Part Of The Problem - The Great Replacement
Episode Date: December 3, 2025Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave and Robbie "The Fire" Bernstein talk about video from New York Times Columnist Wajahat Ali saying th...at white people have "lost", the ongoing conflict with Venezuela with "narcoterrorists", Stephen Miller's statements about a conspiracy to fly immigrants illegally into the country, and more.Order Lauren Smith’s book here: https://a.co/d/67djjBpSupport Our Sponsors:CrowdHealth - https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/promos/potpMars Men - https://mengotomars.com/ Use code "PROBLEM" at checkoutMonetary Metals - https://www.monetary-metals.com/potp/IndaCloud - If you’re 21 or older, get 40% OFF your first order + free shipping @IndaCloud with code [PROBLEM] at https://inda.shop/PROBLEM! #indacloudpodPart Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!PORCH TOUR DATES HERE:https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/porch-tour-2025-4222673Find Run Your Mouth here:YouTube - http://youtube.com/@RunYourMouthiTunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/run-your-mouth-podcast/id1211469807Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4ka50RAKTxFTxbtyPP8AHmFollow the show on social media:X:http://x.com/ComicDaveSmithhttp://x.com/RobbieTheFireInstagram:http://instagram.com/theproblemdavesmithhttp://instagram.com/robbiethefire#libertarianSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, hello, everybody.
Welcome to a brand new episode of Part of the Problem.
I am Dave Smith.
He is Robbie the Fire Bernstein.
How you doing today, Rob?
I'm doing well.
How are you, my friend?
Very good.
Very good.
I've got the Christmas spirit, I would say.
The holiday season spirit.
I was a, it's snowed up by me today.
It was like our first big snow of the season.
which is always fun by the last snow of the season you're just miserable and dying for it to
be over the first one's always beautiful um my kids got off from school today uh so you know just hanging
out enjoying enjoying the this time of year oh can i tell you something please i completely forgot
about this but this okay so i saw now in the background here as rob you know well but then
some of the audience may know as well but so i'm i'm a new york city guy as born and raised in
New York City, live there my entire life. And then for the last five years, I've lived in
Jersey. For the last three years, I've lived in like the country. Like I bought a house out in the
country. And I love it out here. It's nice. And I have a big property and it's quiet and it's
beautiful. But I am like, I'm a New York City Jew in the country. And that's, but anyway, so
I'm adjusting still to this culture shock. And so this morning, I go out, I've never seen anything
like this okay so i go out to uh to take the trash out this morning pretty mundane task uh now we keep
our trash in the shed on the side of my house so you know i got a big driveway i got to go grab the
trash cans and wheel it up to the to the street so i go and i'm getting the garbage out i just i hear
this noise and i don't even know what it is sounds like a bird but like a weird noise for a bird to be
making so i look over and there is a uh a hawk a huge hawk i don't
I thought it was an eagle when I first saw it, but I'm pretty sure we don't get those around here.
But so there's this giant hawk, and he's got a squirrel, and he's just ripping them to pieces
and eating it.
And it's real gross when you get up, like, you really see it up close.
Like, he's got like blood and guts and stuff all in his mouth, and he's taking these bites
and, like, skins, like, snapping back with every bite.
And then I realized, dude, that there's a squirrel up in the tree who's making this noise.
and the squirrel's like yelling at him he's like he's making this crazy noise i've never heard a squirrel
before he's like he's a very liberal squirrel he thinks he's gonna protest it by uh whining well it's
dude there's this it was such a weird moment where i was like wait what's going what's going on
in that squirrel's mind like how advanced is this where he's like you're killing my buddy like what are you
doing so he's just yelling at this hawk from the tree he can't do nothing his buddy didn't make it
I hate to be the bear of bad news, but he did not survive the encounter.
But I just sat there almost paralyzed with like fascination over this moment.
And like the hawk was eating the squirrel and he kept like looking up at the tree.
Like the noise was like it got his attention.
And he was going, all right, dude, I'm not going to stop eating your buddy.
Like anyway, I don't know.
I got nothing more than that.
Did you have to clean squirrel guts out of your shed?
No, no, no.
So it was, luckily, it was on my neighbor's side of the property divide.
Nice.
So that was his problem.
And then as I was, I was literally just watching it.
And then my neighbor's dog came running out and this scared the hawk away.
I hope this dog didn't eat the remainder of the squirrel guts, but I didn't.
I didn't stick around to find out, Rob.
I was like, I'm bringing my trash up.
That's the boring side of the nature show is when the dog, the pet just starts eating with the hawk
killed, and then going back into the house and just rubbing his face on your shit.
Oh, man, Jesus.
And one more reason why I don't want to have a dog out here.
But yeah, I never even really thought about that.
By the way, you're such a New York Jew that you call your residential area the country.
Yeah, I guess that's true.
Well, it is, I'd say what you'd really describe, it's a rural suburb, I suppose, is what the technical
term would be.
Because it's not, it's not a suburb, like, when I pay.
picture a suburb. I'm still picturing houses like fairly close together, a sidewalk out front,
you know, things like that. Whereas like where I am is like a pretty rural area. But yes,
that being said, someone who comes from like a really rural country area probably would not
consider where I live the country. But whatever. That's it for me, for me, it's pretty goddamn
country. All right. Let's talk. Let's talk about some stuff. I wanted to, I wanted to open the show with
this video that's going super viral right now. And I thought, I just found this to be very
interesting. And I think it's part of the reason why the video is taken off so much. And I thought
there was, it was an interesting conversation for me and you to have about it. And I guess
part of the reason why this is, this is such, like this, this video hits such a nerve is because
I think it does speak to a lot of the underlying issues that are really,
that really, like, there's this major seismic shift that's going on across the Western world right now.
And yet, it doesn't, it doesn't get discussed nearly enough.
And because of like the kind of, not, I don't even want to say woke, but just like the broader, like the politically correct culture that we live in, that we have lived in my entire lifetime where there's like a,
there's a severe allergy to anything that could even be considered bigoted.
Now, that's changed a lot in the age of the Internet and with the rise of the Gen Z,
who are kind of not planned by those rules anymore.
But nonetheless, that has been the dominant culture for a long time.
And so it did kind of paralyze people to have conversations about any of these things.
And the dynamic that I'm talking about is that basically throughout the entire Western world,
And I guess this is not true for a few Eastern European countries, but almost every white country in the world does not have a birth rate to replace the white majority.
So there's this tremendous browning of all of the previously white countries.
And people are really starting to notice this.
You know, people in countries like Ireland, in cities like London, in countries like Italy, Sweden.
But like, they have, they've all imported millions and millions of non-white people into their country.
Now, for many years, and I've talked about this before on the show, but progressives used to brag about this.
And in fact, they would call it the browning of America.
And they would brag about how this is going to lead to permanent majorities for Democrats.
Because, you know, like in America, we've imported, you know, tens of millions of Latino.
into the country, and the Democratic strategists would argue, well, they go for Democrats like
70%. So this is going to give us super majorities when they're a huge chunk of the American voting
base. And then right-winger started objecting to it and calling it a replacement theory.
And then they said, that's like a, you know, a Nazi slogan or something like that, even though
it's just a different term for the same thing that you were bragging about. In fact, the great Pat Buchanan
had a chapter in his really amazing book that was called Suicide of a Superpower.
And the chapter was called The End of White America.
And this was a very controversial chapter that I think actually got him in a lot of trouble.
I think this is what got him fired at MSNBC, if I remember correctly.
But if I'm remembering this correctly, it was a quote of some prominent progressive.
Like he was quoting what they said.
But when you say, like when a right winger says it,
and you're not for it, then all of a sudden it becomes this thing.
But I think, like, the, a lot of the reason for the racialist hysteria, and I mean this
from the left and the right, a lot of the reason for the rise of the alt-right, a big part
of the popularity of Nick Fuentes and the Groyper's, a big part of the right-wing reactionary
movement in Europe is all about this, like this fundamental dynamic, that all,
of these countries in the western civilized world have been profoundly changed and nobody's allowed
to object to that or at least that you know i say that in the loosest terms obviously today there are
people objecting to it but for a long time that was kind of the the status quo and so this video
just hits a nerve that is kind of hard to explain um but anyway so the the video here is of a i
I don't want to butcher this guy's name, but I surely well.
But this is Wajat Ali, or Wahat Ali, but he's a New York Times columnist.
So this isn't just some random person, you know, saying this.
This is somebody who is a columnist at the newspaper of record.
I mean, I don't know if the New York Times is still that, Rob, but, you know, it's the New York Times still.
So I want to play this video and kind of break it down a little bit.
If you want to add anything before, you want to wait until after.
Now, let's play, let's roll the Wajalit or whatever clip.
Either of us might be close or nowhere near it.
Who knows?
All right, let's play.
You have lost.
You lost.
The mistake that you made is you let us in in the first place.
That's the thing with brown people.
I'm going to say this is a brown person.
There's a lot of us.
Like a lot.
There's like 1.2 billion in India.
There's more than 200 million.
And Pakistan is like 170 million in Bangladesh.
Those are just the people there.
I'm even talking about the folks who are expats or immigrants.
There's a bunch of us.
And we breed.
We're a breeding people.
And the problem is, is you let us in 1965.
There were a few of us beforehand.
But once you let one of us in, you know what happens with brown folks?
Our grandmother comes.
Our grandfather comes.
Our uncle comes.
Our aunt comes.
Our cousin comes.
Our second cousin comes.
Our third cousin comes.
Then we have kids, a bunch of kids.
And then guess what?
Some white women, you know, the western civilization women, the pure women, the
American women, quote unquote, the Rust Belt women, the real women.
the real women, they like some of us brown folks.
We don't take them. They come to us.
So we're embedded. We are everywhere.
We are everywhere. I've traveled this country. I'm going to speak as a brown person.
Brown people are everywhere.
There will be a Patel motel or there will be a Desi restaurant everywhere.
I want you to realize this. You have lost.
Your story is a shitty story filled with misery.
It's filled with bland chicken.
It's filled with terrible, terrible dry-ass meat.
Your music sucks. All your culture sucks.
Nobody, that's why the kids, like, listen to black people.
and their music. That's why the kids love Latinos. Your parties suck because they're monochromatic.
Our parties have better food, better music, better looking women. All right. So, I mean, look,
dude, when you hear stuff like this, I actually, I really appreciate this guy making this video.
I think it's kind of better when people are honest about what the real agenda and what the real
views are. I just demand that we also get to be honest in our response. And to me, at least,
I'll say, the first thing I'll say, I'll turn it over to you, because I got a bunch to say on this,
but there, it does seem like, if the intention of a video like this isn't to get you to be
racist in response, then you, you really got to rethink what you're doing here, because
there is this like, the guy doesn't even realize that he's making the argument for Trump's
political existence, like doesn't even realize that he is literally making the argument to close
the border to repeal chain migration and to like expose that this whole thing um but it is very it is
very hard i got to say to not look by the way if we want to be completely honest rob i'll
do some of that's true like i like indian food i like Thai food i like but you know like there is
something yeah like yeah maybe they're they do have better dancers or better parties but how do you
listen to that, Rob, and not respond with, you know what else we did besides our bland chicken
was we created the free world that your family risked everything to get to. We have no
culture. You want to really take the gloves off on Indian culture? Like, do you want to?
Because by the way, I don't really, but it does kind of make you want to when you hear a video
like that. You go like, okay, yeah, like if you guys are so superior and we're so bland,
and we're so lame, then how come we're not flooding by the millions to India
to go live in the culture that your people exclusively built?
Or wherever this guy's from.
I don't know.
He mentioned India.
I don't actually know what his background is.
But it is something where, like, there is a disconnect here where you're going to say,
white people you've lost, we've won, we're superior, we're taking over.
But the expectation that you know for a fact, Rob, this same guy would grab his panties
and lift them up if he heard some of the shit
Nick Fuentes is saying, or when he hears some of the
shit he's saying. Well, I'm sorry, why
the hell are you allowed to be this type of bigot,
but nobody else is able to go,
hey, maybe
it's reasonable for an Irish
person for not for them to wish
Ireland to not become
Pakistan. Why
exactly are they not allowed to have that feeling?
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All right.
Let's get back into the show.
So any thoughts you have?
Go ahead, Rob.
Well, off the bat, I'll say this guy's being a racialist.
And he's saying that we actually have an agenda to not become American or to be
a part of your culture but to actually circumvent it and uh take it over and by the way indians their
whole culture sucks their music sucks what this guy's standing by bollywood and their shitty fucking
screechy sounds and the people with the lavish ridiculous dances i mean listen and i'll give you
credit i'll give you credit where it's due garlic non delicious yeah but you like american curry i like
it you like the american version of this stuff go to india oh yeah because it's not because the only
thing to dip your non in is is poop in India. So like, yeah, I like it over here. We got some
sides. Go ahead. You know, I'm a, I'm a really big fan of freedom. And I actually, and for the
most part, I think I enjoy the diverse culture that I'm able to hang out in. I think we see a little
bit more of that, you know, being in the stand-up world and the amount of different people that
have chosen to become comics. With that said, I'm also a big fan of the free. You got to get rid of the
socialism. That's what kind of allows people to come to this country and be like, hey, we're going to be a block and we're just going to try and take government resources. And I also think it's important to have freedom of discrimination, which I think forces outside groups to actually want to level up their game so that they're not a burden to the local society or that they're actually engaging in a way that, you know, the locals want to welcome them in. And when you say someone who's like just openly saying, hey, you made a mistake by letting us in. And he's almost
describing his family as being roaches. I mean, that, that, and that's not the way I view him,
but he's being racialist and he's describing himself as, if you let us in, we're going to bring in
more, we're going to root into your home, and we're going to breed, and we're going to take it over.
And, bud, you're not the dominant society now. And so if you're openly kind of stating that you
have an agenda that you're anti-white and want more brown, I mean, that's it, it, it, how do you think
the internet's going to take that? Yeah, I mean, and, and again,
just to be clear here that this is a new york times columnist like it's just it you do kind of
it's one more example it's like it reminds me of the dynamic with the zionists when the people
who are like support in israel's destruction of gaza and then they try to be outraged by whoever
tucker carlson or candace owens and you're like dude you don't have the moral authority to do
this anymore it's like once you do this it's like oh so you're you're not just like a you're a vicious
racist. I don't know. What else can we say? It is the same exact thing. If anybody else,
if unprompted, I just started talking about any group of people and we're saying their food
sucks, their culture sucks, their women like us more than you. You'd immediately be like,
oh, I know what we're dealing with here. You're a fucking like archaic bigot of some sort. Like,
okay. But that's who's working at the New York Times. So where do you get off telling anyone else
that they can't be that? And by the way, I'm not saying you should become that.
because he's this guy's a fucking idiot but the thing like i guess so so he says there there's a
couple things like he says there that again i think there is there is some truth to his point that he
goes look the problem was letting us in to begin with like okay there's a reasonable point to be
made there right because no question like it becomes a lot harder once you've had all of this
like mass migration to like what are you going to do at that point but he and he correctly pins it back to
1965. Now, in 1965, there was an immigration bill that overhauled the way immigration was done
in America. And even in like, you know, like, when progressives will often say as a retort
to like the border restrictionism of the Trump movement or something like that, you know,
it's been quite often for the last 10 years, how many times, Rob, have you heard a liberal
say, we're a nation of immigrants? You know, like that's the foundation of our immigration. In fact,
Vance has had a great line about that in a CNN interview when he said, yeah, just because
we're a nation made up of immigrants doesn't mean that 200 years later we have to have the
dumbest immigration policy imaginable. There's a good line. But if you actually care to look
into any of the details of this, like it's not completely true that America, like there is truth
to it. And certainly it is true that like most people you know, like that was their story.
Like most people you know, if you ask them about their family history, the story wasn't like, you know, we came over on the Mayflower or something like that.
You know what I mean?
Like most of them were immigrants at least a few generations ago.
But during the big waves of immigration in the late 1800s and in the early 1900s, there were big, there were massive waves of immigration and then there were periods of big immigration restriction and assimilation.
before 1965, from the founding of our country, and there was at a period at the very beginning
of the country, I think, essentially open borders, but to the degree that there was any
immigration control for most of American history, the early part, it explicitly gave preferential
treatment to white Christian Europeans.
People didn't have any problem being racialist in those days.
you know. And the idea, however you feel about it, not saying you have to support this or not,
but the idea was that kind of that's what keeps America having its American characteristic,
that we are Europeans who came over from Europe for more freedom to escape tyranny in Europe
and that then we assimilate into this American culture. And that's how you keep this thing.
Now, in 1965, okay, they passed this bill, which totally changed the racial and cultural
demographics of the country, but they swore up and down that it wouldn't.
Okay, that was the way they sold the bill, was like, it's not going to change the racial
demographics in the country at all.
Because think about it, right?
Rob, this is one year after the Civil Rights Act got signed into law.
It got signed in 64.
This was in 65.
This is one year after segregation ended.
Like, in large parts of this country, it was accepted one year earlier that there's an area where black people can live, and then there's an area where white people can live.
There's a store that's for black people only, and there's a store that's for white people only.
And the next year, do you think America would have voted to it?
To think about, like, how much racial tension there already was and how much bigotry
there already was in the country, I think anyone would have voted like, yeah, let's add
into the mix tens of millions of other racial demographics.
So in other words, in response to this guy's point here, you would, you know, for all these
people who claim to love democracy so much, you would have to admit that, like, the American
people never made that decision, right?
It, that was forced on them from the ruling political elite onto the American people,
who everybody knows if you had had a referendum on this in 1965, 66, 67, 68, 69, all the way up to
today, the bill would have failed.
There's no, there's no chance that the American be, even today, dude, even today in our
multiracial, multicultural society, even, even immigrants.
immigrants don't support it. Even immigrants don't want a wide open border, you know? And so there's
even illegal immigrants don't want it, you know, like even they don't want it. They got in, but they
don't want everybody else to get into. That kind of defeats the whole purpose. And so
essentially what you have here is this guy unintentionally, you know, from the left, making the
argument for mass deportations in a sense. Because I think what we've all kind of recognized is that
like, look, we're, we're, look, I'm a little bit squeamish about mass deportations.
I'm not afraid to admit that.
I believe in liberty and I don't like the government and, man, I don't want the government
doing anything to people.
And then there's a whole bunch of people who like, even the ones who came in illegally,
a lot of them aren't bad people or anything like that.
And it's kind of, that's kind of tough to deal with like federal cops grabbing a mom and
and our kids and kicking them out of the country, you know.
But the thing is that we're caught between a rock and a hard place here.
We're caught, you know, it's like either you have to accept the fact that our government just
did this to the people and that they have absolutely no recourse, that you have no right to
protect anything about your country, that you just have to accept that you're, the racial
demographics, the cultural demographics, the norms that you grew up with, like everything is
is taken from you.
You know, you have to accept that Ireland is going to become Pakistan.
Or you got to deport a whole bunch of people.
Like, those are the options.
And from my perspective, neither of them seem like great options.
But like when you hear a guy making the argument just like this, Rob,
doesn't it push you in the direction of just like, huh, okay, very good point, New York
Times columnist.
Thanks for being honest.
You all have to go.
like it just kind of like it pushes you in that direction that okay between these two bad options
how about i pick the one where this fucking smug brick doesn't get to win all right guys
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free gifts all right let's get back into the show yeah well there's even something like when i go to
boston i want to hear some authentic boston accents and it's almost like disappointing if you don't
run into like a real boston person same with georgia georgia's got a very like recognizable accent
i've never been to france or italy but if i traveled from france into italy and i showed up into
and there's only French food
and everyone's talking French.
I'm like, well, that's disappointing.
And now I'm just describing white cultures right now.
I'm literally just describing white cultures,
but there's something to you showing up to an area
and being like, oh, all the people are kind of like this.
Let's see what these people are all about.
And I don't know, there's just something like it even transcends race,
but just like letting people like be who they are
and they should be allowed to make decisions that they don't want
overwhelmingly new populations with different values coming into their area and changing it like
imagine if like a whole frat house moved to japan and started bro usa in the middle of japan
and then they were out there going hey your bitches love our frat house and uh your culture sucks
you think the japs are going to tolerate that yeah right i mean imagine that and also i mean whatever
it's just it's just like with guy it's very hard to not be provoked into just like having an equal
opposite response.
Like, this is just all my instincts.
I have to fight all my teenage instincts to not just be like, really, is that what's
happening?
The bitches are flooding to the Indian dudes.
Is that what's happening, dude?
Really?
Oh, yeah.
You guys are just cleaning up, like, whatever.
He's declaring color war.
We didn't do it.
Well, that's right.
But you will look, but there is something there where you see how, you know, like, genuinely
comfortable with being a pure bigot, the progressive Democrats are.
You know, like, they're just allowed to say it.
So you're like, okay, I mean, if you want to play this game, good luck.
But I look, I completely agree with you.
And in fact, I think that the spirit of kind of like anti, I think the spirit of like anti-racism to use that term, not, and I don't mean anti-racism TM.
I just mean, like being against racism or being against bigotry.
I mean, I would think that would be like a respect for different cultures and different races and different traditions and seeing beautiful.
beauty in all of them, because like there is beauty in all of them. And that's something that's like,
it's amazing. And it's just a logical extension of how you treat individuals. Like individuals
are all different in their own ways. And there's something beautiful about that. And if we were all
the same, like, like in some way, you could say it in a way where that might sound kind of nice,
like, we're all equal or we'll all one. But if you really like finish that movie in your head,
it's actually like a dystopian nightmare, the idea that we'd all be exactly the same. There's beauty
in our differences.
But yes, that being said, like, I also think, I think the logical extension from that
is not that, therefore, we must tear down every culture and force everybody into one
uniculture or something like that.
I think the idea is that, like, no, like you said, you want to preserve Japan.
You want to preserve Rome.
You want to preserve Dublin.
You want to have different, you know, like, I know my, I have family members who just
went over to Italy and they were blown away.
by how many Muslims there are in Rome.
And they were like, dude, everything's like a Muslim-owned store in the middle of Rome.
And, like, they're not bigots or nothing like that.
It's just that they went to Italy.
Like, obviously, they wanted to go have like an authentic Italian experience.
And likewise, I will say that there's, it's not even like, it's not purely a racialist
argument.
I mean, I don't know, you know, like, where does the, is it race, is it culture?
like, I don't know. Has that experiment ever really been run? I don't know. But what I do know is that
you drastically and radically change foundational aspects of a society when you have mass
importation of foreigners. This very basic stuff. And like, I don't know, it raises the question
of like, who owns the country? Well, the myth of America is that we own it. And we own it
through our elected representatives who are our public servants who may but in a sense i do think like
and i'm not again i'm not making an argument for collective ownership i'm not saying like we all
own it all together but it's just like it seems very reasonable to me to say that like
you said like with the example of frat guys going to japan well how many frat how many american
frat bros ought to be allowed into japan well seems very obvious to me that the answer is
whatever Japan decides.
Whatever they say, if they say none, then the answer is none.
And if they say as many can come as can come, then as many can come as can come.
Now, obviously, I'm not saying there's like one Japan that has its collective will,
but broadly speaking, if like approximately zero percent of Americans would have supported
our immigration policy, then I think it's reasonable to say, like, yeah, that was wrong.
That was done to the American people.
Now, I don't know how anybody who claims to defend democracy can defend this.
It's like, oh, you lost and you fucked up when you let in the first brown person.
Well, do you think Americans would have supported that?
Would they have supported?
Oh, I guess we're going to lose.
We're going to lose our culture.
We're going to lose our women.
We're going to lose whatever he means by that.
Would they have voluntarily lost?
No.
In other words, you're saying, ha, ha, you got fucking tricked.
And I will say that, look, obviously, I've never had the experience of being an immigrant.
I could imagine a scenario, like, where I would.
I don't know if this country really fell to shit.
And like the only place where I thought my kids could be safe was say Japan and Japan was willing to let me in.
And it saved my life, like my, you know, just my, you know, I'm successful.
Let's say I go to Japan.
I'm a columnist in their number one newspaper or something like that.
Like I was in abject poverty, and now I'm having a nice life over here.
It just, it would seem to me that the decent thing to do would be to have an attitude of kind of like gratitude toward Japan as a nation and the Japanese people.
And, man, that was pretty cool that you let me in here.
And I could not imagine a scenario where then this country, like, saves my family's life, allows us in.
And then I'm turning around and going, guess what, you stinking Japanese?
you lost because your women like us better and we're taken over and we're going to outbreed you
and what do you got your bland ass sushi will get ready for some fried chicken motherfucker you know
like i just could not imagine like saying this out loud and not just going like first of all
i'm just an awful person and second of all what type of reaction do i imagine that i'm provoking here
it's wild i think there's uh the word that comes to mind is there's an etiquette to being a guest
somebody's home and that's assimilating with the family making sure not being a burden on them
figuring out to become a contributor and then maybe over time you get to do a little bit of your
own culture because people are like oh what's this uh what's this jew boy about oh we'll do one of
your holidays and then you integrate yourself but when you show up and you go hey fuck you guys
fuck your society fuck the whole thing we're taking this over i mean that that that's it's gross
it's bad etiquette yeah and and look
man like there is I guess I think there is there is some value in tradition like I'm not saying
everything has to stay exactly the same and and in fact that never happens of course but there
there is some value in conserving the good parts of a society and keeping some things like
somewhat similar and I just don't think I think no matter what it is if you're if you're forcing
a radical change on a group of people against their will,
it's reasonable for them to resist that.
And I think that it's for someone like me, right?
Like, I was born in 1983 and I have, so like I was a kid in the 80s.
I mean, I have more memories of the 90s, but I was like, you know, I got early memories.
I have memories from like being three years old and shit, pretty vivid ones too.
And, you know, I was, whatever, in 1989, I was six or seven or whatever.
And look, man, the country from the 1980s to 2025 is a, it's a radically different country.
It's a radically different country in many, many, many ways.
Now, I'm not, like, by the way, I'm not putting all of that at the feet of brown immigrants into the country.
Like, there's been many factors that have changed the country.
And I think anybody who has listened to me as a public, you know, figure for years now,
it's not like, I don't think you've ever gotten a hint of like hatred toward brown immigrants
who are coming into the country, who I hate the ruling elite who have presided over
destroying this country.
I don't hate regular people.
But the fact remains, this is not the same country that we grew up, that I grew up in the 80s.
It is drastically different.
in many ways, it's drastically worse.
We were not in a state of permanent emergency.
You know, if you go watch movies from when I was a little kid,
the cheesy, hacky ending to a rom-com was the guy chasing the chick all the way
to the plane gate, because you used to be able to do that, Rob.
We weren't living in a permanent state of emergency where little old ladies had to get
groped at the airport all the time.
The government was not spying on us in the way.
that we are. We were not in a state of perpetual war. I mean, when the Cold War was going on,
there were problems, but we were not engaged in forever wars. We were not tens of trillions of
dollars in debt bankrupting the country. And we just simply did not have the level of political
and racial and cultural divides that we have today in the country. I don't personally,
I don't like a lot of that. I wish we didn't have a lot of this stuff. I mean, I would have
to find something else to rant about that's a fair point but like i think a lot of this is bad and so
you know it's like if the people are against this this radical change and essentially what what really
is the message here of what this guy's saying he's basically saying fucking accept it dude
accept it you're going into the dustbin of history accept that and deal with that you already
lost well i don't know how many men you've been around in your
life. But you might find that some men have a different reaction to that than going, oh,
all right. I guess this guy from a different country from a different culture with a different
skin color just told me I lost to him. I guess I'll just accept that. All right, guys,
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All right, let's get back on the show.
That's probably not
how it's going to go.
I did
here, let me, I wanted
to cover this other story
too because I thought this was
interesting. Yeah, let's pull up the
the Stephen Miller
video that I sent
Natalie, it was the second to last
one that I sent
over. It's titled
Conspiracy Theory No More.
But this was an interesting comment that Stephen Miller
made on Fox News the other
day. And so I wanted to play
this.
It's it for your audience.
Perfectly, Sean. This was not a loophole.
The Biden administration
Secretary of Homeland Security,
Alejandro Mayorkas, devised
a scheme to
fly illegal aliens into the country and then to escort them in mass across the border by the
millions and to give them something known as parole, which gives them a work permit, which gives
them a social security number, which gives them access to the voting booth. This was the plan
all along to get them here illegally so they can get free government benefits, get hooked to
welfare, and be able to participate in American elections. This was an attack on democracy
by the Democrat Party.
It's the same attack that we see, Sean,
when you have California,
a sanctuary state
that is refusing to turn over
even illegal alien criminals
and gang members to ICE.
So these are illegal aliens in California
who have been arrested by California police,
by California law enforcement,
for serious crimes, for crimes against children,
for felonies, for crimes that threaten public safety,
and they are refusing to hand
these criminal illegal.
aliens over to ICE. Instead, they're freeing them back into the cities to offend and offend
again. By any definition, what California is doing is criminal. It is a violation of our laws.
It is one of the most heinous things that I have seen in my entire...
All right. So, I mean, look, Stephen Miller is alleging a pretty serious conspiracy here.
Now, look, I don't know exactly how much maybe he's exaggerated.
or maybe not at all, which is quite possible too.
But I know this is something that me and you, Rob, talked about a lot over the Biden years.
And I think this is something that I got in a lot of fights with other libertarians about
because there are, you know, a group of libertarians who believe in, like, open borders
and view, like, the government having border restrictions as the government doing something
to peaceful people.
But, like, I don't know, look, Rob, I get tired of being right all the time.
But the point is that, no, dude, like, take a look at, look, we always, you look at the caravans like
that. And we used to talk about this all the time in the Biden years. Look, obviously, this isn't
organic. This isn't just like, this isn't just spontaneously happening without it being directed
in some ways. And then it came out that the UN and all these NGOs were funding a bunch of
these migrant caravans. And now it's being alleged by a pretty senior member in the White House
that actually this was a Biden policy to, by the millions,
import foreigners into the country.
When you really put this all together, what is this other than, in the same way that
a tax or a regulation or any government program is the government imposing something on
its people or any new law, this was the government imposing something on their people.
but just think for a moment how profound that it you know look man if you we had really dumb tax
policies i mean we still have really dumb tax policies but we we had like 90% top marginal rates
you know at one point in this country i mean no one ever paid them you know it was ridiculous
but the government can impose a lot on people look as we've witnessed bro government can even
impose lockdowns on people and then the lockdowns can end now there's not saying that there's not
still a cost to bear to that but there is something about like let's say you're the government of
ireland and you import 20 million Muslims into the country there is something different like
there's something unique about that imposition from a government as opposed to all of these
others because it it creates an irreversible change you know it's it's like a
forcing move that either Ireland goes away and your people go extinct, or you have to embrace
some type of authoritarianism to get all of these people out of your country. And either way,
that's just, it's like drastically, foundationally changes the character of a nation. And so,
I don't know. It's like you could argue in a sense that this is in many ways, like the most
profound betrayal, like the most profound treason is to actually.
like almost in a sense exterminate your own civilization. Does that make sense? Absolutely make
sense. And I think it's obvious when you look at the numbers that the Biden administration either
from Biden or they took advantage of Biden, but somebody was looking to bring as many people over
the border as possible. Speaking to someone just like of the criminality that he mentioned,
one is i didn't know that this was happening in california but i have heard these stories of
essentially people being arrested for criminal conduct and then it does not make sense why you
wouldn't just hand those people over to ice i mean just talk about stupid policy yeah i understand
that we don't want everyone deported but if someone's engaged in criminal behavior in this
country and they're not even supposed to be in this country the idea that you won't let the
other department deal with it and potentially deport them why like why are you taking a stand
towards criminal uh people that shouldn't be in this country at all why are you taking a stand on
making sure that they can remain here if they've already engaged in criminal behavior that's crazy
the the parole system i didn't realize that they got social security numbers the way i understood
the paroling was that the kids and cages thing was basically so bad and that detention centers
were so overwhelmed that they were essentially just granting parole to large numbers of people that were
sneaking across the border illegally, essentially to keep the optics down of just how bad the
situation at the border was, that they didn't want them in facilities. And so they were using the
parole system and they used it on a number of people. I've yet to hear that they were actually
picking people up in Mexico and then flying them into the country and paroling them, nor that they
are currently naturalized in a way that they're able to vote or are voting en masse in elections. Now,
that's not to say that they didn't have an agenda to hopefully naturalize these people
down the down the line and get them to vote um but either way it makes zero sense that
california or other people are busting illegal immigrants for illegal behavior on top of
sneaking into the country and not giving them over to ice to deport i mean that that's that's
insane and then also uh absolutely there should be more of an investigation into what
biden was doing with the parole system because uh i think it was mostly they were covering up
just how many people were coming in, and that was the easiest loophole to basically just send
them into the country and pretend like, oh, they're going to show up for a court date in three years
when we get to it. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. No, it's, you know, look, I don't know. I don't know what's
ultimately going to come of, is that, is that noise by you, Rob? Yeah, I got a, yeah, I'll just meet my
mic. Well, I know that, you know, I actually talked about this a bit with Nick Flentes, of all people,
when he was on the show.
But at a certain point, okay, perfect.
So at a certain point, you're like, look, man,
there is some truth to the point
that that New York Times guy was making earlier, right?
You can't go back to 1965 and undo it.
I mean, that would be the humane way to do this, right?
It would be to get in our time machine
and go back in time and not import the world into America
and keep America as what it was.
but we can't do that. We don't have that option. And so, you know, who knows how many people are going to actually end up being deported? Not nearly enough. I mean, there's, there's no way that Donald Trump is going to deport enough people that it undoes what Joe Biden did. There's just no chance that that's happening. He doesn't have the political will. He doesn't have the plan. And I'm not sure the American people would take it, to be honest. Even if you show some polls where a majority of them support it, that's a different thing.
pointed out before than actually supporting it while it's happening. But if that is the case,
you know, that like, okay, well, then one way or another, we're going forward as like a true
multicultural, multiracial society, then the only way, and I'm not saying, this is not something
that is the role for government, nor something that government can achieve. This is a cultural
thing that we have to develop. But like, the only way to do that in a way that doesn't just
lead to destruction and violence and at worst civil war is you can't do what that guy was doing
that's got to kind of be the rule not the law but there's got to be like a cultural rule about
that like you can't have that attitude dude if you want to live in like if if we want to have
some type of harmony in a multiracial multicultural society that the deal has to be you can't
have this attitude of like we're getting the whites the whites are the bad guys you're the only
group that it's socially acceptable to just be openly bigoted against because that shit's a
recipe for disaster and you know it's it's amazing to me that just people seem to be like i guess
what's what's fascinating to me is that like people are so bad at reading the temperature of the
room, you know, and going like, don't, haven't we gotten to the point where you've seen,
dude, you want to keep pushing this shit.
There's going to be an ugly backlash to it, an ugly, ugly backlash to it.
And then, you know, to your point, Rob, you know, it's, you're right about all that.
But none of these investigations are going to happen.
No one's going to be held accountable.
And, you know, it's just like, we're going to move forward as this country now.
And, you know, it's, I don't know.
I find it very concerning.
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show um another topic uh that i um that i found fairly concerning again this is kind of on the uh
you know just i'm tired of being right i'm sure you are too rub um but so there was you know i i
kind of made a big deal about the um the the elections that happened earlier this month
um and of course you know is that democrats won big in new jersey and uh virginia and
and New York City.
And, you know, I was making the point that, like,
this is a real problem for Republicans
and that this is, like, you know,
they should really wake up and take this as a serious,
like a cautionary tale.
And one of the things,
one of the areas where I got pushed back was people were like,
eh, what are you talking about, Dave?
I mean, these were all Democratic strongholds.
And my, like, counter to that was that, well, okay,
but the last governor the last gubernatorial election in new jersey was razor thin and this one was a blowout so why and by the way it was the same republican candidate it's the same republican candidate came within like a point of winning last time and this time he got blown out virginia why the hell should virginia not be competitive in the wake of 2004 in the biden camala harris disaster but now we've got another election now again there's just one election so
make of it what you will, but this one was in a Republican stronghold. It's a special election
in Tennessee, I'm sorry, which it's the seventh congressional district of Tennessee,
and the Republican Mark Green, who he retired, so they have the special election, and it is a
toss-up. The Republican won this seat by 20 points, and it's now a toss-up. And I'm sorry,
but this is just seems to be one more compelling piece of evidence that there is something to my
narrative here.
Like Donald Trump came in at the beginning of 2024, excuse me, at the beginning of 2025,
he assumes the Office of Presidency in January with his highest approval ratings,
and more importantly than that, the highest approval for his agenda that he's ever had.
and by the end of this year, you know, also juxtapose that with at the beginning of this year,
the Democrats are in utter shambles.
And at the end of this year, the Democrats are doing great in elections.
And Donald Trump is down with some of his lowest approval ratings and approval for his agenda has fallen.
This is what we're saying in almost every show here that you just can't get away from.
This is a disaster.
It's a disaster for Trump.
It's a disaster for the Republican Party.
And it's a disaster for our country.
So, like, people better start waking up to this shit.
Oh, by the way, Rob, do you know what the Democrat is running on in Tennessee?
You're never going to guess it.
The unaffordability crisis, just like they won in Jersey, just like they won in Virginia,
just like they won in New York City.
All about the unaffordability crisis, except none of these guys even know what an unaffordability
crisis is, Rob.
They don't even have an answer.
They're running on a thing that they can't even fucking describe.
They're running on, why?
Hey, Zoran Mamdadi, why is there an unaffordability crisis?
What do you think his answer is?
Well, those people really want to move to New York City and greedy corporations.
You think it has something to do with the fact that we created a third of the money that's
ever existed in the last decade?
You think that might be connected to it?
Do you think?
Maybe, maybe.
There might be something about the trillions and trillions and trillions of
new dollars that we printed and injected into the economy might that be related to why things
cost more like they don't even have that but they're winning on that issue and why why are they
winning on that issue because Donald Trump's not doing shit about it I can't stand the term
unaffordability crisis because a year ago people were actually wising up to this problem called
inflation and they were using the word inflation for why things suddenly cost more but then you
start calling an unaffordability crisis and almost sounds like, oh, what we need to do is just
hand people more money. And then they could afford this stuff, right, ignoring the reality of that
then the prices will just keep going up. And that's not what's going to actually make it more
affordable. But as we've said on this show before, sadly, Donald Trump is a social Democrat as
well. And if he just wants to talk about socialism, he leaves room for other people to come in and go,
well, I want more socialism. I'll give you even more free stuff than that guy is. Because the
problem is it's unaffordable and it just plays into this idea that it can all be free if government
just spends more money and obviously ignores the fact that it's actually inflation one year ago
it was a year ago people were aware of inflation it was in the news people were talking about
his whole presidential campaign was against the inflation and with a single word they've managed
to restere the retards towards government spending that it's not an inflation problem it's an
unaffordability crisis yeah no you have the big government progressives running
on unaffordability and therefore the answer is government should do all this stuff it's just it's
it's uh it's infuriating and um it's a and it's just a disaster for the country but here is what the
trump administration is uh focused on look rob i mean we've we've gotten some wins we uh we renamed the
uh defense department to the department of war and um our our secretary of war
is tweeting pictures about blowing up boats in a little kids book form, I guess.
Can we pull that, the image of that up, Natalie, is the tweet that Pete Hagseth,
who, again, I got to say, like much like Cash Patel, by many accounts,
seems to just be like a clown who's in way over his head and certainly doesn't seem
to be good on almost any issue.
But so he tweeted this.
Now, I don't know these.
My kids never read the Franklin.
I'm assuming this is like a kid's book.
but he said Franklin targets narco terrorists ain't that funny so this is thing now of course
this is like you know he puts this out to like provoke on Twitter and then you know it gets
this big reaction I got to say man and far be it from me to ever um you know ever criticize
dark humor but I do find it a little bit different when it's coming from government officials
particularly ones who are committing war crimes.
I actually think it's really actually pretty gross
to be joking around about the war crimes that you just committed.
But just imagine it.
Imagine it, dude.
First of all, the Trump administration, as we mentioned the other day,
is clearly lying us into a war.
They're clearly lying and trying to move us closer and closer toward a war.
They have been killing a bunch of people.
They claim our drug dealers.
They've never demonstrated.
that they are. By the way, it is absolutely illegal to just murder drug dealers.
Like, that's not legal at all. Even if they are drug dealers, like, you don't get to murder them,
especially when you're not in a war with that country. And the double-tap strike is just obviously
illegal under international law. Of course, as you guys may have noticed, if you didn't
paying attention to Gaza for the last two years. The thing about international law is that
it doesn't exist. That's the major flaw in international law is that there's no such thing.
It's just made up. But like by definition, I mean, it's words written down on a piece of paper,
but it's only as good. Any law is only as good as how much it can be enforced. And so, yes,
it's just clearly illegal. But here you are. Well, that's great. That's great. Pete Hegseth,
you're joking around about the war crimes you've committed while you're losing the fucking
country thanks donald trump administration can i talk about this double double strike tap
that everyone's outraged about um in my opinion it is no worse than the initial strike and this is so
stupid you've got firstly they're taking out these boats who they're claiming are narco terrorists um
now as to whether they actually are firstly as you said they should probably be tried but secondly
we don't actually know that they could be uh oil smugglers fishermen we don't know that
everyone that's been killed was actually bringing uh fentanyl into our country so now you've got
these people are even if they were narco terrorists you're whatever that word means fine
you're tracking you're you're attacking them with missiles from the sky they're essentially defenseless
they're not like if they're holding a gun it doesn't matter you're you're bombing them from the sky
whatever they're not secondly the idea that they're an imminent threat when they're not even headed directly to our country what right do you have i'm just saying even if you
wanted to say these are narco terrorists they have no ability to defend themselves and they're not an imminent threat to the
country because they're not coming directly here so the fact that you intended to kill somebody and then
you missed on the first strike and you basically want to wipe away the evidence of whether or not uh those were people to be
killed, I don't really see why it's so much worse on the second strike than the first
strike. And I think the media needs to pivot to just criticizing what's actually going on here.
I agree with you on that. Yes. But I think the thing that makes, look, it's even even in a war,
like in a declared war, the rules are supposed to be, right? That you're not allowed to kill people
who have been injured and removed from the battle or are surrendering.
Like, I don't know if you saw that video the other day, Rob,
of the IDF, just murdering two people in the West Bank,
who they literally are, I mean, look, dude,
I know you can say you can't get everything from a videotape or something,
but they have their hands up.
They raise their shirt to show that they have no weapons.
They're trying to surrender.
The IDF forces them back into the building and then just murders, both of them.
Now, also the IDF spokesman lied through his teeth about it.
what had happened and then the video came out. We saw what really happened. Also, Ben Gavir
was like championing both of those guys promoting them. The point is you're not allowed to do
that theoretically if the laws of war actually did exist or whatever. And so I guess that is where
I do think it's reasonable to go like, hey, wait, what exactly is going on here? Because to your
point, Rob, right? We're not engaged in a firefight with these guys. We're, you know, we're hitting
them with hellfire missiles from the sky drone bombing them and then why exactly would you then
need to come take out the injured survivors who were like ejected from the boat it's a straight it does
i think it it at least lends credibility to the idea that they're trying to cover something up here
um and also it's just a it's a blatant war crime and i think that's maybe why people focus on it
because it's a it's almost indisputable that you're not allowed to do that or at least you
pretend you're not allowed to do that the fact that they did it and i'll get away with it indicates
that they are actually allowed to do it but i agree with you rob that i'm just saying the fundamentals
are these people are not an imminent threat you haven't actually tried them and they're uh defenseless
so if it's on a second strike or a first strike you were always doing the exact same thing
which was taking out people that weren't an imminent threat without trying them yeah i think
I think, yes, what I very much agree with you on is that, broadly speaking, it should be
opposition to this entire policy. And in fact, as I've said many times over the years,
but I do think there's a lot of great things about American society. I think there's a lot of
great things about living in America and I like it and I'm not going anywhere until everything
falls apart and I got to hope the Japanese let me in. But I think,
that there is a real sickness in American culture that I think has really been put there by
the war party where there's like, like we could be at war and people don't even know about it.
But the average American has no idea that we're at war in Somalia.
No idea.
Trump just broke the record for the most strikes against Somalia in the 20 years that we've
been bombing them.
Most Americans don't even know about that.
The Americans don't even know.
Like, if you were just to name the countries that Barack Obama bombed, like, I'm saying,
if I just went out on the street and started asking people, what countries did Barack Obama bomb?
Yeah, there was the average people, maybe give me one or two of them, maybe?
You know, I mean, I guess they'd know Iraq and Afghanistan, right?
But, like, how many of them even know that we toppled the government in Libya, you know,
started a civil war in Syria, the decimated Yemen, you know, drone bomb the shit out of Pakistan?
And how many people even know that?
And there is something sick about any society where you, where they go to war so carelessly.
Like you don't treat war as like a thing that they're at least like even if you're lied into a war,
which has happened to many, you know, many nations.
But even if you're lied into a war, at least like the politicians had to come up with a lie
that made you think that this was absolutely necessary.
Like, God damn, we know this is a last resort.
But in this case, we really do have to do it
because they're a real threat to kill a lot of our people
or they already have killed a lot of our people or whatever.
Like, the fact that just knowing none of that,
knowing none of that is true,
nobody pretends that in any meaningful way,
Venezuela represents a threat to the United States of America.
And the fact that we can still so,
kind of um we we can go to war and and americans can even support a war without even really
thinking or caring much about it and i do think there's something like profoundly sick about that
because like saying again whatever i don't want to sound like a hippie or something it's just but this
to me should just be like common you know i mean i know even like i don't know what the perspective of
like natalie who like when you first came on this show and like i guess like i'd imagine like
you know the i mean i don't know but i'd imagine like the image of me it's like oh i do this like
right wing show or something but then all day all i ever want to talk about is the babies that get
killed in war because like first of all i do think there's a there's a real right wing critique of
war um but also just like on the bottom line forget left or right or anything we're just like
as a person just go those are real human beings over there man like even like dude even if
these guys are drug dealers like i don't know i've known some drug dealers in my day you
you don't fucking just give them the extrajudicial death penalty for it.
Like, yeah, drugs are bad, you know, but like, okay, what?
And then, of course, the flirting with a wider war, well, what does a wider war mean?
A wider war means, like, fucking women hold their dead children in their arms and wail in pain.
You know what I mean?
Like, there's a real mother who's every bit as much of a mother as the mother to my kids is a mother to my kids.
like then the fact that we just run into this shit so recklessly always from one to the other to
the other to the other always i mean dude we've been fighting since 2003
america has been involved in multiple wars we have not had one month where we weren't involved
in multiple wars and this is just like no way for a just society to exist
All right, we got to wrap up the show there.
Rob, what dates you got coming up?
Let them know.
Everybody check out the Run Your Mouth podcast, new episodes weekly.
And then I've got Denver, which is going to sell out.
So go grab your tickets.
It's a small room doing early Sunday, going to get hammered and then get on a flight home.
So, you know, come brunch with me.
It's going to be a good time.
Hell yeah.
Rob's a good.
Let me tell you something.
Rob's a good hang at brunch.
It's a good time.
Good guy to brunch with.
All right, guys.
And then, you know, me and Rob will be back on the road in January.
We've got Philly, Portland, Oregon, Key West, one other one,
ComicadepSmith.com, go check all those out.
All right.
Catch you guys next time.
Peace.
