The Pete Quiñones Show - Episode 1120: Allowing the Past to Influence the Future w/ Sebastian from Antelope Hill

Episode Date: October 15, 2024

62 MinutesPG-13Sebastian is the editor-in-chief at Antelope Hill Publishing.Pete invited Sebastian on to discuss the release of "With D'Annunzio in Fiume" by Mario Carli by Antelope Hill. A conversati...on about freeing an Italian hamlet from migrant invaders quickly evolves into a discussion about the current state of affairs in the United States.Antelope Hill - Promo code "peteq" for 5% off - https://antelopehillpublishing.com/With D’Annunzio in Fiume by Mario CarliPete and Thomas777 'At the Movies'Support 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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Starting point is 00:03:00 I want to welcome everyone back to the Pekinguena show. Sebastian from Antalup Hill is here. How are you doing, Sebastian? Thanks for having me. I'm doing very well. Thank you. Cool. Tell everybody a little bit about yourself as much as you're willing to give.
Starting point is 00:03:18 Of course. Well, I have been working for Antelope Hill for a couple of years now, and I recently became the editor-in-chief. And it's been a very rewarding journey. It's a job that I absolutely love doing. a lot of passion for. So as I'm sure your listeners know, you guys were interested in talking about with Danunzio and Fiumi.
Starting point is 00:03:41 So I read this book recently, and I think it is a very fascinating case study of a piece of history that we actually don't know very much about. And in fact, I didn't know very much about it until we decided to publish it. And I had to kind of read through it to get this thing up to work. So there's a poet and an aviator, like a veteran in the Italian army during the First World War named Gabrielle D'Anunzio. And in the aftermath of the First World War, as I'm sure a lot of you historically literate people know, Europe was basically carved up very differently than it was before the war started. And naturally, not everybody felt very warm and tingly about this, to say the least. As a matter of fact, there was a lot of iridentist feelings in Italy, specifically,
Starting point is 00:04:31 where the victorious powers actually carved up what was once Italy, and they took this coastal city, which is now in Croatia, at the time it's called Fiumi, and they gave it to, what is essentially not like I said, Croatia, but it was populated largely by ethnic Italians. And this angered Danuzio and a lot of his loyal men, the Arditi, as they were called. They were actually basically the first shot troops of the First World War alongside the more well-known German stormtroopers, actually.
Starting point is 00:05:05 I think they're a little bit underrated, if you ask me. So Danizio took a bevy of his Arditi and marched right into Fiumi. It said, this is mine now. We're not going to let this get handed over to a foreign power. There's no way. This is an Italian city. And we're not going to let it happen. And he actually petitioned the Italian government and said, hey, I've taken the city.
Starting point is 00:05:28 All you have to do is just annex it. Like, I've already done all the heavy lifting. Just sign the paperwork. And of course, they weren't super thrilled about this. They kind of felt a knife on their neck from the victorious allied powers. So, like, hey, maybe we'll just see what happens. And anyway, so long story short, that occupation lasted for a few months before it came to an end. before it came to an end.
Starting point is 00:05:54 But there's a lot of fun bombastics that happened in the meantime. So I hope that was kind of a fun little intro for you. Yeah, a lot of that happened in World War I. After World War I, I was reading recently. It's a little-known diary by Anna Eisenmanger called Blockade, and she was a middle-to-middle upper-class woman in Austria. and in Vienna. And just what she talked about there,
Starting point is 00:06:29 about how checks got part of Germany, and Italians were actually controlling part of Germany, too, and the kind of, the way they were treated, the Germans who lived, the, yeah, and she considered herself, even though she lived in, she considered herself a German, she says it in her, in the diary, that the way that Germans, weren't being treated that, yeah, just because this treaty decided to carve things up and,
Starting point is 00:07:00 you know, as she even made the point that it seemed like this was done to create chaos. And I think that's the kind of thing we see today with like the way they do immigration, where it seems like the immigration, but there's many reasons for the immigration, but one of them is just chaos is to throw a population as a chaos. Yeah, what's interesting is Germans and Poles really aren't even that different from each other,
Starting point is 00:07:28 and even that was enough to cause problems. Now, today we decided it's a great idea to drag as many people that are as unlike each other as possible and throw them all into one geographic area, the best. Yeah, if you have people who historically have lived next to each other
Starting point is 00:07:44 and, you know, pretty much can, You start doing genetic testing. Yeah, we're pretty close. My big thing is I used to live in South Florida. So I've been around Haitians. I was around Haitians for a lot of years. So as soon as I saw what they were doing, you know, and even here in Alabama, I was like, all right, this is, this could be the thing that puts people over the edge.
Starting point is 00:08:13 Because there is nobody. They haven't brought anyone. I mean, Somalis in Minneapolis are, you know, if you, guns ahead, you have to make a choice to live around them or live around Haitians. I'm going to live around the Somalis because I don't think people understand exactly, you know, the how, just how different the Haitian population is. So, yeah, I mean, now it's obviously much worse, but even back then, you were still going to have tensions between people who were Polish and people. who were who were German just because you know it's cousin instead of brother kind of thing mm-hmm that's interesting yeah you know Haitians have been in the news bit lately with the happenings in Springfield ohio as I'm sure you're aware oh yeah the um I've been all over that
Starting point is 00:09:06 and the when you so like the way Czechoslovakia took over certain parts of Austria and Germany after World War I and just basically started to wreck. There was no, they started raping the forests and deforestation and just treating the people native to that land bad, dropping 20,000. I've heard from people up there who say it's more into a town of 50,000. that was already suffering and not only dropping them in there, but giving them wads of cash and claiming that this is what is, you know, this is what's going to fix the economy
Starting point is 00:09:57 when they could have just given the people, the white people in Springfield, that money to fix the economy. Yeah, you have to think there's something, there's something really wrong. And I guess that's something that Dinenzio felt too is like if you're going to, if things are going to start getting carved up, then somebody should probably do something about it at that point. Oh, yeah. It's funny how many parallels there are even today. At least like back in the day, there were clearly demarcated areas on the map. This goes to Poles. This goes to Italians. This goes to Germans, et cetera, et cetera. Nowadays, we don't have that. We just have one big country that all the states are effectively open borders with each other. So anybody can go anywhere at any time.
Starting point is 00:10:42 So it just turns into one giant hodgepod, so to speak. It's quite a different situation in many ways. And then you have places like Appalachia, you know, who are historically, I'm talking about for hundreds of years. My mom's side of the family is from Appalachia. And this is several hundred years of a culture. and now because of, you know, storms and because of our crumbling infrastructure, because, you know, we have this competency crisis, quote unquote, which is just basically white people, white people can't run things anymore. So they put people in there who don't know how to do anything. They don't allow white people to run anything anymore.
Starting point is 00:11:30 Now Appalachians are under, or under attack. the you know in with their the FEMA is like arresting people who are trying to go in there like normal people were trying to go in there and help these people I mean we're it's just basically a war of displacement at this point yeah yeah it's a war of attrition and it's a war of moving people and I just finished reading I just released an episode reading Martin van Kreveld's war in migration and it's just this whole paper he did on historically how migration has been war. You know, displacements of whole swathes of people and ways that people had to be treated
Starting point is 00:12:16 at first in order to be either driven out of there or driven so far into poverty or this despair that they can just bring another group in and replace that, displaced that group. I've actually said for a long time, it's funny that you mentioned that. I've said for a long time that the conditions that white people are in today are actually much harder than a lot of post-war treaties that were inflicted on a defeated population. Like, for example, what happened in Italy after the First World War, I would argue that what we're facing today is actually even more severe than that. 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 favorite Liddle items, all reduced.
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Starting point is 00:14:32 Yeah, and you don't have to fire a shot. No. It's like they're not, it's not like they're coming in and they're, they're shooting people. It's not like they're, they, all they have to do is, um, allow, allow infrastructure to crumble, let nature take its course, you know, you're going to have, you're going to have hurricanes, even this late in the season.
Starting point is 00:14:59 I mean, Hurricane Andrew, which I live through, which is a famous one, um, when I lived in South Florida, that was very late in the season. reason two. It's the late, it's the late ones that always do the most damage. And, um, you know, and then you have, you watch that and you're seeing they're just allowing people, they're going to try and kill, let these people die basically. And then you have, what's happening? Andrew was 1991, 1990 or 1990? No, it's 90. 91. Yeah. Um, and then you, um, and then you, um, um, And then you have this dropping, increasing the size of a town by 33% with people who don't speak English and who are from a culture where they practice voodoo and have cannibalism and also have a history of killing all the white people on the island. Even the mulattoes.
Starting point is 00:16:00 You just kill anyone who's not black, just kill them all. And they're most of the people on that island are pretty aware of their history so much so that they share an island with a country, Dominican Republic, who because they understand the Haitian people, they turn into these like mulatto white supremacists who are like, yeah, you're not allowed to come here. We're going to shoot you if you try and come over our border. Yeah, it's funny. It doesn't take any special knowledge to realize this. All it takes it to not have a propagandized population. And even that, I don't think it works. I think it's more just a carrot in the stick situation and more of a stick situation where
Starting point is 00:16:36 if you speak up about something, you just get punished. You take that away and everyone understands the problem. So Danunzio, are we talking about, we're talking about proto-Italian fascism here? Yes, that's right. Actually, the Italian fashion, like Mussolini and whatnot, actually took a lot of inspiration from the hygings of Danizio and his loyal artis. which again, before we decided to publish this book, I wasn't even aware of this period of history.
Starting point is 00:17:07 So it was a very enlightening thing to read. Well, yeah, it's also an interesting period in time because a lot of countries are having fascist movements, but because they tend to be more nationalist, they can be different from country to country. You know, the Action Francaise and the British Union of FAC. Yeah, British Union of FAC. are going to be too, going to operate two completely different ways, but they're still going to, on an
Starting point is 00:17:39 international level, be able to talk to each other and have a lot in common. Yeah, exactly. Plus, Europe is so geographically small. I mean, it's like roughly the size of the U.S. and that's if you're including, like, the parts of Russia, like before the, you reach the the Ural's, like mainland Europe is actually, if you're not including Russia, it's actually quite tiny, all things considered, which I think it makes it all the more important. to preserve. So did Dinenzio just had his army left over from World War I? Who's fighting with him? Yeah, so basically a bunch of these loyal shot troops that served with him during the First World War. Obviously, these guys were also not very happy about the post-war treaty that were giving over this city.
Starting point is 00:18:24 So it stirred up a lot of irredendentous energies as, hey, that's our city. We're not going to let some piece of paper decide that our city is just going to be up for grabs. There's no way we're going to let that happen without a fight. We just fought a war, and we're not going to let it happen. So especially since the Italians were, you know, on the winning side of that time. I guess one of the things that you could really look at if you wanted to compare this with today is,
Starting point is 00:18:57 I mean, the fact that they are Italian. And we're, you know, when we look at, what's happening here, we're Americans. And, you know, some, it's, I'm not going to use the term melting pot because I know where melt, that term came from. And it's, it's such a horrible term. But it is a bunch of groups who are, there are many different cultures in the United States.
Starting point is 00:19:28 And there is some truth to it. I mean, white Americans effectively today are their own ethnic group, if you ask me. Like obviously it's more complicated than that. Like there's still people that have like strong Italian identity, for example, or Irish or Greek or God knows what. But for the most part, everybody, all the white people today, like nominally identify as Americans first. And then their ancestry is kind of just a nice little bonus thing for them. I don't really think there's anybody who's like, yeah, I'm like only Italian. and I'm kind of just here as a guest in this country.
Starting point is 00:20:05 I think that that sentiment has been long, long gone. So, excuse me, I think if there were ever like an American nationalist movement, I think people would just cling to their American identities. I think, based on my own life experience, that's how everybody feels today. Like, the whole, it's funny actually non-whites kind of make fun of white people, you know, in a way they actually find kind of funny and lighthearted, which is that we are always talking about our ancestry. It's like, oh, I'm like three quarters Italian and a quarter of Polish.
Starting point is 00:20:40 And there's like a little 116th of like English in there. And it's funny because like I've heard, you know, black colleagues and whatnot say like, hey, we never do any of that. How come that only white people do something like that? And I guess it's actually true. That is something that's unique to us. So I've never really heard non-whites talking about themselves that way. I mean, obviously like they'll have their ancestry.
Starting point is 00:20:59 like maybe they're from like Thailand or something but it kind of just ends there and it's not really a point of topic, the topic of conversation really like it is with us. So I'd like to think that we have a little quirk about us and it's something I don't really want to give up even though we are all at the end of the day
Starting point is 00:21:15 like Americans today. Yeah, I wasn't saying that like a lot of white Americans, European Americans still like identify with the old country first. I'm saying it's Just trying to get everybody to come together in the United States under the banner of something is hard because when you see yourself as American, well, that also includes a lot of groups that are destroying America. You know, a lot of groups will fall under that naturally because of our civic religion that are destroying America.
Starting point is 00:22:03 And, you know, I don't think that it's white Europeans that are destroying America. So, yeah, I mean, having people, just getting certain people to understand that, you know, watch cable news. Watch cable news for the last 10 years. And you'll see that they, yeah, I was talking about this today. I can't remember who I was talking about with, but when it comes to, like, victim status, and you have all these groups historically, you know, blacks, Jews, all these, that claim victim status. But it's really not victim status because they're getting, they're getting preferential treatment. And, like, no one has, you know, no one in the United States has declared war upon any racial group, any ethnic,
Starting point is 00:22:53 group except whites. Yeah. You're actually oppressed. If you claim to be a victim, nobody would listen to it. You wouldn't get a spot on cable TV. I mean, just listen to the way that white people are talked about in mainstream discourse. We're effectively just an obstacle for other people to overcome. 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 favorite Liddle items all reduced to clear. From Home Essential, to seasonal must-habs.
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Starting point is 00:24:59 I think I know what you're talking about. Are you talking about Mark Potox calendar of the white population percentage? Yeah. I didn't think that's what you were talking about. Yeah. Could you imagine? I mean, if it was black, if it was like if the black population was dwindling and some white guy at like the Abbeville Institute had that had that and that came out, it'd be war.
Starting point is 00:25:22 I mean, their licenses would be taken away. I mean, everything, they'd be destroyed. But no, it's, and, you know, that's the problem is, is just getting, you know, most white people, especially older, people who have power, people who have wealth, to understand that because they're very, because their wealth and their, and what power they have is still insulating them from a lot of, a lot of this where a lot of, a lot of younger whites can't even. and get the jobs to be able to even start making wealth, getting people to come together and basically understand what this war actually is, is troubling. And then, you know, you take into consideration that once you start doing that, you're going to be infiltrated. You're going to have feds in there. And they're going to be looking to shut you down, even if you, if you're not infiltrated, they're going to try to shut you down from the outside. Yeah, it's interesting. This
Starting point is 00:26:22 country is so geographically expansive that the problems aren't bad enough yet where you can't just run away and find somewhere that's still nice, which is a double-edged sword. Obviously, it's nice that you can do that. However, the downside of that is that it makes it easy for people to bury their heads in the sand and not feel like they're forced to politically fight the problems that are being afflicted upon us. Well, I mean, after living in Atlanta for so many years, I decided I wanted to I wanted to get out and I mean, I live pretty damn rural. Some people could say running away. But even, but then, you know, how far can you run? I live 50 minutes from Silicon, Alabama. I don't know if you've heard that name, but that's one of those places where Haitians were
Starting point is 00:27:11 just dropped off in the middle of the night. Yeah, it's amazing how they don't just get dropped off to like Atlanta or other major population centers have to strategically inject them into the most strategically white places in the country. It's it's almost like it's being done intentionally. And for many reasons. I mean people are being paid off. People are getting rich to do this. I mean, that's come out of Springfield that there are a few names like a factory. Yeah, the factory owner, the mayor, the mayor owns eight rental properties, which, which he's kicked all the white people out. He only rents to Haitians now, and he doubled the rent.
Starting point is 00:27:52 There's a guy named George Ten who has, like, an employment agency, which is just basically human trafficking now. He has Haitians bust in from all over the country. He gets them jobs there, buses them all over the place whenever they get in the bus to go from wherever, from, like, home to work, and everything. He charges each one of them $20 for the ride. and then takes, I've heard he takes half their paycheck and everything.
Starting point is 00:28:19 So there's a lot of problems because, first of all, you know, you have Alexander, Alejandro Majorcas, who is obviously, I mean, like the modern day caricature of, you know, somebody in 711, in 7.11 AD who would have been opening the gates of Toledo in Spain to, and he's just basically busing in, or flying in anyone and everyone who wants to come here, no matter whether they can speak the language, have money if they're European. I mean, it's just, so you have that, which is ideological. Then you have people who are making money off of it.
Starting point is 00:28:59 You have the NGOs. And then you have people on the local level. I mean, basically, you would need, like, somebody, an attorney general with the balls to be like, okay, I'm filing a RICO case, and I'm just taking all you down because this is a criminal enterprise. Yeah, that would also require having government figures in the attorney general to not just ideologically be in on this whole process as well. Fortunately, not the case for us. Well, I mean, we, I guess we shall see, but it seems like really the only thing that anyone can control right now is locally, is, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:42 You know, if you have a good sheriff and you get with your sheriff and you get with people and you, you try to figure out how to handle this if it, if it comes to you because, you know, I get the idea that it's just going to come for everyone. I mean, the whole, you know, the, the idea that everyone, that everyone who comes here is an economic boon on, on the, for the country is, you know, then you have people like Matt Maddie Iglesias who's like, well, I mean, I guess if that's true, then we need a billion Americans. Well, people are responsible at the end of the day. Yeah, yeah. It's just everybody's an economic unit. And that's all we are. And if you're an economic unit, then you can be, you're easily replaced by the next economic unit.
Starting point is 00:30:37 And if you run out of, you know, if they, you know, like, um, if they flood your town with opioids and you get everyone you get half the you know half the white population hooked and you kill them off or you you basically disable them well that's just an that that's just a loss in an in an of an economic unit and it's very easily replaced with another economic unit and we don't care where that comes from yeah absolutely you know actually uh i visit visited my hometown again recently. I hadn't been there in many, many years. And I was very happy to see that it's still nice. And I couldn't still shake off this feeling like how much longer is this going to last before this place gets an injection of diversity or something? You know, you're just having this worldview can be a little bit taxing sometimes because, I don't know, it seems like so many other people don't even kind of realize the, the conditions being inflicted on us by our elite that are hostile.
Starting point is 00:31:42 style to us. It's a little bit lonely sometimes, you know, kind of having to be around everybody who doesn't even realize it, but, you know, maybe ignorance is bliss. But that said, I was still very happy to be back and see old family members and everything. But it's hard to shake off that feeling. It's like I've known too many people that experience seeing their hometown get overrun with foreigners and kind of decline materially. And I'm glad that that didn't happened to me but maybe one day it will and that kind of upsets me just a little bit so I kind of understand I really understand the feeling of other people that have to see their homes have like these big population transfers like we were seeing for example in Europe at the end of
Starting point is 00:32:26 the First World War like it kind of gave me an appreciation for obviously it's a different situation but seeing like two countries swap their populations I mean even after these people have been living in an area for hundreds of years it it it I feel like for me, just the experience of going back home again kind of reminded me, it gave me a taste of reality that these things all happened in the real world. It's not just something I read out of the book. It kind of humanized for me all of these people that had to go through this. So I thought it's valuable for me.
Starting point is 00:32:59 Well, where I grew up, I've never live again, which is unfortunate because I would say growing up in a city and especially in a big city, it's not so bad if your life, if you can live a life that's peaceful, if you can live a life where you can prosper, if that's what you want to do. Unfortunately, that is just impossible in this country at this point. So if you want to live, have more peaceful life, you're going to have to leave. And I don't regret it because it is a really good decision, especially considering where, you know, the way things are now. But, you know, people really shouldn't have to do that. And what you mentioned elites there. And one of the, one of the main issue with elites is, is that when you have a system like we do in the United
Starting point is 00:34:00 States, people can come from anywhere and become elites. And that doesn't mean. And that doesn't mean that they're going to be a, they're going to become American. They're still going to have, they can still have allegiances somewhere else. So if you have elites that are, you know, share a bloodline with you. And, you know, you, a place like Iceland where pretty much 300,000 people and almost everyone's related to each other in some way, shape, or form, sure, you're elite. may watch out for you. Have a, have a better chance of your elites watching out for you.
Starting point is 00:34:44 I still think it's interesting that Iceland was really the only place that after the 2008 crash tracked down their bankers and put them in jail. You know, because, you know, they escaped after that. And they were like, well, you punished our people. And you go there now. And I remember going there. I was there for like two weeks. And I never saw a cop.
Starting point is 00:35:06 I never saw a police officer like the whole time I was there. And it's just because it's a homogenous mass of people who are not going to kill each other. I think there was two murders in the last two years before I got there and they were both committed by foreigners and committed by tourists. And, you know, we look at what we have here. You know, and it's rather difficult. It's rather difficult. You know, there was a time in those kind of. country where people from different parts of Europe, they congregated amongst themselves, still
Starting point is 00:35:43 considered themselves to be Americans, but they, you know, they had something in common. And, you know, they were just in a new land and making a new life for themselves. And that pretty much all went away after, you know, after, after World War II when basically every, you know, the world just dumped to every, the world just started dumping every other countries started dumping everyone they didn't want here. And people who came here weren't coming here to be Americans or to join the American, most weren't coming to join the American, they were coming to get theirs. It reminds me of actually a bit of a funny story.
Starting point is 00:36:27 I used to work in an office and with a lot of like H-1B visa Indians. and they would always talk very fondly in their home country, India. I would always kind of prod them, like, so why are you here? And their answer was always the same money. These people aren't oppressed. These people aren't like escaping some horrible conditions. They're just here for money, and they would happily go back home anytime. You catch them in the corner of your eye.
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Starting point is 00:37:18 Finance provided by way of higher purchase agreement from Volkswagen Financial Services Ireland Limited. Subject to lending criteria. Terms and conditions apply. Volkswagen Financial Services Ireland Limited. Trading as Cooper Financial Services is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Ready for huge savings? We'll mark your calendars from November 28th to 30th because the Liddle Newbridge Warehouse Sale is back.
Starting point is 00:37:39 We're talking thousands of your favourite Liddle 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 Newbridge Warehouse Sale, 28th to 30th of November. Liddle, more to value. Discover five-star luxury at Trump Dunebeg. Unwind in our luxurious spa. savour sumptuous farm-fresh dining, relax in our exquisite accommodations.
Starting point is 00:38:10 Step outside and be captivated by the wild Atlantic surrounds. Your five-star getaway, where every detail is designed with you in mind. Give the gift of a unique experience this Christmas with vouchers from Trump-Dunbeg. Search Trump-Ireland gift vouchers. Trump on Dunbioghush Faragea. Yeah, yeah, I mean, I've never been to India, and I know people who've been to India. the end. They don't want to go back. Like one time's enough for them. But yeah, it's, that's basically what it is. People talk about how, you know, if you wanted to end some of the problems with
Starting point is 00:38:52 people coming over the southern border, you would tax remittances and things like that and tax them heavily or, you know, just make, pass, get regulations that would make it, um, take away people's companies for for hiring people who were illegal things like that but in the end of the at the end of the day it's all about will and it's do people have the will to change you know you hear trump use the term remigration you hear j d vans say you know a lot of people need to a lot of people need to go you hear a lot of people on the right saying that is do they have the will to do it. Do you have the will to? Yeah, do you have, and all it is is will. You know, will is a, will is an amazing thing. Just ask Buckelly. You know, Buckelly has done something to El
Starting point is 00:39:54 Salvador that no one who, who knows the history is El Salvador. And strangely, I do know the history of El Salvador since like, since, you know, the early 1800s just because I've studied the banana, the banana wars and United Fruit and stuff like that, companies like that. But yeah, I mean, who would have thought that people are like going on vacation to El Salvador now? Americans are like, oh, yeah, let's go check this out. Yeah, it's still cheap. Let's go while it's still cheap.
Starting point is 00:40:24 And it goes from the murder capital of, you know, the Western Hemisphere to like the safest country in North America, the safest country in the Americas. You know, just because it shows you that government power. Like if people actually want to get something done, wow, what do you know you can actually do it? This goes to show like the United States government, like arguably the most powerful entity on Earth can't control the border. Nobody can use it. And the thing I love about Buckelly is he's totally leaning into it. The way he dresses.
Starting point is 00:40:56 I mean, he's dressing like a, like a fascist. I don't know that he's a. fascist. He sounds pretty, you know, he's into Bitcoin and things like that. But he's leaning into it. He's like, I'm a strong man and I'm going to do this. And I'm going to, we are going, my people are going to be safe. Why would you have that? How can you possibly have that here when all we are is in an economic zone. I think it's hilarious that a guy making his country safer is like a point of contention. It's just something really weird about that situation where like if you took someone from 200 years ago and you brought them here today, like trying to explain why he's controversial and must make no sense
Starting point is 00:41:48 whatsoever. Yeah. Yeah, it's somebody who, even just a Caesar or something like that, wondering about what barbarian hordes are coming. And it's like, if he were to be like, well, you know, you don't even have to come here and conquer. Just come on in. Just, you know, bullet, no one needs to, no one needs to swing a sword, you know, just come on in. I mean, no one, I forget who was saying it recently, but they were saying, can you imagine, can you imagine, imagine like for like three or four hundred years ago like any king in in Europe any ruler in in Europe being like you know what I'm just going to replace screw you guys I'm just going to replace the whole population with you know we're going to bring a bunch a bunch
Starting point is 00:42:52 of northern Africans in here we're going to bring a bunch of moors in here and you know they're going to work they'd have your head yet look look where we're we are look where we are yeah wars of revolutions have been fought for far less in history yeah kings have lost their heads for for far less but you know we have such it's such a decentralized you know people this is something i started saying a few years ago was people talk about oh how centralized the united states government is i'm like it's not it's decentralized it's like where would you even begin to cut yeah exactly it's like no well i think conspiracy theory is really flourish here in the West because nobody really knows who's in charge or what their motivations are.
Starting point is 00:43:36 At least if you're living in, I don't know, say El Salvador and you're not happy, you can point your finger at Naïve Buceli. That guy's the reason that all these problems exist. Or if you live in Russia, you point your finger at Vladimir Putin. At least you know who's in charge here in the West, not so much. Yeah. I mean, it's just, it's a gigantic corporation. And we have a CEO, but much like many corporations, a CEO is.
Starting point is 00:44:01 just a hired hand unless they own, you know, unless they're the majority stockholder. And you just have all these employees. I mean, I was, when I researched that the executive branch has over like 3.1 million employees, it's like, well, okay, what do you do with that? You know, immediately, well, you fire three point, you know, three point, all but like 5,000 of them. because you don't you don't need it you know the state you don't need the state department the state department is like the president on a zoom call you know with a couple talking with a couple of his advisors and this is all just a gigantic business and it's all a way to create you know it's like
Starting point is 00:44:49 they said that all that um affirmative action was was just an excuse to create a false black middle class and upper middle class. And like the same thing with like the music industry and professional sports was to give a fake black 1% because we're just going to pay them millions and millions upon millions. And now we can say we have this, you know, we have this group. And then we find out that, you know,
Starting point is 00:45:16 even they're compromised in some kind of Jeffrey Epstein way recently. Because why not? Because, I mean, that's the way we live in Jeffrey Epstein world right now. Oh, yeah. I'm convinced that pretty much everybody in the entertainment industry, regardless of what race there has some sort of P. Diddy scandal just waiting to come out. Like you step out of line one time. You make one little misstep and all of a sudden all your blackmail material is out in public.
Starting point is 00:45:40 Oh, politics too. I mean, you have to assume that pretty much every politician, except like Thomas Massey at this point, is, in some way, it is they have something on them. And I had a friend who was a lobbyist in D.C. and he said the way he made it to D.C. was he was just working on a regular Texas, on a Texas campaign for a guy who was running for United States House. And when he, when the guy won and he ran on like a Ron Paul kind of libertarian-ish kind of thing, and when he won, he said, you know, do you want to come to D.C. and work for him, he'd be on my staff.
Starting point is 00:46:20 And he's like, sure. And he said, he went there. He said within a week, the guy was part of the swamp. He completely forgotten. everything and he's like, I, you know, I'll do this just to get for a little bit longer to get some experience, but then, you know, he got snapped up by lobbyists and, um, then he just basically told me how all that stuff worked. And it's just like, this is not, this is not, my friend Oliver hates this term, which is why I like using it. It's not governance. This is not governance. This is not how you govern. This is not, I like the term rule more.
Starting point is 00:46:56 This is not how you rule. If there was a ruler who had my best interest, even if there was a ruler who was just basically neutral when it came to me, like just didn't really care about my existence, I'd be perfectly fine with having a ruler. The problem is, is that my existence and, you know, what I believe and what I advocate for is completely opposite of what this regime, what this regime stands for.
Starting point is 00:47:26 So what do you do? You can just only hope at some point to get your friends in power, get your, you know, people get in power who you share values with. Yeah, and that's one of the reasons I've kind of been enjoying world events lately. Finally, watching the people running our country
Starting point is 00:47:45 have problems overseas, so to speak. It's like, oh, finally someone's causing you guys and headaches. Yeah, well, unfortunately the things that they do overseas, have a habit of pulling us into them because in more ways than one, if it's not monetarily, then you, like Tennessee right now, eastern Tennessee is, the section my buddy lives in is flooded. He lives up on a hill. He's doing fine. But bridges are down, all this and everything. And half of the National Guard right now is in Kuwait, the Tennessee National.
Starting point is 00:48:26 Wait, what are they doing in Kuwait? I'm geez. Who the fuck knows? The National Guard is supposed to be national. Yeah, well, you know, when Global War on Terror started, I have a, I have a friend who was in the, who was in the Coast Guard. He, I have video, he has video, he's shared it with me of him and his Coast Guard, him and his Coast Guard cutter off the, off the coast of Somalia fighting Somali pirates. Wow. I actually didn't know that the Coast Guard went out that for.
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Starting point is 00:49:40 trading as Cooper Financial Services is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. 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. From home essentials to seasonal mustabs,
Starting point is 00:49:58 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. Discover five-star luxury at Trump Dunebeg. Unwind in our luxurious spa. Savour sumptuous farm-fresh dining. Relax in our exquisite accommodations.
Starting point is 00:50:23 Step outside and be captivated by the wild Atlantic surrounds. Your five-star getaway, where every detail is designed. with you in mind. Give the gift of a unique experience this Christmas with vouchers from Trump Dunebeg. Search Trump Ireland gift vouchers. Trump on Thunbiog, Kush Faragea. Yeah, yeah, I didn't, I didn't know our waters like spread to like East, East Africa. You know, everywhere's America, don't you know? Well, yeah, if you're a gigantic commercial zone, that's, that's all that is, is just, you're, there are certain straits there that need to be opened up. So,
Starting point is 00:51:01 that oil can flow and commerce can flow. And that's the main reason. The main reason the Houthis are even, you even know their name right now. That was right about the business. Yeah, because they're able to disrupt commerce. And that is the cardinal sin in an economic zone, which basically the whole West is now.
Starting point is 00:51:26 And they want to make, they're trying to make the Middle East that way and make everywhere that way. Yeah, it's real crazy seeing what appeared to us to be like a rag tag group of scrappy rebels, just shutting down international trade like that. I didn't think I'd ever live to see something who'd quite like it. Some of the missiles that they're firing now are very, very interesting. I mean, they have hypersonic missiles.
Starting point is 00:51:57 And a former CIA guy I know said that, Some of these missiles have been seen, like, changing direction in midair. It's like, okay. And apparently, they're not Russian. So what the, you know, I mean, historically, you know, we have to remember the whole idea that, that Arabs are, like, really low IQ retards is some propaganda. I mean, these are some of the, like, historically some of the smartest people on the planet. And it seems like they're putting their smartest to good use.
Starting point is 00:52:41 Yeah. So the Jew fears the hypersonic hootier. Well, that was something yesterday, watching that rain down, watching some of those missiles rain down. Some of the telegram channels I'm on, I was just like, wow. And they're so, and you know, these bloodthirsty Muslims who aren't aiming for
Starting point is 00:53:09 aren't aiming for civilians. Did you see the CNN reporter crowing about that? Oh, God, the Mossad headquarters is in a densely populated area. If I ran where to hit it, who knows how many civilians might die. You guys are really going to go there after the last year. Well, I don't know if it's been confirmed yet or not, but I mean, I saw one video on telegram that was called. claiming to be them combing through the rubble of Mossad headquarters.
Starting point is 00:53:41 But I don't know that that's been confirmed yet. And that would be the last thing that Israel would confirm. Yeah, I can't imagine they'd want that getting out to, they really thrive off of having an image of being everywhere and being invincible, being all knowing. And if that were to crumble, they'd look a lot weaker. Yeah, this morning I was monitoring their, well, starting last night, I was monitoring their incursions.
Starting point is 00:54:09 They're trying to go over the border and go into southern Lebanon, and they're getting repelled and they're taking heavy casualties. Yeah, I wasn't sure exactly what's going on there. I heard that they've basically been turned back, but I didn't know if that was because they just felt they were unprepared or if they were actually getting fired at having their tanks destroyed or anything. I'm not entirely sure what's going on. I don't know if their tanks are being destroyed, but I know they were taking, they've taken heavy, not heavy casualties, but heavy casualties for, in proportion to the size of the forces that they're trying to send them there.
Starting point is 00:54:47 Well, they've been fighting in Gaza for a year. They're a depleted army, frankly. They're war tired. I mean, there's not that many people in Israel, period, to draw conscripts from. You only have so many soldiers. And they're all exhausted, as I imagine. And air power alone, this is enough. How many IDF soldiers are really that ideological? I mean, if you, the, from what I understand, the settler army is, I mean, they're insane. These are actually insane people and very low IQ, from what I understand. I mean, the average IQ in Israel, most people don't know this, is 92 because it's because of the Mizrahi.
Starting point is 00:55:30 Yeah, these hyper-religious people. people yeah i think they're also more content to just quite frankly like terrorized civilians in the west bank i don't know how effective of actual idea of soldiers those guys are plus the ultra-orthodox and i know all these settlers aren't necessarily ultra-orthodox but the ultra-orthodox already just don't serve anyway yeah so that narrows down their conscription for even more it's amazing that there's a lot of um there's a lot of orthodox jews that live there that are not Zionists or like rabbit anti-Zionists. It's like, okay, what do you do? What are you doing there? Yeah, it's what it's like, okay, you're going to complain about Zionism and you're going to enjoy the
Starting point is 00:56:11 benefits of it. I mean, at the very least, just keep your mouth shut. Yeah, but it is one of those, yeah, true. But it is one of those things where a lot of these people were born there. I think if I'm not mistaken, Nanyahu is the first prime minister who was actually born there, even though he went to school in Philadelphia and went, you know, went to high school in Philadelphia, he went to MIT and everything, but I think he was born there. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I mean, it's a,
Starting point is 00:56:42 it's a terrible thing when you're, when you're used to being somewhere, when you've been somewhere a long time, and along comes a group that seeks to displace you. And, you know, I can understand winning a war, you know, and going in and saying, okay, we're going to take this land and we're just going to kick all these people out and everything. But then just keeping them hostage so you can use them as an excuse on the world stage to be like, look, we have these, we try to be nice to these people, but they're just our enemies. We're doing our best.
Starting point is 00:57:17 I mean, how scummy? Just what's kind of scum do you have to be? I mean, I would. The way Israel treats the Palestinians, makes me wins. And I'm supposed to be like a big bad, you know, pro-white person, which is basically like the medieval equivalent of being a witch in our society. And even I look at them, and I'm like, geez, guys, you want to tone it down a little bit? You guys are cruel beyond measure.
Starting point is 00:57:43 I can't even imagine myself doing this, treating anyone like that. Well, there's no reason to, you know, if you get power, there's no reason. If you have an enemy that's among you, there's no reason to keep them there. Just get rid of them. ship them off. I'm not saying kill them all. I'm saying gather them up and get rid of them. It's your land.
Starting point is 00:58:04 If it's your land, you can choose who you want to be there. If you're rolling over this land, you get to choose who's there. It's just like in your house. If you're in your house, you get to choose who comes in your house. If you have a land, you get to kick them out. If they would have just went in there in 1948 and went, okay, everyone out, get the hell out. I kept no problem with that. Well, they try to.
Starting point is 00:58:28 Obviously, the situation is a little bit more complicated than that. I am sure that if the Israelis could just kick out all the Palestinians tomorrow, they would. But it's not as easy as that. Obviously, we're seeing the consequences of their attitude. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, these are fierce warriors. I mean, they certainly become that way out of necessity. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:51 Well, I mean, even back then, they had the ones that they can't. And people were like, oh, well, there weren't even a lot of those people who were there. They came from other countries because the Jews were coming there. Yeah, listen to what you're saying. These are people who share a religion and, in many cases, share an ethnos. And they're coming to the aid of their friends. And they're coming to say aids to their friends and family. And they're brothers and sisters.
Starting point is 00:59:21 It's like, wouldn't you do the same? Oh, but you can't say that because it's this one person. protected group that, you know, something bad happened to them once or 109 times or, you know, 2,000 times. And, you know, so you're, they have all these excuses. They can do anything they want. You know, I'm, I'm watching this, these missiles rain down on Israel yesterday. And I'm, I'm waiting for the body count. And I'm like, I'm not here at a body count. Yeah. Oh, they're trying to say that like one Pellas City man was the only victim. Yeah, all right. I don't. believe that there's no way that more. Yeah, there had to have been. But, you know, it seems like a lot
Starting point is 01:00:03 of these hits were pretty precise and they were concentrating on military intelligence targets. I heard that Israel lost something like 20 F-35s. I mean, who knows if it's true, but that is what I heard. Yeah, they're not claiming Israel hasn't said that yet, but the, but that is what was reported pretty immediately. But, you know, and just think about what they did to, um, what, what they did to, um, kill what's his name Marsala. Um, from if, yeah, if, if, um, if, um, if what's his name on, on Judge Napolitano's show said, Alistair Crook said, they dropped 82 ton bombs in, in an, in an
Starting point is 01:00:53 area in a in a urban area okay I mean basically from what I've heard from people who know people who know or live in Lebanon everybody knows someone who died this past weekend at least one person who died this last weekend's crazy because what we we're seeing now is like effectively like bronze age warfare brought to the modern world and it really shocks people's modern sensibilities I mean imagine like if iran wanted to assassinate Benjamin Netanyahu and what they did yesterday it was like they dropped like
Starting point is 01:01:27 a friggin like 80 ton like bunker buster bomb on his home or like he was in a bunker and like he blew up like two apartment buildings and killed thousands of people to do it like I can't even imagine like Russia killing like Zelensky like that I'm sure they could if they wanted to
Starting point is 01:01:44 like you don't just like killing like the political leaders of your country like that. I don't know. I don't even recall stuff like that happening in World War too necessarily. You just go up the enemy government officials like that and right in the middle of their city. It's crazy. Yeah. No, it's, I know that Putin, um, Putin probably could have gotten Zelensky many times now. He's just, they don't kill civilians. Yeah. And people have to remember. I mean, I'm, I'm, I'm well versed enough in my Middle East politics to know that Iran has blood.
Starting point is 01:02:24 These are Shia. They're not Sunni headchoppers. They're not Wahhabists. Okay. They don't, these aren't suicide bombers. They don't target civilians. They're very political. And I mean, think about it, with all those hypersonic missiles yesterday,
Starting point is 01:02:47 they could have rained those down into, They could have aimed every single one of them at civilian targets. And they didn't. Yet, you know, Israel just concentrates on civilian targets. And what is their excuse every time? Well, there was someone hiding in the basement. Human shields, yeah. They blew up, I heard from an Arab buddy of mine that they blew up three UN schools in Gaza
Starting point is 01:03:14 yesterday and killed something like 40 plus children. And of course, we don't hear anything about it. And their excuse for naturally was like, oh, these were Hamas command centers. I don't even know why they bought it. I don't realize anymore. Even if it was true. Like, come on, guys. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:30 Yeah. I mean, I'm just, I'm, I'm done with them. I, you know, if all of this was happening and they didn't also occupy my government, I'd be like, eh, you know, this is pretty screwed up and everything. But yeah, it's a huge issue because these people, we're, our country is. beholden to them. So everybody here in America thinks that it doesn't apply to them. Like, you do need to care about this issue. Yeah. Yeah. People are like, well, you know, when I was fighting in the global war on terror, I got to see what, I got to see what these Muslims were like
Starting point is 01:04:06 on the ground face to face, them killing my buddies and everything. And I'm like, I get that. Believe me, I get that. None of them, none of those control your banking, control your press, brought the porn industry to this country. Control Hollywood. Control. Where are, yeah. Where are, what have they done to you? You know, what have they done?
Starting point is 01:04:33 It's funny that you say that because it's kind of ironic that, that our military recruiters and their government are more than happy for, to take advantage of drug, outgrouped racism like that, like an anti-Muslimsendums. when they want you to go fight a war in the Middle East, but as soon as you come home, that's totally verboten. You can't have any outgroup preference at all. Not all Muslims, et cetera, et cetera.
Starting point is 01:04:59 Yeah. Yeah. Well, anyway, we came on here to talk about a book, and I think we covered it. You covered it pretty good in like three or four minutes, and then we basically jumped off the theme of the book. Well, the theme of the book. I don't think we did. I think a lot of what we did.
Starting point is 01:05:17 talked about like thematically relates to the kind of sentiments that the Italian fascists were feeling at the time. I think a lot of Europeans were feeling, well, I mean, the Europeans that were, you know, that ended up being on the short end of the Treaty of Versailles. Yeah, I think that. And you would hope that that sentiment is growing now. Because it's pretty much the only thing that's going to save us. Yeah, well, I'll do a little plug for the book then. I'll just say there's nothing new under the sun. However you're feeling today, there's always, there's somebody in the past who's going through the same thing. And I think that with Danube and Humay is a very good representation of that. And I'd highly encourage anyone to me.
Starting point is 01:06:10 Yeah, let me just, for anybody who's watching it, watching this video, share it on screen so they can see what it looks like. You can get it at Antelope Hill. Is it anelop hill.com or dot org? I can't, I can never know. It's atelopill publishing.com. Antelopheelpublishing.com. I have a promo code there, PQ, all lowercase, all one word.
Starting point is 01:06:32 You get 5% off. And yeah, I have, if you were to come to my library, you would see a lot of Anelope Hill books. Also, there are some times when I need to do research, like immediately on a subject, and I just grab a quick e-book off of the site and, you know, throw it and start control effing and go crazy. So, yeah, the kind of things, I mean, Spanish Civil War, Germany, obviously, Germany, Italy, British Union of Fascist, Oswald Mosley, I mean, a lot of great stuff there.
Starting point is 01:07:16 and, you know, poetry too. And, yeah, I can't say enough. I think you guys are doing a really good job. And I know that everybody that I'd talk to, you know, they appreciate the books they get from there, especially the books that you guys have been able to personally, like, translate out of different languages to put them into English. Oh, it's always a real privilege to be the first,
Starting point is 01:07:44 publisher to publish something in English. So you get to break new ground all the time. I'm very honored to be part of that. My thousandth episode, and I cleared it with you guys before I did. It was reading all of the whole burning souls and commenting on it. So, yeah, that was quite an episode. That was quite a five to six hours of fun. I'm really glad you enjoyed it.
Starting point is 01:08:17 Yeah, that's a, yeah, that one really speaks to me because of, you know, I think DeGrelle was one of the most inspiring people, inspiring men of the 20th century. Yeah, he led a very interesting life to say the least. Yeah, yeah. And, you know, my buddy Thomas 7777 doesn't, has bad things to say about Franco because of, you know, that he wouldn't help. He wouldn't help Adolf in World War II the way he was asked to. But, you know, he did take, he did harbor and keep safe a lot of guys who otherwise may have may have met the hangman's noose and Zagrall was one of them. So, yeah. But Sebastian,
Starting point is 01:09:06 I appreciate it. And, yeah, thanks. Maybe we'll talk again sometime. I love that. Well, thank you so much for having me on, Peter. It's been a pleasure.

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