The Pete Quiñones Show - Episode 1141: The 'Robber Barons' Who Tried to Save America w/ Stormy Waters - Part 3
Episode Date: December 3, 2024143 MinutesSome Strong LanguageStormy Waters is a managing partner of a venture capital firm.Stormy returns to conclude a look into what came to be known as The Business Plot as well as the true "Amer...ica First."Stormy's Twitter AccountPete and Thomas777 'At the Movies'Support Pete on His WebsitePete's PatreonPete's Substack Pete'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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Thank you.
I want to welcome everyone back to that.
We don't even need to do introductions for this guy.
What's going on, Stormy?
How are you done?
How's it going, Pete?
Happy to be back.
Good, man. I think this will finish it, talking about the robber barons of old.
And I think this is the one everybody's waiting for. We're going to start getting into the specifics of America first.
The real America first.
The real America first. And what did people actually believe back then?
And we're not even talking about them. We're talking about what are the common person on the street believe?
So where do you want to start?
Let's start with the America First Committee.
The America First Committee is a really, really interesting thing
because we talked before on previous episodes about the American Liberty League
and the men that made that up.
And those men didn't go away.
And we discussed at the end what it took to stop those men
because it really was the most powerful men in the country.
trying to frankly save the country and to give you an idea at the time the
America First Committee was formed it really only had four policy planks I'll get
into those in a second but the overarching narrative was to keep America out of
any military intervention in Europe, right?
Because there was no military action happening anywhere else in the world.
The Pacific hadn't kicked off yet.
And it was announced on the day that Lend lease started, right?
Because Roosevelt campaigned just as Woodrow Wilson campaigned.
And these men that feds,
was not lost on these men.
You campaigning on keeping us out of war
means nothing because less than 20 years ago
well within the professional lifetimes of these men.
How long does a man usually have in a career 30 years?
Most of these men were roughly in the same positions
as they were in World War I.
and they remember 30 years ago,
Woodrow Wilson campaigned
on vehement
anti-interventionism
and literally his only campaign slogan
was Wilson
kept us out of war
and one of the most famous
speeches that FDR gave on the campaign trail
was that he no American young man is going to go off to some foreign land and die in some foreign conflict.
The only way that that would happen is over his dead body, if only that were true.
Because unbeknownst to most of America, but not unbeknownst to people in elite,
circles and the Hall of Pals of Power is that Roosevelt was not only planning on intervening
in Europe, but had been since the midway through his first administration.
So like the man literally, I mean, from the very beginning, Woodrow Wilson was an idiot, right?
Woodrow Wilson didn't run Woodrow Wilson.
Woodrow Wilson was a lot.
In his second term, he was a lot like Joe Biden.
And I mean, really, we don't have TV cameras.
But we didn't have TV cameras back then.
But you can imagine.
It's pretty well known that his wife, his wife was doing a lot of the same things
that Joe Biden's wife was doing.
And the Colonel House was just basically running the show.
100%.
Who did Colonel House work for?
I think he worked.
for the city of London.
Yeah.
It's for our Barrett,
or Baruch work for the city of London.
Yes, correct.
That is 100% correct.
Literally just like we see today.
It's no different.
It's the same interest groups doing the exact same things.
I caught your interview with Tom Luongo last night.
And I agree with almost everything he says.
What he knows about like the motivators in the financial world,
what he doesn't know is that is that they're roughly paralleled or at least his views are paralleled
in like the private defense or private defense industries and and we'll say like it's generally
called risk capital but it's not really like i mean vc is risk and yes we all know now i mean some
of you guys that have followed me on Twitter for a couple years. I'm suspended right now for being
a bad boy. I got a 12 hour this morning. For something like I posted like a week ago,
somebody was talking about like inheritance tax. Basically the persecutive inheritance tax that
England is trying to throw down on its farmers. Some communist was like, yeah, well,
my guy this will increase production you know how can you not think it's going to increase
production my guy and i guess it's something like how about i cave your head and with a rock
will that increase production my guy it'll it'll make the world a better place oh god communist
brain splattering it definitely increases production and it sure as shit increases motivation
like it's a motivated workforce but um it's the same people again for roughly the same reasons
what happened in 19 the reason that we had 1929 is because in 1929 there's a for those that
don't know there was a cataclysmic financial crash right like massive um
that was global. It was the very first global, I can't even call it market crash, because it was an entire economic crash. It wasn't just like the stock market. It affected all aspects of sociopolitical economy. It was Wall Street and Main Street. And it went all the way around the world really fast because at that point in time, the reserve currency or the currency of trade was the pound sterling.
And in World War I, we lent our banks lent the Brits a tremendous amount of money at the behest and guarantee of Woodrow Wilson and his administration.
Nobody, everyone says like the bankers pushed them into some bankers, yes, but U.S. bankers, not
so much because at the time, like, Germany was kicking people's asses.
So once the Rothschilds were tapped out and they had to go to America for capital,
like they're good and well getting their ass beat.
So who the fuck wants to lend to a, like, would you lend a bunch of money to the Ukrainian
government right now?
no no not at all the only way that like j p morgan is extending a huge line of credit is if you know
the go like the you know pharmaceutical animated corpse of joe biden you know holds a gun to his head
that's the only way that's happening because it's just happening no other way so um obviously
The Brits did not pull out of World War I okay and the reparations money that they
tried to get from from Germany couldn't come in fast enough to cover the interest on all the sovereign debt and the pound blew up and
England defaulted and a lot of our banks defaulted because basically the Brits just stiffed everybody and you had
the great crash of 1929, which basically ended the American Golden Age.
So it was actually the sins of World War I coming home to Roost that ended America's golden age.
Everyone says, oh, the stock market was just unrealistically high. It kept on going up and up and up.
Yeah, as Mark Antrieson on Joe Rogan or any other, one of his appearances will tell you, like, yeah, innovation does that.
Innovation creates value out of nothing.
Sorry libertarians and Austrians.
Like, an economy is not a thing that lives in a vacuum.
And for it to exist in a vacuum,
which it does have to,
under the tenets of really either Keynesian
or Austrian economics,
the only room inside this vacuum bubble is for buyers and sellers making entirely rational decisions
for the purpose of getting a the highest price and be the most value depending on what side
of the transaction you're on and these are the only people that are allowed inside this vacuum
and that's not real.
Do we think that, what do you think, Pete,
what would you say influences oil markets today more?
The rational decisions of buyers and sellers,
going about price discovery in a free market
or the geostrategic needs of Vladimir Putin.
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Okay, could you read out the letters on the wall for me?
Yep.
D-E-A-L-S?
Yeah, D-E-A-L-S.
Deals.
Oh, right, yes, our Black Friday deals are eye-catching,
but the letter chart's over here.
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Well, I would assume the geostrategic needs of Vladimir Putin, but then you look at the
price of oil in the last six months to a year and you're like, why is it stayed pegged somewhere?
Yeah, the left pegged, right?
That's a choice word in the beginning of the Ukraine war, and I'll take a tangent.
But for those of you that don't remember, Janet Yellen,
you know what i mean like went on tour like you know when they they don't really let that troll
on tv much for good reason for good reason she is horrific she's a horrific human being and that's just
not be that's not because any ethnic animosity i may have or my preference to uh anglo-saxon ubermensch
and old stock American Jerome Powell,
but just because she is very dumb.
Her PhD thesis, she's an academic
and has never actually worked in the real world,
was on labor theory of economics.
Labor theory of economics is also known as literal Marxism,
not like the pretend Jane Liz Lindsay kind
or the pretend boomer con kind,
but actual kind.
Her husband is the one.
world's foremost Marxist economist, if such a fucking ludicrous thing could exist.
Out of Berkeley, I believe, or Stanford, I can't remember which.
But she tried to impose a $80 oil price cap to stick it to Putin.
And the Europeans are like, yeah, it's a good idea.
We're going to do a price cap.
And then people in the market were like, this is a terrible idea.
This is really, really dumb.
you should never, ever, ever, ever talk about this again and never talk in public again.
And it's kind of disappeared.
But yet we have, what is Russia?
Russia's like what, 18% of global production?
No, I think it's more than that, right?
It's got to be more than that.
Oil?
Yeah, I'm thinking like oil and we'd have to include that gas, right?
But yeah, it's massive.
It's at least 20% of the market.
percentage
sorry guys for
dying on my keyboard
wow
are you getting 12% of global oil
yeah 12% of global oil
21% of global energy
okay yeah that's
incredible well that's another reason why
the United States can put
a put sanctions on
on them even blow up their pipeline
and they're still fine
I mean the rubles
the rubles crashing now and people think that that's like
Oh, we're taking him out.
How many times we have crashes here?
Come on.
Stop it.
Yeah.
Like the ruble crash.
I mean, it was bound to happen.
Just like, you know, that's like everyone's like, oh, Bitcoin's crashing now as it goes
from like 100 to 90.
Like they forget the up from 8,000 part, which was like five years ago.
Yeah, but, you know, oil makes up 45% of the Russian.
Russian federal budget so oil revenues so they thought they could you know do this but
so we're going to sanction the largest oil per one of the largest single oil producers
in the world and the largest single oil producers in the world and the largest single one of the
largest single oil producers in the world is currently at war with its neighbor
and the pipeline infrastructure runs through that neighbor,
but yet oil doesn't move.
And then what happens next is,
last year we have war in the Middle East
where, I don't know, I'd say 50% of global energy comes from.
So that's some total of what we're at, 70%.
percent of global energy production in those two nations in those two areas and only because we
haven't opened it up here yes but so 70 percent of the world's oil market is technically on fire right
yeah and oil has and they're and they're blowing up pipelines and they are um you know downing
oil tankers with drones so we haven't seen oil move past 70
This defies all credibility.
Like this is, yeah, the oil market is rigged, but rigging something is expensive.
It's really expensive.
And it's a good microcosm for what, like the one thing like Luongo talks about with the Eurodollar system is that he doesn't talk about what it does and why it's so pernicious.
which I think is very important.
So basically what the Europeans,
and this is why I'm actually not upset
that their pipeline got blown up.
Fuck them.
You don't get America paying for your entire national defense
and you go buy oil from someone else.
Buying our energy is the least they should be doing.
I'm sorry Eurobrose,
but it's true.
Like you can't even contribute 2%
of your GDP.
In fact, for the large portion of the history, less than 1%.
And at the same time, you're basically expecting us to foot the bill for the largest single line item budget item on the federal government.
And it should be the largest single line item on any government.
You expect us to pay for that.
And then you also want to just buy oil from the person that we are paying to defend you from.
Like it wasn't for us.
Like, Russia could just take you.
It's, I am, I know it's an unpopular take, but when you put it next to the fact that, yes, America blew up the pipeline, or the Brits actually blew up the pipeline.
And America didn't really care that they did.
because fuck them.
So in the rare instance,
I kind of agree with Joe Biden,
Donald Trump, and Victoria Newland.
But, yeah, America didn't blow up that pipeline.
Sorry, bros.
I know there's tons of Euro guys
that'll tell you about how it had to be America.
And I'm sorry for the tangent, Pete.
But the very first person,
yeah, the very first person to announce
the detonation of the Nord Stream pipeline.
Who is he?
It was on Twitter.
The Polish Secretary of Defense.
He posted a picture of the gas bubbling up from the sea floor.
And it said,
Thank you, America.
What a fucking odd thing to say, right?
Why would you say that?
Why would you say that publicly?
like okay let's say America did do it and a defense minister of a NATO country takes to social media
to rat out the United States to the world what did we do to Julian Assange what are we
trying to do to Snowden and you're gonna like fucking breathe oxygen in a sphere of
US control? Like, you shouldn't be drawing breath. I mean, there's, that made absolutely no sense
to me. All right. Like, nobody that fucking airs out US secrets like that, especially secrets
of US misdeeds will continue to draw breath if the US has anything to say about it.
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Great to see you back at Spegg Savers.
Okay.
Could you read out the letters of?
on the wall for me.
Yep.
D-E-A-L-S?
Yeah, D-E-A-L-S.
Deals.
Oh, right.
Yes, our Black Friday deals are I catching,
but the letter chart's over here.
Oh, sorry.
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of unmissable Black Friday deals.
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Well, you know you can get away with doing stuff.
Yeah, you know you can get away.
way with doing stuff like that if Joe Biden is president. It's the same way you can get away with
invading another country, you know, basically knowing it's going to draw us into it if you know
that the people, there's no one in charge. Yes, possibly. I can totally agree with that.
I can totally agree with that. But this Polish defense minister is a very interesting human being
besides being married to one and Appleball.
I thought you'd like that.
He is, and this will be breaking news on the P. Quina show,
because I don't think I've heard anybody else say this,
at least in our spheres.
So this Polish defense minister is a nobody,
an absolute nobody.
He's a poor, unimpressive, unacademically gifted,
uncollegial sports gifted human being, a really mediocre person.
But somehow, this poor Polish nobody gets a full ride to Oxford.
Strange.
It gets stranger.
While at Oxford, his first year at Oxford, he gets invited to join the Bullington Club.
Do you know what the Bullington Club is, Pete?
No, that I do not know.
The Bullenden Club is like skull and bones if it was somehow more secret and more exclusive
because it is both of those things.
I believe it's five members a year.
So four years, at any moment time, there's 20 members.
And you have to be, which would call it them, your invitation.
has to basically be like chaired by one person or sponsored by one person and then agreed on
by all of all every other member of every including not just the freshman class but all the
other members um but the class of people so it would be like those other five guys other the other
four guys are going to really be the determining factor of you know who the next person is going
to be in their grade year.
Do you know who that person was that vouched and sponsored him?
Because it's not something you can apply for.
It's something that you have to be just picked.
One young Boris Johnson.
Who else was in the Bowlington Club, the freshman year bowling team club?
well
that would be
one
David Cameron
current Secretary of Defense
or whatever their equivalent of Secretary
of Defense I can't remember
there's one other one
I can't remember some of their famous
politicrat
in Britain
was the third one
and Magic number four
was Lord Natty Ross
child. Nady Rothschild owns that other pipeline that went online the exact same day that Nordstream
blew up. Probably didn't, nobody probably heard about it. It's a big pipeline, but I mean,
the news kind of gets drawn, you know, drowned out by, you know, a pipeline being exploded
by a foreign actor and kind of takes all the air out of the room. But it runs from Norway to
Poland. It's one of the umbrella companies of the same group that does Jeannie Energy. You may have
heard of Jeannie Energy. I think we talked about Jeannie Energy. It's a Rothschild. They, I think they're
Golan Heights. I think they control the oil production on the Golan Heights. Yes, yes. They tried to
also propose South Stream. They also have Dick Cheney on the board.
Interesting.
And Doni Rumm, and the late great Donny Rumsfeld.
Yeah, they were a big deal in Iraq war days.
But anyways, these, they were trying to do something called South Stream.
So basically, the US didn't go into Iraq for oil and it didn't go to Iraq for Israel.
It went to Iraq for Israel and oil for Israel.
There we go.
All the, all of the shitlibs at the time were correct.
it was blood for oil, just not oil for us.
U.S. net oil imports decreased after the Iraq war.
But a country that has no natural resources of any kind
outside of human capital, but that is arguable.
It is of arguable value.
Suddenly is the seventh largest energy exporter.
Israel doesn't have any natural gas or oil under its ground.
The holy land is not that fully when it comes to energy independence.
But Iraqi Kurdistan right next door does.
And that's who Saddam was firing his missiles at.
Remember when we invaded?
Yep.
He was supposedly mad at the Qataris, right?
Or sorry, the, was it Qatar?
Kuwaitis.
Kuwaitis.
Kuwaitis.
how come he didn't fire any of those scud missiles into Kuwait
was it really Kuwait that was stealing his oil
I don't know but I know after he was
thrown out of power
the country that he fired missiles that stole all his oil
and now exports it they have a thriving energy industry now
seventh largest in the world amazing
completely non-existent
anyways, let's head back.
We're going to have to get back to the 20s at some point.
Yeah, let's let's let's let's let's that I'm back.
America first committee.
So speaking of skull and bones, it was founded at Yale law school.
One of the men that were,
was a part of it to just to get you an idea of who made up these these fine
gentlemen.
You had a young Gerald Ford and a one,
Potter Stewart, a future Supreme Court judge.
And the main policy point was to keep America out of war in Europe.
The founding of the America First Committee happened after the defeat largely on the continent
of the other European powers, right? So the Battle of Britain, England, getting
getting its ass kicked in the air, had already been underway for two months at this point.
Lend-Leese had just been announced and everybody started to see the setup.
Everybody tries to say that Charles Lindbergh was a Nazi sympathizer.
I would say he's a Nazi respecter only because of having toured there and seen their
capabilities, right?
as in like the same way I respect Russia.
I don't love Russia.
I'm not sympathetic to Russia,
but they have more nukes than we do.
And apparently as of like last month,
they have new ways of delivering those missiles.
Or sorry, those warheads.
So I respect their military capability.
And that's basically what Lindberg.
That was his opinion as well.
But what about Stormy?
But what about the pictures?
the pictures of
of Mr. Charles Lindberg
with Herman Guring
and he was awarded the
what is it, the Iron Cross
I can't remember the medal. Thomas
777 somewhere is chimping at me.
I'm sorry Thomas, I can't remember.
Keep going, keep going, I'll look it up.
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But why was he in there? Why was he in Germany?
Because he was living in Britain at the time,
after his son was murdered suspiciously,
his infant son was called the Crime of the Century.
All right. Well, he was in Germany at the behest of the State Department,
sorry, the war department, and at the explicit invitation of the U.S. embassy in Germany for the
purpose of gathering intelligence on Reich airpower and aircraft production.
Hermann Gurin is an aviator. Charles Lindbergh was the most famous aviator
in the entire world
times like 100.
He was like Elvis.
People got trampled
when he landed in Paris.
There were so many people
rushing the airfield,
which is a pretty fucking wide open space,
not exactly crowded.
And 20 people were still crushed at it.
It's estimated
a really good book
to read if you can get your hands on it.
It is hard to find.
But, you know, let me pull it up.
It is written by the aid to camp of one of America's most famous ambassadors,
a former governor of Ohio, Myron T. Herrick.
The book is titled Myron T. Herrick,
friend of France, an autobiographical biography.
It was written after his death.
I mean, this guy's Uber famous at the time.
The French actually put him on their currency, the five,
I think it's like the five franc piece.
I can't remember for many years.
A whole bunch of streets named after him,
including the one that the U.S. embassy is on currently.
And a bunch of statues all over the place.
Basically, he was the only ambassador that didn't run away when the Germans in World War I were literally miles outside of Paris.
It looked like everyone expected the Germans to be to capture Paris within a month.
I mean, the government had already made plans to evacuate.
And Mr. Herrick didn't feel like going anywhere.
So he got a bunch of howitzers and some Gatlin guns and a hundred Marines and turned the embassy into a fortress and was like, fuck you, I'm not going anywhere.
And the French loved him for that.
He won the, he was awarded the Legion of Honor or whatever.
He was the guy that received Lindberg in the landing of the super famous flight.
So his account of what the public, he was also Lindberg's, it was the first that those two had met.
And he would later, Lindberg would become the political protege of Myron.
So if you want to know about Myron, or so if you want to know about Lindberg and his political worldview and where it came from.
uh myron is probably the place to start um but yeah this was probably the biggest event to happen in
paris in a hundred years as far as like individuals coming to see a specific event that wasn't
you know like beheading or you know something like that it was the biggest like public spectacle
and he was the most popular man in the world charles lemberg was so herman guring
like jumped out of his chair when the ambassador was like i think i could probably get
mr charles limburg to come over um because at this point in time you know the germans were
not doing so bad in the battle of britain and generally on the continent
were viewed us unstoppable so a very famous german fighter pilot gets a chance to
show off all his new toys and the military might of a now strong Germany to the most famous
pilot in the world.
Of course.
Absolutely.
Right.
So what if the war department would like, you know, who cares if the Americans learn how strong
we are or see how many planes we crank out?
I get to hang out with like, I don't know if he was Gurring's idol, but
the excitement like guring like it took him home like showed him his house he was super the pictures
of um guring and lindberg are very very funny as far as like how excited and kid in the candy store
guring looks it's it's pretty it's pretty awesome um but uh he was awarded uh what's what's the uh did you
find the name of that that metal yeah it's the service cross of the germany
Okay. Yeah, nobody, including Lindberg and everybody else at that dinner was expecting to get an award. Guring kind of surprised everybody.
And of course, a bunch of pictures were taken. And a very hostile press took this. I believe because his associations and his intimacies
with Henry Ford Edison and Myron, Myron Herrick.
Myron Herrick is also a, besides a governor of Ohio, he was a big wig in Republican
Party politics and is the primary reason, what is it, Calvin Coolidge?
Was that trying to think.
I think it was Calvin Coolidge.
I can't believe I'm blanking on this.
But was a big reason that the Republicans had won the White House prior to FDR.
No, Herbert Hoover, there we go.
Fuck.
Jesus.
Also, the same man who gave FDR his start in politics.
And recounted often how it was the greatest mistake of his life.
But he made the deal, which you'll find in that book,
to give a position to a young Francis Dillinor Roosevelt.
And the, what was it, the undersecretary of the Navy?
It wasn't secretary of the Navy.
He was the guy right below it.
Second in charge of the Navy at the time of World War I.
And in his memoirs, he says specifically, he made,
he was forced to make the deal,
right, to get Herbert Hoover in,
right, at the caveat of appointing FDR,
who a vehement Democrat at that point,
and an insane appointment for Republican administration to make.
But he said that was the deal that he had to make
with Mr. Bernard Baruch.
He says the, I can't remember what he, what words he use,
but a lot of derogatory words that we probably shouldn't say on YouTube,
if this is going on YouTube.
But anyways, Mr. Myron was not a fan.
But basically he, Lindbergh's associations had raised a lot of eyebrows of a certain group.
And when that photo with Gering was taken, the very next week, it was on the front page of the New York Times calling him a Nazi sympathizer, saying he was going there because he loved the Nazi so much.
And that is the narrative to this day.
and the entire time he was asked to go there by his country.
He would later go on to serve his country several more times,
except under far riskier circumstances.
Also, while a majority of the country's media
was decrying him as a traitor and a Nazi,
neither of those allegations,
the fact that they were coming from the halls of power
and literally out of the mouth of the president
of the United States of America.
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Trump on Doonbiog, Kush Farage.
I was thinking about this the other day.
Right?
if Joe Biden made a point to where he was every time he got on the radio or the television
was talking about how much of a traitor in a scumbag stormy waters is right if all the newspapers
in America were calling me a traitor in a scumbag and this idiot president decides to
stumble us into on purpose or in ignorance.
Stumble us into war with Russia,
a war that was easily avoidable and a war that 80% of the country,
by far more now, but let's just say 80% of the country
because that number is going to come back in a little bit.
80% of the country oppose.
So a war that the American people don't want,
and a war that was a war of choice for a small,
privileged, powerful group of people in the American government,
the deep state, whatever you want, whatever term you want to use,
or through whatever lens you want to use, right?
It is undeniable that the conflict we find ourselves in with
the ancient
Russian people
and the country that is over a thousand years old
is one entirely by choice
and a choice that was not made
by the people that would end up fighting it.
But let's just say that happened
and Joe Biden at the same time
telling America and all the newspapers
telling America that Stormy Waters is a traitor,
would I have the commitment
to my nation
and what that nation is currently
and what it once was if I would have
the decent calmness of Seoul
to basically not be
be moved by any of any of the negative comments being made by the president or the media.
And I would serve my country in a war that I hated, in a war that I didn't support, and in a war
that most of America didn't support, including the men fighting it.
Would I have the courage and temerity to do that?
don't know if I would, but he did.
And that's the type of American you're taught to hate.
Just typing Charles Lindbergh into YouTube or into your podcatcher of choice and you will
see hundreds, literally hundreds of resentful little people that have never sacrificed
anything in their life.
known no hardship suffered none telling us how much of a Nazi how much of an anti-Semite how much of a
horrible person this man is and what's even funnier is that his service was secret right as in
he would get no credit no newspaper would ever report that
Charles Lindbergh is in fact not a traitor and in fact fighting for America in a warplane.
As we speak, he's in fact not a traitor.
Nobody was ever going to know that and he knew that at the time.
So it's not like he was doing it to try and get out of the allegations of being called a traitor.
He was doing it.
Again, here's that word that we don't see.
see any more.
He was doing it because he felt the sense of duty.
His nation was at war. So therefore, he was going to fight its enemies,
whether he got credit for it or not, no matter what the media said about him,
no matter what the fucking present of the United States in the White House at the time
said about him.
So it was published 25 years after he left.
or basically after the war was over,
because that's about the amount of time
that he could get in trouble
for releasing classified information,
which, you know, at the time that he was doing it,
his combat missions into Japan.
And we don't know,
but there is a lot of suspicion
that he took part in the Doolittle Raids.
But what we do know
is that this man flew a hard
186 combat hours in the Pacific.
That is about three times as much as a typical combat airmen would see over their tour of duty.
And nobody was going to know about it.
Nobody was going to, he wasn't going to come home and no longer be called a traitor.
He was going to come home and still be called a traitor.
And no one would know what he did or that he in fact wasn't a traitor.
It was illegal against the law for him to tell anybody what he did.
And he still did it.
And I don't know.
When I think about that, I don't know if I would be that brave.
I don't know about you.
I mean, it's a difficult choice to make, especially when you,
when you look at the way they treat people and the way they hound people.
And even back then, I mean,
McCarthy was already a drunk, you know, when all the hearings started and everything.
But, you know, what they did to them just drove them to drink that much more.
You know, so it's not, you know, people have a tendency to believe because we're in this
information age and things can get out over the Internet in a split second that, you know,
back then it would be harder to slander someone.
Well, not when everybody's reading the newspaper, not when the newspaper.
or not when the newspapers are, you know, all printing the same thing.
Yep.
And they're controlled and they're being told what to be, what's a print.
Yep.
Or the radios.
Yeah, they drove people.
They drove people to become pariahs as just as much as they do it nowadays.
Even more so because at least on the internet, you can post and you could say, no, this is not true.
At least, then we also, yeah, attacking you.
But we also had a more moral society back then.
So people leapt to their morality a lot quicker.
And they took their morality a lot more seriously.
So if they thought somebody was treasonous or something like that,
that meant something to them,
it's not thrown around like we like most people do today.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, Tucker Carlson was called a traitor.
I mean, Donald, we thought the president of the United States was a traitor
and an active Russian spot.
I mean, like, they just throw these words around, like they don't mean anything, but back
then you were 100% right.
These words meant things, which makes them all that more pernicious about how they were being
thrown around.
Because the progressive, I hate to even call it the fucking New Deal, right, or the New Deal
regime, the New Deal administration, right?
because that's not what the men at the time fighting what FDR was doing to the country thought.
On the last episode I did with you, Pete, we read some of the speeches that were given by the head of the Democratic Party and former presidential candidate Al Smith.
and what he thought the New Deal was
and he had just gotten FDR elected
so it obviously wasn't going
basically what he
was told was going to happen in the FDR administration
did not happen and something else happened instead
so like I hate to even call it the New Deal regime
because the men at the time
saw it as
communism being driven
by a foreign group of people both within and without and from without.
So the entire New Deal regime came kind of crashing down on the,
uh, on him and pretty much all of the other men that stood up to it.
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Trump on Dunbiog Kosh Farage.
And now, like, none of the hell that we live in today would be possible if it wasn't for this.
And you could say, like, oh, yeah, like, you know, there were still subversives.
And, you know, oh, yeah, this group has been in here doing all this other bad stuff for a very long time.
Look at the Schofield Bible, but nothing.
Nothing like the fucking New Deal.
It was a revolution no different than 1776, as it fundamentally changed the governance structure and the relationship, the dialogue between American citizen and his government forever.
And I hate to bring up Mark Antriesen again, but he's a really smart guy.
I respect that guy a lot.
But I don't think anybody, even in our spheres that know how pernicious the regime has,
I don't think, I think what he said on that Joe Rogan interview came as a surprise to most people.
It came as a surprise to me and I fucking think about the shit every day.
I'm pretty smart.
Like, the level of persecution at like a granular level was just shocking to me.
And like the, the fact that like Elizabeth Warren has her own attack agency that not only isn't in the Constitution anywhere, but isn't accountable to anybody.
because she's a senator.
She has no authority to have an agency,
but she does.
So like the agency isn't supposed to exist.
You can't sue it.
You certainly can't stop it.
You can't like call up a number and talk to a manager that like there's no,
you're just being, it may as well being,
it may as well be persecution from a demonic entity, right?
It's just, you know, this persecution that is happening everywhere all at once.
And you can't figure out where it's coming from.
There's no way to put your finger on it to get a hold of what's, you know, what's afflicting you.
There's no, you know, command structure that you can air your grievances with.
It's just insane.
And all this came from the New Deal.
And I don't think he, I don't think we, I think we've become a little bit hyper-focused on a specific,
a specific aspect of the regime.
And we kind of miss, we sometimes miss the meta, you know, of it all, right?
Like, the thing in its entirety.
but anyways
if it wasn't
if it was anybody else besides Charles Limburg
I think they would have been sunk
because his popularity
like I said was hard to describe
or hard to contextualize
in modern times
anyways because like yeah
there's famous people
but there's also so many famous people
and people that are famous in all these different ways
and there's all these really, like, different niches.
But like Pete, to what you were talking about,
about how there really was only newspaper and radio,
and if you controlled those things,
you literally controlled the entire public dialogue.
Right?
No one was, you know, getting, finding new bands on SoundCloud.
Right?
The only music you were exposed to
was the music
that was shown to you.
The only news that you were exposed to,
your whole conceptual reality,
and this is public consensus reality,
was dictated through two business verticals,
radio and print media, that's it.
You had total paradigm control.
At least they thought.
So, you know, when someone becomes very well-known, like, in those days, like, it was kind of similar in the 60s, kind of.
But there was no, like, thriving subcultures or anything like that.
So if you think of how popular the Beatles were, Charles Lindbergh was more popular.
I think I have a better, maybe a, a, please.
A stronger astronauts.
Oh, yes.
Like Neil Armstrong.
Yeah.
Yes.
Buzz Aldrin.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
So these were celebrities and national heroes at the same time, as well as international
sensations.
Like, and being an astronaut was like quite literally like being in the Beatles.
Like you were that, like, you were getting pussy that easy.
And if the, if the astronauts have.
happened to have you know been on stage a lot which they luckily they hadn't I'm
sure panties would have been thrown at them as well but yeah so luckily Charles
Lindbergh was popular he had a voice and he could he had really good advisors so the
way he spoke was very much the way Donald Trump speaks
Also in that book by Ambassador Mr. Myron, he talks about, like, he heard Charles's speech and was like, it was so natural.
He was basically just saying the whatever was on his mind, like, as it came into his mind, like, very, very much like Donald Trump.
and Myron recounts how he's like to the average, you know,
uninitiated observer, what he's doing looks very, very easy.
But to an experience public speaker or rhetorician,
like he was like a prodigy.
It was Charles Lindbergh, like, you know, it wasn't taking like public speaking class.
like he he just was a fucking natural very much like trump is and he spoke in a
i urge everyone to listen to i know uh kind of like the hitler ai translation speeches
are going viral which is great i think that's awesome because if everybody if anybody
still thinks that
national socialism
was about
you know
just hating Jews
or
you know
global conquest
or any of the
you know
American secular state religion
belief structures
the second you hear
you know
Adolf Hitler
speaking
and what he's speaking about
all that goes away immediately
like if you replace the word
Germany
that could have been any America
like any that could have come out of Donald Trump's mouth
well not so much Donald Trump
because he he seems to like
or be comfortable with our media environment
right
probably because he's
so good at playing them for fools like he literally fucking lives not just lives in their head rent
free like he owns them they're they're so reactive to him he basically puppeteers them um
but outside of outside of that all of the other aspects of the nsdap's you know policy positions
it's i think it's it's 20 planks you would want any u.s politicians you would want any u.s. politicians
to be saying the exact same thing and you're like oh maybe this was about something different
i urge everyone to look up the uh it's called the demoyne iowa speech right so charles lynn bird
on september 11th 1941 in demoyne iowa is a speech i'm gonna oh i forgot i can't because i'm
I'm in the timeout box.
I would post it to Twitter, but when I'm allowed back on Twitter, I will do that.
Or anybody that's listening, any of the early listeners, thank you for, you know,
supporting one of the best guys in our sphere with your money.
Like the thing that matters, Mr. Pete Quino-as.
But yeah, if you get access to this early and, you know, it comes out quickly,
just start dropping that speech on your timeline.
People need to hear it.
It's that good.
It really is.
And that'll give you a really good idea about what America First was about.
I'll leave some stuff out so the man himself can tell you,
because I think it'll be better that way.
But what he did say, what caused outright insanity,
in if the press hated him before.
But again, so we say the press hated him and FDR hated him.
We're vehemently denouncing him.
It was very much like a Donald Trump phenomenon where all of the consensus media
and consensus policy, you know, people and the, you know, important people,
all 100% agree that Donald Trump is the worst and the, you know,
the vast majority of the country's like, yeah, we don't.
give a shit. We think he's great. 80% of America supported America first.
Its policy positions of non-interventionism, right? So 80% of the country was against any type of
military involvement, whether it be logistical support, arms support, and
most of all, you know, troops on the ground, 80% of the country was isolationists.
They say isolation is like it's a bad thing, like are these bad isolationists.
Yeah, sorry, access to my nation's wealth isn't a fucking human right.
Access to my prosperity and the most valuable things in my nation, which are farmers, boys,
in Iowa, bricklayers kids in New England, right, and farmer sons in the south.
And some electricians kid on the West Coast, that's America's most valuable resource.
And access to it is not a human right. Isolationism is probably the most noble thing that we can do, because
frankly no other nation has the right to American blood I don't care if your
nation has a right to exist or whatever I don't care you're not my people I
don't give a shit about you you catch them in the corner of your eye distinctive
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And now this is chock of Reavash Nation to Hampshire.
It's leargoal gilege,
and not great gree in Aundun,
and leant a Gala to giontamilfada Ghaeghalla Giont Gawattah Gawattah
Gawattah Deirn.
In Ergrid,
we're taking tour chawnaw in Woonagh,
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There's o'us'clock
lecturers,
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with all the town,
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tariff,
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cooct,
Oghghghghgh,
Pongueue,
Pongue Mugugugue.
They're also,
it also shows respect for other people's cultures.
We're not going to fuck with you.
Yes.
You get to have your culture.
You get to have whatever you have.
Don't fuck with us.
You know, if you want to, if there's something you want to trade, we'll have a talk.
If not, you know, God bless.
Don't fuck with us.
Yeah.
But if you, but apparently, if they move here illegally and then they subvert
the nation, they subvert the culture, they subvert the government, they subvert everything,
well, that's okay. And they don't fight.
No, and also-
98% of combat arms just happens to be one ethnic demographic. 96% of combat arms, M-OSs,
sorry, 91% something like that. In the special forces, I think it's 80%, high 80s,
in the regular, the broader Marine Corps and Army.
It's white boys.
It's white American boys.
That's who does the fighting.
So I don't care how smart your Indian friend is.
I don't care how nice your Venezuelan housekeeper is.
I don't give a fuck.
I don't care if they came here legal.
I don't care if they flew here on wings they grew on their backs
don't fucking care because they don't fight
and who fights well patriots fight
so I guess they didn't assimilate did they I guess they really don't share our values do they
because they don't fight they won't fight for those values so they're
Therefore, they don't have them.
Because you only believe something if you're willing to die for it.
Anything else is a fucking hobby.
And these people don't fight.
So they don't believe.
So they don't share your values.
They don't share your beliefs.
Is Vivek Ramoswamy?
Is he going to pick up a gun?
Is he going to go fight?
I don't think he is.
Is what was that Chinese mother's?
fucker Alex Wang was it Wang was running for office is he gonna pick up a gun is he gonna fight
no he's not because he doesn't believe and nobody has the right to have young
Iowa farm boys trying to stuff their guts back in their stomachs as they scream
because a certain group in 1933 decided that they
They didn't even have a country, and they decided that they were going to declare war upon a nation.
And a nation is not a country.
A nation is a people.
It's a race.
Culture is ethnic.
Culture is genetic.
Culture is racial.
So they didn't have enough men to fight.
So how were they going to fight this war that they just declared?
They're not exactly a fighting people as Mr. Netanyahu is finding out right now because he can't get a certain subset of those people to fight.
They refuse to.
They're such a non-fighting people.
They're such a people that doesn't fight that in their own country, they have to have mandatory draft.
because no one would join.
You can tell who's, who believes something,
by who is willing to die for it.
And October 8th of 2023,
or is it one fifth,
one fourth of that population went to the airport
on one-way flights.
So whose land is it?
You know, it's funny.
When I, when I moved to, after high school,
when I moved down to South Florida.
It was described to me.
They were like, you know, it's the one thing about South Florida is, you know,
you're going to find out that it's very transient.
I didn't really understand what that meant until, you know,
I didn't understand what that meant until years later when, you know,
when I learned other terms like rootless.
Yeah, we're cosmopolitans.
Literally everyone from Florida is from somewhere else.
particularly South Florida. South Florida's like this.
And really, anything south of Palm Beach is, you know, West Tel Aviv.
Or North Cuba, or North Haiti, or North Puerto Rico, or Western Russia.
or now Western Ukraine.
The South Florida is a fucking mess.
I can't wait to get out of here.
Luckily, I live in the last bastion of, you know,
wasp culture and wasp demographics.
But I'm sure that's about to change.
Sooner or later, the population of Florida has tripled since COVID.
It just doesn't agree with my,
cultural soul.
Florida is an ugly place.
It really is.
Yeah.
I don't fucking like the beach.
Okay, so what else is there to look at?
Nothing.
It's flat.
And it's either swamp.
The true south.
Yeah, the true south, the Midwest, where people actually put down roots.
That's what America was.
Funny, that's the only place where men that fight come from.
Mm-hmm.
men that are going to be torn apart by sharks in the middle of the Pacific
slowly bleeding out on a beach that they can't pronounce in Europe right that's where those men
come from and those are the only men I find it very interesting that make up our sphere
not to, you know, fire shots or whatever. I'm not going to. I am a New Englander.
That's where I was born and raised. And my family has been since the 1640s.
But when it comes to, like, people in our thing, I find, like, the people from New York, no offense,
that still live there, that choose to live there in the city,
or all just wearing our thing around like a skin suit,
like a fendi handbag or, you know,
some Louis Vuitton duffel bag or, you know, name a shoe, right?
It's a fashion accessory.
It's the, it's the edgy, transgressive thing.
It's fun to talk about doing a racism
They don't believe any of the things
So few of them
I've met a precious few
From New York City
That believe what I believe
To the degree that I believe
With the acceptance of the possibilities
and externalities
that could one day show up at my door for believing what I believe.
There are a few, and I love them very much.
But for the most part, same thing with L.A.
It's just a fashion accessory.
They like to say the transgressive thing.
They like to be seen as transgressive.
But that's it.
I'll never be anything more than that.
That's why you gotta both, you know, be a right-wing edge lord, but at the same time,
don't let anybody say anything mean to our trans friends.
Or anyways, I just find it so hilarious that they somehow believe that they take,
that this is their thing, and we're along for the ride.
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Arland Limited, subject to lending criteria, terms of
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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.
We're talking thousands of your favourite Liddle
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go fast. Come see
for yourself. The Liddle Newbridge
warehouse sale, 28th to 30th
November, Lidl, more to value.
And now, this is the
Chaukhae
and not a year that
Geree in Aundun,
and lehands the Gaela
to give a father
Gaulta Deereen.
In Ergird,
we're taking two
one-wean-one-ha
to find out of
doing on a hundred-leckleck
lecturice,
on as could with all
Tayae
and Pubble,
Tarephau,
A Coochduagin,
full of the airgrid point in.
But nothing could be further from the troop.
I find it offensive,
like, to the highest degree.
Like, it's the insolence that gets me.
But the men that, like those,
they're no different than the people
that had headed to the international terminal
at Ben-Gurie.
at Ben-Gurion Airport, October 8th.
Because if you ever make a move to actualize any of your beliefs,
it'll be people like that that stop you.
It'll be people like that that stab you in the back.
Because if you ever seek to make it a real-world reality,
it's no longer fun.
it's no longer transgressive
it's no longer pretend
you're ruining it
is what you're doing
right by making
any steps towards
actualizing any of the things that we believe
that they say they believe
but it seems
that when we make moves
towards
bringing
our convictions
into
or concrete reality
they screech and holler
like I am tearing up
that Fendi handbag
or I am
pouring bleach over that Chanel sweater
or whatever
because I'm ruining
their fancy fashion accessory
they wear
our heritage and our identity
like it is a fancy dress
and I say dress
because turns out
most of you fucking faggots
like to wear them
or like boys that wear them
nothing
right wing about you
you don't believe anything
I certainly wouldn't die for anything
Not like those men in the Spanish Civil War did.
Not like those men in the Battle of Berlin did.
Both of them knew their situation was hopeless.
In the Battle of Berlin, not only their situation, but their cause and their nation, was lost.
And they still fought.
And you guys, Kavich, whenever we,
actualize any right-wing beliefs outside of the precious view but I think we have a problem of
people wearing our beliefs as fashion accessories and I think that's something that we're
teething pain that we're going to have to go through you know you really can see like
you mentioned the Spanish Civil War and you also mentioned Israel it almost brought me to
tears when you're reading it Pete
Yeah, well, brought me into tears every time I read that.
The, the, when you look at how the nationalist handled the Spanish Civil War, so they had it in, they, I mean, it wasn't, it wasn't even like they had foreign invaders.
I mean, technically, but it was a government.
They had, they had elected, a government was elected that decided that they were going to.
this came out later, kill half the country, that they were going to kill half the people in the country.
I never realized that. I had never known that.
Yeah. Yeah, their goal was to kill 50% of the Catholics in the country.
So what they, when you look at that and you know, and you know that the only people that fled north to France were the infirmed and the old getting out of the way of war and then they stayed there and fought, it really,
goes to show that when you look at Israel and you just have people hopping over this fence
and killing a bunch of people and taking it and taking some hostages and then running back
and you know millions of people decide they're going to go home Israel's not a country
Israel's not a people it's not a vacation destination yeah it's a place where people go
to have extended vacations to be around their own which you're not allowed to do
pretty much anywhere in the West
because of a certain group
telling you you're a fascist
if you do that
yeah they don't have
when you compare that
when you compare the Spanish
and you compare them
there's no
there's no question who the better people are
who the better breeding is
who the better bloodline is
there's the people who are going to stay
and they're going to fight for their own
not run
who the noble bloodline is
because they have no
because they have no home, no matter what they say about Israel.
As soon as something goes, as soon as something goes wrong, they no longer have a home.
They go to their other home or their, you know, wherever that may be.
Yeah, these aren't a people to be.
There are a lot of people who idolize them.
Oh, God, I see it everywhere.
We wish we could have our own ethno state.
No, it's like, yeah, yeah.
Why can't you?
When a couple, yeah, when a couple people get killed, you know, when a couple people get killed, what happens?
Oh, we're going to, we're running home.
We're going to run to Europe or we're going to run to the United States.
Okay.
The army should have been overflowing the very next day.
The army should have been overflowing, right?
Just as every single recruiting station in the country was the day after nine of
11. The only people in that, the only people in that country who actually give a shit and are
willing to die and willing to kill are the settlers. That's it. They're the ones who are like,
we took this, fuck you. No matter what you think of that, we took this, fuck you, unleash us.
Let us go, let us go kill Palestinians. Let us go kill the enemy. Yes. I actually respect them.
Yeah.
And I understand why they don't want to fight in the IDF.
I don't fucking blame them.
Right.
You got these, like, if you're on the, if you're on the kibbutz, like, you're fucking,
you're the closest that one of a cosmopolitan people that have had no roots could be to one
of those Iowa farm boys, right?
Or one of those Appalachian coal miners kids.
Right.
You're doing work in the land.
They actually believe in what they're doing.
Yes.
And you're working the land.
That's what you're doing.
And a certain type of consciousness comes over you.
I know this because I've taken to growing food.
And a certain amount of peace comes over you, tending the soil.
Like, it really does.
It clarifies your mind.
I wish all of our elites
We were out in the backyard today
Getting things prepared for the winter
Yep
It makes you in tune with the seasons
It makes you in tune with your surroundings
And you bond with the land
It is a dialogue
And no one can tell me different
So those people on those cabusses
Their connection to the land is now a spiritual one
And it seems that that's
funny because they're willing to die for it.
And they also won't fight with the people that have to be forced to fight,
the conscripts, the draftees.
Like, I actually respect that they won't join the IDF.
Like that to me isn't a negative.
Why would true believers want to fight besides trans people and other things?
Yeah, the world's fighting force.
Yeah, homosexuals.
And I mean, sorry, but women.
Yeah, when they occupied that church in Lebanon on the other day.
And the one own that they could think of on the Christians,
the own and desecrate the church was to have a mock gay wedding,
except for surprise, the bride or sorry, the groom and the groom, you know,
made out at the end of the ceremony.
Super tough guys.
Like, again, I don't think that's the own you think it is.
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And now she's over
the next to Hampshire.
It's leargoal to the law
and not art gree in Aundoon
and leander Gala to give a time
father to Gaelta Deirin.
In Ergird,
we're taking tour thawky
in one of the first.
I don't know.
It's a lot of
doing to do you
know of a
lecture
on the same
time to
know
and people
tariff
in Tashdy.
There's
a cooct
you are in
Koohueh
Mugan.
I'll know in
back to
yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah.
See,
Pete knows how
to get the
most out of me
because
I do have to
be kept on topic
especially
like that
but
so,
The guys that, briefly, we'll talk about who else,
before we get into Charles Lindbergh's fight with FDR,
which basically it became because being as popular as he was,
any radio station would fall all over itself to get Charles Lindbergh on the air.
advertisers would pay insane multiples on what they were normally paying to be either before or after
a Charles Lindberg speech and it got to a point where the president's fireside chats
president Roosevelt's fireside chats as painful as they are to listen to I urge you to start seeking out
um
Charles Limburg's radio appearances or uh
I guess you can call them like addresses right and then find the FDR fireside chats
either immediately after or immediately before because these men were addressing the nation
ostensibly but they were having a debate like tit for tat right
I mean, it was literally like they were on the debate stage going at it if you listen to them in order.
And it was a debate that FDR was losing.
And Charles was winning.
And after the Des Moines, Iowa speech in 1941, when he said FDR, the British race and the Jewish race were pushing the country into war that settled it.
70% of the country at the time, it's not my.
These are here.
They did the poll.
This poll was, what is this page 18?
This one.
Yeah, Gallup, Gallup 1938, and then Gallup, 1939, 1940.
Yeah, most of these are going to be Gallup polls.
And there's the O.P.O.R. surveys, which I think the organization is now defunct.
but 68% of the population of America said that the Jewish race had too much control over the FDR administration.
So it wasn't just him.
In fact, Pete, I sent you a book the other day.
What was it called?
FDR in the Jews.
that's probably why i didn't remember because it's literally uh you know that obvious uh no i thought it was
yeah okay um and i remember like they i remember reading a couple uh paragraphs i read like the
forward in the in the introductory chapters of the book and basically the purpose of the book was because
um it's one of those great things where they do like the
actually it is happening or sorry it's it's actually happening but also it's actually a good thing
and not a bad thing that you know the left so famously does um so fDR in modern times uh you know
in the in the late 90s 2000s uh right around like the ken burns the suspicious history
documentaries started hitting the air uh fDR is
memory was starting to get a lot of flak because he turned down or he rejected that boat full of uh jewish
emigres that were fleeing manual labor um in germany and hey mann like you know africans i believe are
like lactose intolerant some people are some races are labor intolerant but he rejected uh he
basically turned away the ship right and that kind of came back into public consciousness and
basically like there was this you know narrative going around that it's probably from some
probably from some idiot conservatives i actually i guarantee you it was probably idiot conservatives
saying like, you know, oh, FDR don't, you know, love the Semites like I do.
In fact, FDR and the progressives were anti-Semites.
And that's why they turned away these.
Go on.
Always attacking the left as the, oh, they're the real racist or they're the real anti-Semites.
And yeah, it's like, okay.
It's like that Antioch declaration I was listening to.
I don't know what the Antioch Declaration is.
They saw Cryptos post about it.
Everyone should follow Cryptos.
One of the best accounts.
I saw his post about it, but I was listening,
and I still didn't really understand what it was,
or basically on whose authority it was issued.
And then I was listening to probably the angriest I've ever heard,
Orrin McIntyre.
Just, I guess, just dropped a stream about this.
about how to handle in you know disagreements and infighting inside your cultural uh political
movement that was a really good talk um very angry which is interesting and refreshing to hear i
think aaron should get more angry erin if you're listening need to lean into that it's it's
good not like being angry it's good being angry is not good no emotion is good in and of itself but um
hearing him deliver
you know
points like that
with
with some anger and
and hostility in his voice
it
it makes
Aaron hit much different
and I
in a very positive way
so Aaron get angrier
and
preferably right before your streams
but yeah it was
it's like what
conservatives do man they go run to the left to try and cancel you know guys they don't
like on the right and they anyways but yeah so this book came out to try and like it was
basically like no no no in fact um the jewish people in the fdr administration was actually
their relationship was so close in fact that
the public started, you know, asking a lot of questions and getting very concerned.
And with the, his third election right around the corner,
it basically became politically untenable for him to accept them
because of all the other good things that he had done for the Jewish people
in his administration thus far.
So surprise, FDR, not an anti-Semite at all.
but was so phylo-Semitic, in fact, that it became politically toxic.
And if he had done any more of it, the toxicity would have been fatal to his third presidential, you know, aspirations.
So that's why.
And the book that they that I encourage everyone to read it.
I've only just started.
But if it keeps on hitting like the intro chapters, I think it's going to be a really interesting book.
But yeah, 70% of the country saw it the way that Lindberg did, that these were the three interest groups.
when I think he says the FDR administration and FDR personally he was saying FDR personally
but the guys that were backing him backing the America First Committee these were the same guys
of the American Liberty League if you remember my talk about the American Liberty League in the
last episode I did with Pete you'll get an idea who he's talking about when he says like
the FDR regime as its own separate interest groups because at least from the men that were in power
industrial, financial, social capital, like that type of power, even though they weren't in the
government because the progressives or sorry the new dealers these men saw it as a
political regime that was being puppeteered by by bolshevik Russia and there's a lot of good
evidence for it a lot of that evidence would be confirmed by what's called the bonona cables
It turns out, like, they had some, the Russians had some pretty good encryption tech at the time.
And their ciphers, it took, like, computing power of, like, the early 2000s to come around before we had the ability to bust it open.
So I think the NSA cracked Venona, or at least released, announced that they cracked it and released it.
I believe in the early 2000s.
But surprise.
McCarthy was right.
And not only was he right,
all of these guys at the time of FDR were right and were more right than they even thought they were.
Right.
Like our first lady was literally a CC, a CP USA member.
What the fuck?
Like Barack Obama.
isn't a Marxist.
Joe Biden,
Kamala Harris, isn't a Marxist.
But the FDR regime was.
The New Deal regime was.
At least most of the people in prominent positions
within the administration were.
And they wanted the U.S. in World War II, real bad.
Because who is the other group of people
that were withering against the onslaught brought on by the Vermont?
or the Luftwaffe.
It wasn't just the British,
wasn't just the Jews,
it was the Soviets.
And the Soviets,
unlike the British,
their lend lease.
I heard you bring up the other day, Pete,
and I don't think not a lot of people know it,
is that at the time of the U.S. entry into World War II,
most of our arms manufacturing
weren't manufacturing
weren't set up for
from the very beginning we're not set up for
and we're not at the time making
American Calibers
Yeah it's like you
I think the main character
caliber they were manufacturing was
762 by 54
R yeah
what's that what's that for
that's a Mosinagant
yeah
other Russian
whatever that
um
rifles.
Yeah, what is it?
The, the,
the, um,
the DPM?
Is that the one
with the plate on top of it?
It looks like a dinner plate
or a record on top of it.
I can't remember.
Yeah,
it's like the precursor to the RPD.
Now,
wait,
is the RPD the fat AK-47?
No,
what's the,
what's the,
what's the 762 by 39 belt fed?
That's my favorite.
I'm not a P-KM respecter.
I think it's the RPD.
I think it's the DPM.
I think it's a DPM.
Yeah, the, yeah, the DPM machine was the 762, let me see.
39, or was the DPM the 54R?
762, 54R.
Okay.
And that's the one with the weird disc magazine?
Yep, and if you got to Battlefield Vegas, you can rent one and shoot it.
Oh, man.
And FDR, you know.
Fed the magazines.
That's great.
Hooray.
Makes me fucking sick.
The backers of the America First Committee were equally as interesting.
They were all the men that I previously talked about with the American Liberty League.
But you can an idea of this organization, it was the largest organization, political or otherwise, in the country.
It had 800,000 paid.
members
paid
think about that
like even today
do you think
you know
act blue
or
DSA or
do you think any
Democrat
let alone
Republican
Republican is laughable
but do you think
any
political action group
in the U.S.
has 800,000
paid members
paid isn't like
they've received a check
well you don't need that
anymore
because you have so many
big
gigantic, you know, billionaires willing to fund you that, yeah, you don't need that.
Well, you got to hire you. I mean, these were people collecting checks, not not submitting
them. Oh, wow. Yeah. Insane. Well, they also like, like, it was also like a union. Their members
also did pay, you know, did contribute. But they don't actually know how many members, right?
even the president of the America First Committee even said,
like, I have no idea how many actual members we have.
There was, and what was the population?
What was the population in 1940?
You have a much less loud keyboard as I do.
I'm not subject to listeners to that.
Population.
USA was a population 132 million.
Okay.
Well, there was over a quarter of a million America First Committee members in just Chicago.
That's huge.
Again, 80% of the population not only agreed with the tenants of the America First Committee,
but I would probably say a majority of that 80% back to the organization themselves.
So who come checks?
You want to know what's really interesting about that?
So those numbers that he's quoting, I'm almost 100% positive.
He got those from a book called Hitler and Los Angeles, how Jews foiled Nazi plots against Hollywood.
And in there, which was written by Stephen J. Ross, in there, they actually post these service.
from the 30s asking people, you know, do you trust Jews? Do you use it? Yes. They, yeah, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they, they was the American Jewish committee at the time that was doing those if I remember the book correctly. But yeah, those are, those had been long for, those numbers have been long forgotten until they decided to write this book to brag about how they foiled all these Nazi plots. What was the, do you remember what it said, uh, the percentage of,
the U.S. population that trusted Jews that viewed the most trust were then?
It was between, it was between 70 and eight, uh, who they trusted?
Trusted or distrusted? I'll take either or.
Well, well, distrusted was between 70 and 80 percent.
That makes about. Yeah, and you can even, and I'm on Amazon right now, and like, even one of the,
one of the reviewers says, um, uh, but, blah, what is it? I'm, I found, I found,
this book well written and fascinating. I was somewhat amazed at the strong sense of
anti-Semitism and isolationism that existed in some of the more progressive areas of America
at the time. I'm concerned that some of this thinking is raising its ugly head once again in
both Europe and America. This is a review from March 7, 2018. So yeah, they actually went through
those numbers in this book and just, you know, basically told them themselves that, you know,
it's like it's one of those things where you're, they do it all the time.
They do it.
It's so ridiculous that they do it all the time.
They think that if they put that out there, that thinking people aren't going to ask questions,
like, well, why?
Well, why?
I mean, people in the 30s.
You have to think that they think that they're the only ones that are thinking people.
right so i i don't believe in i don't believe in all of the all of the sillier tropes about you know
their uh in their cartoon representation of dr uh in the figure of dracula um i mean yes you know
i understand st simon um for st simon saint simon's gonna have it we'll have his revenge i'm sure
of it at least in europe um but the fact that
the vampire can't see his reflection in the mirror, I find just so on the nose.
I hate to even cheapen it with a pun like that, but they're not only incapable of self-reflection,
aha, but they're also incapable of seeing themselves as a broader group, right?
So like in that in that public bragging like you'd think like oh this may be a bad idea for us more broadly
you know like there's no there's no reflection at a group level either anyways yeah because
the telling on themselves is constant it is a constant theme I find it just deranged but um some of the
fiscal backers, the check cutters, the big ones.
One is Julius
Morton, governor of
Nebraska and U.S.
Secretary of Ag under
I believe Uber.
He was kind of a big
deal in
the budding conservationist movement.
Arbor Day exists
because of this man.
He made
And he made his money.
I can't remember.
I can't remember I made his money.
Somebody should check it out.
I'm sure it's interesting.
Another guy was Joseph Patterson.
It was a millionaire at the time.
Very much of the establishment.
And was founder of the Daily News,
which was the only newspaper talking sense.
So everyone, when you go back in time,
And this is the other thing.
Like, our academics represent the opinions of the American people in past times by seeing,
by basically looking in the newspapers, right, Pete?
Like, if they want to see, like, what Americans were saying about a certain thing.
Well, who owns the fucking newspapers?
Right?
Like, I have never heard.
Go on?
Especially the New York Times.
Yeah, right?
Who said that that's the paper of record?
Who says?
How come I have never, how come I and probably you have never heard of the daily news, the newspaper?
We're not talking about the New York Daily News, are we?
Yeah, in New York, you have the New York Daily News, you have the Post in the New York Post, and you have the New York Times.
Let me see.
I'd have to go back and check.
But yeah, keep going on.
It's just the daily news.
The founder is Joseph Peterson, or Patterson, P-A-A-T-E-R-S-O-N.
But I had never heard of the daily news, but it was the largest newspaper in the country, right, in the 40s and the 30s and the 20s.
How have I never heard of that?
They had the largest circulation in the country.
How come nobody ever goes and looks at the daily news when they're looking through microfilms about American opinion?
Because I just found that out yesterday.
And as of now, I am going to start looking at when I want to look at opinions of the past.
That's what I'm going to look for.
Because almost all of the historical, you know, academic work, right, is, you know,
you know, when newspapers are involved,
or like, you know, going through archival newspapers,
it's always the New York Times or the Washington Post.
But one of the most interesting backers of America First
and a frequent check cutter was one, John F. Kennedy.
So you had Gerald Ford as one of the founding members,
which I find that very interesting,
that he was Nixon's VP choice.
Right?
That's pretty cool.
But anyways,
John F. Kennedy would write handwritten notes
because he would always put his checks in envelopes.
And on the envelopes, each time would be like,
this is the most vital,
this is the most vital effort in the nation.
this is the most important effort or the most important undertaking of the nation he was a vehement supporter of
america first john f kennedy his father as well right but his father is a business magnate and
a foreign diplomat right very similar to like the mirenti herrick types you know i think herrick was a banker
a successful banker because he's who that he's the guy who was um i think in the um in the very
first episode when we were talking about um the very first episode of the robber barons we were
talking about how um peer pot Morgan was trying to get out ahead of and stop before it really really
really got underway like i think it was like um turkey and some other country you know like the
The Eastern European countries had just started, right?
And it would later melt over.
But the JP Morgan Company tried offering very large zero interest and
loans to both of the belligerent nations.
and Myron was the it was orchestrated out of Morgan and
Morgan and Grenfell was the London office
Morgan and Hodges was the Paris office
it was operated out of the US embassy in France
or in Paris France which was that Myron guy is
operation
and
and out of Morgan
and Hodges
so I find it really interesting
that like the same guys that tried
to stop World War I
are also the same guys
that tried to stop World War II
that makes sense
I don't find that a coincidence at all
oh and by the way
they're also the most
financially powerful people
and you could say the most
financially literate people
in the country
so sorry libertarians
sorry leftists
turns out industrialists
and bankers don't want wars
so no wars
or bankers wars retards
god
I hate the slogan nearing of
libertarians
their bumper
their ideology is a bumper
sticker deep
because
all of the U.S. bankers
seemed to work very very hard
at
substantial personal risk to themselves
and their fortunes to do the opposite of war.
So, at least as far as America is concerned,
no wars are banker's wars.
And the guy that headed,
the guy that was the first president
of the America First Committee,
is a really interesting character.
So, like, you're talking about, like,
the level of American brass, top,
top, I guess you could say, like,
top ethnic stock of the,
uh,
heritage American ethnos i shouldn't laugh right darrell cooper already spends enough time trying
to tell me that i don't have a people and i don't have a country i shouldn't give his silly
position any um anyhow but he's great on everything else darrell cooper's uh he's a really good guy
just wrong about one thing,
which is all right,
because a lot of smart guys are usually wrong at least one thing.
Murray Rothbard used to say that you're allowed one deviation.
Really?
I like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I should be allowed at least one contradiction or deviation or incoherence.
Brigadier General Robert Wood.
was the president and chairman of the America First Committee.
Like, you know, before, this guy is actually really, really interesting, right?
He was a successful executive.
And he went to West Point and he served in the Philippines from 1902 to 1903.
and if you know anything about what happened in the Philippines,
you will understand that this man saw some shit,
like some real horrific stuff.
But he retired in 1915,
and then became the vice president of DuPont Company
and headed operations inside the United States.
just to clarify for his service in the Philippines because you wonder like is this guy like a cadet like how old is he right so at the time that he was retired right he was a major and would later be in 1905 became assistant quartermaster or assistant chief quartermaster and then chief quartermaster
but that was after his service in the Philippines so he started off the Philippines
just a regular officer as one does when you graduate West Point but he would leave a major
and then go and be vice president of DuPont and head of US operations
do you remember who was one of the largest backers of the American Libyan
Liberty League besides Jack Morgan.
I can't remember.
Yeah, I can't remember.
I didn't remember.
Thank you.
So I find it very interesting that one of DuPont's top guys has the America First Committee.
I'm sure after the American Liberty League and the direct attack that they came under by the newly birthed regulatory state, I'm assuming that these guys thought it best to put at least one layer.
the insulation between them and their political action.
And that was Mr. Robert Wood, sorry, Brigadier General Robert Wood.
And he stepped down from the DuPont Company on the eve of 1917 and America's entry into
the First World War.
returned to the army as an infantry lieutenant colonel. So he was on the front line.
He stepped down out of the vice president's office of one of the most successful and wealthiest
companies in the country to go to the front lines. Find me anyone, anyone in corporate
America today in senior leadership that not only served there's lots of men that serve that
have hold those positions at least a handful but how many of them are going to step down
from those positions and fight on the front line if their nation is ever called to arms
we used to be better just unheard of yeah we used to be better this doesn't happen
that doesn't happen anymore all of this stops tomorrow all of it this hell we live in this frail
husk of a once great house this amazing place turned into a haunted house a house of like horrors now
all of this ends tomorrow when the men with money
realized that some things, in fact, most things are more important than money.
These men knew that already instinctively.
Somehow it's been conditioned out of us.
I don't know how, but I'm sure it wasn't easy and I'm sure it didn't happen quickly,
but it happened.
These men knew that there were things more valuable than money, that there were risks
of loss
far worse than money
there are worse things
as we are finding out today
than losing money
and the sum total
of our past sins
well
what's that quote from the movie the Patriots
but the only quote of that movie I like
he's like
he says that
My greatest fear was that my past sins would one day come home to roost.
Sorry, the ghosts of my past sins would come home to roost,
and the cost would be more than I could bear, I believe, is the quote.
That's a good one.
Because I hope that that's not the case with America.
I hope that the ghosts of
our elites sins have come home to roost.
We live in it.
I just hope that the cost is not more than the nation can bear.
But he would later lead the entire American expeditionary force
and exited the war as a brigadier general.
He would then go on to chair the Sears Roebuck Company.
He became one of the most important business leaders,
not only in the company's history,
but in the country at the time,
serving as its president from 1928 until 1939,
also founded Allstate, a pretty serious dude.
To give you an idea of his bona fides as far as American Anglo aristocracy,
is he in 1950 was admitted into the fraternal and hereditary society of the Cincinnati.
If you know, you know.
I don't leave it at that.
But these people, these people weren't like the men, like I just see these men.
And I look at our guys in the shoes that we have to fill.
are immense. Yes, we have been gate-kept away from the wealth of our nation. And I say that
rather hypocritically because some of us, myself included, have not been. But I know most of our
guys have. So the bounty of the greatest country in the history of the world, their inheritance,
has been kept from them.
So as far as positions of prominence in our leading business institutions,
cultural institutions and political institutions, like Esau, that inheritance has been stolen
through trickery and deceit.
So these men's positions of prominence
are not shoes that I can reasonably expect
or guys to fill,
but their character,
their sense of duty,
and their commitment to America,
the nation that is a sum
total of the intergenerational
what's the word to put it
I guess
I don't want to get too metaphysical but
we believe
intrinsically
that there is some type of
every now and then science throws us a bone
Right. Science confirms something that surprises science, but does not surprise us, people of faith.
And one of those things is the discovery of epigenetic memory. It's a very real thing.
We can test it in entirely controlled environments now. First, it was that 100 Monkeys thing that I think I mentioned on.
our show with Thomas Astral and Jay Burton.
Jay Burton.
Yeah.
Also a great guy.
But we can replicate it in the lab
in entirely closed environments.
We're using different colors, spiders, and things like that.
Where, you know, a chimp will, you know,
associate some very negative stings.
stimuli to certain colors and shapes and their offspring are inherently, I'm sorry, instinctly
scared of those same colors and shapes within one generation.
So our consciousness is, there is that innate nature of it, that observer, that passive
participant that is pure awareness that is that's our soul that is our spirit but then there is
our consciousness our conscious mind the um the part of our soul that is us and not god that is a
sum total of our memories our life so if a
portion of memory is inheritable intergenerational memory then consciousness it's impossible to deny
that there is an element of intergenerational consciousness in a people and ethnos or racial consciousness
in the real sense, not in the rhetorical sense like the left uses, but there is a real living,
conscious entity that is in sum total of the memories of each generation.
I don't think I'm doing an adequate job of explaining and I'm a little slow today, but the results of this are undeniable.
Go on, please, save me.
Honestly, I think that's a conversation for another day.
Yeah.
That deserves, that deserves its own episode.
Yeah, I'd like to have that chat with maybe Thomas, too,
because he was the one that initially gave that light bulb.
But the people that serve are moved by that consciousness, right?
Those are shoes that you can fill.
I don't think the ancients were dumb in their.
worship, at least in some spiritual capacity, their ancestors, alongside their gods.
Because, I mean, you know, anyways, so we can fill those shoes.
We don't have to fill the shoes, you know, financially or economically or in positions of
prominence yet.
but we have to be able to fill those men's shoes in our concept and our mortal devotion
to those things and to be ready to fill those shoes to be to be deserving of filling those shoes
and when I look at these guys and then I look at our guys today we need a
lot of work. Just like the black pilling, for instance, the constant defeatism. If you were in a
trench, that type of attitude would get everyone killed if they didn't kill you themselves.
Like, we have to be better.
Well, we, you know, I'll end it. I'll end it on this. You mentioned Orrin in an episode he did,
and he was talking about
the
Antioch thing
of Obama
well
what the fuck is there
the whole
that's some
bullshit
bullshit
inter-protistan fighting
you know
sign this to make
sign this to prove
you're not a fascist or whatever
but the
the
point of Orins
that whole
episode and, you know, a couple comments I've made recently is that it seems like now that the left
is seemingly defeated instead of the right focusing on either utterly destroying the left so they
never come back, or maybe looking at some problems, some big problems on the right,
they're arguing over memes.
They're, I mean, and they're basically unfollowing people going to war with people over the meaning of memes.
And we can't be expected to be ready for the kind of fight you're talking about if we're fighting with each other over this meme.
Or, you know, what is, you know, or, oh, well, you know, if you're, if you're against Israel, if you're against Israel, if you're against
Israel right now because they're at war, then you're obviously on the side of the Palestinians.
I mean, it just, and if that's, if that's true, you're a third worldist. And it's just bullshit.
It's just the right got it. The right decided they were going to get into, the right is like, oh, well, look at this. I mean, Trump got elected and, you know, the woke is, you see people taking, removing their pronouns and stuff like that. So they're defeated. So let's fight with each other.
You know what this sounds like to me, Pete?
What?
The Army Rangers and also NATO has been nice enough to do something similar.
The document is called Cognitive Warfare.
I cannot read it.
The Army Rangers have their own psychological warfare outfit.
And you can get a hold of the training manual and doctrine.
Um, they've been, uh, I think it's this, uh, in the repository I found them on was like a,
was a cycle public intelligence.
It's a great site for, um, policy documents and, um, training manuals, like, a training manual for
like anything military is really like, like, not just like a, you know, it's on an instruction
manual.
It's really like everything, right?
Um, it's a complete text, but, uh, public intelligence, I believe was the site.
I got it from in this particular instance, but it basically goes through what
SIOPs actually are.
And I think it's very informative, and I think we would do well in knowing it, because all
the things that we get chalked up, that we chalk up to sciops, right, like hoaxes or trying
to convince us of things that aren't real, right, like holograms or whatever, like all the
stuff that Alex Jones screams are PSIOPs, right?
like these fake things that didn't happen trying to convince us of not real things that represents
less than 10% of what a sci-ops unit actually does right so our whole conception of what a
sci-op is is less than 10% of what psychological operations soldiers right and operatives are
actually doing do you know what 90% of
of their time, energy and resources is spent on,
sewing discord and creating infighting in a target group.
It's what 90% of Psiops is on the ground, right?
Sounds familiar.
Yeah, it does.
Right, because the number one priority is to break enemy cohesion,
right, and get the various leadership,
individuals or organizations in an enemy population or an enemy fighting force to fight with each other.
Because when that happens, logistics breaks down, command and control breaks down,
and most importantly, trust breaks down. If you don't trust this part of your outfit,
you aren't going to be confident that they will resupply you or reinforce you.
you. So that completely
changes your paradigm of what is possible
on the battlefield.
You won't do
certain things.
Simply sewing,
creating infighting
and sewing discord.
All of the second and
third order effects of that
on the battlefield
are huge.
So much.
It is so worthwhile
that it represents
90% of what psychological operations units devote their time to.
It's all about infighting.
Infighting is the name of the fucking game.
And when I see contrived controversies that no one asked for,
taking over the entire discourse,
I get suspicious.
Because if I have to ask, why the fuck does this matter?
And whose issue was this prior?
Was this like the hobby horse of any particular?
like subset of people? No, it wasn't. This is suspicious as fuck. And anybody fighting on either
side of this argument is dumb or disingenuous. This is an actual sci-up. Right. Fucking holograms or,
you know, no planes or Project Blue Bean convince you of any alien, that's not sci-ups.
This is siops.
This dumb shit.
Yeah.
I think that's where we should end it.
I think so too, man.
It's a pleasure.
Thank for having me all.
Always.
Always.
And let's get back together with Astral and Thomas and Jay real soon and pump some of that out.
Because people are, I think people are loving that too.
I really like that.
Yeah.
We do a lot of stuff in real time there, too.
Yeah, I mean, I think I think panels are the way to go
Like for like current stuff or like stuff that's effect like stuff like stuff like this
A panel is perfect for stuff that's afflicting our guys and the scene like right now also for planning like objectives
For you know anyways
That's something that's something we should definitely get together and talk with Thomas about
Yeah, absolutely because he's gonna have a lot on that all right man. I appreciate you. Thank you very much
Talk to later. Bye.
