn't fight was the police, when the when the fully armored riot police showed up with chemical agents and batons and riot shields and pushed us out into the Antifa.
05:43:17 I mean, the only way we would have been able to beat that force is if we had had, you know, firearms or something, in which case they had a lot of firearms too. So there would have been a gun battle. And if we'd have beaten them, all right, there with firearms, then they would have, I mean, the National Guard was present. I remember seeing him. I took a video with my phone of National Guard mobilized. And if we'd have beaten them, eventually, the military would have been called. I mean, as as was done, you know, I just was at the Shiloh battlefield in, in farther, you know, West Tennessee, and it's like, I mean, people have tried to fight this thing in the past with guns, and you got to, you got to be prepared to fight them with the military.
05:44:00 So the problem is, if you try to do something like that, we basically had to flee the lead Park. We had to leave it or take on the federal government, like the whole United States government, like that's what we would have had to do at the time. It was Virginia State Police and the Charlottesville city police. But if you beat both of them, beat both of them, you're going to face eventually the full force of the government. So with it, you start out with a democratic group, peaceful First Amendment based they got the courts locked down, they got the media lockdown, and they also have the FBI and Antifa, so that Antifa is like an irregular militia. Now, they're not as bad now as they were, but they can still cause some damage. They can still cause some problems, but the FBI aggressively, aggressively uses these COINTELPRO methods to disrupt your groups, and these are methods that they learned from as I've talked about on our show, they learned it from the Labor battles of the early 20th century. It stuffed it. They have it down, bad jacketing, agents provocateurs. There's different methods.
05:45:08 One of them, there's a method called, what it's called, it's like just not disruption. It's something like that. But it basically is a method where you harass the activists and the donors enough, not so that your goal is not to catch them in a sting operation or to frame them and lock them all up. Your goal is just to create enough harassment that they can't people are leaving. People are drifting away, people are intimidated, and you can't really get anything rolling. And then, you know, there's methods where, like they will set up a fake group, either more extreme than you, or more or less extreme than you. Often you'll have two you'll have two different things.
05:45:57 You'll have a really bad optics. I mean, the example I give with this, the textbook case of this, is the BNP under Nick Griffin. Back in the day, when Mark Collette was the youth leader, right, the BNP was a popular democratic force. They were winning elections. Two groups were set up to counter the BNP. One, on the one hand, you had the UK United Kingdom Independence Party, UKIP with Nigel Farage that at the time the BNP was just a joke, that this is like a BNP light. This is a system approved Zionist thing, not making it about race, rejecting racism, in other words, giving British voters a chance to vote for something that is moderate enough. It's not tagged with racism. It's not tagged with Nazism. You know, but this way you can still have your cake and eat it too. Goy, you know, you can still have your, you know, somewhat mildly anti immigrant thing. Now, Nigel Farage is still playing that role all these years later, but they set that up on the one hand, and then they set up the EDL on the other.
05:47:11 The EDL was set up the English Defense League was set up with Zionist money. Tommy Robinson is a huge Zionist they were burning they when they were marching around in those days, they were burning Nazi flags as well as like, Palestinian flags, just to show how pro Jew they are. But the whole idea of the English Defense League was you give your like, young, adventurous hooligan types, give them an outlet that seems on the surface way more radical than the BNP, because the BNP suit and tie trying to win elections run for office. So this way, you suck off the radical young activists into the EDL, which is a Zionist op, and then all the moderate people who are like respectable, you give them the choice of UKIP, and then you're just hammering the thing with media censorship, and you're hammering it with infiltrators and everything else.
05:48:00 So the point is, if you don't have a billionaire in your pocket, if you don't have, you know, a foreign state supporting you, which is illegal in electoral politics, in United States, law, you can't do it if you're just like we were with the NJP, which is a bunch of guys, mostly working class, middle class people, kicking in 50 bucks, 100 bucks a month, you know, you raise, you know, a couple $1,000 you can rent a venue, if you're operating on that level. I think in a fair system, we could still actually build something. We could still snowball it. That was the plan, Snowball it to the point where it's big enough where we can actually run candidates and then build on that success, but with the constant state, you know, pressure on your group, combined with media blackout, so you can't reach any people, combined with tons of ops on Telegram, you know, bad jacketers and people you know, spreading false rumors, stirring drama. Under that constant harassment, it's very hard to make any progress.
05:49:11 So the thing is this, to answer your question, the point of accelerationism is not simply, like a straightforward Well, things get so bad, people will vote for us. They'll vote us into power, because they'll be desperate enough to vote for us. That's not what it's about. This empire has to fall. This empire has to collapse and break apart the way the Soviet Union did. It has to be weakened, and it is being weakened right now through its global misadventures and its you know, stupid economic policies, they're running this system into the ground, the system has to get a lot weaker for us to be able to snowball that strength. You see what? I mean, yeah, like, if it's not just like, oh, white people have to be so, because, yeah, you're right. That's the counter. What if they never get that pissed off? What if we just slowly turn into Brazil or South Africa? I mean, it's, it's like,
05:50:17 I don't know, but I know that as long as the system is as powerful as it is, it's very hard for us to make any headway, and that's why, you know, when the Soviet Union, I mean, there were people who tried, you know, like the Hungarians in 56 there were people who tried rising up against the Soviets when they were still very strong, and they were just crushed. They were just slaughtered, you know, but then at a certain point they grew weak enough to where they could be challenged. So that's, that's what the accelerationism is. It's, there's a there's a group that has has power right now that their power needs to be disrupted, and when they are weaker, then we can have, you know, we mobilize a small amount of strength, it'll have a bigger impact, if that makes sense.
Nicholas Gregory
05:51:05 No, that's, if that's a fair explanation. I think that's a much more nuanced understanding of it than most people I see try to, you know, go advocating for it online. I think mostly the way that the non nuanced, kind of ham fisted take is like, let's just make everybody miserable, and then they'll finally have to wake up. It's like, that that's not, yeah. I mean, you know, that puts a lot of hope in them. That might not be there, but I do get your point that, like, this is a pretty fucking evil empire, and it it's largely kept people in in line with it and going along with it, because they're you they give people just enough. They give people just enough to have comfort, to have some sort of, you know, non third world conditions fully, but at the same time, you're kind of getting little doses of it where, you know, people are constantly getting attacked and. You know, white women beaten up and killed. And it's just, it's this very schizophrenic thing where both at the same time, it's both things. 05:52:01 And, you know, one day it seems okay and it seems like okay. Well, you know, we're, we're pretty decent, comfortable living. And the other time you're hearing about, oh, there's another one and another one and another one. And there's just, you know, this endless list of white victims of black crime or being sent to the next Zionist war. What you know? So it's this very it's crazy making, and I'm not surprised at all that so many people in this country or just in the west at this point lose their mind and do weird shit or just become weirdos in like, a really fucked up way. But I will say, I think that the COINTELPRO stuff is not even just rolled out fully, just on, like political war, because I think they're also doing, like, much lower level, weaker less funded, less effort kind of operations, even on things like, you know, on like alternative media platforms and stuff like, they're just just, You know, little troll bots and shit, and sending in people to dox people or threaten people, or, you know, bad jacking people or whatever.
05:53:02 And I've seen this sort of stuff around recently, and it's just very demoralizing, but I think that's kind of the point. That's exactly what you're talking about. Like they did this, and I remember like they were hump lumping all kinds of bullshit on you guys every goddamn every week. There was, you know, remember the duganist one? For some reason? Yes, because I think that's just when I first got, like, all peripherally, I remember them going, they're duganist, or does anybody or anything else?
Warren - WarStrike
05:53:30 I'll tell you something else that I think I've been getting into Clausewitz a lot. And Clausewitz is great, but the thing of politics is, you know, war is politics by other means, or policy by other means? I mean, there's different interpretations of that, but I really do think what we're dealing with is is, is war by other means? I feel like this is politics is just war by other means. I think that's how the system sees it. I think the idea of voting and free choice and liberty and free speech and free assembly and all that is a total joke to the system. I mean, I was, we were just reading about how they rigged an election in Bangladesh, yeah, how they overturned the democratically elected leader of Bangladesh, and Joe had a great article about it. I think they view the people who run this system, view democracy as an absolute Sham, as something that is just an window dressing on a system of of ruthless Jewish billionaires who pull the strings. I've been using a phrase that I coined that isn't really catching on, but I'm still proud of it, which is, you know how they say absolute monarchy, an absolute monarchy? 05:54:52 Well, my phrase has been absolute plutocracy. I feel like this is an absolute plutocracy. I mean, this system is run by Jewish billionaires, basically, and and so many of the things and, you know, and also their allies and their collaborators, like Peter Thiel, like one of the things that's illuminating about being on Twitter is the theal network and and the BAP network and the whole like, how much, you know, one politically minded billionaire can just fund endless George Soros is another one. I mean, Peter Wright always harps on about him, but I mean, if you have, if you're in that position, you can just fund endless grassroots groups, things to affect public opinion media outlets. To try to do that yourself, is like, you know, with a with a small group of guys that are all like middle class guys with families, with jobs, it's basically like saying, Well, you know, the Red Army invaded.
05:55:53 We're going to need weapons. I'm going to go up into the mountain and start mining ore so that I can smell, smelt some smelt some steel together, some iron, exactly, or bronze, you know? And eventually we'll, we'll learn to make the elements. We'll start smelting war. And you know that I get the smelting thing. It was a wonderful Saturday Night Live segment, a Christmas segment, where it's like Christmas on a deserted island, and it's a couple on a deserted island, and it's a guy and a girl, and the guy gets her his wife, like a shell, like a conch shell or something for Christmas. And she got him, like, a watch that she made where she goes up into the mountains and, like, smelts the ore and hammers out the tin and, like, cuts it and everything, and makes, like a pocket watch or something like that. But it's like, starting from the smelting of ore stage, you're gonna go on and you're gonna beat the Red Army, you know, right? Again, I know this sounds like I'm black pilling.
05:56:48 I'm not black pilling. I'm not at all. I'm very realistic about it. But. So you got to be you got to see this like the people are who are in power want to stay in power, and they have a lot of resources mobilized. So you got to get out of the mindset of what we're doing is like democracy and free speech and will rally the people. I mean, the people can be rallied. That's a component of the struggle. But like, You got to look at this as a war. This is a power struggle between groups. You have to professionalize like it's a war. You have to mobilize like it's a war. You have to train yourself like a war. You know the thing of counter intelligence.
05:57:29 I've been thinking about that a lot lately because of striker. I mean, there are tried and true methods of counter intelligence when you have infiltrators and spies that are used by you know, I was just looking at the memoir of the CIA's top counter intelligence guy. He wrote a whole book on the subject, and it's like when you start a group, the first thing they're going to do is infiltrate it with spies and informants. And people don't think that this exists. People think they start a thing. They think, oh, that's you're paranoid, you're this, you're that. No, it does. It does. It does. And, you know, that's the other thing. You don't want to get paralyzed by paranoia. See, this is,
Nicholas Gregory
05:58:09 well, that's it. The warrant is, people use that as an excuse, right? Like, Oh, that NJP thing sounds, that sounds cool, but I don't, you know, man, I mean, there might be a Fed in there. It's like, okay, well, right?Warren - WarStrike
05:58:17 Is more paralyzed by that than anything. I mean, the right, that's what they do with Patriot front. You know, they do this whole their Feds thing. And it's that, that bit of, like, making people crazy with paranoia. The thing is, look at Hezbollah. Hezbollah just had their whole top command taken out with bunker buster bombs. Yet, they're still fighting Israel, and they're still killing a lot of Jews. I mean, they're killing Israeli soldiers in the in the in the hills of Lebanon. They're doing something right, like they're doing something right. 05:58:52 They, you know, they might be Arabs, but, but they've got their act together way better than white men right now when it comes to going toe to toe with these people. But they had structures in place and systems in place for how to deal with, you know, the loss of their leader in the case of Hamas, you know, we've, we've all been, I think, marveling at Yaya Sinha. I mean, that guy is a man who spent 22 years, I think, in an Israeli prison, taught himself Hebrew like learned Hebrew translated by hand the memoirs of some of these top Israeli generals so he could get inside their heads, and was known as a guy who was good at spotting and eradicating infiltrators, because they realized what Hamas realized was what Gaya sin were, realized was They couldn't make any progress as long as they had infiltrators, as long as they you know, Israel has such a massive intelligence advantage that it's what allowed them to kill Hania in Ismail, Hania in Tehran. It's what allowed them to kill, possibly the Iranian president, Raisi. So if their whole specialty is intelligence gathering and they're very good at it, well then you have to have people who are trained in Counter Intelligence, who you know, again, not making a game out of it.
06:00:28 This isn't James Bond. You can't do that with amateurs, though. Nick is what I'm saying. Like you have to have a professional mindset, and if you want to, and we are going to have to have, like the Leninist thing of a, like a professional revolutionary Vanguard who treat it like a profession, the science of overthrowing a Government, the science of defeating a powerful state. Pierce was William Pierce was very into this type of thing. He was very onto that type of mindset. I would say the biggest difference between me now versus when I started NJP, when I started NJP, I was thinking much more in terms of George Lincoln Rockwell. Now I'm thinking much more in terms of William Pierce, like I'm seeing the world more through his lens. I do think this system can be beaten Absolutely. And I do think that, you know, 200 million white people are certainly going to survive.
06:01:23 Our race is going to survive. You know, maybe we're down to like 180 million, but it's still like the largest white people in any country on Earth. Yeah, you look at what's happening, and we were just playing videos from western North Carolina, these Appalachian whites who I live around, helping each other out, taking care of each other. I mean, these are strong, healthy, resilient people. I think white Americans are capable of anything but, but we got to be realistic about. On what it's going to take to beat this system. They're not going to give it up here. Let me put it this way, we have to earn it. We have to earn it like these people are not going to like we have to be worthy of beating them. Yeah. So, you know, we got to rise to that challenge.
Nicholas Gregory
06:02:09 Well, I mean, the thing about it is, is this system seems like it's this giant megalith. And in a way, when it's you as the individual against it, it really is you versus a megalith. But really, when it comes down to it, it's, it's a number of parts, right? And each part isn't a megalith, right? So it's the weaknesses of the system that have to be identified. I think that that's where is a good start. But also, you said something else that's worth targeting in on. I was talking to Frank De Silva. He was on, I don't know, a month ago or a few weeks ago, and he's the guy that came up with the term white nationalism. And so we're talking about that. We're talking about all these, these fellows that inspired that, all these fellows, I guess they're his elders at that point. 06:02:54 But he was talking about that, and he was talking about how we need this, we need this professional grade of people that are really are 110% dedicated to the mission, and are willing to do what it takes to get it done, and are willing to just be completely professional about what needs to get done and use whatever means is necessary to bring ourselves up to a grade where we can actually get what we need to get done. Because there's a lot of goofing around. There's a lot of, like, weird stuff that's going around, going on, and there's a lot of easy ways to just kind of make this into just an alternative for sports ball, and that that's, that's not going to help, like that's, that's just going to waste our time, time. We don't really have a lot of, I mean, we do have the demographic clock.
06:03:41 That's kind of, it's almost like a, it's almost like an evolution, a biological clock, you know, you can, you can, you can kind of see it going down in your head. So I don't, I'm not doom and gloom about it. I just think that we're in for a rough ride for a little while, and it's just time on the Devon Stack. It's a selection event, and some white people aren't going to make it, you know, but that's it. Is what it is, and it's just a natural order of things. But I think through this pressure that's put on this, this bottle necking of the white race, and especially in North North America, out of this pressure, some diamonds are going to be molded. You know, I think that's yes, definitely,
Warren - WarStrike
06:04:17 yeah, yeah, yeah, no, that's exactly it. And I think that's why trying is so important. I mean, that's why everybody, everybody that is contributing or doing something with the pro white cause. Now, I used to write off commentators and pundits, and now I kind of hate that I am one. I like to think of myself as an activist, and, you know, I'm still up for activism. But, like,Nicholas Gregory
06:04:42 every activist needs a break. Sometimes. Warren, like, let's just, oh yeah, there's nothing wrong with well,Warren - WarStrike
06:04:47 you know, I mean, you get to a point where you're just so burned out and exhausted that, like, you're not going to be any used to you're not going to be any good for it, but, and there is a process here of sort of going back to the drawing board. By the way, thanks. I mean, thank you for bringing on Frank De Silva like that. That. That was a great show, and you'll have to put me in touch with him, because I might like to for either modern politics or war strike one of the other but, but, yeah, that the thing about the diamonds, you're absolutely right. I mean, that's, that's how Israel created Yahya sinwar. Like he is, he is, like, the ultimate Jew fighter. 06:05:25 He is a guy who is, like, born and bred and designed, like, out of all these Palestinians, they finally, like, created a guy who is like, born to fight Jews. You know, if you study October 7, I mean, it was brilliant. What they did, the way they the way they targeted all the intelligence systems, the the all the security apparatuses, I mean, with the drones and everything, and and the way they blasted through those gates and they were going for the military bases, they were not trying. It was not an attack on on random attack on civilians. It was designed to overrun military bases for the purpose of getting captives to bring back prisoners that they could then use in a prisoner exchange. They call them hostages, but I mean, if they were hostages, they would have killed them by now. You know, they're, they were, they're prisoners that to be used in a prisoner exchange.
06:06:23 But I mean, October 7 was brilliant, and it changed the world. It changed the world. We are living in a totally different era now. So they can be beaten, they can be beaten but, but you know, those guys, I mean, the Palestinians, have been forged through the hardest of blows into what they are. So that's why it's important for us to try things, even if they don't work. Out, you know, I didn't know if you would keep the show going when I first discovered you like, I thought there's no way this guy is going to keep up this schedule. Now. I mean, there's a lot of, you know, online content creators that pop up and they don't stick around. I thought there's no way you're going to, you're going to keep this going. Like, I mean, I didn't think that, but I thought, like, we'll see. I mean, like, the schedule that you were keeping, I'm like, that's going to be very hard for
Nicholas Gregory
06:07:21 him to do just the weekdays. So that's a little more. Oh, you'reWarren - WarStrike
06:07:26 right, but it is a classic. It's a, I mean, you've experienced that, I'm sure it's a classic sink or swim. You know, Hitler's thing. If you want to live, you must fight for it. If you do not wish to fight in this world of ceaseless fighting, then you don't deserve to live that which doesn't kill me makes me stronger. All of that, you know, the more as a movement we all try, and that's why I don't mind that there's other groups out there that take a different approach than what I would take, like great front for instance, there's things about their propaganda and their approach and their worldview that I don't it doesn't resonate with me, and based on my experience and my knowledge of history, I don't think is the proper way to do it. 06:08:07 With that said, though I know a lot of guys in Patriot front and they're great, they're brave, they're courageous. They stick together, and they've stuck it out through a lot of heavy blows that have hit that organization and a lot of pressure. And so they're they're getting better, you know, and stronger as a result of it. And if Patriot front were to, for some reason, not exist. The experience that all those guys have gotten would carry on into other organizations. So it is very good to see this, like experience building up with our with our guys. We got to keep pushing. We can't get complacent. That's for sure.
Nicholas Gregory
06:08:52 One thing, one thing I like about Thomas's whole approach is that he's not even trying to necessarily get like a political party per se going. When he was on here, he was just telling me that it's he's really focused on just building these guys into the actual men, you know? And it's true. I mean, given the lifestyle the modern American male, it's not so good. Like, there's a lot of work that needs to be done, you know, like, so I get that. I mean, we all kind of could use a dose of discipline, you know, lose weight, add muscle, this kind of stuff. And organization, showing them how to organize, showing them how to plan things. I mean, they've got very specific, you know, infiltration, exfiltration, how to handle the attacker that jumps on them shields and pretends to be the victim. 06:09:40 I mean, we even talked about that when they had that black artist kind of decided that he was going to dive on their shield. But, you know, he was obviously paid to do that. So it's an example. I mean, but he has a good plan. He has a good strategy as a good system. And you know, I, I'm with you. I think the diversity of tactics is everything, especially when we don't have the ability to organize into a singular unit, a singular force, at some point, you know, maybe down the line, that's where things coalesce and everything becomes one, one force. But just how it's got to be, man, this is part of the struggle.
Warren - WarStrike
06:10:14 Yeah, it'll have to be, you know, when that one force emerges, it'll have to emerge through the struggle, you know. But yeah, I think, no, I think the future is bright. I think, listen, I think Zog is getting ready to, like, really blow it. I think they're getting ready to really blow it. I mean, I mean, what's about to happen in the next like week or so is Israel is going to hit Iran very hard, and Iran is going to hit back. And when that happens, Israel is going to be forced to hit back. And who knows what's going to happen? 06:10:48 I mean, we could, I think right now, we are closer to being on the precipice of the actual regional war that they've been talking about for a year than we ever have before. Now, the US and the UK, as they did just recently, when Israel was hit with those missiles from Iran, the US and the UK are going to go all in on defending Israel and on attacking Iran. What is that going to lead to? I don't know. I don't think it's just going to be game over for Iran, total knockout, total victory for Israel, and then everybody forgets about what happened. I mean, the Jew hatred right now in the West is off the charts, yeah, disillusionment with the system right now is off the charts. Striker talks about the post populist moment, you know, where people have just given up on populism because it doesn't make their lives better. You know they are. I know we're kind of in a bad way as a race right now, but I think they're I'd rather be in our position than their position. Let's put
Nicholas Gregory
06:11:50 it that way. I agree. All they got is money, and the power they got is pot. It's bought. They don't have any friends. All their friends are paid for. It's like, you know, it's like being the guy that thinks he's a sex stud, but all the women he's with are whores. It's like, it's not a win, man, fucking win, right? Exactly. No, you're right. I think Zog is fucking it up, because in their desperation, they're going to resort to things, and they're going to resort to resort to other desperate men, and they're going to do things they probably know they shouldn't do, and then it's good. Something's going to blow up in their face somewhere along the way. I see it too, right here in the the old psychic center. I'm seeing it. I just don't know exactly what it is, butWarren - WarStrike
06:12:26 no, you're absolutely right. And it's, it's one of these things where they're not, there isn't the, you know, the striker calls it the adults in the room. I mean, when we fought World War Two, like the Secretary of War was Henry Stimson, who was a big old Anglo, you know, and he was on the wrong side, and he was a bad guy in a lot of ways, but he was still, like, constrained somewhat by sanity in reality. You know, I often talk about this, but the Jews on the targeting committee with the Manhattan Project, von Neumann, I think he was the one he wanted to, he want, he was really dead set on dropping the nuclear bomb on Kyoto, because Kyoto was the cultural capital of Japan, the old cultural capital of Japan, and he wanted to destroy it with a nuclear weapon. 06:13:20 And Stimson fought to get that removed off the list. He had honeymooned in Kyoto when he was a young man, and he just thought that that was sick, you know, to want to destroy their cultural capital. But people like that don't exist anymore in the government. Like, there isn't that, like fail safe of old Anglo elites to kind of keep these psychopaths in check. It's like deranged trannies, like the moral Levine, you know. And you know, there's a danger to think like, Okay, well, we don't have to do anything. They'll just do it themselves. They'll do it to themselves. No, I mean, people are fighting them very directly. Russia is countering them. China is countering them. Iran is countering them. Hezbollah and Hamas are countering them. Other people are countering them. I mean, in Europe, you have these political parties, but we are right under the shadow of mordor. You know what I mean? We're living right in the belly of the beast. So they got this country pretty effectively locked down. We can do things, but I think right now the best thing we can do is disrupt I think we can cause problems for them, like I was talking about Judd Blevins, you know, who ran for office
Nicholas Gregory
06:14:38 was sick. What they did to him? He did nothing.Warren - WarStrike
06:14:41 Well, my thing with Judd Blevins is the people that say, oh, Judd Blevins proves that you can't do it, that electoral politics are won't work. And my thing was, yeah, but wouldn't you want to at least cause make it difficult for them right now, like that situation in Springfield, Ohio, if you run for local office in a place like that, you could really create a scandal, a scene, a problem. I think the more problems they have with to deal with here at home, the harder it is for them to manage everything at once. So I don't think like we can just form the group and, you know, build the rally, the people in march to victory. You know, maybe the time will come where we can do that when we have the people for it, with the professional, serious mindset and the and the hardcore, absolutely unwavering commitment, and the circumstances are right. You know, the tinder box, the Tinder is dry, ready for a spark. But in the meantime, we can just undermine the system through low level struggle. 06:15:50 You know, I love that line, and I'm always quoting part because of the political, the policy. It's not even, I don't even like the movie that even like the movie that much, but I like some of the politics of it, of resistance. And in the beginning, when the Scotsman, he says about, you know, we cannot beat an army, not with the 50 farmers we can raise. He says, We do not have to beat them. Just fight them. You know, that's what resistance is. Yeah, resistance is not, you know, the big movement sweeps to power. Resistance is just low level, causing them problems, not being complacent, not being comfortable in our servitude, making them uncomfortable, making us you know, Thomas Jefferson, I think, wrote in notes in Virginia, he was comparing blacks to Indians.
06:16:38 And he said that the blacks were lazy and stupid, and you could basically just like, you know, when they're not working, they would just like, go to sleep. He said, the Indians, you had to watch them, you know, you try to make a slave out of an Indian. You turn your back and he's going to have. A tomahawk in your head, and they came to the conclusion, you know, it's not worth trying to enslave Indians like we could use the labor, but we can't. You know, they're resourceful and dangerous, and they're a pain in the ass. They're gonna they're gonna be, that's how we have to be, like we have to be a problem for them. You know, until such time as we are strong enough, and they are weak enough that we can actually make a direct like grab for power, even either on a national level or on a state level or local level. And by grab for power, you know, I mean non violently, of course, peaceful and etc.
06:17:26 But what I mean is like, right now that you know, you can't get 50 guys together with working class incomes, pool your money and go up against a billionaire like Peter Thiel. It's like, it's like fighting nuclear weapons with with stones. So, yeah, that's one of my big you know, I guess, I guess it's a red pill. We kind of use red pill is, it's not a white pill, but it's a red pill. Red Pill, having done NGP, is that this is like a very absolute plutocracy.
Nicholas Gregory
06:18:01 What if there is a chance to find somebody that has resources and actually, legitimately is on our side, like, what if that hasn't been attempted enough? You know, I think everybody simply assumes. I mean, I don't know we're going to get a billionaire, but, I mean, I think we might possibly be able to get a few multi millionaires. I think that it's something we actually could legitimately do. And I think that, if they're themselves, are at very least true believers in the mission. I think that could really be a lot of fuel to the fire. And, you know, yeah, we're not going to be able to run a presidency, but, you know, probably not even the Senate. But, I mean, maybe you could run for, we could get somebody running an election for, like, a state house or something. We could get, you know, get something going here. I think that there, I've talked to guys. I've talked to guys that have, you know, some resources. And, you know, they're not billionaires. They don't have money to just waste, like Peter Thiel style, you know, they had to actually earn their money.Warren - WarStrike
06:18:55 I think that's what it would take. I think that's what it would take. I think that anybody that I mean Elon Musk, let's put it this way. Elon Musk was, was shut down, was forced to bend the knee to them, and He's the richest man on earth, and he was with a fortune of like at the time, I don't know what it was, 250 billion. $50 billion yeah, the ADL called his bluff, you know, forced him to back down by boycotting the advertisers of Twitter. When you think of like Larry Fink and BlackRock, Blackrock controls, manages, manages like, $10 trillion dollars. 06:19:33 Yeah, it's sick, so disgusting, you know, now I'm not going to say that it wouldn't have a value, but billionaires, you know, are locked up into their like, like Kanye West, you know, I mean, he was a billionaire, I think on paper, Donald Trump's another billionaire who, like, they have ways of hurting his fortune big time. Oh, yeah. I think that, you know, it would be good. I don't think it would be a massive like, I mean, whoever. Let's put it this way, if you could find a billionaire who has secured their wealth and resources in such a way that they're not vulnerable to being boycotted or targeted by the system. And that billionaire was as fanatical as you or I, that's the key part. You're not going to find that. You're not going to find that like no one who you know, sooner will a needle pass through what is it camel passed through a needle's eye than a rich man get to heaven.
06:20:37 What it takes to become a billionaire? You're not going to be some starry eyed idealist who wants to change the world. You're going to be, you know. So I think that, you know, it's not inconceivable. We can't sit around and wait for that, we all have a duty to act, but how we act should be, in my opinion, we should think more along the lines of hurting the system and disrupting it and causing problems for it, like by running for office and being a pain in the their ass, or going to the going to The city council meeting and raising hell the way fashion gains did in Oklahoma, you know,
Nicholas Gregory
06:21:19 like, yeah, like, called in and talked about it, actually, now that I remember that you mentioned it, yeah, yeah,Warren - WarStrike
06:21:24 it was great, yeah, yeah. That kind of, that kind of though getting pissed. I mean, you see, that's what it is in Springfield. It's the local people showing up. I'm gonna lose my voice here in a minute. I've been talking for like, nine hoursNicholas Gregory
06:21:35 straight. Close, straight to wrap them up pretty soon. But, yeah,Warren - WarStrike
06:21:39 but, but I think that type of like causing them, I mean, this is partly why I'm suing Charlottesville. I'm the last guy left, the only one left, still suing Charlottesville over what happened. And. Keeping it going. And even though they just missed the suit, we appealed. And I got help from the free expression foundation, you know, Glenn Allen and all them. But we raised the money to and they gave it, you know, they did it the work at a tremendous discount. But I raised the money to appeal it to the Fourth Circuit, and I will appeal it again to the Supreme Court if I have to. And amazing, no, I will. And the reason being is that is that I want to tie them up in the courts like if you shot here's what it is I want it to be. If you shut down Warren Bay logs, free speech rights, you're going to be tied up in the courts for years, for years. And I think everybody should do that in our thing, like when they shut down our rights, we fight and tooth and nail and make it very, very costly and painful for them. I mean, 06:22:51 for every $100 that I've spent in this case, or that we've, we've, you know, spent, total, they've spent 1000s, 1000s of dollars on it. You know, now I'm in the right, and I absolutely am convinced that this is the correct and proper thing to do, and I have the truth on my side, but it's also the principle of fight. Make it hard for them. That's something we can do without bringing the whole system down on our heads. You know? I mean, you're someone, if you've ever gotten hassled about this show that you do because the show is having an effect. It's a pain in their ass, it's a nuisance. It's a problem for them. It's not, it's not a kill shot. You know, you're not going to bring down the system with this show, right? Although you know somebody might listen to it. Who will, you know, down the line? You know that's true. You might have somebody that catches your show, and that's, you know, on their path to whatever. But, but like they have to expend resources to try to shut you down. And you don't go away, and you keep going. You're you're wearing them down, wearing them down a little bit. You know, we all have to do that.
Nicholas Gregory
06:24:06 Um, just clarify. Somebody in chat said they didn't know he worked. So this is Warren baylog, so he was in, he was a leader in the NJP. We're on the council, and you were also do war strike and modern politics, two fantastic shows. If you don't know these shows, you should follow them like I can't believe anybody doesn't at this point, but I guess some people haven't heard yet. So we'll tell everybody. We'll tell everybody. Thank you. Of course, absolutely it's, you know, modern politics is one of the few shows where I've never canceled my subscription to it, even when I didn't have money. So Oh, thank you. Thank you. I think that's a good testament to the value of it, and I'll tell you, I'm jealous. As soon as I can get a wife that's willing to do what Emily's willing to do, I definitely want to try a similar kind of project, you know, but it's probably gonna be a little while to get that done. But that's really cool. It's really cool. You guys get to do that together. I think that's fucking cool as hell. You know,Warren - WarStrike
06:25:03 you're gonna, you're gonna, you're gonna end up marrying someone who's a fan of your show, like someone who might be, it will happen. It will happen. Somebody will be like, somebody will be like, No. I mean, I know many guys in this thing that, through their like movement work by putting themselves out there. They met it, they met they met a girl, like somebody was just like, Hey, I like that guy. You know, that's what will happen.Nicholas Gregory
06:25:25 That's cool. I'm open to it, and I'm open to it. I'll say that much, but, well,06:25:29 you're on TV, so, you know, that's an attraction.
06:25:35 That's cool. That's absolutely cool, man, yeah, I think that the commitment to it, commitment to the effort to do this stuff, is something that doesn't come naturally to everybody, but as long as I'll tell you this thing, the only thing that ever demoralizes me is getting shit from our side of things. If I don't get shit from our side of things, I don't really get that demoralized. Otherwise, it's just another attack from the enemy. But if it's that, that's where I really, like, God, really seriously Other than that, and I'm sure you must know that. I mean, back with the when you guys were doing the NJP stuff, is bad jacketing bullshit that going on, on, on telegram all the time, harassing you, making up all this schizophrenic nonsense about they're secretly controlled by the Russian whatever the hell it was. It was very silly stuff. It, you know, it's very like ridiculous dot connecting didn't even make sense a lot of times, right?
Warren - WarStrike
06:26:27 Yeah, oh no, it's really but, you know, that's the old thing. I mean, that's another thing that I've really learned is, if you're taking Flack, you know you're over the target. I love that expression. I can't I heard, first heard that, like, a year ago, and I was like, Oh, my God, that's so true. That is so true. Like it's, it's really, no, I'll tell you this Nick. I enjoy fighting with this system. I enjoy. You have to on some level. You got to enjoy testing your strength against it, you know, yeah, did you ever play? Did you ever play the first Mortal Kombat?Nicholas Gregory
06:27:04 I did. I did when I was a teenager, yeah, probably about the same time you did.Warren - WarStrike
06:27:09 Pull up a video of the test, test your might, the test, your might sections where you had to mash the remember that you had to mash the buttons really hard. And you would start out like wood. You would chop the wooden block. It's something they I don't think they put it in any of the other Mortal Kombat games. You would, you would have to, like, press, mash two of the buttons really, really fast to build up your strength. And then you'd have to hit the other button to try to chop and crack the wood. And then you do it with stone, yeah, this is it.Nicholas Gregory
06:27:43 I remember that you're pushing the hell out of the button, like pushing the hell out of the buttons.Warren - WarStrike
06:27:47 And then, you know, you could do it with stone. It would go up, and it was harder and harder. And I think the hardest one was diamond. You know, a lot of times, though, they're sure these guys are beating it easily, but a lot of times you would, you would, and you wouldn't, you wouldn't break, you know, get it up high enough.Nicholas Gregory
06:28:06 Those are the success stories. Those are the only one that was, the only one. I have a bunch of them, but these are the newer ones. Most of them not the original. So I pull up theWarren - WarStrike
06:28:13 they did. They did this feature in some of the newer games. Oh yeah, for me, a new Mortal Kombat game is like Mortal Kombat three.Nicholas Gregory
06:28:25 This is back in the day stuff. But you know, you actually brought up something really quite interesting, actually, when you're talking about jamming up the system, you're talking about running for the office. So even if you run for something really low level, your ability to cause problems increases just because they have to hear you out as an elected official in a way they don't have to as a so even if you're fucking dog catcher or something maybe not that low, but if you're like, a, I don't know, like, what would be a reasonably, not incredibly crazy or expensive position to run for, like, what Judd Blevins had done, like, had counsel perfect. They have to listen to him. They can't just say, all right, your time's up. Go away now, like that. So you in that position, even if they ultimately show you out, in between when you're doing your stuff and when they show you out, you can still get a lot of hassle into that. So that's, that's a greatWarren - WarStrike
06:29:11 point, yeah, yeah, yeah, this no, this system. Yeah, the reason I bring this up is this system is, like, this is the most powerful system on Earth. I mean, it is the most powerful system on Earth. So when you are tapping up against it, you're testing your might against the strongest power on earth. Yeah, it's kind of fun. I mean especially when when I see like the evil that they're doing, I'll tell you, that's the other thing I've never, ever, ever been more convinced of the rightness of our cause than by seeing what Israel has done in Gaza. Because again, you look at the pictures of these little Palestinian children with their heads blown apart and their bodies, their limbs dangling and everything. 06:29:54 And think of the 10s of 1000s, hundreds of 1000s of little German and Italian and French and Japanese, you know, children killed by this system in the Second World War, and many since, you know, there's no, we don't have the kind of footage of like the kids that were burned to death at Dresden, but little sweet, cozy, little German houses and their little Christmases and everything burned with napalm, destroyed by the 10s of 1000s. Sick. I mean, it's so sick and evil, and it is always the thing that motivates me at the end of the day, like, I want to get these bastards. I want to get them for what they've done and and now that I have kids, it's like, I have another motivation. It's not just, like revenge, you know, we talked about this, I think the last time I was on this show, yeah, it's not just revenge. Now it's, you know, I really want to live. I mean, I want to, I want to live. I want to have a life. I want our people to have a life. I want my kids to have a world. I mean, I know that's sort of like a cliche. People say that, but like, it's really true. So, so, yeah, I feel very sure about what we're what we're doing.
06:31:11 And I feel like, because, as I said, we're pretty I'll close it out with this, because I got to go, me too. We're in a strong we're in a strong situation, like, you know, if they're like a freaking plane flying overhead, we're like a mountain. We're not soaring through the sky right now, but we're very strong. The body of white America is still very strong. It's going to be very hard to just utterly dismantle it. It's not 200 million people are not going to go away overnight. So we're like I said, I would rather be in our situation than be in their situation. At the moment, you. The second thing is, we're morally right. And I think the whole world is going to see that, after the last year, like, there's going to be more, you know, questioning of the Holocaust, questioning of the were the allies, the good guys in World War Two, like, What the hell are we fighting for? What the hell was this all about?
06:32:10 There's going to be more of narrative breaking, cracking open over everything that's happened than there has been in our entire lifetimes. And then. And then the last thing is, just like I said, the test of your might, like, it's fun to test your your strength against this system, the most powerful evil system on earth. Like, what? What better challenge could you set for yourself? So finding creative and interesting ways of fighting it and beating it, or trying to beat it is a good way to spend your life. That's my dad's favorite quote he had in the mind come the old edition of mind cometh. He wrote that in Magic Marker when he was a teenager, he wrote this line, Horatio at the gates to every man upon this earth, death cometh sooner or late. So how can man die better than facing fearful odds for the what was it for the ashes of his forefathers and the temples of his gods. Yeah.
Nicholas Gregory
06:33:20 Anyway, no, it's true. Man, I look, I don't think there's any more noble cause at the moment than off throwing this evil shackle, this evil yoke. I mean, one thing that really stuck to me is, unfortunately, on the timeline, scroll, I saw this little Palestinian child in his father's arms, and he had no brain in his skull because his his skull was empty, because they fucking blew him up. And it's like one of these things where I almost wish I didn't see it, because it's like, you know, do I need that on my soul? But at the same time, no, because it reminds you that, like, No, you're not wrong. They're wrong, youWarren - WarStrike
06:33:53 know, like they do it to us too. They do that to our kids, you know, heartbeat they, you know, they see us all the same, completely. Yeah, so, yeah, we got to fight them. We got to win. You know, it might take a little it might be a little harder than I once thought. We might have to get a little bit more serious, but you know, we're going to keep going. We're going to keep going, no matter what,Nicholas Gregory
06:34:20 absolutely all. Right, well, I really appreciate you coming on, Warren, because he told me 15 minutes, but he gave me a little longer than that.Warren - WarStrike
06:34:30 How long? How long have we been talkingNicholas Gregory
06:34:33 about 45 oh,Warren - WarStrike
06:34:35 wow, we'll see. I've been talking for so long now that I can't stop I can't shut up.Nicholas Gregory
06:34:39 Now you're in the groove. I told you, the groove you'd get with it, man, you'll hit that groove. You just keep going. Yeah.Warren - WarStrike
06:34:44 Well, listen, congratulations. Thank you. Big congratulations to you. You know, I'll echo what Devon said, which is, you know, here's to the next 1000. Keep at it. It's it's great. It's a great show. You're doing a great thing. You're a great guy. So I totally support you. Anything ever I can do to support the show, let me know. And thank you for being such a support for us, for me and Emily, booster modern politics and and also with war strike, course.Nicholas Gregory
06:35:13 Thank you. Appreciate you so much, Warren. Take care, sir. Have a goodWarren - WarStrike
06:35:16 tree, brother. Take care. Have a good care.Nicholas Gregory
06:35:18 Good night. All right. Well, with that, there goes. Mr. Warren Bay, like so we are complete. Now we've we rounded out the show, the whole show. I'm very, very happy with that one thing that was a great show. Let me read the last ones that did not get read yet, and we will address them. Let me go ahead and just adjust a few things here. A second. I'll go ahead and make a second, bring them up on screen, and we will, we'll round it off here. Okay, let's do that. Fade back into this one. Okay, let me go ahead and bring some of these up here. I think that'll the easiest way to go ahead and read them off. Okay, I could probably kill this repeating message, but I have a message going that has the links to his show. I should have done that for everybody's but I was in a scramble to get everything up, thanks to my computer, so I didn't get it perfect. 06:36:07 But next time, Mika schrednik, she says, Happy anniversary. Cheers from BC, well, thank you, Mika. Salute to you over in BC, British Columbia is a beautiful place. I mean, I'm not a huge fan of the politics, but I was when I lived there, so guess it's a matter of perspective, but there's some, sure, there's some fucking awesome people in BC, you know, I was more of a hippie when I lived there myself, but it's coming up. Yeah, Papa Smurf, he says, love it. Oh, slash. Well, thank you publisher for your serious support, Sir, we're gonna go backwards this time, because that's gonna be easier hand, right hand. He says, Congrats for the 1,000th episode. Save the best guess for last. I thought they were all fantastic. His big salute to Warren from Finland.
06:36:48 We still have a fighting chance with white guys like Warren Hale Vick. Victory. No victory to you sir. Salute to Hanrahan hammer hands an old Chad. He's been around for the whole time. He's been hand ran has been around since the beginning. He's got the OG status, I guess, if we're gonna use that kind of terminology, lying eyes is banana. Bananas are evil. Chiquita Banana company created the first Banana Republic. Truth is crazier than fiction, that that's true they did and they overthrew governments to do that sort of shit. So absolutely fucking terrible. Yeah, it's grimy. If you read about the like, was it? I think it's like, United Fruit Company or something like that.
06:37:27 Ah, it's shit they did in South America. And, you know, wonder why we have some of these problems with invaders and all this stuff. Well, history that goes back that far. Truth four says, I've always wondered if Frank and Warren knew each other. They seemed to have rolled in the Big Boy circles. No. I mean, well, well, Warren's been a lifelong WNS guy like his father was. So his father was in the ANP with rock ball, I think so. I mean, yeah, Alan's been around since, you know, before I was born, and, yeah, Warren grew up with it. So, yeah, Frank, I don't think knows them, but I'll try to see if I can put them in touch and see if something can come of that. Because I think they'd be, I think they'd be very simpatico. I think, as you would say, right? I'll put this one up. I did read it, though. Mika, salute to you. I say, Miss. I think because, I think because Miss, I believe so.
06:38:18 All right, moving up. Moving up. Okay. Robert E pile, he said, Trump supporters will never move on if he doesn't serve his second term, and we will never be able to reach them. Only after Trump is no longer an option, will we ever be able to able to able to get them on our side. They need to become disillusioned with him. He needs to serve his second term for that to happen. Yeah, I generally kind of agree, like I'm very mixed feelings about the Trump. The Trump, what's her name? Pajit Lady, whatever her name is, Kamala kabbalah harritz. I'm very mixed feelings about them. I basically, in short, the shortest way to say it, from my perspective, is I don't think we have a good choice. I think both choices are ultimately anti white. So I think you can, you know, vote if you want to. I'm in person. I just just don't think it's going to fix our racial issues.
06:39:09 That's all, you know. Hey, man, you know, some people want to vote for Trump because they want to buy a little more time. They want to be able to, you know, put away a little more personal wealth. And you know what, I'm not going to shit on that. The other one is people, you know, they want to accelerate, you know, like Warren was just talking about, they want to just get it over with, rip the band aid off, right? So I think both views are legitimate. I think both views have legitimate, sincere motives behind them. I The My only struggle is I don't really even know which one is the best option anymore. I think they were just both bad. Is the short answer, right? Truth forward. He says, All the best people in one place, amazing should be a tradition, like millennial.
06:39:49 I like that idea. Maybe that's not a bad idea. Maybe we just do, like start falls with a, I mean, I don't ever be able to be another 1000 show. This was the 1000 show. In fact, when I actually get my computer in order, if I can actually get my stuff off it, I might, you know, like, re, edit, put the, put the, put the intro. I made a special intro. And also, man, I was the only frustrating thing. But anyway, thank thank God, when we got the show going. Everything worked out the end. So I might end up doing a repair job to have it exactly the way I want it. But I think right now it's good. I think I'll leave it the way it is. There, out there, Fritz, he says to the next 1000 Well, thank you. They're out there. And drew the Forge there. My lying eyes, he says,
06:40:33 My head feels small compared to warrants. Hey, man, you gotta have a big head to house a big brain. You know, this is what's got to happen. You know, can't, can't stick it in a small head. At says that's Appalachian thunder. He said, people in West North Carolina are dying. I'm heading a convoy towards Waynesville, outside of Asheville, first thing in the morning. Care about your folks. Send some fucking help. Yeah, well, absolutely, absolutely help any way you can. Are they doing fundraiser stuff? Because Pete, look, people that are going to do these convoys, you're going to have to put fucking gasoline in the convoy. So if they're not doing a fundraiser, maybe that should be started. Love and division. He says, hey guys. Funny thing is, my pillow is currently doing a 1488, sale. I saw that I thought it was a meme. Somebody said it was like a fucking flood meme or something. No, no, it's just the apparently, just didn't know what it means, I guess. Or maybe he does. Who knows? Maybe he does. And this is back to, does Devon make meat? I think we got, I think we read them all, didn't we?
06:41:32 And then we got, yeah, I think we read them all. Okay, we finally got them all in. Okay, cool. Make sure to miss anything here. I think we're good, though. I think we're good all right. Well, I think what that is about four in the morning, so I'm gonna call it Good night, everybody. I appreciate you all tuning in. Most importantly, most importantly, I appreciate. Everybody who came on the show. Make sure you follow them all. They're all worth tuning into. I promise I wouldn't have had them on if they didn't like I said in the beginning, they're here because they inspired what I do. They're people that I watch, that I invest my limited time on Earth watching. So that's why they're here. They're worth following. Follow Tim Murdoch, White Rabbit, radio, TV, follow red ice. And how you wouldn't, but do it anyway if you're not. Follow Devon Stack, who's on Saturday.
06:42:23 Is another one there. I think red ice is on tomorrow as well. I think Tim Murdoch is also on tomorrow as well. Follow Warren on both modern politics and war strike. I wasn't just blowing smoke. It's one of the only shows I've ever I've never canceled my subscription to, even when I didn't have money. So yeah, you might want to, you might want to do that. It's worth it. It's worth your five bucks, you know. And they do every other they do every other show. They do free, paid, free, paid, free paid, which I think is completely fair. So you can just watch the free ones if you want to. But hey, you know I would, I would suggest it's certainly worth your five bucks, certainly worth more than that. But that'll do it, right? Oh, it doesn't come up line. I says, you rocking it Well, thank you lying. I salute to you sir. All right. Well, with that, I think we're done here, and I appreciate everybody again.
06:43:18 Thank you for making it an epic Show, everybody who came on as a guest, thank you for making it an epic Show, everybody who did serious support today, and there was a lot of that. Thank you. I appreciate you, because, as I always say, you're the ones that make it possible. Absolutely. I appreciate everybody else who tuned in. Remember, it's always free to share that link with your friends. Share the replay, share it around. Share it everywhere. Who knows? I might even cut the different segments out and make smaller segments, but share it around. It's always free to do invite your friends. We're always here. We're here every week. Well, right now, we've been here every weekday, but we might have a new schedule any which way. Come check it out. Thank you for tuning in. We'll see you next time. Take care of yourselves. Everybody. If I can find the outro, we'll finally be out of here. Good night, everybody. Good night. Good night.
Xurious Ft. Hiraeth - Keep in Mind
06:44:52 I guess we want to be should be. Here's the thing, while that's nice, every action has a price. We're meant to be06:45:14 much more than this, and find the home, which we all miss.
06:45:21 So it's time to grow up. As we're taking down the clock,
06:45:35 we're fighting for our past to learn from those
06:45:45 before our Future made secure.
06:46:09 We were meant to survive, to transcend, go forth and thrive, find the light, leave behind all the things that made us blind. It's up to us to
06:46:30 show the way, to hold the torch. We will do all we can till
06:46:43 time is not running.
06:46:53 Fighting to learn from those
06:47:02 Before our future made secure. You