Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is Red Pilled America. It's Red Pilled America's seven
year anniversary, and for a limited time, we're offering fifty
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(00:25):
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Then at checkout, enter discount code RPA seven. That's RPA
and the number seven support what you lover. It goes away. Hey,
(00:46):
it's Patrick Currelci.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
I'm Adrianna Portez and welcome to Red Pilled America's fambod.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
How's the Red Filled America Fanbam doing. I had a
great weekend. Our Dodgers won the World Series, and then
this week all hell breaks loose across America. We got
a commie being elected in New York City. You have
a Attorney general in Virginia who had a huge scandal
(01:33):
saying that he wanted to basically kill the supporters of
Maga's Kids. I mean, there's all this nutty thing's going
on out there. You have California voting in some redistricting thing.
We're going to get to all that, all this madness
and try to give you, guys, our take on all
the craziness that happened across America this week.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
This is an emergency episode of fam Boogie coming to
you Live today. We decided to put a pin in
our Scott Adams episode and do this episode for you
because we've been getting so many messages, so many dm
so many emails, people wanting our take on what's happened
(02:15):
with this mini blue wave exactly.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
So be sure to check out Redpilled America dot com
if you want to become a fanband member. We're having
a seven anniversary special for a limited time, We're giving
a half price on a year an annual subscription for
the entry level tier. So go over to Red Pilled
America dot com, click join in the top menu and
(02:39):
take advantage of this opportunity. Also, be sure to check
out to Adriana Jade over on Instagram. It's her fashion
blog and all things fifty plus influencer kind of thing.
She's got a really good thing going over there. So
check that out, and once again keep an eye out
for our Scott Adams episode. We're going to be releasing
that soon. Part three. Let's get right into it with
(03:01):
this mini blue wave that just happened with Mom Donnie
out in New York City. My first time I went
to New York was in nineteen ninety three. I think
it was nineteen ninety four, and I remember that timeframe.
I'm not sure how many of you guys were adults
at around that time, but going to New York City
was a scary proposition in the early nineties, a lot
(03:24):
of crime. I remember the first day I was there,
I saw somebody walking over by the Empire State Building.
It was a woman carrying a purse. Somebody ran right
crabtor purse and took off running. And I remember going
on the subway at that time and just feeling very afraid.
And I was a young twenty four year old man
shouldn't have felt afraid, and I felt afraid. Fast forward
(03:46):
to around the two thousand and three time frame, and
I hadn't gone back to New York. I think maybe
only maybe a handful of times, maybe two or three times.
In that timeframe. Things slowly started to get better. And
then I'd say the early two thousands, it was right
after nine to eleven things in New York had changed.
I felt safer when I went there. I could go
(04:07):
to Washington Square Park and not feel like I was
going to be attacked. And we were going to New York,
I want to say, was like over the course of
ten years, we've probably had been there like fifty to
seventy five times, just a ton of times. It felt
like it was like our second home, constantly there for
kind of work stuff. And fast forward to then we
(04:27):
take a ten year break. We weren't going to New
York for about ten years or so, and we went
back there a couple of years ago, and the city
had gone back to what I had first experienced in
the early nineties mid nineties. The first time I had
been there, the whole city smelt like marijuana. We went
to Times Square because we wanted to go to some
(04:47):
Broadway shows, and I felt completely unsafe. This was right
during the middle of the day. We'd get stared at
by some kind of like sketchy looking people. I got
my wife and child with me, and you know, I
don't have any weapons with me because I'm no longer
in California, and so I got my wife there and
I just felt unsafe and this city has taken just
(05:12):
a complete nosedive back to the mid nineties. I would say, enter,
you know, Mom, Dami comes round. Mamdani comes around, and
he's a Democrat socialist, a proud Democrat socialist, and he
enters this mayoral race against Cuomo and I think and
then there's another one of the candidates is from the
(05:33):
Guardian Angels, you know, one of those. I think his
name is Silva or something like that. Anyways, people kind
of didn't think Mom Donnie was gonna win this thing,
and you got had these kind of big billionaires come
forward and say, you know, this guy has to be beaten.
And he's a Ugandan citizen immigrant young man. I think
(05:53):
he was born he's thirty.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
One years old, okay, so very and he was born
in Uganda and then when he was five he immigrated
to South Africa, and then when he was seven they
came to the United States.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
And his parents are pretty kind of have been described
as Jihatti's anti American, but He's very well spoken and
very charismatic, and kind of the guy that will go
to like the clubs and be standing with the DJ
and feel comfortable there. Well, here he is ends up
(06:25):
winning this New York election and this New York mayor election.
And it wasn't even really close. Even if the Guardian
Angel guy would have dropped out of the race and
given all of his votes to Cuomo, he still would
have won. He won a majority of the votes. Of course,
Cuomo was possibly the worst candidate you could put up
(06:45):
against him after what he did during the COVID time frame.
He basically put sick COVID people into nursing homes, and
you know, thousands and thousands of people died in that fashion,
shut down the entire economy at some point. He just
left everybody kind of in a very bad position and
then wouldn't reopen things back up. So you have the
(07:07):
worst kind of formulation of candidates against this mom Donnie guy,
and sure enough he wins. Here is part of his
victory speech on election night.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
Thank you to those so often forgotten by the politics
of our city.
Speaker 4 (07:26):
Who made this movement their own.
Speaker 3 (07:29):
I speak of Yemeny bodega owners and Mexican ubuellas, Senegalese
taxi drivers, and who's back nurses, Trinidadian line coach and
Ethiopian aunties, Yes, aunties.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
So he goes through this entire list of people that
he's thinking, and of course he doesn't mention Americans. It's
all these of you know, refugee groups and these immigrant groups,
and that is how he sees New York. Now he
says that he is unapologetically a democrat socialist. How he
(08:15):
won was basically promising New Yorkers that he was going
to freeze the rents. Rent there is astronomically high, and
he's saying he's going to freeze you know, X amount
of people's rents. He also ran with this idea of
having these grocery stores that are free, I guess, giving
out free food and what have you. But kind of
(08:37):
your garden variety socialist ideas. And I think a lot
of people are freaking out because they're like, wait a minute,
this socialist has been elected into the media capital and
financial capital of the United States and by extension, the world,
and what does that mean for America. There is some
(08:58):
cause for concern, but there's also some context that I
think that needs to be put into I want to
play a couple of clips here, because these are some
people that there's some man on the streets videos people
have gone out there into the streets and asked people
who they voted for and why they voted for this person.
And I want to play you, guys a couple of
clips of that of those interactions and these are Mom
(09:20):
Donnie voters and they're explaining why they voted for Monni.
Speaker 5 (09:24):
Guys, can I ask you how you feel about Zorn winning?
I'm happy about it. Why are you happy about it?
Speaker 2 (09:32):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (09:32):
I just I don't. I don't really know.
Speaker 6 (09:35):
I just do really, Yeah, because I keep seeing all
the like pute tiktoks of him, like partying and clubbing,
and honestly, he's.
Speaker 7 (09:41):
Like one for the people, you know.
Speaker 5 (09:43):
That's why I support him. Yeah, Okay, thank you.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
I appreciate it.
Speaker 8 (09:46):
And there you have it, folks.
Speaker 7 (09:47):
Yeah, I mean I hope that he can get some
of the things down that he's saying. He's like, what, well,
he wants to do, Like he wants to help people
with their rent, he wants to help people with this
transportation costs.
Speaker 5 (09:57):
Who's gonna pay for that.
Speaker 7 (09:58):
I have no idea. I don't I don't know, I don't.
Speaker 8 (10:01):
Well, you got what we Look at this, this is
your booth, right all right?
Speaker 1 (10:06):
I know the person has a bunch of Mom Donnie
booth stuff that she's selling, both magnets and T shirts
and hats and that kind of thing.
Speaker 8 (10:14):
Look at this, you're out here selling Zoron merch and
you don't even know what he wants to do.
Speaker 7 (10:20):
I just said a couple of things that he wants
to do, but you.
Speaker 5 (10:23):
Have no idea how it will be implemented.
Speaker 7 (10:24):
I know he has ideas about.
Speaker 8 (10:26):
It's concepts of a plan, right with your favorite Zoron.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Policy, probably like making education more reliable and more equitable?
Speaker 4 (10:37):
How do we do that?
Speaker 8 (10:39):
I don't know. How do you feel about Zoron mom
Donnie winning?
Speaker 7 (10:42):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (10:42):
I feel fucking amazing about it.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
It's such a win.
Speaker 9 (10:44):
Why because we need people like him in office and
someone who's under the age of seventy nine.
Speaker 5 (10:50):
What's your favorite Zoron policy?
Speaker 7 (10:52):
I have no idea. I'm mom from New York.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
So that gives you the gist of his questioning. He
walked up to person after person after person, almost one
female and ask them, do you like this mom Donnie
a character? Did you vote for him? What do you
like about him? They all loved him pretty young, I
would say, I would say, in most cases you're talking
about women that are I would say anywhere from twenty
(11:19):
two to maybe thirty one, thirty two, something along those lines.
But then when he asked them, Okay, what policies do
you like? Almost to a t, they can't name a
single policy. So what that tells me is is this
they're into his charisma. They're into the character of this
mom Donni guy, not necessarily him being a socialist, not
(11:40):
him necessarily buying into socialism as an ideology. But ultimately
these people, a lot of them seem like they're college bound.
Some of them talked about this issue with college and
the cost of college and education. They've been learning about
socialism at these colleges, and it's been normalized for them
(12:02):
for decades. It's been normalized for them via Hollywood. It's
been normalized for them when they see these Shia Guavera
T shirts that they've we've been seeing now for decades.
It's been normalized by the Democrat Party for decades, and
in essence, In many ways, we kind of live already
in a quasi socialist government. I mean, when you look
(12:25):
at all these benefits that people are getting, whether it
be you know, health insurance getting covered partially, whether it
be you know, the scale of taxation, the way that
you have all these welfare programs that are out there,
these snap programs, free insurance for certain people. Then you
start going up the age bracket and you start having
other kind of benefits that could be easily categorized as
(12:49):
socialist benefits. We are already kind of in that environment.
So these people in New York, they're looking at their situation.
They're looking at the cost of living, They're looking at
the cost of food inflation, they're looking at their student debt,
they're looking at the cost of colleges, and they're saying,
you know what, why not go for this guy, Why
(13:12):
not vote for this democrat socialist and let's see where
this goes. Of course, they don't know anything about the
history of it. They're not comparing socialist governments across time
and in various other countries and how it's almost always failed.
They're not looking at any of that. They're looking at
their pocketbook. They're looking at their own situation and at
(13:36):
the end of the day, they're like, well, how much
worse can it be? And so they're looking at this
mom Donnie guy who's promising them the world. He's promising
them free transportation, he's promising them to freeze their rent,
which there I think I heard. The last I heard
was something along the lines of forty eight hundred dollars
was the average rent cost there, which is crazy. In
(14:00):
New York. They're hearing that, they're hearing about these free
grocery stores, and they're like, Okay, let's give this guy
a try.
Speaker 9 (14:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:06):
I mean, I have a friend whose kid went to
NYU last semester, or not last semester last year, and
now they're looking for an apartment and they found an
apartment and it's ten thousand dollars a month, and it's tiny.
Who can afford that.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
Of course? And so if you have a man that
comes along, who's hip, who's going to the clubs and
hanging out with the DJ, who changes his accent wherever
he goes to kind of fit in with the crowd,
he's amongst immigrants in New York, which is saturated with immigrants.
(14:40):
I mean, it's been that way now for decades. They've
been more and more immigrants have been coming into New
York City. That's the case for any of these kind
of major urban areas. You're of course going to have
people that are going to be drawn to that charisma.
And so what are the Republicans doing to this, to
(15:00):
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RPA seven. We're talking about this little mini blue wave
that swept through parts of America. Now, I've seen kind
of two kind of approaches to thinking about this whole
(16:45):
mini blue wave. One is that you got New York.
You know, there's not going to be a Republican that's
going to get voted into the mayoral position in New
York anytime soon. You had California, which the Prop fifty past,
which allowed them to allow, as the governor knew some
to redistrict certain areas, which basically erases Republican representation in
(17:08):
some of those in some of those districts.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
And it passed overwhelmingly.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
Yes, it did. The funny thing is, though, is when
you ask people if they wanted a nonpartisan redistricting of
these areas, they agreed with that, But what they're getting
is the opposite of that. You know, in Virginia is
not necessarily a deep red spot. I think it's kind
of purplish e but leans more blue. And you had
(17:35):
a Democrat governor win there. And there were some other
elections I believe in Georgia and what have you that
were also kind of somewhat in some red areas. So
you know, it is a little bit concerning and kind
of gives you a little bit of a litmus test
of what's going on right now. There was some kind
of a little bit some bright spots in that only
a progressive, a liberal progressive, ended up winning and defeating
(17:58):
a communist out in Minneapolis. Jacob Fray won for the
mayor in Minneapolis. That was the guy that you saw
crying at George Floyd's casket. He was that mayor. He
ended up beating a Sudanese. I believe it is citizen
Omar fetah. So there was at least some of you know,
(18:19):
a couple brights.
Speaker 4 (18:20):
That's the bright spot.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
That's the bright spot out there.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
Gosh, I thought we were not doing dooman class.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
I know, right, But you know, the fascinating thing about
this whole thing that I saw was is that eighty
four percent of gen Z women from eighteen to twenty
nine voted for this Zoran Mom, Donnie guy. Eighty four
percent of gen Z women. And the fascinating thing about
(18:45):
it is is, at the same time, you have women
and these are videos that I've been seeing now for
the last couple of years, where you have these women
who just randomly get punched in the face by a
New York homeless person. I want to play clip.
Speaker 7 (18:59):
For that for you, Hey, Brys, I was literally just
walking them came up and reached me in the face.
Speaker 8 (19:05):
Oh my god, it hurts O back. I out of nowhere.
Speaker 4 (19:08):
This man just came up and hit me in the face.
Speaker 5 (19:12):
I literally just got punched by it. Some man.
Speaker 8 (19:15):
He goes sorry and then punches me.
Speaker 6 (19:18):
Oh my actual god, I literally just got punched in
the face by a homeless man.
Speaker 4 (19:23):
I just got punched in.
Speaker 7 (19:24):
The face on the subway.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
So I mean it's like and they all voted for
Mandannie by the way.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Probably yeah. But then you know, here you have mom
Donnie speaking about violence and he calls it an artificial construct.
Speaker 6 (19:39):
Oftentimes we've even found as legislators when we go into
these courts, the term violent crime is even used when
people are stealing packages. Violent crime is even used when
people are accused of burglary and there happens to be
a housing unit in that same dwelling. So violence is
an artificial construction, right, I have to be very clear
what is happening here. But he's just a attorneys that
(20:02):
is violence.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
So he wants to empty out the prisons of course.
I mean New York is a shithole. It's a shithole,
and they have no idea what's coming. No, this guy
wasn't even alive in the early nineties when this place
went to shit.
Speaker 2 (20:21):
He doesn't even know, He has.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
No idea what's he He's unleashing there and he's going
to be sanitized from it. He's going to be completely
surrounded by a circle, a hermetically sealed circle bubble that
he's not going to be affected by it.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
Can it be like escape from New York all over.
Speaker 1 (20:36):
It's going to be escape from New York all over again.
Speaker 2 (20:39):
Yeah, I'll tell you guys what. We are currently in
the process of applying to colleges for our daughter, and
after she went to New York with us, she said
she does not want to apply to any schools in
New York City.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
Yeah, and we were strongly considering NYU and we went
there and we're like, how do you allow your daughter
to come into this environment? At some point, they're going
to have to, you know, jump on a subway because
you can't take taxis everywhere and ubers everywhere. Sometimes they're
hard to get on a taxi or an uber at
(21:13):
any given time, so and you need to get somewhere. Yeah, exactly.
So you know, I don't know how anyone could send
their daughter there.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
I'm listen, I agree with that. But luckily we didn't
have to make that decision because our kids got a
great head on her shoulders, and she made that decision
for herself.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Yeah, she immediately was like ugh, you know. And the
thing I've also found that was fascinating about this is
that this Mondani Guif appears to be kind of a
trojan horse. You have now, you know a lot of
these Muslim women and Muslim leaders coming forward and feeling
empowered by this election, and you have them speaking out
(21:54):
boldly now explaining their plan on how they're going to
create a Muslim president. And here is one example of
of some Muslim leaders talking about this.
Speaker 5 (22:06):
Let's work towards a Muslim mayor. Next election that comes in,
nominate people for the school board of education. Next election
that comes here, nominate people for the local township. Became
the demographic exchange. People converted. There's a big, huge conversion
going on in this gun. Where are the converts? They
just convert and they're gone in the wilderness. The other
(22:28):
thing children Muslims have the highest population average. They did
is a Pew Foundation did a research study Pew Foundation,
and they said that Muslim household average is three point
four child perfume. The white American has one child per fam.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
So he's basically making the argument that, you know, Muslims
have more kids than American born, you know, legacy Americans.
And so let's just do this slowly. We don't need
to necessarily take over this country via force or through war.
We're going to take it over via demic graphics.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
It's a numbers game.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
It's a numbers game, and.
Speaker 2 (23:06):
They're beating the Americans.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
So how did this happen? Like, how did these this
kind of environment get set up? I mean, obviously one
of the premises of this show is the culture, and
we have allowed these anti American forces to infiltrate American
institutions for decades. They came in to the education system,
(23:32):
they started bringing these ideas in through the education system.
They went into Hollywood, they took over the unions, they
took over the Screen Actors Guild, they took over the
screen the writers Guild. They start producing these stories that
are anti American, these pro immigrant stories that all cultures
(23:54):
are the same, all cultures are equal, that in fact,
actually foreign cultures are better than America. America is an
empire building. They are destroy everything that they touch. They
paint the Muslim community as victims. After September eleventh, Adriana,
(24:16):
me and you were together on September eleventh when the
towers got hit. Could you imagine that about two decades later,
twenty four years later, that the city would have a
Muslim mayor after what you have.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Told me that on nine to eleven, I would have said,
you are a liar. That will never ever happen in
New York City. It will never happen.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
It's shocking that it has, shocking that it has moved
to that. So people are desperate, That's what it's coming
down to. So you allow the country to be flooded
by countries that have a different view of the world,
that have a completely different culture, that don't want to assimilate,
that will never assimilate into the American experience, that will
(25:00):
not pledge allegiance to the United States flag and have
that be their sole allegiance. You allow the United States
to be flooded. You then hit them with this propaganda,
whether it be through media, through the news, through storytelling,
through films, through books, through TV shows, And you create
(25:21):
this environment where you walk through New York and you're
asking all of these mostly white women, the young white women,
how they feel about Zandani or Mom, Donnie, I keep
getting his name wrong, yes, Mom Donnie, and they're like, Oh,
he's so cute, and oh he's at the DJ booth
and he's so cool, And it just creates this incredible
(25:45):
environment and at the end of the day, the same
policies that made New York a shithole, ends up being
able to take over and now create more of those
policies and put those policies on steroids. I'll never forget
in two thousand and eight, when we had the financial
crist and you had the Bush administration that was in office,
(26:08):
and the entire Wall Street starts to implode, and you
have Obama kind of enter the scene saying that he's
going to fix this thing, and he it's the Republicans
that screwed everything up. It's completely crashing because of the Republicans.
Then in the aftermath of it all, you start to
do a little bit of research and you learn, wait
(26:29):
a minute, actually it was the Democrats that passed certain
legislation that allowed this kind of situation to happen. It
was actually Obama and his cohorts that were going to
the banks and pressuring the banks to give these poor
quality loans or give these loans to people that had
poor credit and basically infested the financial infrastructure with all
(26:53):
of these bad loans. And now, based on the policies
that he pushed, he's now going to take over and
be the savior and fix a problem that they created,
and that's what we're seeing happening here in New York.
But here's the problem. Trump came in January, so much
of his time and energy has been spent on foreign
(27:16):
issues and not the United States. The conservative media has
been completely consumed with Ukraine and Israel, and with the
Middle East, but mostly Israel, and that is like what
right now the entire right wing media is fighting over.
At the same time, you have Trump coming forward just
(27:38):
recently and saying that the American economy is the best
in the world.
Speaker 9 (27:43):
And I'm pleased to report that today the United States
has the strongest economy, the strongest borders, the strongest military,
the strongest friendships, and the strongest spirit of any nation anywhere.
We have the greatest economy right now. A lot of
people don't see that. But if you look at what's
happening with all the factories AI Auto plan, it's all.
Speaker 4 (28:03):
Over the country being built.
Speaker 9 (28:05):
That if you would have thought about that two or
three years ago, it was the opposite.
Speaker 5 (28:09):
They were all leaving.
Speaker 9 (28:10):
Now they're all coming in, they're all coming back and
then some And I think that we can honestly say,
and I think you're going to see it even more
so over the next twelve months, that this is the
golden age of America. This is the golden age.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
So I think people hear that and they then look
at their own lives and they say, Okay, if this
is the golden age, then what are the dark times
going to look like? And they will look towards people
and ideologies like this, mom, Donnie guy to try to
fix things. Because I don't know about you guys, but
(28:44):
when I look at the economy right now, I see
all the telltale signs of a recession coming. I see
it in the way that corporations are spending their money
right now. I see it in prices. I see it
in the way ticket sales to certain kinds of events.
Look at Las Vegas. Las Vegas is constantly than the
news is coming out. That is kind of a desolate area.
(29:06):
That there's a ton of hotels are empty. That's usually
a bad sign for the economy. So you can't have
a president stand up there in front of the microphone
and say that the economy is doing well when it's not.
Housing prices have not come down, living expenses have not
come down. Inflation, everybody still feels it. Go out to
(29:29):
dinner and try having a glass of wine with some
friends and see how much that dinner is going to cost.
It is very expensive. Cars are incredibly expensive. By the way,
there's a lot of loans that are going bad in
the car Loan space. So the economy is not doing
as well as Trump is putting out there into the world.
And then on top of that, he is spending an
(29:52):
ordinate amount of time on the Israel issue, and the
conservative media is spending all of its time discussing this
foreign land. And this is the other problem that I'm seeing.
Once Trump got elected, it was like the conservative movement
and Republicans completely disengaged from politics. They basically see their
(30:14):
president their president. One he had one of the greatest
comebacks of all time. He made these promises about kind
of tackling woke culture, and I think we've all have
seen the woke culture kind of marginalized to a certain degree.
He hasn't gone away, but it has marginalized. He talked
about cutting back on the or stopping illegal immigration coming in,
(30:36):
building a wall, deporting illegal aliens, deporting criminals. So I
think people saw this man get elected in this kind
of improbable election, and they just completely disengaged. They said, Okay,
Trump's in there and everything is fine, and they kind
of walked away from politics and haven't been putting his
(30:57):
feet to the fire, haven't been kind of forcing him
to focus on America first issues as opposed to putting
so much time and energy into the Middle East. You
have all these podcast bros, whether it be Joe Rogan
or Andrew Schultz or Theo Vaughn, who were kind of
this big coalition behind Trump that are starting to now
(31:19):
distance themselves from him. Some of the reasons are I
think faulty. You know, it has to do with maybe
the deportations that they don't like or what have you.
But all in all, get my cousin Martin, but all
in all, I think they're what you're seeing happen is
this kind of disengagement because he has spent so much
(31:41):
time on the Middle East and we have this issue
here now where for whatever reason, all of the energy,
the entire energy of the conservative movement is around that issue.
And I thought Asma Gold he's a huge streamer on YouTube.
I check him out every once in a while. He's
kind of one of these kind of interesting guys that
(32:01):
plays clips and has reactions to but he's very successful
at it, has over a million views for every one
of his videos. He's a Texan and he was seeing
his governor, Greg Abbott. Greg Abbott, and he was at
some event and he's looking at the frame of the event.
What he notices is like five or six different Israel
(32:21):
symbols and one American flag. And this was his response
to this site.
Speaker 8 (32:26):
Aw the and this is a thing to me, right,
I see this and I think to myself, why the
fuck would I vote for this retard? Why would I
vote for this guy? And this is, by the way,
this is my governor right here, Greg Abbott. Why would
I vote for this fucking retard? Whenever you have two
Israeli flags, three Israeli flags, three things I stand with Israel,
(32:49):
and only one American flag, I'm sorry, guys, but that's
just not for me. That's not for me. I'm an American,
I'm a Texan. These should be Texas flags that should
stay the same, and this should say I stand with
I don't know, know ice, the police, firefighters, you know,
first responders, something like that, anything except for Israel.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
Right, So this is a guy that I would not
call your standard political conservative, but his beliefs definitely fall
in that space. And it was guys like this who
are speaking up Trump during the twenty twenty four election
that helped push Trump across the finish line. Huge crowd,
huge young audience. What he's seeing now is these gropers,
(33:33):
these followers of Nick Fuentes as being kind of like
the energy behind the conservative movement right now that is
kind of pushing for America First policies. And one of
his chatters on his YouTube chat asked him about the
gropers and this is what he had to say.
Speaker 8 (33:49):
Gropers are taking power.
Speaker 4 (33:51):
Well, I don't think that necessarily.
Speaker 8 (33:52):
Not wanting to, not wanting to have six reminders inside
of one frame that your country is being occupied by
another country is not being a grouper. That's being an American.
This isn't Nick Flintz, This is common sense. There are
two factions inside of right wing politics right now. There
(34:16):
are America First conservatives and there are international traditional you know,
neo con Israel like, you know, like lobbyist people, right like,
there are two groups of people here and the infighting
is why they're losing. They're losing because they're they're infighting.
The reality though, is it again? The Israel issue is
(34:38):
the Republican trans issue. I think eighty percent a huge
amount of voters are demoralized, completely fucking demoralized by the
fact that they have politicians playing like cow telling and
playing patty cake with Israel constantly.
Speaker 4 (34:55):
It is.
Speaker 8 (34:56):
It's a massive thing. And the more that you play
into that, and the more that you try to like,
oh no, this is normal, this is fine, that's the problem.
Speaker 1 (35:03):
So there you have it. There's a guy who is
not kind of really involved in politics, who is more
of a streamer that kind of deals with more pop
culture kind of a thing, but then got into the
whole Trump wave in twenty twenty four and he's seeing
this issue and he's seeing his own governor spending more
time worrying about this foreign land than his own state
(35:25):
and his own country.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
Well, here's the thing. It just it just feels like
common sense, right, But then if you say anything about it,
then you're called an anti Semite and that is the problem.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
Yeah, And there's no like anti Ukrainite or something, you know,
when we talk about this with Ukraine. At the end
of the day, it's taking up too much time and
what's going to end up happening is is people are
going to look at this administration and say, if you're
going to spend all your time on that, and you're
not going to be focusing on American first issues and
(35:57):
our own issues, on our student debt, on our jobs,
on our loans, on the cost of home housing, on
the cost of rent, on the cost of health insurance,
which has skyrocketed over the course of the last year
because subsidies went away. If you're not going to focus
on crime in our cities, if you're not going to
focus on homelessness, then we're going to give this democrat
(36:19):
socialist a try, and we're going to see what he
can do with this. But let me be clear, I
don't think this is something to be afraid of. We've
seen this experiment before in NYC. They did this with
Mayor Dinkins in the late eighties, and what came of
that was the nineties crime wave in New York City
and that led the way for a guy like Mayor
(36:40):
Giuliani to take over there. Our system is also set
up to protect us from guys like this. He can
never be president. He wasn't born in the United States.
He will be a political force. Moving forward, you will
see him campaigning with other Democrat politicians in other areas
because he is very charismatic. He appeals to the immigrant class.
(37:01):
He's kind of like the opposite of Trump. He is
left wing populism to Trump's populism. That's what we have
to understand is that the more time that Trump spends
on a foreign land and on foreign policy in Israel
and in Ukraine and in these kind of foreign escapades,
the more people are going to turn to someone like
(37:21):
a mom donnie for left wing populism. We're going to
either get left wing populism or right wing populism because
that is what the people are craving right now. They
want to focus on the economy. It's like what James
Carvel said in the nineteen nineties, it's the economy stupid.
Speaker 4 (37:41):
Stay focused, talk about things that a matter to people.
Speaker 1 (37:44):
You know, it's the economy stupid. Okay, that's what he
said during the Bill Clinton campaign to win the White House.
It won him the White House. These people are not
buying into his ideology, into this mom Donnie's ideology. They
are buying in to desperation or they are giving in
(38:06):
to desperation, and they are looking for answers that will
fix their current situation. And all they're hearing is about
a land thousands of miles away in the Middle East.
But this Mondani guy, he is going to be an
epic failure. And in many ways it might be a
good experiment because and it might be coming at just
(38:28):
the right time, because we have the midterms next year.
This guy is going to come into office. He's promised
the moon to these people. I think he's promised two
million rents to be frozen. He's sounding a lot like Obama.
Here he is on his victory speech, and listen to
how many times he says hope. Just like Obama.
Speaker 3 (38:45):
There aren't many who thought this day would never come, who.
Speaker 4 (38:49):
Feared that we would be condemned only.
Speaker 3 (38:51):
To a future of less, with every election consigning us
simply to more of the same.
Speaker 4 (38:59):
And there are others who.
Speaker 3 (39:00):
See politics today as too cruel for the flame of
hope to still burn.
Speaker 4 (39:06):
New York. We have answered those fears tonight. We have
spoken in a clear voice. Hope is alive.
Speaker 3 (39:22):
Hope is a decision that tens of thousands of New
Yorkers made day after day volunteer shift after volunteer shift,
despite attack AD after attack AD. More than a million
of us stood in our churches, in gymnasiums, in community centers,
(39:42):
as we filled in the ledger of democracy. And while
we cast our ballots alone, we chose hope together, hope
over tyranny, hope over big money and small ideas.
Speaker 4 (40:02):
Hope over despair.
Speaker 3 (40:05):
We won because New Yorkers allowed themselves to hope that
the impossible could be made possible. And we won because
we insisted that no longer would politics be something that
is done to us. Now it is something that we do.
Speaker 1 (40:27):
So this guy's going to come in. He's built up
all of this hope. He's promised everything to these people,
free transportation, free grocery stores, he's freezing their rent, and
he's not going to be able to deliver on these things.
His victory speech is going to sound asinine, and so
there's going to be a reaction to that. So, in
(40:49):
many ways, what is happening right now with this guy
might be a gift to Trump as long as Trump
and this administrations begins to focus on American issues, domestic issues,
pocketbook issues, because it is the economy stupid you need
to focus on that he had donors that he needed
(41:12):
to kind of satisfy because their money is what helped
him get into office. But in order for the Republican
Party to have any viability into the future and to
win in the midterms and to win in twenty twenty eight,
they need to deal with these pocketbook issues. So, you know,
I think that's kind of the situation that we're in
right now, and I think that is why you're not
(41:33):
having necessarily people buy in to democrat socialism. They're not
necessarily buying into the ideology. But what they're trying to
buy into is change because they're desperate and they need
a fix, and they're not seeing this happening from this
administration right now. All they're seeing is is this push
to support Israel and this kind of struggle sessions that
(41:58):
they're having right now to kind of force people to
announce their their support of Israel and what have you.
And I can understand how that is an important issue
to many Americans and Jewish Americans, but it's not the
only issue. But it sure seems like the only issue
that we're talking about right now, at least within conservative media.
(42:18):
And I want to make some points on that in
Part two, because there has been this struggle for the
heart of the conservative movement that we've been talking about,
and I want to get into that a little bit
more in Part two, So join us on over there.