Field Dispatch
Nazis are weak, pathetic, and dumb | Matt Connarton Unleashed
Speaker 1: Jenny, you have this article that has been published on
Speaker 1: Common Dreams.
Speaker 2: Yes, my first byline on Common Dreams. So I'm very
Speaker 2: excited about that. Unfortunately, it was a topic that I
Speaker 2: didn't ever expect I was gonna have to deal with
Speaker 2: face to face.
Speaker 3: I think we've are you there?
Speaker 2: Oh, yes, yes, yes, these This is something I never
Speaker 2: thought in my Honestly, I never thought that I would
Speaker 2: ever be face to face with Nazis like this, doing
Speaker 2: the whole salute and everything. But yeah, that happened right
Speaker 2: here in Concord, New Hampshire, and they were the you know,
Speaker 2: they came to intimidate us. We had planned a protest.
Speaker 2: I volunteered to help out. I was not one of
Speaker 2: the the main organizers. That organizing group was actually fifty
Speaker 2: to fifty one, the local New Hampshire group here, and
Speaker 2: they had planned this protest, got permit the whole nine yards.
Speaker 3: So we showed up to when we were supposed to do,
Speaker 3: and we were.
Speaker 2: Starting to set things up for the rally that was
Speaker 2: supposed to happen like in about an hour or so
Speaker 2: after we've gotten there, and no sooner do we show
Speaker 2: up and start unloading the trucks at trucks, cars did not.
Speaker 2: These guys march in in their red shirts, which on
Speaker 2: the back I apparently says forgive me Blood Tribe, black pants,
Speaker 2: red shirts, all of their faces completely covered. Can't see
Speaker 2: them except for the founder guy. He's the only one
Speaker 2: that didn't have his face covered. And that's the bald
Speaker 2: guy sitting there with the tattoos going down his face.
Speaker 2: And they started yelling hate with a megaphone, something like,
Speaker 2: you know, the.
Speaker 3: Only thing good about your hair, you know, the Hampshire's
Speaker 3: white people, it's the only thing good.
Speaker 2: And they were saying just nasty, nasty stuff, and we,
Speaker 2: you know, it was like, we didn't engage them, but
Speaker 2: obviously we're not going to have this going on. So
Speaker 2: one of the organizers actually got the idea. She pulled
Speaker 2: her phone out and she started playing there's a song
Speaker 2: about killing Nazis.
Speaker 3: So she played that, she played they not like us,
Speaker 3: and uh, that was.
Speaker 2: Fun to sing along too, yeah, and uh then she played, uh,
Speaker 2: I got to do that once before in DC. They
Speaker 2: played that and we were like pointing at them, you're
Speaker 2: not like us, which we did to these guys, You're
Speaker 2: not like us.
Speaker 3: We were not afraid of them. And their job. They're
Speaker 3: basically there.
Speaker 2: They're trying to intimidate us, and they're also trying to recruit.
Speaker 2: You know, they are on a you know, they want
Speaker 2: more people in their ranks, more white men.
Speaker 3: In their rates.
Speaker 2: Specifically, they had the whole Nazi flag and then she
Speaker 2: also played Martin Luther King, So she put her phone
Speaker 2: in front of a megaphone, and then I had my
Speaker 2: own amplifier, so I put that in front of the
Speaker 2: megaphone so we could amplify it even more, and it
Speaker 2: made it very loud and kind of distorted and just
Speaker 2: literally drowned them out.
Speaker 3: Whatever the dude was saying in the.
Speaker 2: Megaphone wasn't getting very far because nobody could hear them.
Speaker 2: We were literally drowning them out, which was excellent. You know,
Speaker 2: not engaging is important because that's what they want. They
Speaker 2: want you to engage. They want to incite something. So
Speaker 2: you can't fall prey to that, no matter how angry
Speaker 2: they make you, no matter what horrendous things they say
Speaker 2: about our fellow human beings.
Speaker 3: You know, you can't go there. You just can't.
Speaker 2: So when they were getting obviously heard, they decided to
Speaker 2: line up because they weren't there for very long, mind you,
Speaker 2: you know, I'm serious.
Speaker 3: We really drowned them out.
Speaker 2: And so they formed the line so they were two
Speaker 2: by two, and then they started a military march out
Speaker 2: of the state Capitol, down the path under the arches
Speaker 2: out onto the main street, chanting, saying hateful things, trying
Speaker 2: to be like all military ask. Although it was funny
Speaker 2: because when they first started trying to do their little
Speaker 2: military ask moves, one of them went in the completely
Speaker 2: opposite direction, which was rather amusing. So they lined up
Speaker 2: too by two and they're trying to you know, they're
Speaker 2: shouting their hate, and they're photographers, like trying to photographer,
Speaker 2: you know, camera.
Speaker 3: Us, as if that's going to be something intimidating.
Speaker 2: And I just pushed my camera right into his face
Speaker 2: as he was pushing it into mind not.
Speaker 3: Like literally, we weren't literally like we kind of stepped forward.
Speaker 3: He stepped towards me, I stepped towards him, and then
Speaker 3: he walked off, but people were yelling at him, telling
Speaker 3: them to get out.
Speaker 2: None of these people are from here, by the way,
Speaker 2: They're not from New Ham. I'm sure they came from
Speaker 2: other places. They literally marched there and did their hateful,
Speaker 2: yelling and crap all the way down Main Street.
Speaker 3: For a few blocks to where they had parked a
Speaker 3: U haul.
Speaker 2: But when they got about almost to where the U
Speaker 2: haul was, there was an altercation with a person who
Speaker 2: does live here. And I saw a video that showed
Speaker 2: four of them around this one man, and one of
Speaker 2: them punched that man in his back like four times.
Speaker 2: Another one of them pepper sprayed this man, and then
Speaker 2: they ran to their little U haul and jumped in the.
Speaker 3: Back of it. Please were there, and drove off, now
Speaker 3: about you.
Speaker 4: But I'm a little flabbitasted that the police let these
Speaker 4: people climb into a U haul and drive off.
Speaker 3: Because I got I don't know, call me crazy, but
Speaker 3: I think.
Speaker 2: If maybe they were a different group, or maybe if
Speaker 2: their tone was different, the cops would have been like, ah, no,
Speaker 2: you don't get to drive off with human beings in
Speaker 2: the back of you all.
Speaker 3: That's illegal.
Speaker 2: But apparently in this instance, no, maybe now one now
Speaker 2: it's possible the cops thinking was, you know what, let's
Speaker 2: just get them the hell out of here so there's
Speaker 2: nothing more going on, better to get them out of
Speaker 2: the situation.
Speaker 3: Maybe that was the case.
Speaker 2: However, there was an assault and I want to know
Speaker 2: why that why they haven't been accountable for that. My
Speaker 2: understanding is that it is under investigation. I don't know
Speaker 2: enough more. I don't know enough to say anything more
Speaker 2: about the legal aspect of it. But as you know,
Speaker 2: as a citizen in New Hampshire, I serve two terms
Speaker 2: in that House and New Hampshire State House is the
Speaker 2: oldest state house in the country that still operates in
Speaker 2: its original ta like our House and Senate still meet
Speaker 2: in the same exact place they did when the building
Speaker 2: was built, when the country before the country was even
Speaker 2: a country really in a sense, you know, and there's
Speaker 2: a huge history with France and everything. There's really a rich,
Speaker 2: rich history in New Hampshire when it.
Speaker 3: Comes to that stuff. And one of the things about.
Speaker 2: New Hampshire is that we pride ourselves on being a
Speaker 2: place that everybody has a right to be heard. You'll
Speaker 2: hear that said in the New Ympshire House. If there
Speaker 2: starts to get too loud or something like that, the
Speaker 2: chair will say the member has a right to be heard,
Speaker 2: so to the people, and the people have a right.
Speaker 3: To be heard. These guys have a right to free speech.
Speaker 3: They expressed it we didn't inhibit that.
Speaker 2: We have the right of free speech to drown out hate,
Speaker 2: and that is how we chose to deal with it,
Speaker 2: and I think it was a very appropriate way, and
Speaker 2: I absolutely commend everybody that was that was.
Speaker 3: An excellent, excellent of it. In the end, we had
Speaker 3: a wonderful protest, We had excellent protest. They didn't achieve
Speaker 3: their goal.
Speaker 1: We had to mention that picture is a courtesy of
Speaker 1: Andrew Vorhees. By the way, our friend Andrew Vorhees, yes,
Speaker 1: who was recently with us on the Hanging Left podcast
Speaker 1: and on Matt Connerton Unleashed as well on the radio
Speaker 1: version that we do on Saturday as at w M
Speaker 1: and H and talking about the picture, and so they
Speaker 1: used his picture in the article.
Speaker 3: He is a photo journalist and he he took me.
Speaker 2: He took some excellent photographs and I've seen other pieces
Speaker 2: of his work. Yes, and he is an excellent photographer.
Speaker 2: I'm super happy to have met him and now have
Speaker 2: him among our ranks.
Speaker 3: You know, young man with a head on his shoulders.
Speaker 3: It's very good. He's going compassionate.
Speaker 2: And he wants to help make sure that he records
Speaker 2: what's going on. That nothing is done in the dark.
Speaker 2: And that's another big thing about New Hampshire. You know,
Speaker 2: politics shouldn't be in the dark.
Speaker 3: We're the only don't.
Speaker 2: I don't know if we're the only state, but I
Speaker 2: know we're rare in the sense that any bill that's
Speaker 2: introduced from the State of New Hampshire will go all
Speaker 2: the way through the process and will get a vote
Speaker 2: by the entire body. There's no such thing as a
Speaker 2: pocket veto, there's no such thing as a committee kill
Speaker 2: in that regard. Everything goes to the floor for a vote.
Speaker 2: So New Hampshire has a unique perspective in that way,
Speaker 2: and I like it and I'm proud of it, and
Speaker 2: I'm proud to be a part of it, and I'm
Speaker 2: proud of the way the people in New Hampshire responded.
Speaker 3: To these fools.
Speaker 2: And they all have their heads covered in these black socks. Yeah,
Speaker 2: like they look like can you look at these guys.
Speaker 2: They look like they're trying to rob a bank or
Speaker 2: something like. And they all have matching shades on.
Speaker 1: They have their identities because you know, they don't they
Speaker 1: don't want to get black.
Speaker 2: Oh, they don't want anybody to know what they really think.
Speaker 2: A work why not, I think, I why not? Why
Speaker 2: Why aren't you proud of your belief? Why do you
Speaker 2: hide it?
Speaker 1: Right?
Speaker 3: That's my question.
Speaker 1: Well, that feeds into their victimhood though, you know, because
Speaker 1: you'll you'll often hear people who have their point of view,
Speaker 1: they'll they'll talk about and even people who don't have
Speaker 1: their point of view, Uh, to that extreme talk about this.
Speaker 1: You know, there's a lot of white victimhood. Oh you know, I,
Speaker 1: as a white person, I'm so put upon, poor me.
Speaker 1: You know, there's a lot of that in concern in
Speaker 1: modern conservatism and uh, you know, so, so it feeds
Speaker 1: into that to them because you know, for them to
Speaker 1: take it to this extreme, they're the ultimate victims, right,
Speaker 1: you know, because that's what's really underneath this is a
Speaker 1: lot of weak you know, they think they're strong and
Speaker 1: powerful because they're standing up to they're standing up against
Speaker 1: diversity and whatever, but but they're actually very weak.
Speaker 2: Uh.
Speaker 1: These are the uh, these are the weakest of the week.
Speaker 2: Uh.
Speaker 1: These these people who hide their identities and spread hate
Speaker 1: because it comes from a place of deep, deep insecurity.
Speaker 1: They feel threatened, They feel threatened living in a world
Speaker 1: that is not some sort of ethno state where everyone
Speaker 1: doesn't look and think and act exactly and speak exactly
Speaker 1: like them. They feel threatened by that. So this is
Speaker 1: their way of lashing out. And it's and it's just
Speaker 1: it's weakness at its absolute, its absolute, most pathetic degree.
Speaker 1: These people are beyond pathetic.
Speaker 2: But in that same vein Remember some of these people
Speaker 2: have money behind them, and those same people are doing
Speaker 2: things like doing gene editing to have whiter babies, Yeah,
Speaker 2: to have athletic babies.
Speaker 3: You know this is these are things that they are.
Speaker 2: Backing one hundred percent and that that's something that should
Speaker 2: concern us.
Speaker 3: That's something that we should worry about.
Speaker 2: I believe, you know, I worry about Robert Kennedy being
Speaker 2: in charge of our nation's healthcare in Medicare, and he
Speaker 2: wants to put a data registry together of all artistic Americans.
Speaker 3: He believes they should all be in a database.
Speaker 2: Yeah, this is what We're gonna have a database because
Speaker 2: that's not familiar.
Speaker 3: To you, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2: The thing I always wonder with these people, and I'd
Speaker 2: love to know what their answer would be to me
Speaker 2: when they do their ancestry and that pie chot comes
Speaker 2: up and you're a mutt because you know, you're a
Speaker 2: little Scholarsh, a little Welsh, maybe a little Italian.
Speaker 3: Maybe you're a mutt.
Speaker 2: You're genetically a mutt because your pie has got plenty
Speaker 2: of color.
Speaker 1: The vast majority of people, I believe this firmly, the
Speaker 1: vast majority of people in the United States who are
Speaker 1: white are most likely not as white as they think that.
Speaker 2: They are, correct, you know, And the thing that from
Speaker 2: my perspective as an Ashkenazi.
Speaker 3: Jew, now, go look at some of the people.
Speaker 2: In my family tree, and they're pie chart on ancestry.
Speaker 5: It's one colors, one color.
Speaker 2: So if you want to get down to genetic purity, right,
Speaker 2: is it the pie chart that's.
Speaker 5: One color, or is it the pie shot that's a
Speaker 5: little purple, little green, a little blue, little gray, a
Speaker 5: little this, a little Spanish, a little that, because that's
Speaker 5: what their pie shots look like.
Speaker 1: Well the other thing, too, is and nobody really mentions
Speaker 1: this part, but this is this is another reason why
Speaker 1: these people are so dumb, and they're they're just shoveling
Speaker 1: shit against the tide. Because obviously you can't stop diversity.
Speaker 1: What you also cannot stop genetically is you know, sometimes
Speaker 1: they've even used the phrase like people like Tucker Carlson
Speaker 1: and Laura Ingram, for example, have even gone as far
Speaker 1: as using the phrase the browning of America. Yes, what
Speaker 1: you cannot you can't. You can't stop it. But what
Speaker 1: you also cannot stop is the in a broader sense,
Speaker 1: the browning of the global population. Here's the thing, and
Speaker 1: this is what these people don't get. There is an inevitability.
Speaker 1: This is just a simple fact humanity as a whole
Speaker 1: over time, you know, and we won't see it, it'll
Speaker 1: be long after we're gone. But over time, the human
Speaker 1: race is going to continue to get darker and darker overall.
Speaker 1: In a broad sense, you can't stop it. The reason
Speaker 1: being whiteness. Genetically, whiteness is a recessive trait. Light skin
Speaker 1: is a recessive trait. Dark skin is a dominant trait.
Speaker 1: So that is why when you have when when two
Speaker 1: people have a child, typically you know if one of
Speaker 1: them is white and one of them is black, you
Speaker 1: know the child is going to have darker skin. So
Speaker 1: so you know, the white ethno state that these people
Speaker 1: fantasize about, it's it's never going to happen, not not
Speaker 1: just because not just because of diversity, but because just genetically,
Speaker 1: the global population is going to get darker over time.
Speaker 1: So so again, everything that these people put their energy
Speaker 1: into is so not only is it harmful and destructive
Speaker 1: and hateful, it's completely pointless. There's no point to any
Speaker 1: of it. It's so bizarre.
Speaker 2: I'm going to completely disagree with you in an aspect
Speaker 2: that I believe they do know it, they do see.
Speaker 3: It, and that's exactly what they're trying to stop.
Speaker 1: Well, no, I agree with you, that is what they're
Speaker 1: trying to stop, but I don't think they but I
Speaker 1: don't what I'm saying.
Speaker 3: Always able to shop either.
Speaker 1: But but what I'm saying is they're too dumb to realize.
Speaker 1: You cannot possibly, like I said, shoveling shit against the tide.
Speaker 1: You can't stop the ocean. You can't stop, you know,
Speaker 1: the the genetic inevitability of what is already happening, what
Speaker 1: has been happening, and what will continue to happen. They're
Speaker 1: they're so they're so just consumed with their own hate,
Speaker 1: they can't think logically and realize not only is what
Speaker 1: they're doing hateful, but it's but it's also completely pointless.
Speaker 1: The pointlessness of it, they're oblivious to it, and you know,
Speaker 1: and and.
Speaker 2: Well from our perspective, absolutely, but I think that if
Speaker 2: they would.
Speaker 3: Be happy to have a you know, like we'll talk
Speaker 3: about that.
Speaker 2: Actually, well, I don't want to get too much into
Speaker 2: the the weeds on that because we're going to talk
Speaker 2: about some of that stuff a little bit later. But
Speaker 2: now put the fact that this is what's going on,
Speaker 2: and now.
Speaker 3: It's in government.
Speaker 2: Robert Kennedy was very clear with his beliefs that the
Speaker 2: COVID nineteen illness was bio engineered to kill everybody but.
Speaker 3: Jewish people and the Chinese.
Speaker 2: So yeah, and then he went further to state that
Speaker 2: vaccine mandates are worse than.
Speaker 3: Anne Frank's persecution.
Speaker 2: I know, and I can give you the citations, well
Speaker 2: we can, you know, actually the citations are in my
Speaker 2: article if you want to go look at it on
Speaker 2: Common Dreams.
Speaker 3: If you go to Common Dreams, you'll see.
Speaker 2: My article there and you can go to the links
Speaker 2: and you can see the information to back it up
Speaker 2: that these facts that I'm telling you are real and true.
Speaker 2: The video of RFK Junior, he's at a dinner or so,
Speaker 2: he's sitting at a table with group people, and he's very.
Speaker 3: Clear, very clear in that belief.
Speaker 2: And these are there people that are now running the
Speaker 2: country and are in very key positions, and we should
Speaker 2: be very concerned about that. And I'm very concerned about
Speaker 2: anybody who would say these are the same Nazis. And
Speaker 2: I'm not calling them Nazis by the way, because they
Speaker 2: are Nazis and they are little Nazis, Like look at
Speaker 2: the picture, ask them yourselves.
Speaker 3: Their Nazis are.
Speaker 1: Proud they were doing that.
Speaker 2: I had somebody attack me for saying that. Of course,
Speaker 2: I just want to be very clear that they were Nazis.
Speaker 1: Well yeah, well, yeah, I mean, any anytime you you
Speaker 1: post anything like that, there's always going to be people
Speaker 1: who just, uh, you know. I always I make fun
Speaker 1: of them, I say, you know, because they'll tell you, oh, no,
Speaker 1: that's a hateful ideology and I don't agree with it,
Speaker 1: and and they're bad people. And then they go and
Speaker 1: then they see on social media, you know, they'll say, yeah, no,
Speaker 1: I hate Nazis. They're terrible. Oh wait a minute, Oh
Speaker 1: Nazis are being criticized on social media. Oh shit, I
Speaker 1: got to get on there and defend these Nazis, you know, Oh,
Speaker 1: I don't agree with them, but oh but I don't
Speaker 1: think they should be criticized for any reason. I got
Speaker 1: to defend these Nazis.
Speaker 2: So, you know, we have a president who said they're
Speaker 2: very fine people, and these are the same people who
Speaker 2: march through the streets of Charlottesville chanting Jews.
Speaker 3: Will not replace us.
Speaker 2: Matter of fact, if you watch the video of that,
Speaker 2: there is a man that will show up in that
Speaker 2: video and his nickname is the Crying Nazis. Oh yeah,
Speaker 2: Christopher Keilly from New Hampshire.
Speaker 1: Friends are quite familiar with that.
Speaker 3: Yes, yes, he was from New Hampshire.
Speaker 2: He's actually in federal prison for something entirely different.
Speaker 1: I think, oh is he he fell off my radar.
Speaker 3: I think he ended up in jailed, but don't quote
Speaker 3: me on that part. But the video literally saying Jews will.
Speaker 2: Not replace us, the very five people that Trump was
Speaker 2: referring to, and there's the guy. So you know, yeah,
Speaker 2: forgive me if I'm a bit concerned that the President
Speaker 2: of the United States thinks that people who say you
Speaker 2: should not replace us, and thinks that I should you know,
Speaker 2: not exist in this world, are verifying people, and that
Speaker 2: the Secretary of Health and human services you know, buys
Speaker 2: into this, So uh can you blame me for having
Speaker 2: some concerns when Nazis starts showing up in broad daylight
Speaker 2: in front of our state house, marching down the street
Speaker 2: and then assault somebody in broad daylight, and then they
Speaker 2: climb into a back of a truck dive off
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