Parallel Polis Podcast Titelbild

Parallel Polis Podcast

Parallel Polis Podcast

Von: Andrew Torba
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A “Parallel Polis” is an independent society built outside the control of corrupt institutions where truth, faith, and freedom can thrive. Join Andrew Torba, founder and CEO of Gab, for raw, unfiltered, stream-of-consciousness reflections on technology, culture, and building parallel systems for the glory of God.

The Parallel Polis Podcast isn’t scripted or polished, it’s real. It’s one man thinking out loud about where the world is headed, what we’re building to resist it, and how faith shapes it all. From Silicon Valley to the digital wilderness, Andrew shares insights from the front lines of the fight for free speech, Christian technology, and cultural renewal.

Think of it as a weekly fireside chat for builders, believers, and anyone tired of the noise.

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  • Challenging Apologetics Of Jewish Influence
    Dec 23 2025

    I argue that patterns demand conclusions, that liberal democracy's weaknesses were deliberately exploited, that Christian civilization has been specifically targeted, and that the refusal to even ask these questions is not sophistication but surrender. Christ is King, His enemies are our enemies, and no rhetorical sleight of hand will convince us to remain silent.

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    15 Min.
  • Defining American Identity In The 21st Century
    Dec 21 2025

    What if a nation isn’t a set of slogans but a living inheritance you carry in your bones? We open with a stark claim: American identity grew from sacrifice layered over generations—soldiers who crossed oceans, miners and ironworkers who built at great cost, families who buried their dead in the soil they called home. From that lineage-first vantage point, we ask whether a civic creed alone can hold a country together when times turn hard, or whether belonging requires deeper ties of memory, culture, and duty.

    We revisit Theodore Roosevelt’s argument that European settlers fused into a distinct American people under the pressures of frontier life and a shared Christian moral frame. That lens sees assimilation as more than civics tests; it’s intermarriage, shared institutions, and the gradual adoption of norms that make strangers kin. With that history in mind, we examine why modern, high‑volume migration often yields parallel communities instead of unity: pace and scale outstrip absorption, expectations are unclear, and transnational loyalties remain strong. The result is a contest between a boarding‑house model of citizenship and a kinship model that demands sacrifice.

    The conversation sharpens around a loyalty test: when identities collide, where do hearts go? We draw a hard line between paper status and lived allegiance, arguing that nations survive only when members accept costs for the common good. That means rediscovering the language of duty—to ancestors who built and to children who inherit—and regaining the confidence to articulate what joining “us” actually requires. By the end, we’re not offering soft platitudes but a challenge: if we want a unified American future, we must define it clearly, expect real assimilation, and measure belonging by loyalty proven under pressure.

    If this conversation made you think, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your answer to one question: what truly makes someone American?

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    21 Min.
  • Vivek Ramaswamy Is Wrong About Everything
    Dec 18 2025

    Start with a simple question that refuses to stay simple: what makes someone American—documents, ideals, or descent? We unpack the creed-versus-kin debate by going straight to the sources so often quoted yet rarely read closely: the preamble’s “our posterity,” early naturalization rules, and the founders’ own writing on language, religion, and habits. From there, we pull the thread through the twentieth century, where a new universalist narrative took hold and reframed the nation as a proposition open to anyone who affirms the right ideas.

    Along the way, we explore how identity stories are never just rhetoric. They guide policy, set the boundaries of belonging, and affect who feels at home. We discuss the difference between legal citizenship and national identity, why those categories were once distinct, and how collapsing them creates confusion and resentment. We also look at media platforms and power: who gets to define the terms of the debate, and how those choices shape public sentiment. If politics is about who decides and for whom, then ideas about nationhood are not academic—they’re operational.

    Finally, we confront the limits of technocratic answers. Lower mortgage rates or stock grants might ease pain points, but they cannot substitute for a shared story of we. People want continuity with ancestors, respect for cultural inheritance, and clear lines that make trust possible. Our aim is not to romanticize any past, but to name the trade-offs honestly: inclusion with integration, continuity with fairness, ideals with identity. If you’re ready to rethink the slogans and weigh the sources, this conversation brings receipts and asks hard questions.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your take on what defines American belonging today.

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    16 Min.
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