Asmongold TV - A new race war just started.. | Asmongold
Episode Date: July 12, 2025A new race war just started.. Subscribe to Asmongold TV on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AsmonTV Disclaimer: This podcast is an independent project created by a viewer using content from the YouTu...be channel Asmongold TV. The purpose is to make his content more accessible to those who prefer audio formats, helping more people engage with the ideas presented in his videos. This podcast is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or officially associated with Asmongold. All rights to the original content remain with Asmongold TV. If there are any concerns or requests regarding this podcast, please reach out. ----------- Keywords: pc gaming, online gaming, reaction videos Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Race wars. Oh boy. Who's excited for the race wars, guys? Who's ready? This is a great video.
Hostility between races is exploding online right now.
It is.
It is.
It is hell out that baby. Make that baby brain least something for a while.
That's what happens when you grow up with racist.
You're just, you're an unashamed racist.
Correct.
Everyone's tired. Everyone's overwhelmed and we're all exhausted from watching the world fall apart.
And most of us don't know what to do with the tension anymore.
Without any real solutions, the chaos hasn't just continued. It's gotten louder.
Yep.
And uglier.
And it'll get us up where you see me.
because they all still have their teeth.
We've come to realize that we're all about a wake up in a very different world soon.
And this moment right now marks the tipping point.
So what's really going on underneath all of this outrage?
And more importantly, before it's too late,
How can Christian step into the chaos without becoming part of the problem?
To understand what's really happening, we have to look at the two events that everyone's reacting to
and why they become a tipping point for so many Americans.
A few weeks ago, you probably heard the story about a kid named Austin Metcalf,
who was fatly stabbed at a track meet by another team named Carmelo Anthony.
And despite Austin's dad saying that this wasn't about race and begged for people not to turn this into a race war,
that's exactly what...
It probably wasn't.
realistically, their conflict was probably just Carmelo being an asshole.
Because Carmelo got in other problems at school, too.
I think Carmel was just a retard asshole.
Like, that was it.
Like, it didn't have anything to do with race.
The internet did.
I just have one thing to say on behalf of the black community.
We don't care.
We don't care.
Okay?
The same way you don't care about Trayvon Martin?
Yeah.
And I'll say that with my whole heart.
We don't care.
Anti-white race hatred is.
I think that's also a really good point, too, is that the way that Trayvon Martin was portrayed and George Zimmerman was betrayed, or sorry, portrayed.
They, I think the media has done a very good job at creating the highest degree of, like, racial separation that we've ever had.
So profound that a black student can stab an unarmed white teenager.
But this was only to start. Things got much worse as soon as this happened.
Carmela's family set up a fundraiser, which quickly raised nearly $600,000, which left people online split and enraged.
Those who defended him making the money claimed that the stabbing could have been a self-defense and that the money was raised so that Carmilla could have a fair trial.
While those who are opposed to him raising money, claim that the money was raised as a way of celebrating a crime against the white kid and essentially condoning murder.
So the problem with that was like a lot of the comments were about Carmelo Anthony being targeted and arrested because he was black.
I think that was really the issue that people had with it is that there was a degree of almost like, you know, just categorical hand-waving of Carmel Anthony's behavior because he was black.
And you could see that in the comments of the donations.
And I think that's what really radicalized people about it.
And then also the other big issue with it was that the guy that effectively attached himself to the Carmelo Anthony case had a rap sheet that would have gotten him five.
stars in Grand Theft Auto. This guy shouldn't even be out of jail.
Like, he beat up a toddler. He had like a grand theft auto charges, multiple theft charges.
Like, this guy was a complete piece of shit, right? And like, he was basically leading the
charge in advocacy of Carmel Anthony, right? And I think that's what really also radicalized
people as well.
His tensions were already super high. But they got even worse after this happened.
Just last week, a video went viral showing a white woman named Shiloh Kendrix at a point.
Park in Minnesota, allegedly calling a five-year-old black autistic child the N-word.
And when asked why she said it, she defended her words.
Did you call the child the n-y-word?
It is my own business.
You call him a n-k-l-l-oh- Okay, why don't you have to say right now?
Okay.
All right, that's what you say.
A little kid, you call him a n-k.
The little child?
But that's not even where things went crazy.
This was the start of the tipping point.
Hendrix launched a crowdfunding campaign, doubling down on her statement and claimed that she and her family were facing threats and needed help relocating.
And the fundraiser skyrocketed, raising over $700,000 in just days, surpassing the amount that was raised for Carmelo Anthony.
Yeah, this would have never happened if the Carmelo Anthony GoFundMe didn't happen.
Like, this would have never even existed.
It would have never happened.
This was a direct response.
Porter said that the fundraiser isn't about what she said, but about pushing back on cancel culture, the finery.
defending free speech and in defiance of the white guilt narrative.
While those who were opposed to her raising money
are claiming that the reason why she got so much support
is because she's racist
and that this is essentially about people wanting to condone racism.
And ever since all of the...
Both sides are right.
That's the truth. Both sides of this are right.
This went down.
A digital race war has exploded on platforms like X
where so many people saying absolutely horrific things
about the other race.
And this isn't just one or two people.
saying things like this. Literally thousands of people have been openly calling for violence or hatred
or retweeting statements of violence and hatred towards the other race. As calls for segregation keep
continuing to stack up more and more each day. But the more that this race battle continues to
evolve is I think the reason why this started to happen is actually because of BLM and the riots in
2020 and the fact that the government didn't immediately shut them down. And I think that because
of that, it gave people the mindset that because it was like a BLM riot and it was a racially
coded like thing, that it was okay for these people to behave this way and radicalized a lot of
people. And it's kind of like, remember what I was saying earlier today about how like the big
problem in I think Europe and not all of Europe, but the countries that are having these issues
like France and the UK with like these Muslim migrant gangs is not that they're happening.
it's that the government turns a blind eye to it and they don't enforce the law in a unilateral way.
And I think this is exactly the, this is the exact same problem that happened in the U.S. with BLM is that if the BLM riots had happened and immediately they were shut down by the National Guard or some other version variation of that, I don't think that we would have seen this type of escalation that would have happened.
But the problem is that you could see these riots happening and everybody could watch it happening where their births,
burning down businesses that have nothing to do with this. They're, you know, like stealing from
stores. And also, like, when I say they, I'm not talking about black people because there are
tons of white people that were participating in this as well. And Latino people and everybody, right?
This wasn't a, you know, like, it wasn't even really a race war. It was just all of these people
getting together and doing this. But they were doing it for this cause. And the cause was, of course,
attached to a race, which was obviously black people, right? And so this happens. And then you have
everybody freaking out and getting really mad about it because they see the obvious injustice of
you know houses being destroyed businesses being burned down cars getting you know looted stores
being completely stolen everything stolen out of the store and nothing happened and the people
that were calling it out were almost being portrayed as racist and i think that that radicalized people
more than any kKK rally ever could and i think it did so to a a mess
magnitude of like 10,000 times more.
And I think that almost all of the race problems that we have, I think they date back to like
two different points.
I think that woman saying the Trayvon Martin case, I think that was one really big point.
And I think the second point was BLM is it was the selective reporting and the biased reporting
of interracial violence between, you know, white and black people in the 2010s.
And then the crescendo of that, the climax of this.
that was those riots in 2010.
And now you're seeing a huge reflect, like reactions to OJ verdict.
The fact is I'm 34.
I don't remember that very well.
So you could be right, but this is my frame of reference based off of like my
lifespan.
What about the injustice?
Do black people still suffer sure to this day?
Do people not see that part?
Well, like, which injustice do you mean, right?
So like, are you talking about like, for example, uh, like, I, I don't know.
Like, I think that if you're talking about like any sort of like structural like
injustice that a black person is dealing with because and here's the thing right and this is very
important to keep in mind is that I do think that there are elements of racism that are prevalent
and I do think that sometimes you know black people do get treated worse by police by the nature
of the color of their skin I think this happens I think it does happen but the problem is that
there are so many bad actors that are on both sides that are trying to pretend like it always happens
and there's other people trying to pretend like it never happens and so you have two sides of
people that are intentionally dishonest that are misrepresenting a legitimate problem, and it makes
everybody worse. It makes everything worse. And so that's really it. Only inherited wealth?
Well, I mean, like, the thing is that I think that black people are at a number of like kind of
cultural disadvantages. I think that generational wealth is probably the best example that I can use of it.
That's the most material that I can make an argument for. But it's very hard to have honest conversations about
these things because the conversations are dominated by dishonest people. And I find it to be very
disappointing. Where's my generational wealth? I mean, most people don't have generational wealth.
But on average, don't you think slavery and segregation would have made it a lot harder for black
families to have generational wealth? Like, can't both things be true? Why can't you just
acknowledge this obvious reality? Like, I mean, of course. Like, what, what do we,
What are we talking about?
Like, why?
100 years ago?
Yeah, exactly.
We don't care.
It's not about whether you care or not.
It's about whether it happened or not and whether it's real.
Acknowledging that something is real is always a good thing than denying the truth.
Take the L, bro.
That's not the point.
It's not an L.
This is a fact.
It's just an objective fact.
And I can give other examples of this, too.
Like I can give examples about how people who aren't in English-speaking countries that come here and they didn't have access to education, this is just the truth.
And I'm not saying that like the problem why people get so defensive about this is because, you know, like I say something like this and they're like, oh, okay, so you just want reparations.
No, I never even said that. Nobody's saying that. Nobody's saying this. Nobody's trying to push for that at all.
I just, I think that it's, it's important to accurately understand where things are and to understand how we got here.
That's it.
And if you don't, if you can't do that, you can, and also, you can never solve problems if you don't know how they happened.
More and more apparent that these events are more than just controversies.
They become symbols of something much deeper and much more dangerous to our future.
These events are about what they triggered in all of us.
I mean, just take a listen to what both sides of the debate are saying now.
So the way to fight back against essentially this anti-white hatred that's been systemically, you know, ingrained in U.S. society is with white unity.
And underneath what's being said, what we're really saying is that both sides feel like their experiences are being dismissed.
Both feel under attack.
And what we're left with now is race baiting from both directions.
Identity politics on both sides.
Yeah, this is what I was saying before.
Do you remember how I said years ago?
that like if people keep playing identity politics, white people will start playing identity politics
again. Well, here it is. Now it's happening.
Contest over who's the greater victim as everyone's claims systemic oppression against their group.
And by the way, I'm sure both sides would be more than ego to explain why their claims are
legit and the other sides isn't. But to say that would be to miss my point. Because my point is
this. What I've come to realize is that it's easier to recognize genuine problems or even misdiagnosed
problems when we're on the receiving end of it. Of course,
exceptions, but our personal experiences in history shape how we view the world and what we notice.
And if we're not the target, we easily miss those subtle things that others might see every
day. This is why most non-Christians don't see prejudice against Christians, even though a lot of
us believe that we see it. I think that there is prejudice against Christians, and I think that
it's obvious that in media, it's much more socially acceptable to make fun of Christianity
and to demonize and delegitimize and degrade Christianity in comparison to other religions.
It's obvious.
If you can't see that, you're just being dishonest.
There's people on the left, like Ethan Klein and David Packman,
were quick to call out what they perceived as anti-Semitism,
while the rest of their non-Jewish group dismissed it as non-existent.
It's why women on the right have called out what they see as misogyny coming from those like Andrew Tate.
Now, the point is not whether or not these people are right,
but how people within certain groups may be sensitive to what they perceive as attacks coming from the outside
while dismissing it when others claim the same thing.
Exactly.
It's happening all across the board.
and it's feeling a dangerous pattern
where everybody's experiences feel invalidated,
which makes everything worse.
The end result of both sides feeling ignored
is that we're locked in a cycle of retaliation.
Just to be clear, you just said to me
you used the N word regularly.
In what context?
Do you use it with black people?
Yes, if it's appropriate.
When would it be appropriate?
Anytime I feel like it.
So you're just, you're an unashamed racist.
Correct.
Every reaction becomes fuel for the next.
I think that the focus around using,
the N-word is like a really big misdirection.
And that's, it's like a word.
Like, obviously, like, I mean, it's not a polite thing to do to call somebody the N-word, right?
Obviously, it's bad to do that.
But at the same time, the real issues are not the N-word.
The real issues are making sure that people can afford food.
They have access to education.
Like, these are the real problems and that they're being treated fairly by the justice system.
like these are the real issues like the N-word is not
this is like a bullshit retard issue
it's like yeah it's like the hail hitler song like this is this is a retard issue
access to jobs yeah um like well like for example right and so let's look at like
and i'll give you an example right and so there's like a much poorer area and let's say
it's dominated primarily by minorities maybe not just black people but just in general minorities
Well, these poorer areas generally have less stores in them because these stores get broken into a lot.
And so a lot of upper middle class liberal white people like to get together and talk about how much they all cops are bastards and how they want to defund the police.
And they do defund the police and it succeeds.
And so the communities that are actually in the most dire need of the police now don't have the police.
And because the police are defunded, so are the business.
because the businesses can't make their money back
because they're getting their stuff destroyed and stolen.
So then you have the good businesses that are moving out of these areas
that are underprivileged.
And because of that, you have people that are in these areas
that are looking for local jobs that now don't have access to them
because of the second order effect of defunding the police.
And this is the way that these things happen.
Usually there are not...
And this is the problem with discussing a lot of these issues.
Food deserts are like that's one example,
but there's many examples of this.
Womp, Womp, stop stealing.
I agree with you.
I totally agree with you.
But do you know how you stop people from stealing?
Is that you bring in more police,
you arrest the people that are stealing,
and then everybody else is happy.
Look at El Salvador.
Like, no matter how bad you think anywhere in America is,
it's nothing compared to El Salvador.
And he just took care of it.
Arrests the criminals.
the problems go away. Wow, what a surprise. So, yes, Bo's a chat. It's bullshit. And it's not the people in El Salvador's fault. You can't blame the communities there. You can't blame them. These are gangs. These are people with guns. Like, they're going to attack your family. They're going to destroy your house. You need to hold the government accountable for not making, for not getting rid of these people. And so, but, and do you guys see how, you know, these again, you know, virtue signaling.
Like virtue signaling activist causes like defunding the police actually hurt these minority groups and create economic disadvantages down the line through a chain of events.
That's why it's happening.
And these problems do exist and they are real.
But you can't talk about them because most people that are discussing these topics can't understand anything other than a direct cause and effect.
A minute ago, you acted, you met the police is acting in bad faith towards black people.
Now you say these communities need more cops?
Yeah, you're right.
And so the way you would solve that is you spend more time making sure the police are interacting with the communities.
And also, I didn't say that it was or wasn't happening.
I said that there is a degree of it's happening that it's a gotcha.
No, no, this is okay.
That's fine.
There is a degree of it that does happen.
But the problem is that addressing it is impossible because you have two groups of people on both sides that are unwilling.
to gain any, unwilling to seed any ground. And so whenever I'm talking about more police,
you will have bad police officers. This is a guarantee. So the problem with bad police officers
isn't the fact that they exist. It's the fact that they are allowed to continue to exist.
So you would have to reform the police system, increase higher levels of accountability,
you know, make sure that these police unions don't effectively control the law. And that's what
you do. So like in no accountability? Well, you need accountability for the police because and you, do you see how all these things fit together? You don't solve this problem by just giving black people more money. You don't solve this problem by just putting more police officers in a ghetto area. You have to solve it with like seven different things. People don't listen. Yeah, there's no silver bullet, but there, there's like five silver bullets or 10. Your assumption is wrong. Most police departments were not.
defunded. What happened is that many policing departments stopped policing and protest. Hiring more
cops doesn't fix that. Okay. We'll then figure out why they're protesting and what they want and then
fix that problem. Like the solution, oh, the police don't want a police. Oh, okay, well, let's just
give up on the law. That doesn't make a lot of sense to me. And now it's no longer about right or
wrong anymore. It's about defending your group because it feels like our dignity and self-worth is on the
line. So we react, we generalize, we moralize, we snap back, not because it's wise,
but because it feels like survival. And when that sense of threat runs deep enough, people
will justify almost anything to protect themselves. This is why we're now seeing people go so
far as to openly defend violence and racism. And the real problem in all of this chaos...
Well, yeah, of course they're doing that. Obviously they're doing that.
It's this. Most of us feel like we're stuck between two bad options. Stay silent and get streamlined by
attacks on our race. Or,
strike back and slowly become what we hate.
Part of why we feel so stuck is because we're constantly being pulled by outrage and
often only seeing one side of the story.
That's what mainstream media.
That's what mainstream media does.
Very few people will give the commentary that I'm giving right now.
I think you have your heart in the right place, but I think it's also naive to say there's
no systematic problem in the U.S. institutions.
Well, I'm going to ask you like a question.
Can you give me an example of a systematic problem?
give me an example of a systematic problem.
Everyone talks about how the media foments this racial divide.
They do, but they only discuss it from one direction.
They discuss how the media only makes black people look good or how the media only makes
white people look good or vice versa.
And so that's the issue.
It's completely one dimensional.
It's that they provide half of what they should be saying without providing the other half.
So give me an example of something.
Voter suppression, for example.
What do you mean?
Wait, what?
How do you mean voter suppression?
What is what do you mean by that voter suppression?
You're not going to make the argument that black people don't know how to get an ID, are you?
Please don't make that argument.
Well, now he's quiet.
Uh-oh.
I mean, is this going to, I mean, like, we got to move on, man.
Let's get this going, right?
I mean, you're going to argue in chat.
That's fine.
But like, you've got to have an example of, like, what you mean by this, right?
I'll give it like one or two more, like, like, 20 more seconds or so.
And then I want to move on.
And, yeah.
The barrier argument is black people spend more time in jail?
No, is that, what do you call it?
Is the black people spend more time in jail for committing the same crimes as white counterparts?
Yeah, but that's a socio-economic problem.
Black households have a median income of 56,000 and white households have a median income of 89.
Like, this is a huge amount.
And that's median, right?
So, like, you're not counting, like, the super extremes.
That's not the point.
it's just black people in poorer neighborhoods or 80% doing drive-through voting.
I don't understand, like, this is, I don't even get, like, that's, I don't even know what that means.
Okay, let's just move on.
But you have Ground News as the sponsor of today's video.
Ground News gathered this articles from over 50,000 sources and shows you how they're being covered across the political spectrum, letting you see the-
situation.
It's not even a point.
When it comes to the fundraiser for Carmelo Anthony, over 94 sources have covered it already.
By the way, so they have an ID because they're driving?
Yeah, because you need a driver's license to drive.
Uh-huh. Yeah.
And out of those, 37% of them are right-leaning and only 15% are left-lanning.
And just take a look at how the bias is coming out and how they're reporting it.
The right frames it has his parents being rewarded with $445,000 for his violence,
while the left frames it as Carmelo raising the money to go into hiding after receiving so many death threats.
The bias couldn't be more clear.
It's obvious.
And I also love the blind spot feed, which highlights how stories are.
disproportionately covered by one side of the political spectrum.
For example, out of 34 sources, 0%—that's right, 0% of left-lane sources have covered the fact
that Planned Parenthood's annual report shows a rise in public funding and abortions, which is a massive—
Or it's 0% on both sides, if it's about that group in Pakistan that's split off.
Blind spot.
So Ground News has become a valuable tool for me, especially as a Christian seeking truth and integrity and media.
And if you want to try Ground News today, go to GroundNews.
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So thank you, Ground News, for sponsoring this video.
And now back to why outrage feels like it's the only option left and what is quietly doing to us.
So people are striking back at racism with more racism, more threats of violence and more moral compromise,
letting their character erode in the name of defending themselves in this race war.
But if this is war, then what exactly does victory look like?
Is it raising more money for your side, destroying the other person's reputation, or getting them
fired, and will any of that actually force the other side to back down?
Political voices have trained us to get louder, and we're rewarded for doing so with callousness or cruelty.
They tell us that this is the only option left, that we tried to turn the other cheek,
but it doesn't work because the other side is just too evil, and once is eliminated so that way they could destroy the country.
You hear this all the time.
But here's the catch.
The more that we take their advice, the worst things get.
The more that we scream, the less anyone listens.
The more we retaliate, the more emboldened our enemies become.
The more immoral that we act and justified as a necessary evil, the more morally confused everyone gets.
Just take a look around.
Outrage isn't fixing anything.
It's just creating new villains.
And besides, yelling at people and shaming them won't change their mind anyway.
And psychology is called psychological reactants.
It shows how aggressive tactics like shaming or yelling usually make people less likely to change their mind.
Wow, what a surprise.
Screaming and yelling and bullying people doesn't get them to agree with you.
I would have never guessed that.
What a shock.
Not more.
Crazy, right?
Continues to grow.
Nobody feels more seen.
Nobody feels more heard.
No one feels more healed.
And no one's desired more peace because the problem isn't just a reaction.
It's what we used to feel righteous, what we claim to when we feel unseen.
It's about something that I call value makers.
You see, we've all been distracted by these surface debates.
But if you've ever thought, why does everything feel so personal now?
Well, this is why.
We as humans are painfully insecure.
It's made to be personal.
for ways to feel more valuable, whether it's through success, intelligence, fitness.
That's why identity politics is so popular. It's because it's personal.
Relationships, beliefs, or even morality. The things that we subconsciously depend on to justify
our sense of self-worth are what we can call value makers. We all have them, and they're usually
good things, but they become dangerous when we treat them as foundational to who we are.
We're constantly going to these value makers to tell us why we matter, and the easiest way to
feel more valuable without even having to do anything is to look down on an element.
others who don't have what you believe makes you value.
Money or whatever.
If you're in shape, you'll feel better about yourself if you choose to look down on those
who aren't in shape.
Stop eating.
That's why you're fat.
In politics, we tell ourselves things like, I'm valuable because I'm on the right team,
because I have the truth, because I'm more moral.
The right side of history.
But when our identity is built on these things, we start seeing others as less because
it helps us feel like we're more.
And this habit, it becomes like a drug.
We need more and more of it to keep our self-esteem intact.
And today, one of the most powerful and fastest growing value makers is our racial or political tribe.
It works because it promises instant meaning, instant moral clarity, and a ready-made enemy to look down on.
It's an easy way to immediately define a problem without having to think about it.
And people appreciate that.
They like that a lot.
No, I think I call it a tribe.
No, that's what it is.
Yeah, he's totally like, yeah, he's completely right.
Once you understand that, you start to see how racism and so much of the online outreach,
today isn't just about hate. It's about people desperately trying to feel valuable through their tribe.
The only problem is when your race or your group becomes your ultimate value maker, every insult to that
group feels like a threat to the very foundation of who you are. That's why people go to extremes.
Why they defend the end of it's the logic of if it can happen to them, it can happen to you.
Insible, because it feels like they're defending their very identity. Yep. But like virtually
every other value maker, seeking comfort in your tribal identity,
won't make you more secure in who you are,
but only more insecure.
You'll crumble when your side loses,
when your group gets mocked,
when you don't feel affirmed.
And when your identity is built on something that fragile,
you'll always be on edge.
Always defensive.
I think that if you build your identity
on something that you didn't earn,
you're always going to have problems
and you will have issues just down the line
with like 50 different things.
And so what you're really seeing in these cases
is that people that are defining themselves
on things that they can,
control and they don't have any ownership of, the only people that do that are losers, losers
and retards that don't have anything else going for them. So they take pride in things that they
had no control over. Always reactive. And today, everyone has a little bit of snowflake in them.
And then look at them. Snowflakes. So I hope you can see by now, this isn't about politics
or outrage. Fundamentally, it's about misplaced identity. And now that we see the real battle
field.
I think a lot of this misplaced identity, like this guy's talking about it from a Christian
angle, and I think he's going to go there.
But if he doesn't, I will.
I think that people have replaced religion with identity politics and political dogma.
And in place of religion, you see people embracing these types of extremist ideals.
And they, like, adhere to them in the same way that people adhere to religion.
Finally stopped fighting the wrong war and actually fix the problem.
The problem isn't that we have value makers, is that they become so foundational to our identity
when they were never intended to be.
They can't fully affirm yourself worth because they were never designed to.
And as Christians, out of everyone, we should know this because of the gospel.
You know that you truly internalized the gospel, when you can know in your heart that Jesus
didn't just die for you, he died for the very people who hate you.
The people that you can't stand, the absolute worst racist in the world.
You know that you've internalized the gospel if you know that while also knowing that you're no more deserving his salvation than they are.
And if that feels unjust when you look at them, it's because it is.
It is unfair for him to offer them salvation.
But it's also true when they look at you and believe that it's unfair for him to offer you salvation as well.
It's like the prodigal son.
Who and your worst enemy are valuable because you were loved enough for the God of the universe to die for you.
And not because you earned it.
not because you deserve it, but only because he offered both of you his grace.
And this is why the gospel takes away the illusion of self- superiority.
If you truly believe in the message of salvation, then how could you possibly look down
on the other team or feel superior to them because you found Jesus and you're saved?
The truth is, you can't.
And that's the kind of value maker that changes everything.
It frees you from needing to win the argument just to feel okay.
It frees you from the cycle of outrage because your value isn't upfews.
for debate anymore. I think this is a, like, religion is like one component. And like if religion
works for him, I think that's really good and that's, that's great for him, right? I know a lot of
people that religion is an ordering force in their life and it improves their life. But I think it's like
a just a general kind of trend towards like cultural nihilism and a degree where people just
simply don't have any form of identity other than what they make up for themselves. And people have been
divorced from like the tradition of their culture they've been divorced from the religion of their
culture and they're kind of treated as this interchangeable business unit of like of a commodity
and I think that that's just not what people are if yeah no I'm saying really it's going to be a
great right yeah yeah killing people for using a wrong calendar well there's obviously I mean like
the thing is that I mean you can look at any any value system like you're going to have people
that take it to an extreme and are crazy.
You don't have to defend your race like your worth depends on it.
You don't have to drag the other side down just to lift yourself up.
Your identity is no longer built on the tribe.
It's built on the cross.
So yes, fight for justice.
But don't fight like the world.
Don't cling to your tribe like it's your salvation.
It's not.
This whole world and all of these worldly titles causing the vision are fading away.
Jesus didn't die to save your race.
He died to save your soul.
I mean, this is religion, but I think the real problem is the government.
The government not adhering to the law and not enforcing the law accurately and treating people fairly is what causes these race wars.
That's what really causes it to happen.
Because, I mean, the fact is, like, religion helps.
But, I mean, I'm pretty sure a lot of people in, like, the Middle East, for example, are religious.
And they've been fighting each other forever.
So, like, it's not like religion solves the problem of, like,
war, right? Because in a lot of cases, there's like there's the spiritual and then there's the
material where like a lot of these like wars that are fought on spiritual grounds are also about
land. Speak the truth. You see what I'm saying. Do it from a place of peace, not panic,
from grace, not ego, from a secure identity, not a fragile one, because in Christ you would
fully known and fully loved. You were worth dying for it. And not because you had the right view,
or anything good that you've done, but because of who he is.
And when that's your foundation, you can finally stop fighting for your value
because it was already secured at the cross.
Hey, thanks so much.
That's what I've always felt like with me, right?
Is that that's why I don't really like, I don't spend a lot of time like people like
insult me or like they'll get mad at me or like be hostile to me.
Is that like I don't really think that it matters what those people say because
like my own personal value is what really needs.
matters the most. And so, like, if I, if I'm happy with what I'm doing and I'm satisfied with
what I'm doing, then other people's perspective on it doesn't really make a difference.
You can't compare Muslims with Christians. Of course, there's a war in the Middle East. Well, I mean,
Christians have found ways to kill each other, too, right? I mean, like, Muslims don't have a
monopoly on being crazy. You know, Christians, we've done that ourselves, too. Like, I mean, I don't,
And that's the problem, right?
I mean, just it's, again, it's the dishonesty.
That's the big issue.
We're making it to the end of the video.
It really does mean a lot and it helps us in the algorithm.
Now, if this video shook you, even just a little,
it's because we're not just dealing with headlines.
We're dealing with spiritual deception dressed as tribal loyalty.
We make videos like this because we believe that Christians need clarity in a culture that's full of confusion
and the courage to follow Christ without compromise.
But creating this context,
takes hours of research, writing, editing, and planning, and right now, I'm doing most of it myself.
And to keep up with what's happening in the world, and to go deeper without compromising truth or quality,
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So if you've ever watched one of these videos and thought, man, more people need to hear this.
Supporting on Patreon is one of the most impactful ways that you can help make that happen.
And if that's something that you want to help build, not just support, then I want to invite you to join me on Patreon.
on. The link is down below in the description, and it really does help more than you probably
realize. All right? So thanks again for watching, and I'll see you guys on the next one.
I think one thing if he ever sees this is one really insightful and helpful thing for me is
to have a Discord community. And that way I can have like a group of people that will like send
things to me and give me insights that I wouldn't have naturally seen. And I think that that definitely
like if you have one person, that's good. But like for example, like we have so many people like,
you know, we have like, for example, a mob that was in Serbia. And so, like, when they had those
Serbian protests, like, we got to hear it straight from the horse's mouth, right? Like, effectively,
there's the, yeah, yeah, that was free jam, right? And so there's the video, give it a like.
And I feel like, yeah, I mean, that's one thing that helped me out a lot. And, you know, this channel,
it's got, you know, 500,000 subs and this video is doing pretty well. Give it a like, give them a
sub. I think, I think this is good. And overall, I feel like there's a lot of ways, like, and
like, I mean, you, the thing is, like, religion isn't going to be, like, the solution for everybody, I don't think. And I think that a lot of people, especially, like, kind of like people that have, like, my inclination, religion is, like, kind of a, it's a pretty tough pill to swallow. But I think that you can come to these same conclusions with, like, non-religious means. But it's harder to do. And I think that unless you really believe in it, the foundation for it is a lot more shaky. So, yeah.
It's a helper in a situation?
Yeah, I think so.
And I'll go back and I'll look at this.
I'll read some of these comments here and then we'll talk about it.
Because, yeah, I mean, I have a lot of opinions about this.
Of course I do, right?
No one chooses what their parents are, what named or their color, their skin,
but did you choose how they act in life and the principles they stand by?
Yeah, and that's why it's important to make sure that you focus on that and that's what really matters about you.
Not anything else.
But bro, how hard is it to live by causing no harm to others?
it's actually very hard to do
because there are oftentimes scarce resources.
The root of all evil is not money, it's scarcity.
Every single bad thing in the world is tied to scarcity.
And so if you had a world,
if you had a post-scarcity world,
theoretically, you would nearly eradicate
all types of bad behavior.
Well, like greed, well, no, but you don't understand.
Like greed and envy are downstream from scarcity.
you're greedy because you want a lot of things
because the amount of things that you have is contextualized
scarcity is what contextualizes it
envy is also the same thing
scarcity is the root of all evil
thanks for watching this video a lot of dangerous rhetoric online
increasing for everyone I think this was needed
MLK say every man is equal and people tend to forget that as a black person
thank you well the thing is that
like I think that's the way that most normal guys think
and I unironically think this is probably
maybe this is crazy
but I probably have
like if you had an Asmengold
like you know fucking community meetup
and like everybody submitted their photos
we would probably have a more
diverse group of viewers than
almost any other community on the internet
I can almost guarantee you that
and like I mean at least among guys
right we don't have a lot of girls that watch
okay but like among guys
we absolutely do
And the reason why is because except women.
Yeah, there's no women, no. Women are not allowed.
No girls allowed.
But besides the sausage fish, yes, definitely.
