The Pete Quiñones Show - Pony Express Radio - 04/30/26 - License to Kill
Episode Date: May 3, 2026120 MinutesNSFWPete and friends talk about the headlines of the day.Old Glory Club YouTube ChannelOld Glory Club SubstackOld Glory Club WebsitePete and Thomas777 'At the Movies'Support Pete on His Web...sitePete'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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back, everybody, to this, your favorite comedy show on the internet where we look at the slop of Slop World.
You know, I like to think that on January 20th, 2025, we transitioned from Clown World into Slop World because let's be honest, it's kind of hard to laugh these days.
But we're here to just bring up all the nonsense that's, you know, you're.
you could at least try.
With me tonight, I'm not me, not you, of course.
With me tonight is Mr. Pete Canonas.
How are you, sir?
Doing good.
And Mr. Sandbatch, back in action.
How are you?
Back in action.
I feel like an action, like that's what I feel like,
I'm like a bullpen pitcher.
I have a middle relief pitcher for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in like 1998
when they won 60 games a year, you know.
Hell yeah, man.
We got that on the plane.
The wade bogs of the Pony Express or, you know, whatever.
You get me out here to throw some knuckle balls.
I was going to be a refrain tonight.
All right.
Let's hit those shills, shall we?
Alp, link in the description.
Get your nicotine fix.
This, you know, it's one of these things where, yeah, it's made in India.
But, um.
Well, you know.
I was like literally I had a dicotine license.
The story to go with that, and I was like, no, that's not good press.
And then you were like, yeah, sure, they're made in India.
So I'm like, yeah, I was talking to a guy yesterday.
And he bummed a cigarette from me.
And I was like, he was like, yeah, he's like, I'm on these nicotine lozenges.
But he's like, but they make my gums bleed.
You know.
I mean, good for him for sticking through it, you know?
Most people just tell you about the, I tell you I was at a Christmas party and someone mentioned Alp and this guy just starts like, no, man, you can't buy Alp.
It's all dirty. It's disgusting. It'll ruin your mouth and everything like that.
And then later, I found out he was a Jew and just hated Tucker Carlson.
Okay. Yeah, yeah. This makes more sense. I mean, you know,
I want to support Tucker Carlson personally, and I do so by buying his product.
You know, the pouches are all white, which I imagine must be one of the hardest things to get out of India,
something that actually maintains its color without just turning brown.
So I have to give it to Al for that.
So use the link in the description, help out, you know, your friends.
On the subject of India, did you see that, did you see the clip of that dude that was like,
that was shitting on the side of the road?
And he like tripped and fell under an 18 wheeler and died.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What would they say?
That's the, they're calling it the most Indian death of all time.
No, if, if he would have been banging a friggin' lizard at the same time,
that had been the most Indian death of all time.
Yeah.
That's true.
That's true.
We, so the, uh, the, the, uh, the crown is.
still there for anybody in India who might be listening to this. You can still get the most
Indian death of all time. All right. Fox and Sons coffee link in the description. Use promo
code OGC to get a certain percentage off. It's worth it. It's amazing coffee. Even coffee snobs
will not turn their nose up at the wonderful coffee from Fox and Sons. So do that. Do
that for your caffeine fix. Axios fitness and coaching. Got a J.G. Putting together personalized
programs, make sure you are healthy and not fat, which is, you know, one of the tenants of be
attractive and don't be unattractive. So just get on that. It's worth your time. Ms. Vendrillo
in the links. It's also a part of being.
being you know your best you man just buy a suit you look good buy and in like you know buy american
do the whole thing and uh speaking of american tall men books george bagby putting out uh all of the
things that we don't want to forget so he's republishing a lot of the uh the 19th and very
early early 20th century works that have fallen out of circulation
uh and he's a good friend of the club so please check him out
It was always chilling books because this is a big day for me.
It's not a big day for me actually.
But my first two months, the first two months of royalties come in at once.
So if you walk in, if you all can fucking go buy my book, if you're going to do it, do it today instead of tomorrow.
Wait, you got your first royalty check cut today?
No, no.
It's two months from, it's, well, it's not two months.
It's like if it's two months after the end of the month that you publish.
Okay, so I published the book on March 3rd.
And so March 3rd to April 3rd and then April 3rd to May 3rd.
And then actually, well, no, yeah, no, they're only going to go like, yeah, April 30th.
They're only going to, like, this is the last day for my first, for my first check.
So you'll go buy my book.
Right.
Okay.
I was going to say, I'm sorry.
surprised you're sober but if you didn't get paid yet you know there's there's there's still time
i don't drink you know i did i tried drinking like three days ago i bought a bottle of wine and i was
fine and then i woke up the next morning and i had headache and i was fucking mad so i'm like i'm
doing that again for a while yeah that's usually the way it goes um well we what are we look at
we're looking at our first our first story that our first story of the night is no no no no the most
thing that happened yesterday is David Allen co-dive.
Ah, yes, of course.
The great avant-garde country singer,
who's, if you're only familiar with his work,
if you're only familiar with the greatest country
Western song ever, you should definitely go check out
his much more underground work,
the records that include lots of racism
and a spoken 20-minute monologue about being
a drug addicted gay prostitute in the 1970s.
It's all wonderful work.
Wait, so is he
is he secretly Johnny Rebel?
No, no, but I mean, it's Johnny, dude, actually,
Johnny Rebel is from Louisiana.
Yeah, he's from the great Agropolis of Crowley, Louisiana.
And there was the record label, I mean, David Allen Kill was,
he came after Johnny Rebel, actually.
Like that, Johnny Rebel was in the early 60s,
And that dude, I mean, that is a real dude.
And I actually think he might even still be alive.
But David Allen.
He passed away.
Yeah, yeah.
David Allen Coe came after him.
But like, it's like if Johnny Cash listened to Johnny Rebel is what David Allen Co.
It's, you know.
Okay, all right.
Well, so like I said, when the news broke that he died, I actually thought that David
Allen Coe was the Coe was.
CO period and that it was just a name for like a band that's something made up.
I mean, some of his work is some of the work that's talking, it's like you got to go find
it somewhere, you know, but it is every bit as racy as that. But he is, of course, he's one of the,
one of the genuinely great country music singers and we're sad to see him go. One of the,
well, it's been a rough year for American artists. All those old boomers are dying and there's
nothing to replace them.
Yeah, I mean, I'm going to give some country music hipsters a heart attack and say that I'm
going to have to check out his stuff now that he's dead.
I'll be the last guy, the last white man crossing the finish line on David Allen Coe, I guess.
The Yankeesiest moment in plenty of scratch.
Yeah, I mean, I'm just living, I'm just living it, man.
David Allen Coe, Ohio's favorite son.
Yeah, that's a thing.
I don't think of country music when I think of Ohio.
I think of, well, really, I think of South Point,
the heroin capital of the United States,
but that's for other reasons.
Dude, you know, I was talking to the Ohio chapter guys,
and they made a claim with me
that was so over the top and outside of anything
that I had ever heard before.
I like did like I did the like I did the like Tucker staring face at him
through the screen because he told me that rocket roll was invented in Ohio and I
would give yourself the secret about me my babysitter growing up like sometimes
Sam Phillips who ran Sun Studios in Memphis was my babysitter growing up not willing to
get into how that happened but suffice to say I have always been
in and like well inundated and the idea that Rock
And roll was born in Memphis, Tennessee.
And I went and looked this up and holy effing shit, rock and roll, the phrase rock and roll was coined six years earlier than I thought.
And in fact, in Ohio.
So Ohio used to do things beyond the reckoning of what we think they're capable of now.
Wait, wait.
Where's the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?
Exactly.
It's in Ohio, which is like.
Yeah, that makes sense.
I mean, I don't know anything else.
It never made sense to me until now, and I'm like, oh, okay, now I get it.
Well, better known for that than the invention of bebop jazz.
But, you know, so this has to be, I guess, the black bark on this week in Slop is David
Island Coe's death, because surprisingly, we have, well, not.
Not a 100% win lineup, but it's pretty close.
So our first win of the week is brought to us by the SCOTUS,
the Supreme Court of the United States,
who in the Louisiana v. Calais,
how do they pronounce that in Louisiana?
Calais.
Calais, they do?
All right.
Louisiana v. Calais struck down, well,
they didn't strike down the vote.
Voting Rights Act, but they decided to narrow its scope a little bit and determined that there were some of the Voting Rights Act, black districts, were actually unconstitutional.
Well, you know, this is kind of a tangled story.
And the reason, it's interesting, you know, one of the first articles I wrote a long time ago, when the first articles Baby Sandbatch ever wrote that really went viral, you would say,
say, like the guys at the Western Rifle Shooters Association picked it up.
And it was back in 2018, 2019, when Virginia was going through their redistricting.
And Virginia, they were gridlocked over how to go about doing their state legislative redistricting is what it was.
And they brought in an academic because this is what, of course, this is what.
I mean, the fight had gotten bad enough that, you know, federal courts had stead.
stepped in and they appointed an arbitrator and the arbitrator brought this,
Barnard Groffman in from Sclant's UC Davis to, you know, to consult on redistricting.
And, you know, that raised my hackles for all the predictable reasons.
And I really got into this, into this redistricting shed.
And it turns out Herr Groffman had, had written a number of articles for the North Carolina law review,
stating, you know, a lot of what were the legal difficulties with increasing minority
representation in increasing minority representation in congressional districts. And he is a guy who
has been paid hundreds of thousands of dollars since the 70s to essentially sue primarily
southern governments over all of the issues that, you know, that arise from this sort of thing.
And even he at the time, he went about, he acknowledged that it's very difficult to get around the constitutional requirements about racial discrimination.
Because in the South, and this is the reason the South is such a laboratory for this, because it's essentially two races and there's a lot of both of us.
And they're really pretty much 100% along,
a long racial lines and political lines
are virtually identical with one another.
So just talking about it was very difficult actually
to gerrymandered black districts back into,
or Democrat, because his definition of what increasing,
you know, increasing equity in voter participation is,
is to create districts,
where the largest number of minorities have the possibility to be elected.
Courts and, you know, state legislatures have really rubber-stamp that definition for quite some time.
And when the difficulty that when doing it in the South is that anytime you attempt to race,
anytime you attempt to gerrymander political parties, you're also essentially gerrymandering racial lines.
and so this has been one of these things that we're like for which creates these like look at louisiana
louisiana louisiana is the worst like we have the most obscene one and it's a part of it's
and part of that is because of the geography i mean all of the southern states here you can see
i don't know if you could you can follow it with me the north carolina blue district that's up there
that's the great dismal swamps there's like cotton planters there in the south carolina the blue district
is I lived in it. I think that's Jim, Jim Clay. I think it's Jim Clyde. No, Jim Fiborne retired. He went
to the Biden administration. But that is the, you know, that's the, it's not quite the low country.
It covers some of the low country, but that is, all of again, it's a very heavily Democratic
districts where the blacks, where the plantations were. And if you look in South Georgia,
that's where the plantations were. And if you look, if you look in Alabama, that is, of course,
the infamous black belt that goes runs across Alabama's belly and then you have Memphis
the Mississippi Delta Louisiana's though looks retarded it looks the most retarded and it's the
most obscene of all of the of all of the frankly party party line gerrymandered districts
the reason for this is because the Democrat population i.e. the black population is sort of
more or less along the lines of the red and Mississippi rivers that's where all the plantations
were. So our gerrymandering looks worse than everyone else's and in fact it probably is. But the way this sort of shook out is that as of the 2020 census, some black interest groups in Louisiana determined that, you know, we have six members of the House representatives and we're about 30% black. So they needed two districts. And that kicked off a legal.
legal, legal slinky that somehow landed with the original, I believe the way this
landed is the original prosecutor, the original plaintiffs and were actually ended up trying
to scuttle their own case because the whiz bangs and the Louisiana state government
realized this was their chance to, as you said, got the civil right, got the voting rights act
more or less because the grounds that the argument was eventually made on was that,
We have six districts and 30% of the state,
so we get two of the districts.
Okay, you know, this is how thoroughly
Democrat and black have been entwined at the hip
in Louisiana for so long.
They couldn't even make a straight party claim.
They just outright suggested we need two black districts, okay?
And the Louisiana Attorney General said that's unconstitutional.
And so now here we are with the Voting Rights Act overturned.
Um, that's just the sort of play by play of what happened.
I don't know, like, just to make sure everybody's on the same page,
because I've seen so many people trying to figure out exactly what happened.
And nobody really seemed to know.
So that's just the, you know, that's just the, but what has actually gone down.
I mean, God bless, uh, our brothers in Louisiana who were paying attention and noticed that this was a golden opportunity.
You look wild.
You know what it was a woman.
Oh.
Didn't see that coming.
I mean, this, that is actually quite surprising.
But I suppose, you know, right-wingers in blue areas tend to be much more radical than right-wingers in red areas because they have to live with the consequences of, you know, blue governance.
And I imagine it's pretty similar when it comes to, you know, living around diversity and the decisions that people of diverse backgrounds,
tend to make in governance.
I think a lot of, as somebody who lives in one of these states right here,
I think a lot of what people see is,
is they see the map on the right, on the left as just, hey, you know,
we're keeping whitey down.
And the map on the right is there may be some consequences for your actions
if you don't straighten the fuck out.
Yeah, I mean the map on the, uh,
The map on the right is a, you know, it says it's a plausible scenario, but this requires
various groups in these states to bring suit or to actively redistrict.
And I know that some of the Democrats were pulling their hair out because there were something
like, I believe it was 200 or 2,000, that might be a bit much.
There were 200 lawsuits related to the Voting Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, that were ready to go, you know, pending this decision.
And, yeah, I mean, this was, I mean, this is one I think there's like a springboard.
Because, I mean, the reason we're, the reason we went ahead on it is because there was a smaller, yeah, there was a smaller case in Alabama.
But, I mean, the take home is, you know what the real take home is?
Do you know how happy I am right now?
how absolutely thrilled. I am.
So 161 years ago, South Carolina legally withdrew itself from the Union of the States
and was invaded by an army raised by the GOP.
And yesterday, the Supreme Court just handed the GOP permanently to the states that it invaded
in 1861.
This is in a very real way to South winning the Civil War.
Yeah, when God closes the door, he opens a window, right?
Exactly right.
But the, you know, sort of the take-home is yesterday, Mississippi, Tennessee,
I think Governor Ivy in Alabama is she's too old and senile to realize what's happening.
And she said, I don't know that they're going to do redistricting.
But Louisiana is going to, Louisiana has to, because we don't have a congressional district now.
Mississippi called it an emergency session to, you know,
to do their redistricting.
Tennessee did.
North Carolina, I think they've already done theirs and there's is about as bad.
They probably can't do any more than they already have.
And in South Carolina, South Carolina can get rid of their blue district too.
And so we're going to see if they do.
And that it's, you know, I mean, there's going to be some knock on consequences here.
Like this is, I mean, obviously this is like the Southern Strategy version of like break glass, you know, in a case of emergency.
Because this is only really good for maybe two cycles because what you're essentially doing is, you know, you ever read Ernst Junger?
My favorite book, Ernst Junger wrote is the Forest Passage.
And he always talks about the way one party, the way authoritarian, it talks away the way authoritarian parties.
work. For better or worse, the GOP is more or less an authoritarian power in the southern states,
but it tolerates the existence of some of these little blue districts. If you look at that map,
it's already overwhelmingly red, and we just tolerate some of these blue districts to keep everybody,
you know, as sort of the ability for controlled out, for outlets for pressure to exist.
And we're essentially taking those away. And the black population,
is angry, you know, they're angry, you know, what that translates into is hard to tell,
but it's also important to remember the black, the black vote operates by a machine, okay?
There's relatively little actual individual decision making in the black vote, and this is not,
really, this is not, no shade on them or anything, it's just the way they're structured.
Well, I mean, what is the saying blacks don't vote their district captains do?
Yeah, yeah, I mean, they just, they, or,
You know, when you talk and you know Obama was a community organizer,
all of the like civil rights organizers that you like,
see that they're all reverends.
It's like, what are they the reverend of?
And like such of like, you know, black Christianity in the South is largely political.
And what they do is they just go to church and they all go vote together, you know.
And like on the bus to the ballot station, you know, they fill out their ballots.
And then they go in and drop them off.
It's a machine delivered vote.
And so the only real, you know, the only real.
Well, you know, the only real, you know, the only real black decision makers that are, you know, they're looking at the same board we are.
And they're seeing their incentive to deal with the Democrat Party evaporate in front of them.
It's pretty clear that, you know, the black population's holding steady right around 12, 13 percent where it always has been.
they have been in the past they have been for the they have been in the past a powerful
democratic voting bloc specifically because of how early the because of how early the
the um because of how early the them the southern primaries are and like this there's a lot
of southern states in the super Tuesday primary so the democrats the the democrat insider
the democrat establishment has used the black vote as a bulwark against uh radical
for quite some time, but that's starting to fail.
And also, you know, the total share of the black vote and the Democrat Party is starting to fail.
So really, you know, there's a very real sense in which, like, all of us that's on this call,
we've listened, we've lived through what was possibly the peak of black political power in the United States.
Because of the kingmaker role.
Your life for God's ears, my friend.
Yeah, but because of the kingmaker role, I mean, arguably what's coming next is, like, not better
because the reason they're being displaced is because the Latin American vote is becoming so much more important.
You know, so, but, you know, if black, we get, you know, you get maybe two cycles out of this before those black community organizers realize that they now, their best chance at getting what they want is going to start be to moving, it's going to start be moving into the Republican Party.
So this, you know, it's a, you know, it's a break.
It really is, it's what it is. It's a break, break glass in case of emergency.
And I think the GOP has to do it right here, right now, for the next two elections.
But their alpha out of this is going to start decreasing rapidly.
Because what they're, you know, when they've just swallowed a very,
they're going to end up swallowing a very large, traditionally, almost totally opposed demographic.
And it's going to be really interesting to see how that plays out.
Well, so I know that this is kind of looking into a crystal ball,
but I'm not convinced that blacks moving to the Republican Party is really going to mean anything.
I will.
It would be as a part of the GOP Samson option.
Yeah, I could see that.
But when I'm thinking two cycles from now, all the boomers will be gone.
And such that the GOP will exist.
It's either going to be completely taken over by Indians and Hispanics,
or if it does remain the white man's party, which is what it is now,
all the white men in it are going to be,
they're going to understand the racial questions.
And they're not going to want to give any sort of, you know,
have any power in the hands of a race that's, you know,
a full standard deviation on average, less intelligent than they are,
which is no longer one of these things that's only hiding in niche information spaces online.
So I don't know if it'll shake out exactly like that or if it's just going to be,
it's going to shift from a white ethnic party to a brown coalition party the same way that the Democrats are.
I mean, we already have the problem here in Alabama of all of the state representatives that are running are running on the very important and very,
real issue of they're not going to allow Sharia law to come into Alabama.
What is the case for Sharia law in Alabama?
Where is it?
Where are where do they come from?
I don't spend a lot of time there.
Well, there is a town called Arab, Alabama, so I guess it'll be there.
So they're not running on keeping Muslims, Middle Easterners, and North Africans out of
Alabama.
They're running on keeping Sharia law out of Alabama.
That's correct. Yes, yes. There's not a, yeah, they're, you know, as I, as I am, as I say often,
we can get rid of the biggest problem that we have in this country that we've had since about 1880,
and people would still be spiritually, you know.
Yeah, I mean, this is a classic fight the symptom, not the virus.
It's one of these things where you hope that the generational turnover happens at such a breakneck speed that it kind of shatters the system because, you know, we get this little win here, but it's, you know, Sandy, you're saying we get maybe two cycles out of it.
Meanwhile, the whole country is being flooded with the third world.
And while that's at a trickle right now, I'm not so hopeful that it's going to last that long.
Yeah, I mean, it's pretty clear to me that it's pretty clear to me that this election is in fact going to be the most important.
It's probably going to be the most important presidential election or election cycle since 1896.
And the thing that's really interesting about this with respect to 1896 is that we know how important it's going to be ahead of time, which is not something that anybody knew.
In 1866, in 1896, the election hinged mostly on the question of whether or not we should issue silver coinage in addition to gold coinage.
And the elections that occurred primarily on that issue, on a domestic agenda, ended up
being, they ended up being the, um, the Congress that, uh, started the Spanish American
War and inaugurated American Empire. Um, so, so, the, uh, we're probably, this is a,
we're going to be, this is a rare. It's really is going to be an all hands on deck election.
And, you know, um, not 2026. I'm not even really concerned about 2026 anymore, but 2028 is going
to be probably, probably, um, you know, um, not 2026.
permanently decide the fate of the United States.
It's hard to see, it's hard to see whatever happens in 2028,
not being politically decisive for the rest of the century.
Yeah, I mean, I can see that.
2026 has already baked in.
I think that only the most hopeful and the,
the most schizophrenic believe that it's going to be anything other than a Dem win across the board.
But, you know, whatever.
That's not really important to us anyway.
Our mission in the Old Glory Club doesn't change regardless of who's in power.
The only thing that changes is how fast things are going to get worse.
So, well, speaking of foreign influence, the king of England, what the hell is his name?
Charles?
Charlie.
Yeah.
Chuckie.
Chuckie.
In Charles.
He visited the United States, which apparently some people care about.
I am not one of those people.
And Trump decided to greet him with a, I think it's a, I mean, you know, Trump for all
it's false, he still got it.
This is a very funny clip.
Obviously, this can be construed as just a reminder of our heritage as Brits.
we've got the red coats there and the Continentals.
And, you know, it's, but I like to think that it's kind of rubbing the nose in,
rubbing his nose in it that we, you know, broke away from them 250 years ago.
But really, this is, for all its pageantry, there was a funny moment where Trump decided to show a dead wasp to the,
the king of England, which, you know, I'm sure that there are some schizo brains out there saying that this was staged,
and it was Trump saying that the white Anglo-Saxon Protestant, the last bastion of British influence over the United States is dead.
But you'll see.
Exactly.
Maybe that's a little schizo, but, you know, there's a sense in which part of me, you know, as like sort of
of a dark wasp myself where you're like a wasp against the wasps uh where i'm like yeah well you know
goodbye and good luck thanks for all that because it is true the for whatever whatever the merits of the
wasps they were um uniquely beholden to getting us in england's problems uh but you know this speech
was embarrassing and i think somebody who personally i kind of like charlie i kind of like charlie
Are you just like him because he's actually read Gwynon?
Well, I like him.
Yeah, I like him because he's read René Gwynon.
I like him because he married the woman he loves.
And I like also that he, I like also that he, his main interest, he's kind of a weird dude.
His main interest is gardening, gardening in architecture, you know.
So like, and he actually has, whenever he actually bothers to do anything.
you know he's got like a he's interested in urbanism and everything like that he'd be a great guy to he'd be a great guy to get supper left you know but like he comes over here and you know he starts off okay it's like you know there's appeal to this he gets we get this you know this appeal to the special relationship so on and so forth but then he like veers directly into the gar into the shit you know right he's like talking about interfaith dialogue and so on and so forth and what he's like veers directly into the guard into the shit you know right he's like talking about interfaith dialogue and so on and so forth and what he's
he ends up happening.
You know, the Republicans were kind of cheering him a little bit in the beginning.
And they remained somewhat polite through the entire speech.
But at the end of the day, what we just kind of saw is that the king of England just came to the United States and read a canned speech agreeing with the opposite, you know, the opposition party in the Senate.
Like, it's a little bit of masculating.
Maybe he shouldn't be invited back, you know?
I'd be okay with him not being invited back, especially after he drops this silly shit on the floor of Congress.
At aftermath of 9-11, when NATO invoked Article 5 for the first time and the United Nations Security Council was united in the face of terror, we answered the call together as our people have done so for more than a century, shoulder to shoulder through two world world.
wars, the Cold War, Afghanistan, and moments that have defined our shared security.
Today, Mr. Speaker, that same unyielding resolve is needed for the defense of Ukraine
and her most courageous people.
Oh, wow.
You'd think it was BB Netanyahu up there, how fast they got out of their chairs to clap.
I like how nobody cares about Ukraine anymore.
It's just like this is like doddering old idiot up there.
What is a massive fucking faggot?
Yeah, that's about right.
I mean, this guy, right?
Like, he's, this guy, this guy.
He's overseeing.
Like, he's just sitting there watching as his own people are being slow roll to genocide in the country he's supposed to be the sovereign of.
And meanwhile, looking over at Ukraine, salivating at the fact that Ukraine has the Ukrainians have essentially been genocided.
and now he wants to ask America to send all of her white boys to fight more white boys, well, Slavs in Russia.
And it's just like, you know, Charlie, I know that you really like Gron, and maybe you became a Sufi out of admiration.
But can you just put it away for a little bit?
can you at least pretend that you give a shit about Christendom just for just for a little bit you're
supposed to be the head of the church he actually is a Christian you know but I mean you know he says
that but that's because of me no he writes about everything he writes about it personally but this
is just like the same problem with every Christian leader in the world where they like and especially
you know he's got the anglo thing I mean of course he's the live he's the no shit king of england
And he's got that Anglo thing where it's like, well, my personal, my personal faith is a matter of me.
But everyone else is, everyone else should be made to feel included.
You know, it's like, God, dude.
Oh, no, not this time.
This is like Nick Land talks about this all the time.
That's a fucking pathological altruism, you know.
Like he is a Christian, you know.
He's a, the, and I even believe it's a.
He's the head of my church.
You know, but like, you know, like, say something.
Come on, man.
Do king things.
Yeah, I mean, the coronation, you know, I won't even call it pomp and pageantry.
There was something deeply beautiful about seeing the old ways reenacted in such a faithful, well, you know, pending the shuck and jive.
They had some very beautiful imagery and symbology going on during the coronation.
But it just doesn't really seem like there's any spiritual penetration going on with any of our leaders,
be they divinely anointed like the King of England or elected by the slobbering masses like the traitors in Congress.
So this is just kind of a him coming here doesn't really, it's just what I see is a representative of the city of London and, you know, trying to get America to give more money to an international Jewry war in the Near East.
And that's, it's, it's just sad to see that the Supreme Monarch of the, of the, of the, of the, of the,
once great British Empire being reduced to this.
The once great British Empire.
It happens so fast, too.
I feel bad about talking shit about him.
But, you know, really, you know, then I also don't because, like, it's like this Ukraine thing.
That's your mess, buddy, you know?
Like, we're, it's also sort of interesting to note how, like, the, the state of Europe where, like, the king of England is in the United States, like, begging.
for like begging for daddy war bucks and we're just like ah maybe you know nobody cares it's like the same
thing with that assassination attempt is like wow like nobody even looked up from their cell phones
the third assassination attempt there are like so many atrocities that are just being like patently
normalized you know when the when the the twitter scroll the scroll is literally more engulfing
to modern to contemporary audiences than a real life no shit five-year genocidal war in europe itself
and several this presidential assassination attempts like boomers saw jfk get his head blown off on
on on television and they never recovered never that was like 60 years ago you know and like we're
just like oh look somebody shot at the president again today like nobody even blinks it's terrible yeah i mean
that's actually an interesting point. I think that if we did see Trump get whacked on live television,
that, you know, there's been this comic going around for a while now where like aliens land
and they get out and they're talking to a guy who's like the doom or wojack. And they're like,
are you not astounded? And he's like, man, I got a lot going on right now.
That's a good one. You know, I think that that's how most people are.
I mean, you know, it in order to actually care about the governance, the governing structure, the governors of the society you live in, you have to have some kind of buy-in.
And, you know, from the 1960s onward, it seemed to be the raison d'ets of the, you know, the powers that be to remove the buy-in from the American people.
And I think they've effectively done that.
no one gives a shit.
Yeah, I mean, it's like, it's like, okay, you got like polymarket betting on whether the president gets his head blown off on television is that that's the extent of the buy-in at this point.
Yeah, people are seeing seeing it as a way to enrich themselves.
My buddy, Dark Enlightenment and I talk about this all the time because, you know, we've been in the podcast game for a long time.
And it's like the stuff that we used to talk about 10 years ago, it all came true.
And everything is still getting much worse.
You know, I'm like, like, if you stop and take, take the temperature, take the, you know, like,
to take the temperature of where the fuck we're at, that is bleak.
Like, you know, like, like, like, everything is a really bleak state right now.
Yeah, and it's only going to get worse.
I don't expect to be able to hand a better world over to my children when they come of age.
and I don't really at this point expect that our grandchildren will be experiencing a better world that we grew up in either.
Yeah, this is going to take a wild effect.
Yeah, which is why.
You know, I can talk about black pills and white pills and black pills and white pills.
And you do, but that's like one of those moments where it's like you focus in on the very, like on the one piece moves in a very vast card game.
It's like, did that, you flip a stone over?
Oh, was it black or white?
Then you flick another stone over.
So, oh, is it black or white?
Nobody's really aggregating all the stones.
And they're almost all black.
Like we can talk about like minor wins, like all civil rights, you know, Civil Rights Act gets overturned, but to what end?
You know?
Yeah, the demographic, the demographic changes in this country.
I mean, at best, I think we're like 46%.
percent white at this point. So it's it's going to be an uphill battle boys. But, you know,
the silver lining here, you know, historically, you know, we have an example of one country that
was minority white and they ran shit. And they ran shit hard. So don't ever, don't ever black
pillow over being in the minority. We should. Yeah, it's, our, our problem is, is that we have,
have diaspora groups that basically have created laws to stop, you know, stop us from basically doing
what needs to be done. And yeah, that's why the whole thing that, I don't know if it was you,
not me, not you who pointed out yesterday that Oren had, was talking about the divisions in the
country and like the most important divisions are the fact that the, that, you know, that, you
evangelicals have sided with the Jews and it seems like the wass and the and the Catholics have
teamed up to go up against them so it's a matter of that wasn't me but I wish I'd made that
observation that's a damn good observation yeah it's uh it's very interesting that that has
happened and Oren I think Oren nailed it in his episode on Diaspora groups yesterday
yeah I mean worth checking out Oren
a great friend of the club.
And, you know, this, the old glory club came together in 2022, right?
This was during the, what looked like the worst years of the Biden administration.
And, you know, we saw this coming a long ways off.
We hope that maybe Trump might be able to spare us if he was willing to govern like a dictator.
And he obviously is not.
So, you know, we're here.
and we're going to become more,
this thing is going to be more and more important
as we descend
into the end state of globalist
politics.
I mean, I like how, yeah, I mean, I didn't realize
it's been four years, but, like,
the drug high
of, like, rapid growth
and that sort of thing is great. I mean, it starts to wear off.
You have to look at the reality
that this is an organization.
It's actually probably going to be,
not just fun, but structurally important.
You know what I mean?
It's like, yeah, it's really fun to drive fast on the interstate,
but that car's also got to get your groceries home.
So bringing it back, I mean, we're still in America,
but we're going to get away from the foreign influence,
unless you count China, to talk about California's hilarious self-owned
and, you know, what should be a wake-up call to all Democrats if any of them paid attention
or cared about anything other than the destruction of the United States, they passed a
billionaire's tax, allegedly a one-time billionaire's tax, that they can just come back
and and, you know, use again and again as often as.
as they'd like and actually apply that to non-billionaires as well.
If the producer has the particular part of the code here.
So I'll just read this out for our listeners.
The legislature may amend the 26 Billionaire Tax Act by statute passed in each house of the legislature by roll call vote,
entered in the journal two-thirds of the membership.
I can't read that.
Whatever.
If the statute is consistent with and furthers the purposes of the
2026 billionaire act,
this is all a way of saying that they can
levy this tax against whomever they choose
at any point as long as they get
the required votes in their own legislature, which, since they are a monolith, they will be able to do
exactly that. I mean, I got to say fair. It's fair. There's nothing not fair about it.
If you want to live in California, that's the hazard.
Yeah, I mean, and this is the more important part of this is, oh, I'm sorry, this hasn't passed
yet. This is going to be up for vote in November. I would be very surprised if something called
the billionaire's tax doesn't pass among the low info voter that is the American public.
Well, I mean, if it's defeated, it's going to be defeated by, like,
Sam Altman and Elon Musk, like, it's to be like a coalition of gay tech bros is going to,
like, is going to, is going to, is going to libertarian their way out of those.
It's the only thing that's going to happen.
Yeah, I mean, this is, but this is one of those things where Virginia now is, is,
a blueprint for how the Democrats are going to run nationally.
They're going to just lie.
I mean, they already, all of our politicians lie to us about what they're going to do when they take power.
This has been a joke since the day I was born and long before.
But this is just a blueprint for the way that the Democrats will run nationally.
They will continue to try and tax everybody to death.
And, you know, Tucker Carlson, in his most recent monologue, brought up a good point.
If there are so many illegals here that don't have to follow the law, and if there are so many
congressmen and other people that don't have to follow the law, the question then becomes,
why are any of us paying taxes?
Why do I have to follow the law?
Yeah, if our leaders don't follow the law, and if the people who break their way into the country
and, you know, cause crime
and soak up the public purse,
if they don't have to follow the law,
why do we have to follow a law?
You know, as somebody who knows a lot of rich people,
but am not myself rich,
and tell you, for one thing,
anybody who's still following the rules is a sucker.
You might be virtuous, but you're a sucker.
Because nobody else has followed the rules.
There's like no one.
Yeah, this is why I encourage
all of my veteran friends to get on one,
100% disability because there are so many people who when they say they served, meaning they sat in an office their entire career, their entire contract, are on 100% disability.
We are in the looting the treasury phase. And if you're not participating in that when you have an opportunity, you're just getting taken.
Well, it's still that a lot of that boomer brain is still there of, you know, I heard,
I think we all like Jared Taylor, but I heard him the other day poop-pooing the whole SPLC thing because really they didn't do anything wrong.
You know, you can't do you can't.
Yeah, calm down.
No.
I just died on the air, by the way.
I know, I know I was Mr. Fieldhouse and I were to have been having many discussions about.
this um the um yeah it's just that oh well we have to be better than them oh okay so we are we are
better than them i mean existentially from a from a human standpoint from a metaphysical standpoint
we're better than them yeah i mean it's also the question who are you trying to convince that
you're better than them you have talked your way
back into if you kill your enemies, then you lose. You're like, you're doing an Obama.
Yeah, I mean, these are the same, you know, these are the same people who, you know, they,
oh, you know, I love my favorite ones who are the Christians who are like, oh, you know,
it's, you, you, you can't pick up, you know, war is immoral. And you know, you know, it's like,
you know, and you're supposed to love your enemy. It's like, okay, but, you know, if you're
in Spain in 1936 and you see your neighbor or someone,
pulling a gun in your neighbor, does that mean, oh, I allow my neighbor to become a martyr?
I don't protect my neighbor.
I don't protect my fellow Catholic.
I mean, these people are fucking moronic.
And they don't understand.
I mean, these people want you dead.
Jared, these people want you dead.
I love you, man.
We've talked to them.
You know, we've, you know, personally, face to face, love the guy.
But, I mean, that take was just so.
from another generation that I mean, I just don't understand.
I mean, it's obvious, because you know, his, his organization is a 501c3, isn't it?
I believe so.
Yeah, yeah, they're not allowed to.
A little bit of 501C3 solidarity.
Well, I don't mean I may not agree with that.
We don't agree with that method, but I wouldn't want them to not exist because then I couldn't exist.
It's like, no, this is like, like, we're going to skewer.
We're going to kill.
We're going to kill each other with the same.
sword. That's where we're at now.
Like, I'm going to pull the dagger out of my chest and slice your throat open with it.
Don't you think it's really interesting that the evangelicals have,
have because, and most of those evangelicals will tell you, you have to love your neighbor,
you can't do this. They've sided with the one group that, like, is willing to kill anyone,
even themselves, even each other.
I don't understand this love your neighbor's shit.
Do you know what the evangelicals?
I love them, love them to death, but I'm like, yeah, I have to, there is, there is love your neighbor.
But there is also, by the very implication in language of the text you're citing, there is also the stranger.
Yeah.
If every alien is a neighbor, then if everybody is your neighbor on Earth, that it literally means,
nothing. Yeah, it just turns into universalism and universalism is not. Jesus and the Great
Commission said go forth to all nations. He didn't say go forth to all nations and destroy them
and to make them one. Even in the Great Commission, he is, God on Earth is acknowledging that
nations exist. Well, I mean, without turning this into a theological debate,
God would- Oh, I can do that all night if you want to keep going. I mean, God was,
was particularly not pleased when humanity tried to unify under a single nation and a single language.
So, you know, I tend to take that as an endorsement of diverse nations that are whole unto themselves.
But either way, bringing it back to this ridiculous story, some billionaires have started peeing their pants
and begging the California legislature not to do this thing.
You know, it's one of those things,
women who voted for leopards eating people's faces party appalled
when a leopard eats her face.
You know, I mean, Sandy, we've talked about this before,
but I really wish, like, our current crop of quote-unquote elite
are just, like, it is the most,
There's no elite.
Do you know, somebody was one of the southern posters yesterday?
She was like, I want an elite that does this or whatever.
And I was like, we don't have an elite.
We don't have one.
No, we've got the perfect Jewish inversion of an elite.
We have the cacistocracy.
I love that word.
I love that phrase.
Like there's like somebody who's an elite.
Stormy Waters is an elite, you know.
At least it's like he's like what I think of is in like the mold of one.
Unless you have people like that in charge of your country, you're not, you don't have an elite.
What we have is a cacistocracy of dudes who by trick of like women and by trick of women who, I mean, men who by virtue of their own timidity and the fact that they were too antisocial to do anything but learn Python in high school, you know, got fabulously wealthy.
And now we're like stuck in their, we're stuck in their fucked up revenge, you know, revenge narrative.
But it's not elite.
Being rich doesn't make you elite.
It's just like, it's just, that's, in the theory,
the theory goes along that the money follows the eliteness,
not that the money makes you elite.
Right.
And in the,
I don't care how many Kurdish Yarven articles you read.
The actual order is that it doesn't reverse, you know.
Right.
In the proper ordering of the world,
money follows power.
not the other way around.
And we are in this amazingly Jewish inversion world where power follows money.
Where these women gets a fucking scold you.
Right.
And the one on the right calling that a woman is that's a stretch.
Yeah, these puffy abuela whose diets probably,
consist of pork rinds or whatever the Mexican equivalent is. Somehow I imagine it's actually,
they somehow inject more fried fats into it. But yeah, these these puffy abuela
looking down their nose at you as if they know anything at all, much less know what's best
for society. But on that happy note, we can go over to one that is actually a win.
Although I'm not super familiar with this story.
This one kind of blindsided me.
I don't know if I just wasn't paying attention in the chat or what.
But it looks like the Justice Department is looking at, quote, hundreds of citizens for a new push in denaturalization.
Now, if we're being completely honest, hundreds is an insult.
It is the definition of performative action.
It's fishing in the Rubicon.
The proper number would be millions of citizens in New Push.
Can I try this one?
Please.
Can I try this one?
So I've come up with this theory, and I'm probably wrong because I normally am.
I don't think, I think it's pretty obvious to anyone who's paying.
attention that the bus is barreling down the road and there was no driver and we
know for a fact that we have friends in the administration we have we have
friends on the hill we know this now they get hamstrung it seems like they've been
hamstrung since this whole thing started but we have friends I'm wondering
with some of the things that we've been seeing
whether some of our friends, because they know no one's, that, you know, the driver's asleep at the wheel,
they may just be trying to do shit on their own and see what happens.
Maybe throw some test cases out there.
And this might be one of them.
So that's my thinking.
I know I brought that up last night or the night before.
and no one, I don't think everyone agreed with me, but there's a chance that some of our guys may just be trying to do shit just because they know that pretty much no one's going to stop them because no one's in charge right now.
Yeah, I think this is a very interesting theory, especially when you consider how the administrative state or the deep state, according to your taste, operates, where all of these bureaucrats are effective.
allowed to operate under their own volition without having to really account for themselves.
So if we actually have our guys staffing some of the areas of the administrative state that can do
things like this, it's very possible that they're just acting under their own initiative.
Now, that would actually account for why this might be hundreds of citizens rather than thousands,
hundreds of thousands, millions that would actually be necessary.
It's also one of those instances in which you can imagine momentum building off of this
in your most optimistic dreams.
So I think that there is definitely something to what you're saying, Pete,
because we're seeing this all at the same time,
but all small enough that it doesn't seem to be something that the,
administration's full weight is behind right and i don't want to give i'm sorry i'm not giving the
administration credit for this because they're busy reopening something that was closed but it was open
to start with and you know i think the biggest problem is is that okay so if we do have guys out
there who are trying to do stuff and they're just like doing little test runs it's obviously too little
too late. This needed to be done in February of last year, all of it. But, you know, one of the biggest
problems they're going to have, and it is probably going to be the thing that spells their doom in the
midterms is that I don't think any of our guys are in a position to try to fix what's wrong
economically. And, you know, if we could get a hundred million people deported, sure, we could,
that would be a start. And that would definitely affect economics. But there's a lot that needs to be
fixed economically. There's a lot that needs to be fixed as far as global trade goes. And, yeah,
I mean, that's going to, that's not going to be something that you can hide and do. So, the
These are nice, you know, these are, it's nice to see some of this stuff happening.
It's nice to, you know, see a win here and there.
What happened in Louisiana's frigging awesome.
If this happened, this would be awesome.
But, you know, this, we know this has to be done at a grand scale.
And it probably had to be done at the end of January at the beginning of February of last year.
Yeah.
I mean, I was talking to Paul about this.
You know, our very own Paul Fahrenheit.
You know, Paul likes, he likes polo.
political theory. I think he likes political theory a little too much. And I was explaining how, like, you know, there comes a point. I had this moment. I had this moment, too. Everyone has to have this moment where, so yeah, I like political theory, like coming up with systems that might work and so on and so forth. But there comes a point where you have to realize that shit ain't going to happen, man. Like, that's not where, that's not where the
locus of agency is at this point. The locus of agency at this point is who you know.
And it's like, you know, everybody talks about starting businesses. I don't even know that the
locus is starting businesses there because for all intents and purposes, it's a what I did the,
U.S. government, what I call the central committee has made it more or less illegal to start an
actual business. You can be a peddler. You can, you know, and I encourage anyone who thinks they
can make that work to do it. Drop shipping things, you know, just, you know, turnover scams.
The same way and same thing everybody else in this, in this Judaized economy works.
But the idea of starting a business is probably not where the local, not where, you know,
agency lives right now because you need to start a business. You need capital goods. What do you
need to get capital goods? You need money. So what do you need? You need connection to the regime.
You have to already be in that insider. It's so it's because of,
regulations and startup costs and everything like that.
It's functionally illegal to just open a business right now.
So where is your locus of agency?
And it's you and who you know.
And what can you get?
What can you get?
And this is, you know, everybody always talks about.
And I'm about to get spicy.
I'm about to get spicy.
Everybody talks about the right wing.
You know, the right wing.
We've got to keep the right wing together.
The right wing fractured.
I didn't fuck that is what I'm,
is like sort of my thought at this point.
You know, um,
They're most of the guys that I know and I'm interested in, there are theoretically, they're right wingers, but the right in the abstract is nothing to me anymore.
You know, it's like, okay, there's people that I know.
And then there's, you know, people that people that I know know.
And then that's about as far as I'm concerned of anything at this point.
Like I really start to see the conditions of modernity where abstract identi abstract
abstract I abstractly identifying with other people based on shared beliefs.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure I'm really about that anymore.
The locus of agency is you and who you know and what can you do for yourselves.
You know.
Yeah.
And that's a perfect encapsulation of why we're all here.
We see the writing on the wall.
It's kind of
I was doing copy for the club
That was my advertisement
Yeah it was beautiful
It's
I yes and
You know
The system is illegitimate
And so we have to build
Our own legitimate system
And that requires
Getting together pressing flesh
And calling each other faggots
Every once in a while
Like you know
It requires getting the fuck off
At Twitter
Now that's a fact
I uh for anybody
of my meager followership who is wondering why my account no longer appears because I deleted my
Twitter. It's just not necessary for us anymore. We've got enough people in the real world
that the online space, all right, I'm going to go on a tangent here. There's this wonderful
tabletop RPG called Shadow Run. It is a kind of blend of cyberpunk meets fantasy. It's high
magic, that sort of thing. But in this world, the first iteration of the internet is actually
cordoned off because an AI was let loose on it and it started wreaking havoc over the world,
so they just locked it down. And they eventually started internet 2.0 years later. But I'm
fairly certain that's about where we are in internet 1.0. It's all algorithmic slop. It's people
getting pushed into information silos where they're spun around and worked up, and it's just
not worth any of our time. Twitter is, was a platform that needed to be taken over, and it served
its purpose in the 2024 election cycle, and now it's dead. Yeah, it seems pretty dead to me.
I mean, I'm still, like, no offense to you all, but I'm making money, so, like, I'm still until, until, until I decide
that the Jews ain't worth the,
squeeze anymore i'll be here but you know here's the thing though okay so the current version of the
internet who's building the next version who's building the internet 2.0 somebody's gonna have to do that
now that's a fact and it's also something worth thinking about um if the internet uh becomes something
where small groups are uh clustering you're essentially going to build your own i mean that
That's the, if you follow my substack, the stuff on ontology that I've been doing, I mean, this is kind of a specialty of mine.
You know, I do it for money.
But you're going to, the internet by itself, the internet is giant abstraction.
It's how things find one another on the internet is the, you know, the real key.
Constellation internets.
It's going to be, you're going to have to build your own, build your own networks.
there's not going to be anybody there's not going to be of jeff bezos or uh you know the the age of
millennial altruism is over you know we we we we built all the apps and look what we got out of it
you know nobody's going to do it nobody nobody's really looking to do that again in a massively
public way so if you want anything like that you're going to have to build it yourself
yeah and to this uh to this end not all of us have the resources to be a
able to lay transcontinental fiber lines. But fiber line piracy is possible. Just keep in mind that
when you're splicing into a fiber line to wear very heavy gloves because those little bits
of fiber can break off into your body, then they will migrate to your heart and eventually kill you.
So we should say, make sure when you're not doing this that you wear the long.
Exactly, exactly. When you're not doing this highly illegal and retarded thing that,
You're wearing adequate protection.
Otherwise, you will find yourself dying a very painful death.
It's like a Jew.
It's like a Jew I got dinner with where he kept referring to the tragic death of every single Palestinian over and over again.
I'm like, there's still plenty of Palestinians alive.
And he was like, yeah, the tragic death of every Palestinian.
Man, Sandy, you have, you're the wildest stories, my dude.
And I don't know how you interface so frequently with just open evil and still made me.
I don't either.
You know, there's a lot of women that have theories about that.
Yes, I imagine that women have a lot of theories about a lot of things,
but given their intuitive nature, maybe there's some unintentional wisdom echoing.
No, the overlap is that they all notice that I regularly tend to have encounters
beyond what anyone would consider bizarre, you know.
I mean, that sounds like a great life as long as you, you know, you make.
No, no, no, I'm sick of it.
I'm tired.
I want off the carousel.
You hear that gentle viewer by contributing to the OGC monetarily.
You're helping to speed our good friend Sandbatches escape from the wild and wacky world he
is built for himself.
You know, my favorite movie is the spy who came in from the cold.
And if you know this story, I feel like the guy in the spy who came in the spy who came in from the cold.
I have not seen it, but now I have to watch it.
So that's no, my God, absolutely.
You, you, you in particular will enjoy it.
Like, you will enjoy this one.
Is this one to watch solo or should I bring the lady in on it?
No, now she'll have it too.
It's great.
Great.
I'll write that one down.
We've got one more story for you all.
Now, I have always been a, I won't call myself a car guy because I find it incredibly boring when I have to listen to other people talk about cars.
But I have always been a gearhead in that I turn the wrenches and I do the work on my own vehicle with myself.
So I have a rule that I don't buy any cars that are newer than 2010 because I don't need to design dietary software to lock me out of doing the work myself.
Right. But now we have some wonderful new, well, I say new legislation when really this is part of the 2021, so Biden era, U.S. Infrastructure Investment in Jobs Act.
Specifically, this is Section 24,220, the Halt Drunk Driving Act, or as they euphemistically call it, the Advanced Impairment Driving Act.
Convention Technology Requirement Act, in which, starting in 2027, all vehicles will have
onboard AI and cameras pointed at the driver to measure such things as pupil dilation,
reaction time, and I guess general vasodilation to determine whether or not your car is allowed to start.
now this is ostensibly to control for drunk driving but and I don't think the producer has any any of these but Ford has very recently published or filed for a multitude of patents that include things like biometric reading cameras that use AI to read the lips of not only the driving,
but also every passenger in the in the vehicle and tailor the on board because why
wouldn't they be on board screens to show ads based on what you're talking
about so this is another step towards the Panopticon that you know I mean really
you know what that actually tells you it's not a step towards the Panopticon the
Panopticon exists this is the Panopticon monetizing itself which is somehow just
even more insulting.
Yeah, it's, it's way gayer.
It's way more Jewish.
Yeah.
It's just like, it's like, you like, you know, it's like I, I, I, I, I asked for, you know,
I asked for the Baron Harcone and all I got was Gio.
Yeah.
I mean.
Oh, that is so harsh.
Okay.
And let's remember that this is going to get a majority of the GOP.
Yeah.
Yeah, they're going to love that shit.
Because you know who else?
You know who else?
You know who's going to be real up in the implementation there?
It's Palantir.
And this is exactly what Palantir does.
What you, like, how do you feel about Palantir?
And I've been writing a lot of scare pieces about Palantir.
I know Palantir very well because I, I'm in the,
I mean the unaffiliated pool of, you know, people who do the same sorts of things that
Palantir does.
And so I've got a pretty good idea of what their capabilities are and exactly what it is
they do.
And this is exactly the kind of service they provide, which is the data infrastructure
around that sort of surveillance because they have incredible security.
And it's like I never tire of pointing out, Palantir just got $225 million from the
federal government to build a, um,
build us to build a you know a product that will use what we call tapestry analysis i'm
remember you familiar if you really want to see you can head all over to tapestry.com and see what
kind of data has been collected on you and uh remonitized and sold back to companies that need
things like you know a particular psychological profiles like cell phone location in any given time
you've given that away more times than you think you have and um they're going to use tapestry analysis
as well as photographs like Google Maps and that sort of thing to take the appearance,
the outward appearance of a structure of the outward appearance of a street and determine the
probability of an illegal immigrant living there.
Now that's kind of based when you think about it if at least somebody goes and kicks the
illegal immigrant out later.
But when you think about where the funding came from, the funding came from Medicaid,
you know, same kind of thing going on.
here is like what are the possible medical applications of this technology that are even more frightening
somehow um that's the world that we live in and again i say again i return to the idea this is my
real shit now you know like i mean i guess i'm a poet i'm a you know whatever else i've gotten
except for the fact that i'm unmarried and somewhat impoverished i've gotten nearly everything i
could have wanted politically and the the issues that i'm interested in are the interesting thing that's
most interesting is how do we build what comes next?
What is the next phase of the internet?
What's it going to look like?
And this whole concept of data security,
data security, human security,
these are going to become increasingly existential
as we move forward over the course of this year,
especially next year,
and especially through the 2028 election.
So you've got to be really careful about, you know,
what data is out there,
where you're clicking,
you might be right to just delete your Twitter.
You really might be.
I mean, for reasons that I wouldn't attribute to my own wisdom on this thing,
I hope that you're right.
Yeah.
I mean, what's interesting about this is knowing how, you know, cars function on a,
I mean, I guess a rudimentary level or a level that allows me to work on them.
Now, I'm very interested to see how the,
consumer pushback, the consumer piracy is going to be working on this. Because for every new feature,
like the automatic start, stop, or there are some vehicles that will automatically turn off,
say you have a six cylinder, it will turn off two cylinders when it doesn't think that you need them.
There are always people who are engineering these interventions that can circumvent these new things.
because while the vehicle, and you know, Tesla is kind of known for this, while the vehicle is
constantly in contact with its mothership via GPS and other wireless transmission devices,
there is always going to be a way to spoof the signal.
And while I'm not going to be participating in circumventing this newfangled technology because
I'm old now, there are going to be people who produce devices, modules that you can splice
into your vehicle that get around this sort of thing. And I'm very interested to see how the white
man can push back against this kind of thing in kind of unique and innovative ways that the
average wave won't be interested in. The good thing is we got the best team, you know.
Yeah, amen to that.
But this is, you know, what's interesting putting on or gazing into my crystal ball here, what I see for the future is, I don't know if this is going to be in our lifetime, though it wouldn't surprise me in the least, if we get legislation that outlaws manually driven cars and that if you own a vehicle, it has to be self-driving.
Now, at that point, it becomes an issue of, you know, pure enforcement, which I just, I just don't think
that's, it's going to be possible, especially as the federal government continues to lose legitimacy
and its ability to project power. But this, this, for me, this is a very interesting story,
because, like you said, Sandy, this is the Panopticon monetizing. It's also the, the
Panopticon, eking its way into a culture that is uniquely and historically American.
Car culture, though, you know, it has taken off in Europe and around the world,
is specifically American.
And it's an attack on whites.
I mean, with Ford, I mean, who buys Ford trucks?
I mean, this is just an attack on the white men.
that's it.
There'll probably be some kind of AI work around so that Jets can drive no matter what kind of
condition they're in.
Yeah, I mean, yeah.
No, I mean, there's actually something to this, right?
Like the, we lost somebody.
I don't know who, but I'm going to keep talking anyway.
You know, it's, it is an attack on the white man because, you know, the reason that our,
our leaders seem so hell-bent on eliminating the white race is because really of all the race
is ours, is the only one who seems to care about things like individual autonomy and freedom.
When you're talking about a civilization, when you're talking about a, like, think, put yourself
in the shoes of those who rule over the globalist system. If you want a pliant and compliant,
populace, you don't want white people. You want the global south. You want the third world. You want the
people who look into the dirt and don't look into the sky, who don't build great edifices,
who don't see every horizon as a challenge. So yes, Pete, I mean, I know I'm kind of sucking the
wind out of out of this, but I think that's exactly what it is. An attack on whites.
I am never getting rid of my OBD1 truck.
That's for damn sure.
Based.
So that wraps up our official stories.
I was saying this is more of a white pill stream,
but it's kind of a mixed bag.
I mean, I don't know, Sandy, you got anything else you want to throw at this story?
No.
No.
Yeah.
I mean, what else can you do, right?
Again, I encourage anybody listening.
Don't buy anything newer than 2010,
not just because the CIA has had devices as early
that we knew about as 2014,
where they can remotely cause your vehicle
that is controlled by electronic fuel injection
to accelerate out of control with a press of a button,
but also because, let's be honest,
nobody wants to spend money for proprietary software in order to, you know, balance this or regulate that within their vehicle.
Well, you know, I mean, I think the one thing that I do think is wonderful,
the world of proprietary software seems to be going away.
Well, no, it's probably not going away, but it's changing rapidly enough where, like, I mean,
we're moving towards the world where, you know, God, you know, this one last thing, AI.
We can do a little bit of AI.
Anthropic and the Whitehouse are back at one of their throats,
because Anthropic has suggested expanding access to their mythos model,
which is the big scary model that you can use to launch really serious cyber attacks.
And the White House is pushing back saying that, you know, yeah,
you shouldn't expand access to this and the compute's so heavy that it'll,
you'll impede our, it's very clear at this point that the, that the mythos model is actually the one that was the source of the last controversy and the government was using a, you know, an early version of it.
But we're in a, we're in what my favorite historian, Reinhardt Koscilich would call a sasselzit right now, which is, of course, it means a saddle time where, and this is, I know people don't like that I do this, but I would encourage everyone,
everyone to, you know, get a subscription or get, you know, say, get you get a setup going and
you should learn how to use AI because we're in an interesting saddle period right now where
the large AI companies are still subsidizing relatively cheap use and that's going to come to an end
relatively soon here because it's becoming apparent that these tools are so powerful that
we're going to start seeing serious restrictions on, like, private citizens' ability to access them.
So building proficiency now is something that everyone should be doing.
Yeah, I can sign on to this.
I mean, Sandy, you bringing a proprietary software going away got me thinking a little bit.
And I think that the powers that be being as short-sighted as they are, they made the mistake.
of giving the population, the populace access to the internet and what is largely the free exchange
of information, which has woken us up to, the general populace, the normie, up to many things
that they wouldn't have known in the controlled ecosystem that existed before open access to the
internet. And in the same way, they're making a big mistake by allowing the population access
to artificial intelligence.
Because for whatever proprietary software that exists,
there exists already humans who can crack it and who can spoof it
and who can make it so that you don't have to spend the thousands of dollars a year
on a license, I mean, even if we're sticking within the realm of cars to work on your own vehicle.
With AI, it produces this,
I mean, the arms race continues.
It's just elevated.
I can mean offer specifics.
Everyone, I think everyone who's interested,
I mean, I'm sure, I don't know exit group very well,
but I'm sure they have people working on this.
I'm sure a lot of the more forward-thinking groups
are they're probably building communal AI tool sets.
And that would be like communally interoperable AI tool sets
that severely reduce computers.
compute usage, I think, is a thing that serious organizations need to be looking at doing.
So that's my bit of free advice for the night.
Y'all should go buy that book.
Yeah, I mean, I could sign on to that, too.
I mean, this is advice offered cost-free to you, dear listener.
Most good life advice comes at a dear cost, and you've been able to avoid that by tuning in to Pony
Express Radio.
episode 122, license to kill.
All right, let's saunter on over to the superchats,
and then we can get out of here.
Let's say again.
I said, Le Chasseau-Supert.
I don't know what that translates to.
It doesn't. It's just slap.
Oh, yes, the slop.
Oh, superb.
Yes, yeah.
Of course, of course. The greatest of all slop shows.
Solid sake, 1964 for $10 U.S. dollars coming in under the wire, not under the wire,
over the wire. He's the first over the trench.
Evening, jents, seeing the photo of the failed assassin, I would find it hard to believe
if he didn't get some of his silly gear recommendations from Reddit.
The guy looks like a total retarded.
Unfortunately, this type of behavior won't be punished by the admin like we want.
Stay frosty and he sends us a salute like a real American.
Real Americans.
I mean, I think you're absolutely right, solid snakes.
Of course he's a Redator.
Of course he's a Redator.
Yeah, I mean, first of all, he's a teacher in the American education system.
He is required by law to be on the Elegant Air Force Base propaganda outlet that is Reddit.com.
Also, Dudley Newwright made an amazing observation in one of his pictures.
he's wearing a black shirt on red tie, which is the sinister dork outfit.
It's the sinister dork uniform.
So 100% read it reeks the whole way down.
Xcomer for $25.
Supreme Court ended race-based redistricting of the Civil Rights Act in 1965.
This could be the best ruling to help save our country.
Well, we already addressed that at length.
I hope that it has an outsized influence in reducing.
reducing the amount of representation of the, um, the touched races, uh, over our, uh, great
you know, I'm not even really concerned about it in racial terms.
I'm just like, I over the course of today, dipping into local New Orleans Twitter to check
on the discourse, I have been horrified at the indignity in the, the, the ignorant squal
in which the average American lives their day-to-day lives.
And expecting proportional representation from them is, it's embarrassing to all of us.
Of course, and that's one of those things best not to look into.
It's quite like, what do they say in Chicago, if you want to maintain your appetite for sausages
and your respect for city alderman,
you'd best be absent when the former is being made
and the latter is being groomed.
You don't want to know what the normie is like,
not just because it is depressing,
but because you run the risk of becoming extremely prideful.
Because if you're listening to this show,
you're already a little bit above the grade.
All right.
Ski-bum, 220 for $30, $30.30.
I like this. Every super chat is more than the one before it. I hope this trend continues.
Stormy Waters said on the most recent Inquisition podcast that the Trump administration has passed the credibility event horizon,
where no matter what they do or say, they get weaker and weaker, and fewer people believe what they say.
And he asks for thoughts from the panel. And Pete, can you take this one from?
Sure. I think we're at the point where there's only a very small group of people who are hanging around waiting to see what Trump is going to do.
Remember that the first time he was elected and the second time he was elected, it was enough people said it's not about Trump the man.
It's about the fact that the populace would break for someone like him, someone who wasn't a Brahms,
someone who wasn't a Clinton, someone who wasn't a Bush.
There was just, I don't see,
I don't see how he can come back now,
even if he wanted to and be like,
okay, now we're doing mass deportations.
It's like, well, you have the elections coming up.
And then if they lose the elections as badly as a lot of people think
as, you know, people who aren't, you know,
completely siloed into little group think tanks that it's you're going to have two years of
in and out of court you know some people will be like well no you know he's doing the bidding of
the jews they're not going to allow him to be when you make a deal with the devil the devil renecks
okay this is it we we just have a lame duck president at this point when we just have to accept
accept that.
I mean, he's not quite there yet, but I mean, he's going there.
I mean, this is like, no matter what you think about presidents,
the last two years of the second term, you know,
there's not a whole lot going on there,
especially when this is going to,
this is the drawdown of an entire era in American politics.
My guess is that you're going to see the kinetic energy level,
start to drop precipitously over the course of the next two years.
Now, stormy on the other,
stormy, of course, is somebody that I've,
I don't listen because I don't listen to shows, but I talk to Stoney quite a bit.
And he's, I think he's, I don't think I've ever heard him say anything I disagree with.
Yeah, I mean, I can sign on to what you guys are saying.
There is a way for Trump to take his legitimacy and back, but, you know, he's just not going to do that.
It would be too much to ask of an old man who at this point thinks, I mean, if he believed that his legacy would be cemented launching these retarded strikes against Iran,
and, you know, it's very possible that all sorts of things are going on with blackmail and threats and all this kind of stuff from our greatest ally.
But either way, I think the Trump administration has given us what we're going to get.
out of it and I would be very surprised to see anything otherwise. So thank you again.
There's there's also a lot of personal enrichment that is happening with him and his family.
And I think, you know, a bunch of us said in a private chat that we'd have no problem with that.
Write him a blank fucking check, but give us 100 million to 100 million deportations.
Yeah. I mean, I'm just always, I, this is, I mean, this is, I mean, I, this is, I mean,
I'm 36.
I've been around,
I've been around this shit for a long time.
I'm just this one.
I'm always trying to drag people's attention away from politics,
away from the algorithm,
unless,
except for people,
you know,
except for idiots who,
you know,
you're just Twitter brain and you want to,
you want to throw your advertising dollars at me.
But I'm so blackpilled on the entire modality of communication,
the political communications in,
that have existed for the last 20 years or so.
Even to the point where I was like the age of Aquarius stuff,
you know, communication infrastructure is being rebuilt.
You have to look, you have to look somewhere other than politics
to find the spaces where agency can be exercised.
You always have to be looking at something other than politics.
Yeah, find a premise.
You don't want to be the politician.
You want to be the person who moves the politician.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the most important thing.
That's what people who are trying to infiltrate, you know, the, you know, the regime don't get.
Yeah.
No.
We want to be the ones who make them do, make them work for us.
And what does that take?
well, that's not getting a job in the government,
and it's definitely not posting on Twitter.
Amen.
Chancy, keeping the trend for $50,
if we still had gold to give out,
you'd be getting one, my sir.
It is great to have a group of organized and motivated men
who can do things in our own community,
feeling pretty good about the future of the OGC.
Well, thank you, sir.
I am as well.
But I think, you know, there's all everybody's always, there's always bishing.
It goes on inside any organization.
Somebody who's been a lot of member of a lot of organizations.
Bitching is just one of the things that happens.
But I think it's really powerful that, you know, group is actually holding,
groups actually holding together, jelling, doing really well.
And it's like I said, that the drug wore off.
The drug is wearing off.
the drug is like, yeah, let's go hang out with my friends.
And then there's a realization that shit, this is my, this is, this is my Anglo-Saxon war band.
Yeah, it's, it's time to suit up and work.
All right.
Chancy, once again for $10.
Also, the recent episode of the Ken Burns Revolution Slop went on and on about the major
general green, but glossed over the achievements of Captain Hill.
I feel personally slighted.
Sandy, can you take us away on this?
Wait, I mean, I don't really have
just a whole lot going on.
I haven't been watching the series
because, I mean, I don't have a television.
But the, it sounds like a bunch of Yankee shit.
I mean, I like it.
Nathaniel Green, of course, he's the,
you know, the general that was in charge
of the Southern theater during the war.
So I'm assuming this is increased focus
on the sun.
Southern Theater in Ken Burns documentary, which I approve of.
And I'm sorry you, I'm sorry you Yankees feel underrepresented.
Well, you know, our constituency unfortunately spread out and took over every urban center in the United States.
So we're overrepresented, but I catch your meaning.
no i'm not grim from red hood for a dollar 99 smash brothers players are not beating the allegations i'm
sure this was very apropos to whatever we were discussing uh when this was sent but i uh haven't the
foggiest idea of what he is referring to thanks for the two box yes thank you sir or madam
uh sea cider for ten dollars with his
signature
Salute.
Real Americans.
There we go.
Mellon for $10.
And here we go.
This is a good one.
What is Sandbatch's opinion
of internal migration
from the north?
What's causing it?
How the locals will react in the future?
How it will change the situation
in the South, et cetera.
Also, don't move South Yankees.
Stay where your grandparents are buried.
We need you here anyway.
Well, you know, this is the thing on which I, of all of the things that I've been right about,
this is the thing that I've been the most right about, which was the inexorable march of the economic pole of the country to the south.
And, you know, I mean, I've been in the Southern game.
It's the Southern game. That's how I got in this game.
It was, you know, I was, now that the SPLC is totally fucking.
gone is there not gone but now they're not a factor anymore I was at one point labeled the
most dangerous southern extremists in three different states that I didn't live in so that's
really what my background is and um though I was at the time I was essentially exactly the same
person I am now as spjLC is just insane but the um this is a true thing this is a thing that's
happening you know there's no way there's there's there's there's no way around it I don't even have a way to
tell especially
friendly people
in the north not to move here.
I have a lot of friends out in California.
I would like to move to California. I'm trying to move
to California. But I have a lot of friends out in California
that are, you know, they're always like,
they're like, man, I would really, like,
we just can't stand this anymore.
And I'm like, okay, I'll move to Tennessee then.
Because, you know, Tennessee is the place that
probably the best
place for like sort of right wingers that are
escape, fleeing some fucking blue
hell to move right now. It's like beginners level, Southern State. You don't have to deal with like,
you don't have to deal with people like me, for instance. Um, but the, the thing that's causing it
is the essential failure. And it was, I mean, historically what's causing it is that the South
was so poor from 1877 to 1932 that, and then, you know, we got some, we got some major in federal
investment during World War II and something called the bulldozer revolution happened but you know
because of all of the federal oversight and because of the stigma of the south and because of the
immense poverty that resulted from losing the civil war it was essentially the destruction of an entire
civilization and the re-erection of another in its place and the one that was re-erected in its place was
systemically impoverished it was spiritually survived
bile. It was a lot of things that prevented it from modernizing in the 1930s.
And then what happened when, you know, what's happened in the last decade or so is that all of that
infrastructure that was decayed that all of that infrastructure was built in the north and
the Rust Belt and places that what we now know is the rest belt and places like that.
That infrastructure is now decaying, but the South never built that, never built any of that
infrastructure. So now suddenly, the
the South by virtue of not having all of this derelict infrastructure, all of this derelict
state building, all this derelict state building distritis, didn't have any of it. So we look
like a blank slate. There's not really any way to do this. And I was actually talking about this earlier
on the timeline today with respect to the statues and that sort of thing. I said, I wouldn't have
taken the statues down. Of course, I mean, I'm not pro taking statues down or anything like that,
but I have been excited. I was talking to Calcruces about this and I have been excited in the last three years,
to see the South come alive again in a way that I have never seen it in my lifetime.
And like all, I'm an honest enough Southern extremist to be happy that the reawakening of the
South didn't look like, didn't look exactly how I thought it was going to look because
if it looked exactly how I thought it was going to look, it would have looked like something
out of a history book, which is something that's not really alive.
I think that Southerners are going to have to, I honestly believe that there's a redemptive
path for the United States. It has to be a southern path. And I think that, you know, in the same
way that the opening of China fundamentally changed the way China had to look at the world,
that the migrations into the American South are also going to fundamentally change our relationship
with ourselves. And what that looks like, I don't know, but I'm actually, I'm really excited.
I'm really excited about it. But yeah, I mean, it's always better.
to have, you know, to have Yankees stay where you are.
But, I mean, if the conditions just become absolutely intolerable
and you've got to pull the rip cord, do it.
Well, I always appreciate a little look into the Sandbatch mind
when it comes to the future of the South
because I have absolutely no idea what's going on down there.
Oh, man.
I mean, it's my thing.
I'm the guy.
I'm the guy there, you know.
And God bless you for that.
Thrasher Thetic for $5 says, just some money for the boys.
Keep up the good work.
The slop must flow.
Well, thank you, Thrasher.
We always appreciate some more coins in the trough.
And you know, you being here beside us is always important too.
Bolero 393 for $2.
He is responding to Adam Keeney 398, and he says, in quotes, do we?
Now, again, I'm sure this was very apropos at the moment he said it, but for now, it will be a mystery.
I ain't swarling through that chat to figure out what's going on.
Thank you again for the $2.
David on the bayou for $25.
Lute from Boregaard's
Bayou crew
of Louisiana. Patriots,
find your chapter.
You can just do things.
It's a message to me.
It's a message to me.
I lost two of them,
I lost two of them on
Bourbon Street last week,
and they're begging me to go
find this. You know, find your
chapter. Find your chapter.
Like, I don't know. I don't know where he went.
Come on a fan batch.
Come home.
Mellon for another three dollar reduce.
Internet 2.0 will be a mesh-tastic reticulum type Bluetooth stuff
that connects to your local area, in my opinion.
Some sort of radio internet where white guys own the hardware.
So this is kind of the pan, the personal area network.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, that's, yeah, that's, I essentially believe that.
That with the, I mean, I'm real into this ontology thing.
I think this ontology thing is important, but I think what Melon is talking about here,
that combined with the ontology concept is exactly where we're going.
Well, that would be an interesting look into the future and one that could actually serve us quite well.
I just hope that it's not being serviced on the Bluetooth platform because that is a garbage protocol.
Manayud Sushai won for $4.99.
And he quotes,
The concept of progress acts as a protective mechanism to shield us from the
terrors of the future from Frank Herbert in Dune.
Now, I have read Dune, and it is a wonderful book,
but I do not remember this particular quote.
and I'm not sure that I agree with Mr. Herbert in this formulation.
If I see the concept of progress is not something that shields us from the terrors of the future,
but one that denies the terrors of the future and tries to socially engineer an imagined future.
Well, that's a protective mechanism.
It's a mechanism.
It doesn't mean it works.
You know, I guess it's one.
So it could be a metaphor of progress rather than progress itself.
So it's a fiction.
It's a fiction acting as another fiction to verb us from banal.
Very bodriy.
And I'm sure that our uncle Ted would appreciate that as well.
And to round out the evening.
No, I'm not grim from Red Hood for another $1.99.
That one cent is what kills you, man.
You think that our friends in the Hasidim would allow that one cent to lie on the sidewalk?
No.
No, they would not.
So he is referring to the would-be assassin who did the big who cares over the weekend.
The assassin was a smash.
He did the Big Who Cares?
The Big Who Cares?
The assassin was a smash brother's tournament player.
Yeah, I mean, that's, you know, one needs to ask.
And I assume that this is the case.
Was he a melee player?
Did he play Marth?
Was he the gayest man alive?
All of these things I think are probably yes.
You are born gay.
Enjoy it.
Come now, Mr. Carlson.
know nobody is born gay.
And coming in under the wire, unlike Mr.
Solid Snake, who was over the wire earlier,
for $4.99, again,
leaving the Hesedem shaking.
I'm from Rhodesia, said Leonardo DiCaprio.
We call it Zimbabwe now, said Jennifer Connolly.
Do we? asked Leonardo de Caprio.
Dude, you know, I happened to watch that movie for,
I watched that movie for the first time back in like the Coney 2012 days.
And like two nights ago, I watched it again.
And that scene that just got quoted there is like maybe the most sexual scene I have ever seen in a film.
Well, Jennifer Connolly is very good at giving the eyes.
So, yeah, yeah.
I mean, like they were both incredible in that one.
And it's perfect.
Everything about it is perfect.
All right.
Now, I'm going to wrap up here.
I am drinking straight liquor.
So I'm going to sit down and watch that movie.
What's the name of that movie again?
Spy who came in from the cold.
What?
Okay.
Blood Diamond.
Blood Diamond is the one the scene is from.
Okay.
Blood Diamond.
Blood Diamond.
All right.
I'll watch Blood Diamond again and save.
a spy who came in from the cold, which I have written down for when my beautiful wife is returned
from her 24-hour shift of cutting minorities open on the surgery table.
Returned from winning the family bread.
Exactly, exactly.
I am the house husband.
Oh, what more?
Before we close out for the evening.
Volpe's persona for $10 like a real American
sends us a salute.
Sweet. Real Americans.
Thank you, sir.
Mr. Canones, please shill for us.
Go to Rumble, go to Odyssey on Saturday morning at 11 o'clock
and hear episode number 122.
the final episode reading of 200 years together by Alexander Solzhenyson with Dr. Matthew Raphael Johnson.
Your 74 episode short, Pete. I am so, I'm so sad.
I wanted it to be 109. I wanted it to be 109.
Yeah, fine.
But no, check out one of my favorite things about Pete's channel on Rumble is apparently they don't give
a shit about copyright. So he's always putting up bangers at the beginning of his Sunday streams.
So do check those out, if only to expand your musical taste, dear listener.
This week it was white, this week it was white zombie.
Yeah, if you don't understand that the 80s was the last gasp of American music, I just,
I don't know. Sandy.
I'm an early 2000s man, you know, you all could.
You know, listen, my friend, I love late 90s trip hop.
And it's just going to, you know, the sneaker pimps and fucking Portis head and all that kind of nonsense.
Oh, man.
So, okay, yeah.
You all, I would love if you all would go sign out, go head over, sign up for my substack,
which I stopped shilling for a while because I stopped using it for a while.
But I'm actually putting up what I think is really high quality content.
on the substack right now.
And then also,
yeah,
like I said,
to get in under the wire,
to get in under the wire
on my,
on my royalty check.
Because I live on this shit,
man,
and I got a lot of expenses coming up.
So it would make me feel,
make me feel great if you want.
And people seem to love the book.
I gave out two copies today,
because I mean,
because,
you know,
I get author copies.
I gave out two books to,
I gave out two books to 22-year-old white girls today.
And in return,
I got two manuscripts, two phone numbers.
The phone numbers are three digits apart.
The three digits, phone numbers are three digits apart,
and their book manuscripts are both the same concept.
So we are over the target and bombing with respect to the book.
But I think you all will enjoy it as well.
And it's quite, because I finally have a copy of it.
It's quite pretty.
It's good coffee table, good coffee table book material as well.
Or toilet take, as I need something.
to replace horizons of iron, which is an inferior book of poetry.
But I absolutely endorse Sandy's substack.
It has happened before where I sent him a text saying,
man, your most recent substack was really fucking good.
And he insults my intelligence by telling me that he put it out while he was taking a dump earlier in the day.
No, it was the one I did for the one, the one did for the one I did for the one I did
for the OGC substack.
Well, this was basically,
Scott Greer got so fucking mad,
which, like,
made me happier than anything else could.
Like,
Scott Greer's,
those people,
like,
if Scott Greer goes to bed,
pissed off,
I find a happy man.
But I,
I wrote that son bitch
while I was sitting out a Marty girl ball.
I was just bored waiting on my date
to get back from the bar.
And I was like,
I was drunk.
I was like,
can I write a substack article
for OGC while I'm drunk?
And I'm,
Lo and behold, I can.
It's a beautiful thing.
Let no man say that we don't have the greatest talent in America in the old glory club.
I don't have anything to Shilk.
I haven't been putting out anything other than the chapter house,
which you should all tune into every Wednesday, 9 p.m. Eastern,
the only time zone that matters, just to get an idea of,
what your brothers are doing in the old world.
Who's coming out next?
Who's up next?
Yeah.
The Nathan Hale Society of New York City.
I thought you just did the Louisiana chapter.
Was that two weeks ago?
Two weeks ago was Bodriard.
Bodriard's was a, it was the Bayou Crew of Louisiana.
And last week was Nebraska,
Stephen Steel Society,
where I should say last week, this week.
Next week, we've got Nathaniel,
or I keep saying Nathaniel,
Nathan Hale, and the week after that,
we have the Iowa chapter,
whose name I cannot row,
the Iowa Dragoon Society.
The Iowa Cornhuskas.
Be sure to check into that
because they're going to prove me wrong
and my belief that Iowa does not actually exist.
I was going to say,
I was like, I know, Iowa,
I know. And I, and I, you know, I hate to say this to my, well, I shit on Iowa and Ohio all the time, but it's a toss-up between Iowa and Ohio.
Is that just because they start with vowels?
It's, I don't know, but is it tossed up between Columbus, Ohio and Waterloo, Iowa for worst places I've ever been?
So if you're in either of those places, I'm sorry. But for me, the state that I'm not definitely certain exists is Delaware.
I don't know, like, you can't, you can't tell me.
me Delaware is real. I mean, you can tell me. Well, I mean, check the backlog. My friend,
Chapter House has had our Delaware chapter on. Can you prove that they were in Delaware at the time?
They claimed I had no way to verify. Yeah, that's what I mean, you know. All right, all right,
all right so uh besides that uh check out american spirits every monday 8 p.m in the only uh time zone that matters
and check out uh the best in slop radio the bullshit that just doesn't matter every thursday 8 p.m.
for the old glory club i am not me not you thank you for joining us good night
When I pass on my good jeans to my sons, they're going to join the old glory club.
