SUPREMACY
2025-11-17T03:24:10+00:00
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That's out of destruction, The self-destruction system has been activated.
This island will be struck in 10 minutes.
All the personnel must be evacuated immediately
all the personnel
in fact away immediately September 28th, Jaylight.
The monsters have overtaken the city. Daylight Monsters have
over-taking the two
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I'm and What? What up, retards?
Strill Stani, what's up, bro, with the 10?
I appreciate you, bro.
Comrade Kid with the 5.
What's up, bro?
Slow Mo with the 1.
What's up?
Versage.
Laco, Dubois,
the two, bro.
What's up?
I appreciate you.
J.B.
with the five.
Appreciate you, brother.
Blunt with the five.
What's up,
bro?
Comrade with the five.
I appreciate you,
bro. Thank you. Damn. What the 5. I appreciate you, bro.
Thank you.
Damn.
What the fuck?
Versaise with the 25.
What's up, bro?
Appreciate you.
Thank you.
Or be tall with the 10.
What's up, bro?
Thank you.
Thank you so much, brother.
Phil Fo with the
1. What's up, bro?
What's up, bro? Good shit.
Dark
NRG with the 5. Thank you, bro. Appreciate you.
Appreciate you, bro.
What's up?
Damn, that shit.
I didn't know that shit update like that.
Fuck.
That shit just...
You saw that shit
in real time start updating.
Johnny Castro with the five.
What's up, bro?
Y'all are, uh...
Y'all be on some crab time.
Appreciate y'all.
But, uh...
Guys, on some real shit.
I fucking hate these long...
This is the longest intro we've had
in a long time.
I don't remember the intro
ever being this long.
It's almost a 40 minute intro, guys.
Just get in the fucking stream.
Stop wasting time.
You know, it's just like,
we got to prove that communism works,
that the tragedy of the commons.
Because some of y'all are like, I'm a wait, I'm a wait.
You know, you guys, y'all in line for Chick-fil-A, okay, at the airport.
And you're sitting there.
You're like, I'm gonna wait for the line to clear up.
And then I'm gonna go get me my chick-fil-A, you know?
And it's like, you got this totally wrong mentality.
Orbital, what's up?
And then what ends up happening?
You know?
The line never... I don't know. Wait, wait in line, motherfuckers.
It'll be a lot quicker.
Just wait and lie, it'll be a lot quicker.
All right? We give the 10 minute intro.
Instead of waiting 40 minutes, you get a longer stream.
Stream's always going to be the same size, okay?
Because my time is fucked.
I mean, I'm, shit, shit, shit.
I got so much shit I got to work on.
You know what I mean?
Anyway, y'all I'll I'll be streamed more often
shit is kind of dead
and I'm gonna talk about that
in terms of like politics
as this is like anyone else feeling it.
It's me too. Before I the stream started,
I'm like, fuck.
Because y'all saw that post I made today, that tweet
that I made. And it's like,
we're in a situation we've never
been in before in the entire history
of infrared and the entire history of our movement, the entire history of U.S. politics.
And the reason is because we're straight up just on the boiling point. And I think the thing that, the thing, you know, as far as I see, is that when it got found out, and everyone knew this was the case, so let's not pretend like this is somehow, you know, let's not pretend like this is somehow a big shock, which it's not. But the fact that the whole nation had to process it
is the crazy thing. That, you know, Trump finally is just in those emails with Epstein, right? And it's just like concrete. And that, that was pretty recent. That was, what, a week ago that we saw that. And then another thing, another thing that I think is like also really, yeah, the whole thing with Bill Clinton okay with Trump
you could not think of
a more
tangible
scenario like there's you couldn't think of a more
symbolic
representation and an act of just how much Trump is part of the system and part of the establishment.
And that, I think, has led to a ominous silence throughout the country i don't know maybe that's just me
that's feeling that way maybe it's just the weather the season that it's winter it's getting
colder the nights are getting longer there's overall a, a darkness that's descending upon America.
It's an ominous silence.
But I think that at this point, and I may have to explain this to people who may not understand why this is and like why is it if we already
knew this like why well because for the average joe you're talking about a scenario where
i can't imagine a normal american who doesn't think the government are all pedophiles anymore.
Every single American in this country believes that our rulers and our government are full of pedophiles.
And as we actually accurately predicted or anticipated many times, Maga was this movement of people who
recognized that, but still
held on to Trump as someone
outside of it all. They held on to
Trump as someone who
represented some kind of
concrete, positive hope.
Or I should rather say, he represented some kind of like source of authority and
legitimation that was just outside the system and that's the only reason people liked Trump and
were fans of Trump. They saw him as outside of the system and why? Because of
the way the system and the media
kept attacking him so relentlessly.
And looking in retrospect,
should we say that it was all an inside job
the whole time and that he was always
this was all like a manufactured and I don't know.
The truth is I don't know.
I tend to be, I don't know.
I mean, anyone who claims they know that I think is also lying.
What I actually think is happening
is a gangster-like
conflict going on up there.
And I think Trump's
stepped on some toes and that they're getting
back. I mean, this is like part of the
blackmail that they had on him.
And
so for sure, maybe he's done
something to piss them off, but it
did expose that he...
I mean, he's a pet of what
what was we going to call it right
he's part of
he's like straight up a pedal
like what else are we going to call it right
and we always knew this it's not a surprise
to anyone
but the way that it's just all
becoming so exposed if you talk to an average person 20 years ago
and ask them if they think the government are all pedophiles actually they may say they
it's possible they may say they have suspicions it's not like going to shock anyone for such conspiracy theories to become widespread.
But this isn't a conspiracy theory.
It's actually cold, hard fact. And the entire, I want to explain something to you guys about revolutions and social unrest and how populations typically like to experience reality. Now, there are those of us who are probably in the 5 to 10% who do like actively enjoy conspiracy theories we actively enjoy the idea that everything is a lie that everything's going to shit that everything is going to blow up some kind of way.
What can we say? We have revolutionary instincts, I confess. But 90% of people would prefer
to not have to think about those things. 90% of people would prefer to not have to think about those things.
90% of people would prefer the illusion that everything's fine, that everything's going
as is intended, that people in power know what they're doing.
And that's 90 to 95% of all people in a given country.
They actively delude that they partake in a public illusion about the nature of power.
Everyone knows that the powerful are evil and they're wicked and they're corrupt.
Everyone knows that.
But people, you know, they don't want to actually have to know that in a way that
that leaves a question mark upon them of like, okay, well, how is life going to be facilitated at the day-to-day level?
It takes so much energy.
So people actively are biased in favor of illusions and lies and delusions and and and copium that's the nature of the system
we live in that's the nature of most societies the problem with what's going on now with these latest emails released about Epstein, and by the way, this is a tipping point. I mean, we're talking about Gaza. We're talking about the Israel lobby. We're talking about Trump being exposed as a total his conflict with
MGT that's going on
his conflict
with Thomas Massey
the amount of
times the Maga base has just felt
betrayed by his presidency at this point
so this is a pretty stark, like, way to wrap it up.
This is a tipping point for sure.
But at this point, the illusion can't be maintained.
There's, there's no way for people to just go about their daily lives and be like, well,
there's a chance. No, I mean, it's also out in the open now that there's an ominous silence I see
that has covered and enshrouded the entire country, kind of darkness, right?
Where people...
And at any point, please intervene and tell me that I'm projecting, but...
It very much feels like people, there's this extreme anxiety about the future now, because the illusion of a USA, of any kind of like
normal government is just not possible anymore
and like the last
person that people were holding out on
that they thought was like somehow
against the system and against the status quo
being revealed as part of it all, that is a
that is a dramatic development, absolutely a dramatic development. And, you know, you may be
curious, for example, about the question of, well, okay, then why were you Maga communists if you knew this all along? Well, for the same reason, everyone knows everything all along and doesn't act upon that knowledge directly because it's different types of knowledge.
There's a knowledge at the level of the consciousness of the people,
and then there's a knowledge at the level of what we...
I mean, Lenin does talk about this in left-wing communism, actually.
You know, regarding the illusion of parliamentary politics,
Marxists are in the know that parliamentary politics is ultimately a waste of time.
But Marxists should still participate in bourgeois elections,
and bourgeois electoral processes.
Independently, of course, from the perspective of proletarian independence, of course,
it's a key reason we're not Democrats.
But, you know, sometimes I see people confuse the critiques of Mamdani and the, you know, election stuff.
And it's like, they're like, well, electoralism is bourgeois elected.
No, no, no, no, Lenin addressed this very clearly.
It's not that electoralism is bourgeois.
It's that lacking proletarian political independence is bourgeois. It's that lacking proletarian political independence
is bourgeois, okay?
So if you have
your own proletarian party
and you run for,
I mean, it's standard,
standard.
I mean, I hope most of you
that's a given,
right?
But nonetheless, we understand that the system cannot be changed at an electoral level.
I mean, we know that.
Everyone knows that.
But Lenin makes an important and crucial distinction.
We may know that, but what's an illusion for us and what's an illusion for the masses and for the people is a completely different thing.
And so you have to not reinforce the illusions of the masses, but recognize what they mean.
You have to recognize their meaning. So for us,
you know, Maga communism was absolutely a way of recognizing what Trump symbolized for that
movement. We didn't affirm our agreement that Trump is a trustworthy politician that people should follow.
If we ever held that position, then we would have simply said, instead of join or follow or listen to the communists,
instead of organized as the American
working class, you should just
follow Trump and vote for him.
And yet, curiously,
the Maga Communists, not
once advocated
anyone votes for Donald Trump.
So we recognized what he meant as a symbol for people.
Again, the logic is pretty clearly established in this tradition.
Parliamentary democracy is also an illusion,
but it means something different,
in objective reality, right?
In any case,
but now there's an interesting development development which is that it does kind of seem like
maga is dead and i think it's kind of fair to say maga is over i think now as of nove 16th, 2025, it is absolutely fair to say that Maga is over.
The Maga movement is no longer this, you know, alternative reality of American
popular sovereignty
because it is no longer alternative.
It has been
fully embraced
and absorbed by
the system, which is
absolutely, I mean, go on the infrared archives and keyword it,
and this was absolutely one of the outcomes in 23 and 24 that I said could possibly happen if Trump wins.
And this is the outcome that happened.
I mean,
MAGA
has been absorbed, and by MAGA,
I mean, you know,
not necessarily the
consciousness of the base,
but more so the position Maga had previously occupied, which was a way of bypassing traditional institutions through political and correctness, through alternative facts, so-called alternative facts, you know, through a lack of trust in experts in favor of more trust in Trump and so on.
Well, the system has assimilated that and incorporated that.
And it's absolutely kind of absorbed it as a circuit within the,
kind of detour within the hegemony, if you will, right?
And what I mean by that is it's like, well,
it's kind of a stupid example, but it's like,
you know what I think, you know what I'm thinking of when I'm thinking about this shit I'm thinking of like the um the um the um the um the ad with sidney suenny which is like oh we have great jeans and like you know that the people who made that ad you know for a fucking fact that they're like snickering and they're like woke is dead we're gonna we're gonna we're gonna we're gonna sneak in this
Nietzschean genetic superior like um these people
you know that's what's going on, like straight up.
And then Dasha, who was, well, she actually got fired because she was talking to Nick Fuentes.
But that whole, like, New York scene, like the Dime Square people, for example, like, they totally, like, have...
They're in.
Like, they're kind of, like, in.
And, like, yeah, you know what?
Woke is dead.
It's true.
The whole point of Dark W woke is that it's an affirmation that woke is dead, meaning the old libtard kind of political correctness and inertia of institutional thinking.
Like, that's actually dead.
Kyle Kalinsky can smoke a cigar and be like,
woke is dead, motherfucker.
But that's actually, this is him being ironic.
That's him acquiescing and acknowledging the superfluousness now of Maga.
Kyle Kalinsky is now Maga,
but he doesn't have to even acknowledge it
because Maga has been incorporated into the system.
So it's no longer like identified as Maga
because it's no longer this like separate thing
from it's become
absorbed in the ordinary everyday
everyday consciousness of every every political
actor. Every political actor
is already Maga. Like I said
this a year ago when Trump got elected, but
to reaffirm it,
Maga is superfluous
maga already took over u.s. politics
everyone is already
maga and what remains of maga now
is just trump
the the movement you know this now is just Trump.
The movement,
you know, this distance,
this radical distance toward the kind of impersonal,
you know, 2010,
zero, bureaucratic,
like, woke woke political correctness
is universal. Even the
transgender blue-haired furry
is victimized by that
subjective distance. Even they, even they
no longer
are the naive liberal
of 2016. That doesn't exist anymore.
Darg is brilliant.
Look at Gavin Newsom's tweets.
Maga has won.
Maga already dominated U.S. politics, and everyone is now Maga.
To the point where what's the point of calling it Maga if everyone's Maga?
There's no point of that signifier anymore when it becomes superfluous and it has already nope nobody see some people might try to
like be like oh myga communism was disproven right and it's like are you fucking kidding there's no other
game in town now the reason we don't even use that term is because it's like, well, I mean, like, Hassan Piker is a Maga communist now. Who isn't a Maga communist? Everyone is. The pre-Maga position in U.S.
politics doesn't exist
anymore. Like, that doesn't even exist
anymore. Are you kidding?
Do you remember who AOC
was in 2018?
Do you remember what Bernie was
in 2015, 2016? Do you remember what Bernie was in 2015, 2016?
Do you remember the 2020 era of BLM?
Do you fucking remember that?
That doesn't fucking exist anymore.
Okay?
What remains of the liberals are like very extremely edgy.
They are literally posting Sun and Rans with sickles and they're doing the kirkified memes
like on everything.
Like that is not,
that is absolutely a post-maga phenomena.
That speaks to the fact that maga
became superfluous
and just everyone's maga now
and there's no need to acknowledge it.
So like don't, don't get confused.
Like when people say, oh, woke is back.
Woke is coming back.
Woke is not back.
Okay?
This is an ironic comment made by people for whom, you know, they're sarcastically mocking the, the, frankly, yes, I mean,
conserve a boomer slop of Matt Walsh that constantly just beats a dead horse.
The reason the woke is back meme is so effective is because, like, it did die.
Everyone knows it died.
So when Matt Walsh keeps talking about woke this, woke that, when retard conservatives and right-wingers keep talking
about woke this and woke that, the libtards are like, dude, what we know woke is dead. So why are you constantly talking about it so that's where the
memes and the irony is coming from that's why they're mocking it in the first place it's no longer
this sacred thing to be defended it's something to just kind of be mocked and played with without taking it
seriously and the only the only need for and played with without taking it seriously.
And the only need for it to be regarded as post-woke, by the way,
is that there is an ironic, subjective distance toward it that there wasn't before, okay?
Nobody in 2020 during the summer of 2020 had an ironic distance of self-aware subjectivity
with respect to wokeness.
People straight up very seriously
with a straight face
were out here saying that if you're a white man,
you need to like kneel and start crying. And like, they were straight up like robots, like
serious about that shit. Now, they might say that ironically, they might even say it and then give some kind of addendum footnote to be like well and yeah actually yeah actually we do they but like there is still now there's like this distance toward it where it's no longer something they can do without self-awareness.
Maga has imposed a self-awareness upon U.S. politics
that will never, ever be reversed.
And the reason liberals want
revenge is because of that
because they know that they've been
corrupted by Maga and they
want, that's what Dark Woke is about, they want
revenge for it. They want revenge
for their Obama era optimism
being corrupted in ruin.
I used to live in a really bright, nice world, and then Trump ruined it.
Like, they want revenge for the fucking wholesome.
They're literally like reactionaries in a way, right?
Like, they want to go back to Obama, and they're really upset that that fantasy was ruined
for them, so they want revenge.
All right, so, like, that's straight up just true, right?
But no, with all that said and done, though, let's talk about trump today and what maga means
today like what remains of that signifier once since it has already as a phenomena and as a
movement prevailed over all of u.s. politics, it's dead. It's straight up dead. I mean,
it won. So now the word is dead. Like, it means literally nothing. What does that even mean
anymore? It's no longer the fundamental axis of polarization around which politics is defined in the U.S.
anymore.
Can I explain to you why nobody should be scared of Nick Fuentes?
And he just got acknowledged by Trump, by the way.
So that's, let's not be delusional, okay?
He's not going to be going anywhere for U.S. politics, for sure.
You shouldn't have that illusion.
You should absolutely be aware of what's going on. But the fundamental
axis of polarization that's now defining U.S. politics is no longer between MAGA and the
politically correct, lib-tarded establishment.
The fundamental
axis of polarization
is based in the
Israel question.
That has targeted a nerve that is fundamental for modern american society and there is no
going back the fundamental axis of polarization surrounds the israel question for maga it's a very simple question of we're not putting our country
first you know there are politicians are ruled by zionism for okay, at least those among them that have humanity in some way, and not to sound like a libtard, but what else can you say?
It's the same thing. Like, why did we tolerate a genocide? Why did, why do Zionists have the right to commit a genocide?
You know?
And, well, they realize our politicians are bought and sold by APEC.
And it's like, you have Israel, and then you have the Israel lobby and you have Zionism and then there's Jeffrey Epstein, which is this intermediary that connects the entire corrupt world of the global capitalist ruling class, the global Anglo-Atlantic capitalist ruling class.
People say, why are you saying Anglo-Atlantic and not jewish because the jewish aspect of the ruling class is part of the
anglo-atlantic ruling class there's no telluric jewish power okay there's no telluric jewish
power there's no eilaric Jewish power.
There's no
Eurasian
Judaic power.
To whatever
extent there is
a Jewish
power, which there is.
Jeffrey Epstein
was Jewish.
That's the whole
he's a proxy
for Mossad.
He's a proxy for the entire billionaire capitalist jewish class on a gul a jewish capitalist class on a global scale um that are plugged up through family ties through kinship relations and ultimately through
Israel but that's part of the anglo-saxon capitalist world that's part of the anglo-atlantic world
of the ruling elite.
You know, the symbol of that is what?
It's the British monarchy.
So that has become, and we could talk about the reasons why, but let's just accept the reality. That's become the
fundamental axis of polarization between the hegemony and counter-hegemonic forces within the
country, which is fascinating, because under Biden
Mago was a proxy
for counter hegemonic consciousness
and then
with respect to the establishment
with respect to the system
but that that counter with respect to the system. But that
counter-hegemonic
movement
was absorbed by the hegemony.
And it's become superfluous.
Everyone is now Maga, right?
So now that everyone is now Maga, a new contradiction has reared its head. And therefore, a new space for partisan counter-hegemonic consciousness and movement has been opened up. a new space for it, right?
It's no longer just maga.
It's something actually that encompasses a much broader strata of the population, which cuts across age, which cuts across cultural affiliation.
It cuts across geography.
And, you know, another, you know, there's, you know, I'm going to say something to compliment Noah's kind of idea of reprolitarianization.
One of the reasons this has happened to is because the traditional proletariat, the blue-collar factory proletariat,
that was the base of maga right but as noah points out and i don't know if i can fully send off like a you full complete um like endorsement of the all the theory aspects of the theory because i haven't even
read it in in depth to that point but the basic idea is more or less correct which is that
that proletariat was experiencing a declassing to a great extent, you know, de-industrialization, aging, you know, they're, they tend to be older, and then they tend to be
geographically confined elsewhere. And then there's this kind of re-proletarianization process
where a new threshold of proletarianization
is emerging, which is
cutting across older traditional
forms of life and
conventions and
means of subsistence,
including blue-collar working-class jobs.
But the difference with the re-proletarianization that's happening isn't leading to a new, like, proletariat, emerging, but more like a huge declass, like prominently lumpenized population that have no future job prospects. They're either working bullshit jobs that don't even matter. They're unemployed unemployed they don't have a future prospect for any
kind of jobs and it's this and they're in debt or they're students and they're looking for a job
and they can't find one but that is a much more broad encompassing demographic of the American people.
De-proletarianized, yeah, I mean, it's confusing, right?
The aspect of proletarianization that's going on is people are being cut from their traditional means of life. So proletarianization was typically a consequence of the enclosure when the peasants lost their old way of living and were forced into the cities to work in the factories.
But what's going on now is that the cut is happening, but it's not leading to the constitution of a new laboring,
you know, proletarian class that produces surplus value.
It's leading to what, you know,
post-Marxist theorists, you know,
will often call,
what do they call it?
It's like excess surplus population.
What is the specific word
that they
use it's like
almost
I even think
that
um
heart and
negri
when they were
referring to the
multitudes
they were
referring to
something like
this
uh
de los
in his
I think defense of the lumpen.
Superfluous, absolutely.
Superfluous population.
That's the word I'm looking for.
Yeah, it's leading to the growth.
Yeah, precariet.
Thank you, Jennifer.
Holy shit. So, precariet. Thank you, Jennifer. Holy shit.
So, precariet and kind of superfluous population.
And that is basically the new subject of the new counter-hegemonic movement that's taking place.
Because default... of the new counter-hegemonic movement that's taking place because default lines the class
divisions that the maga versus establishment conflict exposed are no longer the fundamental contradiction because the class contradiction among the
people that's taking shape is between this increasingly growing superfluous population as precariet, you know, and institutional gatekeepers and beneficiaries of the rentier system.
Now, this doesn't mean
that we give up on our strategy of highlighting
and emphasizing the blue collar working class
at all.
But what it does mean is that we should have an awareness of why the shifts and changes
that are happening in U.S. politics are happening in the way that they are. And why are they cutting
across old political and ideological fault lines? because a new class is
converging together made up
of disparate elements
young conservatives
young liberals, young
leftists, young right-wingers
the reasons why young leftists, young right wingers.
The reasons why you had a left-right divide
in the U.S. in the past was based
on a class distinction
that is no longer fundamental in
defining the differences among
the population. So now, as this new class is emerging
very rapidly and taking shape, the old political fault lines are collapsing, and there's this
new axis of polarization, which is between a very heavily gate-kept hegemony, okay, and a large
population of people who are just excluded. Okay, so the reason there's a lot of anti-Semitism is because Jews being from the Ellis Island immigrant
population came to the U.S., the immigrant factor is fucking huge here, and I want to talk about
it, because this is something that's often overlooked, which I I want to talk about it because this is something that's often
overlooked which I absolutely want to talk about but basically America was this like wasp
country whatever then Germans came in late 19th century then the next generation of immigrants were
the Jews the Jews were the Jews were the first kind of immigrant group that came to the U.S.
And they, they, instead of becoming proletarianized at their conclusion, you know, um, becoming absorbed in the main,
in blue collar industrial work,
or manufacturing or whatever,
they made a living off of their kinship networks,
which allowed them to build capital,
to basically occupy this very high positions in the hegemony.
So things that are related to culture, things that are related to medicine, things that are related to lawyers, you know,
education,
professions,
right?
Jews are like
the OG group,
immigrant group
that came
and just like,
they were the founders.
They like,
they took it
before anyone else, right?
Now, Jews are not actually unique as far as, like, this kinship network kind of way of, like, making a living off of a country.
Every other wave
of immigrants that have
come after the Jews,
okay, pursue the same
strategy, absolutely pursue the same
strategy. Immigrants, let's say,
I think I would,
maybe I could get away with saying this.
After the 90s at least,
the waves of immigrant groups that would come to the U.S. legally,
again, emphasis on legal,
did not come here to work with their hands.
They came here to be like the Jews. They want to be doctors.
They want to be lawyers. They want to be in corporate positions. They want to be in professional
positions. They want to be in finance. They want to just be in these like, they want to be in
tech, right? So this is like Indians.
This is like Nigerians.
This is like Lebanese people, Arabs.
You know, one of the reasons why there's not a lot of Lebanese people in our movement, and I'm like the only one of the only ones.
Because by and large
Lebanese immigrants um and I witnessed this they fuck with the Groypers more than us because they
have the same class background by and, Arab and Muslim and Lebanese immigrants, by and large, I'm not saying as a whole, but by and large, you know, they come to America and they are aspiring professionals. They are aspiring PMC. They're aspiring
CEOs. They're aspiring doctors
and aspiring lawyers.
And they're aspiring whatever.
What they are not is
complacent
factory workers. What they are
not are traditional warehouse workers. What they are not are traditional warehouse workers.
What they are not is, you know, that's just not what they fuck with at all, right?
Yeah, they have a petty petite bourgeois disposition.
And, you know, look, as a salt, you know, honestly, I'm an extremely overeducated person in terms of how self-taught I am.
And maybe that has to do with my background. Maybe it does. You know, I'm not a proletarian. I buried myself in books since I was like 14 or something or 12, whatever, right? So, but I became a Marxist, just like Jews in the past would become Marxist. Instead of becoming doctors, they would just become a Marxist, and they would go with the people, right? So whatever. But, yeah, in any case, but that's why you know so let me explain this new generation of the precariet
and this new generation of the the superfluous populations what's heavily represented among them as like a lot of the ideological leaders and a lot of the cultural leaders and the main bulk of the sentiment, where is that, where is the centers of gravity coming from with anti-Semitism?
It's coming from the immigrants. It's coming from these immigrant groups. Okay, Lebanese, okay, Albanian, okay, Balkans,
Polish or some shit,
Latin America, absolutely, Nigeria, you know,
you think of Persians, absolutely.
Absolutely, it's coming from... You think of Persians, absolutely. Absolutely.
It's coming from aspiring professional immigrant groups who are resentful about the fact that the top or just the most viable positions are perceived as being occupied by Jews, and oftentimes they are, right?
And they just see the Jews as this obstacle to being able to climb within the hegemony, right?
So that's creating an antagonism between these strange, you know, ethnically ambiguous immigrant populations and the Jews.
And so right, what this reflects, though, is something we should talk about.
It reflects the fact that the leaders of the counter-hegemonic
movement in the U.S. right now, like most insurgent, dare I call them revolutionary movements,
and there's nothing loaded about that term necessarily. It's led by the Petit Bourgeoisie, just like it was in Europe in the middle of the 19th century, just like it always is. But the Petit Bourgeoisie is assuming the reins of leadership in the movement right now, against the hegemony.
And by the Petit Buzzi, I'm talking about the aspiring professional elements or the declassed professional elements.
You know, the wreckers of our party, fun fact, you want to know what all the wreckers of our party, fun fact,
you want to know what all the records of our party have in common?
You want to take a wild guess what all the wreckers of our party have in common?
Every single,
nearly every single one of them
was an aspiring academic who was shut out of the system.
Every single one.
Aspiring university, they wanted to become a university researcher, a doctor, they wanted to become a university researcher a doctor they wanted to be a lecturer
and they were like shut out so that element is becoming that element is assuming leadership of the movement right now.
Now, this is, what I'm going to tell you is very crucial for the American Communist Party and for how we should interface with this new movement okay um
el n bad you is like dead who are you talking about his most ascendant pupil
don't tell me you're for you that guy is his most ascendant pupil get bedew is literally
his legacy is dead if that's the case like that's the most stupid shit i've ever heard anyway
you must be talking about rock hills people like what do you mean bedew alen bedew's most
ascendant give me a fucking break that's? Alain Bedou's most ascendant...
Give me a fucking break.
That's not Alain Bedou's
most ascend pupil, okay?
Fuck's sake.
Alain Bedew's most ascendant
pupil is some retarded American
who doesn't even know anything
about Marxism.
It doesn't know anything about Hegel,
doesn't know anything about Heidegger, nothing.
None of the formative influences on Bidou.
Doesn't even know anything about Spinoza?
Give me a fucking break.
So look, anyway.
Um... so look anyway um nothing it's not important deluz so look um the only way proletarian leadership is going to take charge of this movement is if we,
and it's going to sound fucking boring and horrible.
But this is my view.
You want to critique me and present an alternative view?
Just do it, sure.
Just don't be fucking retarded and stupid.
And don't disappoint me with stupidity.
We need to organize the working class.
Because the working class, the proletariat, what remains of the blue collar proletariat, cannot assert itself as a leader of the movement as an individual. They can only as a collective force that's organized collectively only by a logic a proletarian logic of association only that is going to exert
the needed influence on this nascent you know movement that is going to exert the needed influence on this nascent, you know, movement that is full of
these kind of declassed elements. Because, look, can everyone fucking listen for two seconds?
Like, holy shit.
Are you retarded?
Yes or no?
Can you process what I'm about to tell you?
Like, are you fucking idiot?
Or can you actually open your ears and process what I'm about to tell you.
Okay.
So, this new precariet population, just like all young people, right?
They can only mainly be defined
in the negative. So they've lost
a former position they used to have.
They're aspiring toward
a position that they cannot have.
They're weighed down by debt.
They're weighed down by gatekeeping
they don't have a future
they don't have future career prospects
they don't even know how to get by
they're getting by through
welfare
they're getting by through snap
they're getting by through shitty minimum wage jobs that they're getting by through snap they're getting by through
shitty minimum wage jobs
that they're working multiple
multiple you know
bullshit jobs
only fans
you know uh crypto scams
what can you say
DoorDash Uber Uber, whatever.
So that's a huge mass. Like, that is the mass. They're not all lumpin, but it is a mass of people who are
primarily defined by a negative.
They have nothing.
Okay?
So in that respect, they are proletarianized.
But the reason they're not the proletariat is because the positive aspects, when I say positive, I don't mean this in a loaded, you know, normative or moral or anything sense. I mean in a sense of like, what, what do you actually do within the division
of labor? Like, what do you actually do, right? That, they have nothing in common with the traditional proletary they don't produce surplus value
if they do i've seen some convincing theories about how they could be doing this for example
in the form of data that data is the new form of surplus.
Like, I'm always interested in that shit.
I'm always open-minded and whatever.
But, no, you're not going to convince me that, you know, working at McDonald's is the equivalent
of the proletariat of yesteryear in terms
of like how labor is being crystallized
in the commodity and how surplus
value is, I don't buy
that at all. I'm interesting creative
ideas though, you know, the data
thing is super interesting to me.
The attention economy shit, super interesting to me.
Like, I'm super open-minded to it.
Anyway, but that population is mainly divined by a lack.
Okay, is everyone listening or ones if you're listening?
Like, do you have that first part down? Okay. Is everyone listening or ones if you're listening? Like, do you have that first part down?
All right, good.
Okay.
The reason these immigrant groups, the reason this Petit Buzois element is leading that movement, is leading the masses, just call for what is, they're leading the masses, like they are. The reason the Petit Pougeoisie is leading the masses and articulating
their revolutionary sentiments is because they're offering a positive articulation and a positive substantive class position, which is we want to be the Jews. We want to be the professionals. We want to be the lawyers. We want to be the doctors. We want to be the doctors.
We want those positions.
We want to be running Hollywood.
We want to be running, you know, the game Ubisoft and whatever.
Like, we want that.
We want it.
And it's just for us, you know? That's the, in an immediate level, that's extremely, extremely compelling to people whose existence is defined by having lost all of that. Of course those people are like,
you know, you sell that to people and they're going to be like,
fuck, yeah, I want that shit.
I want it.
Like, that's what I've lost.
That's what I'm inspiring toward
and my dream is being crushed.
I want to attain that, right?
So we need to distinguish the masses.
The masses are, by and large, not the blue-collar workers.
By and large, and they've never been in history.
By and large, the masses are people who are defined by a loss, okay?
And the petite bourgeoisie is assuming leadership over their movement
and is assuming leadership over articulating their feelings and their sentiments because they're the ones
providing a positive class leadership in the form of the petite bourgeoisie.
Like they are, they are providing some kind of like this is what we should aim toward they are articulating their class
position in a positive way the only ones okay and it's true also for leftists leftists they may be dark woke and shit now but it's true also for leftists. Leftists, they may be dark, woke and shit now, but it's still the same position of DEI.
It's still the same position of we want more inclusivity, we want it to be more, you know, um, ethical. We want more ethical black rock, uh, bankers. We want more, you know, uh, woke, uh, whatever. Yes, we want to become the managers and CEOs of Starbucks, but we want to unionize.
Like, whatever.
Like, that's the same shit.
We want to be philanthropic and humanitarian, yada, yada, yada.
It's still the same class position, though, okay?
So that's the, that's a petite bourgeois articulation the leftist one um you know you know what the leftist
version of it is versus the groypers it's like it's it's um professional activism and like
and charity.
It's like, I want to be part of an NGO that feeds hungry people.
I want to, like, have a professional career that's defined by compassion, which is, like, the most lucrative one you could fucking imagine.
It looks so good on your fucking resume, right? And, like, I'm not... by compassion, which is like the most lucrative one you could fucking imagine.
It looks so good on your fucking resume, right?
And like, I'm not here to talk shit about Callowalsh.
I know she sacrificed a lot.
She has.
And I do respect that to an extent.
Like, just the bravery, honestly.
The ability to be principled and brave is something I can respect
but Calla Walsh is disposed
of a petite bourgeois consciousness and sentiment
because she's like
an activist NGO
NGO activist like
gone wrong like gone extreme
for sure
but like
it's still rooted
in that
kind of like
I want to make
my college resume
look so so good
and so so
moral
and so so ethical
I'm gonna fucking outdo you by
blowing up a hospital. Like, I'm just kidding, but like,
you guys, you know what I'm saying?
I'm just, that's a little bit a joke, but
like, it's just taken to such
an extreme that
it no longer is logically
compatible with its like material purpose, which is like to get a career and whatever.
Which is again, I'm not saying Callow Walsh is motivated by wanting a good resume.
I'm saying the logic of Petit Bouzbozbois professionalism defines that type of
radical consciousness.
However it mutates and whatever
direction it goes in, it's still bounded by that
logic of humanitarianism
and moralism, right?
But it is Petit Bousois to the core.
Like, to the core, it's Petit Bougoir, right?
So do you guys understand the basic framework I'm working with now?
It's like you have the masses who do have these Petit Buzois inclinations, but not necessarily.
And then, but there's a petite bourgeois leadership over it.
So it's not that the reason the petite bourgeoisie is leading the movement is because
all the masses are petite bourgeois.
There's just no alternative leadership.
Okay.
So, how can we affect a proletarian leadership of these masses?
I hate to sound cliche, but it really is, the decisive thing, really fucking is organization. I mean,
that's really it. It's organization. The key to proletarian discipline. It's organization.
Organization.
And in the traditional, yes, to be boring.
And I'm open to creativity.
Nobody's saying I'm not open to creativity.
I just haven't been shown a framework like that yet, you know?
Nor have I been smart enough to think of one,
frankly. I've tried.
But you begin small by organizing
the blue collar workers salting organizing you go to their workplaces their factories
you organize them at that level and build the trade union consciousness, the blue collar working class,
the traditional one, right?
And you basically build a movement
that's shaped by the proletarian attitude,
the proletarian culture,
the proletarian consciousness,
and you can be a leader for the masses.
You can help lead and define
how the masses are articulating
their downwardly mobile trajectory.
Instead of longing for the illusion that they're going to climb up and become, you know,
oh, they're all going to become doctors and lawyers and whatever, you can lead the masses
by materially
materially assisting
in their ability
to accept their conditions
not accept their conditions in the sense of
like refuse to overcome them
or fight for anything better.
But like,
soberly accept the facts,
soberly accept that it doesn't matter how much you scream about the Jews.
It doesn't matter. You you scream about the Jews, it doesn't matter you're not going to become, you're not going to fill their role.
The only way, the only way the masses will be liberated from the system is through a comprehensive and revolutionary overthrow of the system.
The only way the masses can emancipate themselves from their current humiliation, their degradation, and their debt slavery is a comprehensive
overthrow of the system,
a comprehensive overthrow
of the hegemony,
a comprehensive reconstitution
of the system
we live in on a basis
led by the proletariat.
In other words, a proletarian dictatorship led by, for and of the people.
And that is an extremely different alternative to maintain.
That is what proletarian leadership entails.
No longer the illusion that you can somehow tweak the system to fulfill the careerist aspiration
of becoming part of the professional classes, but a comprehensive, revolutionary position based on the overthrow of the current system.
And step one is organization.
Step one is the organization of a new discipline, a new army, a new chain of command, a new structure
of social existence, a new discipline, a new type of consciousness this is exactly what the black panthers are trying to do
that's exactly what they were doing
because it's it's literally the same because the black panthers
the black population of yesterday is the white population of today.
The black population in the 70s was exactly defined by being declassed and lumpinized.
And the Black Panthers provided proletarian
leadership through
militancy and through collective
discipline. You know what they lacked, though?
They lacked a mediating element
in the factory proletariat.
That's what they lacked.
And there was a sizable black population that were in the factories, that were...
I mean, they didn't have that, though.
They didn't have any pull with organized labor at all.
They didn't have any pull with any new type of,
unless I'm speaking from ignorance and I'm wrong.
Correct me if I'm wrong.
At least they're not remembered for that at the very least.
So that's one of the big things that was missing, okay?
But in any case... That's one of the big things that was missing. Okay.
But in any case... Okay, what do we make of the peace and freedom bar?
Do I live to just hear stupid shit all day?
Like what am I fucking hearing?
The peace and freedom.
What do you think about the poop and pee party?
What do you think about the shit butt party?
What do you think about the fucking...
What do you think about the asshole retard party? What do you think about the fucking stupid bullshit nonsense party?
Like, what does that even mean?
You know, you know, we don that even mean? You know,
you know,
we don't even
stop doing as Americans.
Grant,
what's up,
bro?
We need to stop
being like,
look at this new party.
It's called the,
the,
the freedom and sunshine
party.
And this is a cool,
it's like,
look,
having a good idea
doesn't fucking mean anything.
Ideas don't unify masses.
Ideas don't unify collectives.
Ideas don't unify movements and they don't unify parties.
So let's just stop thinking in terms of, I like what this guy's saying.
So therefore, he's about some real ass shit.
You know, I'll tell you something.
Hazaldean, a lot of people don't fuck with what I say.
But you want to know why I'm a powerful figure, which I am.
I'll say say based on relative
to like my following,
I'm a pretty powerful
figure. Want to know fucking why?
Because I understand how collectives work.
Because I understand
because I understand
the actual basis
of actually building an army.
Like, that's what I really fucking understand, right?
So, you can be a good speaker who says shit that people like.
It doesn't mean they're going to follow you. It doesn't mean you're going to actually have influence. It doesn't mean they're going to follow you it
doesn't mean you're going to actually have influence it doesn't mean you're going to affect
anything right anyway look uh what i'm trying to say here
when all is said and done, if you will,
is that
the ACP
American Communist Party
we need to articulate
our labor strategy in two prongs, okay?
Because it's about the organization of labor, but that has to translate tangibly into some kind of, yes, leadership, yes, cultural leadership over the masses, most of whom are not blue-collar workers.
So this is the class struggle is not between the blue-collar workers and the masses.
The class struggle is between proletarian leadership versus what?
Versus Petit bourgeois leadership.
Petit bourgeois leadership is based on individualism. It's based on illusions and scams. Proletarian leadership is based on this is a movement.
We can't promise you a fucking thing except that you pull together your strength,
you pull together your abilities and your skills,
and we can move fucking mountains.
It's about the collective principle, okay? okay our labor strategy has to translate into a type of leadership over the masses
we cannot consider the labor strategy alone as the war for the masses rather we are pursuing a labor
strategy to build the foundations for an effective leadership over the entire mass of people,
over the entire masses, who are vacillate, who are a vacillating element.
You know, Asan Piker said that America doesn't have the equivalent to a peasant population.
Dead fucking wrong.
The peasant population, all the peasant used to mean is a farmer, someone who lives off of subsistence.
Okay, well, that's most people today are just subsistence.
They can't really neatly
be classified in any class
category. They
really are just aiming for subsistence,
right? Through a conventional,
traditional way of life that is now
being disrupted. So they have become
a vacillating element between bourgeois, petite bourgeois, and proletarian
tendencies.
So the war is over the masses.
But we can't win the masses.
We cannot win the masses.
And, you know, can I tell you guys the trick here? It's not a trick. Can I tell you guys the whole
kicker here? The kicker is this. You win the blue collar workers and you organize them.
You don't understand how much that translates
into influence. The blue collar worker is usually the family's breadwinner and authority figure.
The blue collar worker, hell, the blue collar worker might even have 10 baby mamas. That's like a giant clan.
All his kids vote.
All his baby mama's vote.
All those kids vote.
You know, those trailer trash people?
I mean, one blue collar worker
is like a
chief. It's like a literal
nomadic step warlord
that has authority over
a vast...
Okay, I'm literally exaggerating, right?
It's like a joke.
That's a joke.
But no, think about it.
One blue-collar worker in the South, one blue-collar worker in rural America, one blue-collar worker in Michigan or the Rust Belt.
They have so much authority and influence over their entire family and extended family.
Okay, Thanksgiving dinner.
Who do you think at the dinner table people are more likely to listen to?
The blue collar worker, the tradesman, or the brother who works at GameStop
who are they listening
who has more
who has more weight
and authority
who has more Vlaas
as the Russians call it
right
who at the dinner table
are they going to listen
to more
they're going to listen to more?
They're going to listen to the guy who works with his fucking hands.
So they may be a minority of the population,
but they have the ability to lead the masses. The, yeah, the, the zoomer that went to college and dropped out and works a GameStop now,
not an authority figure.
They won't lead anything.
Yeah, they're nodes of influence.
Absolutely, nodes of influence.
And again, there's a, and that's a word I love,
there's a systemic redundancy there, okay?
There's this, for every one of these influencers that are rallying these masses, these demagogues, they don't have systemic redundancy.
It's all just a cult of personality.
So you have one guy, and then you have a, they're very popular, they're very like whatever,
but if something happens, you know, look, honestly, I'm not even saying this to be like
hostile, but no, for the devil's advocate,
let's say something happens
to Nick Fuentes. What happens to his whole movement?
It's not a viable
model. It's not a viable model.
Something happens to him.
His movement disappears. It's gone. It's over. Okay? viable model. Something happens to him his movement
disappears. It's gone. It's over.
All the, to whatever extent
he's animating, popular
energies against the system, which
yeah, we all understand. We suspect
he has bad motivations and he's a bad faith actor.
But objectively speaking, he's articulating rage against the system for masses and masses of people.
So if something happened to him, all that disappears as a movement.
That's what Petit Bouzweil leadership and paradigms entail. But, you know, traditionally in a communist movement, you know, it was the case in
communist movements that entire generations of leaders were shot and killed.
But because they had an organization, because they had a way, they had a systemic redundancy,
if you will, the new generation carried on and fought
you know.
And systemic redundancy is so
important for a movement. So important.
It's so fucking crucial.
Why do you think Marxism is so resilient?
I talked about this last stream. Why do you think Marxism
survives? Because it's almost like a, it's like a backup
plan. Like you can be anywhere at any time, in any circumstance,
and this remainder is here
Marxism. It's like this whole tool, this whole guidebook.
You can just build from scratch, you know?
That's a type of systemic redundancy.
See, the class war, it's a multi-generational
war. We know this. This's a multi-generational war. We know this.
This is a multi-generational
war that's been going on.
The last generation
of leaders of the proletariat, they're
dead. But the
battle's still ongoing.
You know, fuck it.
It's like the fucking Terminator.
Shit, I'll say it.
It's like the fucking Terminator.
Like, this war with Skynet, it's been going on for generations.
You get an entire generation of leaders of the resistance can be wiped out,
but there's still a fucking war between these things and humanity, right?
And it's the same thing when it comes to the class war since the time of Karl Marx himself.
And it's like Marxism is our backup plan, always.
So, like, what I'm saying basically is that we need to be aware of the new situation
that we're in.
The Maga communist strategy is important.
It's important, above all, that we are not historically nihilistic. It's important
above all that we articulate the importance of that strategy, especially at the time that that
slogan was coined or whatever, right?
But if you are still basing your understanding of politics in this country based strictly on, you know, Maga versus the establishment, which I don't really see anyone doing that anymore, but there are a few like autistic people who are like, it's looping in their head and they've never gotten the memo and it's like
this thing that's just
been looping in there without a firmware
update
you know that
how do you do
what the influence of the Zionist
evangelical churches have on them
okay I want to introduce you a concept
that I don't actually have the name for but I'm sure someone has the name for it.
Okay.
Let's talk about Africa.
Who wants to talk about China?
It's about China.
Did you know?
Or is this Africa or China?
I forget which one it was.
One of these places.
One of these regions of the world.
China is also a region as much as it's a country.
Landline telephone.
How did China deal with landline telephone they didn't
they didn't by the time
china was ready to modernize and was modernizing with communications
tagline they just skipped straight to cell phones they skipped it so funny enough in
america you'll drive around you'll see landlines and you'll see this this uh garbage from the past that makes us look more outdated you go to china and they're at the cutting edge. You know, there was a niche
needed to be filled. Communication. They could just
skip over all the stages we had to
go through. By the way,
you know, another example of that
is the October Revolution.
Russia,
you know what Russia's version of landline telephone was?
It was the French Revolution.
They didn't need it.
It was the entire experience of European revolutionary history in the 1800s.
They kind of just skipped all that and went straight to the proletarian revolution, right?
Same exact principle.
Same thing with China.
China didn't have landline.
They all, you know what they didn't have?
They didn't have the bourgeois revolution.
They didn't need it.
Skip straight to the proletarian one. It's okay.
So, a similar principle applies
when it comes to competing with the evangelical churches.
For rule strategy, frankly.
A similar principle applies for having an effective rule strategy.
The principle is very simple.
We need to be at the vanguard of a new niche that defines how people are socialized and defines culture, right?
And we need to be the ones that roll it out.
We need to be there first. We need to be, our logo needs to be the ones that roll it out we need to be there first we need to be our logo needs to be
slapped on a new controversial and emergent social technology that has not reached them yet a new
type of communication with the masses
and that sounds like it's a lot and it sounds like it's a very loaded and tall order
but it's really fucking not for example okay
rule infrastructure is very poor and therefore in rural places people are very lonely
and they're also very terminally online.
But, you know, they're lacking in basic things.
What if ACP goes to small towns, you know, this assumes we have a lot of resources and wealth, which we will in the future, one way or another.
Stimmy or no Stimmy another, stimmy or no stimmy,
stimmy or stimmy be damned.
And we start being known as the people who organize social events,
not even necessarily politically loaded ones. Just we're the guys that we put on these events
so if you're in this fucking shitty small town you want something to do we're actually the ones
throwing the events for you to attend that's just one one idea that comes to my head right now, right?
Suddenly, we control that space.
We are, we're occupying it.
Like, that's ours.
And it's an objective need that these places need fulfilled and our brand is on it right
so we're filling the niche that is how you build counter hegemony that's how you build counter hegemony that's how you compete with because that's exactly what the
evangelical churches did there is a niche in the people's consciousness the guys the churches
are mega corporations okay they took advantage of the despair that came with
neoliberalism first of all the great great revival movement so they have all these souls that are in
despair that's a niche that they took then they became the basis of education of charity work they became the bait pillars of their community in many ways they bankrolled all these youth events. They like,
they were there and they
built a foothold because they were
there and nobody else
was fucking there.
Like, they're
there. They showed up. Nobody
else did.
So that's why they want.
So we have to be there.
And if we're there, but what does it mean to be there?
It means to be where no one else is.
And be so intentional intentional so methodical so filled with purpose okay that nobody can even compete with us
you have to be there.
Because these people are left behind and nobody gives a shit about them.
Contrary to what many are claiming, I think our equivalent to the proletariat
is the blue collar
working class and the rural
small towns. Because they're
living the reality that the current
generation of the masses
have not yet
fucking experienced,
okay?
You know,
it hasn't dawned
on that pink-haired
college student.
It hasn't dawned
on them yet.
That,
no,
you're not going to be
able to become
the
the editorial chief of BuzzFeed,
and you're not going to be able to produce these movies you want to,
and you're not going to become a doctor,
you're not going to become a lawyer,
and they're still living in New York City,
and they're still, like, or they're still living in L.A., and they're still, in New York City or they're still living in L.A.
and they're still like aspiring toward this future.
They're emiserated in debt.
You want to know what hasn't dawned on them yet though?
The fate and the despair
that's already taken hold
of America's working class
the mundaneness
of small town existence
the loneliness
just the fact that you're abandoned
and not even considered human.
Whenever there's a natural disaster, nobody gives a shit about you, you just get left behind.
Just the mundaneness of drug addiction, fentanyl, and just this is just what defines everyday life.
Buddy, I'm not talking about the fucking suburbs, okay? I'm talking about small town America. I'm
talking about working class America, okay. Please.
Fuck sake.
Like sometimes people in chat will take
some shit that I'm saying that's like so
important and vivid
and they'll literally take
a piece
of toilet paper covered in diarrhea
shit and smear it all over what I'm
saying. Like, you know how fucking ugly and
stupid it sounds that I'm talking about suburban
America? I'm not
talking about suburban America. I'm talking
about fucking Al-Appalachia. I'm not talking about suburban America. I'm talking about fucking all-A-appalachia.
I'm talking about the coal-mining towns in West Virginia, okay?
I'm not fucking talking about bored suburban kids.
I'm talking about actual de-industrialized, like devastated American working class in the South, in Appalachia, in the Rust Belt, all over the country.
That's the future of the masses.
Not the past. It's the future. the masses not the past it's the future it's not the past it's the future can you guys listen to what i'm saying that's not the past that's the future that's where they're headed right now
those people are not idyllic, you know,
German peasants wearing overalls.
That's not them.
These people live in despair.
They live with drugs and despair,
and they're abandoned.
Their infrastructure is corroded. It's shit, and they have abandoned. Their infrastructure is corroded.
It's shit.
And they have nothing.
That's the future.
By the way, that's what Noah means by
re-proletarianization.
That's the brilliance of Noah's idea of
reprolitarianization when you come to think of it.
Noah is basically saying that all of these professionals that are getting declassed are getting lined up for joining the American working class.
But they're not prepared for it you know that's basically what he's saying
I think you know
so so this is not about even this is not even about urban versus
there's new there's new geographical terminologies in the 21st century, guys.
We're not living in the 1900s
where it was about like farmers versus city folk.
Okay, everyone is a city folk,
but the same contradictions within the the town and country reemerge on top of these new you know
postmodern post urban you know civilization i don't i keep having to talk about this.
So it's like,
the pink-haired barista is slated to become the despaired old, you know, working class American in a trailer park.
And they don't, they're not prepared for that future yet.
So instead of, people think that we're reactionary trying to preserve the old way of life,
it's not true.
That old way of life is the real way of life.
I mean, fuck, you know, we need like movies or tv or something to represent this for you guys because
it's like it's very vivid in my mind and i just like i need to fucking explain it to you like
can i like do microsoft i want to like draw it, you know?
I don't know how to like explain this to you guys.
Let me do like Microsoft Paint or some shit, right?
It's like,
let's look at rainbow sunshine land, right?
Zippity do die. Zippity
day.
And it's like, I don't know,
let's just do the stereotypical pink hair
or whatever, right?
Like, this is, this was all an illusion, man.
This was all based on credit.
And this was like a fake world, like, move to, like, NYC and, like, L.A.
And, like, college.
And it's like, you know, BuzzFeed or you might become, like, this was all an illusion and like, look what's going on the entire time.
Tartis, you know, literal the underworld.
The underworld is just like these
small towns
that are like
smog
and fucking horrible
crumbled infrastructure.
Fuck, I don't know what I'm doing here.
This is such a horrible drawing. so like you know this is what I'm saying.
Like, we're not trying, we're not reactionaries where it's not that we're trying to go from, this is the future and this is the past.
This is the fucking reality the entire time.
This whole thing was this, okay?
And like, the past was actually the future
because once Rainbow Road
starts collapsing,
when this starts collapsing
and they realize
that this was all fake,
guess where they're going?
This pink-haired person
is going here.
They're going straight
to these small town
and They're going straight to these small town.
They're going straight here.
This is the only place that's for them. Fentanyl, despair, destruction,
and,
sorry, addiction.
They're not ready for this.
Okay, so this is kind of how I think,
honestly, send this to Noah and asking if this
is what reproletarianization is.
Because if it is, I fully sign
off on it, because it's like, yeah, that's what's going on.
People think that the blue collar small town America is the past. It's not the past. It's the future.
You know, it's like the dark timeline, the entire time. It's the dark timeline.
Is this specific to small town folk? Buddy, please never use the word folk again in my chat
in that way. Small town folk. When you, you know, Dugan did write a great piece about the,
the,
the Knights Templar of the proletariat,
where he's like,
they live in the dark underworld.
That's,
he's spot on with that,
for sure.
That description,
because it's like,
well, I'm not talking about some like idyllic like you know what you're thinking of
you're thinking of the fucking German soyjacks
can I show you like
sometimes I'm scared you guys are like
misinterpreting the shit I say
for this
like bro I'm not talking about this, all right?
Like, I don't, this is not what I mean when I say the rural, small town.
Like, don't get this association out of your head, because this is a cancer.
Music sir. I don't know what that is.
If that was someone dying, that was fucked up.
But anyway, get that idea out of your head. Like, that was fucked up. But anyway, get that
idea out of your head.
Like, yeah, get that out of your head, all right?
Because it's not what I'm fucking, I'm talking
about dark, you know
what you should be thinking of? Post-Soviet
abandoned, like, former factory towns.
Because that's in America, too.
It's the same shit.
That's, it's like a dark future, a dark dystopian future.
Okay.
That's America
that's in America and that's the future
not the past
so Kyle
what I'm explaining to them
people think
that oh the pink-haired barista or whatever like that's the new people think that
oh the pink-haired barista or whatever
like that's the new cutting-edge thing
and Gary Indiana is like
just some outmoded outdated thing from the past
and I'm saying no that's the real thing
that's reality and thing. That's reality.
And the aspiring kind of professionals in New York City and L.A., that was all fueled by credit, and it was a bubble, and it was never the reality and that they're not ready to face that fact yet and realize that their fate is going to be the same as g, Indiana.
They will be sent to the mines,
and they're not ready for that fact.
And it's like,
there was this American middle class,
look, so I was talking about the Jews.
Anyway, I was talking about the professional, upwardly mobile professional orientations of American immigrant populations after the Jews.
So, for example, Nigerians,
Indians, Lebanese, whatever.
But what a lot of people don't know is that that was also the American middle class in the 50s and 60s and 70s.
They were all sending their kids to college and university to get a diploma, become a doctor, become a lawyer. That was the American
dream. You know, become a finance, become whatever. But that was also the, like, Native American
working class, or sorry, middle class as well and that was the buy-in
post-new deal like that's what was promised to Americans for the American dream not that you're
going to live in a factory and that will support you for the rest of your life.
Because the American blue-collar workers were like, this job sucks, my children will join the bourgeoisie.
My children will be doctors.
My children will be lawyers.
My children will be media executives. You know, my
children are going to be successful. They're not going to have to work this mundane,
shitty, proletarian job. So that's what happened. Okay. And in the the 80s people started to fucking realize what the fuck is going on
this is not happening is not panning out how we thought it would we're still stuck here
and so what happened well with neoliberalism and the deregulation of a finance and these new financial technologies that emerged um basically what happened is that this the the middle classes were kept alive by credit, credit cards and debt, you know.
And the whole thing was maintained by debt, the whole fucking thing debt all the so you know suburban america someone
mentioned suburban america is a debt bubble america that's what it that was all the mcmansions
all that said it was all based on debt and credit cards okay and that bubble burst in 2008, by the way, right?
So anyway, the children of the middle classes,
they moved to the cities.
They moved to NYC.
They moved to L.A. They moved to the megalopolis. They moved to NYC. They moved to L.A.
They moved to the megalopolis.
They move, and they're pursuing
careers. They're aspiring
upwards, okay?
These children
do not understand the reality of the American proletariat.
The reason they are so thoroughly bourgeois
is because their whole life they were sold on a dream
that they can join the bourgeoisie.
Little did they know that the entire time what the system has in store for them is the same thing as what they had in store for East Palestine, Ohio,
or Gary, Indiana, or the coal mining towns of West Virginia.
Namely, that we're just going to fucking leave you behind to rot.
We're going to leave you with fucking nothing.
Maybe you cope with it with drugs or whatever else you have, but you're literally
going to become human waste.
It's like so cyberpunk, right?
It's like you're going to become human waste rotting away
you're not going to be taking
care of in any way
maybe through welfare in some way
but we're not going to upgrade your infrastructure
there's going to be
no efforts made to improve your quality
of life you're going to be no efforts made to improve your quality of life.
You're going to be deprived of access to the elite institutions.
And you're going to be, you know, a good little obedient slave when we need you to be because it's going to be like a lottery.
You know, maybe your daughter will get lucky and some oil shake or some Epstein pedophile
will, you know, turn your, your college-age daughter into a prostitute,
and that way, that's your golden ticket to become part of the ruling class, I guess.
But otherwise, you're just going to be, your default is just going to be
your default is just going to be despair
your default is going to be
you're going to be in this shitty
dark gloomy small town
with no future
and we're just going to leave you there to rot more or less and we're
going to make you feel grateful to be exploited so even the minute possibility that we pray upon
any of you,
that's going to be your
golden ticket.
But for the most of you,
you're just,
you're just going to rot away.
And there's no plan for you.
Like,
there's literally fucking none. Okay? literally like city 17 from fucking half life that's literally it like city 17 from fucking half life
okay so proletarian leadership over the masses that i'm talking about means that there's a lot of
bubbles we have to break we have to break the illusion no there's not going to be in america first
where you're going to be the doctor and you're going to be the doctor
and you're going to be the fucking lawyer.
No, that illusion needs to be broken.
You need to grab the
spine of that, just like Bain
grabbed Batman
and snapped his spine in
half. We have to take that illusion and snap it in half, snap the spine of that illusion, that there's a way to, you know, we're just going to get rid of, we're going to topple the gatekeepers the jews and then everything will be fine we'll take
their place there's no solution except radical comprehensive destruction of the system
destruction of the citadel's of the system. Destruction of the
Citadels of the Hegemony.
We're not
going to make Black Rock more inclusive.
We're going to
fucking destroy it.
And the only way to destroy it
is to build alternative centers of power and organization. So we are literally preparing the American population for a post-apocalyptic scenario like
fucking Terminator salvation like they're literally plugged in the matrix okay we're out here
as the resistance fighting Skynet out in this desolate city 17 shithole.
And they're still plugged in on their fent-laced fucking Matrix illusion VR world.
And they have not accepted
that our reality is just Gary
Indiana. Like, that's our reality.
Because, you know, I think about this
all the time and how fucking stupid people are.
It's like, dude,
you may feel like you're living in the future because you're
in NYC and you're in L.A. And like, you know, I don't know, like there's these new social technologies,
which are very real. There's this new culture threshold, which is very real, and I acknowledge it. But at the end of the
fucking day, I mean, there's still a fucking truck driver delivering your shit to you. And at the end of the
fucking day, it's still coal that's being used to power your fucking electricity.
And at the end of the fucking day, you know, it's still somebody, some farmer, some fucking shithole bankrupt farm that's growing your food, you know?
And like at the end of the fucking day, it's still the same shitty construction, you know,
company and workers in the company. It's the same ones that are building your, it's like, it's, there has not been a lot of updating about the fundamentals that are necessary to sustain life itself. Should there be? Absolutely. Do I romanticize the old? Do I think we should stay with the old if we were in? No, we should overall and fucking renovate everything. But that's not going to happen because the rentier parasites who rule us don't find that to be very profitable.
So this is the reality we have.
I'm not saying we should go to the past and neglect the future.
I'm saying we need to accept the reality we have in order to have a clear understanding of our future,
right? So it's like, it's like that's what I'm talking about, all right? And, you know, I, for the record, it's not that I necessarily think the new generation
is just going to go down to the towns and country, and they're going to be the same thing, per se.
Because I think what they're going to bring is something new,
a new cultural and social technology,
which will be a very radical tool to organize the future proletariat.
They're going to bring memes.
They're going to bring a new perspective. They're going to bring a new perspective.
They're going to bring a new way of interfacing with social media and smartphones and culture.
And they're going to be bringing all of that.
But, you know, and that's going to be key.
That's absolutely a key battle space.
But we need to fucking be honest about our reality.
We need a reality check, okay?
Okay.
You know, we're being sold on this lie that
everything's going to be overhauled.
It's really not.
You know, sometimes people ask me, like,
Haas, are you reactionary? You know, sometimes you've asked me like, Haas, are you reactionary?
You know, what if they automate trucking? Would you be
against it? I don't believe they can automate
trucking. That's the thing.
The only way trucking is going to be automated is if we have a proletarian
dictatorship but as it stands when have you ever seen the bourgeoisie undertake such a large
systemic overhaul of how things are done at the most fundamental levels if we've
been doing the same shit we have been since the 70s at i'm talking about at the infrastructure
there is like a material infrastructural substrate that the ruling
class doesn't have
the ability
to replace
China
does have that
ability to
be clear
but that's because
China isn't ruled
by these
rentier parasites but but we are.
So it's like we've had the same boring old shit since the 70s, okay?
They're not going to change something that's been working for them just fine.
Now, Elon Musk and these other utopians, they're a startup.
They have all these grand ideas for how they want to change society.
But can I ask you a question?
Have they ever succeeded?
I think
the closest they've gotten
is
EVs.
Whoop-de-do, EVs.
Very profound.
But just to be clear
the only reason EVs
are taking on more prominence in the West
is because of competitive pressure
coming from China
do you ever know
before China
made the rollout
and manufacturing
and implementation of EVs
a cornerstone of its five-year plan
I think what was is like 2019
I don't remember
I don't remember
EVs
like being that big of a thing in the U.S., right?
And, um...
So, like, no, I don't, I don't buy this idea that, uh,
2015 or whatever, yeah, I don't know.
In any case, at the, at the, look, where there, where there has been,
let me tell you why we live in a cyberpunk dystopia in a way, because it's like
the progress that's been made with technology
have been in these consens, it's like a concentric circle.
Can I, let me do Microsoft paint, because I like, I hate describing shit.
I mean, I could describe shit. I mean I could
describe it I'm just too lazy to
right?
So it's like
you have these circles
right
and it's like you know, you know what a better way of representing this would be?
It'd be like this, actually, because it's like they get increasingly more narrow as they go on, you know?
Yeah, and we just like have this one, be like... Yeah, so it's like, you know...
Think of it like this, like like there's this black pit
and this is like basically um our hardware you know like
the fundamentals of production
hasn't changed since the 70s
right
and then there's like the
you know maybe this is like
I don't know
cell phone technology or something
right
and then you know you have internet, you know, here.
And then, like, all the software side, like, smartphone bullshit.
You have it, like, right here.
But, like, so, for example, like, you see what a small sliver this is?
And like this has the potential to radically revolutionize the foundations and help us change the foundation.
But it's not. So the only way progress is made, because look, put it
this way, let's say this is, let's say the blue, let's just say blue is meta, right? Let's just say Facebook is the most
advanced type of technology,
which is not true, but you hear what I'm saying, right? This is meta.
You know, meta has made innovations and gained a perspective about, you know, a lot of things that, you know, it kind of would, or Tesla or whatever, it would make it really easy to be like hey let's like upgrade all these shitty things
that are like that that that meta depends upon to make them more efficient but then you want to know
what happens?
Then meta is cutting into the profits of,
let's just say the yellow one is Verizon Wireless,
okay?
Okay, Verizon Wireless is a fucking monopoly.
Are you think they're going to let meta fuck with their money and overall and change their shitty bullshit?
No, they're going to fucking stay as they are and barely like roll out changes because they are a fucking monopoly and they're making rents. So Verizon's gained a perspective, you know, I guess, on, like, how to organize shit and technology.
Verizon, let's say like Verizon depends upon
what would be like
the second order here.
I don't know.
I'm kind of fucking stumped here.
Let's say it's like,
you know,
I bet there's literally like an example of this.
I don't know, like,
what's like something that's above Verizon Wireless
as far as like a bigger
rentier monopoly
like that that
that Verizon depends upon
I don't fucking know
let me think
um
let's just say
um
comcast comcast
it would be Comcast or Dell or
I don't know yeah let's say like Verizon's like okay we've gained a
perspective on um
you know.
You see, I actually, Versailles right, electric company.
You're right.
I'm just going to go with electric company.
We want to, you know, General Electric.
So, are you kidding?
You think General Elect...
About electricity uses.
Just say that, right?
Because Verizon and Comcastle is like the same shit.
So,
you think General Electric is going to let them fuck with their money?
They're a fucking monopoly.
Everything's going fine for them.
They're not, they don't want a radical revolution and change.
They're going to stay as they are.
So you're not going to do it, right?
All right.
So General Electric, just probably probably you know like tesla literally did
discovered shit about energy tesla did nicola tesla he discovered shit about energy right
like you know this gives you a perspective that's like hey maybe we should change our energy sources
uh oh no no no no no because now who are you fucking with right you're fucking with uh standard oil
and royal dutch shell and exon Shell and Exxon
Mobile and whatever, right?
Now, you think they're going to let you
fuck with their fucking bullshit? You think
they're going to let you fuck with their bottom line
and they're going to overhaul how we
obtain energy in our society?
Fuck, no, they're not.
So, do you guys understand?
It's like,
the only way progress has happened
in the history of U.S. capitalism
is... in the history of U.S. capitalism is
just by adding a layer on top of the shit,
like as, you know, on top of the shit that's already here,
basically, and, you know, using it it even if it demands radically upgrading and overhauling the more
fundamental infrastructure there's no logic of the market that makes it possible for the radical infrastructure to be updated you know as kyle's saying
that only happens with state or intervention only with the intervention of the state does that happen
and that's why china is able to do that. China can actually upgrade the fundamentals of infrastructure.
We can't.
So we have this funny cyberpunk society,
you know, where I have this iPhone, which has,
I mean, this iPhone's more complicated, they say, than the rockets that they sent to the moon.
And yet, it depends upon transportation infrastructure from the 1970s.
So the more
dependent technology is
the more ethereal
let's say you know
what our aesthetics should be to in America
it should be kind of like
in a way it's cyberpunk
because it's like
you have this, like, rugged, heavy metal infrastructure,
and then this, like, etheric, holographic interface on top of it.
Like, the more
substantive things become,
the more
they are
incapable of being
changed technologically.
But the more abstract
they are
in relative to information.
You know, they're making
these new smart glasses.
Let me put on my smart goggles.
And I'm going to be able to look at reality and alternative reality.
But that's like the future.
Like you're going to put on smart goggles and you're going to be walking around
East Palestine, Ohio with your
smart goggles
and you're going to be walking on like some
train track bridge and the bridge
is just going to fall
and your smart goggles are going to
they're going to like stream like you, um, floating on a cloud while you're like falling to your death.
That's basically America today.
Smart glasses are used in L.A. for, bro, I don't know what you're talking about all right You know, You know, All right y'all.
Guys, next stream, literally, get in here quick.
So we have a large intro, okay?
And I hope you enjoyed the stream. You guys enjoyed it, right?
Good stream. you guys enjoyed it right good stream all right well if you're about to drop a large uh gifted
about to drop a 20 we're about to wrap it up I was reading that comment by Kyle.
Just got unpinned.
Why is trucking so lucrative?
Because most truckers have been turned into gig workers as independent contractors and take credit to get their
trucks banks are the largest benefactors of the trucking industry status quo no one's going to
undo that yep Yep. Absolutely.
And there you have an example. See, people think trucking is an outdated industry, but the most cutting edge ways to fuck over the working class are being employed against them.
So how can we say they're an outdated form of the proletariat?
We can't.
Strauss-Sand with the Five.
There are so many post-Marxist theorists
who find it tempting to say that physical labor is outdated
and it's no longer the threshold of true proletarianization.
This includes the barista camp arguments.
The barista campus usually will argue that we're relying on an outdated understanding of the proletariat.
The barista is the new, like, more advanced
thing. But although this is tempting to think because of the fact that on a cultural level,
the proletariat has been
totally outmoded
osos was not outmoded
surpassed and
and second
um
proletarian labor
like infrastructure and humanity itself, I guess, has just been subjected to immense neglect.
It's not true. It's not true that it's outdated. It's very much still something the system depends upon.
I think Marxists should take more seriously this question of like uneven development, you know, because it can lead you to preposterous conclusions about who the most advanced subject is and who the most backward one is.
Sometimes things appear precisely as their opposite.
Sometimes what appears as the most advanced is actually
the most backward and
vice versa, right?
This is the irony of
uneven development.
For example,
take China. In China, uh, for example take china
in china
uh in the 1930s
you know something the Shanghai factory proletariat
was much less advanced
than the Chinese peasantry in the countryside.
Although they appeared to be from the future, the Shanghai factory proletariat,
they were a proletariat that was molded institutionally in the image of the Eurocentric European paradigm of modernity.
And this actually made them more politically backward than the Chinese peasants who who represented a much more dynamic
and advanced kind of subjectivity
in many ways
that could really like de-territorialize old
institutions and old institutional
paradigms.
So the logic of
lesser and more advanced needs to be
re-evaluated in light of
the reality of uneven development.
Sometimes what appears as more advanced is the least advanced it just it it's because it appears as so like this is where the factories in the modern industries being built so it's more advanced but what underlies the logic of the construction of this is actually less advanced than the potentials for example among the chinese Chinese peasantry, for the building of alternative institutions.
This is why dual power is our way as Leninus.
The pre-Leninist understanding is that you march through the existing institutions.
But Leninism said, no, you can start from scratch and you can be like the Chinese cell phone carriers who skip landline. Do you understand what I'm saying?
Dual power means skipping landline. That's literally what it means. You're going to a space
that the hegemony has not captured yet
and that's where you're that's where
the avant-garde is. That's where you can actually build the
avant-garde. If there's no, look, look, you know what I see?
Look, you go to New York City and you go to L.A. You know what there is?
Landline. Landline everywhere.
But if I go
to Oklahoma,
there's no infrastructure at all.
And therefore, there is no relic of the past obstructing my ability to reproduce the most
cutting edge and advanced communications infrastructure.
Conceivable.
That is the dialectical logic
of Leninism. The logic of
Leninism inverses our understanding
of the less advanced and the most advanced.
Trotskyism
wants to take the landline power and just impose that on the country,
failing to see that the clean slate represented by the backward sectors actually opens up
the opportunity for the most cutting edge and revolutionary
transformation you see it's like landline versus mobile cellular service towers, right?
We need to skip landline.
New York City is full of landline.
L.A., full of landline.
Zorn Ramdani, it's all landline.
But if I go... If I go...
...to...
What town did he run in in Georgia?
If I go to the small town in Georgia,
there's nothing.
So there's nothing standing in the way of me just building the most advanced thing from scratch.
There's no old thing getting in my way.
Guys, I want you to comprehend the Leninist, Fitzgerald.
Comprehend the Leninist.
Take this away.
Comprehend the Leninist logic of modernization.
Modernization means nouness.
Modernization is always an electric shock that rocks the foundations of civilization.
The cumulative development of technology is not modern the way that technology developed and it's not modern
when you have a core monopoly and you're just building around the monopoly, you are not in the now.
It's not nowness.
It's not modern.
But when there's nothing and you can just relitigate the encounter with
nowness from scratch that is what modernity is it's a lightning bolt
that awakens
the people to civilization
that awakens them to the now
to the modern to technology
there's no gradual anything
it's a it's a direct revolutionary shock.
And the more backward and archaic a place is, the more it is susceptible to the modern encounter,
without any mediation, without any dilutions. So the modern, the best place for the modern to emerge is precisely in the most extremely backward. Thank you. so anyway guys we're going to wrap it up
good stream be here sooner next time don't don't do Good stream.
Be here sooner next time.
Don't do 40 minute intro, okay?
Be here.
We do five minute, 10 minute intros, okay?
Everyone get in here quickly next time, okay?
Bye-bye.
See you guys next time.
Bye-bye.