Posobiec asked Lisec what he attributed to the massive success of the book they had been seeing, even in the pre-order phase.
He responded that the pair began to realize that there "are patterns that are followed in every communist revolution, that is a cognitive evolution is when there's one class or one group of people who claim to be oppressed, there have nots relative to a have class or group in that society."
"A communist revolution," he said, "is an implementation of Marxism."
In essence, the Karl Marx hypothesis declares that the poor have to rise up and destroy the wealthy and take what they have in order to create a utopia, Lisec explained.
He continued: "But we see that done culturally, in what's been termed Cultural Marxism. And throughout these periods and these events, we've begun to see obvious parallels to the present day ... And we realized that we're currently experiencing in the Western world, United States, in particular, a communist revolution 2.0."
This is why the author believes that people have taken such an interest in the book.
Posobiec highlighted the recent viral example of squatters having the ability to evidently move into homes that others own and stay there by law, laws that were implemented by Democrats.
"So you're telling me that the left doesn't respect private property rights, and actually wants to give your private property to classes of people that they feel are oppressed?" he quipped.
Lisec agreed that "the communists, wherever they go throughout history, they do not recognize the rights to life, liberty, and property. In fact, when communists are able to wield power, they actively disintegrate rights to life, liberty and property. And they do so in the name of what? the name of equality."
Watch the full episode below.