The Pete Quiñones Show - Episode 1063: Commenting on the Latest Headlines w/ Thomas777
Episode Date: June 6, 202458 MinutesPG-13Thomas777 is a revisionist historian and a fiction writer.Thomas comments on various current topics, including Trump's conviction, Mexico's new president, Zionism, pride month, Ukraine,... and "White fortressing."Thomas' SubstackThomas' Book "Steelstorm Pt. 1"Thomas' Book "Steelstorm Pt. 2"Thomas on TwitterThomas' CashApp - $7homas777VIP Summit 3-Truth To Freedom - Autonomy w/ Richard GroveSupport Pete on His WebsitePete's PatreonPete's SubstackPete's SubscribestarPete's GUMROADPete's VenmoPete's Buy Me a CoffeePete on FacebookPete on TwitterBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-quinones-show--6071361/support.
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me, and I hope to expand the show even more than it already has. Thank you so much. I want to welcome
everyone back to the Pekinguenae show. Thomas is here, and we're going to jump around and hit some
subjects that I want to talk about, so get his opinion on them. So how's it going, man? I'm doing well. I got
my hair cut, so I'm doing well. Oh, nice. Ready for the weekend, huh? So I don't know if you've talked about this
with anybody publicly yet, but what's your opinion on the court case and what happened with Mr. Trump?
I talked about it with Jay Burden, but I haven't uploaded that discussion yet.
There's something that really flies in the face of precedent about this lawfare strategy
that's being pursued against Mr. Trump.
And, excuse me, precedent matters when you're talking about what constitutes executive
overreach and what constitutes truly impeachable offenses.
I realize in the case at Barr, figuratively and literally, Trump's enemies in the deep state,
they're quite literally trying to see if by hanging liability on him and by sort of branding
him with a verbal scarlet letter of felon or in that other bizarre civil case liable for rape,
their notion apparently is that they can disqualify them from office.
There's something very basic about that, quite literally.
You know, like the, I realized, you know, for the, when the media establishment was
incessantly banning this term insurrection, insurrectionist,
these people have no real understanding of the law, like in contextual capacities.
They looked, they looked at the Civil War amendments.
They took notice that, quote,
were precluded from
seeking and holding office, obviously,
because they, you know, they'd been in,
they'd been in, um, command authority roles
during the war between the States.
Like, it didn't register with them that, you know,
if you can just pigeonhole this word to describe somebody,
then they're disqualified from office.
Like that's the way like a little child to think about things.
Or maybe like a jailhouse lawyer who, you know,
learn to read in the prison rec room and doesn't really understand,
what the letter of the law represents beyond the most kind of basic textual interpretation.
So I find that kind of shockingly incompetent.
Secondly, in living memory, you know,
post-Watergate, I mean, watergate's than living memory too.
You know, the oldsters remember it, but when I say in living memory,
I mean, not just do people recall it, but it's still very much controlling precedent.
you know, I've got a lot of sympathy for the Iran-Contra defendants like then as I do now, considering this, what they believe they were doing.
But what went on there was incredibly illegal, you know, essentially utilizing the Oval Office to subvert the will of Congress and quite literally pedal arms to fund a private war, you know, based on priorities decided.
than the cloister the National Security Council, like, at odds with what supposedly is, you know, the will of body politic, you know, expressed through Congress.
Like, that's incredibly illegal.
You know, it was decided then that for the good of the country, as well as to not kind of compromise the integrity of the office itself, you know, nobody, there was no talk of impeaching Reagan.
And at some point, liability stopped.
You know, Oliver North very much fell on his sword.
you know and um that was that and in 2003 you know bush literally suborned perjury to procure a war
mandate suborning perjury before the united states senate to recur a war mandate whereby i think
around 10,000 servicemen and women were KIA or wounded i think that's unprecedented i mean
that's not just incredibly illegal, but that's precisely what, you know, the impeachment powers
tailored the address and deter and, I guess, remedy. So the idea that, you know,
things like Iran-Contra aren't truly actionable, subordinating perjury before Congress
resulting in the deaths of 10,000 Americans, that's not actionable, but
Donald Trump arguably paying off a woman he had sex with, you know, bumped up the felony liability under a theory that at that point he wasn't, you know, he wasn't taking adequate measures to, like, not commingle his private assets from his campaign finance resources that's beyond preposterous.
And I've tried to explain this to people and they give me like a blank look, like you don't get it.
Now, another rebuttal of some people is, like, oh, this kind of pettiness as part of the course.
look at Bill Clinton. People forget Bill Clinton committed perjury and he just kind of like laughed about it.
If you commit perjury or if I do, we go to prison. It's a serious crime. Like for better or worse, I think it should be, but even if I didn't, you know, Clinton wasn't, quote, hassled for having sex with some woman.
And I think the obviously independent counsel is an abomination. I don't think it should exist. I'm not saying I like Ken Starr. But Clinton quite literally, he committed perjury.
And then they, like, laughed about it and basically said, what are you going to do about it?
All right?
I mean, that's not, the president doesn't get to commit felonies when he feels like it.
You know, unrelated to acts of state and unrelated to any kind of national security imperative.
So that's kind of a different case.
And, of course, Clinton didn't, you know, he was censored in some, you know, kind of a quasi-official scolding,
which, you know, seemed kind of like the dobiest of all possible remedies.
but you know this idea that uh this kind of like superstitious almost kind of like religious faith in the law
is not you know just uh really like a a kind of political apparatus that uh is you know in a
in a circumstances is tailored you know to to assuage uh conflicts of interest you know between
between parties to government, you know, to hold people accountable, you know, without resulting in overreach, whereby, you know, the executive can't perform his job.
It's like, you know, it's like, it's almost like these people who believe that this is a legitimate exercise of the law.
They don't understand any of that.
But at the same time, they look at this like kind of like, almost like this kind of like big magic or something, whereby if you can get it judged,
to say somebody is something that's what they are and then they win.
You know, like I said, it's incredibly primitive, you know, and, um, I mean, that's, that's my take
on it. It's, um, you know, and whether you, I don't understand how people can't, like,
perceive what the issue is here. Like, it, you don't, it's not, it's not, it's not legitimate
to charge people with crimes just because you don't like them, you know, and, uh, a state's
attorney, I know, in, in place, like,
York, you know, they're called district attorneys.
Here are their state's attorneys. It's the office of the state's attorney.
You know, they're basically police.
You know, and like the police, it's not like on television where there's like this Fort
Apache, the Bronx kind of scenario where there's these hairy people like and there's crimes
happening everywhere and they're just desperately trying to get on top of all this informational
paperwork. Like, it's not like that. It's not like that. It's.
It's a lot of make work.
You know, I mean, don't get me wrong.
There are, in fact, you know, people who are victimized by violent crime who have to be made whole and they're entitled to justice as a matter of law and as a matter of right.
But, you know, that's the exception.
So you've got, you've got these state attorneys out in New York.
They're quite literally pouring over the statute books, you know, not very adeptly, as I noted.
And looking at things they can possibly charge Donald Trump with, you know,
know, incident to their, like, lawfare strategy.
Like, is that a good use of the public trust, and is that, like, a good use of time?
You know what I mean?
Like, it doesn't, that's something to give people pause about why these, um, why these
people and these basic, you know, what on the policing roles are being allowed to kind of
pursue their, their private petty grievances with, with public officialdom, like, through
the office.
Like, that's not, that's not the way you do things.
and, you know, in a developed society that's, like, rules-based and, you know, has, um, and where conflict resolution is, you know, um, is generally objective and, you know, there's a, there's a basic integrity to the judicial process, you know, I mean, so that's, that's, that's like my take on it. I mean, finally, just, too, the, none of this, uh, none of this, uh,
none of this makes a lot of sense.
I mean, at base, you know, like I...
The way you do things in a system like America is where despite what people think,
there's not real political parties, there's not, you know, obviously,
despite everybody saying, like, we're on the cost of Civil War II,
that's really not the case.
You know, there's not a lot you can do within the American system of a radical nature,
just by its sort of structural parameters.
You know, the executive office, even after, even in the, even post-Watergate remains pretty powerful.
But that is the shared office.
Like, you don't get a permanent incumbency there.
This idea that, you know, when your guy loses, you go utterly berserk, you pull it all stops to try and sabotage his legitimacy.
You try and tie him up with frivolous lawsuits and imaginary charges.
I mean, that's not
how you do things
in functioning societies.
It's just not the way, like, rational adults do things.
And it's also
there's like, um,
you know, Trump doesn't actually do a whole lot.
Like, a confident opposition
would have had no problem with
his incumbency.
You know, like all Trump
really did, of a policy nature.
Trump is good on immigration.
You know, like, that can't be denied.
I think he did the right thing with sanctioning China and finally, you know, removing a lot of their kind of privileges they enjoyed as a normal trading partner, which was ascending, considering the things that they were engaged in.
You know, I'm talking like out and out, like criminality, you know, not just making hash with IP protections and things.
But then that, I mean, Trump's a guy in a permanent campaign. You know, he's not making a...
a boogeyman out of him.
His enemies are actually
going to get something they really, really, really
don't like if they keep this up. I mean,
one of the,
the part of the function of a guy like Trump is that
you know, the people feel like
they're being represented and have a stake
in the system.
You know, I mean, obviously, that's
part of the, that's
kind of the theatrical aspect of politics,
particularly in a system like ours.
You know,
um,
it's like these people don't understand that.
They're like people who think that like TV soap operas or TV wrestling is real or something.
And like you think Trump like literally is this like evil person.
Like they then that's, I mean again like that goes beyond ordinary comedy crisis stuff.
Like it's staggering like how stupid these people are.
Like they really believe that stuff.
You know like um, so that's kind of, that's kind of shocking.
But it goes hand in glove with the entire course of policy, trajectory of policy like across the board in this.
in this country. I mean, I've been saying for years of the foreign policy establishment,
they're literally, like, they're like mentally disabled people.
You know, they have no understanding of them.
I was watching, you know, George Kennan in 68, he did that TV debate on Vietnam with some retired general.
A Ken I remember isn't it? General Glass might have been.
But the rebuttal from LBJ and his press corps as well as the Department of State was,
George Ken has never been to Vietnam.
He hasn't served there in uniform.
He doesn't speak the language.
Who the hell is he to be talking about policy there?
And people used to understand that these things mattered.
Now, like, it's, like, legitimate for some, like, literally retarded person,
like, Nikki Haley to be, like, mouthing off about Israel.
Or, like, these crazy people, like, Lindsay Graham,
like, these guys have, like, authoritative opinions on foreign.
policy that's literally insane you know um so there's something wrong if there's something wrong with
the system anyway that like that kind of thing is accepted you know and people don't realize that
there's something wrong with it but um the um but finally realize i'm i'm being a i'm being long-winded
part of it is too and i don't know how much of this is subconscious and how much is how much uh
people are cognizant of it, like, their proponents
to this perspective, I mean, was,
you know, the left doesn't have anything,
and they've got a big problem, actually, in all kinds of ways.
I get, like, on some level, they kind of need
Trump as a boogeyman, because they don't have
anything else. You know,
um,
they're, uh, and they very much
uh, worn out their welcome,
even with their traditional, um,
bases. You know,
um, it's really,
it's very much, uh, you know,
I'm always saying and I'm sure people are tired of hearing it.
It's very much echoes of like late Sovietism to it.
So maybe,
maybe part of this is they have no idea what else to do.
So the devil's sitting is just, you know,
pretend that Donald Trump is Satan or Jack the Ripper or something.
I mean, that's just, um,
this is my take on it,
like in this,
that's my view on the basics of it.
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Ready for huge savings?
We'll mark your calendars from November 28 to 30th
because the Liddle Newbridge Warehouse sale is back.
We're talking thousands of your favourite Liddle items,
all reduced to clear.
To essentials to seasonal must-haves, when the doors open, the deals go fast.
Come see for yourself.
The Lidl Newbridge Warehouse Sale, 28th to 30th of November.
Lidl, more to value.
Those people who love going out shopping for Black Friday deals, they're mad, aren't they?
Like, proper mad.
Brenda wants a television and she's prepared to fight for it, if you ask me.
It's the fastest way to a meltdown.
Me, I just prepare the fastest way to get stuff,
and it doesn't get faster than Appliances Delivered.e.
Top brand appliances, top brand electricals, and if it's online, it's in stock.
With next day delivery in Greater Dublin.
Appliances Deliver.aE, part of expert electrical.
See it, buy it, get it tomorrow.
Or you know, fight Brenda.
If he were to get elected, what do you think happens?
What do you think he could get accomplished and what do you think the reaction is from the screeching heritans on the other side?
Trump's going to get elected, Trump is absolutely going to get elected, unless,
they find someone to disqualify
his candidacy
or they cancel another election
and I don't think they can do the latter
I think a form would cause problems
what Trump's second term
would look like
is
the big danger would be that
you know Trump
Trump's not a real engaged guy
in matters of kind of global significance
like figured up being literally
the neocons are
staging something of a comeback
owing to a few different factors
including the fact
that they're banking on Trump
on Trump's incumbency
and his delayed
incumbency and they think that they can like capture
his ear in policy terms
and you know exploit things
like
the
collapse of
NATO's war against Ukraine and the
in the situation
in Palestine
for um
you know to widen um
to capture you know
just like a general kind of like conflict mandate
you know to pursue
hostilities against Darrell Islam
and against the Russian Federation
and right right now
they don't have the forces in being to do that
but that could change especially under a Trump presidency
um
otherwise
uh
Trump's big um
Trump's big
uh
his big policy coup, as he's going to present it,
it's going to be immigration.
You know, and like I said, that's what he's going to...
You know, I'm always pointing out to people.
One of the reasons it's bizarre as hell that people pretend, like Trump's
dangerous extremists because he's anti-immigration,
immigration is always massively unpopular.
Like, you only capture clout, it's always a guarantee
to, like, talk about who we need less immigration.
You know, it's like, like, immigration and taxes are the two
guarantees that, you know, you can bank on to capture
support. So
Trump's big thing is going to
be
you know
Trump's big thing in a second
Trump presidency is going to be like
see like we were sabotaged by you know these
by these radicals and these
and these and these anti-American people.
You know now we're actually going to build the wall and
you know we're going to make America great again and protect
ourselves and you know and like I said that
the downside of that
there's not a downside of that in like
radical enforcement terms of.
obviously. The downside of that in terms of the
sort of tenor that it generates
is that
it's going to have Vitroa Peehuv and more to kind of
like this
this
national security footing of
like oh we're under siege and we're at risk
of terrorism and all kinds of other things and you know
Muslims are after us and Israel's
Israel's you know the last line of defense against Islamic terror
and you know the Russians are trying to interfere with us
and I mean all that kind of happened
be horseshit. Trump's going to try and piggyback that on what otherwise is an entirely legitimate
and necessary remedy to a clear and present, you know, crisis on the border. But otherwise,
you know, like I said, Trump doesn't do a whole lot. And there's also, you know, things have changed
in all kinds of ways and the way like business is done. And traditional business,
I was thinking about this either day,
when Bush 41, like, went to Japan,
that was, like, the infamous visit where, I guess,
he, like, ate some bad fish or something
and, like, threw up on himself.
They threw up on the Japanese prime minister,
you know, which was not a good thing.
But Trump took a...
Trump took Leia Kokoa with him on that state visit,
you know, to show kind of, like,
you know, hey, like America's back,
you know, our evaluated manufacturers
are back, and we have some...
can are going to compete with
the Germans and the Japanese.
I mean, that seems
quaint in all kinds of ways, but
you know, this
the presidency
kind of like throwing its lot in with some
with some discreet
sector of the national
economy, or like identifying
what used to be called, you know, the Japanese
identified winners and losers. We never did that.
But, you know, the presidency
kind of,
identifying some firm or some or some or some national industry as kind of like the
the American brand like that doesn't happen anymore and um it's not um it's not as
simple as you know well you know the financialization of of uh of economics in in the in the first
world that's part of it but um you know it wasn't um there's not going to be uh
There's not going to be a radical shakeup or, you know, and a return to, like, you know, economic nationalism or something.
Or, like, or the superfluor trappings of it.
I don't see how that could happen, you know, like, I don't see how it would play out.
So, I mean, the, it's basically, uh, it's basically, like, like, with all things being equal,
and in an actual election season, where it was, when our actual election day is permitted to be held,
like what I'm getting at is that
basically what carries the days
so you can dominate the news cycle
and Trump is like
does that you know without even
you know losing a night's sleep
and uh
whoever can control the narrative
and in substantive terms
there's not much to the narrative
but a handful like key policy issues
and like Trump has those nailed you know like
hey I tried to
you know I tried to make our border secure
and you know the left wouldn't you know the Democrats wouldn't let
me, you know, because they're an American, you know, and they don't, they don't want us to be safe
and, you know, stuff like that. So that's kind of, that's the way I view it. I believe, too,
I mean, Mitch McConnell, his, his kind of final act before he retired was, like, throwing in the
towel on Trump and, like, abandoning, like, the never Trump bullshit. Okay, like, the deep state is,
like, coming to terms and that Trump's going to be the president. You got these outliers, like,
these cranks, like this dipshit, like New York, um, different to the terms. And then,
and some of these people in the media who can't seem to get through their head.
You know, but I think those are outliers, like, noisy as they may be.
Let's take a trip south of the border.
Mexico just elected a new president, a female.
Indeed.
Claudia Shinebaum, second generation.
maternal grandparents, Sephardic Jews from Bulgaria, the paternal grandparents, Ashkenazi Jews from Lithuania.
And as a friend of mine said, he went to work this morning and told his Mexican co-worker
that the Mexicans had elected a female president, and he thought that he was joking and said that
that was probably the most impossible thing he had ever heard, and he didn't think it was funny at all.
What do you think is going on down there?
it's hard to say in Mexico
you know I mean obviously
Mexico has really been in a
I mean Mexico has been in a state of war
like Columbia was
in the you know during Escobar's reign
Mexico's been in a state of war like actual war
since around 2002 in my opinion
they
the Cina Loas aren't going to do things
like Escobar did like assassinating
you know a whole panel
of Mexican judges, you know, it's not the kind of war it was, you know, Escobar Contra,
Bush 41, DEA, and their proxies on the ground in Colombia.
Like, the Ceno Loa basically need the status quo to keep doing what they're doing.
But the intrigues within that paradigm,
are extraordinarily violent and not particularly stable.
You know, I mean, and I, my take on this,
and I'm not a regional studies guy at all,
I don't like speak fluent Spanish or something,
but my take on why, um,
on why the kind of, um,
why the kind of globalist deep state,
you kind of look at that way,
like the Daveless elite and like the G7 or whatever,
why they like insinuated this like you know kind of like random jewish lady into them
into Mexico they that's what they do when they're trying to when they're when they're when
when they're when they're when they're when they're when they're when they're trying to
telegraph that the situation's under control like that's what they were trying to that's
that's one they're like benizier budo got targeted by al-Qaeda I mean part of it's because uh I mean
obviously she was their enemy and she was a cipher of Zionist interest but um you know I
I speculate that congruous with their M.O., you know, they'll take some like non-entity, like this lady, like this shine bomb lady, and say, like, I'll see, like, look, Mexico is being progressive and electing a lady as executive.
And, oh, that means that Mexico is, you know, joining the community of nations again. And it's not really a narco state that's, you know, been at war, you know, for an entire generation.
You know, like everything's returning to normal and there's nothing to see here.
There's something strange about how America is waging the war on drugs.
And obviously that's, I mean, that's one of the reasons.
That's what really underlies this kind of marijuana is legal, but it's not.
That's kind of what underlies in the big city.
They're selectively enforcing narcotics laws in a way that's never in the case in my lifetime.
You know, so I, they're coming to terms.
I mean, this sort of outside the scope.
the national security apparatus is coming to terms with just kind of the permanent existence of the cartel, which is incredibly fucked up.
While, at the same time, you know, retaining an appearance of control and law and order.
And I speculate that that's really what kind of underlies the insinuation of this lady into the executive.
like the Mexican presidency is a weird thing though like they'd
like according to the like a letter of the law and according to their heritage
where you know um
Mexico was a
I mean there's a reason why Napoleon 3 like
you know um
they had it kind of cloudated in Mexico
it's a place I'd be right for
you know like a like a strong man executive
and there's men there who like who like who try and
like suggest that they are that.
Like I remember like decades ago like Zadillo,
that was,
he'd swat around like trying to look like some Cowboy Sheriff or something.
But, um,
you know,
in reality,
the executive has like no,
no real clout,
you know,
whatever meets the road.
Um,
in policy or military terms,
you know,
that's,
um,
and that's one of the ways the cartel,
uh,
became so powerful.
It wasn't just because they've got some very adept guys.
you know, like Choppa was no dummy and he wasn't just some jumped-up gangster.
You know, he's kind of a fascinating guy.
But, you know, the way he was able to build that organization up, the way that he did,
um,
it was the fact that, uh, you know, they were very smart about how they proceeded.
And, um, I think, uh, you know, I,
at this juncture,
even, uh, though, in my opinion,
even if and especially if I'd say there's a kind of qualified disengagement underway with the war on drugs.
I'd say that I'd say that more than ever you'd need some kind of strong and executive to oversee that.
But that could be provocative depending on, you know, the conflict paradigm we're talking about.
But, I mean, Mexico is weird, man.
and I, you know, it's not, despite, like I said, despite the kind of cultural aspects of the country, and despite the letter of the Constitution, which does formally, it's not a president a lot of power.
You know, like, even, like, most people in any given decade couldn't even tell you the president of Mexico is.
You know, like, he's not a very visible figure, you know, so that's, um, yeah, that's my take.
on it. Did you know
those Black Friday deals everyone's talking
about? They're right here at Beacon
South Quarter. That designer's sofa
you've been wanting. It's in Seoul,
both concept and Rocheburoix.
The Dream Kitchen, check out at Cube Citchens.
Beacon South Quarter Dublin,
where the smart shoppers go. Two hours
free parking, just off the M50,
exit 13. It's a Black Friday
secret. Keep it to yourself.
Ready for huge savings?
We'll mark your calendars from November 28th
to 30th because the Liddle Newbridge
warehouse sale is back. We're talking thousands of your favourite LIDLITL items all reduced to clear.
From home essentials to seasonal must-habs, when the doors open, the deals go fast.
Come see for yourself. The Liddle New Bridge Warehouse Sale, 28th to 30th of November. Lidl,
more to value. Those people who love going out shopping for Black Friday deals, they're mad, aren't they?
Like, proper mad. Brenda wants a television and she's prepared to fight for it, if you ask me. It's the
fastest way to a meltdown. Me, I just prepare the fastest way to get stuff and it doesn't get
faster than Appliances Delivered.aE. Top brand appliances, top brand electricals and if it's
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expert electrical. See it, buy it, get it tomorrow. Or you know, fight branda. Yeah, I thought one of
the interesting things that came out of it was that in the run-up to these elections,
37 people who were running for president were killed were assassinated.
And like just yesterday, a female mayor in Western Mexico was shot to death.
I mean, it's just wild.
I mean, people are putting this out there like it was her rivals that were all killed
and everything like that, possibly, but not that's not in the office they're running for.
This was like 37 different people who were running for office in different parts of the country were just assassinated.
I mean, it just, it's a failed narco state.
And, you know, I think at this point you just really have to wonder, I mean, I would just assume that the CIA is just in constant contact with, with the cartels.
I mean, they'd have to be, they have to be otherwise, you've got to be, even if people who are your ops formally.
if there's no communication at all, you're dealing with an anarchy.
So, yeah, the DEA got kind of knocked off its pedestal by Obama,
but whatever constellation of forces, you know, I guess, yeah,
like Department of State, like DIA and Central Intelligence,
and, you know, military contractor types under light diplomatic cover.
I mean, they have to be liaising with cartel guys.
Otherwise, and if, whatever, me, more basic, whatever means the road,
or if they got to make sure that they're not killing cartel guys and vice versa,
that they cartels and killing their people.
You know, like, hey, this is what we're going to be, we're going to be doing this here, man.
Like, don't show guns blazing as us, okay?
I mean, that's, um, I believe that's where we're at.
And yeah, I, the people, I think, uh, they don't understand.
as Mexico is.
You know, it's, I guess, I guess because it's so approximate, they figure like nor any
America as could be that sort of critically unstable.
But, you know, that's the most, that's, that's, that's kind of the primary national security
exigency America actually faces, you know, and that goes way back, you know.
Um, it's never really been resolved, you know, and, um, yeah, I, uh, it's also, too, I mean, Mexico,
Mexico is not really at all like the United States.
It's, uh, it's basically got a European constitution and a European political heritage.
It's got this strange racial situation that's very much, uh, you know, cast-based.
okay um not in um kind of deeply formalized terms like um in the far east but you know nonetheless
in defecco terms it's very present you know it's not um i think people think it's kind of like
some like badly governed version of america just with like more brown people or something like
they don't get it at all but um yeah that's um that's uh i don't i don't and again i'm not
I don't have any, like, expertise on Mexico or even any, like, insight beyond, like,
what anybody else does.
But I, I don't think that this, this Shinebomb woman's installation in, in the executive
offices, um, I don't think it's, I don't think it indicates like any actual, like,
policy shift or, like, power paradigm shift.
Well, October 7th continues to weigh, uh, way heavy on American politics.
the, you know, it's revealed Nikki Haley. We saw her writing her, writing messages on bombs that were going to be dropped in Gaza.
Turns out that she was on the widow Adelson's. She took the widow Adelson's planes to Israel.
The widow Adelson has promised to back up Donald Trump no matter what, you know, through his trying times here.
what's your take on the
state of Zionism in the world and in the United
States right now?
It's a pariah ideology.
People like that Nikki Haley woman is so
unbelievably stupid, like she can't be real.
Like she's so, so, I mean, somebody that's strange
and like that, like, literally like staggeringly fucking stupid.
Like, I can't believe somebody like that's actually real.
Like, if somebody like that
like survived day to day and not like,
strangled themselves like with their shoe laces or something.
You know, like, not being funny.
She really is, it's like reptilian, like,
I mean, people, I mean, in the UN General Assembly,
they used to, like, they took, like, openly just, like, laughing at her.
I mean, like, what else can you do?
But, I mean, Zionism's always had,
with the exception, I guess, of the Cold War days,
they've always had optics problems.
And they're, um,
You know, the people who,
the people who kind of
constantly, they're, like,
their front office here in policy terms
always seemed, like, cringe, it's like bizarre
people.
You know, like, and no more is that
more present of a tendency
than no. But,
um,
you know, uh, Netanyahu's grossly
mismanaging the war.
I mean, within the bound of rationality of,
of the military exigencies there.
the fact that he hasn't been sacked and replaced
tells you that there's a real
he's got this bizarre coalition around
that's keeping him in
the driver's seat too that doesn't make any sense
you know
it's an incredibly fragile
coalition sustained only by the continuing emergency
and there's a perverse incentive
for Netanyahu to continue to mismanation
the conflict.
And people have just,
people just, like,
woken up to the reality of
these things. Like, the mask
has dropped.
You know, like, the days,
like, the days where, like, Zionists
can pretend to be the special
victims of history,
or pretend to be fighting this,
you know, kind of,
this kind of sacred
battle
against, uh,
against fascism or something.
you know that's over
you can never go back to that
you know
and uh
each day that America
hitches its way again to
um
to Zionism
like is another
America becomes more of a pariah
in the eyes of everybody else on this planet
so um
you're seeing the end of um
you're seeing you're winning the end of
of the
of the American Zionist
hegemony, like, as it has existed since, since 1949.
Like, it's, it's over, you know.
If Trump gets in there, it seems like some of the biggest voices that came to his,
uh, came to his aid after the, after the conviction was handed down after the sentence was,
well, not sentence, but, uh, the verdict was handed down that they were Jewish, um,
Bill Ackman, another guy, McGuire, I can't remember, and Edelson.
Trump gets elected, how hard does he try to keep Zionism,
you know, his pro-Zionist views that he's had going?
Does he take us as far as trying to go to war with Iran, which we know that's what they want?
Yeah, he may.
you know, I mean, it's like when
it's like when you
had, you know, it's like when Baruch
Corf
was one of the last men's standing who refused
to turn on Nixon.
I think it's more cynical
than in those days. I mean,
Baruch's
court's motives were, in large,
cynical, too. But, yeah, the
neo-gons think they can stage
their big comeback by hitching
their wagon to Trump.
And, you know, they think
Trump will have enough of a mandate
and if they can
insinuate in the public mind
you know this idea that
oh see Israel these beleaguered
good guys like Trump and it's like
you know it's like communists and
anti-American people who are
anti-Israel it's like they're anti-Trump
you know and if they can
if Trump's fortunes
not just as a perennial candidate
but as a president and
his credibility
as an article to
executive, if they can
hitch that
inextricably to
a belief that, well,
you know,
Zionism is
is to be pro-Zionist
is to be pro-American.
And the reason why, you know,
the third world is gang up on America
is because, you know,
they're, you know,
they're against all these things that,
you know, are actually what it means to be a
patriotic American.
That's what their
angle is.
And that's why
if people have to qualify
people have to be qualified
in their
in their
support of Trump,
you know,
but that's
people try to bait me
into that argument a lot
and I don't take the bait
but not because I'm afraid to do or something.
I don't give a fuck, but it's,
I think there's
I think there's bigger fish to fry.
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Well, it's June.
and it's Pride Month in the United States
and around the world
how do we get here, man?
How do we get to the point
where the United fucking states
has a month dedicated to
faggotry?
Well, I mean, the thing about stuff like that
is that it was very much just kind of like
declared by Dick Tot one day.
Like, it wasn't some organic process
or even an inorganic process
whereby opinion manufacture,
you know,
like the kind of opinion
manufactured cadres, you know, over like years and decades, you know, just kind of habituated people
with this, like, gradually. And, you know, back when they had more of a bully pulpit, you know,
kind of, um, you know, habituated people with the idea. It was literally just like one day, like,
oh, June is like Sodomimmon, just like it's always been. You know, and it's like the,
I think at least here, you know, um, and like I said, it's not, uh, it's not exactly like I'm at,
you know, ground zero over some
for, uh, or some like right
wing culture. Like, uh,
it seems to really, like, people
kind of like wince about it almost. And it's like, why is
you know, like even if
um, even if that was,
even if, um, the people that
this purports to honor the dignity of,
like, even if you had sympathy of those people, like, why,
why would there be like a month dedicated to,
you know, to a sex parapheria? Or why
why would there be like an entire month dedicated to observing,
you know, the kind of,
discreet and fringe
interest of this
of this subculture.
Like something about it seems like very,
very, very, just like kind of inorganic and
like unnatural.
You know, I mean, what I tell people
when they tell me to discuss it by this stuff,
I mean, what I do, and I've got all the
answers,
what I, what I do in macro terms,
I mean, I and we
are literally building like
an alternative society,
like literally,
and seceding from
the one maintained by our enemies.
I mean, I ride under the bloodstained banner in the swanaska.
People ask him a pride month.
I say it's white pride month because that's every month for me in my world.
In my world, the only world that matters because my people fucking built it, so fuck you.
You know, like, who can say what they want?
I could say that, I could say that, I could say that it's hammerhead shark month
or that it's, you know, the Sheriff of Nottingham month.
Like, that's great.
I mean, you know, regime apparatchics saying it doesn't make it.
it's so, you know,
um,
so there's that, um,
you know, I, uh,
I, uh, I admire people not to be foolish,
you know, don't go on picking fights with the police.
Don't get yourself arrested, you know,
to make some kind of statement.
You know, don't, um,
don't catch life without parole,
you know, by, um,
by, um,
jumping the gun, figuratively and literally.
But, uh,
don't, don't like, abide is garbage.
Like, you know, when people talk about what pride month, they laugh at them or correct them.
I'll tell them, yeah, it's white pride month.
That's every month.
Why, why are you talking about anal sex?
Like, that's weird and gross.
You know, like, call on it.
That's what I do.
Well, I think my favorite part of this month is the videos that come out of Russia
when they try to have their gay pride demonstrations over there,
and they're just being dragged off the street and thrown into buses.
Yeah, well, it's also, um,
Well, that's why these people are going to lose.
I mean, like I said, like, they don't understand that they're pretty much hated by everybody else.
And, like, I don't come back to the point again and again, but it's, like, it's going to BLM sort of at Humbold Park.
Like, the locals in the ground, like, the fuck you're doing here.
And when they didn't have the right answer, they started shooting them.
You know, it's all, like, get the fuck out of here.
You're not going to, like, come here and just declare, like, this is what you're going to be about,
and you're going to cause trouble, you know, based on this, like, crazy.
ideology you have that, you know, nobody else actually believes in. I mean, that, um,
this stuff's 10 miles wide and like a centimeter deep. Like, that's what a lot of people don't
understand, you know, and it's, um, I was stoked, like in, like, in Philly, like the,
like, people in support of the Palestinian resistance the other day, like, shut down, like,
their pride parade, you know, um, and you're going to see more and more of that, you know,
even people who might not be as sophisticated as one would hope,
you know, they realize something's terribly wrong with, you know,
the situation by which, you know, Zionist rule,
all the posts that matter on this government.
Then they look around and they're like, okay, it's the, you know,
America's providing aid and comfort to Israel as it,
as it ethnically cleanses an entire nation of people.
and what are Americans doing?
They're like waving these dumb little flags
and saying like, love is love.
Let's all dress up like the opposite sex
and celebrate anal sex month.
I mean, there's something like,
about that just like breeds contempt and everybody.
You know?
And it's like if you're actually,
I mean, if you're actually a principled person, again,
even if you're not being sophisticated,
you're going to be,
there's something about it that's like grossly offensive.
You know, um,
this kind of like indulgent, like bullshit.
Like, meanwhile, there's, you know, there's this real outrage of what, um, that cries out to heaven for vengeance.
Speaking of which, um, we're almost two and a half years into this, uh, Russia, Ukraine thing.
Russia is on the offensive again.
Um, their, Ukraine is talking about shooting missiles into Russia.
They actually are shooting missiles into Russia.
Um, these missiles could be American.
they probably have been all along.
Ritter says probably 500,000 Ukrainian casualties,
maybe 300,000 men dead.
I mean, that's a generation of men.
I always tie this.
When you look at the names behind it,
they are the arch neocons and Zionists in our government.
And the Ukrainians, the Ukrainians decided to commit suicide.
You know, and God hates race traders.
You know, so, I mean, that's terrible, but the Ukrainians did it to themselves.
They deserve it.
Like, they really do.
The Russia, I wrote about this the other day on my timeline.
The only objective of the armed forces of the Russian Federation is to kill the Ukrainian armed forces.
That's it.
There's not a territorial objective.
obviously the Russians need to
maintain the mainline of resistance
at
safe range from the Russian frontier
but beyond that I mean it's NATO's war
like if if Ukrainians are going to keep on
like charging Russia figuratively literally
and committing suicide by throwing themselves against
the armed force of Russian Federation
well I mean NATO started this war
NATO facilitated it
NATO's perpetuating it again.
NATO's refusing to negotiate.
And NATO actually has
a history of
pretending
to negotiate while
reconstituting forces as a kind of peace
ruse. So if your opt-for
is committed to, it's literally to war
for war's sake.
They won't negotiate
armist's terms.
The only statements
out of their diplomatic
core are like bizarre, shrieking
polemic about how you're evil.
I mean, what can you do?
You know, the Ukraine
is going to keep committing suicide. Well,
that's what's going to happen.
Russia doesn't need to do anything.
I don't think Russia has pursued this war
in a particularly intelligent way, but
that's the way that Russians always
fight. You know, the
and Superov
famously said that
Soviet and Russian,
you know, what was Soviet, but, you know,
prior to the Soviet era and subsequent
too.
Russian battle doctrines
treated almost like regulation.
They just do not deviate.
And the idea is
that eliminates
uncertainty as much as
possible
from the decision-making process.
You know, and
that's what Russia is doing now
when they're practicing a scaled-down
or fluid version of deep battle.
You know,
and the Ukrainians pretend to
staging these grand offensives but then when they do actually accomplish a
breakthrough they don't they don't exploit it you know um the Russians simply um
would draw the mainline resistance um then on flank the Ukrainians and mass
firepower I mean that's it I mean from the only way like I've been saying from jump
only military
path to victory for Ukraine
would be
if Ukraine destroyed the
armed force of the Russian Federation
eliminated
its capacity to reconstitute
eliminated its strategic
reserves, occupied
Russian territory
and was able to
devastate Russian infrastructure
and impose attrition
adequate that
Russia would never attempt
to reconstitute forces in the future,
there's literally no chance
of that happening, zero,
that's literally impossible.
It's like saying I'm going to turn a lump of lead into gold.
So because there's literally no chance of that happening,
the Ukrainians have been committing suicide for no reason.
You know, I guess,
but they've proven themselves to
literally be like natural slaves.
They love being slaves of the Jew.
So, well, I mean, that's, you're going to pay for that with your lives.
And they made their choice.
That doesn't mean me happy.
It's terrible.
That's where they're at.
I guess we'll finish with this thing, this last one.
An article came out yesterday talking about this town, this section of Baton Rouge in Louisiana
that broke off from Baton Rouge called St. George.
Yeah.
And they're calling it, and I love this term because I could have never came up with it.
Now I got to use it.
white fortressing.
I mean, ignoring the fact that St. George is like 20% black.
Yeah, I'm going to say, there's no, there's no hood in, like, in Baton Rouge.
It's like 100% white. There's not.
I mean, you know.
So what do you, this, this idea, what they did, and it took them 10 years of court.
I mean, it was, it was insane when you read about it.
Is this a way forward?
Yeah.
I think Louisiana is an unusual culture,
I mean, like politically and otherwise.
But when I say that we're creating alternative of sociologies,
we are doing that in the terms, in the ways we live our lives,
and the way we socialize with others, and the way we indexed with others,
and build communityarian structures with others within our,
you know, within our race and our, our ethnos.
but also
as the regime
loses its ability to
directly administer
you know
territories on the ground
you know people by default
you know self-help is going to become
more and more than norm
and people are going to be forced to rely
less and less than the police
which people have people who are squared away
like don't rely on the police anyway
but um you know
you're going to see you're going to see more and more self-segregation you're going to see more and more of a
returned you know real kind of property rights and um you know you're going to see more and more
even in urban hoods where people are close together you know kind of a like a township
sensibility where like outsiders might be welcome for limited purposes but you know they
definitely need to understand that there's limitations to that hospitality yeah that's
already happening. And that's, you know, that's just going to become the norm. And
increasingly, particularly, you know, there's a huge crisis with the ability of a big city
law enforcement to be able to recruit anybody because, I mean, especially the Floyd bullshit.
But that's only part of it. It's more just, um, people are changing the way that they think
about, um, the security apparatus and its proper role. And, you know, you're going to see
You're going to see PMCs or basically, you know,
growing police functions, you know,
or, like, literally just, like, deputized, you know,
like citizens, like doing that kind of thing, you know,
and there's strong precedent for that in America.
So, yeah, that's already happening, in my opinion.
And, yeah, that's a positive.
Well, I just wanted to let everyone know that I made a page on my website.
If you go to my website, you know,
there's a link up top to access the movie reviews we've been
doing because recently we reviewed near dark and I put the video and the audio up on
Gum Road and of course we did taxi driver which is still selling I'm still
people are still finding that one and getting emails on that all the time so my
website free man beyond the wall dot com forward slash movies Thomas and my movie
reviews and then once we get back from from the trip that we're taken then I
I guess we'll review the next movie.
Yeah, I've got a few ideas.
No, that's great, man.
We're like a mystery science theaters.
Oh, yeah.
I think we tossed around one idea that I think people will really, really get excited for.
Yeah, yeah, we'll figure it out.
When we're at the old dirty glory club, we'll figure out what movie we want to review next.
Yeah, speaking of that, I got to raise up and like, I got to pack my bags, or my bag, rather,
and get myself together for this pilgrimage to OGC and then Graceland.
So yeah, thanks for Hoc to be, man.
Yeah, just do a quick plug and go ahead.
Yeah.
Best ways to find me is on my website.
It's Thomas 777.com.
It's number seven, HMS-777.com.
the podcast and
other media
you can find on
Substack, it's Real Thomas 7777.7.com
I'm going to start adding some
some stream slash podcast
that content. A new series I'm doing with my front rake
when I get back from
Memphis.
That's going to feature on Gumroad.
I'll announce that and
plug the details of it
when I get back, but keep an eye out for that.
I'm on Twitter, obviously.
It's real capital R-E-A-L underscore number seven,
H-MAS 7777.
But I'm on Instagram, man.
I'm on T-Gram.
Just, like, look around and you'll find my shit.
All right.
I'll be looking forward to seeing you this weekend.
Yeah, man.
Like this.
