 Welcome back to Good Morning Britain, we are finding out how men can make women great again because in Orlando, Florida is a man charging almost a thousand dollars. Anthony Dream Johnson who says he wants to abolish feminism and make women great again. In Orlando, Florida that's going to be insane in the crime. 21 Studios, okay? They are pretty much the Avengers of the manosphere. First and foremost, set out to 21 Studios. So this convention is put on by a company called 21 Studios and they have this whole convention every year called the 21 convention where it's just teaching men how to be better. Women are queuing up to pay nearly a thousand dollars to have a man like Anthony tell them how to be women. It's mansplaining balloons. Anthony Dream Johnson, that's really his name. He's the founder of the convention. Like yourself and like Anthony Johnson, president. The first president of the manosphere. President of the manosphere. You're protecting the sphere in a way that not enough people give you credit for. Thanks man. And I really mean that because if you didn't protect the sphere at all, it would just be a complete show. That's why you're the president, right? You gotta be presidential. You gotta be presidential. So that guy's name was Anthony the Dream Johnson, the president of the f***ing manosphere. There's only one guy in the manosphere. Yeah, you're a piece. Mr. President, you're f***ing done, dude. That's all there is to it. All in favor, say aye. Excuse me, I'm mansplaining here. Vote Dream 2022 and make the manosphere great again. I'm Anthony Dream Johnson and I approve this message. Boom. How's it going, fam? Let me see if I can get this. I'll get it like that. Welcome to episode 176 of The Red Man Group. I'm your host today, co-founder of The Red Man Group, founder of 21studios, 21 convention, 22 convention, the patriarch convention, the under-21 convention, 21 university, and about 10,000 other things on the internet. In today's episode, we'll get into it in a minute, free the alpha within, featuring guests, returning guests to the show. He's been on live at other versions of The Red Man Group before. Richard Nicolai from freetheanimal.com, link in the description, visit his website. But more about him in a minute. So today's sponsor of the show is going to be 21 Summit. So that's in about three weeks, almost to the dot in Orlando, Florida. It's the Manosphere World Summit. It includes three events held at the same time, same weekend, same venue, each about one minute apart in the hotel. That includes the classic 21 convention for men, where we're going to make men alpha again. It includes the patriarch convention for fathers and husbands, where we are rebuilding the patriarchy, where, as you know, the feminists almost smash it to bits. So we have to build it back and take over the culture and abolish feminism. And finally, the 22 convention to make women great again, because women today become basically a bunch of obese, you know, land wells and other variations of losers. And that's not good. Your grandmother was better. She was a great woman. And that has just gone downhill at the speed of speed of light. We got to fix that. We can't let women just destroy themselves and then destroy our country. And then we'll fall like Rome. I don't like that. I like my country. So check out the link in the description, get tickets to the event. It's still buy one, get one free. That's ending in about a week at the end of the month. And also tickets are on sale a couple hundred bucks off until the Sunday night. And then they go up in price. And then again, like the week after that, as even gets closer, get tickets now, get your ass to Orlando, Florida. Beta males make excuses. Alpha males make it happen. So link in the description. Also today's sponsor of the show and it's five minute commercial. Visit 21university.com or search for 21 university on the app store. It's the number one app for men. You can get all our videos, premium, high quality, ad free, censorship free, exclusive content, such as my now banned interview with Cobra Tate. It's still on YouTube and a couple of places that's super hard to find. And it was banned for Cofid information or some nonsense on my personal channel. They basically hate this guy and hate any videos with them, but not at 21 university where we love Andrew Tate. And there's many other speeches there. You can watch feminism sucks. The truth about paternity fraud, divorcing feminism, fire in the dark, the state of fatherhood. Check it out. Support the channel. Join 21U. Support yourself. Get yourself some masculine education. Now without further ado, please help me welcome to the show the illustrious, the infamous Mr. Richard Nicolai. How you doing, man? Good, good. I liked in your intro, particularly pick one thing out. And that is the talk about your mother, your grandmother. I was fortunate to grow up with a great grandmother until I was like 29-ish years old. And she had her faculties pretty much up to the end. And you look back and you say, she had a bad home and she ran away at 14 and had a daughter and a son and raised them as a back blue. And this was very, we're talking 1920-ish. And it was tough, but she was a tough lady. Yeah, I'm sure. And what can you say? They don't make them like they used to, I suppose. Yeah, that's what we got to make them great again. We got to fix them up, get them back in a shape, back in the kitchen, back in the bedroom, where they belong. None of this work crap. The more I think about it, the more I realize how delusional it is that women today just like immediately go to college and immediately start working. It's like such a waste of their life and their biology and their fertility and their eggs. It's crazy how we've just accept this as normal and it's not normal. It hasn't been normal for hundreds of thousands of years or at least 10,000 years of civilization. It's so fucking bizarre. And picking berries is one thing, but really beyond that, you should be taking care of babies until maybe later in life, if at all, something else. Anyway, let's get some background on you. So you've run free, theanimal.com. Let's actually pull that up. This is now, I think, one of the oldest running blogs, probably on the internet at this point. There we go. Guys, you're checking out Lincoln Institute. 19 years old. And I've got like just about 5,100 published posts. Wow. It's that's at a rate of a post every 1.4 days. I just published that one at the top. And one every 1.4 days over covering 19 years. That's, you know, and I'm a one man show. That's the thing. Yeah. That's how I found you. It was your blog, you know, many years ago now. I found your blog probably in 2009, something like that. When I was much more heavily involved. I hadn't had it, but you know, I had, you know, maybe a few thousand and the paleo whole thing. Because I, you know, it was just like, you know, right place the right time and I ended up becoming an influencer. And then blew it all up because of the because of the, you know, now that I think of that, we were talking before we went on about the paleo effects, but that whole feminism bullshit began at the AHS 2012 at Harvard. That's really, that's when the chick started going after me. I didn't know that. I thought it might have, I figured it, it got, it was bubbling up. Let's, we'll look at paleo effects in a minute, which is another paleo then. AHS was the ancestral health symposium, right? That went on for a couple of years. Yes. Yeah. I want to see if I can pull up. I found on their website, these embarrassing, the founder ended up bitching at me privately after I started making fun of how feminist and cucked this whole thing had become. Oh, here it is. Oh, God, you're going to love those guys. So this is paleo. Oh, here we go. I got to pull this up. This is paleo effects, an event I helped get started back in 2012, by the way. I was compensated in different ways and they paid for my flight, hotel, cash stuff, I mean, all kinds of stuff. And it went on for a long time and I think now it's officially, look at, I mean, look at this crap. When I helped this thing get going in 2012, helped them organize it, helped them put it together, get it filmed, produced all this stuff. I mean, this is like a stripper pole they bring into the event and everybody has pink hair and all this, what is this garbage? I mean, is that even, I don't know if that's a dude or a chick on the right. So it just became, I know, so you know the founders like I do, so I got to contextualize that. One of the founders is, I mean, there's actually three founders in the beginning. So two of them were former speakers of 21 convention. But anyway, this thing just went eventually woke over the years, the 10 years that it ran. I know it's dead as far as I know with bankrupt. And that's sad in itself, but it's, you have to keep in context that this thing went super woke and super feminist. They ended up recently, I think, one of the founders went on this huge apology rant about George Floyd and his negative comments about that. I mean, just standard like ass kissing all these losers. It made me lose respect for the guy. It's like, what, maybe he was confused or whatever, but it was sickening to watch this go down. And Paleo, as you know, Richard, back in the day had like nothing to do with feminism and any of this crap. It was not part of the subject really. It wasn't part of the subject matter because we were talking in the context of deep evolution. And everybody, I think, had an understanding of the way social hierarchies worked back then. And that was assumed to be probably helpful, I should say, right? And so, but this thing is, I'm glad I live in Thailand because this is very, very much a male dominated society, I mean, from the top on down. This isn't Thailand of a king. Is there a king of Thailand? Yes. Well, it's an interesting thing because we tend to think of three branches of government, executive, legislative, judicial. Thailand has that. The king gave up absolute power in the 1930s. I think it was 32 or 38, something like that, right? So they have the equivalent of like a parliament and prime minister and all that stuff. And they have a judiciary and they have legislature, right? But politically, there's two others. The king, though he doesn't have absolute power, he has politically strong, a lot of connections, as well the military. In fact, the current prime minister or whatever was a former general and he was Thailand's government, there was a coup in 2004. It's amazing. They've had like nine coups and nine constitutions or something like that. But here's the thing. The company is quite stable, really. I mean, it's impressive in a lot of ways. I could go on and on. But yeah, that's where I've lived for the last two years and like nine months now. It wasn't the intention, but then COVID happened. And I didn't want to, I was not interested in jumping through all the hoops to travel. And well, in the first few months, you couldn't anyway. Basically, the whole world was a travel band. And I was just quick story. I was standing in line on March 15, 2020 to fly to Vietnam. Saigon Ho Chi Minh City. And I had a visa and the flight was canceled as I'm in the check-in line, right? I said, well, okay. So I got on kayak and I said, ah, there's a flight to Hanoi. So that wouldn't work because the visa to Vietnam is port of entry specific. And so they wouldn't even let me board for that flight. And so I ended up getting stuck in Thailand. And then I heard from people I know and friends like Vietnam was a nightmare for, I mean, they were just basically, you were locked in your room. Thailand is a different kind of thing. So everybody gives lip service to everything, but there's very little enforcement of it. So there was never a time, there was some inconveniences, right? But generally, the most annoying thing is that so many businesses were closed, you know, and especially kind of I like, like girl bars. Well, you came, so you lived in California for a long time now. You've had a whole interesting life in the Navy and the military. And then as long as you were. Yeah, I'm an old Asia file because I lived in Japan for maybe four to eight, nine, five years. And in that time, I was everywhere. I was to Thailand about seven times, about a total of four to six months in country, Philippines, I've been to like 50 times. We had a Navy base there, Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, you name it. So I've been to all these places and some of them many times. And so I have, you know, I have a decent experience and understanding of Asia and Asian culture and whatnot. And I like it. I get along well, always have. And I have a good ear for understanding what they're trying to say in English. So talk to me about Japan. I have a lot of interest in Japan in the past couple of years. Nothing like I'm sure what you've experienced living there, but what was it like living there? Okay, so first of all, you know, being a Navy shipboard officer, the actual time in country out of five years is probably about three of it. And Japan is somewhat, you know, you would say, you kind of would say racist. But that didn't bother me. I mean, Japan is for the Japanese. I understand that. You know, I lived in France after that. I've always, I bemoan the shit that's going on in Europe, you know, in all those great countries. You know, trying to just melting pot everything. And so I like, you know, the French for the French, you know, it's, it's, that's how it should be, you know. And so, so, so Japan, but Japan is very interesting. I mean, there's, there's the politeness is over the top, the hygiene is over the top, you know, I mean, there's just a lot of really, really cool things about it. And there's, there's, I think maybe they do the whole saving face thing, right. And how is the, how's the sake? Oh, it's good. You know, people tend to, the world over some, somewhere they've got the idea, at least as when I was a kid and I was first heard about it, you know, everybody drank it more than the best sake is drank from cedar wood casks and everything a cedar, even the cups you drink it from metal and touch it or anything, right. But it's, it's, it's not chilled, but it's at room temperature and it's quite tasty. Yeah, I become a big sake fan the past couple of months, researching it. My girlfriend even bought me a sake set, like a really nice one from Japan. There's some good, good documentaries and stuff about the process of making some of the really renowned great ones, you know, it's amazing. Of course, like, like anything they do, like watch how they make the samurai swords and stuff like that. They're, they're quite the craftsmen, you know. Yeah. Unlike cheap Chinese crap, which they always, I heard the Chinese and Japanese hate each other with a burning passion. Well, the problem with the problem, and I don't know whether it stems from its time under communism, what a, you know, there's, there's, there's lots of Chinese in Thailand, but they stick to themselves. You know, I joke about it, you know, Chinese people come here to Thailand, but they do, they sign up at the Chinese tour company, they get a Chinese airplane flying, they get on a Chinese bus to a Chinese hotel, but the Chinese restaurants, they don't interact with the culture at all. Not most, most of them do not. I heard, I heard the Chinese are like super racist, like most racist people in the world. Yeah, it's interesting because, because it's, it's, it's strange to us because in my experience growing up, America is on the whole, you know, you know, there's some racist people, but on the whole, I mean, it's, it's, it's, it's kind of in its genes being, being the country that is populated by, you know, people from all over the place, you know, now it had it, it's, of course it had its original sin, mislavery and so on and so on. But, but, you know, that was a government policy. It wasn't necessarily how the people felt for the most part. Yeah. So I want to get into some other content though that I think is really going to upset people, the taboo subjects and the sacred cows. Your brain is a lot more polarizing, I think, than the average person realizes until they read your stuff, right? Read your blog and things you've, things you've stated over the years. So talk to me about, and you're one of the first, you're one of the first I ever saw that, that came out with this, and this was controversial even back in 10, 12 years ago. Talk to me about the difference between conservatives and Democrats, Republicans and Democrats. Like conservatives pretend that they're not hypocrites, only the Democrats are hypocrites and conservatives are this and that. Talk to me about that. Well, I, just to kind of frame it, I've always said, I mean, it's got to be two decades now that I've said that, that the Democrats are the evil party, but the Republicans are the stupid party. You can, the best example of that is going back to 1994 and Clinton's first midterm after he got elected in 1992. And so the 94 elected, I mean, the Republicans routed them. I mean, got a huge majority in the House and took over the Senate and it was by big margins, right? So essentially, the Republicans were in legislative total control, right? So they had this like agenda, which they called it the contract with America and the Democrats have left, did it kind of a clever turn of phrase, which I thought was kind of funny. They called the contract on America, but, you know, of course, but that, but pretty decent, you know, politics, politics, you know, but the problem is, is the Republicans squandered it. What is the first agenda item that they tried to push? Wait for it. Prayer in schools. I mean, with all the crap, even in 94, that would need, that needed to be fixed, you know, social security, welfare, immigration, you know, which has always been a problem. There's still like a crime wave at that time too, massive crime wave. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, you had the riots. You had the riots in LA, the Rodney King thing that they rioted over and things like that. And so, you know, and of course, the war on drugs, which was, you know, at least it could have been like, Hey, why don't we have all these, you know, there was no effort to think and say, Well, all right, there's, but there's, well, we were just users and they're not violent, you know, and they've never hurt anybody. They may be hurting themselves, but it's kind of having, it's kind of stupid to have those at any rate without going into a million different details. The Republicans squandered it and they continue to do that every time they back down. They think they think that, because their hearts are kind of in the right place. I've always said that too. Their hearts are kind of in the right place, but they're stupid. They're gullible, right? But then you have the, then you have the state ones or the neocons or whatever. Yeah, this is about the time the neocons started rising in power, right? Reagan was almost dead at this point and yeah. Yeah. And some, and some of the, I mean, the warmongering and the, you know, you know, Bush two was seemed like it was going to be good, but then, you know, the whole, I mean, that was, it was the peace candidate, Georgia Bush back in 2000, peace, peace, peace. Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, the issue with Donald Trump is he, he showed, he showed no light on that and that is, you know, he had so many influential and establishment Republicans against him and why you have to look at it and say, why in the hell would, would the Republicans be against him for everything he did? I mean, nowhere even leftists, I believe there was a piece in the Atlantic that said, say what you want about Trump, but he's, he's fulfilled more of his campaign promises, the stuff he said he was going to do than any president ever in history by a huge margin. Yeah. Yeah. So you say, you're commenting on these political parties and these different issues from when I was just a kid, but I've been, I've become more familiar with them as an adult looking back on footage of New King Ridge, Ron Paul back then commenting on this stuff. But are you, you have been an anarchist for a big chunk of your life. Were you then and are you now considered yourself an anarchist? No, it's, it's a tough, it's a, it's a, it's a hot potato because too many people associate anarchism with, with nihilism and destruction and everything and anarchism is actually a neutral position. You don't, you, you don't have agents of force all over the place. So you don't commit. I've said, I've said, I've said, anarchy begins at home. It's, it's a, it's a heartfelt mentality where you don't want to, you don't want to be ruled nor do you wish to rule, right? And so that it's really as simple as that. And, you know, I become very disappointed in the libertarians and, and, and even more so recently, within the last several years since the whole big government, big tech censorship thing. And there was this, this, the Fifth Circuit, uh, their two page decision on that Texas law is, is perfect because they said what they, what they got, what they said is that, look, you don't, you don't get to lie and say, hey, we're this big, we're the free speech platform so that you get everybody and you essentially create a monopoly for yourself and then turn around and do it. Uh, you know, the, the, the Twitter and Facebook, uh, Google, they, they're tantamount to public utilities. And I think you and I have talked about this before that, you know, they, they stand because they have, uh, because they have a quasi monopoly status. Um, they don't just get to, um, you know, but then you have the libertarians say, oh, it's a private company. No, it's not. It's a publicly traded company in, in, in a joint state protection in terms of limited liability. That, let's pause on that because I don't know if people understand that. And that is one of the most irritating things about what they do. There's, there's a number of things to do that are fucking aggravating, but you're right. They have limited liability protection for defamation. So if you or I go on Twitter or Facebook or whatever and say something, you can't sue them. You can sue me or you for defamation. You can't involve the platform. Now, if they were truly, truly, truly, truly, like a bulletin board, like a neutral just thing, he posts this stuff too, that makes sense, which I think is how it was designed, section 230 in the mid nineties around that same time that you were talking about earlier. But they, but they editorialize, they, they, they take shit down. Yeah. They're no different than the, at this point, they're no different than the New York Times or any other newspaper. They just editorialize whatever the, they are, that's, that's correct. Like crazy, like rampantly, they, they, they banned, they editorialized for months in the 2020 election with Trump. And then they eventually just banned this dude from their platform after editorializing probably fucking 200 tweets of this. It's insane. It's even deeper, a little bit deeper than that because the whole idea of a corporation, you see a human like business entity is sole proprietors or partnerships. In other words, I'm the business. I, Richard Nicolai, am the business or Richard Nicolai and Anthony Johnson and, and, and Socrates and all the, and these other guys are the business and we're fully liable for everything the business does, right? The business assets and our personal assets are all in the line, right? With a corporation, you have a separation between the person and the actions of the corporation. Now there's only one entity that can, can, can perform and accomplish that. And that is the state, right? The, the, the both the, both the individual 50 states and the, and the feds, right? So when the libertarian says it's a private company, I say bullshit, it's not. It is protected by the state. So now, you know, I'm not saying don't have a corporation. My company was a corporation. You got to play the game, but at least understand the terms and the definitions and the distinctions between, between legit, truly legitimate business entities, like they used to be until the corporation. Now, and why do you think a corporation exists? Well, people will say, well, it's because of the way you can, you know, manage a different set of books and assets. Yeah, you can do that, all that stuff. You can synthesize it the same way with the sole progression. The one reason for it is that you can, you can get away with a lot of stuff that you couldn't get away with as a sole proprietor. Yeah, you offload risk. I do it too. I have, my companies are all LLCs and they've been that way for a while. You know, I don't blame anybody. You know, if you're gonna, if you're gonna be in the game, you got to, you got to do the, you know, you've got to follow, go with the procedures and the rules and how things are done and so forth, right? Yeah. Yeah, I wanted to, I wanted to talk to you about this as well. So you're, you know, much more familiar than most with some of the, and you have experience too, so you could, I think, relate to what I was going through and continue to go through as an entrepreneur and a business owner. So, you know, numerous people over the past couple years in particular, I've been in business for 16 years. In the past, like five years or so, not even, there's been a number of people trying to destroy my business publicly, privately, steal it, undermine it, create new ones that then siphon off, you know, basically the business, a variety of different actions that we are in an active lawsuit right now against that involves us with the, with the competitor event that tried to steal a variety of, right, explicitly, former staff, former employees, former volunteers, former speakers, and then literally, like, copy the blueprint of our event. Even under his own, you know, he had his own contract with me as well. It's whatever, it's in court right now, and I think we're gonna win. We just got to discovery, so I'm pretty excited. But anyway, it's, you know, what did, what did you go through in your life as an entrepreneur or a business owner? I know, for example, too, at the end of, when you ended up closing, you had a debt consolidation business, I think, as I described it, that you built on California. And at the end of it, you just basically, like, burnt it to the ground because the government of California was, like, fucking with you. So, can you talk to me about your business experience and, like, what you've been through with people trying to fuck with you and the government trying to fuck with you? Richard, you there? You kind of, oh man, I think I lost him. Hmm, guys, I'm gonna see if I can get Richard back on. I think he did, digitally speaking. Well, guys, we'll wait for Richard Nicolai to hopefully reconnect. I can advertise my event to you. Well, let's see. I think it's now 21university.com. Oh, yep, he did. Check out TicketsGuys21studios.com, link in the description. Coming out to the event, we've got about 25 speakers. You can see Elliott Hulse here, Richard Grannon, myself, Jack Donovan, Coach Greg Adams, and many more. Three events at the same time. 21C is for men, patriarch is for fathers, 22 is for women. Check out the speaker list for 21 convention. That's our flagship live event for men, probably the most famous competitor. It competes well anyway at 22. It's been all over the news. So list of the speakers, Ian Smith from Attila's Gym in New Jersey, famous, Pastor Michael Foster, AJ Cortez, Coach Greg, Jeff Younger. A lot of you know him from our channel recently. He's had videos. He's the most popular speaker in our history at this point. He's a Texas father trying to save his son. We have Arthur Quan Lee, artist, classically trained artist. Jay Vincent, he's a high-intensity training professional. Legendary seduction guru from the PUA community, Zam Parion. Ivan Throne, Steve Williams, Allende Gordon, Allende from authentic alphas. Paul Caldwell from the War Room channel. You guys have seen his videos on our channel lately. And Pat Stubman, the world's most wanted and most controversial dating coach. There's going to be a lot going on at the event. A lot of speaker panels as well on Monday for the event. You can get tickets. Full price is $24.99. On sale now for $18.99. Price goes up on Sunday. You can go VIP for $28.99. We have a virtual ticket as well for $4.75. Full price, $500. You can watch virtually from home. That's exclusive to this event. We don't have that available this year for $22 for the women or the patriarch. But we do have full pay-per-view. HD, high quality. And that's right here for this one. I'm still in here back from Richard. So maybe we can keep the show going for today. If it doesn't hop back on soon, I might have to cut it. Maybe have it back on in the future. I'll check out the patriarch event while we're waiting for Richard to hopefully reconnect. The future is patriarchy. It was Elliot with his zoo size going on. Pastor Michael Foster. This actually started as a patriarch convention or the 21 convention patriarch edition. And then more recently, we rebranded it to the patriarch convention. It starts in about 20 days. You can bring your wife free ticket, drop off for baby setting, wife baby setting basically at the 21 summit at Socrates. It's kid. Pastor Michael Foster is of course, Thanos. Patriarchy is inevitable. And you got to dominate your wife to dominate life. There's no other way, guys. You don't dominate her. She will dominate you and blow up your family and blow up your life and blow up your marriage and blow up your relationship. So take the reins, lead your house, lead your family, lead your relationship, lead your woman. She's begging for you to lead. The 22 convention is kind of hilarious if any of you haven't seen it. I really sent the media, oh, Richard's back. Let's see what we got. Hey, Richard. I'm on my phone. I see. Yep. Let me auto you. Oh, wait, let me see your mic. Yeah, it should be all right. You there? Oh, man, you froze again. Oh, wait, now you're good. Can you hear me? Barely hear you breaking up. Yeah, I believe never had problems with internet. Wouldn't you know it? Yeah. Let me know if you can hop back on your laptop while I was trying to keep the show going just through your phone like this for a while. So I wanted to talk to you more about religion. Unfortunate. It's weird. Yeah. So anyway, you, you've been outspoken for a long time about religion. You've had, I don't know where you're at with it currently, but oh, he did. Let's see if he hops back on here, guys. While we're waiting, become the ultimate alpha female. Now I'm just playing. That's just super feminist and retarded as mean coach Greg. So this event for any of you that are not aware of it has been all over the news, blaze, New York Post, New York Times, independent, Daily Mail. There's a funny trailer here you can watch for these people to lose it. It was actually a TV show that covered, they did like a 10 minute segment on the show back in 2020. Let me get a show and I'm getting canceled, but it was like the view of kind of like ghetto chicks and shit. This is our sunflower dress girl. Oh, here's Richard again. You there? Yo, can you hear me? Check, check. Yeah, I, I turn off my Wi-Fi on the phone and hopes that might help. How can you hear, can you hear me? Okay. Yeah, it's decent. I think it was a delay too. Yeah, problem is that very much I can't hear you. It's like just a garble. Sorry about that. We could try redoing the show in the future, man, if you want. You're looking better now actually, a lot clearer. Yes, nothing coming through just like garbles. Damn, very strange and I've got plenty of bars on my phone. So I'm not sure what the deal is. I don't know how well you can hear me. You sound actually pretty good. It's unfortunate you can't hear me. We might have to just redo the show in the future, man. Yeah, if you can't get back on your laptop, I think we'll just have to redo it, man. Yeah guys, I'm not sure if the show is going to work today and I appreciate you hanging in there. Let's just keep rapping about 22. We'll see if Richard fixes his internet and stuff. So this is like our flower chick. This pisses off all of the obese women who find the page. Patriarchy is inevitable. Also aggravates all of the women. This is actually something he said, by the way, he's a pastor. He's also right, by the way. Masculine leadership is built into our nature as animals and as human beings. So feminism is doomed. I should tweet that. Women who go to this event can get themselves a pure-blooded alpha male, like Elliot Hulse. That's what she got. That's what we're promising the ladies. It takes the same price to this event as they are. Oh, here's Richard again. Richard, are you there? Why don't you go to some other stuff and then when my wife, if my Wi-Fi comes back up, I will pop back in. Apologize. I never have a problem. It's like, what's going on? Yeah, it's happened to me like that, man. That sucks. Yeah, some kind of just going through the event. Let me know about your internet. But yeah, guys, we do these three events at the same time. It's a Manusphere World Summit. We should definitely get your ticket now. Link in the description. A lot of amazing speakers, people you've seen on the channel, I'm sure, the videos and stuff. It's an amazing event. It'll change your life. That's a lot of guys don't realize in the Manusphere is like, they want to get better. They want to improve if they're not just like totally nihilistic and blackmail about it. But the change, it takes real effort and real action. And that's what a lot of people are trying to sell you. Snick, well, don't tell you, you got to do stuff like physically move your body, get your ass in a seat, go somewhere, get on a plane, you know, talk to that chick, tell you want to banger to her face, you know, whatever. Richard, can you hear me? So barely. It's like garbled. How well can you hear me? I can hear you 100%. You sound fine to me. Yeah, your upload speed is fine. It's your download speed, I think, that is chugging. Let's let's just call the show for today and we can try it again in the future. I'm gonna have to be after the event. Yeah, I can't hear anything that you're saying. It's just like a garble garble garble. It's okay. Guys, we're gonna wrap up the show. Sorry for today's technical difficulties. I'll see you in a future episode. Law of Richard back on and see what we can do. Thanks for tuning in. I appreciate it. Peace out. See you in a future episode.