The Pete Quiñones Show - Pony Express Radio #129 - Savior of the Rest
Episode Date: July 3, 202682 MinutesNSFWRedhawk, Pete, Auberon Quinn and Paul F talk about the headlines.Old Glory Club YouTube ChannelOld Glory Club SubstackOld Glory Club WebsitePete and Thomas777 'At the Movies'Support Pete... on His WebsitePete's PatreonPete's Substack Pete's SubscribestarPete's GUMROADPete's VenmoPete's Buy Me a CoffeePete on FacebookPete on TwitterBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-quinones-show--6071361/support.
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Boy, oh, boy, did we get a lot of comments about the thumbnail for this week?
Let me tell you.
I challenge anybody in the entire American scene to have better thumbnails than we at the OGC do.
We kick ass on Pony Express Radio with our thumbnails, I tell you.
All right, we are back here for another exciting episode, Pony Express Radio.
Mr. Pete is back after taking last week off.
How are you doing, Pete?
I'm good.
Doing good.
All right.
And thank you for joining us this evening.
Mr. Paul Fahrenheit.
Always a pleasure to speak with you, sir.
Thank you for having me.
Indeed.
And then Mr. Oberon Quinn is taking a trip from American spirits and hopping over to
Pony Express tonight.
It's a crossover of the century here.
How are you doing, sir?
I'm frightened.
I'm confused.
These are unfamiliar faces, unfamiliar confines.
I don't know what I've done.
We've kidnapped you.
All right.
Well, before we get into the various stories of the evening, we must ensure that the lights are kept on here at OGC headquarters.
So it is White Boy Summer officially now.
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All right.
The chuds are out.
Chads are here and they're here to stay.
And you too can get in ripped shape with Axios remote fitness and coaching.
Link down in the description if you guys want to get shredded for the summer season.
White Boy Winter will be here before you know it.
And as we all know, the white man gets his power from the cold.
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And you too can be warm throughout the entire year.
On that same subject, if you guys need your caffeine fix,
you must head on over to Fox and Sons coffee.
Those of you who are coffee drinkers have given fantastic reviews for Fox and Sons over the years.
They've been longtime friends of the show.
So please hit on over to Fox and Sons Coffee.
On that same topic, if we here at OGC are fans of big tobacco, of course.
So we here are sponsored by Alp, nicotine pouches.
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so you must head on over to MS Vandrillo suits. And finally, we need to give some love to our good
friend, Mr. Bagby, Mr. George Bagby, who has worked day and night bringing back books about
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the 20th century.
Please do head on over to Tallman Books and give him some love.
All right.
Gentlemen, why don't we just jump right into it?
So the big stories from this week, of course,
are the number of Supreme Court rulings that came down this week.
Why don't we just start with the big one and jump right into it?
We all knew this was coming,
and it's a sad irony that this ruling came just days before 250th anniversary of the United.
States. So we got to talk about the birthright citizenship case. So, I mean, the first place to
start with this is, is anyone really shocked when hearing this ruling? I certainly did not think
that it was going to go our way from basically what I've understood from people who are more legal
scholars than myself. I've heard plenty of people on our side of things argued that basically,
well, the rulings that they kind of made, where basically,
basically just what the letter of the law says. And because the conservative movement has just
stacked the nominees with various, you know, originalists, you know, legal scholars, as opposed to
just outright right-wing partisans. This is not really an unexpected result. Mr. Quinn.
All right, all right, all right. I'll let you finish. I'm going to let you finish. But that phrase
you used, what the letter of law says is the crux of this whole thing.
thing. And I've read the opinion. I've read Thomas's dissent. And it's fascinating what the
court had to do to get the result that it reached. How nerdy do you want me to get with this?
Because I could talk for an hour. Oh, boy. Here we go. This is the quality content people are
coming here to listen to it. All right. So starting about in the 1960s, we had a movement in statutory
interpretation, which is how courts read the law, how do you determine what the words on the
page mean? And the formerly dominant paradigm was textualism. That's where you read the law,
ascribe it, it's common meetings at the time you're reading it, and interpret it accordingly.
The Warren court started to push back against this with a much more expanded, much more progressive,
shall we say, theory of constitutional law, that the words of the law really embodies certain pretextual, spiritual commitments.
It is the judge's job to tease out of the words and get at what the framers really meant.
Starting in the 1980s, this movement generated a reaction called originalism.
And the great champion of originalism was Scalia and nowadays Thomas.
but Scalia was the first great public champion of originalism.
Originalism is where you read the law and you don't assign it the plain meaning of the text as you read it that day.
You don't try to find emanations and penumbras to get at where you really want to go.
What you do is you try to put yourself in the mind of the people who wrote the law
and try to understand what they meant by it, hence originalism.
And this opinion, whatever else it is, is total victory for Ant
and Scalia, its total victory for originalism. I say that because the majority opinion frames
itself as an originalist opinion. They go back to English common law and they say, what did
medieval English peasants understand subject to the jurisdiction to mean? What did the founding
generation understand it to mean? And they build up this beautiful originalist narrative of how
subject to the jurisdiction thereof means exactly what it says. If you're born within the territory,
integrity of the United States than bim bam boom you're a citizen. So they they justified their
opinion in an entirely originalist way. Thomas, the greatest originalist in his descent,
points out the sleight of hand because in their originalist analysis, they were discussing what
people meant a thousand years before the 14th Amendment was written, what people meant
a hundred years before the 14th Amendment was written. But they didn't spend much
time thinking what people in 1866 would have understood the terms to mean. And that's what Thomas
does in his dissent. He goes through magisterially. He starts the story with Dred Scott. This is the
case, the famous case where the Supreme Court ruled that a black slave was not a citizen of Missouri
and that the Civil Rights Act passed in 1866 before the 14th Amendment was specifically
intended to overturn that decision. And in the Civil Rights Act, they used the language
born in the United States and not subject to any other foreign power.
And Thomas explains how subject to the jurisdiction thereof is another way of getting this
concept of a cross of when they say subject to the jurisdiction thereof, they mean subject
to the complete jurisdiction of, as in there is no foreign power that has a competing
claim on the child. If the child is born in the United States but a foreign power has a
claim on him, then he's not a citizen. And this is how it was understood.
by the Reconstruction Congress. This was how it was understood by the executive branch in the
following 50 years, as they repeatedly refused to allow people who had been born in the United
States, but had gone back to their home country and then tried to come back in and claim
American citizenship to allow them to do that. They refused because they understood subject
to the jurisdiction thereof to mean, subject to complete jurisdiction thereof, subject to no
competing claims from a foreign power. And Thomas points out that
This is not the case with the people affected by Trump's executive order.
These are people here temporarily.
There are people here illegally, and there are people here with foreign powers that have claims on their loyalty.
A Chinese birth tourist coming into the Marianas Islands, dropping a baby and going back to China,
China's going to claim on that baby.
It's not complete jurisdiction of the United States.
And so under Thomas's interpretation, they would not be entitled to citizenship under the 14th Amendment.
But the meta point is here that originalism is so judicially dominant.
It's become the animating philosophy of the American judiciary to such an extent that even the majority had to try to do this in an originalist way.
And they did it through a flight of hand, which is why this ruling is wrong and disastrous.
But the fact they had to do it is at least a mini white pill buried into the monstrous stack of sub.
Hey.
Well, thank you for that explanation, Mr. Quinn.
He's certainly done it better than anybody else could have.
I mean, I guess the fallout of this immediately is to first attack Amy Coney Barrett, which obviously has this woman given us a single good ruling?
Like, said she was predominantly.
Well, the one.
Yeah, yeah, well, yeah, I guess that's true.
That's true.
Yeah, she, well, you know, a broken clock is right, you know, twice a day, right?
So, yeah, it's like, where do I even really want to start this conversation, right?
Because it's like, you know, you could take this as the way, you could take this one way and say the country is literally over.
And then I've seen other people, you know, take this other way and say, oh, well, don't worry.
There's another plan down the road.
Even though this one failed, we've got another one.
Hillary Clinton has been executed and Trump is currently in control.
I've seen that level of delusion in response to this.
And I'm finding myself basically kind of in the middle because I didn't expect this ruling literally to change anything.
Yeah, I never had any expectation that the court would reach the right result on this given the composition of the court.
But before we go too far overboard in the Amy Coney-Barrant bashing, I want to take a moment to bash Brett Kavanaugh.
Because he concurred in the judgment, which means he agrees with the result, but he differs on the reasoning.
And the reasoning that he gave is that, yes, the Constitution definitely does not grant citizenship to any random illegal who drops a kid on U.S. soil.
But there's a bullshit federal statute out there that Trump didn't dot the eyes and cross the T's on.
So actually, this executive order is illegal for that reason.
So Kavanaugh refused to take the principled stand
and instead found it out in technicality to concur in the results.
So, you know, you can say what you want about Justice Jackson Brown's Tumblr blog there.
You can say what you want about the majority opinion.
But Kavanaugh's act of pusillanimity was particularly distressing to me.
What a good picture of him.
Fuck a cry baby whiner.
This all sounds very Talmudic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it's like, yeah.
One of the things I've constantly talking about is a term that I borrowed from, the
Manosphere, stay plan is the same as the Go plan, right?
And basically that term was used in that context is when a man needs to reestablish
control over his relationship, usually in the context.
of a marriage, you just need to continue to stay on your path.
And if your wife or significant other decides to leave, then that's on them and not on you.
It is, you are responsible for your own destiny and moving the direction of the relationship
where you want to go. And it's much the same thing here, in the sense of our goals here at the OGC
or the broader online right movement, whatever you want to call it, are still the same.
the day before this ruling came out as it is the day after it came out. I was talking about how
I don't think any of us were shocked to see this result. I mean, perhaps maybe, you know, the six to three
ruling or some people were thinking, you know, five to four, whatever. We did not think that this was
going to be the magic bullet that was, oh, well, well, now we can deport all of these people. And here's
the other thing, too. It's like, even if we did get this ruling in our favor, does anyone really
think for a second that they were going to rack up deportations up into the millions here and
get rid of everybody by putting all the ice guys going door to door and every single state in
the country to get rid of these people. I mean, let's be real here, right? No, but it still
doesn't really negate the fact that there were people who were just, there were still people
trusting the plan on Twitter saying, well, you know, all that means.
is that everything is the same as it has been.
And it's like, well, everything being the same as it has been
has led us to where we are.
So it's not like this, we're not even getting a pause.
It just continues.
So, you know, people who are still, you know,
I said this about it.
It's like people want to say personnel is policy.
you had the personnel there.
You had Trump's court and nothing got done.
What you wanted to get done did not get done.
The system, this is about a system.
And the purpose of the system is what it does.
And personnel doesn't seem to be able to change that.
So this isn't blackpilling.
This is, we got to figure out something else.
Indeed, and Charlemagne makes a good point in the chat.
He says, everything is not the same.
There's now new precedent keeping people here.
And that's absolutely right.
Prior to June 30th, we at least had the benefit of ambiguity.
But now there is none.
Let me speak a little bit.
The whole thing about packing the courts.
Okay, so pack the courts.
and then the next administration packs the courts.
It goes back.
This is a system problem.
So let me speak a bit to the more practical effects here because, yes, so thus far,
the conversation has been primarily addressing the legal procedure that led up to this,
the issues with the system, but there are many practical effects of this decision.
This decision, what this, the weight of this decision is that,
functionally, as Mr. Quinn mentioned a few moments prior, this closed the loop on birthright
citizenship as a constitutionally enshrined doctrine. The only thing that can undo this decision
of the Supreme Court is another decision of the Supreme Court overriding, which the Warren Court
did for the aforementioned Dred Scott, which was upheld over 75 years of precedent. If you ever
take a look at Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. It's the most hilariously easy case to deconstruct,
I think, in Supreme Court history, the Warren Court made that decision based off of a single
sociological study that was then disproven two years after the court made the decision, but I
digress. The impacts of this decision is that now, functionally, it has been made legal that
more than legal, it has been enshrined as a constitutional right that you can anchor your baby
your way into this country. And so the country is not over yet, as, you know, despite what some
people say, because even if you're vulnerable, even if you have a chink in your armor, unless and
until someone takes advantage of that and delivers a killing blow, you are still alive,
it in a vulnerable position and you ought to correct that vulnerability as soon as possible.
However, if a, you know, functionally, I believe the next, there's no reason that the next
Democrat presidential candidate would not be a second Brandon or something similar to a Brandon.
And Brandon brought in, what, 13 million people? Is that the number?
That we know of, right?
Yeah, that we know of.
closer to 40.
Yeah, so there you go, right?
And that's approximately, assuming 350 million is the population of the United States.
That's a little bit over about 12% of the U.S. population.
Basically, the United States got a 12% population boost by virtue of bringing in 40 million illegals.
And so who is to say that the next Brandon, the next Democrat, which is literally the next Democrat,
Who's to say that the next Democrat doesn't bring in 26 million?
You know, doesn't bring in 39 million.
However you want to increase the number.
Seven billion.
Yeah.
Correct.
Right.
So, so long as those people make it here in time to give birth to babies,
which is, you know, it only takes, what, nine months, you know, if that.
I take today to give birth.
Correct.
Right.
nine months at maximum.
So what this exposes the United States to is a massive vulnerability in the sense that now force of civil law protects invading foreign armies coming in as a constitutional statute.
Right.
This isn't this isn't a matter of, you know, just basic federal law that, you know, a Congress can repeal.
And I mean, and people say, oh, well, Congress can pass a citizenship act.
And they can.
Good fucking luck with that.
man. Yeah, they can't. It's, it's not going to happen, right? And, you know, this is a very clear
electoral strategy on the part of the Democrats of just, of importing infinity foreigners because
they virtually all vote Democrats. So that's what happens, right? So, you know, and we can talk
about, if you want to, you know, oh, the elections are rig. Okay, we can talk about that later.
You still need enough of a population to make it believable. Um, so ultimately, this is what
deeply concerns me and what ought to deeply concern all of you is this practical implication of
this is that functionally the Republicans or at least the Trump-ish in order to keep a
functioning country need to win every presidential election forever until this is undone because I
guarantee you the next Democrat that makes it in barring a total reconstitution of the party
system and you know you have something similar to the nixon wallace election where ideas and
positions and power blocks and such are swapped around in ways that we can't really predict right now
um barring something like that this is just the the country is gone the moment that a democrat
is elected right and and to speak to something mr pete mentioned i i have tried to you know remain as
neutral as possible throughout this whole dispute that has existed amongst the online, right,
between those who are a bit more favorable towards the admin versus those who are skeptical of it.
And frankly, a lot of the reaction that I've seen to it is that any kind of dislike,
any kind of disconcertion, any kind of attempting to seriously engage with the facts of what
this case means and has brought about is punished.
is ridiculed, is met with scorn, with attempts of, of exclusion, of exiling, of insults, of whatever
you can do in an online entirely verbal format without crossing certain lines, though I,
anyway, that, that is what I dislike about this. There is, there has been a split amongst the
intelligentsia of this online movement that has been making itself manifest over the last year.
And this decision is no different in revealing that.
And ultimately, that is what disconcerts me, is that it's getting to the point.
And again, I'm not trying to name any names.
I'm not trying to speak to anyone in particular.
But amongst this tendency, it's getting to a point where any attempt to engage with facts,
any attempt to call a spade a spade and to acknowledge a loss as a loss,
an attempt to take strategic lessons from that,
is met with, frankly, putting your head in the sand,
frankly, with refusing to acknowledge the full extent of the negative effects of this decision.
I know I've been talking for a minute,
but that's the point I wanted to make.
Let us acknowledge the negative effects of this decision, for they are vac.
But I want to address two comments in the chat.
Operative Kane says, America's gone, man.
I'll be outside.
Good luck.
Marby Dogg 65 says, then it's already gone.
Gentlemen, there are not one fewer Americans on Earth today than there were on June 30th.
we are not diminished by this.
Our enemies are multiplied by it,
but what is the quality of our enemies?
We are not diminished.
We are not defeated.
We face dire circumstances,
and it behooves us as Americans
to take stock of those circumstances,
but America is not done
until we decide it's done.
And I'm not deciding it's done.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yes, I agree we ought not to decide that it's done.
That being said and that being resolved, I believe that the great minds that I still believe
in habit this side of things ought to be contributing their great intellect and their great
wisdom towards formulating plans to, how to ensure that the civilization survives.
And I believe, and I know many are doing that, especially many in the old glory club are
doing that.
But this is ultimately, you know, ultimately you have to, you cannot deny the severity of this.
You know, there's a line that you cross when you say it's done, it's over, et cetera, which is in itself intellectual laziness.
But, and by the way, I don't think, I don't think the Charlemagne division would have said that.
But what is it?
But ultimately, you need to acknowledge the full extent of the risks that this post.
and the full extent of the dangers that this poses.
This is the Stockdale paradox for those of you who are unfamiliar.
You have to acknowledge with full open-eyed reality,
every extent of the severity of the situation
while simultaneously believing, never letting go of the fact
that if you persevere, if we persevere, we will prevail.
We will overcome this obstacle.
We will overcome the setback.
And we will overcome the next 50 setbacks,
whatever they may be, so long as we remain resolved, and so long as God himself does not veto us,
we will prevail. And that's what needs to be held on to. But it needs to be held on to in Twain
with a full sober acknowledgement of the situation we are presently in, and you must start acting
accordingly. Indeed. And when you say you must start acting accordingly, we mean you, the person
hearing this. What are you doing to prepare for the coming troubles? What are you doing in your
life to make yourself resilient and make yourself survivable for the tests that will be sent to
us? Every OGC man can answer that question with his chest puffed up.
Can you?
I think basically to build off what Mr.
Fahrenheit said is that really it just seems like the split right now is how is what to build.
And I don't think that that's something that every location that decides to do it does.
I think that the, I mean, if you're going to do it online, that's fine.
But if you're basically still, I hate to say this, because, I mean,
I don't want to cause wars and I know it just pisses people off.
But if you're basically still planned trusting that, you know,
Trump is somehow going to get us out of this.
I mean, the next, as Mr. Fahrenheit said,
the next Democrat, the next Democrat control Congress is going to turn this on its head.
And that you have to come to the,
you have to come to the conclusion and you have to,
start planning for exactly what you're going to do. What are the people in Alabama going to do? What are the
people in Tennessee going to do? The Georgia people, the Florida people. What are you building that is going to
not only mitigate the risk of having your enemies who, you know, want you dead back in power, but also,
you know, you have to be building something where people are not only people within the club,
that the people around you are looking to you as the leaders.
And I said, as I said at the conference, you know, you can say nice words and you can give
great speeches and you can, you know, shit on, shit on libtards and shit libs and you can shit
on journalists all you want.
But in the future, people are going to be looking for people who can feed them.
So are you building something that is going to be able to feed and protect people?
This is basic survival of a people, of a race.
And, you know, arguing over whether, you know, Godspeed, if you want to go and fucking just keep,
if you're making money by supporting Trump, you know, get your money, put it aside,
invest it in land, pay off your debts.
I mean, do whatever needs to be done.
But you best fucking be doing something outside.
side of your online activity that is going to save your people because no one it doesn't seem
that anyone is coming to do that there is no franco there's no andrew jackson coming we don't
see anybody like that you're going to have to be andrew jackson and you're going to have to
be franco and you're going to have to figure out how to do that you know all this that we talk
about seems so daunting and so insurmountable given
the various issues that we have to deal with in modernity that many others have never had to
tackle it before things like the age of the internet the discourse between men and women what have you
all the kinds of things that we talk about rising inflation costs or what have you but at the end of
the day we can all hold our heads up high knowing that we are americans we are the real americans
real Americans.
And all that we need is what we have right here.
We can do it.
We didn't get to choose this situation.
It was thrust upon us.
But this is a call to adventure.
This is a call to action.
This is not a call to give up and have it just like curl up in a ball and say everything is over.
It's like...
It's exactly that.
I personally am charged up right now.
I'm excited, frankly.
Yeah, it's grim.
Yeah, it's bad.
But this is living historically, ladies and gentlemen, this is how you get into the epics.
You solve great problems.
You surmount great challenges.
You don't do it by yourself.
You do it with your brothers.
You do it with your community.
it's not always dramatic, it's not always fun,
but when our posterity endures 250 years from now,
it will be worth it.
Absolutely.
Now, I'm, interestingly enough,
I was reminded of this by none other than a meme recently.
So everyone remembers the famous line in The Lion King
when James Earl Jones reminds Simba.
He's like,
remember who you are. It's like, you know, white men of the West, Americans one and all,
like remember who you are. We are a group of people who pacified an entire continent,
something that had never been done before onto the grand scale that it was in the time,
in that time frame. This country ain't over, man. It's not. You think that, do you,
seriously, like what kind of pathetic people are we if we just allow like a Supreme Court ruling to
say, oh, the country's over. It's like, really?
You know, a ruling by Congress, a group that has a 13% approval rating and is run by old
octogenarians, like who can't even like lift up or pull down their own pants to take a
shit. It's like, what? No way. There have been, our ancestors have been, way worse odds
than this. And we can do the same. Well, let's not just,
limit this discussion to the
Supreme Court ruling about
the birthright citizen.
There are a couple other rulings
that came down this week
that we must discuss.
The other one, of course, refers to mail-in ballots.
So,
again, pretty much the same thing.
It's like, hmm, yeah, well, those elections,
they will be fortified, and they will be
fortified in perpetuity, it seems.
So,
with that coming in, the calculation
that we know how are we going to adjust things how are we going to act accordingly knowing that our
elections are going to be the most secure that they have ever been going forward but i was i was
promised that the save act was going to be passed any day now oh yeah we didn't we didn't we didn't
bless is real hard enough if we if we if we i've been told that there's a verse in genesis that
says if we bless Israel, if we pray to Benjamin Netanyahu every day that we will, we will get
the SAVE Act and, you know.
All right.
Enough of your metaphysical Huey, Pete.
Clearly, to get the SAVE Act passed, we just need to bomb Iran harder.
Yeah.
Two weeks to pass the SAVE Act.
Yeah, exactly.
Yep, yeah.
Two weeks to slow the spread of ballots.
anyway, so to the ruling itself, yes, mail-in ballots still allowed, and we can count votes.
As long as they're, quote, unquote, stamped the day of the election, so the votes can still be counted,
which I want to bring up something from our good friend Charlemagne here, who's brought this up on Mr. D's Twitter spaces a number of times.
But I think that what people really should be doing when our...
arguing over this thing is not the actual like numbers of mail-in ballots received or how many of them
like a helicoptered in or anything like that. The argument just really needs to be that there are no
mail-in ballots. This doesn't happen. Voting is already such a high agency act and most people don't
participate in it anyway. Do you seriously think that tens of thousands, if not hundreds of
thousands of people are literally requesting a ballot, filling it out, stamping it,
taking it to the post up.
There's no fucking way.
There's no way that, no, absolutely not.
Just attack this on its face.
There's no way that this is actually occurring.
Well, I don't know about you, Red Hawk, but on every election day, I go to Washington, D.C.,
scratch my vote onto a pottery shard and cast it into the reflecting pool.
Is that not how it's done?
you should get arrested for that
littering
you know
again
what more is there to say about this that we didn't talk about
with the previous discussion right
the thing of this is right
is it's been known since the times of Pericles
that a democracy is only as good
as the person managing it right like no one
I don't think anyone who seriously
studies democracy actually believes in democracy right
you've always got someone managing it.
And they pick and choose which elections are quote unquote real and which elections are
quote unquote fortified, right?
And that's just been the case since the beginning of time.
And it may not be centralized.
It may be decentralized.
But ultimately, right, your democracy is only as good as whomever is managing it.
And right now the people managing it are 46-year-old millennial women and 28-year-old brown
college graduates who are also women because the men aren't involved at any point or if they
are there. This is the thing about democracy. Any lawyer can tell you that power resides not
in the person who answers the question, but in the person who asks it. An electorate answers
questions. The rulers ask them. Excellent point. Indeed.
Right.
Now, I'm just, again, like, I go back to the same thing I already talked about earlier in the show.
It's like, again, state plan is the same as the go plan.
You know, it's like people are talking about, oh, the next Democrat administration.
It's like, well, we already knew all this going in.
We knew this under Biden.
We knew this under the 2024 election cycle.
We know this going forward.
It's like this is just such a extremely powerful tool for our enemies that they have basically unilateral.
at their disposal, and there's no way that they were going to give this up.
Well, again, same way with the birthright citizenship case.
It's like, our plans literally haven't changed at all.
The system sucks.
The system is in service of our enemies to the detriment of ourselves and our posterity
and needs to be changed.
Before we leave the various court decisions of the last few days,
I do want to insert one minor white pill, which is that the court did rule that the president has authority to fire and hire the heads of independent executive agencies.
This is a magnificent step in reversing the administrative state.
Sandbatch, I'm sure, is malding right now.
But it's good that at least a measure of to the extent that democratic accountability is a thing,
there's at least a minimal restoration of it in that area.
Yeah. Well, before we leave, let us not forget the major win of the week that I've just heard nothing.
And I've heard nonstop celebration and praise from is that the Supreme Court has ruled that women or that men can no longer participate in women sports, guys.
Oh, got what I voted for again.
Oh, man, I was sitting on the edge of my seat for that one.
Oh.
I truce did like you couldn't believe to get that one.
And if you tune into the World Cup, you can see women of both genders on the screen.
It makes me kind of nostalgic for the 2010s to think that there was a time when that would have been something looming large in our minds.
Nah, yeah, really.
Just a short time ago, you know, it's like, what's this gay or gay?
Back to the days of worrying about gay marriage.
Yeah, yeah, great.
Thanks, guys.
Great, great conservative victory that we got there.
You know, protecting women's sports.
I've reeled about this issue for a very long time
because it's the only time that establishment right-wingers
and boomer conservatives are allowed to talk about the differences
between men and women.
And it's only when we protect, you know,
some rich boomers like, you know,
21-year-old, like granddaughter who lost the game of volleyball,
ball, you know, because like our Trune was on the other team.
You know, it's like, oh, well, now we have to, well, did you guys know that men and women are
different?
You know, it's like, yeah, no shit, man.
How about you remove women from the workplace?
Like, do something, you know, they would actually help people in society.
But, you know, ah, alas.
So, all right.
Are there any other discussions to be had about the court this week?
I mean, I do know we have a funny clip here about the recent L.A. election.
Why don't we just play that?
it's because it's hilarious, you know, as a relation to the L.A. County Sheriff's Department is flying
in ballots from vote centers across the region. You can see the tropper is landing right now. We're
standing in the parking lot of the L.A. County registered ballot. Ballet Clause is in center.
They land right here in the middle. And then you see workers, they're standing by to put up those
ballots and take them inside. They're picking up ballots from eight cities, including Lancaster,
Santa Clarita, Palmdale, Lakewood, Santa.
Monica, Van Nuys, Pomona, and Torrance. Once they arrive, the ballots are securely transferred
inside where election workers are receiving and processing millions of ballots. While most ballots are
transported by vehicle, election officials use helicopters to bring in ballots from some of the
county's farthest vote centers.
Well, guys, I don't know. I just don't know how the United States for 250 years could have
possibly, you know, done elections without helicopter.
flying in ballots.
Come on, guys.
The video's a little grainy.
Are those Federal Reserve helicopters?
Very funny.
Man, again, it's just so obvious that this is not,
mail-in ballots are not required to have a secure election system.
This is not like, you know, the will of the people getting their voices heard or what have you.
This has been done for centuries without.
this nonsense and just because we had like a coup you know where we decided to shut down the entire
world and use that as the excuse for the least to just rig elections in perpetuity
it's just so ridiculous now we're literally flying in helicopters imagine showing this to somebody
who voted like 1823 or something as fun as it is to rage about this there is an important
lesson here which is that politics is not a popularity context politics is an organizing
contest. The side which gets organized and does whatever they have to do to win is the side that
wins. And for 70 years, the American right has been vastly outclassed in the organizing department,
and we can gripe and moan about that and about the lack of resources we get. But as Auren said the other
day, it's up to us to figure it out. We have to get organized. We don't have billions of dollars. We don't
have NGOs, we have to do it ourselves.
Yeah, but I, you know, we can get it done.
I mean, the, the characters that I have met in this scene over the last several years
are, in no exaggeration, the most competent and most intelligent men I've met in my life
by far.
And everybody who's been to any of our events will tell you exactly the same.
Oh, it's, victory is inevitable as a friend of mine says.
There's a saying, I know the Romans used it.
I don't know if it's Cicero who said it or whomever, but it goes something like this.
The secret to power is organization.
The secret to organization is justice.
And the secret to justice is adherence to a time.
cosmic principle, right? We talk a lot about eternal truths, whether you want to cast it in a
religious frame, in a subset in a confessional frame, or in a more, you know, I know there are
perennialists who talk about these things, but in a more perennialist frame, right? Justice ultimately
is an adherence to these principles, the proper application of which we call justice,
is the secret to internal group coherency
and which itself is the secret to the organization
that bears the fruit of political power, right?
This is something that needs to be committed to memory by all of you, right?
Is that if you understand the principles, right,
and some people say that you can explicitly write them down,
some people said that they're felt,
but they can only be imperfectly encapsulated,
right but if you embody these principles then ultimately everything else flows outward from there right that is the secret to this the left understands this
the problem with the left is that their time their quote-unquote timeless principles are not timeless but they are believed in and adhered to whether you are in Portland or Richmond or St. Louis or
Chicago or Europe, right? A leftist is a leftist because they all understand what they are all adhering to.
This is why they seem so much more powerful is that they have a lot more of a group cohesion,
despite the fact that they are generally a societal minority.
The right, by nature, more fractitious because we spend more time thinking about these things,
right, has a bit of a harder, a bit more of an uphill climb.
right and the purpose of organizations like the old glory club is to provide a means by which right wingers can start having the coherency can start having the organization that left wingers enjoy
you know through ultimately what unites all of us through ultimately those principles that we all agree to and that are under common threat by women such as the reporter in this video and by those
carrying the dollies and piloting the helicopters and ordering and paying for all of it.
So that's something I want all of you to remember.
I'll restate it.
The secret to power is organization.
The secret to organization is justice.
And the secret to justice is adherence to a timeless cosmic principle.
Well said, Mr. Fahrenheit.
Well said.
I mean, again, I will reiterate what I've said a couple of times on this show.
stay plan same as the go plan our plan is to save our people and the united states of america
any ruling that comes from the supreme court congress president what have you will never change
that goal for us it might only change the tactics we use to get to that goal stay on target
yeah there we go there we go nice so
On that, that we got all of the important stuff out of the way, why don't we have a little bit of fun here?
So one more story that we want to talk about, and then we want to actually talk about the Fourth of July here and celebrating 250 and all that.
But one more story that came from out this week is a, again, we talk about like the Faustian spirit and, you know, white people things or what have you.
but so a couple apparently climbed to the top, the tippity top of the Empire State Building in New York,
and let loose a, you know, kind of a gay flag, you know, what have you.
You know, love is love, yada, yada, yada, you know.
But you got to say, white people things, man.
You know, that's, you know, everyone wants to climb them out, you know.
Pretty amazing stuff.
Paul, do you want a red pill, red hawk on the blob question?
Are you being serious?
We're not starting this now.
A couple in question are Russian.
So the Slavs are actually somewhat questionable, right?
Because they're actually, for those of our ilk,
the Slavs are kind of a roar shock test.
I will.
I will.
will emphasize though and I have absolutely no one in mind while saying this but
Baltz those from the Baltic states I will not not including not including
Estonians are Asians much like Finns are but Latvians and Lithuanians are
are Aryan whites they are not Slavs they do not speak a Slavic linguistic group
They are not genetically associated beyond intermarriage.
They are, you know, it's easy to forget about them because they're kind of pissant
haven't really been relevant for a couple of centuries at this point, but they are, in fact,
not Slavs.
So I just wanted to fully emphasize.
And the citizenship law of the United States, circa, I think 1912, fully agrees with me, fully
conformed to the Nuremberg laws.
Correct.
Right. So I just wanted to ensure that I know this has been a raging hot debate as to whether the balts are Slavs or not within the sphere. I wanted to settle this debate immediately right now. They are in fact European. They are in fact white. I know Slavs are a bit, you know, again, it depends on who you ask, but, you know, we can address that on its own. And you can see right here the Slavic phenotype, right?
demonstrable in both of their faces, you know, the very, very strong brow, denoting a very low
intel.
I'm just kidding.
Or am I?
You don't know.
You don't know what I think about Slavs.
You know, anyway.
Anyway, so this diatribe brought up by a meme, I'm sure, I'm sure someone, I'm sure whoever,
I think he was, I think he was joking when he mentioned that, but he actually, you got a
a five-minute ramble out of me.
Speaking of bolts, I'm certain I can speak for Dan Baltic when I say would.
The heck are you on?
I'm just saying that's what Dan Baltic would say.
The thing that I love is that whenever you take it...
I didn't even know he had that out of the soundboard.
she looks
what's the
what's the what's the friggin
no I would
I would
what's the thinness
problem
bulimic
no not bulimic
no there's
anorexic
interxic yeah
she looks
she looks
she's beyond
anorexic
she looks malnourished
like most Slavs
I just love
how the Slavic women
will give you a look
it's like
they would just
will not respect you
as a man
unless they're confident that you can just beat the absolute shit out of them in a moment's notice.
Yeah, this is the problem.
This doesn't exactly make a very,
a very functional society because, you know,
even the most angry and aggressive of men have better things to do
60% of the time than putting their hands on their women, right?
So they just by default win.
It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter how much.
many times you hit them. They just by default
win. Charlemagne comes
back with the correct opinion in the chat
that there is no such thing as a thinness
problem. He's correct.
Here, here.
He can speak for himself.
One of my girlfriends back
in the day was, I think, 90 pounds.
Cool. And you'd let her get away?
You can pick her up easily.
Yes, I did.
All right.
So before we are told
to cease the horny
posting and get bonked on once again.
But yeah, we just thought we'd bring this up because, you know what?
There are still some cool things happening out there in the world.
You know, I mean, if for nothing else, that is pretty amazing.
You know, I'm pretty ballsy, and I guarantee you that this guy got laid after that one.
Garrett, fucking did it.
So at least there's that.
I think you got arrested, actually.
Well, when they get out, they will.
You know.
They didn't say late by who.
Well, gentlemen, I think it is now time that we do actually have a minute of seriousness and take stock a little bit because, you know, this Saturday is indeed the 4th of July.
It is 250 birthday for the United States of America, you know.
And, yeah, nice, yeah.
So, I mean, before we get into anything else, I mean, everybody.
everybody, do your damnedest to make sure that you get out and spend some time with some families,
spend some time in the local community, light off some fireworks, drink a beer, have a hot dog,
you know, listen to some patriotic music and just have a grand old time.
Really try your absolute best to, you know, not bring up, you know, the current state of our country,
you know, to bring the mood down, especially when you're like with boomer conservative members.
I know a lot of guys in our thing can be very aggressive on these kinds of things and pushing family members to try and see things more our way.
But I think on such an important occasion, everybody should just take a step back a little bit and appreciate all the things that we do love about the United States.
One of the things that's been very interesting, I mean, of course none of us give a shit about soccer, but seeing the flood of Europeans, many of whom are arriving in America for the very first time,
And I don't know if anybody's seen it, but the great cultural exchange, much like we had earlier this year with the Japanese, is occurring once again with a lot of our European brethren who have been told this story about what America has actually been like their entire lives.
And when they actually arrive here, they realize, oh, wow, like America is not what I've been told it is.
Americans are very friendly people, very welcoming people.
We are people who appreciate the important things in life, you know.
And anyone else have anything to add on this?
Happy birthday, USA.
Hell yeah.
The hope is that the United States will continue to do what it has done in the past,
which is disprove all systems and models of history
that state things like an empire can only last 250 years.
The hope is to basically break all models of history,
be they written by German high school math teachers
or British military officers.
The goal is to have a civilization,
is to basically prove that a civilizational decline and collapse
is a skill issue.
Well, in the Roman timeline,
we're not even to the Punic War yet.
Well,
I've heard it
argued that the Punic War was the
two World Wars, because Spangler
wrote before that point. So you could,
I think you could argue that the Punic Wars were
the two World Wars. That's the most analogous.
The closest
we, I don't know,
the most equal of a power
we've ever fought.
Anyone have any
final thoughts that want to say about, you know, history of America, some things that, you know,
get you thinking on this 250 birthday.
I mean, there's all parts of American history that stand out to plenty of us.
I mean, I guess I'll go first.
I mean, you know, I just, I really love the frontier in American history, man.
It is really, really cool.
It is something that not a lot of countries can say that they did, you know, had just so much
untamed wilderness that was just conquered piece by piece by outdoorsmen, fur trappers,
hunters, engine fighters of all stripes.
It's just something really, really amazing, and it always stands out to me.
And as well as the National Park System, thank you, President Teddy Roosevelt, for that.
Everyone go out and enjoy the great natural beauty, the United States has to offer.
The only country on the entire planet that has every single Bible.
biome represented on its soil in one way or another.
We've got everything here.
We've got deserts.
We've got oceans.
We've got more freshwater than anywhere in the entire world.
We've got rainforests.
We've got temperate forests.
We have boreal forests.
We have everything here in the United States.
And the country must be appreciated from the open road to really, really get an appreciation
for it.
Something that some of our friends that we've seen from Europe recently made comments.
of as well.
The wide open spaces of this country.
Very, very important to our character as Americans.
Thomas Wayne Radley brings up a good point, if you can this weekend.
Try and get to a reenactment.
Yeah, that'd be really cool, for sure.
The first one I ever went to those, actually, was on one of the famous Fahrenheit
death marches at Gettysburg seeing Civil War reenactments.
Those are pretty cool.
I mean, something, I actually think this is somewhat pertinent, but
if I had to pick a favorite moment from American history, it would be when the Continental Army
goes into winter quarters at Valley Forge. I think this was after the Battle of Saratoga.
So I think this is the winter of 1777 going into 1778. Let me be a horrific historian if I get this
wrong, so I'm going to fact-check myself real quick, just to make sure that I have the year right,
because the year is important, because I believe, you know, Saratoga was the great, you know,
turning point. Yes, I was correct, winter of 1777 through 1778. So after winning this great
amazing victory, the Continental Army, which is basically little more than a glorified militia,
goes into winter quarters at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, to undergo a restructuring.
And George Washington hires a ton of foreign generals from Europe.
At this time in the 18th century, a lot of European military officers were basically given
carte blanche to go be mercenaries or even go fight under the uniform flag of a foreign power
during peace time to keep them occupied.
And this had the obvious downside of a lot of times.
They would get more advancement, higher position,
and more meaning from fighting for another country than fighting for their own.
And that's why by the Napoleonic Wars, this was more or less brought to an end.
But at this time, the Continental Army benefited greatly from this.
one of the most prominent foreign generals, foreign military officers hired by George Washington
was one individual by the name of the Baron von Steuben.
The Baron von Steuben.
Whatever, right?
We say Steuben here.
I said it, I said it, Stoibin in basic training, and I got corrected.
So I say Stubin now.
Regardless, he was a Prussian nobleman.
and military officer with combat experience, very, very possibly a homosexual.
Well, you said he was Prussian.
Yeah, well, there you go.
You know, it kind of comes with the, comes with the territory with them, unfortunately.
Don't look too deeply into Frederick the Great.
But regardless, he was an expert at military, at drill, right?
You know, he's a Prussian.
The Prussians, even at this time, were renowned for their military discipline.
And he comes to Valley Forge and he finds this army of country bumpkins who basically say, go screw yourself.
Why should I do this when he tells them to do something?
He was used to dealing with, back to the, back to the, back to the, back to the Slav thing.
He was used to dealing with half-Polak mongrels that made up the conscripts of the Prussian army that responded very well to the whip and to the harsh crack of the German language.
and the Anglo, Scots, Irish settlers, even some Germans,
they were Rhineland Germans here, didn't respond very well.
And so the Baron von Steuben had to completely redo his whole training regimen.
He had to write out something called what we now call the Blue Book,
which was basically a total writing out of the reasoning behind every single order,
every single procedure, why you do rank and file,
why you make your tents clean and orderly and you put it in a geographical shape.
Because at this point, like, the temps were haphazard.
There was no camp sanitation.
It was causing all kinds of disease.
Why you do all of these things.
And, you know, the Baron von Steuben wasn't the only part of Valley Forge.
There's a whole story that goes into Valley Forge.
But what Valley Forge was, was it, it's this moment where this undisciplined,
disorganized, very cantankerous, very disagreeable.
Everyone, every American was a three thinker.
Every American thought they were Ben Franklin, right?
You know, bring them all into a room.
They come up with 50 different opinions.
Where that energetic but disorganized, raw material was taken and was passed through a forge,
literally Valley Forge, was passed through a forge.
And on the other side, the Continental Armed.
that we imagine.
This is why the uniforms are blue, by the way, is it's Prussian blue, right?
The uniforms of the Continental Army were Prussian blue, right?
And they were brought out to the other side, and they were a disciplined, organized military
force that could go toe to toe with any European army anywhere.
You see this at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse.
You see this at the Battle of Yorktown.
You see this elsewhere throughout the rest of the revolution.
And I know that was a bit of an extended favorite moment of history,
but I think it's very pertinent right now, you know,
is remembering that if you, you know, organization is the secret to power.
And a period of hardship, of struggling, of suffering in the cold, with diseases,
with all of these other things in Valley Forge took the Continental Army
and made it into the force that won the independence of America
and ensured that American civilization would be sovereign
and would not have to be dictated to by a foreign power.
I will follow up Valley Forge with Chosen Reservoir.
My grandfather was there and he never talked about it.
This was during the Korean War.
The American forces had pushed the North Koreans up to the Chinese.
border. Nine hundred thousand Chinese volunteers came south and bottled up the American forces.
Chosen. They fought through a bitterly cold winter, 30 degrees below zero. Horrible, horrible conditions.
They held them off long enough to withdraw and reconstitute deadlines further south.
And while it was certainly an imperial adventure, it is a shining example that we were the same people as the men of 1776.
The determination and the grit that they displayed in the face of overwhelming numerical odds is exactly the spirit with which we have to approach our own long march in the coming days.
hell yeah
I think the
another thing we
have to think about
is
what could happen on the local level
and that
makes me think of the Battle of Athens
the McVen County War
and how
men who had just come home from the war
came home to
an insanely
corrupt local government
and where it was predatory policing and the corruption was mind-boggling.
And these men picked up rifles and did what they had to do.
And that's not something with the way everything has been structured now,
if that were to happen today, we know what would happen.
But at least we have a, we have several, but post-World War II, Nuremberg regime,
at least we have an example of what men were willing to do to make sure that they came home
to a county and an area that had been taken over and were like we weren't,
We didn't just go fight over there to come back here and be slaves.
So, yeah, the men of the Battle of Athens.
Damn right.
There are plenty of Americans, great American men, all of us can take inspiration from.
We have no shortage of men with fighting spirit.
And as Mr. Quinn said earlier, nothing is over until we say.
it's over. We are the inheritors of our history, our nation, our people, this country.
And it's not over until we say so. So with that, let's get into the super chats for the
evening and then everybody can enjoy their 4th of July weekends and celebrate America 250.
At the top, we have Solid Snake 1964, who has once again regained his top dog spot as number one
super chatter. So for two bucks, he says, no time for a long chat. Have a good fourth all.
Salute. Well, thank you very much. No solid steak. Cardboard boxes are flammable. Stay away from
fireworks. Very true. Steak. Real Americans.
Okay.
Star Colonel Francis E. Deck for 20 bucks. Another week, another round of executive cuckoldry.
DOJ could have gone after birth tourism on day one that isn't getting shoved in the faces of Normies is a net positive.
Modus in Vine.
I've read that as Velociraptor.
I don't want to do that.
It's pronounced.
Perfect.
Salute and happy fourth.
You're real Americans.
Yeah, I love that.
Real American.
Yeah.
I think we've set our piece on the Supreme Court for the day.
Seasider has once again send us $10 in a salute as he does every week.
Thank you very much, sir.
Real Americans.
Yes, indeed, and you are a real American.
Aramig discourse, haven't seen him around for a while, for five bucks says,
always remember a nation's wealth is not measured in culture, technology, religion, or even GDP.
It's measured by immigrants per square meter.
I thought there was going to be something inspirational at the end of that.
Had me in the first half.
I like that he used square meter.
Yeah.
He used the commie measurement.
Try glazer, you know.
Okay, okay.
So my surname being Fahrenheit, I have to spur out a little bit on systems of measurement for about two minutes.
Oh, boy.
The metric system is the most horrific thing ever conceived of all time.
a bunch of Frenchmen came together and just said, we can just arbitrarily set a measurement and
force everyone to follow it. And then thanks to Napoleon, the world now follows it, right?
The imperial system, they did the same thing with Celsius, by the way. Fahrenheit is the superior
measurement in every respect because it is made off of the human body, the same way that the
imperial system is made off of the human body. A foot is approximately as long as a foot, right?
This makes sense to people, okay?
But it doesn't matter because a bunch of Frenchmen who, you know,
every bad idea on earth comes from France.
What is it?
A bunch of Frenchmen got together and decided we can now set at this,
this complete arbitrary standard.
And I think it can be measured by the fact that it is one of the most common
and loved markers that brown people pretend to adhere to.
Fahrenheit as opposed to Celsius, if I say 100 degrees, okay, that's hot.
That makes sense.
But if I say 30 degrees, like in your mind, it doesn't make sense, right?
It doesn't make sense to anyone.
Because, again, Fahrenheit measured off of the human body.
It is a better system.
They tried to do the same thing for time, by the way, and it just didn't work.
So.
There we go.
I heard it from Mr. Fahrenheit's mouth to your ears, gentlemen.
So take that, Euros.
BTFOed once again.
So our good friend Thomas Witt.
morality of the American Southwest sends us a test box in the chat. Thank you very much.
And please do check out American spirits on Monday. Mr. Riley has been a great hand to us over with the OGC and his wealth of historical knowledge. It's fantastic. And in addition to that, having the most pleasant accent in the entire continent. So there you go, sir. Absolutely fantastic words. Brother Albaran Quinn join your local OGC chapter yesterday. Hell yeah.
Thank you, sir.
Thank you, sir.
Mr. Jeff Dice stopped by in the chat tonight.
Thank you very much, sir.
We appreciate it.
Friend of the OGC, sends us $20.
Thank you very much, sir, and have a happy...
Ron Paul walked so that we could run.
Absolutely.
All right.
City breakdance, sir, man.
Always happy to see you in the chat, sir.
And I always look forward to reading your name because it's just so hilarious.
Yep.
Amazing.
For $10, he says,
Quick drop in to wish everyone a happy fourth.
I'll be listening to the stream tomorrow,
getting my house ready for the barbecue on Saturday.
Nice.
I hope everybody has a nice burger
and gets to enjoy a nice cold beer
and light off some explosives.
And I saw this ridiculous tweet coming out
from the mayor of Richmond, Virginia,
saying that fireworks of any.
kind, even sparklers are
outlawed inside the city limits of
the state of Virginia. Please
text 311 to
report your
firework sightings or what have you.
Man, I love Richmond.
I say unto you, everybody
in the Richmond area and everywhere
else, okay? If anyone reports you,
please do your patriotic duty
and stick an M80 right next to
their bedroom window.
We're going to have to drop this entire city must be
perched. That's exactly. That's
Exactly. That's perfect, perfectly encapsulates. We're going to have to just, like, sorry, I know, a lot of history, wonderful, wonderful city in American history. I get it. We're just, unfortunately, we're going to have to glass it and salt it and remove any and all memory of it from the earth. It's just what's going to have to happen.
Please, please forgive me for using this name, but I would love to go full Sherman on.
Richmond right now.
Uh-oh.
Well, the problem with that is that they rebuilt Atlanta after.
Hmm.
Wow.
Damn.
All righty.
And a reminder to everybody as to how amazing it is that the amount of fireworks that
will be blown up on the 4th of July.
I'm always amazed how the phantom fireworks stores that you see around
country basically get all their business in like a two-week period to justify the warehouse that they
have for the rest of the year housing all of their fireworks but uh yes um every fourth of july
americans light off as much explosive power as all of the uh nuclear bombs have ever been tested
so combined so take that everyone else so uh all right moving on next in the super chat line
is Mr. Adrian Shepard
for $2.50.
Interesting denomination.
All right.
He says, no matter what,
I'm still proud of our 250 years.
Salute.
Well, thank you, sir.
Real Americans.
Indeed.
We are proud as well.
Hammer rain,
410 bucks, says,
it's really helpful in times like these.
Just sit back and say,
she is.
Like, well, yeah.
It's getting closer.
Yeah, it's getting closer.
That's a subspecies of sealing bird.
The night from beyond for five bucks, to heal the division within the right, there must be a vision, a goal, a mission.
Your members are looking for directives.
Acta, non-verba.
There is a vision and a goal and a mission.
It's just that vision and goal and mission for some people is to make money from.
You know who from.
Yeah.
Yeah.
America Southwest once again for 20 bucks says Fremont slash Carson were about to free California, but they were attacked by engines.
Three died.
They spent the next day cleansing the area of all hostels.
They wrote about it.
It was a bestseller.
They never apologized.
This isn't about the Mexican War.
Nice.
What could you mean by this?
And then American Southwest once again sent us another two bucks.
He says, if you're in New Mexico, I'll be at two reenactment events on Saturday.
Well, there you go, as he says.
Go see a reenactment.
They're pretty cool.
Wool uniforms in New Mexican July.
Yeah, my goodness.
All right.
Our good friend from Down Under, this is Dawn Browning, the only woman who listens to this show.
She sends us a smiley face, and then she also gifted an OGC.
channel membership which if you guys want to sit at the standing back and standing by tier
of our memberships you will have access to our various gaming streams that we do uh you know
throughout the week well and we have a good time there so thank you this is browning
man of you and sushi for five bucks says men didn't love america because she was great she was
great because men loved her happy birthday america salute thank you sir you are real
real Americans
and then we got
Wingman 4564
who is a channel member
he's rocking that star on there
thank you very much sir
for two bucks he says
Sherman mentioned
James Ogl Thorb
triggered
because I'm a real
I think I'm the only real southerner
of the four of us
I think I could start trash talking Georgia
and start boosting Sherman
to make the Georgia guys
even more mad
but I will choose not to at this time.
Well, that is us all caught up on the super chats.
Thank you very much, everyone, for coming by this evening.
Again, everyone, you know, the times, they may be bleak, they may be dire,
but we have each other, we have our brothers on the OGC,
and we're going to win.
Victory is inevitable.
Who knows what path that may take for us, but it's not over until we say it's over.
But wait.
there's more.
Call now and we'll double your super chats
because Adrian Shepherd
has sent us another two bucks.
Tar and feather, anyone that stops the fireworks.
Damn right.
Here, here.
Absolutely.
All righty.
Mr. Pete, what do you have to promote
to the fine people in the audience?
I just dropped a new episode
tonight with the crossover
that people didn't know they needed to hear
with Thomas 777 and Dr. Matthew Raphael Johnson.
Just four episodes so far of them just riffing on Hegel.
So check that out.
All right, be sure to check that out.
Mr. Fahrenheit, do you have anything to promote, sir?
You know, I couldn't come up with a quippy quote in time,
so I'll just tell people to get involved with the Old Glory Club.
Absolutely. Good advice, good suggestion all around.
And Mr. Quinn, thank you for joining us tonight on Pony Express.
In addition to finding you on American Spirits on Monday, do you have anything else to promote to the fine people?
Yes, I would like to promote my new mumble rap group, Riffing on Hegel.
No one listens to it.
All right. Well, for myself,
we got another super chat coming at the last minute
just when we thought we were out they keep pulling us back in
I know Ali Farley him for 10 bucks he says nothing but it but his money
thank you very much sir we appreciate that
in addition to checking out all the fine content here on the OGC channel
with Pony Express Radio on Thursdays American Spirits on Mondays
chapter house on Wednesdays
if you guys want more of my stuff I made an appearance
on 5 till midnight this week on Monday.
Always fun to talk to Adam, Sam, Typo, all those guys.
They put out a great show.
They're hilarious dudes.
You could find myself, Mr. D. and Charlemagne on Sunday evenings on Twitter,
where we are doing Dr. D. at Dr. D's cinema, where we are watching, you know,
actually good movies.
Cap and Michael Pull have the Monopoly on Drive Time Movie Night of, let's just call it,
lesser known films,
we'll say that,
to be charitable to them.
But we here at Dr. D.
cinema are watching
old classics. So we've done
Jurassic Park, Jaws, and Alien.
And on this weekend, we are doing
aliens on Sunday. So if you guys
want to come by and watch that on Twitter,
where we could watch an entire movie and
comment on it because Elon Musk does not care
about copyright. So
and with that, happy birthday
to the United States.
everyone enjoy your 4th of July weekends, light off some fireworks, eat a hamburger, drink a beer, kiss your loved ones, and wave an American flag. We will see you next week. God bless America.
