Part 2 - Nick Fuentes isn't The Extremest - You Are Preview... "We were supposed to be the grown-ups. Instead, we traded their future for comfort, for politics, for wars, to kick the recession can down the road. We told them they have privilege, we called them racists, fascists, blamed them for history, expected them to have our same moral code, we shamed them for things they didn’t do, couldn’t control, and never signed up for." Link to full article...

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This series is really good. Are you becoming a thinkboi? I'm currently reading "The collapse of global liberalism" by Philip Pilkington. You should read it too and get him on your show. He explains the collapse very well and it's not just the broken money, but the broken social ideology.
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Toooldsadly 2 weeks ago
Just another Shock Jock that’s a waste of everyone’s time.
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Stjepan 2 weeks ago
In time of Slim Shady, there was plenty of Nick Fuenteses around. I knew one guy with same topics like him. Guy that was so slimy no girl would touch him. Only real difference is that they did not have communication platforms where they could group up and attract low IQ people into their cause and spread hate like he does, and no sane journalist back than would ever call someone like him to talk on TV. He is not effect of some injustice towards group of people. He is effect of change in our abilities to communicate. Pieces of shit that used to be on a bottom of the pool, ignored and contained now suddenly have chance to float up to the surface. And they really enjoy air and sun so they can spread their smell around.
👇this explains so much We told them to get a degree, then made the degrees worthless. We told them to buy a house, then inflated the houses out of their reach. We told them to trust the institutions, then the institutions lied to them, over and over.
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natalalee 2 weeks ago
Interesting read, I can definitely relate to your observations! Every generation has it’s challenges. Younger millennials and gen Z were given so much yet so little at the same time. So on the outside we look like spoiled brats when we despaired about society. Technology and governments became our de facto parents when certain ideologies tore the mother out of the house, belittled the patriarch and relegated religion to an archaic superstition. Despite this there is still hope. There are pockets of young people who are overcoming their tech addiction, resisting governmental overreach, returning to the faith of their forefathers, and doing their earnest to live a virtuous life.
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Moonpilot 2 weeks ago
An interesting set of articles, certainty worth thinking about and it might explain why those at the top of the pyramid are so desperate to shut down social media and freedom of speech - but all they are doing is accelerating their own demise.
Thanks for bringing attention to this interview Peter. I agree with your take that it's an iconic one and a watershed one for our times. I watched the full interview and thought Fuentes was hilarious but also that he spoke the truth while Morgan could only parrot the received narrative and try to hit Fuentes with low blows. The post war consensus is done. A new age is upon us. That's not necessarily "good" or "bad" but it most certainly "is" imo
I bet you if Piers was interviewing a BLM activist he'd end up making some of Fuentes's arguments just to have a chance to be condescending. I liked your article in principle, but the generational framing seems irrelevant to me. You seem to be saying that Gen Z are vulnerable to certain views because they're vengeful or something. I'm a millennial and found Fuentes far more cogent than Morgan because he argued better and spoke truthfully. Caveat: I've never heard of Fuentes before this, and could only tolerate Morgan for about 30 min so didn't watch the whole thing.