Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is Red Pilled America. You're listening to Red Pilled
America's Fambooby Part two, and we're going to talk a
little bit about this communist mayor in NYC and some
other issues that are happening about free speech that I
(00:24):
think are interesting. But let's start first with Elon and Trump.
They're at it again. They're like, and it's Elon. You know,
the thing that has been so funny about their feud,
whatever you want to call it, was that it's typically
been Trump that's been the petty one in these kinds
of arguments. In my opinion, he doesn't really start them.
(00:46):
He's kind of a counterpuncher, but then he goes kind
of low pretty quickly. But in the case of Elon
and Trump, it's Elon that's kind of taking the He's
kind of taking the low road often. He did that
with the whole like saying that Trump was going to
be on the the Epstein list, and that turned out
to be a kind of a nothing burger. You know,
(01:09):
obviously they haven't released the files yet, so I guess
that one can still hover out there for Ian Carroll
to kind of grab onto. But Elon is now, you know,
kind of he's coming after this big, beautiful bill. And
what I'm seeing with Elon is one of two things
is happening. He's either a political novice that's in a
(01:31):
certain stage of his political transition. Yes, that I've seen
happen with many people. Or there's something else, far more
narcissistic happening in regards to something that's in that bill
that hurts his financial bottom line. Or it can be both,
or it could be both. But I've seen this so
(01:52):
often with guys like him, or like, oh, we need
a new party, we need a new party, And we've
done episodes on like the GOP being dead and there's
going to be a rise of the new party. But
how a new party rises is that people come within
that party and take it over. That's how new parties
are started in our American system, and that has already
(02:16):
been started within the Republican Party. You're starting to see
that happen with the Maga movement. These Trump followers have
come into the Republican Party. They have taken on this
America first position. They want to be very strict on immigration,
they want to focus their attention on America, and so
(02:41):
in a way, there is a new party that's rising
right now. The old Republican Party seems to be kind
of faltering, although they might have gotten a little bit
of life with this stuff that's happened in the Middle
East recently, but in general, that part of the party
has been kind of fading and this new thing is happening.
If you want, you could say that there's a new party,
(03:03):
political party. It's the Maga Party, but they've taken over
the Republican Party. That is how parties are taken over. Elon,
it's like he doesn't understand history. It's like he didn't
know what happened with Ross Perrot in the nineties, he
didn't see what happened with Pat Buchanan trying to start
another party, or he didn't see what happened with Ron
(03:24):
Paul in two thousand and eight. And he's just thinking, now, Okay,
we're going to create this party for the eighty percent
of the people that don't align with these other parties.
That's just not the way politics is. And it's kind
of making me think that he's either not as smart
as I thought he was, or he is playing a
different game and using this argument because Trump says that
(03:49):
it has to do with these ev mandates. Apparently there's
also some kind of AI language in this bill that
he might be hurt by as well. But it feels
much more personal to me than, oh, we need to,
you know, stop this debt crisis that's been happening now
for twenty years. We've been all been talking about it.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
I agree he's acting like it's a personal attack on him.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Although I have to say, and I know this is
probably a little bit unpopular, but you know, I really
like Trump's tactic of being a very strong counter puncher,
and I don't mind that he goes for the juggular.
If someone comes at me, I'm just in here, minding
my own business. Let it be known. I'm gonna come
back at you, and I'm gonna come back so hard
(04:36):
you will not be getting up. I'm good with that.
That works for me with Trump and I right now,
I miss it.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
That's how you roll, That's how I roll.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
And I like when Trump rolls that way. And I
know that, you know, people find that to be petty
and small and unpopular, but I don't care. And I
miss that from Trump, and I would like him to
shut it down.
Speaker 1 (04:53):
Well, No, he has said some stuff. He basically said
that he's gonna sick doze on Elon, which is kind
of funny. Okay, And there's also been some discussions about
maybe needing to deport Elon Musk.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
But he's an American city.
Speaker 1 (05:07):
Elon is one of these guys where American citizen. Now, yeah,
he's an American citizen, but he's a guy that, you know,
if you really think about him, I just don't think
he thinks about America in the same way that we
think of America. He's, you know, from South Africa, leaves
his home country of South Africa, goes to Canada, goes
to Philadelphia, goes to San Francisco, goes to Austin. Now
(05:30):
he wants to go to Mars. Okay, now he's like, okay,
screw Planet Earth, now I want to go to Mars.
He's constantly running from one place to the next. I
used to think that he had America's best entrance interests
at heart. It took me the h one B Visa
episode or excuse me a moment to think differently of him.
(05:54):
If you guys haven't seen or listened to our Red
Pilled America's what's an American series? Where at Part seven are.
Our final episode is coming up soon. It's going to
be Part eight. We're gonna be releasing it very soon.
Check it out. Please spread the word on that series.
It's the perfect time for it. You have Trump now
(06:14):
talking about this birthright citizenship. You have oh you hear
me say citizenship. You have birthright citizenship that we're being
discussed right now. You have this immigration issue that's coming
to the fore. This series explains the issues that we
are having with America and with people having an allegiance
(06:36):
outside of America and not focused on America.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
The best way for you, guys to share it and
to help the show is to share it on social media.
If you're on Instagram, share it to your stories, share
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retweet it. We really need for you guys to help
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(07:02):
It is really the best way to help the show
reach more people.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
And we have been having listeners do that on Twitter.
I really guys, I really appreciate you guys doing that.
There's that's been happening much more than normal.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
Yeah, and you know what, this is my favorite series
that we have ever done. Yes, I love this series.
I have to tell you, I have learned so much myself,
and that's the beauty of doing this show. And that's
what I love about doing the show and being a
part of it. I feel like I have grown and
evolved and I've learned so much, and things take us
in a direction that we had no idea we were
(07:35):
going to go in, and it's it's exciting.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
I agree with you, this is our I have really
learned more in this episode than I have learned in
any other episode in any series that we've done. But
getting back to this topic with Elon Musk and Trump,
So Elon, if you're listening to this show, and we
know you are, we know you have listened to this show.
How you change a party is you go within the
(08:00):
party and you change it from within, and things happen incrementally,
they don't happen drastically. We are seeing that now in
New York. We're seeing that how the Democrat Party instead
of moderating in this position, instead of seeing what has
won Trump the presidency, which is kind of being an
(08:20):
immigration hawk, being a law and order president, trying to
get all of the kind of crazed wokeness out of
our politics. They've decided to go in a completely different direction.
And now you have this candidate, this mayor candidate in
NYC that ended up beating Cuomo in the primaries. His
(08:44):
name is Zaharan mom Donnie. He's just an outright, straight
up socialist, admitted socialist. He's from Uganda, and I believe
he's been He moved to New York City at the
age of seven, but I don't think he's been a
US citizen for that long. Well, now he's winning the
(09:04):
primaries in NYC, and he has a good chance of
winning the whole thing. Here he is talking about some
of his beliefs and he's literally using communist language.
Speaker 3 (09:18):
What the purpose is about this entire project. It's not
simply to raise class consciousness, but to win socialism, and
obviously raising class consciousness is a critical part of that.
But making sure that we have candidates that both understand
that and are willing to put that forward at every
which moment that they have, at every which opportunity that
they're given. We have to continue to elect more socialists,
(09:40):
and we have to ensure that we are unapologetic about
our socialism. There are also other issues that we firmly
believe in, whether it's BDS right or whether it's the
end goal of seizing the means of production.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
So if you've listened to What's an American, you understand
why this is happening right now. You understand that the
United States changes him policies and have allowed people to
come into the United States with these completely foreign ideas
and they don't assimilate. They don't have allegiance with America.
(10:16):
They have an allegiance with an ideology that is completely
incompatible with the US Constitution. Okay, socialism and communism is
a complete, a complete diametric opposite parts of the room
as the US Constitution. But our kids have not been
(10:37):
taught civics, not even patriots really understand why the United
States has gotten into this position so often. We're so
like okay with dual citizenship, We're so okay with American
citizens having an allegiance with a foreign land because we
have been indoctrinated and propagandized to believe that that is
(11:02):
somehow how a positive, and it's not a positive. We
need people here in the United States that have allegiance
with the United States, and the United States is paramount
to them because without that, it starts to break down
the social fabric of the United States. So here's an
example of this guy now coming in from Uganda. He
(11:26):
wants to make public grocery stores in New York. He
wants the government to take them over so that they
can control the prices of groceries in that state. And
this kind of stuff is soaring. These kinds of ideas
are soaring with people in New York because the guy
won the primary.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
Now he's not American born.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
No, he's born in Uganda.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
See, that should be illegal. In my opinion, if you're
not American born, you should not be eligible to run
for any type of public office. In my opinion, you
should have to be American born.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
I agree with that in principle. It's a controversial take
because I think some people will hear that and think
that there's some kind of xenophobia going on, and you
almost hate them just purely because of their foreign interest.
Speaker 2 (12:15):
But no, it's just it's common sense. My mother is
foreign born. She's a naturalized US citizen, you know, But
if she wasn't born here, she should not be eligible
to run for public office in the United States. I
don't don't think it's that controversial. I think it makes
perfect sense. You could have more of an allegiance to
your birth nation, even if you had to leave it,
(12:37):
your heart could still belong to that foreign nation. And
I don't think that that's that hard of a take.
You know, by the way, just so we're clear, my
mom's heart belongs to America. She is a patriot. But
still I feel that way. I think that makes me.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
I think it's a safeguard. I think that if we
had that in place, it would be a safeguard that
you'd have. But there are plenty of you know, far
left liberals out there. Their families have been here for many,
many generations, so it doesn't wipe that out, but it
does create a safeguard at the bare minimum, just more
of a guard rail that we need guard rails because
(13:16):
these ideas start to come in, and this is where
democracy starts to falter is you allow these ideas to
come in and now you have a bunch of people
that think like this, and you have them all kind
of congregate in a certain area, and next thing, you know,
that can start taking over the government, and now they
have a voice in the government. And this is one
(13:38):
of the things that the founders didn't want. They wanted
one people when immigrants came in, They didn't want them
enclaving and kind of not assimilating. They wanted to spread
them out throughout the nation so that they would assimilate.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
Yeah, I mean, this guy basically in his own words,
he calls himself an Islamic Marxist. I mean, you can't
get any more on American than that.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
And there's been laws throughout the United States that kind
of has made at times communism and being involved in
the Communist Party available offense and pushing communism.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
I think I should be available offense again. I'm in
favor of that guillotine.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
It is not compatible with the United States founding. And
we prospered for two hundred plus years based on a
very strict following of the US Constitution, and that changed
around the mid sixties, nineteen sixties, and we've been having
problems ever since. So, you know, I don't think what
(14:39):
you're saying is logically out of bounds. I think that
we do need some kind of guardrails up to kind
of protect us from these ideas coming in because our
system is such that we have free speech here and
it allows people to say whatever they feel, and so
we have to make sure that the people that are
coming in here buy into our constitution before they are
(15:03):
allowed to kind of be a part of our public discourse. Yes,
it's that simple.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
It's not that, you know, I don't think that's such
a reach.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
This topic kind of blends in to the next topic
that I want to talk about, which is whether free
speech absolutism is viable. And we're going to get into
that with this issue that has come of this artist
coming here to the United States and he got his
visa revoked for some things that he's been saying abroad.
We'll get into that right after the break. You're listening
(15:36):
to Red Pilled America's fam Boogie. I want to talk
about this artist named Bob Villain, that is I guess
he's kind of a rock artist. He has like dreads
and he's this kind of like mixed heritage. He looks
like he's part black, part white perhaps, and he was
recently performing at this concert in England called the Glastonbury Festival,
(16:01):
Huge Festival, Big Festival, and there's some controversy now because
he had a tour plan to come into the United
States and the US State Department revoked his visa and
now is not allowing him to come into the United States.
And this statement that they put out was this is
it in part. The State Department has revoked the US
(16:24):
visas for the members of the Bob Villain Band in
light of their hateful tirade at Glassbury, said Deputy Secretary
of State Christopher Landau. The quote goes on, Villain led
the crowd in death chants. Foreigners who glorify violence and
hatred are not welcome visitors in our country. I want
(16:47):
to play for you, guys really quickly. A clip of
this guy's band performance at this glaston Berry Festival. Free fruit,
Free fruit. Have you heard this spot though? Beef to
the IVF, the.
Speaker 3 (17:03):
Theft to the id theft to the id F.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Deaf, theF to the iv F deaf, theF to the
iv F.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
Hell yeah, from the river Tennessee. Palestine must be, will
be in shah Lah, It will be. So he's at
this concert and you have a lot of Palestinian supporters
waving Palestinian flags. This is at once again at this
Glastonbury festival, and here he is with another one of
his uh catchy tracks. It's about immigrants coming into the
(17:39):
UK and people complaining about their country as Brits, their
country being taken over by immigrants. And this is his
response to those Brits that are complaining, what count you
cut your pa, You cant death. If you want to cut,
(18:03):
you pass.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Let you want to cut your class.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
So when you'll cut, you back back, shut the fuck off.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
So so what he's saying is heard, you want your
country back. In case he didn't catch that, Yes, now
let me ask you something.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
Is his name.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
Really Bob Villain or is that a play on Bob Dylan.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
I'm not sure. It might be the name of the baron,
might be the name of the band. But so now
he's having his visa revoked, as we said earlier, And
the question is you have a lot of like libertarians
kind of saying, oh, this is clearly a cancel culture.
You have this man coming in. We have free speech
laws here. This is clearly within the realm of free speech.
(18:53):
I don't know about the death death to the IDF
kind of you know, you're starting to potentially provoke violence.
But let's let's say that. It all kind of fits
within the free speech realms. It's all legal speech here
in the United States. The question is this, do we
want foreign entities coming into the United States and riling
(19:14):
up kind of these anti colonial sentiments. Now, this guy
is clearly an anti colonial kind of a guy. He
uses that kind of a language. He's talking about, you know,
the Brits wanting their country back, and he's saying, you know,
fuck that, you know, haha, you can't have your country back,
kind of laughing in their face. We're taking it over here.
(19:35):
This guy is against colonialism, he's against Western civilization. It's
fine for him to say or have any whatever beliefs
that he he has, But then to come into the
United States and kind of rile up our crowd. Should
we allow that? Is that a damaging to free speech
(19:56):
here in the United States? If we do not allow
this man to come here and tour at these kinds
of big, big concert festival events. What is your feeling
on this.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Well, my feeling is that he would be a guest
here in our country. Okay, he's a guest, and we
don't need to open our door to him if we
don't like what he is going to bring into our house.
I think it's very very simple, and the answer for
me is no, I don't want him coming into my house.
The answer is no. He is inciting violent for sure.
(20:28):
Look at what happened has happened the UK. It's completely
been taken over. Is that what we want people coming
here and advocating for. I mean, I think we have
enough of that with with stupid Americans that are advocating
for that, and for illegals. We don't want somebody like
this in our country.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
I have to agree. This is something that I had
to think long and hard about because I am a
defender of free speech. When the whole cancel culture thing
was happening here in the United States, we were possibly
the biggest proponents of free speech at that time. But
this was for Americans getting deplatformed here in the United.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
States and getting debank and getting debanked.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
And whatever jobs, yes, and not being allowed to speak
on college campuses when other ideologies were allowed to speak
on other college campuses, and that kind of a thing.
But to have a foreigner come into this country and
basically rile up a crowd and call for violence and
just have these very political views, I think that we
(21:34):
cannot allow entities to use our system against us. It's
one thing if we have American artists touring throughout the
United States that have controversial views, they have a First
Amendment right, and libertarians will say, well, this guy has
a First Amendment right as well too, But he's not
here in the United States. Here, he's not here, and
(21:55):
we can stop him from coming in. This is our home.
We can invite who we want in our home. And
we don't like what this guy is doing in the UK.
He's advocating for immigrants to take over their country. We
don't need more of that here. We've already already have
enough issue here in Los Angeles.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
Advocating to kill people as well.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
Yes, let's be very clear about yest. Yeah, he clearly
says death to the IDEF.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
So having this guy come here in the United States,
I just don't think that we can allow foreign entities
to come here and use our system against us.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
Here.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
Perfect case is this Mahmud Khalil guy that we spoke
about a couple months ago. He was one of the
main guys that was the organizers of the protests on
Columbia campuses. And I'm all for protest, legal protest. This
guy was a spokesman for people that were illegally taking
(22:51):
over college buildings. And you can have beliefs where you
are supportive of the people of Gaza and the civilians
that are getting hurt in the conflict there. You can
have positions where you are supportive of Israel. But to
go into college campuses and take over buildings by force,
(23:11):
and to illegally occupy those college campuses and those buildings,
it is not free speech, and it's not protest, and
it's not protected protests here in the United States. Now.
To allow people to come into the United States with
green cards and organize those protests is a major problem.
(23:31):
This Mahmud Khalil guy was recently released from a detention center.
We were trying to deport him. What is the first
thing that he does. He goes to a protest, and
he doesn't have an allegiance to the United States, And
neither does this Bob Villain ban. They don't have an
allegiance to the United States. They aren't American citizens. The
(23:51):
whole reason why we have protests and why we have
free speech in America is to allow the American people
to voice their concerns about the government and about the
direction of the government, and so that we can figure
out solutions to problems. But if we have foreign entities
coming here into the United States riling up the public,
(24:12):
we don't have a true understanding of the of the
body politic here in the United States. We don't understand
what their true feelings are, and that's an issue. And
so in this case, I'm like, no, we don't need
we don't need troublemakers coming in here into the United
States and causing problems.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
We have enough problems of our own. We don't need
to bring in any new problems. We've got plenty to
deal with here already.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
We need you, guys to spread the word on What's
an American. We're going to have our Part eight coming
out soon. It's going to be the finale. I think
it's one of the most important series that we've ever done.
We wanted to get it done now so we could
play it in full at the two hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of the United States. So please spread the word
(25:01):
on that. In social media. All you have to do
is just share a link to the episode. You can
find it on any podcast platform. What's an American. We
need to get the word out there. Please share, like
and push the word out there on that series. That's
(25:21):
it for this installation of Fambogie, Red Pilled America's Fambogie.
Thank you guys so much for your support. If you
guys want to join the Fanbam, go to Redpilled America
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you guys, share the show, become fanbam members. Thank you
for your patience over the last couple of weeks, and
we promise you guys, the truth and nothing but the truth,
(25:42):
and we will continue to deliver that moving forward. Goodbye everybody,
and enjoy the rest of your week and happy fourth
of July.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
Happy fourth of July, everybody,