RICHARD SPENCER: What I'm getting at here is that there does seem to be an asymmetry between left and right in those ways. And there's also this way in which the right can't rule, and it never can rule because it's always the kids at the kids table as opposed to the adults table. It's always the people outside of the restaurant smoking a cigarette, theorizing about how the restaurant is secretly poisoning you, as opposed to the people in the restaurant and the customers and the wait staff and the chef. They, like, you can't have Kash Patel as the FBI director, someone who declared that he wanted to destroy the FBI and make it into a museum. You can't — the outsider can't be the insider. And so, it's almost like inevitably going to turn out this way, where in order to truly reflect and represent the base, you have conspiracy theorists in office. And they're almost, you know, investigating themselves or, like, denouncing themselves. There's this chaotic energy to the right that was amplified by Trumpism that was there in 2016 and I think is even more powerful now. And it just — on some psychic level, it can actually never govern anything.
NICK FUENTES: Yeah. I think there's a lot of truth to that, and you can even tell in terms of how the Trump movement has completely failed to institutionalize any of its reforms. You know, I think that when you look across the board, even these guys like Claremont, let's say, or DOGE that came in with all these PayPal mafia people, is any of that going to be around in a couple of years? Is any of that going to be around after Trump leaves office? I don't think so. I think the ball is going to fall back squarely into the lap of the old guard institutions that hung around, maybe that didn't go crazy. And so, I think you're right.
There is something inherently destructive about Trumpism. It almost seems like, you know, maybe in a roundabout way, they were kind of right about how he, in the end, is going to tank everything, is going to destroy everything. Because you look at where Trump is now, his approval's in the toilet, favorability's in the toilet on all the issues.
And what's more, it's not just that it's conspiracy theorists in the government, but it's like a criminal enterprise, which almost no one's talking about, but they're all looting. And that's really what Charlie Kirk was doing. That's really what Turning Point was is it was like a nonprofit that was hiring contractors that were owned by the board members of the nonprofit. It was just, like, kind of facilitating, it was just like this graft in the same way that the Trump administration with, like, Howard Lutnick and Steve Witkoff and David Sacks, these guys are like, it seems to be like criminals. It seems to be all about their personal enrichment. And I think that the Epstein files is a really good example of that. I think this relationship with Netanyahu and Trump is a good example of that. And not least of all because it's, you know, Jewish or Israeli, but because it shows how the state is just being turned inside out and used by these, like, clearly conflict-of-interest-type people.
And I don't know that the Republican Party will survive when Trump does not deliver on anything. In three years, what's going to be the excuse? You know, in 2020, you could say, well, we had the pandemic, and we need four more years to keep America great. But OK, you got your second shot. You fought back. You learned your lesson, whatever. OK. In three years, if we have a bad economy, we're still at war with Russia, if there's not actually measurable results, and all that happened was, like, rank corruption and disappointment and embarrassment, I don't know that there's going to be a salvageable party.
And you'll see that play out in the primary between someone like — you'll see it in the contradictions in someone like Vance, where Vance is going to try to be everything to everybody. And I don't think he's going to be able to – that's not going to hold together. I think that you're going to wind up with somebody maybe like Rubio or DeSantis, or you're going to wind up, in other words, with like a refortified center right actually. And so, so, yeah. I tend to agree. I think that the whole thing has been a complete failure, total failure in terms of governance.