Knowledge Fight - #285: Lil' Taste of Poland
Episode Date: April 17, 2019Today, Dan and Jordan take a little break from talking about Alex Jones to dip their toes into the murky waters of Stefan Molyneux, specifically a mini-documentary he released in December 2018 about g...oing to Poland. Documentary might be the wrong word.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, Dan here. I just wanted to say hello and give you all a little bit of an intro
for this episode because there's some things that may seem a little bit confusing, largely based
on the fact that Jordan and I recorded this episode a couple weeks back. So there's some
things that may sound a little bit dated. Like for instance, at the beginning of the episode,
I say that I just signed a lease when at the point that we are now, as this episode comes out,
I've already moved into this new apartment. And also Jordan makes reference to the idea that we
just recorded a emotionally draining episode. And now I have foisted this episode that you're
about to listen to upon him. And that is because we recorded this right after we recorded the
episode that came out, where we talked about Alex Jones's coverage of the Christ Church shooting
in New Zealand. And so he's still reeling from that a little bit as we jump into this episode.
For a long time now, I've been getting messages from listeners who've reached out and express that
they would like for us to cover Stefan Malinu. They'd like us to take a look at him and give
our thoughts. And I've watched a number of his videos. And most of the time, I don't find them
to be something I really have much interest in covering. I think a lot of people who do shows
that are slightly different focused than us have done some great pointing out of
things that are wrong with his world. There's a lot of coverage you can find of that sort of stuff.
But I did think that there was one thing that did speak to me, and I thought that it would be
something that was worth our time. And that is the episode you're going to hear here.
There was a part of me that felt that this would be the beginning of a longer series
about him. And that may be forthcoming in the future at some point. It's an open question at
this point. But for now, we have this episode here that I hope you enjoy. And we will see you
back on Friday with Who Knows What. It could be anything. Andy and Kansas, you're on the air.
Thanks for holding. Hello, Alex. I'm a first-time caller. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. I love
you. Hey, everybody. Welcome back to Knowledge Fight. I'm Dan. I'm George. We're couple dudes.
Sit around, drink novelty beverages, and talk a little bit about Alex Jones.
Oh, indeed we are, Dan. Jordan.
Dan? Jordan.
What was the last time you signed a lease, Dan?
Just today. Just today.
Got it all taken care of. I'd like to thank everyone for their thoughts and prayers and
concerns over these trying last few weeks have been a real hassle. But yeah, I actually got
all that taken care of. I will be moving now. Congratulations, Dan.
So now it's just the stress of the actual process of moving. But that's certainly
something that I can make it through. I've done it a hundred times in my life.
Oh, of course.
No big deal. And the excitement of setting up the new place,
our recording space in it and having an actual bedroom. There'll be one bedroom as opposed to
a studio that I've lived in that's kind of living for the last, I don't know, over a decade.
Yeah, absolutely.
It'll be very interesting to have a new kind of space to experience. And I'm excited for that.
You know what I just realized? I don't know your address. Go ahead and tell it to me right now.
No, you can't do it. No. But we're like right now. No. There's a what?
Oh, well, I will say this. I'm not going to tell you my address, but in a very interesting turn
of events, I have lived in this building before. Really? Yeah. I'm moving back into a building I
used to live in. That's crazy. Yeah. Yeah. But I did like the building. Everything was nice about it.
Yeah. Only thing that sucks is a terrible laundry room.
Terrible laundry room. That's fine. There's a coin-op laundry. Not too far away. Everything is
golden. Man, I hate a coin-op laundry. I don't hate them. I don't hate it. I hate a laundromat.
I like it a lot because they have the quarter machines there, which is big. I don't have to
plan ahead of time and go to the fucking grocery store, the customer service area,
to get a roll of quarters. Of course. Plan so far ahead. Then on top of that, you know,
you can just sit and read. It's nice. I don't know. I just don't like them, Dan.
Fine. When I moved in with my girlfriend. You have the unit laundry. In unit laundry.
First time in my life, Dan, it has been, it has been, I god damn, you have no idea how beautiful
an in-op laundry unit. There was one apartment that I had sort of looked at that had in-unit
laundry. And I was like, this seems unessential. I don't like the rest of this apartment. And
honestly, I think that the washer and dryer take too much space up. Oh, you're so wrong. It's worth
it. It might be worth it, but you know, when it's, when it's that, that is like a variable that
limits other parts of the apartment. Fair. I think that, that I can very much leave.
I can, I can respect that. Something that I can respect.
What's that? Is the very generous support of our listeners, people who have signed up and
are supporting what we do. We really appreciate it. So now it is come time for us to give a shout
out to some new donors. Hey. First of all, I'd like to say thank you to Philip. You're now a policy
wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you, Philip.
Thanks, Philip. Next. Carissa. Thank you. You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk. Thank you, Carissa.
Thank you very much, Carissa
Next Richard, thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk. Thank you, Richie.
You're a king, Richard!
Next Nate, thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk. Thank you, Nate.
Can't wait for his buddy Warren G to donate.
Oh, to regulate our finances.
Gonna need it.
Next Kisha, thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk. Thank you, Kisha.
Thank you very much.
Finally, I'd like to say thank you to somebody who donated on an elevated level.
We appreciate that also very much. So Brian C, thank you so much. You are now a technocrat.
I'm a policy wonk.
Four stars. Go home to your mother and tell her you're brilliant.
Someone Sodomite sent me a bucket of poop.
Daddy Shark.
Jar Jar Binks has a Caribbean black accent.
He's a loser little titty baby. I don't want to hate black people. I renounce Jesus Christ.
Thank you so much, Brian.
Thank you very much, Brian.
If you're out there listening, folks, and you're thinking, hey, I like what these guys do,
I'd like to support their endeavors, you can do that by going to our website, KnowledgeFight.com.
Clicking that button that says support the show, we would appreciate it also very much.
Absolutely.
Especially because my rent is going up.
And I do not have a job.
Oh boy.
Oh boy.
Life is good.
He just said this weird thought of us being the worst human beings in the world.
And instead of giving shout outs to people who do donate,
we just find somebody who stopped donating or like, hey, guess who's no longer a policy
wonk.
I could never imagine doing that sort of shitty fucking horrific thing to do.
Or just anybody who we have.
We have a good idea that you listen to our show and you're not paying us to go fuck yourself.
Oh, just somebody who's got about like, just we just randomly see if somebody has left a review
and we're like, ah, I don't think.
I search IP addresses of people who have downloaded and they're like, all right,
I'm making a list.
All right, there we go.
All right.
How fucking awful would that be?
Terrible.
That's like the NPR drive, except for evil.
So Jordan, today we'll be taking a look at Stefan Malanou.
A little bit of intro to looking at this pile of garbage.
So our last episode was a huge downer and now we're really bringing up the wackiness.
Sure, we're really going to make this a light breezy episode with no evil,
evil monsters at all, right?
Right, right.
I've really struggled with what to do about this because we've gotten a lot of like requests
from people to like, hey, you guys should cover Stefan Malanou.
It's like, it's not like I don't know who he is.
He's been on info wars a ton of times and I'm aware of that part of the internet where he
lives and thrives.
How do you solve a problem like Malanou?
Right, absolutely.
And one of the biggest problems is that there's so much to talk about about him.
That's one of the things that it kind of works in his favor is that anybody who wants to be like,
all right, here's the problem with this guy.
Smash cut to eight hours later, you still haven't really demonstrated the totality
of what makes his show and what he does so incredibly dangerous.
To be honest, I do not know anything about Stefan Malanou.
I've seen like, I've seen people screenshot his tweets or something and it's like,
to me, a lot of race IQ stuff lately for sure.
Right, what I see is just some asshole who's trying to be provocative and be like,
hey, look at me.
I'm not trying to say this.
This is just the truth.
Open your eyes, man.
There is a little bit of that going on with him.
And unfortunately, some of the more robust pieces of criticism that I have for him will
have to wait, because some of that is just outside of the scope of what I can manage today.
But as we begin, I can give you a little bit of information about him.
Number one, he's bald.
Okay.
I'm out.
That's all right.
That's it.
That's all you got.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
So right off the bat, there's a ton going on when you take a bit of a closer,
beneath the surface look, it's Stefan Malanou.
Far beyond what we could hope to cover in a single episode of this show.
In reality, it would be hard to cover him outside of the framework of an in-depth,
weeks-long series.
And I'm hesitant to do that because I fear that some of the episodes would be meaningful,
but dreadfully boring.
For a long time, I've resisted covering Stefan Malanou because of stories I've heard
that he's super litigious and really into suing people who use his content.
I've sat with that feeling and after considering what our show is and what we stand for,
I'm not willing to let the fear of that possibility stop me from covering someone
I see as a dangerous pillar in the white supremacist media.
Smash cut to eight months later.
We're getting sued.
I've reviewed relevant fair use laws and everything that we use of Stefan's on this
episode and any other will be for the explicit purpose of criticizing and providing commentary.
So I know that we're in the clear.
We're on very solid footing.
Right, right, right.
What compelled me to make this change in my position about sort of being hesitant to
cover him to being like, we got to do this, is that in December 2018,
he released a mini documentary that should scare the shit out of any right-thinking person
in the world.
We'll get to that documentary, but first we need to get to know Stefan a little bit
because you don't know anything about him.
I don't know anything about Stefan.
Stefan Malanou is a self-described philosopher who disseminates his pedantic and nonsensical
messages through a YouTube channel and his internet radio show Free Domain Radio.
Okay, so I don't know Stefan, but I know.
You might have met him before.
I've met a Stefan before.
First of all, Malanou isn't really an expert in philosophy.
He has a bachelor's degree in history from McGill University and a master's in history
from the University of Toronto, but no degrees in philosophy.
I guess he could have been a philosophy minor, but so was I.
And you don't see me doing a six-part series on philosophy 101 shit like the Trial of Socrates
and acting like I'm some kind of a bald YouTube version of Zizek.
Dan, Dan, everybody, look, Dan, do you think the original philosophers went to school for
philosophy?
I mean, like the Academy?
No, not those people.
The original, original philosophers, you know?
You know, like, like, Lao Tzu?
He didn't go to philosophy school.
It was easier back then.
He said some smart shit.
It was easier back then.
It was easier back then.
People hadn't said a lot of those really basic things.
There was less philosophy already laying around.
Right.
Not to impugn the early philosophers, but they had a lot of just like fruit that was on the
vine ready to be picked.
Okay.
So I'll, I'll say, um, and they didn't really have like one of the important things about
a like philosophy education is like the history of these ideas and stuff like that.
And that history didn't exist back when the early philosophers, so a big part of what you
needed to learn about the tradition of philosophy and that stuff didn't exist.
So there's a real trend in his work that's a very, it's a very trivial thing compared
to some of his more dangerous ideas, but it's something that lives in the background of all
of them as well.
And that is that Stefan Malinou is a lazy and bad philosopher.
He uses words that sound smart to dumb people.
But if you spend any time parsing out how he attempts to use inference to make arguments
or diagram his sentences, you see clearly that he doesn't know how the basic tenets of logic
work and without logic, philosophy is just a bunch of dumb talking throughout his high
school and collegiate career.
Stefan Malinou was a member of debate clubs and teams, which should come as a surprise
to no one.
I've said it once and I will say it again.
The only people who stay on debate teams are pathological overachievers destined to
be valedictorian and deranged psychopaths who feel that they can train themselves to
use language as a weapon.
I would not be surprised to learn that Stefan Malinou was not his school's valedictorian.
Right, right, right.
Yeah, you know, I hate painting people who can literally debate me with such a broad
brush, but I think you're probably right.
I was in a debate club for a while and left because you got the temperature of the room.
I'm not going to get over without logic, philosophy is just dumb talking.
That is a fucking great line.
Um, I mean, I don't want to say that everybody who enjoys a debate club and stuff like that
is, you know, they're all the same person, but it is one of the, one of the biases that
I've had in my, my, like sort of my stereotypes that I've had for my entire life.
And I have never been wrong.
Anytime I've met somebody who's like, oh, I love debate club.
Saw that coming.
Here we fucking go.
So Stefan and his brother founded a tech company called Caribou Systems in 1995,
going on to sell the business off in 2000.
A listener of his show has written that on one of his private podcasts, because he puts
up stuff behind paywalls and stuff like that that are difficult to access.
But on one of those episodes, Malinu said that he received $800,000 from his share
of the business.
It took 18 months off work to write a book.
This may have been his book, Revolutions, which was self-published on December 9th, 2002.
And I would have grabbed a copy of that to read so I could tell you more about it,
but currently on Amazon, you can only buy a used copy for $1,099.
So I'm going to have to pass.
You can buy, you can find first editions of like Emily Dickinson that are cheaper than that.
I don't know.
I feel like those would, those would be more.
All right, fair enough.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
So Stefan has self-published a number of books over the years, the titles like The Gods of
Atheists, The Art of the Argument, Western Civilizations Last Stand, and On Truth.
I am annoyed.
Yeah.
I am already annoyed at him.
I would assume that Stefan would say that he self-publishes because Harper Collins and
Penguin Books are run by dirty collectivists who are afraid of his ideas.
Of course.
But I would suggest it's equally possible that he's afraid of editors notes and the
inevitable rejection letters that would come from him trying to actually get anyone to
publish his shit.
The number of literary agents who have sent me rejection letters is daunting and it can
be discouraging.
It can hurt your process.
Oh yeah.
So whatever the case with all that is, in 2005, Malinu began free domain radio as a podcast
that sends his grown into a full-fledged internet community.
He has books, videos, podcasts, podcasts behind paywalls, and a robust message board
where his followers aid in the initiation process of new recruits.
Many of the accounts that I've been able to find of people who have left free domain
radio feature the same point.
Somewhere along the line, something changed.
When it began, it wasn't very cultish.
It was just kind of a libertarian anarcho-capitalist show and discussion group.
But it changed.
And members of the community who experienced it have pointed largely to Stefan Malinu's
refusal to accept criticism, his narcissism, which only seemed to grow as the show got
more popular, and his clear projection about emotional issues and relationships as the
main driver of that change.
That doesn't sound like any cult leader I've ever heard of.
Now, I need to tell you about this documentary.
In late 2018, Stefan Malinu released a documentary called The Hundred Year March,
a Philosopher in Poland, where he ostensibly goes on a fact-finding mission to Poland
to experience their country's 100th anniversary parade.
What he actually does is something quite different, and that is what we will experience
here today.
Okay.
Now, that premise for a documentary seems kind of fun and joyful.
It seems like you would go there and you would see a nation celebrate its 100th year,
and they would all get together, and people would share stories,
and it would be a positive way of viewing a country.
You know, sure, we've done a lot of bad shit.
We're a nation.
Nations do bad shit.
That happens.
But at the end of the day, we're all the same people.
I'm guessing there's probably a little bit of that that he experienced,
but this documentary, taken as a whole, is profoundly fucked up.
It is not about going to a march.
It's about cruel indoctrination and absolutely clear demonstration of a man
coming to terms with being a white nationalist.
Oh, okay.
So that's what we're going to experience.
It's more like the 100th year anniversary of the Third Reich,
if the Germans had won.
So here's how we start the documentary,
where Stefan is walking around in the woods, a snowy wood, walking around in the snow,
giving out sort of the premise of what he's expecting to learn about.
The diversity of Europe, the true diversity of Europe has always fascinated me.
I have a pan-European family history from Ireland to England to Germany,
but my first name is actually Polish.
It's spelt in the Polish fashion.
And my family history bleeds eastward from Germany across to Poland.
And I find Poland incredibly fascinating.
My notebooks are full of so many questions,
and I feel like I almost can't rest.
They can't sleep until I get some answers.
How is Poland able to preserve its culture and its religiosity
and its history so passionately and so powerfully?
Why is it constantly referred to in the mainstream media press
as xenophobic, as far-right, as you name it,
ultra-nationalistic or some awful phrase?
Is any of this true?
I suspect that it's not.
But I'm an empiricist.
I always want to get the proof.
It is all true.
Oh, boy. Oh, boy.
I, I, oh, listen to that.
That's the longest sentence I've ever heard,
seven mile a new say, and I totally get it.
Because every part of that is a red flag,
but he says it in such a cheery and chipper way.
It's like, I'm excited to learn.
And you're like, yeah, but all the stuff you just said
makes me think that when you say the true diversity of Europe,
you, you, you don't, I'm from pan-European nations.
I'm both German and Polish.
Oh, right. Now that's, you, you're kind of,
you're kind of not getting right.
And you kind of also come to the idea,
like I think you can tell right off the bat,
even just by listening to just that introductory passage,
that when he comes to the end there,
he's like, everybody says that there's xenophobic,
hard right, ultra nationalist.
I suspect that isn't true.
The documentary itself, you already know good and goddamn well.
He's not going to debunk those things.
He's going to make peace with those things.
Gotcha. Gotcha.
That's the journey he's going on.
Yeah.
Is like, oh, wait, I love those things.
Yeah. A lot of people are saying
that it's hyper nationalist and xenophobic
and very white nationalist.
But you know what I say?
That's probably good.
Well, have you considered it?
Well, maybe you should try it.
We'll get through some of the dynamics
and all the stuff that's really at play here as we go along.
But I think one of the major reasons that he feels this way
is that when he went to Poland, no one yelled at him.
Like they, like they generally do in his daily life.
They accept me. They love me.
And I bet it's totally not because I'm white and look like them.
Here is him discussing that just a couple of minutes.
Yeah, not even a couple of minutes,
just a little bit after that last clip.
Here's something else we did,
which I'm telling you my friends would be impossible
to do any other place that I've ever spoken.
And that is we put out a request
for anybody who wanted to come by and chat
on social media, open to the world,
couldn't have done this in Canada,
couldn't have done this in America or Australia,
New Zealand, other places that I've talked.
So he's put out the call that anyone can come to his meetup,
that he's doing, he's having an exchange of ideas.
Nice little town hall.
Absolutely. And he's like,
I couldn't do that anywhere else,
but it's totally cool here.
Yeah, okay, sure.
You could like maybe a bad example, a bad parallel,
but like you can say the n-word at a clan meeting
and no one's going to yell at you.
You understand?
That's true.
In different circumstances,
you can do different things
that are unacceptable in other places.
Right.
Being a xenophobic, hard-right, ultra-nationalist guy
like Stefan Malinu is,
you get yelled at in other places
where people hate those ideas.
I can see his main appeal, I think,
is he is polishing turds.
I believe that's his main goal in life, right?
Because he put that, he put that so lovely here,
unlike anywhere else.
I can have a town hall and share ideas with people.
And you're like, oh, well, it's good to share ideas,
but you know, you can have a town hall
and share ideas in America.
What is it about Poland that makes you think this?
Maybe we're going to find out something different.
And what are those ideas you want to share?
That is a good question.
What are those ideas?
Are they different races,
are variable in quality of personhood?
Because that's going to get some pushback
from people in most places.
So Stefan Malinu puts out the address online
for this meetup.
And in this next clip, he describes where he goes,
and they show some footage of him going for this meetup
and it's at a bar that he describes,
and we'll discuss on the other side of this clip.
Everybody has been incredibly welcoming,
incredibly friendly.
And that is an amazing thing,
because the view from outside Poland,
there are these terrible international lies
about Poland, you know,
xenophobic, and terrified, and angry, and fascist,
and so on, right?
None of this is true, or if it's true,
the nicest, friendliest fascist, I think.
Dare I say it, fascism with a human face,
something like that.
So the bar that Stefan Malinu goes to,
the only way he describes it is,
a place where this guy,
they had an idea of a bar
where people could have, you know,
revolutionary ideas could be discussed.
People who are, you know, just left,
or they're just right of center,
you know, they're just objectivists.
People like that could come together
and have these ideas.
And the great thing about it is,
it's in the basement of the former
communist headquarters in Poland.
Oh, isn't that reclaiming our space?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So in reality, the bar that Stefan is giving a speech at
is a place called the Freedom Lounge.
Oh, I thought it was called White's, White's, White's Only.
A place released from December 27th, 2017,
describes it as, quote,
the first right-wing formation center in Warsaw.
The idea from the people who founded it
is clearly as a place to organize right-wing politics,
not as a place for the fun and free exchange of ideas.
Someone might argue that this constitutes a safe space
for those aspiring fascists, what they need,
so they can talk about their shit
without fear of someone calling them accurate names,
but whatever.
I'm more concerned about the fact
that the founders of this lounge
are very upfront about being a right-wing formation center,
but Stefan Malinó still insists
on hiding behind descriptions like,
this is a place where rationalists,
subjectivists, people just a little right of center
can come to discuss ideas.
That is an act of whitewashing intentions.
Oh, also, if you look at it,
you find that the Freedom Bar wasn't opened
by some freedom and discussion-loving Polish patriot.
It was funded entirely by the Warsaw Enterprise Institute,
a think tank which lists demography
as one of its primary areas of interest.
From the Warsaw Enterprise Institute's webpage,
quote, the Warsaw Enterprise Institute opened
the Freedom Lounge.
It was created with conservative
and free market youth in mind,
a place where youth organizations
will be able to organize their events free of charge,
use the in-house television studio
to develop their professional careers,
as well as for socializing and entertainment purposes.
The Freedom Lounge is part of a strategy
being employed by the WEI
to facilitate propaganda and social recruitment
towards hard-right ideas.
This isn't some cool coffee house scene
full of revolutionary thinkers.
It's a well-funded hard-right think tank created space
where fascism can fester,
which, when you think about it,
is exactly the kind of place
where Staphan Malinu would like to give a speech at.
Explain to me how what he said then makes sense.
Like, at the beginning, whenever he's like,
oh, you know, these people are described
as xenophobic, hard-right and fascist,
and they've been nothing but kind to me.
Well, it's fascism with a human face,
which you can read that code.
Right, but someone who looks like them
is genetically from that area
and hates as many people as they do as well.
Like, that is a meaningless sentiment
unless you are a person of color
or something along those lines
coming into a place where you would be treated xenophobically,
as opposed to a white dude with a fascist face.
I'm making a mistake about it.
Everyone in that bar is white.
Oh, of course, oh, of course.
Everyone in this entire documentary is white.
Not concerned, no.
Did not, that was asked and answered the moment
I read one of Staphan Malinu's tweets.
Heavily implied that you're not going to see
a lot of different folk in this.
Would be shocked if he's met a black person that he, you know, yeah.
So he gives this speech at this W.E.I. funded, organized,
and run far right, right wing politics formation center
in Warsaw.
And he's passing it off as this like,
cool fucking awesome place where just like really cool kids
who like free market get together in a talk shop.
Sure.
So that's great.
Can you point me to any cool kid
who likes discussing the free market?
I'm sure one exists, but I have no idea.
I don't think anybody's riding up in a motorcycle
in a leather jacket, 17 years old, like, hey, man,
do you understand how trickle down economics actually works?
Keynesian economics is alive.
Let's get on out of here.
Leader of the Peck.
Yeah, I don't know.
I'm sure someone exists in that mold,
but it's kind of comical to imagine them.
Rebel with the free market cause,
I believe was the original working title of the movie.
Or you go back to civil war type ideas.
Rebel with a lost cause narrative.
But he wants to put it to the world.
So he gives this speech and what a shock here
is his response to it afterwards.
He's just so amazed that it went so well.
We were in a glass enclosed area facing the street
talking about radical powerful philosophical ideas for hours
with no fear of crazy people who want to shoot us
or bricks coming through the window
or bomb threats emptying the building
or all the other things that have happened.
Other places that I've gone to speak.
That's an amazing experience.
Also, we talked about ideas all night without anyone crying racist
or sexist or cisgendered scum or heteronormal
or all of the other refuse and garbage
that clouds intellectual discussions in the west
and reduces us to identity politics of obsessed ashes
of our former selves.
It was wonderful to have that.
So, so wonderful.
You have a look on your face of just stupefied wonder.
I really don't like in the...
Dan, you're mean because there's no way that it...
Because look, immediately following this fucking New Zealand terror attack
we have some assholes being like no fear of crazy people
who might send bomb threats or other shit.
And I'm like that's because they look like you
and think the same shit you do.
Well, of course.
And it's the same shit that motivates the people
who throw bombs at minorities and shoot them.
Of course, you don't get fucking...
Oh, no.
I went to this meeting and there were zero burning crosses on it
and it was so surprising to me.
Well, like the reality is that what he's probably actually talking about
is less like bomb threats and actually him fearing for his safety.
He's really more talking about when I give speeches,
they get disrupted.
Like if I were to go to some college campus
in the United States and try and give a speech,
I would get that Milo treatment.
I would get people who were like,
fuck you.
No one says that you're racist or a cisgendered male.
And that's because everyone there is racist and a cisgendered male.
I mean not everybody,
but they exist inside a system where those concerns aren't concerns for them.
Yeah, exactly.
They keep all that shit either out or repressed to a level where it never...
The conversation about like those human rights just doesn't come up.
So in this next clip, he discusses meeting someone at this bar.
And this is the only place where I'm going to make a leap of logic
that is maybe irresponsible.
But I think I know who it is.
I'm not entirely sure, but I think I know who it is.
If you were making a leap of faith,
I would say it was Ezio Auditore from Assassin's Creed.
It is not.
It's not.
Well, at least not based on my suspicion.
Okay, fair enough.
But here is that clip.
I met a man in the Freedom Bar who had an in to the man
who was organizing the entire 100-year Freedom March.
Now, they were facing some incredible opposition.
It was actually shortly after I landed that we found out
that the mayor of Warsaw had cancelled the entire march, had banned the entire march,
and they were engaged in a significant legal battle and a culture battle
and a media battle to try and get the march back on.
So he meets this guy at the Freedom Bar
who is trying to get this march going
because it was cancelled by the mayor of Warsaw,
which we'll get into in a little bit.
No, no, no.
That's a big first question before you end any...
Before you're like,
and there's been a long culture battle and legal battle,
you should first be like,
the mayor of Warsaw cancelled the march.
Here is why the mayor of Warsaw cancelled the march.
He doesn't want to talk about that.
You can't just skip over that.
Oh, but we'll talk about it in great detail.
I imagine so.
But for now, we have to jump to who I think he's talking about
because he's one of the only other people who's interviewed in this documentary.
Okay.
Then the main focus of it,
who's the politician who's trying to get the march going.
Gotcha.
This in between, I believe, is this guy whose name is Lukas Warczyka.
And here is a little bit of his interview that Stefan has.
Liberal here would be more free market in America.
It means more left.
But yes, but I mean the Polish sense,
the European sense of the word, liberal as economic liberal.
It's like an insult in Poland because people have in mind,
not the period of collectivism during the People's Republic of Poland.
They have in mind the whole period between, let's say, 1993 and 2015,
when they say these were thieves who ruled.
So remember that 2015 date, because I think that's important.
Okay.
So I suspect that this is who is the person who is the in-between
that connects Stefan Malinu with the guy who we'll talk about in the next clip.
Sure.
And this guy, whether or not he is the person who was in-between,
kind of irrelevant.
Right.
This guy is named Lukas Warczyka.
If you Google him,
you'll find that he's a very accomplished photographer,
which is great,
but doesn't really explain his involvement in this documentary.
To understand that,
you have to go past the first page of search results.
That's tough to do.
If you do,
you find a really crazy coincidence that Lukas Warczyka is one of the primary writers
for the Warsaw Enterprise Institute,
the people who built the Freedom Bar that Stefan Malinu gave a speech at earlier.
On January 1st, 2019,
Warczyka published a column to crying how teaching children in school about hate speech
and its consequences amounted to liberal indoctrination of school kids.
He discusses a textbook passage about a pyramid that's in the textbook
that describes different levels of hate.
Quote,
the lowest floor of the pyramid is verbal lack of acceptance,
which is absurd in itself.
Are we obliged to prove of everything we do not like even verbally?
It looks like it,
because this layer we see exclusion language,
parentheses,
out-of-focus category arbitrarily interpreted by the left,
spreading myths,
stereotypes and rumors,
parenthetically,
we can't even gossip,
and even making malicious jokes.
According to Allport's scheme,
as shown in that picture,
all of these behaviors lead to violence at the end,
while the top of the pyramid is extermination.
So, to put in a nutshell,
maliciously joking with a friend,
I'm aiming for his extermination.
No.
He's making a-
That's a dumb, dumb, dumb, dumb, dumb argument.
Right.
So, he-
Are all of your pictures of disembodied hoods?
Well, so, I mean, he, you know,
he's making this same sort of culture battle argument
that we hear from Alex Jones all the time,
this idea of, like, these making younger people aware
of the consequences of their actions,
that sort of thing.
Yeah.
Is tantamount to indoctrinating them
to be all about the degeneracies of society.
What?
Now I can't even tell somebody to their face
that I don't like them because they're gay?
What?
So, Lucas wrote a piece skeptical about vaccines
on October 7th, 2018.
On August 19th, 2018,
he wrote a piece dismissive of the dangers of drunk driving.
It just goes on and on.
You start to see the picture coming into shape here.
There's the beginning of a pretty solid picture.
Dismissive of the dangers of drunk driving?
Right, because-
That's a hot take.
Well, the think tank probably accepts money
from the alcohol industry.
Oh, of course.
That's very common.
You see that sort of argument being made
by people who take alcohol industry money in America.
Like, these same sorts of arguments permeate.
The Warsaw Enterprise Institute is an organization
that is incredibly hard right,
and their fingerprints are all over this documentary.
The fact that at no point does Stefan Malinu
ever call out their involvement,
or the fact that they keep popping up all over the place,
pretty much every aspect of his trip to Poland,
makes me pretty suspicious
that it's because he was told not to mention it.
It sounds like that.
That's kind of a main feeling that I have here.
The idea that this bar that he's lionizing
as the place where we can have this free conversation
is entirely funded by them and run by them
as a right-wing formation center.
One of the very few people he interviews
who's a photographer outside of him being a pundit
for the Warsaw Enterprise Institute is just a photographer.
I don't know why he's in the documentary
unless there's some sort of a connection.
Yeah.
And it gets worse.
It seems like if you're going to this bar,
which you hail as this wonderful place,
you might want to give people a little bit of history
about who started that bar, who's funding that bar,
the people that we can thank for that bar's existence.
Why not?
Like, have you ever gone to a cool bar?
You know, you've been to so many cool bars in the college town.
You know, we were in Austin.
We went to some cool bars there,
and any time we asked people about it, they'd be like,
yeah, this was started by this guy,
and it's got a long history.
There's no point would anybody just be like,
yeah, it's a cool place for people to hang out.
If your perception of it is that this is a heroic,
important, free speech wonder,
the ninth wonder of the world here in Warsaw,
then it would behoove, or not behoove you really,
but like, it wouldn't be an ugly thing to just say like,
and thank God the Warsaw Enterprise Institute
paid for this to exist.
Right.
Wouldn't you be excited to tell people?
Because they're good in your world.
Look at how excited would you be to tell people
about how they created this wondrous place?
Right.
Because yeah, because they are nothing but heroes.
Yeah.
To the narrative that you're putting forth,
unless you recognize on some level, Stefan,
that recognizing how they're all over this documentary
would make most right-thinking people think,
oh, this was funded by the WEI.
This is propaganda.
This is 100% paid propaganda.
I went to the Prager University.
Ha, ha, okay.
Now we're done.
Goodbye.
You can stop right there.
Yeah.
So I don't know if that Lucas Warcheca
is the guy who connected Stefan with this guy
he's going to talk to, who's trying to get
the march running in earnest.
Yeah.
But in this next clip, we do meet that guy.
This is the map of Warsaw, and we start the march here.
We go this street through the center of Warsaw,
through the bridge, and we finish the march
close to National Stadium.
So he's giving Stefan sort of the lay of the land
of what this march is going to be about,
and that's all good and well.
First we march southwest, and then southeast,
and then northeast, and then northwest,
and then we go back down southeast,
and then southwest, and then go back over northwest,
and then southwest, and then we march back up northeast,
and then back down southeast, and then go back down
one more time straight south, and one more time straight east.
How long you can do this?
I'm pretty much, I think if you diagram it out,
you know what I got.
So this is the voice of Krzysztof Bosak.
He's pretty much the primary interview subject
for this documentary.
He's credited as the organizer of Poland's
100-year anniversary march.
Although interestingly, whoever edited the film
misspelled organizer as O-R-G-I-N-I-S-E-R,
which is pretty easy and pretty simple fuck up
for someone to make, especially if they talk
about IQ all the time, like Stefan Malinu does.
He's organiser.
Missing fucking organizer.
He's organiser than you.
The more important thing here is that
Krzysztof is not just the organizer of the march,
he's also a far-right politician,
who's only gotten more right wing as his career has gone on.
He's currently a member of the National Movement Party,
the party that only came into existence in 2013,
and has been a force of hypernationalism
and xenophobia ever since,
with a little dash of LGBT folk don't deserve rights
thrown in for good measure.
Sure, you gotta toss that in.
Yeah, to taste.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Though the party is technically only six years old
at this point, the Independent has reported
that they trace their roots to, quote,
anti-Semitic groups active before World War II.
They aren't a wildly successful party
from an electoral standpoint,
but they are very relevant in terms of how they've
played a role in shifting Poland's politics
to the extreme right in recent years,
along with a couple of other parties
that are affiliated with them,
who surprisingly, or not surprisingly,
are also involved in organizing this march.
So we trace our history back to anti-Semitism
before World War II.
Yes.
All right.
That's not a ringing endorsement?
I believe we'll get a little bit more into that
a little bit later in the episode.
I definitely wouldn't call that a credit.
No.
Like, if I was-
But I don't think he-
I don't think he credits-
I don't think he in an interview would say that.
Oh, no, of course not.
But I think that it's known, and they do talk about it,
and that critical coverage of him might point that out,
that he's a leading politician in the National Movement
Party that has deeply anti-Semitic roots.
That's not how it would want to be brought up
on a comedy show.
You know what I'm saying?
You don't want that to be in your intro?
No, no, no.
And coming up to the stage, tracing his lineage
all the way back to anti-Semites from before World War II.
Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for Jordan Ol-
No, thank you.
He was into anti-Semitism before it was really uncool.
Back when it was just really uncool,
and before it was really uncool.
So you remember that that other guy, Lukas Wojciechka,
was saying he was describing that terrible period
as being between 1993 and 2015.
And part of that is probably because Poland's
current president has been in office since 2015.
And in that time, he's done a good deal of work
towards what you might call solidifying anti-Democratic power.
Andrzej Duda has essentially crippled their court system
by refusing to swear injustices to the constitutional tribunal,
and refusing to give their rulings official state backing.
Despite those troubling signs,
Polish journalists routinely dismiss Duda
as just a puppet of the real power in the Polish government,
Jaroslaw Kaczynski.
He's the leader of the Law and Justice Party,
which Duda was a part of until he got elected,
and then he became an independent.
But all signs point to him really still being
under the sway of this Kaczynski.
Kaczynski, god damn, so many whys and c's all over the place.
I understand.
Kaczynski is a hard-right nationalist who aspires
to assert complete government control over the judiciary,
put controls in place over the media,
and usher in what he calls a, quote, moral revolution.
He's super bad news, and he's head of the party
that elected Duda, as well as their current prime minister
in Poland, by passing them off as moderate candidates.
When in reality, all indications are that they're actually
getting their marching orders directly from him.
If it's not clear why this is a problem,
Peter Stasinski, a journalist who published
underground periodicals against the Communist Party
in the 80s, put it this way, quote,
there are no longer checks and balances of power.
The parliamentary system is dysfunctional.
The constitutional court and judiciary are paralyzed.
New laws passed by the parliament
can't be challenged or changed.
The government is supposed to publish sentences
of the constitutional court to the Journal of Laws
for them to become legally effective.
This is required by the Constitution.
But the government, by not printing them,
paralyzes the constitutional court,
which has been reduced to announcing its sentences
on the internet without any legal effect.
It's a very dangerous time.
It's a very dangerous time,
because in that kind of an environment,
evil people are the first to realize
that there are no longer consequences for their actions.
In this vacuum in Poland, fascists and xenophobic groups
have been growing in power at a very rapid pace since 2015,
knowing that the state isn't going to be there
to push back against the mob.
This all came to a head at the Independence Day March in 2017,
the year before this documentary is shot,
which brings us to the reason why
there isn't going to be a march this year,
according to the mayor of Warsaw.
There's a real reason, but here's what Kristof Bosak says.
What is their excuse, I guess?
To cancel the march?
It's pure nonsense.
There is no reason in Polish law,
we went to the court and the court
cancelled the cancellation of the march.
So we organized the march since nine years.
We organize it always legally.
It's not a far-right march.
It's a national conservative march, patriotic march.
Are those different?
Organized by grassroots right-wing organizations
from conservative libertarians,
center-right people, two nationalist traditional Catholics,
monarchists and so on.
Very different people in one march
connected by national pride and patriotism
and belief that Polish independence
is something very important for us.
So that's a great way to say things,
but that's complete bullshit.
So this documentary is literally called Third Polishing, then?
Yes.
Okay.
So you may remember the videos that came out in 2017
of the Independence March in Poland.
And if you do, you remember seeing a horrifyingly large group
of people with some real fucked-up signs
chanting horrible things.
There were chants of pure Poland, white Poland,
and refugees get out that broke out all over the march route.
One man interviewed by a news station
said that he was marching to, quote,
remove Jewry from power.
Tommy Robinson made the trip from the UK
specifically to be there for that Independence Day march.
Andy Eddles, a language teacher in Poland,
described the march as, quote,
50 to 100,000 mostly football hooligans hijacking patriotism.
People in black masks marched behind
large banners that read Islam equals terror
and carried signs with slogans like
white Europe of brotherly nations.
Many carried signs displaying the Falanga,
the symbol of the National Radical Camp,
an ultra-nationalist Polish political party
which traces its roots to the Falanga National Radical Camp,
a group active in the 1930s
who defined themselves by their fascism,
anti-Semitism, and eliminationism.
They were a large driving force
of anti-Semitic violence in Poland
in the lead up to World War II.
Their party was outlawed by the state back then,
but now in 2017,
their banner flew freely at this Independence Day march.
As you might imagine,
the optics of this were fucking terrible.
Oh, no, why?
Politicians marched alongside outright fascists,
a celebration of national independence
being characterized by people with signs
demanding a white Europe.
That sort of thing is not good for your look.
If you're...
The politicians are like,
I don't want to be associated with this.
Whether or not I am okay with it,
I don't want to be associated with it.
Too many of these videos
are making it into international media.
Yeah, I don't like...
Like, when you describe them as football hooligans
who are also racist, I'm like,
oh, yeah, we have those in America.
There's a reason Colin Kaepernick doesn't have a job.
We don't even need to bother
with the football-equal sucker here.
You just use your word, we use ours.
Same shit, different day.
So, obviously, people weren't happy about that march
and the optics and the visuals that came out of it
and people being like,
uh-oh, that's really fucking scary.
That sort of thing.
And when the 2018 march rolled around,
the mayor of Horsesaw said no to the organizers,
like Kristoff Bosock,
saying, quote,
the city has suffered enough from aggressive nationalism.
President Duda decided to make his own independent
stay march to replace the one that was banned,
those being organized by these hyper-nationalist groups,
that sounds like an adult thing to do.
But he specifically said that if anyone was carrying
a racist or fascist banner, they would be arrested.
So they canceled the march.
No, they did do the march,
but it was a sanitized, whitewashed version of it
under threat of arrest.
Gotcha.
The presence of chaotic laws
and rampant unconstitutionality
taking place since 2015
have created the environment in Poland
where these sorts of things are bound to happen.
We've seen the same thing happen in our country
where fascists and Nazis feel free
to walk around in public, unashamed.
This is a large-scale problem in the world,
which is why it should come as no surprise
that at the 2017 march,
fascists also marched with signs that said,
we want God, which was a reference to Polish song.
They weren't quoting the song.
They were quoting Trump referencing the song
in a speech that he gave in Poland a few months prior.
Of course, of course.
A defense of the march was published
in Politico's European arm.
It makes a very strange attempt
to minimize the fascist character
of many of the march's attendees.
Quote, out of the 60,000 people in attendance,
no more than 10% could legitimately be called
far-right nationalist or the fascist variety.
Too many.
So that's a real...
Some would say too many.
So this is...
6,000?
6,000's a lot.
This is a really defensive guy
trying to defend this march,
and he's starting with 10%?
That is not a good sign.
Look, I was there, 60,000 total people,
and only 6,000 people told me that
n-words need to go.
Like, it was...
It's so nice.
It's nice.
So that post ends with an argument
that this is really about how the EU
was desperate to, quote,
use the threat of fascists
as an excuse to push for further
centralization of bureaucratization.
It's probably worth noting that that defense,
that article in Politico,
was written by Tomas Warlobski,
who's the president of the Warsaw Enterprise.
I was about to say...
I didn't want to pull...
Because I knew this was coming,
because I did the same thing to you
whenever I did my climate change episode.
But yeah, I saw that one coming a long way off.
That was not difficult to guess in advance.
Fingerprints everywhere, everywhere.
So that's kind of what's going on with this march.
It got way out of hand in 2017,
and the city was like,
fuck this.
And then they came up with a sanitized version
that was agreeable to everybody.
The nationalists still got to be a part of the march.
The government got to celebrate the 100th anniversary.
Everyone got to come out and do this,
and it didn't appear to be something so fucked up,
like it was the year before.
Right. Nobody screamed kill the Jews.
Everybody was like, let's get rid of the Jays.
They mumbled kill the Jews.
They were talking about the Blue Jays, I assume.
Yeah, they don't like Jose Bautista.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Don't have any other Blue Jays reference.
That was not a bad one.
That was a good one.
That was good work.
Thank you.
But so Stefan is here,
and he's really excited to go to this march.
And it would be hard for me to see that, hear that
without thinking.
Part of why you're excited to go to this march
is because you know what happened in 2017.
Yeah.
It doesn't, it, I don't know how to encapsulate this other
than he saw the image of what was being reported
in the 2017 march.
So he comes to the 2018 march with the idea of like,
is it as bad as everyone says?
And obviously it's not going to be as bad
because the government has stepped in
and said, we will arrest you
if you have racist and fascist signs.
Right.
If the government didn't do that,
in 2018, the march would have been probably
just as bad as in 2017.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But they had to control some of those aspects.
So what you're seeing is actually the opposite
of free speech being represented and manifested here.
And it's a trap because Stefan Malinou
is going to come in,
he's going to see the march,
he's like, everyone lies about them.
I didn't see any Jew bashing here.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Everyone is just so full of shit.
The only reason of that, that is the case,
is because of state control, which you are super against.
And he knew that the, so I don't know
when he made the plan to go to this march,
but he knew before he made the plan to go to the march
that the government was going to clamp down on hate speech.
Maybe.
So my supposition, my supposition.
Or the Warsaw Enterprise Institute knew that.
Well, yeah, yeah.
My supposition is also, it wouldn't have mattered.
It could have been a shit show like it was in 2017,
but he still would have made the same documentary.
Do you know what I'm saying?
I don't know.
I don't think he could have.
Well, he probably couldn't have, but he would have tried.
He would have tried his hardest.
He would have tried to make the same point
with a different documentary, with a different presentation.
It would probably end up being about the awful Antifa leftists
in Poland who are trying to stop this march from happening
or something like that.
It would turn into a victim narrative as opposed to a
isn't this white ethno-state wonderful kind of,
which is where we're going.
Spoiler alert, that's where we're going.
I went to a bar where they allowed black people,
and I was yelled at.
Isn't it black people's fault?
I went to a bar where there were a ton of black people around,
and I said that they genetically have lower IQs.
And they weren't willing to engage me in serious debate?
They wouldn't let the free exchange of ideas happen, man.
Oh, no.
Get the fuck out of here.
No, shit.
That's my position on that sort of thing.
No fucking shit.
So there's an interesting irony that Stefan Malinu
claims that he has some sort of Polish heritage,
but he's not really specific about it,
and it's not a major part of his identity at all.
He thinks that his name is spelled in the Polish way,
which is whatever.
I don't give a shit.
But it's shocking to me how excited he is to take part
in this Polish Independence Day thing when he's not Polish.
He's not involved with their country at all.
And so here's him expressing some of that.
So here, you're able to celebrate being Polish.
You're able to celebrate Poland and everything that has survived
and everything it will accomplish in the future,
unironically, without having to defer to other people's feelings,
other culture's feelings, other racist feelings.
You can just celebrate who you are and where you are.
I really wanted the taste of that,
like I could return to that brief window of my childhood
where celebration and pride was possible.
And I can't wait to see it in the flesh come to life again.
Before this, he was talking about how when he was a younger man in the UK,
there was a pride that you could have in being English.
And now that sort of disappeared because of,
I guess, diversity and multiculturalism.
So he's like, now I'm here in Poland,
and maybe I can taste those sunset vistas of my youth
that I remember so romantically in my head
of being proud of being British by sort of association or it's a mess.
Like from just from a moral standpoint, does what he does what he,
does he think what he just said is a good thing?
Yeah.
Because I feel like what he just said is you're allowed to celebrate being,
like when he says without having to defer to other races,
is like, wait, do you mean without having to consider what other people think?
Period.
Yeah, exactly.
You're allowed to celebrate being Polish.
You're allowed to celebrate being this part of this nation.
And you don't even have to think about how you're ruining other people's lives.
Like that's kind of what he's just said, right?
Well, I really kind of think that he's just saying,
like as long as you have a white nation,
you don't have to be concerned about other races and what you're doing to them
because they aren't there.
Right.
So at this point in the documentaries,
Stefan plays a bunch of swelling music and shows B-roll of the Independence Day march.
Again, it's important to note that this is the 2018 march,
which is operating with a strict order from the government
that it's a sanitized version because of last year.
This isn't a free speech haven as he wants to portray it as.
It's a march that exists with the full expectation that if you show up
with a no more Jews sign, you're going to get arrested.
Like I said earlier, this is a very literal representation of repressiveness
in a march that he's attending,
but it definitely helps him create the visuals that he needs.
Namely that the ultra nationalists he's hanging out are really just super into Poland,
not that they're crazy xenophobic bigots.
Right.
The optics are there for him so perfectly and he presents it
in the worst manipulative way possible.
By censoring speech, I present this place as a bastion of free speech.
Right.
Yeah.
So in this next clip, we get to Stefan sort of wrestling with the idea
that he's so anti-collectivist to a very serious extent.
Like he's been an individualist that's defined so much of his career.
Like you can find probably a decade's worth of videos on his YouTube channel
that he has, I would say he should have taken down some of them.
And thankfully I've got copies of them.
So even if he does take them down, I don't really give a shit.
Wonderful.
But there's so many things that like from his career,
one of the biggest pieces of it is a obsession with individualism,
like to a severe extent.
And as he discusses why he went to Poland,
he starts to talk about how he wanted to challenge his individualism
and whether or not there is the possibility of collectives being okay.
And that's fucked up given what we know about the collective
that he's hanging out with.
But it's not unexpected.
Oh boy.
I also wanted to put my individualism to the test
because those of you who watched my show for the last 12 years
know that I'm a very staunch individualist.
Know that I am skeptical if not hostile to collectivism as a whole.
And here you can see we have people marching in the same direction,
carrying the same flag with the same pride.
And I have to tell you,
I feel like something has just kind of broken into within me.
That Aristotle said 2500 years ago,
whoever can live alone is either an animal or a god.
Well, I of course am neither an animal nor a god.
And I remember the pride when I was a child of the Second World War
at the Battle of Britain.
And the last few days here in Poland
have just kind of shattered something within me.
In that the sense of collective unity,
the sense of collective pride,
the sense of having a tribe,
the sense of having a culture you can be proud of
has arisen within me.
And I've never been to Poland before.
My first name is Polish.
I know there's family history,
but I've never been to Poland before.
And I can't tell you how strange a feeling it is
that I have a sense of unity
with people in a country I've never been to before.
I think this clip is a perfect encapsulation
of how bigots hide behind lofty ideas
to mask their real positions.
In this clip, Stefan claims that his longstanding position
of being an individualist is being shattered
by being around these people
who are all marching in the same direction
and are there for the same reason.
That's bullshit.
Have you ever been to the Pride Parade?
How about the Puerto Rican Day Parade?
Any of these parades that I've been to in Chicago
that are equally moving if you just engage with what?
No, collectivists.
All that took for Stefan Malinu
to reconsider one of his deepest held beliefs
that he has, namely that a man is an individual
and collectives are to be viewed with suspicion.
All that took to shatter that
was to be walking around in a large collective
of only white people.
That is all that is happening here in any way.
That is it.
I was a rugged individualist living in Atlanta
and then believing that I could never find a collective.
I went to my first clan rally
and I finally found out that collectives aren't bad.
Fuck you.
I didn't want this to be a thing any more than you do,
but the moment he started saying,
like I've always been an individualist
and I finally found a collective,
I was literally in my head with screaming
just cut his dick off.
Like they're screaming.
But then also at the same time,
what you have to recognize, I think,
is that this is the same thing as Alex
once he realizes the white nationalist applications
of Rex 84, like flipping on his very longstanding beliefs
because those beliefs are conditional.
Those things that these people have built
their entire careers, personalities, identities,
philosophies on, flip.
As soon as they recognize, oh, this works better for me.
Yeah.
As soon as that being absorbed in the whole of an ethno-state
or whatever, as soon as you experience that,
you're like, oh, shit, individualism sucks.
I want to be with my whites.
That sucks, man.
It's so sad.
It's such a bummer to see.
And it's one of the reasons why I argue
at the beginning of this episode,
and we'll continue to in every episode
that we do about Stefan,
is that he is a lazy bad philosopher.
Because how did you not consider these possibilities
in the last 12 years you've been doing your show
as like, well, maybe I would be into collectives
if they were the kind of collectives I would super be
and to namely ones that exclude people I'm creeped out by
or afraid of or whatever.
So I think in that last clip there,
you got the sense that Stefan was about to cry.
You kind of, I don't know if you could pick that up,
but if you were watching the video,
you could definitely see some wavering in his like,
I've never, I've never seen a collective like this.
Something in me has shattered in this next clip.
He starts crying.
This quiet unity, this quiet pride, this calm resolution,
this celebration without giddiness, I've never seen it before.
And I feel almost, I hate to say born again,
but almost like something has broken within me
that I have put up to defend myself
against criticisms of unity, against criticisms of pride.
It is an appalling thing to take away people's history.
It is an appalling thing to take away people's pride.
And it is an appalling thing to take away their unity,
because I've never felt it more strongly than I do today.
Together we stand divided.
Gross.
We fall.
Gross.
So then the swelling music kicks back in.
Fuck you.
More b-roll of the march.
You emotionally manipulative piece of shit.
Oh, totally.
I'm gonna, he's-
But I also do think he's-
His new name is Turd Polisher Steve.
But dude, I'm not against that.
But I also-
I'm calling him a TPS report from now on.
I'm fine with that.
But I also do think he's struggling a little bit.
You know, like I know that there is like clear intention
and malice and propaganda going on here,
but I do think that there is some part of him that's like,
fuck, I realize what my career is about now.
This is what I've been talking about this.
Like, it's not really even that he had to go to Poland
to see these things to get to that place.
I think it's just a realization of like,
all right, let's just get real.
Yeah.
Let's just get real.
This is what I'm about already.
Fuck it.
I'm a white nationalist.
Yeah.
I think, yeah, this is perfect.
Look, I've been to the gay pride parade and I felt zero pride
and I felt like I was being attacked,
but I go to this-
So disgusted.
I go to this white nationalist parade
and I realize that collectivism is great.
So now I want a nation for whites,
I want a nation for gays,
I want a nation for black people.
I want to say this super clearly and very specifically.
The footage that he shows of the parade in Poland,
like, it is all white people.
Yeah.
But I don't think that all of those people are bigots
or anything like that.
Sure.
There's a lot of people who are there with their kids
who are out for the anniversary of their country's parade
in Warsaw.
That's cool.
Yeah, absolutely.
And everybody loves the fucking parade, man.
Totally.
Yeah.
It's just a parade.
Yeah.
There is no damning indictment of everybody
who was in that parade.
Right.
But knowing the history of the previous years of that parade,
it's tough to escape the character of the march itself.
And again, not an indictment of all of these people there
or the city of Warsaw or Poland even as a whole.
Like, it's not the people's fault there.
There's something scary that's happening there.
Yeah.
Is it like when they showed B-roll of the parade,
was it like a fun parade?
Yeah, a lot of it seemed pretty awesome.
Yeah.
There were people with flares and stuff like that.
OK, that's great.
I remember growing up, I was in the marching band
and I used to play for the town parade
that we would always do.
The high school marching band would always play.
And I remember people throwing candy out.
There were floats.
Is it that kind of thing?
Is it that kind of?
No.
It's mostly just people walking with Polish flags.
OK, I mean, I guess that's fine.
Yeah, and some music and people singing patriotic songs
and stuff like that.
But as it becomes night, there are people
with flares and doing sort of, it's not really even a dance,
but sort of a demonstration with the flares.
Right.
But there are.
See, this is, again, why Carnival is the best parade.
Absolutely.
When you have to describe something as not really a dance,
then you don't understand how joy works.
Stefan would say a little gay of Carnival.
But the other thing, too, is all of the B-roll,
until it gets to evening when there's those people
with the flares, it's all just people with Polish flags.
Yeah.
And part of that is what President Duda said, which is,
I believe his quote was.
Put away your hate the Jews and put up your Polish flags.
It was, you can come, but only come with your red and white flags.
OK.
Something along those lines.
Like, that's the only thing that's going to be acceptable
for people to be marching with.
Right, right, right.
And so people understood that we're going to get arrested
if we come with anything else.
So we've already got our first absolute bullshit thing
that he's doing here is he's saying all of these.
OK, I apologize for saying first.
Our what?
Let's call it 68th.
He is saying that the people who have covered the parade
in the past have gotten the parade wrong.
Because this parade that he's at currently
does not reflect the coverage from the previous parade.
Yes.
He is not admitting that the current parade does not
reflect at all the previous parades.
The circumstances are entirely different.
So both can be true.
You can have the white nationalist horrifying parade
that the mainstream media covered perfectly.
And you can also have the relatively calm parade in 2018.
Sanitized version for optics.
But that they're not mutually exclusive.
No, but he's trying to present them as though
they were mutually exclusive.
Well, because the part that he wants to express really
is that what was being talked about in the 2017
aftermath and all that stuff was bullshit.
It was fake.
It was just a bunch of collectivists coming in.
False flags.
Globalists coming in and saying like this is like they
are fake newsing this wonderful celebration of Poland.
Right.
All this and whatever.
So at this point, there's a lot of swelling music
and more b-roll of the parade.
Then the parade ends and there's more sort
of heroic contemplative music.
And Stefan Malinu is at a graveyard.
And he starts waxing poetic about Poland's role
in World War II.
I already don't want to hear this.
We're not going to listen to any of it
because it's so rambling and so long.
OK, thank God.
And also point taken.
Like it's whatever thing he could be trying to bring
into the conversation, we know.
And that is that World War II fucking sucked.
It was a horrible time for people, including the Polish.
Like everybody did not have a good time in World War II.
So him waxing rapistotic about Poland's role in World War II.
It's like, yes, sure, doesn't help your point here.
It really doesn't.
He loves to, whenever people critique him on Twitter
and stuff like that, his stock response is always not
an argument to send back to them.
So I would suggest you blowing hard in a fucking graveyard
about why this white nationalism that you were coming
to accept, that's not an argument.
Whatever you're doing is not an argument.
No.
So at this point, Stefan Malinuk gets on a train.
And he has a little bit of a breakdown on this train.
Not a crying breakdown.
He did that at the parade.
But he has a little bit of a breakdown about his ideas,
his philosophy that he's maintained for all these years,
particularly about the idea of collectivism being bad.
Is there a benevolent collectivism?
Is there a good version of collectivism?
Have I seen it here in Poland?
I have seen so many negative aspects of collectivism
that it became a devil with no redeeming characteristics
or features for me.
It was a cloud with no silver lining.
It was a night without a dawn, a rain without an end.
And almost like trying to sand or jam a square peg
into a round hole, I have to face the fairly beautiful
collectivism of the Poles and try
and figure it into my mindset of collectivism as bad.
Even my definition of collectivism has been found wanting.
But I am an empiricist, and I also respect emotion.
And if my emotions react positively
to the beauty and strength of Polish collectivism,
I can't just dismiss that.
I can't just say, well, that's just a silly throwback
to medieval tribalism.
And it must be expunged from my character.
So that's tough.
That's tough to square.
So Turd Polisher Steve here.
Right, GPS.
Does everybody not?
I don't understand how he has a cult,
because it's very clear that he is a pompous, pretentious fuck
who should shut the hell up.
I don't understand how people are listening to this.
That's a pretty understated criticism.
No, just, no, even if it wasn't.
No, that's very real.
Even if he wasn't a white nationalist.
Even if he was just a guy who was really in the play-doh.
Like, even if he was in line with our politics.
Yeah, even if he's like, you're a pompous, pretentious fuck.
Shut up.
Right.
So in this next clip, Stefan is still on the train.
And he talks some more about this idea
of this benevolent collectivism.
But again, you have to recognize that what he's talking about
is being surrounded by only white people.
And how awesome it is that no one yelled at him
when he had that show at a bar, basically.
And therefore, I feel very strongly
that a great treasure has been withheld from me.
A great treasure has been turned into a curse for me.
And that the collectivism that is beneficial
has been driven out by a great thirst to implant in me
a collectivism.
Ah, this just struck me.
If you drive out the benevolent collectivism,
you atomize people.
You alienate them from their tribe, their peers,
their benevolent gang.
I have, for the most part, over the course of my career
as a public intellectual, worked a lot.
Hold the fucking shut up.
Fuck you.
Because you see, collectivism was just terrible.
Collectivism was awful.
And therefore, those who have organized themselves
along collectivist lines have a great advantage over me.
Because I lack a tribe.
I lack a community.
I lack a group.
Shut the fuck up.
Even now, being out of the studio,
it was a solitary occupation.
It was me and a camera.
Being out here with these wonderful people
who are organizing and filming
and recording what it is that I'm doing
is a very different experience.
So that's something interesting to me,
because he's saying that there's people
who are organizing and filming,
and, like, you know, there are other people
who are involved in this documentary.
And I'll tell you that at the end of this,
he has a credit, like, the credits.
There's nobody mentioned in the credits
who could have been the camera people.
There's only one.
There's two title cards in the credits.
One is starring Stefan Malinou.
And the other one is thanks to the whites.
No, it's thanks to the people that he interviewed
in the documentary.
And then a Breitbart writer.
I don't think that,
I think that that probably was just like,
because that Breitbart writer
does talk about Polish issues a lot.
Yeah, he was probably like,
hey, you should try going to Poland one time.
Right.
The thanks, that guy who works for Breitbart
is the only person who doesn't appear on camera
in the thanks.
Is he doing this with a...
And the thanks to Freedom Bar,
but he doesn't thank the Warsaw Enterprise Institute,
which is probably not suspicious.
But there's nothing in there to indicate
that there were camera people.
Is he using a handheld or...?
No.
No.
So he doesn't list any of the people who actually...
No credits for the people who are actually working on this,
which again strikes me as very suspicious,
because it's possible that those people
were employees of the WEI.
That sounds right.
It's very possible that these people don't want credits.
Yeah.
Because...
Well, the fingerprints will be here.
That'll be too obvious for people to trace back
that we brought you here
to do this propaganda documentary.
Right, right, right.
Now, I can't prove that,
but it's my very strong suspicion.
It could have just been the Warsaw Tourism Board, Dan.
It doesn't necessarily have to be
the Warsaw White Nationalist Party Institute.
That's...
I don't think they would be there.
No, the Tourism Board is really influential
with Stefan Malinu, our third polisher, Steve.
So you heard there, you know, he's talking about,
like, I've been deprived of this benevolent,
wonderful, beneficial collectivism
that is all white people hanging out, which is great.
Yeah, the more he uses the word benevolent,
the more I want to punch him in the face.
And he's like, I have no team.
I have no tribe.
And he's like, go fuck yourself.
You have your work on.
You're doing all right.
You white nationalist piece of shit.
So at the end of that clip,
he's talking about how, like, being in the studio
is a solitary exercise.
It's just me and a camera.
Bip, bada-do, boop, boop.
Which is what he chose to do.
I mean, that's what he's always done.
Back in the day, his oldest videos
he can find on his YouTube channel
are him driving around in a car with a camera on him.
Just driving to work, I guess, or whatever.
Just driving around, given...
Just on a commute.
Yeah, just giving like a little like,
well, here are my thoughts about blah, blah, blah.
Right, right.
I'm going to work at my homeopath shop.
So while I'm on the way,
let me tell you about collectivism.
He's always sought that singular thing.
That individualist thing.
It's always been what he's about.
And in this next clip,
I think that it comes from him
being an anti-social fuck on some level.
But he blames the globalists for it.
There is strength in numbers.
There is strength in community.
There is power in the tribe.
The enemy we face is great, and powerful,
and organized, and well-financed,
and enormous in number.
Maybe they tricked me into fighting alone
so that I and everyone would just lose.
Boo!
Boo!
Boo, get off the stage, you suck!
Even from, like, you take any of the ideas out of it.
Yeah, that sucked.
Oh, my God.
You goddamn mope.
Jesus.
They tricked me into fighting alone.
Go fucking cry for yourself, you asshole.
Get out of here, dumb, dumb.
Jesus Christ.
This is so frustrating, because it's like,
oh, oh, so that asshole in your college philosophy class
could just have started at Kult
if he tried hard enough and had a British accent?
That is so fucking annoying.
Maybe.
If you've ever been in college in a philosophy class,
you've met this asshole, and he's fucking stupid,
and you know it.
Yeah, I was a philosophy minor.
I met another of those guys.
You met this asshole.
Yeah.
God.
Yeah, but I mean, one of the things that is important to
is that, like, I know that you're resistant to this idea,
but Stefan Malinu is pretty smart.
It's just not the right kind of intelligent.
I didn't say he wasn't smart.
I know, I understand that.
Yeah, I just said he was a turn polisher.
People resist whenever I say, sort of, apparently positive
things about awful people.
Right, right, right, right.
I understand what you said.
And I don't need to say that he's smart in terms of, like,
he's able to analyze these ideas and come with a good
conclusion.
He's smart in the way that he's able to package things.
He's smart in the way he's able to present these ideas as
sounding less crazy than they actually are.
He's smart in the way that Ted Cruz was the debate team captain
or whatever it is.
If you want to go back to that metaphor, like, there's
definitely an intelligence there.
Yeah.
It's just dumb.
Yeah.
So that was on the train, but in this next clip, he's back in
the graveyard.
He's talking in the graveyard, and I do think this clips a
little bit longer, but if you really listen to it, I do think
that this is an accidental condemnation of what he does
and what the people he surrounds himself do and their
effect on the world.
That sounds about right.
If it was natural for us to hate each other, why would so
many words and speeches and books be required to teach us to
hate each other?
Why would we need to be fed from the black tea to propaganda
and sophistry?
Why would we need to constantly be force fed this propaganda
if it was natural for us to hate each other?
Where do these graves come from?
They do not come from human nature.
They come from the language we imbibe, the language we speak,
the hatreds that we sow, where we say, this group will exploit
you, this group will cheat you, this group rightfully took what
was yours, and we're going to take it back for you by force.
This group deserves to die.
This group are your friends.
These groups are your enemies.
This is the language we constantly are given, are force fed.
At this point, a good end to this documentary would be, I'm so
sorry for my career.
Yeah, I was going to say, if it was natural to do the thing
that I do, then why would, oh, no, that's me.
I'm the one who's doing this.
These graves are the result of propaganda.
Yep.
Yep.
Yep.
Now take that thought a step further.
Yeah.
I'm a propagandist.
No!
That step isn't taken, and instead it just strengthens his
resolve.
That's such the, are we the baddies moment.
Yeah.
And it turns out he's not.
He is.
Facts us.
I do not believe that these hatreds are innate to us, and then the
moment that the social order breaks down, they erupt like
dormant volcanoes and have us at each other's throats all the
time.
I believe that we can live in much greater peace.
There will be differences.
There will be disagreements.
There will be arguments.
But I believe that we can live in much greater peace.
But to live in greater peace, we must be very, very careful about
the language that we use to describe our group, other groups,
or whether there are even groups at all to begin with.
I believe that we have a much greater common humanity, and we must
be taught to hate each other.
Sure?
I'm fine with that.
Where do these graves come from?
These graves come from language.
These graves come from the seeds of hatred that are sowed by the
syllables of sophistry.
Nice alliteration.
All right.
The syllables of sophistry?
Now, that analysis is kind of like so vague as to be meaningless,
because he is pointing the finger at himself and people like Alex and all
of that, but he's doing it with the inversion, with the like, no, no,
no, no.
We're the ones who are right.
Oh, no, of course.
We're talking about you globalists who insist on multiculturalism.
Of course.
That is the sowing the seeds of sophistry that leads to these
graves.
I know.
Which is so abusive.
It's like, I believe that we don't have to hate each other.
It's just these languages that we use to talk about ourselves and the
people we disagree with.
It's like if the Martin Luther King Jr. speech was given by Strom
Thurmond.
You'd be like, no, no, no, no, I get where all your words are coming
from, but you're a white nationalist.
So what you're really saying underneath all of this wonderful and
beautiful language is, as long as the white people are in charge and
nobody is allowed to say anything else about us.
Yeah.
So, I mean, I appreciate that point.
I think you're totally right.
But I also think that we should call ourselves out because we've been
calling Stefan Malinu, a white nationalist this entire time.
And maybe that's unfair.
It's not unfair because of what he says in this next clip.
I've also called him Turd Polisher Steve.
Let's not forget that.
Well, more importantly, here what he says in this next clip, we are free to
call him a white nationalist.
First of all, I've always been skeptical of the ideas of white nationalism of
identitarianism and white identity.
However, I am an empiricist and I could not help but notice that I could have
peaceful, free, easy, civilized and safe discussions in what is essentially an
all white country.
Okay.
Oh boy.
All right.
So.
Hey, buddy.
Hey, Stefan.
Hold on.
You just told on your son.
Hold on.
You just told on yourself real hard.
Did he just say what I think he said?
No one yelled at me.
So white supremacy is fucking awesome.
White nationalism is the way to go because no one will call me names.
So is he, his dumb argument is that white nationalism is good because nationalism
is good and we need to separate ourselves from.
So I'm in a white nationalist country and it's a white nation.
It should be for whites.
Right.
If I went to a black nationalist country, that nation should be for blacks.
I wouldn't be accepted there and never the twain shall meet.
Now, hey, historically, maybe when there are all white nations, bad shit goes down,
could be, could have something to do with why we don't do that anymore.
But as long as it's all whites, we're good.
Right.
He's a white nationalist.
Yeah.
And I think he said as much.
I think he pretty much outlined it.
It's not.
Whenever you say like, I've been resistant to the ideas of white nationalism and
identitarianism, but I'm in an empiricist, but I'm an empiricist.
Yeah.
Like, hey, I only go by the facts and the fact is no one yelled at me here in Poland.
And that means that the free exchange of ideas is possible as long as everyone is white.
What a fucking asshole.
Right.
I mean, that's a level of terrible thinking that only exists when you have a conclusion
you want to get to.
Yeah.
And you're working your way towards it.
Because anybody who was an empiricist would consider alternatives.
Like I don't know what if I was in Poland for two days and I happened to go to this
sanitized version of the Independence Day Parade and a bar that's run by a group that
isn't like a run, like a hard right think tank.
What if I'm only seeing what they want me to see?
What if I'm not getting the full picture of what it's like to be Polish?
Yeah.
What if I'm only seeing the Warsaw Enterprise Institute's version of what they want the
message to be?
That's what an empiricist would act, ask themselves.
They wouldn't just accept this blindly and be like, white nationalism is sweet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That only exists if you're trying to justify that.
Well, there's been so many examples of that where it's been they take a well-known writer
and you know, China or Poland or wherever will bring them in and they'll have a tour
guy.
Sure.
They're carefully orchestrating their entire thing.
So when they write the piece, holy shit, it's overwhelmingly positive.
That happened with PG Wodehouse in World War II.
He collaborated with the Nazis essentially because they just showed him the version of
Nazism that they wanted him to see and he did like radio broadcasts that were satirical
and comedic in nature that minimized the idea of the Nazis being evil.
Exactly.
In other words, he talked about how like, I didn't know what was going on.
Right.
That sort of thing.
And people, it's still, to his death, dogged him this idea of people who were like, you
were a Nazi collaborator.
Yeah.
Technically, he was, but it was because of the curated version of Nazi Germany that
was shown to him.
So like, yes, I don't think it's as extreme as those sorts of examples.
But what Stefan Malinou is doing is the equivalent.
Yes.
Absolutely.
Into a place where there is a very serious situation politically and socially and culturally
going on.
And he is beholden to very clearly this one specific think tank.
Yeah.
I don't like to be like, ah, this solves everything.
But as I watched this documentary and the Warsaw Enterprise Institute kept coming up,
like it's, it's can't be a coincidence now.
And the fact that he doesn't bring it up at all.
Like this is an interesting organization or anything like that.
Cannot be a coincidence.
It can't be.
No.
I think, I think it, I'm an empiricist.
Yes.
But I also trust my emotion.
Ah, yes.
And as we found out from his ridiculous posturing, you cannot be an empiricist if you do not
also trust your emotions.
Certainly.
You've got to ask yourself though in question, like what was it that, I mean, I think we
all at the end of this right now here, I think we all understand that Stefan Malinu
went to Poland hoping to reach this conclusion and he reached the conclusion.
White nationalism is fucking awesome.
These people that are seen as extreme aren't as extreme as evidenced by the fact that there
weren't all kinds of crazy people at this independence march.
Everyone is totally cool and super wonderful.
But that still leaves one important question and there's why did he cry?
That's weird.
Why did Stefan Malinu cry at that March?
Because that's fucked up.
I don't know.
That's out of care.
Yeah.
But he's not like Alex making a good documentary.
Sure.
I mean, it is emotionally resonant to some extent, but he's not like Alex.
He's not unhinged like Alex.
Yeah.
The way that Alex fakes crying or even does cry sometimes about Twitter taking his kids
away.
Something like that.
That's in Alex's wheelhouse with Malinu that is not part of his presentation and it seems
very strange.
Yeah.
And thankfully he describes what happened and why he was moved in this next clip.
The polls are not guilty and guilt has been so infused into the hearts and minds of Europeans
and of whites that to see a change in guilt free culture, a resilient strong culture that
is resisting collectivism is something that moved me more than I can probably ever express.
But I hope is encapsulated in the footage that you're seeing in this documentary.
It is.
I assure you, it's encapsulated.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, you're totally right.
Why did he say whites?
Yeah.
Why did he say whites?
You didn't even say it.
You didn't need to say whites.
Just say Polish.
You literally didn't need to say whites.
Just say Polish.
You could have just said the polls.
Right.
Why are the polls infused with guilt and whites?
No, you didn't need to say and the fucking sentence.
But he can't because that's what he cares about.
God, that's so fucking annoying.
I hate him so much.
He's the worst.
So in this next clip, he talks about how it's great to be in Poland, mostly because everybody's
white.
And the guilt is just a horribly profitable vending machine that people pound in order
to get resources from largely white male taxpayers.
And it's a horrible shakedown.
And it's something that should be enormously resisted.
And if you doubt as to why it should be resisted, look at Poland.
Look at the glory, the celebration, the peace, the cleanliness everywhere I went.
The streets are clean.
The people are civilized.
I did not see one drunk person.
I did not see one fistfight.
I did not see one crazy protester out there threatening violence because there are ideas
that they don't agree with.
What's not to love about something like that?
Well, I don't know.
Stefan fancies himself a philosopher, Jordan.
And if we hold him to that standard, that that sentence, that entire clip is an indictment
of his capabilities in that realm.
He's asserting that he saw a wonderful utopia in Poland where there's no fighting or drunk
people and everything was clean.
He's ascribing these things he's seen as being a result of the fact that only white
people were around.
It's very clear based on the other clips before this.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
No, the only, the only conclusion that you can draw from what he's saying is that those
things only exist because of non whites.
Yeah.
And I mean, like if you talk about the like sort of concrete versions of this, he's talking
about it.
It's clean.
I didn't see any fights, whatever.
Like that.
Great.
The bare minimum of human existence is your, okay.
That's something where you're taking like a correlation and ascribing causation.
You haven't proved that the fact that only white people around caused streets to be
cleaner in no fights.
Well, everybody, everybody knows that when there's only white people around there are
clean streets and no fights.
There's no history that would suggest otherwise.
Dan, name one place.
I used to live a block away from Wrigley Field.
So where, but where he really tells on himself is the, when he says everyone is civilized.
That's where he tells on himself a little bit because that is not definable in concrete
terms.
Right.
That is a assessment that he's making as opposed to an empirical analysis of the streets are
clean.
There weren't fights.
Those are things that have metrics behind them.
There is one fight.
Oh, there's two fights.
There's three fights, you know, versus zero or whatever.
The people are civilized.
That's what you think about them.
It's a dog whistle in the same way it would be like, and every black person I saw was
very articulate.
And you're like, ah, you know what you said, right?
You know well what you fucking said.
So even if he is right that there weren't any fights in Poland while he was there, which
he's not right about, he hasn't proved the causal connection between the things he's
seeing and the fact that everyone there is white.
That is sloppy junior varsity level philosophy.
If I've ever seen it in my life, right, that are to quote Stefan Malinu.
That is not an argument.
I suppose the only way that you could, and I don't know why I'm somehow on the side of
giving him the benefit of the doubt here is if instead of him saying white, what he meant
was homogenous.
Like that's the only way that you could say, well, yes, he has, he has more of an argument
to stand on because, because his argument then is because all of the people are like
each other in the same way, right?
And they have a shared, let's call it whiteness.
Then there is far more peace than if there was a, let's call it miscegenation, right?
And we know how well it is when white people say miscegenation, it's great.
In the same way that all these people hide, and Stefan does all the time too, they hide
their bigotry behind these lofty intellectualizing masks, and that sort of thing.
He does do that, that idea that it's homogeneity as opposed to whiteness, that I'm responding
to.
That's what I was thinking.
But let's imagine him as a empiricist and a philosopher going to a hypothetical all-black
country and experiencing it.
Do you think he would walk away from being like, oh, everyone is so civilized here, isn't
this wonderful?
Because it's a homogenized society, and they treated me with such respect.
I think he pretends that he would respond the same way, but he would never do this documentary
about it.
Because what he's interested in is defending white nationalism, white separatism, identitarianism.
Those are the things that he's interested in defending.
Absolutely.
So in this next clip, he, Stefan gives a metaphor about campfires.
I really don't think he's qualified to make metaphor.
He's only got a master's degree in history.
That's true.
I think metaphors are really something that he, that are in his purview.
This one's all right, though.
It's about keeping fire.
So there's a campfire that you got, right?
Yeah.
It's burning out.
You got to go get wood, but also you got to stay warm by the fire.
It's existential crisis.
What are you going to do?
Oh, I don't know.
Well.
The shallowness and hollowness of Western European culture compared to the seriousness
and depth of Polish culture is really a startling contrast and something that I will take with
me to my grave.
Hold on one second.
Freedom, you see, is like a fire.
To have a fire, you need to go and gather the firewood.
You need to light the fire.
And then, my friends, you know what you need to do?
You need to tend that fire.
Like keeping non-white people alive.
You need to make sure.
I was going to say, are the non-white people the firewood in this metaphor?
To do that, you want yourself to fire the firewood so that you can go out into the woods
to gather more firewood, to keep that fire alive, and pass it down to your children as
your fathers passed it down to you.
Poland is keeping that fire alive, the rest of Western Europe, and the rest of the West
is not.
What?
What's different about them?
When the fire...
Their fires are colder.
...of liberty, history of your civilization, when it begins to diminish, when it begins
to die out.
There is a great temptation to huddle up close to that fire, and to stay close and to warm
yourself from the dying embers and fading coals of that fire, rather than go out into
the woods to gather more wood, to feed that fire and bring it to life again.
It is so easy to take that fire for granted, and to imagine that the fire is not something
you need to protect and feed, but it's like the sun, it burns of its own accord, gives
you warmth, whether you work for it or not, it's false, it's false, and it's a destructive
fantasy to imagine that the fire will last as long as you and your ancestors have wanted
it, and as long as you and your descendants draw breath, it will not.
It's very unclear the specifics that he's talking about, but it is clear that because
he's so emotionally and intrinsically changed by experiencing, like he said it himself,
I'm suspicious of white nationalism and identitarianism, but I'm an empiricist, and what I've seen
in Poland has made me realize that it's pretty cool stuff.
So if his conclusion comes to the fire of freedom is really delicate, whatever the woods
are, whatever the firewood, whatever the fire itself is, all of it is about preserving,
and the best way to phrase it, your culture, but it is white separatism.
Your culture does not exist if blacks come in, your culture doesn't exist if Muslims
come in.
He can't be that popular, and he totally is, isn't he?
Yes, he's very popular.
All he has is a turd polished version of whites are great.
Every idea that he's presented so far is a different variation of the whites are great,
but I'm going to say it in a different flowery language.
It's an infuriating thing for him to do, because if you know what he's talking about, no matter
how much flowery language you use, you're still trying to say the n-word.
That's what you're really trying to do.
And another piece of it too is I understand that he gives a long impassioned speech about
the Polish struggle in World War II, and that, again, is fine.
We take that as, you know, accept that.
I accept that.
A lot of folks.
But there's nothing in this documentary that I really see an acknowledgement of what's
going on presently in Poland.
There's nothing that indicates to me that he even knows, Duda doesn't come up by name
at all in the documentary.
I don't even think the law and justice party comes up.
The idea that this guy, Christof Bosak, that he's talking to is someone in the National
Movement Party.
The fact that the WEI is so deeply involved in sort of running interference and sort
of justifying the acts, the anti-democratic acts of the government and are, you know,
at least one of the interviews he's doing and the bar he goes to, I just can't walk
away from this documentary without looking at it and thinking, this is something that
was planned to an extent.
There's no way that these elements would exist in it so consistently.
And the people who would be publishing articles in Politico justifying the 2017 march that
became such an embarrassment for these nationalist groups overplaying their hand to a certain
extent, that all of that would trace back to a single think tank.
I don't think that it's possible.
This documentary is only an hour long.
It's not like he talks to a wide array of people.
It's not like he goes to many, like there's four scenes in the documentary.
There's the interviews, I have five.
There's him standing in the woods and the snow talking.
There's the parade itself.
There's him struggling with his own emotions on a train.
And then there is him in the graveyard.
That's it.
That's the entire documentary.
I assume he has at least one interview with somebody who was at the 2017 march.
Well, I mean, I guess Bosak was, for sure, who was involved in it.
Who was on the receiving end of so much bigotry and horror.
I assume he has one interview, like just as a token interview.
That's all you need to do.
Would you be surprised to find out that is not in this?
No, wait, no.
So he doesn't have any conversation with anyone who disagrees with him?
No, there's a unified front here.
That seems less like a documentary and more like a propaganda film.
You bet.
Oh, so you have one more clip and it's how Stefan ends the documentary.
And it's a little bit jarring.
Liberty is not constant.
It is not a force of nature.
It is not a force of gravity.
It is not an element of physics.
It is something that must be willed and protected and maintained and kept every single generation.
Poland remembers what the rest of the West has forgotten, which is that your freedoms,
which take generations to build, the fires of liberty that keep your civilization warm,
can vanish and go out like that.
And that's the end.
Oh, oh, OK, cool, dude.
So Poland has remembered that.
Right.
The only substantive difference between Poland and any other country that even Stefan has
demonstrated is that everyone is white.
Yeah, it seems like that.
And I don't think that the population.
Well, you are an empiricist.
I don't think that the population of Poland is 100 percent white or anything like that.
I think it's the version of Poland that he was exposed to.
Yeah, of course.
So that's the only thing that is fundamentally different from any other place.
He was kept cloistered in white separatist, white nationalist enclaves.
And that is enough for him to say like they are keeping the fire alive.
These are the it's insane.
Well, it is insanely transparent.
It is. It's all the all the more so because I man, if I were the Warsaw Enterprises Institute,
I would go out.
I would scour the entire fucking country to find any non-white person who would agree
with that.
Oh, sure.
On camera.
Oh, that'd be good.
The entire like one by one, a phone book name by name, anybody who would be on camera.
Oh, yeah.
Even the Trump administration can grab somebody, you know, and they'll pretend that he's not
racist or whatever it is.
So the fact that they couldn't even get one.
It does indicate it's kind of a big deal.
They couldn't even get one to be at his bar.
Yeah, exactly.
They couldn't get one person to stand in the background while Stefan is videotaping the march.
I will give you 10 grand to stand next to this horrible racist.
There is no non-white people that I could find.
I'll say that there is a possibility there's someone way in the background.
Hey, you know what?
It happens, but I couldn't see anybody that wasn't white in this entire documentary.
And that's the substantive difference.
That is what changed Stefan Malin, whose mind from being skeptical of white nationalism
and identitarianism to being like thumbs up.
So that was the end of the documentary, but it's not the end of the video.
I oh, okay.
The documentary ends with that.
Freedom can disappear just like that.
Right, right, right.
You could tell from the sound effect what happened on screen.
Right, right.
He could use an editor to pare down his language a little bit, but a good editor will probably
require a credit.
He's not willing to give one fair.
So Stefan ends the documentary after the entire corpus of the work is done by coming back
on camera and pleading with his audience to give him more money so he can do more of his
work.
See, he did an encore.
That was just an ad pivot.
Nice.
He's realized that he doesn't want to stay in his studio and that there's a big world
out there for him to be a racist idiot in, but he needs them to pay for it.
He needs his cult to provide him the money to be able to do it.
Incidentally in August of 2018, Stefan Malinou made another trip outside of his studio.
Tim and Lauren Southern made a trip to New Zealand, where they did a speaking tour.
Late last week, two mosques in New Zealand were the target of terrorist attacks.
The hostility toward non-white people being seen as an invading army is all entirely rooted
in the ideas that people like Stefan Malinou have made a career off of spreading.
This mentality isn't new, but it's something that's been made so much worse in recent years
by propagandists who have validated white terrorism.
Their lineage comes down from Alex Jones making excuses for Timothy McFay, all the way down
to the present day where we've seen Alex Jones making excuses for this terrorist act in New
Zealand.
Not even making excuses, just kind of saying that it's a good idea.
Yeah, kind of get it.
Trying to get it.
Hey, hey.
Right.
So while Alex Jones is what we focus on and what we study and we talk about all the time,
it's always important to recognize that there is a greater ecosystem here that Alex is a
part of.
Stefan Malinou comes on Alex's show.
I'm not sure if he comes on that much anymore, but he has been a fairly regular guest for
a while.
That's insane.
He's someone who exists in the same anti-other to capture the bigger picture of it.
Anti-non-white people worldview that Alex is a piece of.
And it's impossible not to see this document as almost a debutante party for himself, where
he comes out into the world and declares himself, you know what, I am a white nationalist.
We've known, Stefan, we know.
We've known this for a while and we've been criticizing you for it.
People have been criticizing him and saying, Hey, these ideas you're expressing are explicitly
white supremacist, white nationalist, you're a piece of shit.
That's why he gets yelled at when he goes and gives speaking engagements.
So when he goes to Poland, and he is in this enclave that's a very safe space for him,
and he's like, Oh my God, it's all white people around.
Isn't this fucking awesome?
Isn't this the best thing ever?
He comes out and he recognizes, I am a white nationalist.
And that means two things.
One, no shit you are.
And second, fuck you for being mad at people for yelling it at you.
How dare you?
How dare you be mad that people yell, Hey, you're a white nationalist.
When all that took for you to get in a documentary that you presumably have final cut on and
say, I always was suspicious of white nationalism, but I'm an appear assistant, Poland has shown
me pretty good stuff.
How dare you?
How dare you pretend that the people criticizing you didn't have a point.
They knew who you were before you were ready to admit it.
Yeah.
Not the best wacky Wednesday.
Not too wacky, but who do we got?
Who do we got on this episode?
I mean, we got plugs first, but I'm really trying to like anybody in my head that's been
mentioned in this episode.
I'm struggling.
I mean, a lot of them didn't, didn't kill anybody, but I'll say Andy, Andy Eddles, who
was that language teacher who's complaining about how all the parade in 2017 was a bunch
of the football hooligans, hijacking patriots.
Oh yeah.
That's fair.
I would say that Andy Eddles probably has never killed anybody.
All right.
Well, first I would say that we have a Twitter.
Right.
And a website.
Knowledgefight.com.
Knowledgefight.com.
And it's that knowledge underscore fight.
That's correct.
Then we also have safe book.
We have a group called go home and tell your mother you're brilliant.
You can download us on iTunes, uh, uh, subscribe, we review all of those fun things.
Absolutely.
And now that we have already decided who it's going to be.
The language teacher, uh, in, uh, Poland has never killed anybody.
Uh, but one guy who technically has probably technically is Alex Jones.
Andy and Kansas.
You're on the air.
Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex.
I'm a first-name caller.
I'm a huge fan.
I love your work.
I love you.