PBD Podcast - “White First” - Patriot Front Founder Thomas Rousseau Admits TRUTH About Fed Connection | PBD Podcast | Ep. 418
Episode Date: June 1, 2024Patrick Bet-David sits down one-on-one with Patriot Front founder Thomas Rousseau! Thomas Rousseau, leader of the Patriot Front, a white nationalist group born from the aftermath of the 2017 "Un...ite the Right" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, has been a central figure in promoting white supremacist and nationalist ideologies. Shadowed by the FBI since he was 17, Rousseau's contentious role has sparked theories on the right that he might be working for the very agency tracking him. THE VAULT CONFERENCE FEAT. PATRICK BET-DAVID & DWAYNE "THE ROCK" JOHNSON: Purchase tickets to The Vault Conference 2024 September 4th - 7th: https://bit.ly/3X1JBzm MINNECT: Connect one-on-one with the right expert for you on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3MC9IXE Connect with Patrick Bet-David on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3OoiGIC Connect with Rob Garguilo on Minnect: https://bit.ly/426IG0R CHOOSE YOUR ENEMIES WISELY: Purchase PBD's Book "Choose Your Enemies Wisely": https://bit.ly/41bTtGD BET-DAVID CONSULTING: Get best-in-class business advice with Bet-David Consulting: https://bit.ly/40oUafz VT.COM: Visit VT.com for the latest news and insights from the world of politics, business and entertainment: https://bit.ly/472R3Mz VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: Visit Valuetainment University for the best courses online for entrepreneurs: https://bit.ly/47gKVA0 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! YOUR NEXT 5 MOVES: Want to be clear on your next 5 business moves? https://bit.ly/3Qzrj3m ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So, just a couple weeks ago, we saw this clip of a group of people representing an organization
called Patriot Front led by a man named Thomas Rousseau.
And this video went viral.
If we can play this clip.
This is in DC.
This is a couple, I think this was May 13.
This thing got 11 million views and they're marching.
A lot of people started asking questions.
Why are these guys wearing a mask?
Can we find out more about the founder?
Are these guys tied to the Fed?
Is this a Fed thing that they're just kind of trying to manipulate to make it seem like
folks who are voting for Trump are part of white nationalists?
And this is a Ranvile leader who is known for his role as Patriot Front, a white nationalist and
neo-fascist organization in the U.S., now we've read this many different places, so
this prompted a couple different people to react to it.
Rob, if you can go to the bottom of the comments section on one of the other tweets where Elon
Musk responded.
So here's them.
If you show the clip at the top first, Wall Street Silver, the fact that the legacy media
shows zero curiosity about unmasking these guys tells us 100% that these are federal
agents or paid stooges of one of the agencies the media has been instructed by the FBI to
just report that Patriot Front exists, white supremacy, etc., etc., again pinning this
against Trump.
Ian Chung asked the question, does a phenomenal job himself, what's the deal with these Patriot
front guys' vehicles?
Their license plates are completely blank.
Good question.
On the bottom, Elon Musk's asked the question, seems like they should be followed and unmasked.
Why doesn't the media or government care about their identities?
Go a little lower.
Even Alex Jones' response saying, if you look into the group they came out of
Added the events of Charlottesville 2017 the former leader admitted to working for the Obama campaign
I'm going to do a report on this anyways this leads to
even
Joe talking about this on a podcast you can play this clip
Talking about this on a podcast you can play this clip
Can you raise the audio where these people we fucking organized out of nowhere they pop out
With the same size flags the same outfit on goose stepping the walk not goose day But you know I'm walking in this at the same pace in the you know a fucking orderly line like who's who organized this
See the video of them walking.
See the video of them walking. Is that the video of them walking?
It looks like these are linking to blog posts.
Fast forward a little bit to see what he's looking at.
How come they're all wearing the same clothes? Look at these guys. Where's the fat people?
How come they're all wearing the same clothes? Do that again. What the fuck is this?
Have you ever seen anything anything looks more like feds
Tell me that doesn't look like feds asking good question right people are asking the same question Oh, look at this these guys are all runners. Okay?
I go to the next one Rob where where there's a clip of them going to the train
And then cops are standing right in front we could play this clip right there Rob you had it and then
So that's them going away get all
the way at the top at the escalator there's cops here preventing people from
going down why are they being protected by the cops anyways I got a few other
things I just have a lot of questions and so we reached out to the founder
Thomas Rousseau and you know he been, based on the things you read,
he's been followed and I don't even know, this is 2017, the FBI was on the FBI watch
list, I think it's 2017 or 2016, it was early on as a young man.
In high school.
Yeah, in high school.
He was being watched to see what he's going to be up to.
And you've said a lot of interesting things.
Number one, I was surprised that you said yes.
So obviously you'll answer all this stuff a lot of people want to know.
My question for you is why did you agree to do this interview?
I agreed to do the interview because it seemed like a great opportunity to clear the air
about a lot of these things.
There are a lot of these misconceptions and you see when you have a lot of the explanations
on something which is very new, a lot of people do not know about Patriot Front.
And when we do these big marches, one of the chief, you know, the ends of the marches
to inform a lot of people about what Patriot Front is,
and during that realization process you have a lot of confusion.
But when we actually are able to sit down or are able to have a conversation,
you're a huge proponent of free speech.
You're a huge proponent of people who love America. And I think we are extremely in common in those two things. Maybe we have a lot
of differences about other things, but we believe in speaking, we believe in rational. For sure. Yeah,
absolutely. And I think, you know, this was a great opportunity to be able to clear the air and help.
Okay, what do you think about Joe Rogan, Elon Musk? What do you think about Joe Rogan,
Elon Musk, and Alex Jones? What do I think about them personally? Yeah Musk, what do you think about Joe Rogan, Elon Musk, and Alex Jones?
What do I think about them personally? Yeah, just what do you think about them and what they've said and what they stand for, generally? So as far as Alex Jones, I think he has a lot of interesting
theories about the world and I think he's right about a lot of things. I think he is wrong about
a few things and you know, one of them being Patriot front. He even said when we were doing
a march in Austin, he said that we were going around harassing children of color or something to that effect, which is not true. And Alex Jones
should know that as somebody who a lot of people have said things about, which are not
true himself. But I have a lot of respect for any man who stands up in the political
space and has a lot of slings and arrows thrown at him, you know, especially for the ends
of free speech. Elon Musk, in the same way, Patriot Front is still banned on Twitter. I myself am
still banned on Twitter, but I do believe Elon Musk has done something to enhance
the amount of free speech on Twitter. And you could say he's interesting as an
entrepreneur. I'm not a businessman. I, you know, I watch some of your content
about the EVs, but I'm not qualified to speak on those matters. But Elon Musk, I
think it's interesting in the realm of free speech and in business thirdly Joe Rogan
I think he's an excellent entertainer and in that clip
I believe if it was allowed to play a little bit longer, he does clarify
He's not an authoritative source on this
He is an entertainer and this is just his off-the-hip comments and I even think it's a little bit complimentary him pointing out
How there's no fat people because I'll take it if that's the only thing about us
So listen man, so how how well what are the benefits package of the feds?
Like how well do they pay you man?
Like is there like a...
They don't pay me.
They don't pay you?
Nope.
Okay.
I'm not a federal agent.
I am not being paid by anybody and actually a lot of...
Why do you think so many people that are trusted don't believe you?
I think it is partly astroturfed.
I think because it is so convenient because when we do these big things, it is partly astroturfed. I think because it is so convenient.
Because when we do these big things, it is, we are presented to millions of new people
because it is a spectacle.
And when we go out in March, when we have the drums and the banners and the uniforms
and the masks, it is engineered to be something which is spectacular.
It is very out of the ordinary.
And people watch it.
And it's very easy for a lot of conservatives, I believe, not the ones here, but a lot of conservatives to dismiss us by saying that's not real, it's
fake. You don't have to engage with these people, you don't have to engage with
their ideas, you don't have to engage with the fact that the political
landscape might be bigger than you previously thought. So it's a very, it's
an argument of convenience that they are also, a lot of people are worried about
guilt by association because the left throws around words like white
nationalist and neo-fascist and I haven't called myself those things. But the left throws around these
labels wantonly. And a lot of people decide, okay, well, I'm going to stay away from anybody
the left labels with those things. But the thing is, these aren't real definitions. These
are insults. They're labels to censor and silence people. You know, when they call you
racist, when they call you a Nazi, when they call you all these things. And it's a lot
easier for some people to say, hey'm not a racist those guys aren't even
real as opposed to saying hey you know these are patriots these are
nationalists they may not be like me they may not agree with me on everything
yeah but that's different though you're saying the left you know Musk is Musk at
a meeting with Trump the other day well must you know those terms exactly no I
know but Musk doesn't trust you in your camp based on what he's saying.
Like, hey, let's investigate these guys.
Joe Rogan is a very reasonable guy.
I agree.
That's a guy that's and some may even from the left are sitting there saying,
why would Alex Jones criticize you and say you were tied to Obama, you know,
and one of your founders was, you know, doing stuff with Obama campaign.
I know what he's talking about.
Tell me.
So Alex Jones is familiar with Charlottesville, and I know what he's talking about. Tell me. So Alex Jones is familiar with Charlottesville and I believe what he's talking about is one of the organizers of Charlottesville Jason Kessler did publicly work for the Obama campaign
at some point years before
But I have never worked for the Obama campaign. You can search for a million years
You'll never find a single statement of me ever supporting Obama and Alex Jones said he'll
Release a report on that matter in a week or two I
Don't think it ever I think if he sees this he will react to the same thing
So Jason Kessler I just pulled it up is an American neo-nazi white supremacist and never worked with him directly
You've never worked with him directly. No, so you guys have never spoken never done anything together. No communication at various times at Charlottesville
Often so what do you and him agree on you and Jason Kessler? I do not know the man personally You had no communication. We spoke at various times at Charlottesville.
What do you and him agree on?
You and Jason Kessler?
I do not know the man personally.
I don't have a list.
He has changed his beliefs several times throughout his political career to the best of my knowledge.
When was the last time you spoke to him?
Is there an allegiance there where you guys get on?
No, there is not.
When was the last time you guys had communication?
Years.
Okay, got it.
So let's set that one aside.
But that's where I think the Obama fact is coming from.
Okay, so again, this is the great thing about asking questions. You know, the audience can go
do their own due diligence and people can react to it. Let me continue. So, your position,
I'm reading some of the stuff that you've said. An African may have lived, worked, and even been
classed as a citizen in America for centuries, yet he is not American.
He is, as he likely prefers to be labeled, an African in America.
The same rule applies to others who are not of the founding stock of our people or do
not share the common unconscious that premates throughout our greater civilization and the
European diaspora, the American identity was
something uniquely forged in the struggle that our ancestors waged to survive in the
new continent, not simply by birth, by one granted this title, but by the degree to which
he works and fulfills the potential of his birth.
So what do you think, like if you were to break down what you believe in, do you want
America to be a place where it's all white nationalists and nobody else that's not a
white nationalist will be here?
Would that be an ideal situation for you?
Not necessarily, and I believe that might be a bit of a leading question, but when you're
talking about that statement in particular, and it is from an older version of the manifesto,
it has been updated and clarified, but when you look at different groups, you know, different groups in America, blacks have been very much culturally,
economically, socially, and even legally distinct from what we call white Americans, or I simply
refer to as Americans, for the entire history of this country. And from the 1600s to the
2020s, there are groups in this country that are very distinct.
And when I say American, I'm not referring to purely as a citizen,
but I'm referring to a member of the American nation, which I believe is a cultural, is an ethnic group,
just like Iranian, just like a member of any country from Europe.
But I believe we should treat the native, trueborn population of America
in the same way that other countries are purely
allowed to recognize that somebody from this country has a unique cultural background.
And this isn't to say that blacks are not here, that they do not have a unique culture
on this continent. It is simply to say that they are so distinct both racially, economically,
socially. You know, segregation still exists de facto today.
Many communities are largely one or another population.
I believe these differences are so distinct that we ought to consider them as different
nations perhaps within the same government.
Okay.
So what does that really mean?
Going back to my question.
Sure.
I'm from Iran.
Okay.
My mother's Armenian. My dad's a Syrian. I came here in
November 20 1990
June 20th of 1999 I become a US citizen. I joined the army with a green card. Okay
What do you consider me? Do you see me as an American or do you see me as an Iranian?
I would think you would be, you are a citizen.
You are legally and civically a part of the United States.
And I would classify you as a good citizen.
You are a businessman, you have brought a lot of value to the country.
However, I would say that you are distinct from an American.
And I am not somebody who believes that everybody who is not American is by default worse than.
I don't put the world into that kind of hierarchy.
But I believe there is a distinction there.
And when you're talking about, you know, what I would want to do, I think immigration should
be restricted.
I think a lot all of the illegals should be sent home.
I think anybody who lied about their naturalization status in order to get it unlawfully should
be sent home.
Like Tucker Carlson, you spoke with him recently. He mentioned how everybody with a dual passport
should have to choose.
Things like that are a great start,
and I think you would really be able
to help demographically secure the country.
But, you know, are we asking,
should the United States have anybody
within its borders in any civic capacity,
which is not a national,
which is not a true cultural, you know, assimilated person, I think
there is some room for that. And I think there's some room for that in a lot of
reasonable governments. But what we're talking about today, or what we're
talking about in the country today, is the fact that should immigration, should
these globalist policies be allowed to completely transform the cultural and
demographic landscape of the country? And I believe that would make it something
entirely different.
So my sons, their mother is white.
Their mother is white. She was born in Texas.
Houston, Texas.
Their dad is Middle Eastern. What are my kids?
Are they American?
I would say they are half and half.
So if they're not born here to you, they're not American.
If they're not...
So what do I have to be to be fully American in your eyes?
You personally?
Anybody.
So an American, I believe, is a member of the European race.
Any of the nations of the European race.
Or, and they not only, you know,
you aren't American simply by being a member
of the European race, you have to have lived in America
and assimilated to the American culture,
the American heritage,
which is harder to do nowadays because our culture has been so diluted.
Things have been made much less sincere, I believe, when we look back at our history.
So somebody not only a member of the European people,
but also specifically a member who has assimilated to the American nation,
just like anybody might assimilate. Got it. so have you done ancestry on your family yes and what
showed up what came up for you I have ancestors from both my mother's and my
father's side that go back to the 1700s before the revolution and where do they
come from Scotland Britain and I have some French and German ancestry as well
was it a hundred percent Scotland Britain and was there anything on the Middle East at all?
No, not that I know of zero percent from anything else entirely European. So for you ideally, let me go back to it
Because on another article, you know when you're talking about
What
the Patriot Front's propaganda tactics and dissemination methods.
Let me just read this to you.
This is an article written about you.
You can react to it.
So Patriot Front prioritizes the dissemination of propaganda as a core feature of its organizational
activity.
Here are some of the key tactics and methods they use.
Physical propaganda dissemination.
Members are required to participate in physical propaganda dissemination and attend public
events as a condition of membership
This could involve distributing flyers posters and stickers in public places
Okay, cool online presence to group maintains a careful public image with propaganda and public activity
intentionally void of overt racism and hateful conduct
This sanitized public image allows for a wider reach to others who may be sympathetic to
the world view.
3.
Professionals and Publicity.
The organization places significant emphasis on professionals, publicity, and membership
growth.
Next one, Recruitment Patriot Front quietly recruits new members who are worried about
a nation overrun by immigrants and a world controlled by lews.
Their propaganda acts as a funnel to more extreme immigrants and a world controlled by lews, their propaganda acts as a
funnel to more extreme organizations and ideologies through their online presence and organizational
affiliation." You can obviously dispute that. But it says,
recruits quietly. So I'll come back to this. Intimidation and vandalism. The group engages
in a mix of vandalism, intimidation, and to foster anxiety. They use attention-grabbing techniques like igniting smoke bombs during demonstrations
and protests.
Secrecy Patriot Fund communicates secretly and avoids talking about guns or violence
online.
This is done in an effort to avoid attracting negative publicity and government intervention.
Which of these do you think is inaccurate about your organization?
So when you, they say that we use colored smoke at demonstrations or banner drops to instill anxiety or fear
That's a ridiculous point. You'll find photographers using colored smoke to for attention grabbing photos. That's the same reason we do it
They're entirely harmless and
Private communications are so that we can hide things from the world now your company here
I don't imagine every communication between all of your employees is public. You can't look that
up on Twitter. When you're talking about recruiting members quietly, I don't know how we...
How do you recruit them? Where do you recruit the guys from? Where do you find them?
We have a website and people find the organization on any of our publications or they see us
in person or a lot of networking in person happens. There's a lot of peer-to-peer contacts
and they will contact us. They will submit an application, there will be an email process,
and then they will go through our membership process, which is somewhat proprietary because
we do take vetting very seriously.
We do take security very seriously.
But that article was written by somebody who does not think highly of the organization.
Of course, I get that.
No, I totally get that.
So if I wanted to go to apply for the application, is this the way to go through it?
That would be the page, yes.
And is it a list of questions that I'm going through or what's the, or is there like a
face-to-face interview that eventually ends up happening?
There's multiple stages, yes.
There is the application page and as you would fill it out, more things appear.
Are you asking me questions in the interview process or no?
There are questions, there's in-person things. But in here what kind of questions would you ask me? So,
can you Rob just put it in there? Let's kind of go through. I'm curious to know what the questions
are. Yeah, so you have your email, that's so we can contact you. Would you describe your political
beliefs? Yep. Do you live a healthy lifestyle that includes regular exercise? You can tell a
lot about a person. Sure, yeah. Have you described your religious beliefs? Okay. What are you looking for there?
Mainly, are you looking for specific faith or faith is not the key?
It tells you a lot about somebody, so it is a general very good conversation starter.
Most all of the organization is Christian or other traditional European faiths. We do not permit
members who are Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, Juda do not, Judaic, we believe that would
come into conflict with our sort of America First principles of wanting a
very native-born ideology. Fair enough. So why do you want to join? What are you looking for here?
Well, it really depends on the person because it's somewhat open-ended
because I want to find out what somebody is interested in. Sometimes people say,
oh well I want to join because I want to go out what somebody is interested in. Sometimes people say, oh, well, I want to join because I want
to go get people, or whatever.
And OK, trash.
Right?
Somebody says, I want to join because I want to help people.
I want to join because I feel alienated due
to my political ideology.
I want to join because I've seen y'all slandered in the media,
and I feel like that's unjust.
Right?
And some people join just out of spite
due to what the media says about us.
Some people join genuinely because they have a deep attachment to the country,
they have a deep attachment to the traditions of America,
and they see Patriot Front as one of the more preeminent organizations
showcasing a very traditional American view of patriotism.
You know, again, there's many different examples.
What skills do you have to benefit the organization?
Activism, so you value activism, planning an organization,
video editing, outdoorsmanship?
We're looking at where somebody's coming from. Okay. What kind of skills? Activism is kind of like so okay.
If somebody's previously been involved in an activist organization perhaps. Yeah.
How did you hear about us? News, stickers, stencils, flyer, demonstration, community, outdoor, social media? Okay.
Have you read the manifesto and reviewed our updated page?
Or yeah, the updates page where we talk about our actions and various things.
And yeah, the question being the manifesto there is, it's kind of a good hint that somebody should go read it if they haven't already.
If I put yes, does it open up for more options?
No, that will be the full answer.
So that's the end of it. So this gets sent in to you from here?
It gets sent in to people who manage them, yes.
Got it. And it's from there, what is the recruitment process?
What's the next phase?
Well then we talk with people, you know, digitally, and we have a whole script that we go through.
We ask them a lot more about themselves, we ask them a lot more about their ideology,
about their character, because character and morality is very important.
We're not just an organization that recruits, you know, we think you're American, we think
you're one of us ethnically and culturally so you're good to go. No we select for men
of character, men of good conduct, men who are disciplined enough to be in an
organization with rules and with security and with practices on upon which
there are stakes. And after that there you know there could be there could be
several in-person meetings which are variable depending on what we've learned
in the process so far and where you might be going and what local representatives you might be
speaking. How did you learn how to do this? Who taught you this these tactics?
Well I got started in political organizing you know on the sort of you
it could be called the right-wing fringe I don't like reducing things into purely
left and right but you know the the nationalist politics I started
organizing at 1718 and Patriot Front
is a result of seven straight years of adaptation and evolution and A-B testing because you
know like you've gone through many different jobs and business ventures in your life, Patriot
Front has gone through many iterations, many updates to its structures because what Patriot
Front is doing in its particular realm of politics,
when I showed up, you know, I was fresh out of high school, there was not a handbook written out.
There weren't all the rules. Nobody was there to say, hey, don't do this because this is going to happen to you.
And we have had to find out a lot of things the hard way, but we do really well in trying to find out mistakes before we make them.
Because, you know, you're familiar with the violent tactics of anarchists and antifa,
and you're familiar with people online who will try to find
somebody's identity and use it to destroy their lives. There's a few videos
that have gone viral of you know somebody who the left and the internet
thinks has done some racist thing and they get millions of views their life
gets turned upside down they get kicked out of college all those things so
there's a lot of security matters that come into place there and we've had to
build that up over time.
Have you ever had conversations or communication with the FBI?
No.
Have you ever met with the FBI?
No.
Why did you think about it?
Well, I was wondering if at any point in our marches in Washington, D.C., we'll often have
a lot of cops come up and talk to us.
Usually those are regular D.C. Metropolitan police.
Sometimes I believe there's a few lieutenants in there.
Could there have been one of them who's an FBI agent who walks up and says,
hey, you know, why don't you...
Actually, I do remember a few times. I don't know if he was FBI though.
But there was a gentleman who walked up to the front of the marching column and said,
hey, you're obviously the one in charge. I'm not wearing a mask. I got the big hat on.
He said, hey, next time you're showing up to Washington, give me a call.
He hands me a business card
I'm not interested in talking to the FBI. I ripped it up. How many members you guys currently have is it 160?
No, it is it is considerably above that but the exact number I'll keep a little bit proprietary
I guess what I'm asking for is of the people that you have that's above 160
How many of them are active are a lot of lot of, is it a lot of active?
In the 90% range, yes.
So 90% of the 160 is active.
Well, we have a membership that's in considerable excess of that.
And we are not a strictly political organization like a lot of people might think.
We're not a political party.
A lot of what we do is community organizing.
A lot of what we do is fraternal, where people have family events.
We engage in charity efforts.
We, you know, the paper activism you see, where it's a poster, it's a sticker, it's
a flyer, it's a banner.
That is just one side of what we do.
People also engage in career networking.
People also engage in physical fitness and training.
People engage, we host sporting events.
We host outdoor treks and hikes and things
of that nature. We host workshops. We teach people how to, perhaps you might need some
homesteading lessons. Perhaps you might want to start up a small business. Perhaps you
might want to know how to rappel down a cliff if you're doing rock climbing. Things- anything
goes really. Because we do all those things. And actually you mentioned in that article
you were reading before, it says we avoid talking about guns. We don't do do anything with guns one of the biggest things that the FBI uses to entrap people
I think they do this maliciously is they will go into a political group often one that likes guns a militia type thing and
They'll say hey, do you want to buy this illegal firearm? It's really cool
And the person will say I think so and then you know game over right?
Members are not even permitted to talk to each other about what guns they might own.
Nobody is selling or buying or modifying any firearms from each other.
We have these security measures, solid concrete in place because we want to prevent, you know,
we do a lot to prevent anybody with bad intentions.
They don't have to be in the FBI.
There's lots of people in the world with bad intentions, you know.
We do a lot to prevent those people from even getting in.
But even- Do you trust the FBI?
Not at all. I think the FBI is a very politicized institution and I think frankly it should be
abolished and perhaps something else should replace it. I don't think you should be able to get
away with murder by crossing a state line, right? There should be some way for laws to be enforced
on that scale, but the FBI itself, I believe, is so bureaucratic, it's so politicized,
that it should be completely gutted and replaced.
Thomas, of the people that have applied to your organization, some would say the reason
why you don't want to give the number is because it's a lot smaller than people think,
and when you're small, you have to act big, and when you're big, you have to act small.
So maybe you're trying to act big while you don't have a lot of members and you're having
a hard time gathering a lot of people.
That could be one position that some people may take, whether it's true or not.
Yeah, they may say that.
Have you had any of the people that came to apply that were former FBI members? Any of the folks that applied?
We screen and we ask people about if they have any government background, whether that's working for the post office or the military.
We have a lot of veterans.
And we have never uncovered an actual FBI agent.
Now, this does happen, and this happens all across the political spectrum,
but a lot of times if somebody's information is put out there,
if somebody's name gets big on Twitter for some sort of fringe political thing,
this happens with Antifa 2, this happens with even Trump supporters who post a message about...
Sometimes they say, hey, that person should have something bad happen to them.
The next thing you know, next morning, you got two plainclothes FBI officers knocking on your front door
and they say, hey, we have this tweet printed out here.
What would you like to say about it?
That has happened to members.
But the FBI, I don't believe, engages in the type of undercover infiltration
that a lot of people attribute to it as much as people think.
So yes or no, you've never recruited anybody that was with the FBI before?
No.
You've never had anyone? So are most of the people in the organization that get
recruited, what percentage would you say are former military?
Somewhere maybe around 15 to 20 percent.
Oh so it's not a big percentage?
Zero to five.
It's not a lot. I would have thought it would have been more.
Not in a good or bad way.
I just would have thought, because everybody looks like they're in shape.
So maybe the guys that you're getting are CrossFit guys.
I don't know who you're getting.
Tell you again, because these guys are in shape.
Sure.
Why wear the masks?
Masks are engaging in the practice of anonymity.
And I think the government, because if we don't trust the FBI, if we think government
institutions like the FBI are politically motivated and they do use
people's personal information to silence them, to censor them, and not only that,
but the media, you know, they talk about, oh well why isn't the media identifying
them? Because it's really difficult for them to do so and it's a lot easier for
them to publish the types of articles that they do. Anonymity is a right, I
believe, that falls well under the First Amendment of the
Constitution.
What do you think about the Organization Anonymous?
I don't have a really fleshed out opinion of the Organization Anonymous itself. I'm
not sure if it's really a single organization or if it's done anything lately. It might
have done some good things. I'm not really familiar with it.
Any inspiration from them? No not not necessarily no any connections with any of the guys from anonymous or no
I've never known anybody who's been got it
So, you know records obtained by the Texas Observer show that the FBI has been monitoring you
Since at least May of 2017 now may have 2017 you're how old at that time?
I would have been 17 or 18 17 or 18
and I know I think where that comes from because
At the time a lot of let me just finish
While he was still a student a couple high school for his own flower distribution on Dallas area campuses
so that's it why would FBI follow a
17 year old kid what are they worried about with you?
maybe they were worried that I would start a much more successful political organization
than the one I was in at the time.
But at the time, what's more realistic is a lot of people were putting up a lot of posters
and flyers at college campuses around the country and the FBI probably had some political
movers inside that said, hey, keep an eye on these things and get all that data because
we think some of these people putting out flyers, maybe they're dangerous.
That's all they need.
The FBI doesn't need...
That doesn't make any sense though.
The FBI doesn't have a high threshold.
They're just worried about you with flyers?
Perhaps.
It was part of a larger trend that was happening in the country.
The FBI doesn't have a high threshold for needing somebody to look in on something.
Yeah, but for flyers, there's hundreds of thousands of people that put up flyers you won a
17 year old kid is put on a
FBI is monitoring them because of just that I think it's as crazy as you do you think so? Yes
What do you think about Nick Fuentes? I?
do not have a
Really one way or the other opinion on Nick Fuentes. I think he has a lot of correct opinions.
I think there's plenty of things that me and him might disagree on. I have nothing against
him personally. He has had some complicated opinions on the organization in the past,
but I think he is broadly somebody that is pushing the boundaries of free speech and
pushing the boundaries on perhaps conservatism, even patriotism. So I would say he's done
some good in his political career. Who on the America First community has publicly supported
what you guys are doing? There have been a few podcasters and pundits who I
believe have made positive statements. Who? I believe one of them, Ryan Sanchez,
has come out in support of us. Not people on the same level as Fuentes.
But there is some support on that side of things.
Why do you think they're uncomfortable with you?
You would seem to be somebody that they would say, there's a young man, Thomas Russo is
doing XYZ.
Why are you not getting that?
Why are they so uncomfortable with you?
I think there might be a level of perception of competition or a perception that there may be more enmity
You find in a lot of fringe politics
Yeah, that there is a lot of kind of my team your team tribalism, which is something
I really try to move past I've never made any public statements against Nick Fuentes
And I really do my best to avoid making any negative comments on people individually.
I mean, I get that, but to me, like, this is a...Charlie Kirk was a young guy coming
up and boom, Charlie Kirk blew up.
And he was pretty controversial.
He was challenging a lot of people.
He wasn't, you know, it wasn't like, hey, you know, nobody was supporting him.
There was plenty of guys that were comfortable supporting him.
Let me read something to you here from 2016, February 28. Your
first column for a student newspaper on February 20, 2016 was titled,
Diversity Clubs Bring Friendly Atmosphere to Students of Varied
Backgrounds. That's kind of contradictory to where you are today, no? So that is a
news piece and I was simply doing a story for my school newspaper, perhaps sophomore
junior year, that I was given by my editor and I, like a good journalist, simply wrote
the facts and I talked to these people and I wrote down what they said.
If you look at the same newspaper there are other comments or there are other articles
I wrote under the opinion category and you will find more patriotic opinions under those
when I was free to write my opinion.
So do you believe in diversity?
Do you think diversity does bring friendly atmosphere to students of varied backgrounds?
I don't think ethnic and cultural diversity help a country.
I think they impact negatively civic engagement and there are some forms of diversity that are good.
Like if you're trying to build a house, right, you want the diversity of having a bricklayer, a plumber, an electrician and an architect.
But if you're trying to build a house,
you don't want ten people who don't speak the same
language, 10 people who are trying to build different types of houses.
And that's the type of diversity we have in the country today.
We're not selecting people for skills, we're selecting people for votes, we're selecting
people for economic reasons.
The Democrats are importing voters, right?
Because every group that they're bringing in is voting more Democrat than they are Republican.
And 90% of the people coming into the country are from places other than Europe, other than traditionally white countries.
So there's a huge economic incentive and there's a huge demographic and electoral incentive for that reason.
I mean, if one may say, why are you uncomfortable with that?
Since maybe even, you know, everybody that almost everybody that came here was an immigrant on one point
They came from somewhere right that they came to America. Yes, even even when
You know revolutionary war, you know, they had control we're gonna leave we're gonna come here
You know, we're gonna come and build what we're gonna build it. Let me just even go to a different question. What do you think about?
Slavery the history of slavery,
what's happened, blacks, whites, you know, what's your position on that?
Firstly, I would say that for the significant majority of American history, all the way up until the 1960s,
the groups of people that were coming here were broadly from not only Europe, but only certain parts of Europe.
And that almost a hundred 100%. And the conditions of
people especially coming here in the 16, 17, and 1800s, they were coming to an area which
was not fully governed. They were coming to the frontier. They were building homes out
of mud brick. These were pioneers. These were settlers. These were homesteaders. It's vastly
different than the people who come here today and sign up to welfare programs,
the people who get their court date and don't show up.
And on your second point, what do I think about slavery?
I think slavery was imposed upon the colonies, which later became the United States, ultimately
by the mercantile system of Great Britain and the Empire.
And it was sort of stuck because it became a very difficult institutional question to
ask.
And the founders asked this question. Thomas Jefferson and even Abraham Lincoln
thought emancipation should naturally be followed by repatriation.
Colonies were started in Liberia and even places in Central America
so that we could return to a status of domestic tranquility
without these large ethnic divisions.
But unfortunately, when you were ratifying the Constitution,
there were disagreements between northern and southern colonies as to should slaves, that's where the three-fifths compromise comes from.
And you had this large population of blacks, which were slaves at the time and then emancipated later, used as political leverage.
Because southern states wanted them to be added to their House of Representatives number for apportionment, and northern states wanted the opposite because and later on you'll find that the opposition to slavery became less of a political and a
geographic thing and much more of a moral crusade but even today I think it
can be argued even even Candace Owen says it that the black voter base is
somewhat used as a police as a as a way of political leverage from one left to
the right. Do you think Lincoln screwed up with
Emancipation Proclamation? I think it was an act of war. It was done during the
Civil War as a method to destabilize and to hurt the rebelling colonies or those
other rebelling states. As a method of achieving his ends in that conflict, I
believe it was successful. Would you have done what he did? I cannot personally say what I would have done
if I was in Abraham Lincoln's shoes, and it should also be realized that Abraham Lincoln was
assassinated before he could really carry out whatever his vision was, and that's the story of
historical debate for every day since then. People have argued what he really would have done.
Yes, I got some questions on that because when you're talking about
Emancipation proclamation. Okay. We do think slavery is an immoral institution for the record
You do think slavery is an immoral institution, but you were hesitant to
You know say whether you think what he did was the right thing or not, right?
And you're like I can't really political level, yes. It was controversial at the time.
It was controversial at the time,
but do you think, you know, I'll read it to you.
So Lincoln issued an Emancipation Proclamation
on January 1st, 1863, announcing that all persons held
at slaves within the rebellious areas are,
and henceforth shall be free.
Do you agree with all of that? I agree that slavery should have been ended, yes.
So do you see blacks as equals to whites?
In the respects of having basic human rights and not deserving to be slaves, yes.
Do I think that they are analogous to people of every different nation on the planet? No.
Nor do I think I would compare any two groups of people and expect them to measure up precisely on the fact that they are different. I don't
put the world into a hierarchy of races. I think that's unproductive. But I do recognize
that different nations are different. They have different cultures. We have different
languages. We live in different places. And that type of diversity, not within borders,
but between them, is something which is very important. And a lot of the conflicts you have in the world today whether you're looking at
the Middle East whether you're looking at Russia and Ukraine are a result of
nationalism which has been impaired by imperialism or globalism or these
matters where people don't line up with their borders and America did really
well at that for a very long time. Do you think your your bloodline is superior to
blacks? Superior in what respect? In thinking, decision-making,
leadership. Superior in being American, yes. Superior in any other realm where
you might try to measure an individual, I think that doesn't matter. I'm not an
anthropologist. I'm not going to look at scientific things in IQ. I'm not
familiar with those studies. But what I do know is that different groups
of people are the best at being who they are. But I don't believe we should put
people into categories where it's making some sort of hierarchy, which is
entirely unnecessary. What do you think about Hitler? I don't have any necessarily strong opinions on
Hitler. I've never looked into him detailed in a historical lens.
Really?
Nothing I believe ideologically or politically is reliant on him.
So you've never studied him?
Never studied him. No, I mean, I'm familiar with the events of the Second World War. I
think a lot of people.
You ever read Mein Kampf?
I have never read the book. I've heard excerpts, but I think a lot of people have, but I've
never read it cover to cover.
You've never read it cover to cover. You've never read mine, comp.
Okay.
All right.
So when you started the podcast, you said something about, hey, you know, you're an
American, you've done good, but there's some disagreements that we have.
At the beginning, you said that.
I said you're pro-American, yes.
So what part of me, my ideas do you disagree with?
I'm curious.
I think we have different ideas on what necessarily constitutes naturalization
Okay, which is more of a natural process as opposed to a legislative process and
Any attempt by the government to make that a legislative process is I would think a measure to coincide with the recognition of the?
Natural process because nations are natural things if you if you started the world over right, and you put a bunch of people in a bunch of places on earth,
you would end up with nations. They would be different nations, but you would have nations.
Because within human nature, given to us by whatever creator somebody might believe in,
there is a social aspect and there is a hierarchical aspect. We form different cultures.
We form hierarchies, and from our hierarchies extend governments. And from our various social collectives, we form families, communities,
nations, and then ultimately races. And these are all natural outgrowths of the human mind
and body. And we, and me as a nationalist, I want a government which recognizes and upholds
these natural truths instead of what we see today, especially with the transgender pathology, people are trying to play God.
People are thinking that human beings and culture and heritage and everything up until
now is just something like clay that you can infinitely mold and cast people into these
things where they're infinitely malleable.
It's not true.
Earlier, you talked, I asked you a question about people that came here, everybody was
an immigrant that came here, etc., etc.
What do you think about Italians?
I think Italians are from Europe and people of European nations can assimilate into the American nation as it is of Europe.
Why do you think Italians experienced, you know, I don't know if it's racism, discrimination at the beginning,
where Italians were not allowed, they had all these things about them.
Why do you think Americans that happened are history? There was discrimination and
there was opposition to a lot of the immigration that happened in the late
1800s and the early 1900s not solely on the basis these people were from Italy
because even the immigration restrictionists of the time agreed that
there are good people from these countries but the matter was due to the
economic incentive and due to a lot of social differences, the worst rungs of those
social classes from Italy and other places around the Mediterranean were brought into the country,
because for example, steamship companies would make money by the head. So what do you do? You go and
you clear out the asylums, you clear out the prisons. And a lot of countries were happy to dump
these people onto American shores, and that was where a lot of differences come from.
And of course, there was the opposition based on Protestant and Catholic lines.
Religious differences you're going to find all the time.
That's something innate through him at human history.
So if you were president today, how would you handle, what would you do differently
today?
If you become a president today, it's 2024.
You know we're going with immigration.
You know we have somewhere between 8 million, 15 million. There's a lot of numbers. We've read what things would you work on immediately?
So first things first you'd want to shut down the border
I think this is not a controversial thing to say to the right wing
You'd want to shut down the border every single illegal immigrant has to go anybody who's lied about their naturalization status where they lied about
Living somewhere they lied about really being a refugee when they're just an economic migrant, their naturalization should
be revoked.
Anybody who used that person as a chain link, anchor baby, sort of, you know, don't keep
family separated deal, they should go as well.
Anybody who's only in here due to visas, which I believe have a lot of economic exploitation
of the country, they should be sent home politely.
We don't need, we should be able to create our own engineers. Dual passports, anybody with a dual passport, even Tucker Carlson said this when he spoke to him. Every single person with a dual
passport should be forced to choose, and I think you'd be really surprised at what countries people
would choose if you made them pick. And then you can start on a process of even voluntary repatriation.
If a lot of people, you know, a lot of you know, you have millions of people coming in,
you know, maybe not every year, but every couple years, Biden's led in 7 million people in the last three years.
A lot of these people are only here because of the economic incentives, right?
And I agree that America should be a place where people can make money.
I agree that America should be a place with this sort of opportunity.
But not all the people coming across the Mexican border are entrepreneurs and businessmen and
doctors. A lot of these people are here for the social programs. If those dry up, or even if you
turn them around and say, hey, we're not doing that anymore. We've tried since 1960, 1965,
we've tried the greatest humanitarian experiment in the history of the world. And frankly, it's
failed. So we're going to turn this money around and we're going to set you up going back home.
You'll get a bus fare. You know, we'll even have sign all sorts of treaties with the government you came from and we'll make sure it's happy.
Would you consider yourself a white supremacist?
I would not for the reasons that I listed before because I don't believe that the world needs to be put into a
hierarchy of nation over nation over nation race over race. I think that's unproductive. I believe in nation states.
I think throughout history, the most stable form of government
has been when you put one nation in one state, right?
When you have a state which expands over many nations, you end up with imperialism.
And in history, you would have governments that expand geographically,
like they would push their border over another nation,
you have the Roman Empire, you have the Persian Empire, you have any empire, take
it or leave it. And what we have now is the opposite, where we're taking people from
other countries, other nations, and we're bringing them here. And it's still a form
of imperialism. And I believe it's an attempt to assimilate all of these various nations,
or you know, members of various nations that reside within the modern day United States into a sort of uprooted culture a sort of nothing at
all nationality and I think that is very difficult what was your question again
no I asked a question about not what not white supremacy oh yes I'm not I'm not a
supremacist so I don't believe you need to rank things in a manner. And I consider myself first and foremost loyal to the American nation.
I am not loyal to other European countries.
If there was ever a case where the interests of the American nation, which I am a part of,
came into conflict with the interests of any other European nation, I would choose my own.
So saying that I'm purely white in that respect would be reductive.
Who are your heroes as a kid growing up?
My heroes? So personally, I was in Boy Scouts and I had role models and I had mentors in
that that taught me a lot about morality, a lot about team building, a lot about small
group leadership.
And I believe, you know, my father and some of the people in Scouts that I looked up to
were role models growing up.
But further on, as I've began to study and familiarize myself with American
history like I believe all members of the nation should, I have come to find a lot of admirable
qualities in people like George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Andrew Jackson,
Theodore Roosevelt. Each of them have very stunning values, which I think I would never compare myself
to, but I think we should, as Americans
and as what we believe are servants to our national cause, we should try to emulate them
to the best of our ability, because those people came from extraordinary circumstances.
And I believe if we are going to save America, if we are going to recast America anew, because
America has had ups and downs,
but every time there's been a large correction and America has been set for the next century,
maybe the next 150 years, I think we need that and we need to look back at our history and say,
how did they do it? Not exactly the methods, but how did they do it in terms of character,
in terms of virtue? What kind of conditions did our founding fathers grow up in that made them so strong?
Yeah, but you're saying, so at 17 years old you're already thinking about doing some of these things.
Why? Why is that? 17 years old, you know, most people are smoking weed. I'm assuming you didn't smoke weed.
Never. Never once.
At 17 years old, you're, you know, chasing skirts, you're going doing what you're doing with girls,
you're playing sports, you're maybe joining some clubs, you're part of a...
you have a four-point... you're academia guys.
Why are you thinking about these thoughts at 17 years old?
This has to have been a deep-rooted conviction, either from someone in your life
or a book or something to get you to be thinking the
way that you are? I saw a lot of the political landscape when I was just
finishing high school. I was on the school newspaper so I stayed tapped into
the news and of course Trump was running and politics was everywhere. You could
not get away from it if you tried. I went to city council meetings and I saw what
local government was like. I tried to join the young Republicans Club in
school. There was nobody that even supported Trump I went to a press conference when Trump was
When Trump was not nominated when Chris Christie endorsed him for the 2016 presidential race
I was there with my school newspaper
I saw all the various news agencies grilling Trump about his tax returns again and again and again
I saw a lot of the political spectrum and then I got involved in online movements. I was talking with people online and I ended
up at Charlottesville and I personally think I would have been better had I
not been there but knowing that I did I learned a lot about what not to do. I
think Charlottesville was a chaotic rally. I think it was very unfortunate.
Now I don't think that you know it was intended to be criminal or anything negative in that way but I think it was very unfortunate. Now I don't think that, you know, it was intended to be criminal or anything negative in that way,
but I think it was very poorly planned.
And seeing all that, I came to a conclusion from the parts of the political landscape I had seen
that it's not good enough and somebody needs to be doing something that I don't see being done right now.
And when you find yourself, you probably have experiences in business,
when you find yourself in a room of people and you might be the only one who thinks that something should be
done at a certain point you think you have to do it yourself okay so
Charlottesville did you get paid from anybody to be there no I actually spent
some of my own money nobody paid you to be there not at all whatsoever I don't
know anybody who has paid to be there okay got to his honey pot some of the
stuff that big conversations were coming up.
Okay, so let me, books, what books inspired you as a kid? What books did you read?
I have read and been inspired by the historical works of Francis Parkman.
I think he was an excellent 1800s American historian who teaches the realm of history in a very successful way.
The Federalist papers are not necessarily inspiring, they're very dense, but they are very informative and you really need to look up at the, you know,
the Federalists and the Anti-Federalists with almost a semblance of awe for how articulate and
how reasonable they were with the circumstances they had. So that was very influential on me.
I've read through the speeches and a lot of the works of George Washington, which
sounds cliche, but it's cliche for a reason because Washington is the father of the nation. I read, I don't
exactly remember the book, but I have read biographies of Andrew Jackson. I believe I
read Benjamin Franklin's biography, and I found that to be very interesting because
he lived in such a different world. I have read some works by Madison Grant and Lothrop
Stoddard, who I don't agree with everything on their racial theories, but I think in regarding immigration,
they were right about a great number of things.
Who do you fear? What do you fear and what do you fear?
I fear a life not worth living. I fear
Irrelevance with nothing to do about it. I fear unfulfilled potential.
I have a lot of people who don't like me in the world.
I have a lot of people who come after me, whether it's legally, whether it's
rhetorically, whether it's politically, but I'm not afraid of that. I'm afraid of
not doing the most I can in my life to accomplish what I think is bright and
moral and virtuous. I'm afraid of not being true to myself, with being put in
a situation where I feel like I have to morally compromise. Tell me about your
relation with your parents, mom and dad.
Absolutely. And I think my mom, who don't necessarily share all of my political opinions,
or even some of them, so I won't drag them into this, but I think my parents were divorced from a young age.
Well, from my young age, not theirs. And I went back and forth, and I learned a little bit about how families can be a little bit dysfunctional in the modern day,
but I think my story is one shared by many, young men in America today. Yeah, absolutely and I
Believe that I learned a lot from them. I still keep keep I still keep in good touch with them
Are you close to both? Yes, I would say so not one necessarily more than the other although
I did live with my father longer once I got older
But I think it's important for a young man to have a more
male role model. Who offended you? Offended me. Did anybody offend you? You mean in a
personal context? Did anybody offend you to cause rage within you? I don't believe
I have the kind of rage in me that a lot of people would expect or predict. I do what I do out of the belief that it's right and that it's necessary.
And I always do my best to avoid getting angry with people, but I don't have to try that
hard because I can have disagreements with people.
But I believe politics and decision making and leadership, especially since I work with
volunteers, everybody I work with is working with me because they want to.
And when I say, hey, go do that thing, I always follow it up with, and here's why. And here's why I
think you should do it. And if you don't, if you...
Who taught you how to do that? Who taught you how to attract volunteers? Where did you
learn that?
I learned some of it in Boy Scouts. I learned some of it on the school newspaper, but gradually
it was really a practice of learning it in the field, learning while you do.
Did you duplicate anybody
Did you have somebody that mentored you? I wouldn't say I had a specific mentor
I've seen a lot of people in my life who've done things one way or the other I
Believe I might have a natural proclivity for a few things
I don't want to sound like I'm you know putting myself out there too much
But I believe I do have a particular personality which helps towards working with volunteers. Who's your enemy? My enemy?
I believe anybody who wants to absolutely
Transform and transfigure the the face of America into something both it is not and something it was never meant to be
Does it make you feel uncomfortable that you're sitting with a middle-eastern right now? Not at all
We're having a rational and reasonable conversation when you went went to school at Capo, what percentage was whites?
It actually changed very considerably in my time there.
I'm not exactly sure on the percentages, but when I was freshman year,
I believe white people or traditional Americans as we would know them,
were the considerable majority or a super majority of the population.
By the time I left, I remember there was one very key moment
where I went back to my middle school. I was there working for the school paper, and there was a World War II veteran of the Pacific Theater speaking about his experience at Pearl
Harbor. And I looked into the audience, and I would say around three-fourths of every child
sitting there was of Indian ancestry, subcontinental Indians. And the amount of indifference I saw was startling.
And I'm not accusing these Indian children of being indifferent to the struggles of World
War II American veterans, but frankly it's not their history. They have, you know, the
history of their parents also extends back to World War II, India was involved, but it's
very different.
And it was just a shocking moment because the country that this man thought he was fighting
for and the country that he was being presented with today were so drastically different that
that was a stunning moment.
But was I personally offended?
No.
Okay.
So Patriot Front, do you guys have any black members?
No.
Why not?
Because I believe that the interests of blacks in
the United States and the interests of who I call Americans are distinct. I
don't believe they're always contradictory, but we only recruit members
who are of the European race and of the American nation. We've denied... So then
that's why they call you white nationalist. Are you okay with that
disposition? America was living by that standard
Yeah, essentially from six nothing that there's anything wrong with 1620 to 1960. That was the standard right so
But in white nationalists is a term you won't find the founders saying it George Washington the first Congress in
1787 signed a signed a law saying naturalization act the very first one only free white men of good character free white persons of good character did George Washington ever
call himself a white nationalist do people call George Washington a white
nationalist so they call him a fascist even though he existed a hundred years
different America than today so different America today so so so black
so you black members cannot be a part of the Patriot front can a Middle No. Can I apply and be part of it? There are
many organizations in this country that are by and for people of African descent or people
of Middle Eastern descent. Sure, I'm just qualifying that so we know. It's not a big
deal. It's just you're saying what the position is. Okay. Yes. Trump, how do you feel about
Trump? I have a balanced opinion on Trump. I do not personally overtly or actively support him.
I think the patriotic constituents in America, people who think like I do, are too easily brought in behind
politicians who may over promise and under deliver. I think Trump is very unique in the political space.
I think he has done a lot for the conservative movement. You see things being the norm in conservative politics that under Mitt
Romney and Newt Gingrich would have been unthinkable. So I think there is a value
to that. I think the landscape has opened up. But I don't personally support Trump.
I think Trump has to do more.
Such as what? What does he need to do?
I think his support for Israel is one thing in
particular and perhaps his favor of those Zionist politics is one of the
biggest things that are perhaps perhaps holding Trump back from a true
America First policy. So you're not for him supporting the Zionist and Israel.
You don't like that. I am not in favor of it. Why are you uncomfortable with that? I
believe not only is the the wars in the Middle East and often involving Israel either
directly or indirectly are a huge drain of resources of diplomatic credibility.
I mean how many countries in the world hate the United States because we have
chosen Israel as an ally over however many dozens of countries despise us for
our role in that. But it is a drain of blood, it's a drain of resources, it's a drain of money, it's a drain
of diplomatic credibility.
And culturally, Americans have very little in common with, I think, a lot of the people
that live in Israel.
Perhaps not much more than we would have in common with the people who live in other countries.
Unpack that.
What do you mean by that?
The word, we disagree with a lot of people in Israel?
Americans are not culturally similar to Israelis any more than we would be culturally similar to
Iranians especially you know in the country where you grew up I know Iran has changed very drastically, but I don't think we have a whole lot
There's no reason that Israel needs to be this
Ally which we are willing to sacrifice our place on the global stage for, which we're willing to wage trillion-dollar wars to destabilize their neighbors.
X, there's no reason except for the fact that there's so many Zionists in the American
government, in lobbying groups like AIPAC, and they brag about their influence.
They brag about being able to buy politicians.
And you look at politicians that say pro-Israel things, that they defend Israel invading these
cities in Gaza, and you look at how much money they've received from AIPAC and groups like that, and it's a lot. up politicians that say pro-Israel things, that they defend Israel invading these cities
in Gaza, and you look at how much money they've received from AIPAC and groups like that,
and it's a lot.
But I don't think we should support these other groups in the Middle East.
I think the United States should be hands off the Middle East, because I think a lot
of these countries, a lot of these groups, were having conflicts and border conflicts
and ethnic conflicts and religious conflicts long before the United States ever showed
up, and they'll be having them after we leave.
Do you think the world's a better place without Israel existing?
I don't know. I think the existence of Israel is something that needs to be
cited by the Middle East and not the United States. So, okay, are you a Christian?
I am not personally religious, although I do deeply respect and appreciate the role that
Christianity has played in shaping the culture of America.
What do you believe in?
I have... I believe there's something. I believe there is greater power, there is
something in nature or something in the creation of the world and the universe.
Who do you think Jesus was?
I think Jesus was an immensely important historical figure. I believe He was real. I believe
He was present, and I believe He defined millennia that have followed with His words and with His
actions and with the... Like, do you see Him as the greatest carpenter of all time? Is that kind of
high view? I think Christ exemplified a lot of the moral teachings that I believe have greatly influenced,
I mean, he's called the Son of God, and billions of people believe that.
So would you say you're an atheist, agnostic, more agnostic?
I've never delved really into picking or choosing a label, but I deeply respect the role that
Christianity has played.
So let's just say I'm a Syrian, okay?
Okay, very good.
And most of the Assyrian land was today's Iraq, okay?
And a lot of the places, historical places of Assyrians, you know, of Al-Amas and some
of these places that we had, they've been destroyed by people in Iraq,
absolutely destroying well-known churches, well-known buildings, to get rid of the history.
I'm against historical erasure.
Okay.
But also, if you say you're against it, but what does that really mean?
Because some people may say, well, the reason why Israel is necessary, because that's Jerusalem.
So what if we let it lose, and you let the Middle East handle it and they go in and they
destroy the city?
How do you prevent that from happening?
I wouldn't be in favor of cities being destroyed generally.
You won't be able to control that because that's happened plenty of times.
Does the United States need to guarantee every city in the world?
Jerusalem is a different city though.
There's a couple billion people worldwide that believe in this guy named Jesus.
They don't think he was just a carpenter. They think he was a...
I understand.
Right. So, to them, they would like to keep that place...
When you spoke with Vivek Rameshwami, he was talking about how... I don't believe he thinks that Israel should be in its place of preeminence, that it is right now.
But he was talking about how Israel had all the money and all the guns that, frankly,
they needed to defend their own borders.
But what they lacked most was diplomatic credibility.
And that was not being used by them.
Because I think there's a lot of people in Israel who are placing the conflict and their
war goals over their diplomatic credibility on the world stage.
And without the United States propping them up diplomatically, perhaps a lot of those politicians in
Israel would have to make a lot of very difficult decisions which would
ultimately bring them back into a semblance we can hope of harmony. But
that's a decision that has to be made by them. But that's a different conversation
though. Those are two separate things we're talking about. I think... I don't
think that America exists to assure these places.
You don't think America exists to ensure these places.
So, got it.
So for you, whether they destroy Jerusalem or not, that's not in your top 100 list that
matter to you.
I would say that I would think it would be a very bad thing.
However...
You wouldn't lose sleep over it though.
The United States, if we're talking about what we would do, I'm not in any position
to write policy or dictate foreign policy, right? But the United States could act not
as a arms dealer, but it could act in a more assertive tone as a peace broker. And I think
that could avoid the type of cataclysmic scenario you're talking about. What prompted you to be so uncomfortable or maybe against Israel's existence or
you know the fact that's like I think these may Trump being too supportive of
that I'm not with that what prompted you at this age 25 years old to be so
against that?
It's not so much Israel in the Middle East as much as Israel in the United
States.
I think the amount of people of Jewish faith and ancestry,
and specifically of Zionist political leanings, is...
there are overrepresented in positions of power in the United States today.
And is that me saying that every single one of them is morally bad and guilty of
some particular wrongdoing? No, absolutely not.
But I think it is not wrong to say that
these people, you know, especially Zionists, people with these lobbying
groups, are so vastly overrepresented in comparison to the amount of Jews in the
Middle East or in the United States or anywhere, that we need to ask some
serious questions as a country as to whether or not the influence of these,
you know, political careerists is in the best or the negative
interests of the United States.
And if you're asking me, I would say no.
I think that's a very valid note.
I don't think people would dispute that.
I don't think that's the concern.
There's a lot of people that are probably going to be on the same page with you there
on whether America's first or not.
It's not about I hope so.
I think that's what the case is.
Because we would want it to be America first. Some of them are simply not they're given too much money to Ukraine too
Much money to a lot of different places. Those are all
Valid concerns to have I think for you
Okay, so at the beginning I asked you, you know what things this organization was about you're like
Well, that was a hit piece that was written on us. Okay, that particular one right that one
That was a hit piece that was written on us okay that particular one right that one that was a hit piece written on you guys who who is an ideal
candidate today that you would say I like what he or she stands for as far as
conventional politicals and electoral sure yeah I don't think right now there
would be somebody that is that Patriot Front is willing to endorse because
there's not somebody up in that same stage who would in turn endorse Patriot
Front I will defend anybody who defends me.
However, I would say that the political constituency or the patriotic
constituency in America is not really ready for a nationalist candidate
because we lack a lot of the community organizing, we lack a lot of the central
focus. You look at the Republican Party today and so much of it is about what we
aren't, what we don't like about the left. It's very oppositional, but you will find
there is a more intense lack of a congruent and cohesive vision of what America should be, 10, 20, 100, 150 years down the line.
So you're sitting out this election. You will not be voting this election.
I will personally not be voting. I will not be stopping members of... that would be illegal. I'm not stopping anybody from voting.
You won't be voting.
I'm not telling anybody not to vote, but personally, I will abstain. So, okay, so if that's where you
are, my take on you is you're a true, you won't like this, you're a true white nationalist,
not in a way that you're a Nazi and you're, you know, from that standpoint, but I think
you may need to study a little
bit of Hitler because...
I don't think so.
I think, I think, listen, if you really are trying to do good in the world, which sounds
like that's what you want to do, it's important to study history.
Sure.
And sometimes studying history isn't just the good and the just studying the good people.
Sometimes you got to study the bad people as much as the good people to find out what
drove them, what moved them, what pissed them off and what led them to do something that was catastrophic
You're young you're uh, you sound like you're a true true believer. I'm not convinced all of this is happening
I think something happened to get you to be believing this stuff
I don't know the relationship with mom dad and uncle somebody like that at the beginning
There's nothing negative about it. I don't say negative. I didn't say negative.
I mean, I have some certain beliefs myself that as a young man,
that got my convictions to get deeper, I think there's something there.
Because I think for someone to just wake up one morning and want to do this,
it prompts a lot of different questions at a young age.
There has to be something that's the motivation.
I don't know what it is, but I'm sure within time time we'll find out any final thoughts to the audience before we wrap up
For me yeah
I think there were a lot of things that when we were talking about the elements on Twitter
Especially some of the things with the tweets regarding the arrests in Idaho
We never really got to fully dig in there when you were talking about the fact that masks weren't taken off
Can I talk about that point?
Of course.
So if we could perhaps pull it up the image or the video of the...
Yes, so he's asking there, why no mask removal after a rest?
And I actually saw if you scroll down in that thread a little bit, there were photos of
the guys...
See, right there, if you go right...
Not only is that everybody's mugshot, but you go right there and there is one of the guys, see right there, if you go right, not only is that everybody's mugshot,
but you go right there, and there is one of the guys being unmasked. And here's why, here's what happened,
is they stopped the truck because a citizen, just a regular person, saw something very strange,
he saw something very unusual, he called the police, and he used some language, and the police were on a hair trigger that day,
they were very nervous. And what they did was they showed up with all their SWAT
gear and stuff like that.
Because previously, there was a militia group in North Idaho
which said, hey, we're going to be there.
We're going to do all sorts of stuff, right?
That wasn't us.
But the police hearing that phone call
thought it might have been that militia group.
They show up like this.
They arrest people without even saying.
They were talking about a rioting charge
before they even opened that box truck.
They knew what they were going to arrest those people for.
They bring all those guys down onto the grass, handcuffed, because if you're a cop,
you're thinking, what's more dangerous to me, this guy's face or his hands?
So they handcuff everybody, they sit them down, and they start processing people one by one.
What they did, and this includes me, they took me up there in front of the squad car,
they take all your stuff out of your pockets, they take your mask off, they take a photo of you,
they do some paperwork, then they put you in one of them big police vans,
and they take you off to jail. So when people say
why didn't they remove their masks? They did, they absolutely did. And that whole
court case happened. Not everybody. I mean I understand you're just isolating one of the cases.
I would be more than happy to go through every single case.
There's a difference between having something like that versus you
guys wanting to come out. What do you think about KKK? What do you think about Q-Clux Clan?
I think it is a useless organization both modern
I think it made a lot of very large mistakes in history such as I think its tactics were overly chaotic. I think
There were some big political investments by the clan into things like prohibition, which I think were useless especially in hindsight
I think religious the religious disputes of the Klan were entirely useless,
especially in the modern context. And the cultural footing of the organization was founded
in a lot of resentment following the Civil War, which I think made it ineffective in
getting out of a culture of resentment
itself because if that's where you start it's gonna be very easy to stay there
and it's gonna be very easy to recruit everybody who has that sense of
resentment but it's gonna be very hard to translate out of that. What do you think about
David Duke? I don't know a whole lot about David Duke's life there are
probably some things he said which are reasonable there are probably some
things he said which I had disagree with. I don't know if he's ever hurt anybody. I
don't know if he's ever committed any particular crimes. So I will say that I'm
broadly unfamiliar with the man. So sounds like maybe you didn't study
Hitler. Well you definitely studied the KKK. It's a well it's American history,
yes. Why'd you study them? Why are you so interested in the KKK? Well the KKK is an interesting part of American history, especially when you look after the Civil War and in various periods of racial unrest in the 1800s.
It's role in the 1900s I'm a little less familiar with, but there were various iterations. It's obviously not all the same people.
But I am familiar with the Klan as much as I am familiar with the various other political figures in the aftermath or before the Civil War.
Yeah. So then for me, it's not necessarily America first, your disposition.
One may watch this and say, it's not America first, you're white first.
Because there's a big difference.
Because if you say America first, some people may, on the left, they may find a way to use
you and pull you in other America first organizations.
Have you considered changing the branding to white first over America first?
Well, no, because the white people I'm talking about are those who specifically live in America
and have a connection and a history with America.
So it's not Germans, it's not Lithuanians, it's not people from Denmark, it's Americans.
And I believe in... White first. These people. White. I believe, sure, colloquial it's white people.
Yes, descendants of the European race. But what I'm saying is that would get...
That would help a Musk or Rogan or some of these guys. They say okay cool. He's white first. It's great
No problem. It's not America first. Those are two different things because the definition of America go ahead
What you're talking about from again from 1620 to 1965
Americans were thought of before the before Europeans landed here
There was no America America is a word that comes from European cartographers. The United States of America comes from the 1700s. There
was not a single signer of the Declaration nor a ratifier of the
Constitution. Even until 1912 people who we call Native Americans, which is a term
born out of the 1960s, did not have citizenship. They were not members. They
were not even citizens. What do you think about the Constitution? I think the Constitution is one of the
greatest legal documents in human history. Do you really? Absolutely. So I think the Constitution is one of the greatest legal document do you really history
absolutely so what's the first what's let's go through it Rob just pull it up
let's pull up the Constitution go for it I think it outlines a government that
has been very effective a government which allowed okay America to go from a
series of fledgling colonies to a continental Empire can you pull up the
Constitution Rob so what do you think about freedom of religion?
I am in favor of freedom of religion, especially in the context in which the founding fathers wrote it.
There was no large population of Muslims or Hindus in America at the time it was written.
This was primarily written between different sects of Christianity.
So meaning a lot's changed since then.
Some things have changed in terms of legislative policy, but not necessarily the proper ways to instill and defend a country. How big was
the Muslim religion in 1776 Rob? Can you Google this? How big was the Muslim
religion in... these are people that are your heroes. Thomas Jefferson went to war
with Muslim pirates. I totally get that. What I'm trying to find
that is, you know, because if you're talking about
you love the Constitution, you love what it stands for, I love its role as a document which protects the government.
Freedom of religion is a way
saying that other religions can coexist and other religions could not be white.
Well, that's also important because we had immigration policy made by the legislative branch outlined in the Constitution which for hundreds of years
precluded immigration from places which were largely Christian and largely European and
Once that changes it's much more difficult to say that Congress shall make no law about anything in particular
Yeah, but but it contradicts what you're saying which what you're saying is, if the Constitution is a beautiful...
Do you think George Washington was Christian? I'm curious to know where you're at with that.
He was, yes.
Thomas Jefferson, you think he was a Christian?
Jefferson is commonly historically understood as a deist, so...
He's known as a deist?
Yes.
Okay, we're on the same page. Okay. Where are you at with Benjamin Rush?
Benjamin Rush, I would assume he was also a Christian.
Okay.
I'm not familiar exactly with his religious beliefs.
So freedom of speech, great.
I'm favoring that.
Freedom of assembly, great.
Obviously I practice that.
Freedom of religion opens it up.
So maybe.
On Christian, make no law, I agree with that.
The government itself should not adopt an official religion.
I know, but what that does do is then maybe what you,
to be congruent with your beliefs
Then maybe it is I think they screwed up when they put freedom of religion
I don't really know but then that attracts Muslims that attracts others to come here was not with the Constitution
But with the immigration policy immigration policy was opened up in 1965 not 1784
What's your point? The point is that
immigration policy allowed for all of these different people and the reason
Muslim wasn't here prior to that? Not very many. You think other religions weren't here prior to that?
Not in any significant quantity. Well it's not about significant of course. Not enough to make a difference.
I get that but compounding effect. No I think I think to to be fully congruent with where you're at, the part that may make sense is
white first, coal, because that's your priority.
When you tell somebody America first, like you tell Elon Musk, do you consider him American?
I would say it can be argued if he's fully assimilated given his cultural history you could say yes
You could say no, so he's not born here. He's from South Africa, but because he's white he's American to you
He is of a nation which is which is the South Africans who are from the Netherlands and
America has more in common with the Netherlands than it does a place like Japan I
Totally get that and I understand you you say I should say white first
No, it's not I you should say you can say whatever you want to say and nobody
can this is America I'm a freedom of speech but I think based on the way
you're presenting your ideas I don't think you're America first I think you're
white first is what you are because it's not even you're not even Christian go
ahead so it's not the denomination where you you know, I would have said if you're America first,
I think Trump is America first.
I think Musk is America first.
I think Rogan is America first.
I have nothing against these people.
No, what I'm saying to you is I think a lot of these guys are America first.
I think, you know, me being from Iran, I think I'm America first.
I'm supportive of this.
But I think there's a difference between what America first means
Versus yours, which is more specific to skin color and origin where they come from
Did you know that Charles Lindbergh who originally coined the term America first for the America first committee had beliefs in race and naturalization
Much more similar to mine than any of the people you may have but that doesn't mean that's time
That's if you ask the average talking about the origins of a but but there's a difference
So you're saying Trump has that position? I am saying Trump has his own unique positions not all of which I of course
That's kind of like saying I you know
The same book written of vault is written by 20 different people that doesn't mean
That if I write the book vault is the same as the first guy that wrote the book fault
No, that does that's not what that means and when I think I think Trump like it's the same as the first guy that wrote the book Vault. That's not what that means.
I think Trump is thinking about choosing Tim Scott as a VP.
You probably would lose your mind if Tim Scott is the VP.
I don't know or have any large opinion on Tim Scott.
But he's black though.
That's not America First.
I didn't know he was black until you just told me.
Tim Scott is black.
So far.
Very good for him.
Yeah, but it's not about good for him or not.
That would be against
Patriot front that you and your community wouldn't be okay with when you were speaking with Vivek
Yeah, you talked about how Ann Coulter believed that Vivek would not get her vote for president sure because he's the children of immigrants
And he is very surely to stay I think that is this that is an opinion held by a very large person
I don't disagree of the conservative. Yeah. I don't disagree. Of the conservative.
Yeah, I don't disagree.
Enough of a percentage to make a difference politically.
Enough or not enough?
Enough.
Okay, good.
That's an opinion.
Enough that I think it needs to be weighted.
And when you're talking about when I say America, I love the history of America.
I love the culture of America.
And I will always...
You don't really like the freedom of religion, because that kind of screwed it up a little
bit. I do not. what do you believe I endorse
that's against it because if you if if they would have said only Christianity I
don't agree with that but what I'm saying to you is the moment you say
freedom of religion yes you attract whites blacks Middle Easterns Asian
Japanese Muslim you know anything and everything to come
here because... When they wrote that and then hundreds of years afterwards, then they screwed
up and your immigration was restricted. Then you they screwed up and your people who wrote that
also made a mistake. Naturalization laws, yes. Okay, so they made a mistake, so that's what you're saying.
Well, not they made a mistake, but people hundreds of years later made a mistake. Well, not necessarily.
If they say freedom of religion, then maybe they weren't paranoid enough to think that freedom
of religion could open it up to other religions from different sects and
communities to come to America. When they passed the Immigration Act of 1965, I
believe Lyndon B. Johnson said it would not significantly transform the
demographics of the United States. We know that that's false. And when they
wrote the Constitution, when they include the First Amendment in there, they're primarily
talking about preventing religious disputes among a people which was
largely homogeneous enough European descent. You can look into the works of
Washington, Hamilton, Jefferson, and they all believe this. I understand that. I
understand where you're at. I understand your position. I think the audience gets
to decide to say, okay, this guy is not necessarily America first, he's maybe white first, or
some people are going to say, no, I think he is this, they're going to make that decision
for themselves. Candice Owens, you've said a few things about Candice Owens.
Would you be comfortable with her becoming the president of the United States? Would
you vote for if she ran? I don't think she has opinions analogous to
mine and I don't think the president of the United States should be of her cultural background
So the president of the United States should be of the cultural background. We should be American. Yes, she is
Some people's definition that goes to skin
Well, it'd be good to give me give me a black American in your eyes. I don't think there are any that's the point So that's skin. That's where you're going. Race is not skin deep. But I understand that. But to me... Race is an experience of which has all sorts of ramifications
sociologically, demographically, economically, culturally, religiously, even linguistically.
Well, I'm telling you what today did is everyone now knows who you are. I'm glad. Yeah, everyone now
knows who you are and what your position is. Yes. This is this is good for you now
They know and by the way, you know, some people gonna be like I like this guy and I think there's a believe it or not
I think there's a community of people like you that are out there
The same way when you said I think there is enough of people like and culture in America
Sure, I think there is but I think some people also say they're also holding America back
Nationalism is going to be a part of the political landscape, no matter what anybody does, because
I believe it's rooted in the innate feelings of human beings.
What do you think about Obama, by the way?
When Obama became president, what were you doing back flip celebrating that we have a
black president?
I was not in favor of him.
I was very young.
I was in middle school or perhaps elementary school.
He's not one of the guys that you're in favor of, that would drive you insane.
I don't think Obama did a very good job as president.
So then who at that young age made you believe that?
Did your parents play a role?
Did they say anything about blacks?
My parents did not influence me largely politically.
I think my parents did a good job of raising me, but I will not place my political beliefs
on them.
I get that, but for that to be injected at a young age, influenced that and that's all I'm saying for somebody to have these deep rooted beliefs like this
And I understand when you get to a point where you don't want to get your parents involved or anything else sure this does somebody
Doesn't just wake up one day and say yeah, he's you know
Well, it was a process that right years because when I in 20, how are you right now?
You're you're October 20 at 98. You said what you were you born?
20th 1998. Okay, so so when I was if I could help you out with right to 2004 he talks at the DNC
So 2008 I know you weren't but in oh wait, he becomes president
You're 10 years old. There's only one way that influence is gonna be there. It's probably from parents. I
Was not following politics at that age when I was in maybe 2014 2013
I was not politically minded at all like I was the kid like you described just doing things and
Then when 2015 2016 comes around yeah, I start learning more about politics
I start interacting with more people who have all sorts of different opinions online
I start and eventually about politics. I start interacting with more people who have all sorts of different opinions online I start and eventually you know with Trump
I start interacting with a lot of people that like Trump or that dislike Trump and I find out more of what I believe by
Interacting with people who believe different things
You know you sometimes you don't know you don't like something until somebody presents you with it and you find out well
That's not really who I am and then after a few years and ultimately I got caught up in Charlottesville
out, well that's not really who I am. And then after a few years, and ultimately I got caught up in Charlottesville as somebody who wasn't super familiar with
a lot of the things going on, and I found out a lot of what I didn't like, but I
also found out that there's something in patriotism, there's something in
nationalism that's worth having, it's just it wasn't there at the moment.
Would you ever marry a black woman? No. Okay. Middle Eastern? No.
Armenian, Assyrian? I want my children to look like me. Okay, so got it. You want your children to look like you?
I think that's a very understandable opinion. I don't know. There's people that there's a guy that
goes viral all the time and he wants blacks to only marry blacks. I don't have a problem with that.
I got a manic yesterday from somebody whose parents
are Armenian and she's dating a black guy and her parents want her to marry an Armenian guy. I can understand that. I don't have a problem with that.
But going back to it, you would be more white first, not America first.
Well, Americans are one of the sovereign nations of the European race.
Just like somebody who believes that Iranians should only marry Iranians.
Would you say that he's Arab first?
What big name today in America agrees with you?
I would say that there are people who have individual opinions.
If I'm going to point to somebody who believes everything I believe.
No, no, just the specific thing about to say,
I'm not comfortable with Candace Owens being a president.
I'm not okay with a Tim Scott being a vice president.
I'm not okay...
You put them on the ballot and you'll find out how many people believe that.
It's not about finding, oh, are you kidding me? Like, you, you, you're, we, we learned how many people
did that when Obama won in 08. Yeah, but what I'm saying to you is, I don't disagree that there isn't a sect with you.
Yes. But I think your community is getting smaller and smaller and smaller not bigger I think your community political landscape is opening up you think so
There's a lot of people you know when you talk to Tucker Carlson you asked him what America was and he said America as a people
It's a place and experience
I'm not saying he agrees with me on everything
But he also said that if you change if you take all the people in America and you replace them with somebody else
It is no longer America. I think that is a very common opinion.
I think that is a very deeply felt opinion
on the long and long-term.
I'm actually with a lot of what he's saying there.
I actually agree with him.
I'm not, when I came to America,
I feel I had to earn the right to come
to this great country.
It gave me incredible benefits.
I owe to America. I
don't think America owes me anything. Nothing. I came here and I had 195 other
options. Why do we choose America? Then, you know, we could have gone to Africa, we
could have gone to Russia, we could have gone to, you know, at the time Yugoslavia.
We could have gone to... Why do we come here? We owe America. This is why I served
in a military. But I think the difference between you and Tucker you've caught a lot of people
Yes, you've quoted Tucker you've quoted and Colter you've quoted Candace Owens and Colter data Dinesh D'Souza
Okay, sure that's Candace Owens. I think she's black. I'm tell you where she is and Tucker Carlson
Gets along with practically anybody and it's not so I would like to think I'm getting along with you.
I don't think it's about along the differences like I don't think a Tucker would want somebody
to become a president based on their skin color and being white first.
I think America, Tucker would want somebody to become president.
Race is not purely skin color.
Race is a broader aspect of the human experience.
I get that. But I mean, listen, Candace Owens is as American as Apple Pie, and Candace Owens
is black.
She is black.
And you would be uncomfortable with her being a president. I ask you if you would ever marry
somebody. No. Okay, cool. The fact that you're uncomfortable to say white first, you know,
you shouldn't be. You should be comfortable with it.
America is a nation which is a part of what you see as the white race.
And I want to put the people in this.
I don't mind.
I married a white girl from here.
I think we did the ancestry and I think she's British.
So I married a white girl that you would support of, you know, where she's from.
But to me...
I don't support somebody automatically because they are a member of my nation.
I support people because of
matters of their character and matters of their deed.
That's not what it sounds like though.
It absolutely is.
That's not what it sounds like.
I think we should be able to have a country...
The immigration policy that you're talking about
where it's largely restricted to merit,
you would believe it should be a meritocracy.
And people who have something to bring to the country
should be let in.
Right.
If that was in practice for the last 100 years,
do you think the country would be whiter or less white?
100 years are going back to 1924.
Sure.
If that would have been practice, would it be whiter?
I don't know.
So we're only letting in people
who could do something that you did.
Yeah, I probably, if you allowed it based on what they did,
I don't know, because the educational system
in Japan is incredible.
I think when I came to America from Iran,
I schooled you guys in math.
Because of how well Japan is.
No, no, but wait a minute
When I came here in seventh grade, okay, I was shell-shocked of how pathetic the math was in America at seventh grade I laughed at Americans and so, you know go look at how many Persians Iranians job creators what they do
Are you kidding me? They're all over the place when it comes onto business
So bring Japanese bring Indians the highest paid
Yes, you know Indians in America. Can you pull up Rob?
Which immigrants in America make the more make more money than actual whites?
This is actually the direction you went. Wait a minute. Let me just show this to you
So if you can pull this up Rob where it shows there's a statistic income inequality
If you can't find it Rob, I'll find it.
It shows which ethnic immigrants make the most money and whites are at $65,000,
Indians are at a $129,000. So do I think America would be better if they
attracted more Indians? They kick white people's ass, I mean if if that's the part. And I'm not even Indian.
There's no reason that I believe all these, and what you're talking about is more the immigration
that's coming from the visa programs and not necessarily the southern border.
Well, I'm not for illegal immigration. I'm not sitting here saying we do illegal immigration.
That's not where I'm coming from. But that are-
India landed on the moon. I think they can have their own engineers. There's no reason that these
people need to come here, especially not in such great numbers that it's transforming American communities
Yeah, but but that part what you just asked is when you said if from
1924 till today. Yes, if we you know followed guidelines
Would America be wider or this?
numbers specific data highest paid
or this numbers specific data highest paid immigrants in America okay ethnicity there is a chart which we've done an episode on this brand and if you're
watching I found it okay here we go and that you got to see this because I
think this will be good stuff for you to take a look at at the top just something
for us the largest growing demographic group in the country is coming from south of the
border.
There isn't a single country of that nationality on this list.
No, you're, you're, maybe at the very bottom.
Okay, check this out.
Indian Americans, number one, you probably are uncomfortable when it says Indian Americans.
What percentage of the country right now has Indian Americans?
Hang on, let me kind of go through this here for you.
I was asking the demographic. country right now has hang on let me kind of go through this you're asking a Democrat Indian Americans hundred thousand Filipinos 83 Taiwanese Sri
Lankan Japanese Malaysian Chinese Pakistani whites white first there a
place then you got the average American nobody this because I know white is
important to you so white Americans are there the cultural experience no no but
what no but you said you asked me a question. I understand. And your question was if we
would have followed the guidelines. If I see this right here, you know what I would say?
I'd love to get more Indian engineers here. Are you kidding me? We hire a bunch of them.
They're brilliant. So whatever, you know, the IIT Institute engineers destroyed the
MIT Institute engineers. Their educational system on on how they there's a video documentary that was done that got
Engineers graduating from IIT. I don't know how familiar you are with IIT versus MIT
Okay, then you ought to take a look at this because our educational system is
Weak it's not strong Indians come in here. They make us better
Educational system from Japan make us better Middle Easterns come in here with the math from Iran. They make us better
What's wrong with that? I mean if America wasn't able to use some of those resources what I'm against
Is leaving the border open guys come left and right they just found six
People who are on the terrorist list that's come in the last two
What was the number six or 14 Rob do you remember six six six that have come the last two years on the terrorist list that's come in the last two. What was the number six or 14 rap? Do you remember six six six that have come the last two years on the terrorist list because we've left the border open
No one's for that if if we could because I asked you a question about what the total demographics would look like
When we pulled up that list the largest percentage making up groups from Africa and south of the border from Latin American countries
Was at the bottom and again, I'm not saying those are bad people,
but I'm saying we need to question
why our immigration policy allows mostly those types of people.
That's a fair question.
And we shouldn't be afraid to point out
that these various groups are coming from different places
that are different.
But this destroys your argument.
What percentage of the present day United States population
is from India or the Philippines?
That would be a very excellent question because if you subtract that...
But let me ask, okay, so...
Then what does the demographics look like?
But no, no, then do you not want more Indians and Filipinos who send their best people?
I think India and the Philippines are perfectly functioning countries,
and they need all of their engineers because to me, being an American isn't about making money.
Being an American is about a unique experience.
If the Philippines or if India was going to be 52% European,
I would think that was just as bad
as if America was going to be 52%
of all of these groups you list here.
And it's not only that, but it's that the groups
that are composing the largest growing demographic percentage
you will see are actually a net negative in terms of taxes.
You know when you got triggered?
What's that?
Do you know when you got triggered? You're gonna go back and watch this because your guy's recording it, right?
Graham is recording it. You know when you got triggered?
I would, I believe I am having a civil discussion.
Oh, no, no, by the way, let me tell you.
You're way more respectful than I thought you were going to be and I'm actually enjoying the conversation.
Thank you.
So I'm not, I'm not, if somebody asked me and and said how you were I'm not gonna say he's an asshole
No, good. Am I gonna say he is, you know
You know, whatever the question that's not a feeling I got but I will say
The moment I said white first you your body energy changed all of it because I believe it's a mischaracterization of my view
Yeah, that's okay. Let the audience decide on what that is. But to me, I don't have any problem with people who
Have your position others can disagree with it and be like, okay great. Yeah, he doesn't think a black person should be a president
No problem. He doesn't think the Middle Eastern should be I think Americans are white and white people should be president in America
That's why I think you're white first and And other countries can make those decisions for themselves.
You're right, but that's your position.
Just stick to it.
That's my position.
You can say, I believe I'm white first, not America first.
Those are two different distinctions.
But Americans are white.
Yeah, I know.
And not all white people are American.
And you would never want a black American
who's born here to be the president,
and you would never want a Middle Eastern person who's born here to be president. Being born here doesn't
make you American. Okay, so then you change what the founding fathers who
wrote it, then you can say they were fools. Their immigration policy.
Finally we're getting into the bottom of it. That, Rob, these
founding fathers made a lot of mistakes with this no no no
It's not a was proper. Yeah, it was good
Well, they just didn't they just didn't know who was gonna make more babies over the next 200 years making more babies doesn't mean you Get to have my country. Yeah, but but your but your country the way it created a Constitution
Allowed for the people to come here because of the guidelines that the had. The constitution didn't outline immigration policy because that is under the
realm of the legislative branch of government. Right. The issue began with
the Immigration Act in 1965. But the founders created the structure in a way
that allowed the legislative or Congress to make laws. Yes. That's fine. That's on them then.
Then that's the point where they create founders messed up by making based on your
position not mine based on what you think I think what the founders built is
Ridiculous, I think what the paper what they built is absolutely insane
And I am super grateful for the way they built that this is why I believe I'm America first
I would have no problem with somebody who is... I'm not born here, right? So guess
what? According to our Constitution, I can't run for office. I respect that.
Totally get it. Makes sense to me because I wasn't born here according to the laws
that they have. I get why they would do that because if you don't, if somebody
all of a sudden from the outside comes in and they want to take over and destroy
this great nation, they would. that was the right way they thought.
This country was built with a context of naturalization that I believe.
You can point- Right.
White first.
Sure.
Absolutely.
And every single European nation has practiced this policy for thousands of years.
Now we're talking and this ends the conversation.
My opinions have been the same.
I know they have been the same.
This is just more messaging for you because it's confusing some of the people on the
America First side because they're putting you as America First.
So whatever the journalists are writing, they should change the verbiage instead of America
First because it's more white first.
That's all I'm saying.
They should understand what I believe America First is.
I think they will.
And by the way, I think, believe it or not, I think you've done a phenomenal job presenting
your position of where you're at.
Kudos to you.
It's very obvious where you're at.
And the audience now doesn't have any, what do you call it, questions to say, okay, maybe
he's not fit.
He's white first.
Maybe he's not this, but maybe he's not- They don't have questions, or if they do, they
know where to find me.
Yeah, there you go.
Okay, fantastic. Well, well Thomas appreciate you for coming out
what I do respect more than anything else is an individual that's willing to
come and answer the questions and is respectful about it and you've been like
that from the beginning to the end and I value that a lot it's one of those
things we value a lot in our family and I don't care whether you're white black
Asian or any of that stuff I I enjoy the conversation. Thank you very
much. Anytime. It's been a pleasure. Take care everybody. Bye bye bye bye.