3:18:21

INSOMNIA STREAM: 250 Edition - 07/04/2026

Display stream descriptionThis Independence Day edition of the Insomnia Stream focused primarily on Devon Stack's reflections on the 250th anniversary of the United States. The discussion centered on his interpretation of American history, the Founding Fathers, citizenship laws, immigration policy, race-related historical legislation, and changing national identity. He reviewed historical figures such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Abraham Lincoln, and organizations such as the American Colonization Society while arguing that modern narratives about early American history differ from the historical record. Later in the stream, he discussed AI-assisted game development projects, his experiences working at Gateway Computers, corporate management practices, patriotism, cultural change, historical films, technology, surveillance systems, beekeeping, and numerous listener questions and paid chat contributions.
Full Summary
Catalonian Numbers Lady
00:00:15 Steve and strengthen
Star Spangled Banner
00:00:47 What so proudly we hailed at the twilight last gleaming, Who stripes and a bright star through the perilous fight all the rampart we walked was so gallantly streaming and in direct silent reposes Reposes deep as it fitfully blows a concealed purpose. Now it has Earth now shines in the car. Thank God.
Lee Greenwood - God Bless the U.S.A. (Remix)
00:04:04 and I'm proud to be an American, where at least I know I'm free, and I won't forget the man who died, who gave that right to me, and I gladly stand up next to you and in her skills today, because there ain't no doubt of this land. God bless the USA. It that I'm proud to be an American, where at least I know I'm free, and I won't forget the man who died, who gave that right to me, and I gladly stand up next to you and end her skills today, because there ain't no doubt of this land. God bless the US land.
Devon Stack
00:07:12 Welcome to the Insomnia Stream Two Fitty, Two Fitty Edition. Two Fitty. I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack. Happy birthday, America. I guess. Well, you know what they say, and it's become a cliche, but it's true. I mean, it's.. I think we prove it. Democracies usually last about 200 years, and so this is.. we're on the..
00:07:53 we're on the downhill part of it. It's, you know, there's still.. there's a lot of.. there's a lot of steam still left in this engine. Things are just gonna fall apart instantly, you know. It's like, it's like I was gonna use a metaphor that I don't think most people are gonna get.
00:08:18 Well, okay, so things that that take a long time to live usually take a long time to die, right? Like, so for example, if you try moving a suaro cactus, those great big cactuses, right, it's, I mean, they live a long time, they take forever to fucking grow, I think they live like I don't know, maybe about as long as America. Basically, I think like 100 200 years or so. I don't know, something like that.
00:08:51 But if you move one and then you know you transplant it, you don't know if it worked.
00:08:59 The transplant worked for like a few years, like you might have killed it, but because it's such a slow growing, slow living plant, you won't know for like it's just it's slowly dying, but you won't know for a few years, and that's kind of what's going on, I think, with America, it's you know, it's certainly nothing like it was. It's nothing like it was intended to be. It's nothing like many of us were told.
00:09:33 It's, you know, like what exactly is there at this point? It doesn't even live up. That's the funny thing, is it doesn't even live up to the, like, the propaganda, like, not, not even, like, to a little bit, you know, like, not even, it's not even like, what's the way of putting this, it's kind of like you were raised to believe in some kind of mythos.
00:10:00 Right, some kind of vision of America as a child, and it was, it was supposed to be like the ideal, right, where you know there were, there were certain American values, and you know, even if you take out the fact that by the time, obviously, many of us, if not all of us, were in grade school, you know, the whole racial, you know, we're all one race, the human race, kind of a thing was already inject in there, even if you put that, even if you don't worry about that, right, and just, just think about like the rest of it, that's that's not even, that's not even relatable, right, like the way that they would, they would, they would portray America in, say, positive propaganda in like the 1980s and 90s, or even like early 2000s about what America was supposed to be isn't even recognizable anymore, and I don't just mean because of what's going on in New York with the Muslim mayor and all that fun stuff, and you know, the Somalis, and I mean, that's part of it, you know, but it's.. it's just no one, no one sees.
00:11:11 Here's the thing, I think once you reached a point where there were more people in America who didn't have any connection, and by that I mean, like, bloodline connection to the founding.
00:11:29 As soon as you had more people who had, who had zero connection to that, then you had people who did have a connection to that, it was over. It was over at that point, America stopped being like a, a land of your ancestors, and it became kind of just a property.
00:11:50 It's like it's IP, you know, it's like if anytime you have a company that, and it's going to go public, right, the second you find, like, if I remember, I worked for a company once, and they were going to go public, and that place, when I first started working there, was great.
00:12:09 We got, like, the money that was, that was the, that the founder made. He was a generous guy, so he would put back into his company and put back into, like, the quality of life of the employees. He cared about the company because it was his baby.
00:12:26 It was what he wanted it to be, a cool place to work. He wanted it to be actually provide a good product, like he, it was, it was part of him.
00:12:37 And the second he was going to go public with his company, they, as part of this process, they hired a bunch of efficiency, efficiency experts who came in and said, well, we have to streamline this. Oh, this is losing money over here.
00:12:54 Like, oh, you mean to tell me you're giving people customer service for free? Well, we got to put a stop to that, and the place sucked to work, like, within, like, six months, everyone was fucking quitting.
00:13:07 It was horrible, and the company doesn't exist anymore, or at least, I mean, I think someone owns the name or something, but, like, it's, you know, it's not like a real company, and that's kind of what's happened to America, right? America, once it crossed over from being like, no, no, that we have to make this work, because, like, my grandpa died in a war, and, and his grandpa died in a war, and his grandpa died in a war, you know, and, like, and we've lived here for generations, and, like, this is, you know, this is my baby,
00:13:41 I, you know, this is where, you know, 10 generations of my family have walked, walked this, this trail, and we gotta, you know, we gotta preserve this, this forest for future, you know, all this stuff, right, like all the sorts of things that you give a shit about when you've got some kind of actual connection to the land and to the country that all evaporates when most of the people here don't, you know, it just, it just becomes it's like, you know, if you sell, sell a house, you sell your house to someone, and then you come, like, ever go back to your childhood house after not being there for decades, right, and you go back and maybe they've made it better, maybe they've repainted it and they planted a new garden out front, or whatever, or maybe they haven't, maybe it looks all like shit, or maybe they've bulldozed it and now it's a freeway or something like that, right, but that's kind of what's happened, is it's, you know, we sold the family house, and now it's someone else's who doesn't really give a shit about it.
00:14:47 Their grandpa didn't build it, now they're just looking at ways that they can make the most money, and unfortunately kind of much in the same way that a lot of these vulture capital.
00:15:00 List companies do when they, when they purchase big companies, you know, with no intention of, of, let's focus on trying to improve, you know, let's try to streamline things, so that we can actually provide a better product for cheaper, and just make it more efficient, and also it'll make money for the shareholders.
00:15:16 No, it's more about just, let's just strip it for all, you know, let's take all the assets out of it we possibly can, and you know, just cut it to pieces, and then just auction off all the, all the, all the individual parts. I kind of feel like that's what's going on in this country, but that's not always what it was like.
00:15:39 It's not always what it was like I wanted to talk a little bit tonight about, well, the history, the white nationalist history of the United States, the and try to pinpoint, you know, maybe like roughly where it went wrong, but I think it coincides with what I'm talking about, where like as soon as you hit that point, where, and it's not just like a white or non-white thing, because we're still technically, I mean, I don't know, I think I think whites are probably in the minority right now, but I think that happened fairly recently, right, and
00:16:25 I think the nosedive happened well before that, and I think it coincided, like I said, not even because of white, non-white, but because of American, not American, you know, just opening the floodgates to just anyone who is going to treat this place like an economic opportunity and not the nation that they are part of now.
00:16:52 Some interesting things we look back at the history of America, and especially the way, especially because you know, boomers love talking about the founding fathers as if they're some kind of like they were civnats, right.
00:17:09 In fact, I even saw at one point, well, actually today Richard Spencer tweeted out, I think something about the line, all men are created equal, as if it were some kind, and he said, I think I forget the exact quote, but he said something like, oh, this is like one of the evilst lines ever written, and yeah, in today's context, the way that it's used today,
00:17:38 the way that it's interpreted today, yeah, and I guess this is a lesson why you should need to be precise with your language, and it's also a lesson why things that might have been really helpful and useful in the past, and it might have even been like a guiding light in the past for white people,
00:17:57 has outlived its usefulness because it wasn't specific enough, but at the time you have to remember they didn't mean like when they say all men were created equal, they didn't mean black people, for example, they didn't, they didn't at all, it didn't even occur to them there would come a point in time where other white people were thinking,
00:18:23 you know, that that means niggers too, that that didn't even like cross their mind, that's that idea was so foreign to them, the idea that white people would someday lower themselves and to a degree that they would think that that would include, like, non-whites, that they didn't think they had to be specific about that, they didn't think they had to clarify that in the language, and they were just waxing poetic, so you know, as an example, you know, Benjamin Franklin, you know, he didn't even think, you know,
00:19:06 Germans were white, really, he called them pallet palatine boars, and he was worried that the influx of Germans into Pennsylvania would quote Germanize us instead of our anglifying them, and that quote never they would never adopt our language or customs any more than they can acquire our complexion, because he didn't think Germans were white.
00:19:39 In fact, he said quote the number of purely white people in the world is proportionately, proportionably very small. All Africa is black or tawny, Asia chiefly tawny, America exclusive of the newcomers wholly so, and in Europe the Spaniards, Italians, from.
00:20:00 French Russians, Swedes are generally of what we call a swarthy complexion, as are the Germans. Also, the Saxons, only excepted only with the English, make the principal body of white people on the face of the earth. I wish their numbers were increased. so that's that's, you know, that was Benjamin Franklin.
00:20:28 Benjamin Franklin's idea of white people was basically just Anglo-Saxons from England, you know, founding stock Americans, you know, not even the Swedes were white, so the idea that the founding fathers were white nationalists, or weren't white nationalists, is kind of fucking crazy.
00:20:52 You also have to think about, you know, you had the colonial slave codes and anti-miscegenation laws, you know, Virginia, when it was just a colony, obviously, from, I think, from 1662 on, restricted all black people, you know, black rights, banned or penalized interracial marriages, and obviously fornicating and limited blacks' ability to testify in court to like extreme cases, like you had to, like they had to be like the only, like the only source of the information you needed to even allow them on the stand, they couldn't have guns, they didn't have the right to assembly, because they knew when blacks to get together in a group that can cause that can cause problems.
00:21:50 The northern colonies had similar, similar rules.
00:21:54 I mean, this, this, this was a this, it just went without saying that when they said all men are created equal, they weren't, they didn't mean what the Universalists mean when they, when they cite it today, you know, the context was they were talking about, they were politically equal to the, the British subjects, basically, like they, because you got to think about the context of what, what that document was for, why they were writing it, who they were trying to appeal to, they were trying to set up this narrative that the colonists were being treated as second-class citizens, and that they weren't, that's why they needed independence, because they were, they were basically like, you know, they didn't have the same rights, even though that they were, they had, they were still subjects of the crown, and so that's what they meant by that.
00:22:57 What they meant by that is, hey, we're just as good as the English people in England, and so therefore we should be allowed, you know, you know the same representation, like that's what the context was. It had nothing to do with, like, everyone's the same and race is skin deep, had nothing to do with that.
00:23:14 I mean, Jefferson had slaves, Jason Jefferson had slaves, and as did many of the signers of the Constitution, so the idea that they were like, oh, you know, you know, I've heard, you know, people like Mark Levin, right, like these, these Jews that try to, or, or what's his face, the Indian guy that try to rewrite American history in a sieve net, a palatable boomer siv net narrative that that appeals to conservatared Magatard boomers that want to know, because they're patriotic, they want to learn about our nation's history,
00:24:07 and so the Jews are like, "Oh, let me, let me, let me make a completely jeweled up version of it for you to consume, because we know you're not going to ever read any books or anything like that, or dig any deeper.
00:24:19 Watch this documentary by this Indian guy that tells you how civ net everyone was, and how basically exactly whatever, whatever the Republican party is saying today, that's what the founding fathers believed in. So it's, it's really kind of, kind of fucking crazy, really fucking kind of crazy that anyone ever thought that that they weren't white nationalists.
00:24:44 Now you had the net, the Naturalization Act of 1790 and we've talked about that a few times, which was upheld, by the way, is or as recently as in terms of like the white aspect of it held up.
00:25:00 As recently as early 20th century, you know, when that Indian guy was found by the Supreme Court not to be white, but this says, you know, this is the Naturalization Act of 19 or 1790 any alien being a free white person, meaning that, you know, that's who they, that's that was the requirement, basically, to be a resident, you know.
00:25:25 Initially, it was two years, then they changed it to five years, but you had to be a white person of good character in order to become a citizen of the United States, and, like I said, in, like, something like 19, we did a stream on, I want to say it was like 1920-ish or something like that.
00:25:46 Some Indian guy was given, he was well, he was given citizenship by I want to say a Washington state office, and then it was his citizenship was contested because the well, he wasn't white, he didn't, he didn't fit the the requirement of being a free white man of good character, and they took it to the Supreme Court,
00:26:13 and the Supreme Court agreed that that Indians are not white, and the fact, you know, again, there's I did a whole stream about this, the funny thing was, his argument wasn't even the argument before the Supreme Court in this case wasn't even that, oh, you shouldn't have to be white to become an American, even in like 1920 that was just everyone just got it, like, yeah, of course you have to be white, his argument was Indians are white because they're Aryans, like that was his argument.
00:26:43 He wasn't even trying to say that. Well, I'm an Indian, and I should be, I should be allowed to be an American, even though I'm not white.
00:26:50 No, his argument was Indians are white, and the Supreme Court ruled Indians are not white, actually, I so I mean it over and over and over again, you look at the founding fathers' private writings, you look at just the founding documents, look at the Militia Act of 1792 one of the requirements to enroll in a militia was quote every free, able-bodied white male citizen of the respective states.
00:27:33 You had it says that you had to be a white male citizen of the state to enjoy to join the militia, so again, if the the founding fathers, if the founding stock Americans, or not founding stock, the founding Americans really are our ancestors, those of us who have descended from these people, if they had intended to have some kind of kumbaya bullshit strip mall of a country like we've got today, this doesn't make any sense.
00:28:20 Doesn't make any sense, they had explicit racial qualifiers for all kinds of things, including the citizen military, you know, you had, let's see here, Thomas Jefferson, this is notes on the state of Virginia, 1785 Jefferson proposed gradual emancipation, but argued free blacks could not be incorporated.
00:28:53 Quote, deep-rooted prejudice entertained by the whites, 10,000 recollections by the blacks of the injuries they have sustained, new provocations, the real distinctions which nature has made, and many other circumstances will divide us into parties and produce convulsions which will probably never end, but in the extermination of one or the other race smart man said this in 1785 1785 he predicted exactly what we're experiencing today, that deep rooted prejudices sure on both sides, where you have and blacks playing the victim and new provocations, so in other words, nigs nigging out back in 1785 Are real distinctions which nature has made, so you know, Jeff Thomas Jefferson, a race realist in 1785 pointing out the fact, yeah, don't, don't get mad at me, these are distinctions nature made, and many other circumstances, will divide us into parties and produce convulsions, which will probably never end.
00:30:31 He said that over 200 years ago, but in the extermination of one or the other race, that's the only thing that hasn't happened yet, yet. So, yeah, the founding fathers were by no means just like, oh, you know, all men are created equal. No, I mean, not really.
00:31:05 When you're talking about the real distinctions which nature has made, that means you have a very good understanding that that not all men are created equal, actually. You know, and the fact that initially we didn't let people who weren't land owners vote.
00:31:21 Well, I mean, not if that doesn't make any sense. If the founding fathers thought that all men were created equally, unless you don't own land, I mean, that doesn't make any sense. So, there you go. You got James Madison, James Madden, Madison supported the emancipation paired with colonization Africa, as did obviously Lincoln. In fact, he served as the president of the American Colonization Society.
00:31:59 There was a whole society of ruling class whites dedicated to the idea of let's get rid of these niggs, let's send them back, we gotta send it with that, we can't, you know, I don't care where you go, but you can't stay here, but let's be cool about it, and you know, we'll give it, we'll give you like a free ride back to Africa, and they cited for the same reasons.
00:32:29 Yeah, we said it was the most compassionate thing that, because of the natural differences between whites and blacks, which exist between all races, but are most extremes. I would, well, yeah, I'd say that's probably the largest contrast you can find.
00:32:50 That would never work, and you have to, you know, he supported a gradual removal of the Negro, a gradual removal of the Negro, because a multiracial society would never work, and he owned slaves and did not free them in his lifetime, so there you go, James Madison, we got Jefferson, Ben Franklin, I mean, these, these were all normal ideas, George Washington didn't free his slaves until he died, he put on his will, but he had conditions in his will.
00:33:47 I forget what the all the conditions were, but he had it wasn't just like he died and they were all instantly free.
00:33:53 It's like they, there was like a transitional period or something like that, but he wasn't even willing to get rid of his slaves while he was alive, he and that was that's that was a pretty common, common arrangement.
00:34:09 Several of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were were slave owners, and to the degree that any of them freed their own slaves, it was mostly after they were dead, and didn't matter anymore, right? I guess it was. That's a real boomer move. Fuck it, I'll be dead.
00:34:28 Who cares? But the going back to the American Colonization Society, this was founded in 1816 1816 it was well, as I said, it was they advocated for the emancipation and colonization of free blacks, and then of. Eventually the slaves, they wanted to start.
00:35:01 They basically, what they wanted to do is get the blacks that were already not slaves out first and send them off to Liberia.
00:35:14 I think it was founded by Henry Clay, Francis Scott Key, and Reverend Robert Finley, oh no, and Charles Fenton Mercer, and Bushrod Washington, who was a nephew of George Washington, and he was the, he was the first president, so the nephew of George Washington was the first president of this organization, and it was supported by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison and James Monroe.
00:35:53 In fact, James Monroe, when he was president, provided US Navy support in helping move the blacks back to Africa, which is why we have Liberia.
00:36:09 So we had presidential support of sending the blacks back, and it's not like we got rid of some of that's why there's Liberia, we, we did get rid of some of them, and then the idea was you will, after you remove all the free, the quote, free people of color, so that's more than just, uh, that's that's that's a, that's, that's cast in a wide net.
00:36:42 They use that phrase for the same reason the left uses that phrase, because that could mean anyone. It's not white. It's a nice way of saying non-white people of color. The free people of color will be, will be sent, we'll send them all back. And then they were going..
00:37:00 the plan was what they wanted to do with this organization, advocated for, was to slowly reduce slavery, not even, not just shut it off overnight, because they knew that would be an impossible thing to deal with. You couldn't just instantly have, like, all these freed slaves running about, it'd be a fucking nightmare.
00:37:18 So they wanted, they wanted to basically slowly phase it out, so they would gradually, gradually phase out slavery, and as they free, quote unquote, freed the slaves, they would stick them on boats, navy navy vessels would ship them off to Liberia, they Again, not a, not a insignificant organization had presidential support using the Navy, using the Navy to accomplish its goal with lots of backing from the ruling class of the time and even Lincoln, who kind of fucked things up for well, kind of just fucked up the country in a lot of ways, but even Lincoln publicly supported stripping the the blacks back to Africa for Negro colonization.
00:38:31 In his Peoria speech in 1854 he said that his impulse was to free all the slaves and send them to Liberia and 1858 there's Lincoln still with his debates with Douglas. He said he was not in favor of social or political equality between blacks and whites, so that that was impossible.
00:39:02 He said that he was not in favor of making blacks voters or jurors or having the ability to hold office or even intermingling with the white population, and said, quote, the physical difference between the white and black race, which will ever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality, would get in the way again.
00:39:31 Race realism, even Lincoln, because every white person was in 1858 It's really only until recently, it's really only until well, if you guys watch the show, you know it's really only the turn of the century after we brought in a bunch of Jews from Eastern Europe, I mean, that's really what did it, we flood the kind.
00:39:59 Country with a bunch of subversive Jews from Eastern Europe, you know, and that was pretty much over, like, like that, that was the end of it, that was that was the beginning of the end, like a fucking turbo cancer, they spread through really every, every facet of the American machine, you know.
00:40:33 They took over every, every, I mean, they took over all the media, they took over the political apparatus, I mean, these early, I mean, pretty quickly too, I mean, they were, they were basically leading Roosevelt along as if he was on a leash, so yeah, I mean, you had Lincoln, who was, was very much in favor of Negro colonization. Quote, here's another quote. There is a physical difference.
00:41:08 I am as much as any other man in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race. That's Lincoln, the guy that boomers love to slobber over, that's the guy who's got the big temple in Washington, DC. I don't know if you guys have been, if you've been to the Lincoln Memorial, that was the one thing that stuck out to me.
00:41:32 I mean, not the fact that it's, it's an impressive memorial, but when you go inside, it says this temple, I forget what the rest of it is, but I just, because that's where my brain was like, well, hold on, what? Like, I know it looks kind of like a, because it does, it looks almost like a Roman temple, what you would see, like a temple to Athena or something like that, except for it's, uh
00:41:54 , it's Abraham Lincoln, and so it is a temple and I would say that there are those that go there to worship, and he said the white people were superior, because everyone, everyone thought that everyone thought that in 1858 everyone did in fact as president in the first annual message to Congress December of 1861 he urged for steps for colonizing freed contraband blacks quote at some place or places in a climate congenial to them, in other words, yeah, some kind of jungly place. The black people don't belong there.
00:42:56 Send them, or send some.. I don't know what he was a little vague about it, but you know, some, some kind of jungly, you know, not, not America, definitely not America, and, like, he said this to black leaders at the time, imagine living in the America where, like, the cucked liberal guy, Lincoln is meeting with a delegation of black leaders, and to their face saying, ah, you know what, you guys are just too different, and I think the best thing is just if you went all back, all went back to Africa, really.
00:43:35 I think that's the only way it's going to work. That's the America, that's see, that's the America that I wish we could be celebrating today, but that's the America that doesn't exist anymore. That's the America that is a foreign country now. That's the America that's been flushed down the toilet, that's the America that I think some people still fantasize and think that we live in, and it just doesn't exist anymore.
00:44:14 It just doesn't exist anymore, because we let all the Jews in around the turn of the century, and I'm not being hyperbolic, that really is the reason, that really is the reason, in fact, he requested and signed congressional funding, this is Lincoln, still for colonization to Liberia or Haiti was another option, or anywhere, again, just somewhere jungly, didn't really matter, just not here, in fact, one of the, one of the options they talked about.
00:45:00 Was actually Texas, Matt. You think Houston's bad now, or Dallas, or really a lot of, you know, any city in Texas now. Imagine if they, if they managed to.. we're just gonna give.. we're gonna give all the blacks Texas.
00:45:19 That was one of the things they, that was one of the things on the table, they're like, yeah, we got like it's kind of funny because the list was, oh, we got Liberia, I don't know, maybe Haiti, what about Texas, but yeah, even, even late into the Civil War, I Lincoln was still talking about Negro colonization, so it's not like he was saying that for political purposes, you know, to appease the South, or whatever.
00:45:54 Even late, late, late into the Civil War, he was still making public comments about colonization being a priority, and, and expressing the truth that the, the two races were incompatible, and that the society, the white society that white people built, wouldn't function if blacks were allowed to participate as equals, and again, look, blacks are an extreme example, but the same, you know, that's just true across the board.
00:46:30 When you have white people create a society for white people, and then you introduce non-whites, you either have to radically change the society in ways that are that are net negatives for white people, severe net negatives, or it all comes apart at the seams, which is we're kind of getting a mix of both of those outcomes right now, so then you had, you know, you've, you've also had Supreme Court rulings affirming racial differences. I talked about that one in it was 1923 Look at my notes here.
00:47:16 There was the Bhagat Singh Thind, that was the, that was the Indian guy that, that said Indians are white, and then he got owned, but before that, of course, there was Dred Scott versus Stan or Sanford. Now this was a ruling that black people, whether they were free or slaves, were not citizens under the Constitution, and could not sue people in federal court because they weren't citizens, and Chief Justice Roger Taney's major opinion, or I'm sorry.
00:48:01 Majority opinion surveyed founding era laws and practices, and concluded blacks quote are not included and were not intended to be included under the word citizens, and can therefore claim none of the rights and privileges which that instrument provides, so in 1857 the Supreme Court surveyed all of the founding documents in a context much terms of time and culture and demographics much closer to the founding, and through their lens, which was a lot more accurate, because they had a lot, a much shorter distance to look,
00:48:54 they determined that the founding fathers by no means intended the constitution to apply to non-whites, that was 1857 They argued perpetual and impassable barrier was intended to be erected between the white race and one, which they had reduced to slavery, that's that's in the majority opinion, the majority opinion of the Supreme Court, which now has non-whites on it, and women in 1857 argue that the founders intended a perpetual and impassable barrier to be erected between the white race.
00:50:00 And the one which they had reduced to slavery, and again, so this is what I, what I, what I, what I say, that, like, look, there's no possible way that the founding fathers, when they wrote that all men were created equally, that that meant anything outside the context of we should have equal representation under the law that the English subjects in England have, that was the context, that's what they meant, all men. necessarily meant white men, which necessarily meant Anglo-Saxon English people.
00:50:55 That's what they meant by that. It did not cross the minds of a single one of the people involved with the creation or signing of that document that 200 years, some odd years in the future people will be quoting that to mean that niggers should be able to vote now.
00:51:23 Not, not in a million fucking years did they think that that would happen, and like I said, the Supreme Court said as much, when they reviewed all of the the founding documents, all the the founding era laws and practices, a perpetual impassable barrier should was intended to be erected between the white race and the one which they had reduced to slavery, and look, this is coming from the North, this is coming from the Yankees,
00:52:15 the Yankee Supreme Court said this, the and then, of course, like I said, we have that case from 1923 where they, they ruled, you know again, apparently this is.. I don't know if this has just been overturned or if they're just quietly ignore this precedent, because you always hear about how all our hands are tied, legal precedent.
00:52:53 Well, how come there's no legal precedent set in 1922 when they ruled that South Asians and Japanese, which was included with that were not white people, that you know, that Asian people weren't white people, Arabs weren't white people, Indians weren't white people,
00:53:12 American Indians weren't white people, that white people was interpreted by the Supreme Court to mean European, and depending on who you asked, maybe even more specific than that, and that was long after the Civil War, that was a mere 100 years ago, this Isn't that crazy, as we celebrate this country's 250th birthday,
00:53:48 to know that just 100 years ago, 100 years ago, there's very few, there's probably someone alive today who was alive, I mean, barely alive, but there's probably people, a handful of people alive today that were alive when this was was the opinion of the Supreme Court that white people means Europeans, and so therefore you can't be a citizen, can't be a naturalized citizen in America, unless you're white, there are people alive today again, probably not very with it, but there's a few still alive when this was the, the, the majority opinion in the Supreme Court, just barely 100 years later, just barely 100 years later, we've got negresses on the Supreme Court, I.
00:55:00 A lot has changed, a lot has changed this Jewish view of the, of the founding fathers of our, of our, the patriotic, like the, like the Disney version, you know, the patriot slop that they have been shoveling into the mouths of boomers and Republicans my entire life paints a completely different picture, but this was the reality.
00:55:36 We were a white ethno state 100 years ago, we were a white in the the exact definition, when people see that's the thing, when people act like, oh, your dreams of a white ethno state, oh, LARP much, uh, LARP much, is that you want to live in fantasy land? Oh, purity spiraling.
00:56:02 Are we those are all people, in fact, almost I would say 100% of the time, the people that say stupid shit like that are people that are not founding stock. They don't realize, no, bitch, before dipshits like you showed up, this was a white ethno state, like, legally speaking, it wasn't just white because the other people hadn't got here yet. No, it's not like, oh no, the door was always open, the door was always open.
00:56:33 It's just that they, they hadn't arrived yet, right? It was just, you know, they hadn't, they didn't have, I mean, this is obviously part of the white technology. Unfortunately, post-industrial revolution is what facilitated it, right? But even legally speaking, they weren't allowed.
00:56:53 They weren't allowed to be citizens. 100 years ago, 100 years ago, America was a white ethno state, according to the Supreme Court. In fact, you had another case in this, was earlier in 1884 about Native American citizenship, it was Elk versus Wilkins, where they, they also ruled for the same reason.
00:57:31 They said, well, no, actually Native Americans can't be US citizens because they're not white. Get back on the reservation, enjoy the fire water, and the fucking box of beads, you suckers. So, I mean, look, this, this is, this was, this is the, you know, the impossible, crazy fantasy land that people that want to live in a white ethno state live in. Apparently, it's less than 100 years ago. That's just that was the reality.
00:58:13 I know Australia had, like, the another the white policy. There was a couple. I mean, this was not unusual in the Anglosphere, for the time, for them to either explicitly or implicitly have an ethno state. I mean, in fact, if anything's unusual and weird and unnatural, it's not having an ethno state.
00:58:42 That's a new development. It's an extremely new development. In fact, it's a development that has never developed in a country in world history where immediate collapse was not followed, did not follow, you've never had a multiracial society exist for longer than than like a century or so I In 1875 we had the Chinese Exclusion Act.
00:59:34 1882 we had lots of race-based immigration bans mostly targeting Chinese, and it was, it was race, like it was explicit in the language that you know that you couldn't wasn't, it wasn't about where you were from, it was if you're Chinese, if you're a white guy from China, you know.
00:59:59 Come on in, because the way that the law is, it was about race, so they banned Chinese from explicitly Chinese from naturalization, and then they extended it to broadly include and ban other Asians, you had the Immigration Act of 1924 This was the Johnson-Reed Act, and this established national origins quota systems, and the purpose of it really was to keep the white ethno state that was literally it was 100% the the point of the immigration act of 1924 it was to maintain or actually really I think what it was it was a it was a little reactionary.
01:01:01 It was, it was to try to rescue the white ethno state after all the immigration of Jews from around the turn of the century. This was kind of a reaction to that, so they, and not just the Jews, but also Catholics from, like, Italy and things like that, because they, they basically banned immigration from, I mean, if you, if you look at it, it's basically Catholic countries and Jews, because they effectively banned immigration from southern and eastern Europe almost completely, and Asians, Chinese people, anyone from Asia, and explicitly to preserve the the racial character of the United States, I mean, that's that was that was the explicit purpose.
01:02:13 So, again, 100 years ago, 100 years ago, you had representatives in Congress draft drafting and a president signing the immigration, the Immigration Act of 1924 which was explicitly the for the purpose of preserving the white ethno state, and this is just a handful of years after the Supreme Court ruled you had to be a white person to be a naturalized citizen, that was 100 years ago.
01:02:57 This isn't like some fantasy land, you know, kooky make-believe country, this is America, 100 years ago. Now, a lot of this was, was influenced, of course, by one of our heroes, Madison Grant, an oldie but goodie, writing the book The Passing of the Great Race, he published that in 1916 and basically made a, it was a lot of it was like we've talked about before, a lot of this, it was, it was people who lacked the technology to be precise about the science of race, but they filled in the gaps with observation and common sense.
01:03:57 They didn't always get the details right, but they came to the right conclusions, and they were witnessing, especially because of the influx of immigrants from undesirable parts of Europe, you know, the swarthy parts of Europe, and the, and the Jews from Eastern Europe, they, you know, they were ringing the, the alarm and saying this is, we're not gonna be able to maintain this fucking society that we created for our, you know, the based Anglo Saxon created, we're not, they're gonna, they're gonna fuck it all up, these people.
01:04:45 We're gonna have, we have to start caring about race. And here's a, here's a scientific, you know, albeit, you know, by today's standard, primitive, but scientific and cutting edge for back then argument for doing exactly.
01:05:00 Like that for worrying about race, you had, you had Congress requesting reports, you know, on the what are the effects of the racial ethnic character of, you know, of the country, and, and those reports are pretty, pretty explicit that without keeping a white majority, this country, as Jefferson predicted, would, would come apart, or, or, or one of the races will be, will be extinct, so you had, you had a lot of that going on, like I said, up until about 100 years ago, you had just a few generations ago, but then you had World War One and World War Two,
01:06:10 of course, and then all the wars, you know, in between, or not in between, so much as afterwards, a lot of a lot of warrior class white men have been wiped out in these stupid wars for nothing, so anyway, I just thought it would be important to talk about the context that you know, when people, you know, when I saw that, when I saw that tweet from Richard Spencer, I mean, I get what he means by it, you know, but it's, it's like I said, it's, it's not what they meant by it, you know, they didn't mean by no means of the founding fathers think that all men were created equally. They, they explicitly say otherwise, you know.
01:07:07 And why would they own slaves if they believe that? You know, like they didn't believe that. That wasn't the context of that of that statement. It's just that statement has been so appealing to Jews who have used it to create some kind of Disney patriot slop view of the founding and reenact it as if it were something it wasn't and never something that never was to suit their own purposes.
01:07:51 So, anyway, that's about it. Like, I don't really have, like, a big thing. I thought that most people be getting drunk done anyway. Let's hang out. I'll hang out and talk, talk and chat for a little bit. Well, I'll tell you, we'll do super chats for right now, but, but I'll also just kind of hang out.
01:08:18 Let's just, you know, I got nothing going on. I got a bunch of fireworks. Oh, you know what I did? Actually, if you guys follow me on on X or on Telegram, you guys probably saw this. I made a racist video game. Actually, I've made.
01:08:39 well, the other one's not racist, it's churro-themed, but I was just dicking around with AI and Python and stuff, and I made racist Robotron, so it actually plays very, as someone who has played the actual Robotron a lot on arcade machines. I knew what I was doing, and, and so I made Raisses Robotron. I'll probably see people where Sally should put this in the Steam store.
01:09:16 First of all, to put anything in the Steam store, you have to, you have to spend like 100 bucks. Second of all, you have to wait like a month, because as to go through like this whole process, you have to like create like the landing.
01:09:30 You have to do all this stupid shit, and then I'd probably have to make some changes to make it more like more different from Robotron than what it is now, that's too similar, and then even, even then, you have to worry about the, the copyright holders of the original, even though it's like it's a game from like, like almost 50 years ago now, I mean, it's it's from like.
01:10:00 Like the early 80s, you know, you never know someone sitting on some fucking copyright, and because, oh, it's racist, you know, they'll try to send you into litigation or something like that, but I don't know, I don't know if it's worth, and plus, and then the biggest problem, I don't know that there's a huge demand for racist Robotron, you know what I mean. It's like I, I like it, but I like Robotron.
01:10:33 Robotron is not exactly like a big hot game right now, it's not like I'm making GTA six or whatever, it's like an arcade game from the 80s, that, that I only made it because, like, I wanted to, I wanted to test the, the, the new Claude stuff, and by the way, surprisingly good at certain things, surprisingly good at certain things, but I wanted to see if I could, you know, just as, like, a case that I was like, can I actually make, like, a fully functioning, like, all the bells and whistles, like, you know, solid polished game using mostly AI.
01:11:14 I used AI to do all the sprites, I used Grok to, well, I had to, you know, edit them and stuff like that, but like to actually create the images, I use Suno for the Music, the soundtrack. I used 11 labs for the little pew pew sounds and things like that.
01:11:35 So I wanted to see, like, basically 100% of this game, you know, not 90% of this game is me just playing like a director with an army of robots doing all the bitch work, and it's surprisingly good. I'm not gonna.. well, you know, let me see.. maybe I got a video of it still.
01:12:02 do I have a video of it still? I know it's on, it's on, it's on AX, if I don't. Yeah, let's see. Here is this it? See, when I, when I made the X video, that's a still photo of it. Where's the video of it?
01:12:32 I'll download it from my Telegram real quick, since I can't find on my computer right now, but in addition to that, because that went so smoothly, I was like, you know, what, I wonder if I can make another game, and, and I did, I'll show you what that is here in a second, like I said, it's churro themed, I download that and then I will download this and Our fireworks going again. There we are.
01:13:34 All right, let's see. Come on, Telegram, I Yeah, so this is Robotron 1488 Let me get to the title screen. Strike this down, so you can see it. There we go. So, as you can see, for those of you familiar with Robotron, it's very similar, but for legal purposes, it's not Robotron, it's just. it's inspired, it's inspired by classic 80s arcade games.
01:14:26 Also, it is satire. It's satire. I am lampooning the original storyline of Robotron, which is kind of a white supremacist storyline, if you look at it a certain way, which I have chosen to look at it that way, and I am making fun of that with this satirical game that looks a lot like it. Anyway, so there's this, but then the new one.
01:15:01 Again, I don't know that anyone's gonna want this. Let's see here, where is the other one? Videos, okay? This is probably all right. This is the Churro themed game.
01:15:42 There's big fat churro churro peed, get it? Because he, because he, because he, he peed, say, because he's gonna get it, because, because of, because urine, so anyway, this, this one's not as much polished, but I was like, ah, let me see, how you know, let's see how hard it is to make one of these, and yeah, we got, we got churroped now, so I was thinking maybe there's not a market for racist Robotron,
01:16:25 but maybe, maybe if I package like three little ones together, right, make it racist arcade, you know, maybe even like a menu, make like a little menu system where like you go to an arcade and then there's three arcade machines, there's churroped, there's Robotron 1488 which I might have to change the name even more, call it like Globotron, Globotron 1488 or something like that, and and then I don't know something else, so yeah, there's the there there's churroped.
01:17:08 Why is it not? That's how I was looking for churroped anyway. Let's take a look at some super chats, and they'll hang out and shaft for a little bit, depending on how much you know what time it is, we got the Supreme Rabbi Satan says, "When is your next declaration of independence? Well, that's that's the problem, is when you think about what it took.
01:17:38 See, here's the thing, you'll often hear people say, and this is, this is a, an important distinction, and this is kind of why, despite what I was just saying about the fact that this was a literally a white ethno state 100 years ago, people say, why are you black pilled then? If this was a white ethno state 100 years ago, surely you know we can make it a white ethno state, really easily, and it's like, well, no, having a revolution was very difficult when it was a white ethno state. It's not a white, that's the thing.
01:18:13 Why do you think they wanted to make it not a white ethno state anymore? Because just like with Amazon, knowing that they had, if they had a diverse workforce, that the workforce wouldn't as easily be able to band together and unionize to fight the management. That's the exact form, that's the same formula. That's why they're doing it. It's the exact same formula that they're using on citizens of America right now, is they want a diverse workforce, which is what you are. I mean, that's that's what you are.
01:18:47 You're part of a workforce, you're not like a citizen, you don't have, you're not like a shareholder, right? Your interests don't really matter, you're just like an employee, and they don't want you to unionize, because if you unionize, then you can fight against management. In fact, it's really the only way employees can ever have any power, is if they unionize or if they go somewhere else, right? Like that's the two options, right?
01:19:18 Like, if you, if you're in a company, and then you know the boss makes the rules, and there's, you know, you can, you can go and plead your case to your boss and tell them, like, I really don't like these working conditions, but ultimately, if the boss doesn't want something, that's it, you know, and so your only choices as an employee is you keep working there, and just complain about how it sucks all the time.
01:19:45 As you just keep working there, you try to form a union where you get enough people at that company together to where you actually have, you know, political power enough. To where you can negotiate and whatnot, but they've, you know, that's been made pretty much impossible, or you leave and work for another company, or start your own company, that sort of a thing.
01:20:14 Now, obviously, for this metaphor to work, I don't necessarily mean that you leave the United States geographically, but I do mean that you start working on your own, your own company.
01:20:35 You cease to be an employee of the machine, and as more and more competent people leave these companies that go under as more and more white people check out from the machine and stop giving their expertise and their whiteness to a machine that hates them, the sooner it's going to fall apart.
01:20:59 That company I was talking about earlier in the stream that I worked for, this the second that they started acting like assholes, and I can just tell you what it is. I guess it was Gateway.
01:21:15 Remember when Gateway was, it was him, was a company, Gateway computers would like the cow on the box. I worked tech support, and Ted Waite was the president of this company. He was, he literally started it in his barn, I want to say in like South Dakota, or I don't know, somewhere, and he was like some hippie boomer, and they wanted to make money, and there was, they were going public, and they hired these efficiency experts.
01:21:53 Prior to the efficiency experts, everyone I worked with was white and was proficient in computers enough to where they were, I would say almost all over qualified, but it was a cushy job.
01:22:14 You sat there on the phone, you got like massive discounts on computer stuff, which was almost, you know, at a time when computers were very expensive, so almost in and of itself that was like a, that was a great, if you were a nerd and you liked computer stuff, that was a good, good bonus, right there. You got paid really well. I mean, the pay was good, the benefits were good, and there was no, like, the atmosphere was super laid back.
01:22:47 All they cared about was, did you fix the problem? Did you fix the problem that the person called up about? Good, then good job. And that's what you got judged on. They would listen to your phone calls, and if you fix the problem, that's how they score. Oh, this guy really knows what he's doing.
01:23:05 After the efficiency experts were hired, they decided that customer service was a money drain, that you were paying all these people to answer phones to fix people's computers, but that was just a loss, if you look at the balance sheet, you're paying like this building full of people, and they're not making money, and now you could easily argue, actually, the reason why people bought gateways, it wasn't because they were the best computers, because they weren't, it's because they came with free lifetime tech support,
01:23:41 and it was at a time when people didn't know how to use computers, and so if you were some dipshit boomer that was buying their first computer, and you bought the cute cow box one, and you didn't know, because 90% of the phone calls you got were not actual hardware software problems,
01:23:58 it was user error, you know, and so you were basically holding the hand of some, you know, stupid old person trying to walk them through using some part of the computer, and so they're paying, that's what they were paying for, so they were paying a little, little extra and feeling good about the cow box computer that they got, because when they couldn't figure out how to use the CD ROM drive.
01:24:22 They could call up this 800 number, and some guy would tell them how to use the CD ROM drive, and that would make them feel good about that Cowbox computer.
01:24:33 And they would tell their boomer friends, "Oh, get the Cowbox computer, because then, if you don't know how to use it, like me, because I'm a dumb ass, you can call the 800 number, and some nice, nice young man will tell you how to use it, and, and so this was that, that was the value to the company, the value to the company of having that service, even though it didn't show up in some balance sheet was.
01:25:00 Is that you got goodwill from the customer base, they got, and that was included in the price, so even though you say, like, oh, it's free customer service, you know, for life, like, and when they first started, it was for life, and then it was like five years, and and then it became like one year, and then, like, that, yeah, as soon as the, as soon as the, the efficiency experts, just like an office space, as soon as they, they came in there, they made it hell.
01:25:31 Not only did they make it to where they started time.
01:25:34 Here's the thing, they started timing our phone calls. It used to be, you might be on, like, these are old people, some old lady is calling up who doesn't know how to sign on to America Online, and she keeps disconnecting the call because she keeps dialing up with the modem when you're on the phone with her, right? So it keeps dialing in your ear like you could be on the phone with some old lady for like an hour trying to get her to fucking get on the internet, okay? And because that's what it took to like make sure she was never in a fucking call back again.
01:26:07 Well, what happened was because these efficiency experts got involved, they started timing all your phone calls, and they gave you an average time that you had to meet by the end of the week, and the average time was absurd. It was something like seven minutes, and so if your average call time was exceeded seven minutes, then you got dinged. And so, what happened? Well, I'll tell you what happened.
01:26:34 People would start just immediately hanging up on a call the soon the second it came through. Why? Well, because that call would register on the on the spreadsheet as having taken two seconds, and so would make your average call time go down because you had a call that was two seconds long.
01:26:52 Well, what happens on the other end of that phone call? Well, the person who called up called waited on hold for like an hour just to be hung up on immediately, and now the guy who used to be really happy because he got the cow box computer and the nice young man on the phone would spend 45 minutes with him fixing the stupid AOL problem he had, now waited like an hour and got hung up on.
01:27:18 Now if he doesn't get hung up on, he calls up and he gets someone that wants to get him off the phone in less than seven minutes, like at all costs, because he's got to hit that fucking time. Then insult to injury, the efficiency experts decided, well, that's that's just phase one.
01:27:41 Now that we're getting them to get these people off the phone as quickly as humanly possible to get through all these fucking phone calls, so that we have to hire fewer people, because that was the idea. Well, if the phone calls are only seven minutes long instead of an hour, we don't need as many people answering the phone.
01:27:58 We can have far fewer people answering the phone because they'll, you know, we'll be getting through all the calls, not realizing that no, you're gonna have more calls now because people are getting hung up on their problems not getting fixed, so yeah, now instead of making like 145 minute long call, they're making like 10 seven minute calls, you know, but anyway, so this, this is this, the efficiency expert doesn't, doesn't think about it, because that's whatever it looks like on a spreadsheet, is what they care about.
01:28:25 Then they decide this was a brilliant idea.
01:28:27 This is what made me quit. Then they thought, you know, it'd be great, you know, if we can make this make money. Yeah, and we, here's this great idea.
01:28:40 How about after someone calls up, and if they don't get hung up on immediately, and they actually get through to somebody, and whether or not their problem's fixed doesn't really matter once the person is trying to get them off the phone, because you know, seven minutes is tick tock, it's coming up. What if the person that fixing their problem then tries to sell them magazine subscriptions? I'm not shitting you.
01:29:10 You are supposed to try to get them on AOL or whatever, and then be like, by the way, do you like magazines, and not even computer magazines? It wasn't even like, hey, you want a subscription to PC Magazine, or you know, whatever they were, whatever, they know it's like, hey, you want a subscription to Time magazine or Newsweek or something again, because that, that was a way for the efficiency expert to make it look as if this part of the company that on a spreadsheet was just bleeding money, because it was, you know, it's just a cost, would then be making money.
01:29:52 Well, what happens when you do that? Well, no self-respecting, competent person in that kind of an environment is going to keep working. There, where? Okay, now I used to get satisfaction out of my job because I was actually fixing people's problems, which made me feel good.
01:30:09 I always learn I had the time to research problems I didn't know the answers to. So I'm, I'm also getting kind of an education for free, and I'm working with other people who are in a similar environment, and so there's, you know, a sense of camaraderie, and it's kind of nice to everyone's stressed out.
01:30:28 They all fucking hate their jobs. You're purposely not fixing people's problems because you know the problem is going to take too long to fix, and your call time average is getting too high, so you're just fucking getting them off the phone. You're, yeah, it's a nightmare, and now you got to sell them magazines.
01:30:45 No, no one that actually was qualified was going to work under those conditions. So that's exactly what happened. Everyone that was good at that kind of a job got the fuck out, including me. My case in particular, in fact, about half our team, you love that term, corporate, corporate boomers always like to make it, you're part of the team, Billy, you know, like use that kind of a language, but half my team quit after we watched Office space as a team building exercise. I don't think they knew what the movie was about. They had, they called us in.
01:31:30 They're like, "We're gonna get pizza. This is right in the, in the peak of all this, you know, hell that's going on at the job, and after the movie, uncomfortably, about half my quote unquote team is standing back behind the building, the Gateway building, smoking cigarettes, looking at, looking at each other uncomfortably, and then someone's just like, "We work at In Attack, you know, we work at In Attack.
01:32:02 What the hell was that? And I went home that day and never came back. That was.. that was..
01:32:11 I watched that movie, and I couldn't believe it was a movie about what was happening at where I worked, and I never, never went back to work, and I found out that the same was true of, we didn't, and by the way, not coordinated, we didn't talk, we didn't plan, we none of us said I'm not coming, maybe a couple jokingly, maybe you know, at work, but I never expected other people to not show up the next day, but that's that, and what happened to Gateway to Compute or Gateway Computers?
01:32:45 I think the brand exists, some, yeah, like the little sticker that goes on some laptop that was, that's not actually made by the entity that was Gateway back in the 90s, right? It's just like it's just a label now, you know, it's like it's like Atari, right?
01:33:05 You can buy Atari products, but it's not like Atari, you know, like the company that existed in the 80s making video games, you know, it's just like a brand name that some other larger corporation bought, so if you buy like an Atari thing, you know, it's just, you know, it's just you're buying it from whoever bought the, you know, it's like Commodore, you can still buy Commodore stuff, you know, like all this stuff.
01:33:28 So just like it's just another dead fucking brand name that I don't even know why they want. I guess some people might have, maybe it has some brand recognition still.
01:33:36 I, I don't know, but yeah, the company basically evaporated almost immediately after that, almost immediately, like it was crazy how quickly Gateway fell into obscurity, and they, this is like, they were peeking out, they were built, they were trying to compete with Apple, you guys might not remember this, and only reason I remember is I worked there, and so I had to look at all the company propaganda,
01:34:07 but in the same way, you know, we have Apple stores today, they, they had Gateway stores, right, right at this peak, this was the peak of Gateway, they had Gateway stores in not just a few places, like in several, like pretty much every major city, had a, in the United States, had a gateway store, and they had gateway-specific products, they were branching out, they were trying to be like Apple,
01:34:33 you know, had they survived, they would have had a gateway phone or something like that, I'm sure, but no, they hired efficiency experts and tried to squeeze every fucking penny they could out of the company, and it just, they squeezed it to death, and that is precisely what is happening to the, or what is, we're in the process of that right now, I think, with this country, is they're trying to squeeze.
01:35:00 All the productivity, and every last fucking penny out of this, this country just fleecing the people, but eventually people will have enough. There's literally a bee. I don't know if you can hear that buzzing. Somehow a bee got in the house and is stuck like in a one of those CFL bulbs making a lot of fucking noise. You guys hear that, like driving me nuts. Should I do something about it. I'm just gonna act like it's not.
01:35:44 Hopefully, the AI podcast filter that I've got activated on the microphone filters that out. It hopefully it thinks it's like an electrical buzz or something like that. But anyway, yeah, that was that's that's basically the, that's a very long version of why it's difficult to have a revolution, and a company like that, that's, you know, I guess that's the thing, is at a certain point one,
01:36:14 once they've made the, the country just a shitty company that you're working for, right, that's that's basically, you know, what's the point of having, like, it's almost like it's if you think a gateway, right, it's not like me and the guys went back behind the building, took a smoke break, and thought to ourselves, how can we, how can we infiltrate management and work our way up in the company and eventually change it so that it's not like this? No, that's fucking stupid.
01:36:49 That would have been the, that's like the stupidest plan ever, and wouldn't have worked anyway, right? Another, another conversation we didn't have is we should, we should try to get everyone together, and we'll band together and form a union, and then we'll tell them, no way, Jose, we're not, we're tired of, of all your crazy ideas, like selling magazines to people when they, they want tech support.
01:37:17 No, we didn't do that, we just said, "fuck this place, we said, "fuck this place, and it went under, and because they've turned this country into just a shitty place to work, I feel like you know you're gonna have the same kind of solution available to you now, you can, you can fantasize, but like, what I, what I would do if I was in charge, but you're not in charge, dude, you're not in charge.
01:37:50 The Negro, the Negress, and the Mexican, or the Jewish Mexican on the Supreme Court, and people like that are in charge, you so having a revolution when that, when people say stuff like, well, you know, it was only I think I even used to say this sometimes, where all you need is, you know, what's the..
01:38:17 it changes, like I've heard figures between 10 and 25% but you know all you need is 10, that you know maybe we'll say 15% of the population, that's that's all who really fought in the Revolutionary War against the British, and so therefore if you want to have a another revolution, you don't need to red pill everybody,
01:38:37 all you need is like a good 15% of the population, and then you can rise up and overthrow the the country and no, because that's what you needed in a white ethno state, you know, that's what you needed in a white ethno state, where you know you were going to have some people that were going to be loyalists, you know you're going to have some people that weren't going to go along with things,
01:39:01 and, and maybe because they thought that there's no possible way you could win against the British, and so they, they decided to go side with who they thought was going to win, and then you know, obviously ended up being wrong, but you know, they were just some people making a calculation that way, or maybe they actually did feel, you know, like they were, they were just being loyal to the king, or whatever.
01:39:27 But generally speaking, in a scenario where everyone is white, you're gonna have people, most people are just gonna go with whatever the white people are doing, other white people are doing, you know, that's not going to be the same case.
01:39:44 Let's just, let's just say, let's just create a fake scenario here, where you, and first of all, good luck even accomplishing this, but let's just say you did get a good 15% of white Americans willing and able to. To fight an actual revolution, like an actual revolution, as in, like forming militias, like armed militias, maybe even somehow getting access to, you know, heavy weapons and things like this, and actually trying to confront the the United States military. Well, again, this another reason why it's different is the British.
01:40:35 One of the problems they had was they didn't have like this massive military presence in the United States, or what is now the United States, in the colonies, right, and so they had to bring their military and all the logistics and all that stuff that was involved with, with going across the Atlantic Ocean,
01:40:56 that was like a big deal, you know, that was like a big obstacle in them fighting the war that wouldn't be an obstacle for the United States military, because they, they're all their bases are here, you know, already everything's already here, you know, and not just everything is already here, but all the law enforcement is on their side, and all the diversity would be on their side, so you would be, I mean, it's a totally different situation. It's a totally different scenario, where you're not just..
01:41:30 it's not like it's not like we're a colony of the United States, and we have to, and with a colony that has, you know, minimal military presence, you know, and all you have to do is, is fight them off and get the locals to be on your side. You're, I mean, we're talking like you'd have to have way more than 15 to 20% of people on board with this for an actual civil war, you'd have to pretty much make it a race war.
01:42:04 You'd have to have all whites on board with it, and you'd have to make, and you know, you'd have to make it so that your skin was a uniform type of a situation. There would be no such thing as a civ net civil war, though 00 possibility of that happening, so yeah, that's the problem.
01:42:33 Supreme Rabbi Satan, all right, we got a SJS whale SJS. whale, fuck it. Let's play it, I SJS W S J S Whale says keep up the good work. Well, I appreciate that. All right, then we got Gorilla Hands. Gorilla Han says, I hope everyone had a good Fourth of July.
01:43:45 The past week has been bittersweet for me. This holiday has always meant something to me, as much as Christmas and Thanksgiving. Now I don't feel that way anymore, for most of adult life, since I became red-pilled with the wars in the Middle East, COVID lockdowns, and the Jewish question have jaded me, this feeling has been depressing me, especially since I was a flag-waving America fuck yeah, guy.
01:44:22 I hope for our people, nation, and Western civilization. I think we can turn it around. Yeah, I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm not black pilled on white people, I'm black pilled on the ethno state that was the United States 100 years ago. What was still possible then is not possible now, and people need to come to terms with that, and thinking that if we just win the midterms, guys, or if we just get this guy.
01:45:00 I elect the president, or if we just didn't know, no, we are, we are so far beyond that. It's the political solutions are all gone. You had plenty of political solutions around the turn of the century, and really, once those, I mean, and think about how much the character of the country must have changed, not just because, obviously, having Supreme Court justices as part of their majority opinion explicitly writing that they thought the founding fathers intended there to be an unbreakable wall between the superior white race and all others,
01:45:45 you know, like that's like, I mean, we're talking like that's think of just what the average racial awareness and and narrative was 100 years ago, and that when you have the Supreme Court writing opinions like that, I mean, just what the average person was like, and even back then you had people like Madison Grant who were starting to notice things chipping away, they were starting to notice the problem with importing all the Ellis Islanders, and importing all the Jews, and just like you know that there was going to be issues, and here they are. We're living it now.
01:46:31 We are now living it, and so the time to address those problems was then, and it's like, you know, you can't smoke your whole life and get lung cancer, and then think, well, if I just quit smoking, you know, it's like, no, you already did it, you already, you already smoked like three packs a day for 20 years,
01:46:53 you know, like, you, it's done now, the time, the time to not get cancer was like 20 years ago, not smoking those three packs a day, but you did it, and so now you just have to live with your decisions, and unfortunately we have to live with other people's decisions, but that's that's just the reality of it, and and I get what you mean by the being, you know, being patriotic, and being from a because that's how my upbringing was too.
01:47:28 I still remember when I was a kid playing with sparklers at the Fourth of July parade, and also at the big fireworks display, where they would have it down at the, at the, you know, the man-made lake in our little suburban area that we lived in, and everyone was fucking white, everyone was white, and in fact, that's the funny thing, is that should have been a clue,
01:47:58 right there is when I went to school because this was when I was like when I was elementary school, I lived in California, and in school the, the racial, yeah, the white replacement was already happening, and so in my classroom I'd say the classroom, you know, sometimes was was was already like 50% white or less. We had all kinds of different weirdo East Asian jungle Asians, and all kinds of, you know, random Latinos.
01:48:35 We even had different kinds of, it was like the fucking un, you know, different kinds of black people, like we had, you know, like slave blacks, but then we had like blacks from like Africa, but anyway, my point is that's that was the racial reality in class, but then when I'd go to these Fourth of July events at the lake with my, with my parents, it was like White City, because you know, these, these non-whites weren't going,
01:49:10 because they didn't give a fuck, because, yeah, they're just, they're just, they're just here for economic reasons, they don't, what are they celebrating, they're selling, why would they, why would they come to the lake and celebrate your aunt, what something your ass ancestors did, right? doesn't make any sense, so that was that, should have been, you know, I should have raised some alarm bells there, but that it's unfortunate that you find out that you've been lied to about something that was important to you.
01:49:49 It's not unlike being betrayed by, like, a friend or a, or like a job, you know, like I, I've. I've been hired by companies, and given, like, a basically they've lied, they've lied about what the job description is, what I'm actually going to be doing, and even to some degree the compensation I'm going to be getting, right, and you sometimes will sacrifice to leave the job you have to go to this new job,
01:50:25 then you get there and find out, you know, you've been lied to, and it's like a big gut punch, and and you got, you gotta start hunting and looking for another place, or some people, like I said, or just keep working for the shitty company, just keep working there, and and complain and bitch about it, I guess, on your lunch break, but I was never one for doing that, you know.
01:50:50 So I think that's the way you have to look at it, is yeah, it sucks. It sucks that the efficiency experts are here and they've rolled out the big mission statement banner, and they're they're timing all of our phone calls now, and they're making us sell magazines, and all, and they've made all the black people bosses,
01:51:10 so to fill some weird racial quota, that was another thing that changed, too, is my boss went from being like a nerdy German guy that knew how you know how computers worked to some like 400 pound white chick that had that didn't even know like the basics of of computer stuff, and it was just like God, why the fuck is this bitch in charge anyway?
01:51:37 Yeah, I think that everyone kind of feels that way today, that's patriotic, I mean, most of the people that are on the right come from that, you know, you come from a norm and Republican or libertarian background, and even if you come from a libertarian background, libertarian was just like the midway point between republican and where you are now, right, and so it's, yeah, we all, we all grew up in like that, those patriotic conservatar households, and especially if you're founding stock, because that's a part of your family history too, so it's not just like the myth of your nation is the myth of your family, I mean, I've got my ancestors literally fought in the, in the Revolutionary War.
01:52:25 I mean, I have their names, and so it's, you know, it's, it's personal, and it sucks to think that, you know, you had these people that you want to celebrate in, and it's okay. Look, it's okay, obviously, to celebrate your heritage, and just realize that the, the, you know, that the, the American dream is, is unfortunately, now that's all it is. Little wagon, little wagon. little wagon says, thank you for the streams.
01:53:17 Well, thank you, little wagon, for the generous dono, very generous dono. All right, then we got Supreme Rabbi Satan says, "Don't let a firework hit you in the balls, it hurts really bad. Yeah, it's uh, I got a bunch of fireworks, I was gonna play with some, but it's very dry, very dry right now, as it rained in a little bit, and there's just enough wind to where, like, I don't feel I'm not probably not going to set up any fireworks this year, or at least not right now.
01:53:56 Burn, you know, despite what you might think, you can burn down the desert. There is actually stuff that you could be burning down. Yeah, look, you look like I said, it's okay to celebrate the Fourth of July. Celebrate your, especially if it's your heritage.
01:54:16 Just realize, if anything, like just look at it less about, because I feel like that.
01:54:25 Here's part of the problem, the way that they've reframed the story of the founding is there's a sense of finality about it, right? There's a sense of we finally got it right, you know, the America, it's this great experiment that has, that succeeded, you know, like, like that's that, that's the part that they, they mutilate, is they act as if this, it was like all of human civilization was getting it wrong, and they never figured it.
01:55:00 Out, and then a bunch of sieve nat boomers got together and made this equality state, and you know this democracy, and and and then you know, as long as we keep dying for Israel and and and keep self flagellating ourselves over over slavery and, and talk about our base black friend, and whatnot, and celebrate women's suffrage, and you know, all basically all the things that ruined the original idea, you know, that we're all being great Americans by doing that, and that's, I think, that people just need to realize that, look, it was there, was not a, there was no finality to it.
01:55:49 It was an experiment, and the experiment failed, and you know, not all, not all the way.
01:55:56 I mean, there's a lot of just like with every experiment, right? Like anytime you do some big experiment, regardless of what it is, you always learn from it, and so we can learn from this experiment and know what went wrong, and I'm sure our descendants will. They'll look back at the United States, and they'll be a lot more explicit with their language when they write things like all men were created equally.
01:56:19 They'll have little asterisks, you know, if they ever say things like that. All right, then we got it's getting dark. Says, hey Devon, thanks for all the awesome streams. I'm in the replay gang, so I'll be watching this later. Anyways, you need to check out the 1984 Rajneeshy bio terror attack. It was the first and largest bio attack by an Indian cult. Their plan was.. no, I did a stream about this. I did a stream about this.
01:57:00 Their plan was to take over a second small town, Oregon, by poisoning the city during local elections. Blah, yeah. No, no, I did a stream about this like years ago. They had every pay phone tapped, huge compound with hidden rooms full of recording equipment, and a small bio lab with antibiotic-resistant bacteria. There has to be more to the story. I don't know if there's more to the story.
01:57:24 I think it's just like a crazy boomer cult. I think you underestimate how many cults we didn't do, like a stream, I don't think exclusively on this, but it was a stream on a couple different cults.
01:57:37 I forget which one it was, but yeah, I think that I mean there was post World War Two, and really ramped up in the 70s, America just had just a, I guess it always kind of has had a vibrant cult culture, if you will, it's definitely been like a, a very, very fertile ground for odd religious movements, because of the, the freedom of religion aspect.
01:58:18 It's kind of given birth to a lot of these kooky cults, and in a pre-internet world, a lot of that stuff was way easier to do, because it was way easier for people to fake miracles, to, you know, to lie to people that there's no way they could verify what you were saying, and just, or get away with really crazy shit in one state, and then, you know, and then be driven out to the next state, and the people in the next day wouldn't, wouldn't know who the fuck you were, because again, they can't just Google you or something like that, right? So, there was a lot of weird cults that were springing up, plus boomers, or at least some, a lot of boomer hippies had this weird obsession with like Indian gurus for a while.
01:59:00 I don't know what was up with that, but that was like a thing, and I think I think that's what it was, it was just like some bunch of stupid boomers and like some Indian guru trying to take over a part of the country, I don't know if there's any more to, I mean, yeah, another problem with diversity, though. Right. All right. Then we got the Supreme Rabbi Satan says one last round before I drown. Well, there you go.
01:59:30 Appreciate that. Then I got a Pork Chop Express as replay gang. Devon, you mentioned Apocalypto, one of my faves, on Wednesday. Have you ever done a stream on it? Also, I think the Patriot Mel Gibson is vastly underrated. Happy Independence Day. Well, look, uh, Apocalypto.. I don't know if you need.. I could do a stream on it, just because.. I mean, it's.. I don't.. it's not that deep, I.
02:00:00 You know what I mean, like I think it's pretty apparent to anyone that watches it, obviously not none of the not in English, which makes it difficult to do a stream on, but yeah, I don't think it's, I mean, it's not too deep, but just look how primitive these these people were before the white man showed up.
02:00:23 I mean, that's pretty, that's the takeaway, right? As far as the Patriot, I mean, there's part.. there's things I like about the Patriot, but the thing that.. that will always.. I think I did do a stream on it or something.
02:00:43 I feel like I have, and the thing that will always fucking ruin that movie for me is the fact that when they are in hiding, they go to like the magical island of black people, you know, where there's like, oh, there's this little Wakanda Island, we're all gonna go to the British will never find us on Wakanda Island, and it's just like, what are we doing, you know?
02:01:09 Or in just like, or the fact that they had, like, the black guy in the, in, you know, on the side of the militia, and they had that whole race story arc, right? Where the bigot guys like I ain't gonna fight with no niggers, and then by the end of it, he's like, you're my brother, and hopefully someday they ban slavery, and you can vote and stuff, you know, like, like, the, like, again, this is exactly what I'm talking about, this is the kind of bullshit shit that they think that boomers thought was going on is the stuff that's in the Patriot.
02:01:48 They really do think that, like, there was, like, some, you know, based black guy fighting in, you know, with the militia and teaching, like, life lessons to the racist white guy that was like, whoa. Now I, you know, I just.. I never really knew any niggers myself, but now that I fought with you side by side, you were my brother.
02:02:09 We all bleed red, you know? Like that's that's exactly the problem with, with the, with the boomers, is they think that the Patriot is what I was like, and it wasn't like that.
02:02:19 Now, again, there's good parts, in fact, one of my favorite parts, one of my favorite, favorite parts of that movie is after the, you know, the British kill Mel Gibson's, like, in the very beginning of the movie, they kill his son, and and then they just leave, and he, and he, and as soon as the British leave, he gets his other two sons, and he gets some guns.
02:02:45 He's like, you know, follow me, and they go and camp out, waiting for the British to go by, so they can, they can, you know, kill the officers and free his other son, like what's his name, Heath Ledger, right, and the little speech he gives to his other two sons, where he's like, you know, you know, basically just he's telling them how to kill, you know, and it's like it's, it's a powerful moment, because it's, it's like you think about that scenario, not necessarily just in the context of the Revolutionary War,
02:03:23 but just war throughout history, when fathers have been put in that situation where you have to tell someone who is your son who is, you know, very young, like what you know, like I think in the movie that, like, one of the kids looks like he's like eight, you know, and the other ones, like, maybe, like, 11 or something like that, and he's, he's basically instructing them on, on how to kill, like, we are now in a situation where we, as a family, have to draw blood, and you know, Dad's gonna tell you how to do it, and, and, so, like, that scene to me was, was very, it was, it was that, that seems very powerful, but you know, like I said, it's that's not what it was like, and the Wakanda Island thing just kind of ruins it for me.
02:04:13 Is it like a relatively harmless family movie? I guess, but again, this is this is where it's kind of funny. This is where I feel like AI will come in handy in the future, because you could get a movie like that, where it's almost there, right? Like, it's almost there.
02:04:34 You can go in and you can AI the scenes that are stupid, you know? Like, you can get rid of, like, Wakanda Island, but and then, like, fill it in with something that actually makes sense, you know. You'll be able to alter some of these movies to actually make sense, and that's that's actually not too far away from the future. Changing a movie in a believable way to where you could actually show it to someone.
02:05:00 Who's never seen it, and they won't pick up on it unless they're maybe they're really paying attention. I feel like that's not that far away, and I think that's going to be something that's very valuable to us.
02:05:14 Is you can, you could just go back and get all these movies that were, they, they would have been good had they not had the anti-white propaganda in there, or the movie that would have been good if it had had the obvious Jew element, that you know, like the, you know, this wouldn't be happening if one of those fucking Jews, like if you could have that scene in there, you know, so I feel like that's, I feel like that's that's something to look forward to. Rocco d2 says
Clip
02:05:46 white power.
Devon Stack
02:06:00 Rocco d2 says you think we make it to another 2/5 no, not no end, no, nope, nope, nope, nope, nope, nope. I mean, there it's possible there's something called the United States into over the years, but it won't be this, it will not be this, whatever this is, you know, like, I don't even know what this is anymore, but whatever this is, it is not long for this earth. It's really not, it's really not.
02:06:40 It's, uh, but like I said in the beginning of the stream, about the, you know, the Suaro cactus transplanting, not knowing if it, you know, if you did a good job or not, because it takes years to die, it'll, it's gonna take a long time, and it's not like a straight down linear, you know, like anything, right, like any company that goes out of business, or I mean, very rarely, I mean, I guess that can happen if you have like extreme kinetic kinetic energy going on, like you know, like you get bombed out of existence or something like that, but I don't, I don't think that's how this this ship goes down, maybe. I mean, I guess there's scenarios where that's plausible, but I don't, you know, at least not that's nothing that that's easy to to predict right now.
02:07:24 I see it more like a slow death, but yeah, absolutely not. Absolutely not, Rocco d2 But thank you very much. Then we got Tyler W oh five says, for whatever reason, Rumble, or actually, first Tyler W oh five. Oh, we already did that one oldie, but goodie, Tyler W of five says, for whatever reason, Rumble wouldn't let me send a chat last stream. Hope all is well, just giving support.
02:07:56 This fourth is extra depressing with all the flock cameras pointed at us.
02:08:02 Yeah, I feel like that's another obstacle, but I also feel like it's, it's also with, with these problems also comes opportunity, because the more they rely on digital systems, as much as it makes certain, it just, it changes the game, it doesn't end the game, it just changes the game, and it means that we have to be nimble and adapt to it, but I feel like, especially as the ruling class becomes less white and less competent and more reliant on technology, that yeah, certainly the technology will be good, they'll have access to better, more expensive technology, but their reliance on technology is going to make them weak, and these systems always have soft spots, and we can always turn this shit against them.
02:09:12 Just as an example, you're talking about flock cameras, just their security on the actual cameras that they go out and deploy. People have hacked those already easily with a phone, like you can just go up to a flock camera and basically, in a sense, log into it and view its data, and people have done that, and I'm sure, look, all this stuff is new for them too, and they'll, they'll have to patch it and stuff, just as the systems, as the system gets more and more complex, it also creates more and more vulnerabilities, and so we'll just have to be, we'll have to get better at finding exploits and. And fighting it, it's not a game ender, though, at all.
02:10:06 The surveillance state doesn't, doesn't end things, it just, it just changes things, it just means you have to be aware of their capabilities and the weaknesses that that every every system has all right. No land. Findlay says hello to Evan. When was the last time you saw a $2 bill? I see one all the time, because I have one on my wallet for good luck.
02:10:37 My grandpa, I think it was, he said he would give up, he would give us and all the grandkids $2 bills like all the time, and I think he was just being cheap, because it was like it, it was obviously it was a cheap way of giving a kid something kind of cool, so yeah, they still, I'm assuming they still make them. I think you can still get them. Right? Are you a colonizer? says test. Well, that worked. And then are you a colonizer? said with a big dono.
Mayer Rothschild
02:11:14 Money is money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself.
Devon Stack
02:11:20 Look how Jewy this bag is. Are you a colonizer? says I sent you a PM on Gab. All right. Well, I'll take a look at it, but if this is about your, your, your wanting to start, that I know I, I think I know what your PM, your, your, well, your DM is going to be about, right? It's about like calling ourselves colonizers, because we're gonna colonize the stars, and this sort of thing. Look, I, I don't think it's the worst idea.
02:12:07 I just don't know. I don't think that's like a torch I want to carry, you know what I mean? Like, I'm not against it. I like, because, like, I've said, well, and I apparently got shit for it. I think, like I was saying on Outlaws on Wednesday, I think we are going to, at some point, you know, colonize Mars and things like that.
02:12:29 I mean, it's like way in the future, and I'm not going to live to see it, but yeah, I think that we're always going to, we're going to expand, either that will go extinct, or, you know, it's one of the other, either we will expand out and eventually move out into the unknown, as we've always done, or we will go extinct.
02:12:50 You know, it's one of those two things. So, I get it, but I don't know about turning into, like, a philosophy, you know, or a movement, or something like that. I'll take a look at it. I'll check out your, your DM. And thank you very much for the big support. There are you a colonizer? I mean, I'm technically my family, my ancestors are 100% colonizers, uh Professor Chaos says, Happy Independence Day, Devon.
02:13:27 I'll catch the replay. Well, I appreciate that. The Shadow Band says, would you say the Anglo people should act as a unified diaspora or diaspora people like the Jews do, is that even possible given our nature? Not only is possible. I mean, it'd be great. It's just that, well, for one, in America, especially, there's not a lot of Americans that are like exclusively English. A lot of Americans have other..
02:14:08 I mean, even if they're white, they have like German or French, or you know, some something mixed in there, and or Italian, or you know, who knows? Right now, my ancestors are almost exclusively, well, they are exclusively Dutch or English, with maybe a couple little exceptions of the branch, you know, if you branch off far enough right on the family tree, but direct line is 100% English and Dutch, right, and genetically the English and the Dutch are like almost, almost identical, but that's that's I would say unusual for Americans and.
02:15:00 And the Australians are probably racially consistent, well, more so than Americans, but there's far fewer Australians than Americans. I just don't think that there's that identity doesn't really exist. There's not like an Anglosphere identity, you know, there's an American identity, there's an Australian identity, there's a English identity, and they're all different and distinct, and wars have been fought. You know what I mean.
02:15:30 Now, given the current racial realities, those differences are being overcome, and those we're finding that we have a lot more in common than we then we don't, and perhaps a new identity is emerging, a new white identity that's more generic, and I would say, I would say absolutely, that's happening, I would say that growing up, as an example, Europe sounded very foreign to me, and to the degree that I encountered Europeans, I didn't go to Europe when I was a kid, but we had European exchange students that would come to our school, and they just seemed like they were from another fucking planet,
02:16:17 you know what I mean, like, and there was even, you know, obviously, because I was, I grew up in a conservatar household, very patriotic, and I ate up that whole, you know, all that jingoistic, you know, like rah rah America, fuck yeah, and there was a little, you know, looking down my nose at the same Europeans, some of that I haven't outgrown, you know, like especially when you guys talk about not having the air conditioners.
02:16:43 I'm sorry, that's just wild to me. But you know, and guns and things like that, obviously.
02:16:53 But anyway, that aside, I have found that some of the people I get along with best in the world right now are people who are Europeans and not Americans.
02:17:06 Now, the some of the people I have the most in common with, and that I feel like a closer connection to are Europeans and not Americans, and and I feel like there is, and I don't think I'm alone in that.
02:17:20 I think that more and more, and while you do see that, like kind of like the the banter back and forth, and some people take it to a point where it's further than banter, and that's I think stupid and unnecessary, but you know, I think ultimately white identitarians in America and white identitarians in Europe are, you know, do feel kind of a, a kinship that, that maybe hasn't existed until now, until we've been kind of forced in this demographic situation, where, you know, like, like, I guess that scene in, in Lord of the Rings, right, with Gimli and Legolas, right? Or they're like, "Ah, we fight together now, because we're at least we're not orcs, you know, like that kind of a shit.
02:18:17 But yeah, let's see here. Rupert says replay, gang. Here, happy White History Month, and 250th birthday, America. See you next week, Professor Steck. And have a good night, Heil Hitler. Well, I appreciate that. Then we got Professor Chaos says Ken Burns has the American Revolution documentary series.
02:18:41 I haven't seen it, but I think you should check it out. It might be stream-worthy, you know. Ken Burns exists, I mean, he even says that he, he, he's, he purposely is making propaganda with his Jewish daughter.
02:18:55 I'm sure it's awful. I'm sure it's, I'm sure it's either, either it is highlighting the white supremacy acts aspects of the revolution and the founding fathers, but framing it as, as like something that that's bad, that that delegitimizes white power, you know, and and we should all cry because, because it was, it was white supremacy, but it was evil.
02:19:26 Either that, or he glosses over it. I, my guess is he actually highlights some of this stuff, though, and just puts it in a negative framing. Tyler W o5 says I could be wrong, and what I'm about to say, or missing context. If so, let me know, but from what I gather, Franklin never really had any racial issues with other Europeans. There were few writings where he praised German Americans.
02:19:54 What he said negatively about them was culturally provoked, not racially. I think he just wanted America to maintain its Anglo culture, and even though he called the French, among other Europeans, swarthy, it's well known how much he loved the French and considered them equal.
02:20:14 I think he was just describing differences in appearance. Yeah, well, not just that, though, he was literally saying that there's too many Germans here, and they're not going to adopt our culture in the same way they're not going to adopt our complexion. So, he obviously saw a racial difference there. I mean, look, I'm not saying I agree. I think he was, he was like maybe being a little autistic there, to say the least, but I used it more just to demonstrate that these were not people that were, you know, like, like unaware of race.
02:20:56 These are these were people were very aware of race, and in Franklin's instance, hyper aware of race, Tom O'Hawk says I'll cash the replay like always. Thank you, Devon. I appreciate that. All right, I'm gonna scroll, scroll, scroll. Corn Pop, the bad dude says, what point in humanity's development do you think we shouldn't have reached when looking at the present? In my opinion, we shouldn't have gone past the industrial revolution. What point should we have not reached? I don't think you can.
02:21:35 I don't think you can stop it.
02:21:37 I think I don't think that I think that I mean, look, if you're trying to optimize for quality of life, even I don't think that you stop it, because I think to truly have quality of life that white people always need to be pursuing and innovating new ideas and and exploring new technologies and philosophies, and I think that's just part of the white spirit, you know, always moving forward, always progressing to some new thing,
02:22:17 and look, sometimes it doesn't go, it doesn't work out right, you know, and so sometimes you end up in a scenario where maybe you found that you have thrown the baby out with the bath water and you need to like re-evaluate and take a few steps back, but I don't think that that means you, you just hit the pause button, you know, I don't think that that you could do that and still be white, I think.
02:22:41 If you look at civilizations that have hit the pause button, you find very primitive civilizations, you know. You find civilizations like the tribes in the Amazon, or, or those weirdos on that, that island off of the coast of India, where they keep killing Christians that keep trying to give them Diet Coke and Bibles, you know, like I think that that's what you get when you hit pause on on innovation, you get ABOs in Australia, you know, you get those South American tribes in the, in the jungle, you know, like I think that, and look, you could, could you make the argument.
02:23:23 Well, they're, they're, they're happy, though. You know, they don't have mortgages, they don't have as much stress in their life. I don't know, maybe, maybe they're happy, but I don't think a white person could be happy only achieving exactly what their, what their parents did, as an example, which is kind of what happens when you're in a society like that, right? Like you're never pushed to achieve more and go above and beyond the generation before you.
02:23:59 I think it's, it's very white in nature, or in our nature as whites, to want to, you know, to move, progress beyond, you know, what everyone before us has done, and so, yeah, there's obviously, like, you know, you could say, is maybe a better question would be, is there like some time period you'd prefer to live in, and the problem is, is like, you'd have to be able to hit the pause button for me to even answer that, because if you say, well,
02:24:37 the 1950s would be great, all right, well, maybe, but then you're going to live through the 1960s and then you know, can't just be the 1950s or you know, you can't just live 1955 on a loop, you know what I mean, and so even if you were able to regress somehow back to some other time period, you're going to see change, I.
02:25:00 Well, I don't hate that I was born this time period. There's a lot of good about it. There's there, look, there's there's also some shitty things, you know, like the saying that you were born too or too late to explore the world and born too early to explore the stars.
02:25:16 I think about that sometimes, where I do have that explorer gene in me, where I.. it sounds very romantic going into the newly discovered continent of America, like Lewis and Clark, right? Just.. just..
02:25:31 I don't know what's the.. you know, finding being the first white person to find the Grand Canyon, and just going, what the fuck is this, you know, or being the first white person to see, you know, Yellowstone, or any of these, these sites that are just very unique to this land, and being the first white person to experience that, that sounds like really cool, or obviously being the first white person to like take a dump on Mars, you know, or something like that, that'd be really cool, but like neither one of those can happen anymore, or can happen for me. Let's see here.
02:26:11 Then we got the great Waite says, my hope is that the Jews have created a non-white golem that feels no loyalty to them, and will turn around and eat them. Not that we need nons.
02:26:28 I just think that would be nice. Well, I mean, to some extent they've kind of done that. I think just generally that's that sort of applies to most nons, not all nons. There's some. I mean, Indians seem like weirdly slavish to the Jews, but there are a lot of nons that don't care about Jews or the Holocaust, and in fact they view Israel as, you know, as colonizers and evil. Croset has a big dodo,
Mayer Rothschild
02:27:00 money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend
Devon Stack
02:27:05 himself. Look, how Jewy this bag is I cross it with the big dono. Says, have you ever looked into the Jewish origins of public companies and stock trading? Seems like a net loss for society, profits above everything, planned obsolescence only to benefit a few at the top.
02:27:42 What do you mean, like the concept of the stock market and stuff like that? That's existed for a long time. I don't know who. I don't know what the origins are. I have done some on planned obsolescence.
02:27:58 I don't know if it was like a whole stream or part of a different stream, and there are there are a couple Jewish hands in that, but I have to look into the stock market, but yeah, look, there, obviously, that's the, that's the problem is when you capitalism in a, in a society that is multiracial and amoral to some extent, and lacks any kind of, certainly, I guess you know, solidarity among each other, or any kind of responsibility to your fellow American, because what does American mean?
02:28:50 You know, like, do you mean American as in, like, the black guy that just raped some white girl?
02:28:55 Do you mean American as in some illegal immigrant? Do you mean American as in, like Cash Patel, do you mean American, as in JD Vance's wife? Do you mean American, as in, you know, Trump or Jeff Bezos, or, you know, I mean, like, and so when you, if you're in a, you're one of these psychopaths that run these companies, you're ultimately every decision you make is is just motivated by by money, and it's not about like what's this going to do to the American people, you know what I mean. So in that context, capitalism just creates these these evils and but yeah.
02:29:44 Thank you very much. Cross that. I'll look into it. I don't know, I don't know the concept of a stock market, stock market, like I said, it's very old, so I don't know that that was, you know, well, let's find out.
02:29:58 Actually, let's. The stock market I Okay, I might be kind of doing, we got the Dutch East India Company involved, so the Dutch East India Company was the first, I think so. The first modern stock market where investors could buy and sell shares in companies rather than just government debt or promissory notes emerged in Amsterdam in the early 1600s The Dutch government chartered the Dutch East India Company.
02:31:12 It was the world's first publicly traded joint stock company with limited liability to finance expensive, risky voyages to Asia for spices and other goods. The VOC sold shares to the public. This is widely regarded as the first blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.
02:31:31 Who did it, though? Might just be the Dutch, I Okay, yeah, I don't know, but even I guess ancient Rome had some kind of form of it where you could buy shares in public contractor companies, and then Italy, medieval Italy had similar, similar things going on in Venice, and then looks like, yeah, I don't know, this is like a Jew thing, but maybe there, look, there were obviously there were Dutch Jews involved in finance, so who knows, I don't know, I'll look into it. I've never.. finance has never been my, my strong suit. All right.
02:32:46 Purdible Catman says, Hey, Devon, I was reading up on a place called Freedom, Georgia, a black community put together by 19 black families. Pretty funny stuff. And then there is Brooklyn, Illinois, same idea. Hilarious. I'll look into that. So, are you talking about like this is like the black return of the land, return of the nig return of the niggas. Let's take a look at that Randall flag, says Devon.
02:33:20 I know your feelings about religion, but it seems women who leave the LDS become massive whores. This seems on brand across several 1000s of examples. Why is this gross behavior so prevalent? Well, I think what it is is two things: one, it's its selection bias to some extent, is it? Is it that girls that leave the LDS church become whores, or is it that whores leave the church?
02:33:51 Yeah, what I mean, and so there's that, there's a little bit of that going on, and then the other bit of that is it's some something I witnessed right with my with other Mormons that that left the church right that there were other Mormons that I would see at parties right, and I'd be like, oh, you're drinking lot of it wasn't just the girls becoming quote unquote whores, it was everyone just became degenerates, including myself, and that's because when you grow up in a very restrictive household, where even drinking a Coke is a naughty thing to do, and you grow up in a, in a environment like at school and everywhere else you go, like no one else has all these fucking rules that you have.
02:34:43 The second you got out of the house, you go and break all the rules you've been like itching to break, and sometimes people go off the deep end with that, and that's what I saw, like, and I think you know girls are no different, right? Like, I, I became. Like a massive pot head, and was like getting fucking hammered all the time, and, and girls became whores, you know.
02:35:09 I, there was a couple girls I knew where that, that happened, so I don't think it's, you know, like Mormons make whores, it's just like now the people that leave are people that were overly restricted, and they kind of go ape shit.
02:35:24 It's like my mom bought this Pekingese fucking dog, ridiculous fucking dog, and it had been kept in a little tiny cage its entire life, and she took it home and open up the cage and the thing just would run laps around the house like an insane like like a demon and it was it never it never settled down and it's because it was kept pent up in that fucking cage for so long that the second it had like a taste of freedom it just went crazy, super annoying dog.
02:36:10 But anyway, I think it's a similar thing, you know, if you don't give people a little bit of wiggle room when they finally bust out of your grip, you know, they kind of go crazy. Let's see here. Then we got Purple Cat, man says, I think if you would make for a really..
02:36:33 I think it would make for a very funny stream if you cover these communities, and I believe that there are a few more, but I haven't looked at them. Tell the black communities. Yeah, I'm sure it's ridiculous. There have been a few more. Randall Flag says I'm not a founding stock American, but my German family has been here for 200 years.
02:36:53 I recently found out I'm distantly related to Peter Thiel Teal, though my great grandmother, which is worse than being Jewish. Well, I don't know if it's worse than being Jewish, but you know, maybe you can get some of some of his money. We should email and be like, 'Hey, hunk, look, we have some of that money. Drove work says, 'I only do business with small businesses owned by or owned and staffed by white people.
02:37:24 Now, well, that's good. That I look that, and that's something that you can do right now. And look, there's.. it's funny because there's so many people, white people, that want to complain all day about the nepotism of Jews, but you ask them to be just a little bit nepotistic, and they, they fucking cry about it, you know? They call you, they think, "Oh, you're purity spiraling.
02:37:48 It's like, "All right, well, then lose, lose to the Jews, lose to the Jews. Well, you think it's purity spiraling to stick to your race when you're trying to have a pro-white movement to not want, like, a gay Mexican in it, you think that's like, oh, it's purity spiraling, is it? Really, show me all the non-Jews that are, that are in charge of Jewish NGOs telling Jews what to do. Oh, it doesn't exist, does it?
02:38:20 Yeah, because race comes first, which is why they're winning, and you know, if race doesn't come first to you, then you're not a white nationalist, you're just not, you're CivNet, all right, whatever, just don't, don't fucking, don't kid yourself, and that's the same thing, like there's so many people that can't be bothered, they can't be bothered to spend like an extra dollar, or you know, something like that.
02:38:47 Like, look, there's some.. look, there's.. there's all.. you have to be practical if you got a family, you got to raise, you know, there's.. you know, it's not easy out there to make it financially.
02:39:00 I get it right. Not everyone can sit there and make sure they're only buying everything from only white people all the time, but make the effort, make the effort to avoid these anti-white companies, and to don't, don't fucking hire illegals to mow your lawn, you know, don't fucking hire illegals to re-tile your bathroom, like there's some of you that are just actively funding this shit, and I get it, I get the temptation, but look, if we can't even have, you know, the fucking restraint, then how do you expect some normie to, but good job there. Draw, drop work.
02:39:45 Then we got Bobby Ray says there are 195 million white people currently in America alone. If every white person donated just $1 a month, very quickly we could get a, or get financed to make changes.
02:39:59 Just a thought, I. It no, absolutely, like that's the thing, is if you had a, and look, that's that's how that's how Jews do it, that's how a lot of religious organizations do it, right, like Mormons have tithing, where every Mormon is paying 10% of their income, or not every Mormon, like a lot of Mormons, directly to the church, now they've got like billions and billions and billions of dollars, like billions.
02:40:30 I mean, how much money does the fucking Vatican have? You know what I mean, and maybe that's the problem, is there is no white religion that ties us all together, whether that can serve as like the hub for something like that, and you're going to have to create white NGOs the way it's going to have to be, you're going to have to have competently run ex explicitly pro-white advocacy groups that can be like the white ADL.
02:41:10 I think the need for that.. I know there's no political solution, right, but doesn't mean that you ignore the political realities of the present either, and as we become more and more disenfranchised and replaced in our countries, you're going to need some kind of advocacy groups.
02:41:31 So I'm hoping to see more of that. I'm beginning. I think we're seeing the beginnings of that, and yeah, it's not like there's not enough white wealth, there is. It's just not being put to work. Banana Pill says freedom is a Jew ideology.
02:41:50 Jews were tired of being persecuted for their Jewish behavior under the Crown, and they participated in the pilgrimage, creating the country we have through free man apparatus, they created the freedom is gay. Obviously, I'm dumbing this down a lot to fit in the characters.
02:42:14 Then you say Freemasons, yeah? I mean, I don't know enough about Freemasonry to know all the ins and outs of that, but I know it played a role, obviously. All the founding fathers were Freemasons, or at least a lot of them were. A lot, I mean, I don't think is as much these days a thing.
02:42:38 Maybe I'm wrong about that, but yeah, I'm not like a.. I don't.. I don't.. I'm not well versed in Freemason history. There's.. it's funny, because like, obviously, I think Joseph Smith, I'm pretty sure, was a Freemason, and there's a lot of people that think that, like, every Mormon's a Freemasons.. like, not really.
02:42:58 I mean, there are Mormon Freemasons, like I said, my mom, when she was a little girl, it's either my mom or her mom, I forget, because the story was told to me so many years ago now, but it doesn't, you know, it's the same either way, but their church was either burned down or something happened to it, like it either burned down or like burned down, and so they, their church met like a Masonic lodge for free, you know, just not because they were all Masons, like, but there was some, obviously some Mason had connections right for them to meet there while they finished the repairs to the building. I don't see a lot of masonic lodges these days.
02:43:52 There's that big one in DC that looks really like eyes wide shut creepy. There's like no windows and stuff like that, but the Masonic lodges I do see occasionally are like, like shitty little buildings, like there's nothing really.. I don't, I don't think they're what they're used to be, but maybe they..
02:44:13 who knows, maybe I'm wrong about that. Rivers of Blood says Dev, and your customer service job reminded me of how our family's first computer was a Gateway 2000 machine loaded with Windows 3.0 good times, yeah, Gateway 2000 that's like early gateways before me, by the time I was working there they were just Gateway, and then that was the beginning, they dropped the 2000 because it was one, probably because it was after 2000 right? So, yeah, then we got the show gun, so. Says, oh, slash, appreciate that.
02:45:03 Then the Shadow Band says, "By the way, you're a B guy. Do you send your bees around to help pollinate various crops? I do not, because they are Africanized, and so I would be spreading Africanized genes all over the country, and it would just be dangerous, and they, they wouldn't even stay, so when they ship beehives, they usually throw what they do is they, they throw these big nets over the hives, and they like that, they put the hives on pallets, the stick stick them on pallets and put big nets on them, and lift them with forklifts onto big trucks, and these trucks just have like hives covered in nets stacked up on them, and you'll lose a few hives, but generally they'll hang out inside the hive until the truck gets to where it's going, and Afrin eyes bees would not do that.
02:46:04 The second that you tried to, like, lift their hive with a forklift, they'd all crawl out of the fucking high, and they would just be this fucking nightmare. So, no, no. In fact, there was a guy.
02:46:19 There is some agriculture out here, and there's a guy that's got an orchard out here that's not super far, and I tried to get him to let me use his property to put bees on with that argument, saying that, oh, you know, it'll be free pollination, I just need a place to put these hives, and I'm sure there's parts of your property where, like, no one's going to be walking by, so it's not like dangerous, but you know there are, they are Afronized B, so just, you know, don't go buy them, but you've got a big enough plot here, and you know you won't have any problems, and I'll, it'll be good for me, good for you, and he's like, no, I'm like, okay, never mind.
02:47:00 Then, so it's yeah, it's been a little tough to get people to let me put bees, because I can't lie to them. I can't be like, oh yeah, they're nice bees, like, because then you know, then they kill their dog, you know, the bees kill their dog or something like that.
02:47:18 Yeah, they have to know, like, don't go by the big death machines, but the second you start explaining to, and I try to do it in a way that doesn't sound scary, but, like, you know, people are people are pussies. I mean, I have hives, literally, like on, like, outside where I'm like my building, I walk by, like, an Africanized hive all the time, and for the most part, they don't fuck with you.
02:47:43 It's not until you go and fuck with their hive that they get mad. Corn Pop, the bad dude, says, "Have you or anyone here been to in the Gateway School program?
02:47:58 You ever heard about the weird shit they would do to the kids, give them lace drinks that make them forget things. Future video topic, I think what you mean is gate.
02:48:12 I think that's some of that's just schizo posting from people on chan. There is stuff that was weird, but they didn't like, I think some of it's just like fuzzy memories and schizo posting, and then some of it was boomers with access to smart kids doing stupid experimental education, but I was in the gate program, and they, in fact, I went to a school that, what, because they had two kinds, what they would do is they had either a gate where for like two hours a day, or like maybe a day a week, or you know, they, they pull you out of normal, like normy class, basically.
02:49:04 And then you'd go with all the other smart kids to, like, the gate class for, like, whatever, you know, the day or the hours, or whatever it was. But they also had a school when I, where I went to school, where the entire school was gate, and it was, it was a weird range of ages, because it was like third grade through seventh grade, so you went there, then it's.. it was all very.. yeah, I don't know what way to describe it.
02:49:41 It was very, you know, kind of like little experimental learning, you know what I mean? Like, it really was like, for example, for science it was a lot more hands-on type of stuff, right? Like, oh, we're, you know, we're going to spend the semester growing. Radishes, and, and we're gonna go.
02:50:03 It's all very open, you know, open, open world game, where it's like study at your own pace, and you know, we did this thing called Cardboard Kingdom, where we put refrigerator boxes over our desks, and we made fake companies, and I don't know, like there was some weird shit that we did, and yeah, they did, they did like some tests, but I don't think it was just because we're in gate,
02:50:33 I think they just do that with kids, like they did like hearing tests and colorblind tests, like everyone gets stuff like that, right, and IQ tests seem weird when you're a kid, because they are, I guess, they are kind of weird, but they did like IQ tests and things like that, but some of the stories I've seen on chan just sounds like, because a lot of schizos have high IQs, and so some of, I think some of us just like schizos that went to that were engaged, and they, you know, they've created like some, some like, you know, insane version of what it really was, and look, and I think it makes some people feel special, like they were part of some like weird, you know, ooh
02:51:20 , I was part of this weird government program to exploit the smart, you know, it makes you feel like you were part of something like X-Men, you know.
02:51:28 I went to X-Men school, but I think it was just Gate, and I think a lot of their teaching methods were experimental, and because it was, you know, product of the time, and also it was boomers, you know, trying to be like all these crazy ideas we had in the 60s and 70s, let's try them out on these fucking smart kids.
02:51:56 Draw fork says addendum to my other comment, obvious exceptions is only patronizing small businesses are utility companies right now, like, yeah, there's some things you can't get around, and if you can, but yeah, like you should not, you definitely shouldn't be frequent frequenting non-white establishments, but there are certain scenarios where you just can't, you know, what do you got to do? Love and the vision says, Hi, Devon, please check your odyssey. I will. I haven't forgotten. I was just already..
02:52:33 I had the Rumble tab open first, so I will. I'll definitely. then we got sack opossum says worked at an equip or equipment dealership ownership changed after us or after us mechanics couldn't help customers on the phone with simple fixes, better to charge 2000 for field calls than to charge a for a $5 relay, it felt dirty.
02:53:03 Right now, that's the thing, is when you feel like you're actually, you get satisfaction out of your job because you're actually helping people, that makes all the difference in terms of your motivation to get to work, and people that are qualified and actually go to their jobs want to feel that kind of satisfaction, and if they don't, they leave, and you end up with basically scumbags and scammers and stupid people as your employees, if what you are doing resembles a scumbag scam.
02:53:40 All right, then we got Cassandra says with a big Christmas dono,
Clip
02:53:48 children today will be leaving the best Christmas ever. Our story begins with the
Devon Stack
02:53:55 Magic Negro Christmas tree.
Clip
02:54:01 Me,
02:54:05 where did the snowman go? The best Christmas
Devon Stack
02:54:19 ever. all right. Cassandra says, says for you, for churro, for this broken country we once quaintly referred to as our nation. Well, thank you very much. Cassandra says you're always very generous, you're generous on the on outlaws too, so really appreciate you supporting, supporting the cause, very very based of you, and I believe that gets you know I'm gonna, if I haven't already, that gets you a.
02:55:00 Think it's you a beehive for sure. Are you on my list of beehive patrons? No, you are now. I right, as soon as I can get out to a bee, it's, it's really warm, so I'm not getting into the hives much, but you are on the list that you will have a hive branded, it'll probably be Africanized, because most of them are right now, if I can find a nice hive, I'll try to give it. That's not named already.
02:55:45 I'll try to give you a nice hive, but they are probably.. it's probably going to be a mean one. That's no good around that right now. But thank you very much.
02:55:58 Cassandra says, then we got a corn pop, the bad dude says a birdie on a tree branch told me those flock cameras don't like high powered lasers, that is true, the sensors in those cameras are they are sensitive to high powered lasers and they are vulnerable to to Able to, to well, a number of some of them have, like, their Bluetooth wide open.
02:56:29 Some, I mean, it's, it's a mess, especially, like, you know, that's the thing, is I worry less about a surveillance state that is run by diversity, and the more I use AI, the more I realize AI needs a lot of guidance right now. I don't think it's going to be forever, but at least for right now, AI needs, like, when, for example, when I made Churro Ped, I mean, it needs a lot of guidance to produce code, like it needs almost me, like I might as well be coding it sometimes, you know.
02:57:12 And so, again, I feel like that'll change, but for right now, there are exploits across it, says yeah. I ran into the Dutch thing for the origin. Seems like there's more there because of how open for fuckery it is, or I'm reading too much into it. I don't know, don't see any positives.
02:57:37 Yeah, look into it. Like I said, I'm. I don't. I'm not, you know, finance is not one of my, my strong suits. Then we got Tyler W o5 How hard would it realistically be to set up an organization that fights for white rights that's crowdfunded? I would imagine the hardest part would be getting participants. There have been a lot of people that have tried set up organizations, and I just think that the unfortunate reality is to really get something going, you kind of have to get like some seed money. I mean, is it possible to do something grassroots? Absolutely, and to some degree, you could even argue that there are groups already doing that.
02:58:26 One example is, you know, you had Patriot Front showed up to Washington, DC, with at least reportedly 400 people to demonstrate, and so that's, I mean, that's not just, that's not how many members they have, that's how many members they had show up to DC for a demonstration.
02:58:48 That's, I mean, if that's the real number, I mean, that's pretty, that's pretty decent. That's certainly more people than show up to a lot of these other dissident events that other people have tried in the past, I mean, and for them to not just show up, but to show up in, I don't want to say in uniform, but you know what I mean, like there's, there's a, they're not just like casually showing up, and they're not showing up with their based black friend, and they're not showing up, you know what I mean, like this was organized white, and with no fat people, and, and, and no black friends, you know what I mean. So, who knows?
02:59:33 Who knows where that, where that's where that will eventually go to, but I feel like they've, they've grown significantly over the past few years, so who knows if not them groups like them, and I think that all it's going to take, it just takes some seed money, and it takes some seed money, and good, well, it takes some seed money and good leadership, and something else that that's always.
03:00:00 Been a problem too, in just politics generally, is they're just, you got to watch out for grifters, right? Like, got to watch out for people like when Steve Bannon tells you he's raising money to build the wall, and then he pockets, like, you know, whatever.
03:00:14 This, I don't, I don't want to, you know, I'm only accused of slander here, but so I don't know all the, all the details of that, but you know, you know what I mean, like all these, all these mega grifts, where they raise money to do something, and it's just, you know, it's just grifters, so it's one of the tough things is just finding not just competent people, but people that actually walk the walk, people that actually believe in the cause, and hopefully those groups are being formed.
03:00:48 I know there's people talking about doing it, but I think that the biggest hurdle is it takes money to make money, and that's true of nonprofits too.
03:00:59 You need to have people actively seeking donations, and in wining and dining, and courting rich people, and being, you know, having representatives that they can go to where the rich people are, and there's some overhead to that, you know, you can't just be like, I'm starting an NGO, and then email Elon Musk asking for money or something like that. You know what I mean. It's all about networking and who you know, and that costs money.
03:01:35 Ah, here we go. We got Corn Pop, the bad dude says Smith was a 33rd degree Mason. When you reach the 33rd degree, one of the things you can go and do is create your own cult. Well, I don't know if that's generally across the board, but yeah, I guess so.
03:01:54 What's his face, I Art Bell, Art Bell was a.. I don't know if he was 33rd degree, but he was.. he was a Mason. What you could.. you could argue in some way, he created a cult. He certainly had a cult following. Southern Poverty Porch Monkey says big thanks to Devon and his ancestors that founded a land from true wilderness. You may think us Shamrock Spics do not have appreciation to the founding stock, but some of us do. Hats off, Devon. Well, I appreciate that. Thank you very much.
03:02:37 My, my Blarney brother, Corn Pot, the bad dude, says shout out to Wyatt Stag. There you go. All right, then over on Odyssey, of course. Love and Division, Love and Division. Where's my Love and Division button? Big Foot is a real American, I Bigfoot is a true American Native American, you know, there's like a desert Bigfoot, the desert cryptids are so fucking ridiculous, so there's there's there's cactus head I the cactus head, is, is especially when you hit, when you read the description of what cactus head is supposed to be, you know exactly what it was, and it's, it's just like absurd that they made it into a thing, so cactus head, just imagine this has the body of a dog, but the head of a cactus.
03:04:12 So, what happened was a dog got into some cactus and got a bunch of cactus shit stuck to its head and ran around in some fucking drunk gold miner or something saw it was like, oh goddamn cactus head, and now there's now, now apparently cactus heads like a like a desert cryptid, there's also Yucca man, yucca man is like desert Bigfoot. I don't know, it's so dumb. Anyway, um. Let's see here.
03:05:04 Sorry, love and a vision. All right, was there Jewish influence in the making of the US Constitution? AI says yes. Constitutional principles often reference biblical and Talmudic sources. These protections create a government where Jews could participate fully and safely, unlike Europe's regimes of expulsion and persecution.
03:05:31 Well, I mean, look, I don't know, I mean, you could say obviously there was Jewish influence because the Christian Christianity that informed the value system of most of the, you know, even those founding fathers that would call themselves deists or whatever, they were almost all exclusively from Christian households, you know what I mean, so I mean I'm sure, yeah, obviously the philosophy was influenced by, by, by Jews, and look, you go to the, what is it, the Capitol building, we got the big mural painted on the ceiling, it's, it's like the, I mean, a lot of it's like scenes out of the Bible, and shit, and they got like the 10 commandments there, and so I mean, yeah, yeah, and like the First Amendment, you know, the freedom of religion stuff, obviously allowed for a lot of, a lot of Jewish fuckery.
03:06:46 Love and a vision also says, do you think the gateway destruction was intentional sabotage? I don't know. I, it was hard to tell, because I mean, I was young, I was really young, I mean, because I was a gifted kid, yeah. My friends are working at McDonald's, and I was doing tech support, you know. So, I was pretty young when I was working there, and so I didn't really have a good grasp on things.
03:07:13 I just knew that the people that would come in there, I mean, they just..
03:07:18 I knew what they were doing, like in terms of, they were trying to squeeze every penny out of the place in ways that were going to destroy the company, and I could see that as a kid, I was like, this is going to ruin it, because no one, no one gets a gateway because it's like the best computer, they're not, and in fact, there's nothing that really differentiates them from, I mean, you gotta remember at the time everyone was getting a computer, and this was there was like a billion different computer companies,
03:07:50 and they all had pretty much the same stuff, you know, like everyone was getting, I mean, what, either, well, I mean, unless you got like an Apple, right, like that was the two choices were Mac or PC, but if you're going to get a PC, I mean, back then there was, there was Compaq, right, there was Compaq, there was e machines, there was Packard Bell, there was HP, there was Dell, there was, you know, Gateway.
03:08:23 There was, like, 100 million different mom and pops, which I worked for one of those for a while. I worked at a mom and pop operate for a literate, like, that guy was a Jew. I worked for a fucking, like, my first education in Jews was working for a fucking crazy fucking Jew, who would try to, who would sell computers to people by showing them that you could watch porn on him, and I'm not even kidding.
03:08:51 Anyway, I should do a stream on that fucking guy, man. That guy was so fucking Jewy. He was so Jewish, like he was so Jewish, and I didn't get it. I didn't realize that that was like an ethnic, like that was ethnically driven. I just thought he was like just a total fucking scumbag that happened to be Jewish, because he was like the only Jew I knew. I didn't know, I didn't know that, like, oh, this fits right in with the whole, you know, Jew thing.
03:09:17 In retrospect, I'm just like, fuck, man, he was a super Jew, but yeah, like, so the competition was like crazy, and if you looked at all the survey data about why people picked Gateway, it was because of the free - I mean, again, not free, it's rolled into the cost of the computer, but the quote unquote free customer service, that's why they did it, and you know, you take that away, and you're just some other fucking, you're just some one of the hundreds of other computer companies, your boxes just have cow dots on them, and who fucking cares, right, so.
03:10:00 I don't know, was it intentional? I don't know if it was. I, I'd have to go and look now in retrospect and see what, what went down. Maybe that would be an interesting thing to do, because I never, I never looked it up.
03:10:15 I just, I just noticed that all the Gateway stores rapidly closed, and all these gateway products that they were trying to make a shill were went nowhere, and and then, like, next thing you know, they're not even really a company anymore, so yeah, I don't, I don't, I don't, I'd have to go look up and see exactly what happened, like, who these.. I never even looked to see, like, well, who.. who would have..
03:10:47 who hired these efficiency experts? Like, what firm was it, and all that? Maybe I don't know how much that information would be available, but yeah, I mean, I don't think it was intentional. I think it was just like hubris and greed, I all right, let's take a look here over back on Rumble, and then we got, oh, we got another big dono from Cassandra says
Mayer Rothschild
03:11:23 Money is power, money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend itself.
Devon Stack
03:11:29 Look, how Jewy this fag is. Cassandra says, says Devon, it's me, Penelope Maynard. Oh yeah, okay. Well, you're gonna get two hives, then you do have a Penelope Hive. I forgot that that's what you changed it to, Penelope. My other account was hacked, hence the new name.
03:12:05 Don't worry about the cranky bees. Yeah, no. Okay. Well, I'll give you.. I'll give you a new one. I'll give you a new one. I still haven't gone out to that, that yard. I've kind of. that I've got a yard that's slightly neglected, partially. partially because I've just, I've had so much going on here, and I know they're gonna be bitches. I know it's gonna suck. It's been so hot.
03:12:28 It just, it sucks having to put on like that space suit of a, of a suit to deal with that yard, but that's what I have to do. It's the. there's this one time I got that yard so fucking pissed off that in a fit of rage what I did was I just got a bunch of these hives and I threw them on the on this trailer that I had, while they're all like they're all attacking me, and I just drove into the desert, like a few miles into the desert, and then, and then open them up, let them all start attacking me, so they were all out of the hive, and then I drove like another like few miles away, like, ditching all the, the meaning that all the guard bees were still in the air, like, you know, I left them all behind, orphaned them, basically.
03:13:29 They all, you know, eventually would probably die, but, like, I guess it doesn't make sense, unless you can, I guess you had to be there. It's one of one of those had to be their stories. Never mind. Anyway, that yard's super angry, super angry. But thank you very much, Penelope.
03:13:56 I heard you're going to be at the at Rebecca's thing in. I forget what day that is, so that should be fun, all right. Well, I think that's everything, guys. Think that's everything, guys. Well, I'll tell you what, I'm gonna put some polish on the the Robotron game. I don't know if anyone's, yeah, what I think it's..
03:14:30 I'll tell you what. If you're into, if you play main games at all, if like, if you're into like the old emulation stuff, and you like those kinds of games, you'll like this. If you don't, you probably won't, and so I don't know, but maybe I'll, if I don't set up like a Steam page, I'll probably set up a, there's like some other, it's like not Steam, it's more like indie gamer.
03:15:00 Are focused, and I don't think they, they do as much censoring or reviewing of the content being posted, so maybe that'd be good, or maybe I'll just post it somewhere, because there's gonna be some people I think that are like, oh, I'm not gonna install this, this is like a virus, so maybe maybe I'll even give out the source code, I don't know, because it's not like I have anything to hide, and it's not the most complicated.
03:15:26 It's not like I have trade secrets in the source code. These are not complicated games, but you know, it might be a fun way to support the show, have like an officially official Black Pill branded game. It could be fun, and if you've got like an old, like, if you have like an old arcade cabinet, like a main machine or something like that, it could be fun to play it on there.
03:15:49 Although I did try playing it, I tried playing it on a Raspberry Pi, and it was a little much, it was a little resource heavy for the Raspberry Pi, so I might have to optimize a little bit for the shittier hardware, but it plays great on my computer and other, you know, my laptop and stuff.
03:16:07 Anyway, there's that. And then, yes, I know why you're making games. You haven't finished your book, because I need to take a break from the book. I'm working on the book too, but I need to take little, little fucking breaks from it, or I go crazy. And making that game took like a day and a half, is all, so it's not like it wasn't a big time investment, but anyway.
03:16:29 Happy Fourth of July, everybody. Happy two fitty, happy two fitty. Sorry, sorry, it's come to this, but you know, at least, at least I don't know, I'm trying to think of, like, a nice silver lining. At least they have been fire. Well, I guess a lot of you, they probably banned fireworks where a lot of you guys live.
03:16:58 Lisa, haven't been fireworks everywhere, at least, that at least they haven't banned fireworks on Indian reservations, so you can always go there to get them anyway. You guys all have a good rest of your weekend. Enjoy it with your family. Don't, don't be too black pill, you know.
03:17:13 And don't indulge in a little patriot slop. It's, you know, a little little patriotism slop isn't too bad, you know. Enjoy it, enjoy it while you can. In the meantime, for Black Pilled, I am, of course, Devon Stack.
Clip
03:17:42 Stop it. Stop.