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And here we go. | ||
The family of the Ukrainian refugee killed on a Charlotte train last month is speaking out for the first time as we see more video of the horrific crime. | ||
Right. | ||
Of what happened afterwards. | ||
The newly released video shows the aftermath of the shocking attack that's now being prosecuted on the federal level. | ||
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Lucas Thomason joins us live with the latest. | |
Good morning, Lucas. | ||
Good morning, guys. | ||
The family of Arena Zarutsk is speaking out for the first time after the brutal murder of that twenty-three-year-old Ukrainian refugee on a train in Charlotte. | ||
Here's the statement. | ||
We are heartbroken beyond words. | ||
Irina came here to find peace and safety, and instead, her life was stolen from her in the most horrific way. | ||
No family should have to go through this. | ||
This could have been anyone riding the light rail that night. | ||
We are committed to making sure this never happens again. | ||
And the suspect's half-brother speaking out, telling the New York Post that Carlos Brown should not have been allowed in public. | ||
I think they could have pretty much prevented it then. | ||
I didn't even know he had mental problems. | ||
You can't just let him free, especially because of mental issues. | ||
He could do it again. | ||
President Trump's Justice Department now stepping in, bringing charges against Carlos Brown with one count of committing an act causing death on a mass transportation system. | ||
He faces a maximum sentence of life and prisoner death. | ||
Here's Attorney General Pam Bondi. | ||
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We are going to prosecute him to the fullest extent of the law. | |
We have taken the case because it's murder on mass transit. | ||
Progressive DAs cannot handle this case. | ||
Here's FBI agent James Barnacle in Charlotte. | ||
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The system has failed us in this case. | |
There is no doubt. | ||
Everyone deserves to go about their daily lives, to get to work, to get to school, just across town without the fear of being attacked. | ||
So we'll have to figure this out, right? | ||
This is not a problem the FBI or the U.S. Attorney's Office can solve. | ||
And here's the video showing Arena's entering the train at moments before she is murdered. | ||
We have received new video of the aftermath. | ||
Viewer discretion is advised. | ||
Some people have scrutinized the reaction of some of the passengers. | ||
It's not clear how much time they had to react. | ||
Some passengers are seen later in the surveillance video trying to come to Arena's aid. | ||
DeCarlos had been arrested previously 14 times. | ||
Recall here in D.C. two years ago, the police chief said the average murder suspect in the nation's capital had been arrested 11 times prior to committing a homicide, guys. | ||
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Well, there's something wrong with that stat. | |
It's eminently correctable. | ||
Thanks, Lucas. | ||
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Please take me far, far away. | |
I can't watch it anymore. | ||
She covers her face. | ||
You might call me hateful. | ||
Bigger than it races. | ||
I'll wait for the next train And reach my old ages You can't fix a savage Animal rabbit And damage | ||
Oh, no And guess what, my friend Everything will be okay Everything will be okay Guess what day What day | ||
Yes, hump day Ooh, ooh you Ladies and gentlemen, a little bit of a different look in our show today and a slightly later time that we are broadcasting because we are getting a new studio together thanks to our friends Gates Garcia, who is allowing us to use his studio here in Tampa. | ||
Massive shout out to him, his team, and the Gates Foundation who are letting us in lieu of a catastrophic internet outage inside of our studio that you saw maybe perhaps live yesterday, where there was construction that cut our internet. | ||
Now, was that construction being done by the DNC? | ||
Is that construction being done by the Communist Party of China? | ||
Is that construction being done by the Soros Foundation? | ||
We don't know exactly, but we do know that we are thankful for our friends allowing us to broadcast here. | ||
So we'll have a slightly different look today, but it's an awesome studio, totally kick ass. | ||
Uh, we're thankful to be here. | ||
We're sorry that we're a few minutes late today. | ||
We got a very important show. | ||
This would be the show that they would want to cancel because this is the moment in our society's history where good men are beginning to notice. | ||
Where good women are beginning to notice, where the American people are beginning to say, wait a second, what's happening to us? | ||
Are we being hunted by domestic terrorists of our own making? | ||
Today on the show, we are going to rip the bark off of the data that they refuse to show you the federal statistics about black on white crime and the other way around, percentages of the population, and horrific trend lines and pattern recognition. | ||
And we often say, and we've said it for years, I don't claim to be somebody who went to the Ivy Leagues. | ||
I don't consider myself a uh particularly credentialed individual. | ||
You won't find that around here. | ||
I never turn my nose up. | ||
I'm not a snob, I'm not sitting here to say like we're so fancy and we're so smart. | ||
Oftentimes we go to the chat, actually, to crowdsource what we should be covering, what we should be talking about, because I'm you. | ||
I'm you. | ||
I was raised in hog farms, right? | ||
I also married a farm girl. | ||
We're like humble servants of the republic, simple Christians. | ||
But we know pattern recognition. | ||
And that is perhaps our superpower. | ||
Our superpower on this program is we have, well, one weaponized autism and pattern recognition. | ||
And the entire team does. | ||
So we put together a show today to really talk through what is happening in this country. | ||
And it's high time that we have this conversation. | ||
I don't think it's been had in a generation. | ||
Certainly not in my generation. | ||
And I'm on the wrong side of 30, let me tell you. | ||
But I've never had and ever seen the dialogue that is happening, that's happening right now online, uh, particularly on X, but on other platforms, we are now breaking through. | ||
We are breaking the narrative. | ||
And that is what we were going to do today on our program. | ||
Uh, and here, this, our wonderful studio for the day, hopefully, as our internet gets fixed. | ||
So let's rock and roll today. | ||
It's Wednesday, September 10th, 2025. | ||
President Trump calls for death penalty against animal to Carlos Brown Jr., an animal that should have been caged a long time ago. | ||
We're gonna break down the systemic failures that allowed for the murder of Arena Zestruka. | ||
Audio released of the killer's first phone call from prison. | ||
You won't believe what he has to say. | ||
Turns out that all of us saying that this was demonic possession. | ||
The same way in the time of Christ, you know, they say when like Christ engages with demons, it's a dude who's like been banished from the town. | ||
He's living among the tombs in one instance. | ||
And he cuts himself and he injures everybody and he breaks chains, and the entire town is effectively like buried him among the dead. | ||
Because the town refuses to have this demon live amongst them. | ||
Christ casts out the demons, right? | ||
That's the way it happened in Christ's Day. | ||
That's what's happening here. | ||
We have the audio to prove it. | ||
It's a wild similarity between this and the shooting in the Catholic Church in Minneapolis just a few short days ago. | ||
How quickly we forget these moments. | ||
But that individual also claimed to be demon-possessed. | ||
So it's important to like have honest conversations about these things. | ||
And that's what we're going to do today. | ||
Congressman Chip Roy Jones joins our program. | ||
He's running to become the attorney general of the state of Texas. | ||
In the state of Texas, there is a killing that is eerily similar. | ||
A young white male named Austin Metcalf in the prime of his life. | ||
He was uh, I think 18 years old, perhaps 17. | ||
Either way, uh murdered. | ||
He was stabbed, also with a knife through the heart or through the throat in the circumstance in Charlotte. | ||
Same situation, totally unprovoked, and there's footage of it, and the state of Texas won't release that footage. | ||
Why exactly? | ||
Who are they protecting? | ||
We're gonna talk with Chip Roy about it today. | ||
My name is Benny Johnson, and this is the Benny Show. | ||
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Okay. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, we've been talking on this program a lot about patterns. | ||
And it's something that we need to have a basic data, definitional groundwork to understand what the true terrorism in our society is stemming from. | ||
And when you start asking questions, questions that the corporate media continue to cover up and obscure from us. | ||
Like, for instance, in this now famous CNN clip where Van Jones goes after my boy Charlie Kirk and says, we have no idea if there's any racism that's at play here in the Charlotte murder. | ||
Now, what we saw yesterday in a clip that we have decided editorially, we are not going to play in full on the program because it is too gruesome, but you can find it on our X account, for instance. | ||
It is important that people look into the heart of darkness and see precisely what happened. | ||
We have the footage of the murderer to Carlos Brown Jr. saying, I got that white girl after he slits her throat. | ||
She sobs and weeps and slumps over after about two minutes, bleeding out alone on a train. | ||
Five other passengers witnessed this, and none of them stepped in to help. | ||
The indifference to human suffering is something we will not allow. | ||
It is prima facie evil. | ||
It is the opposite of the Good Samaritan. | ||
We're sickened by it, and it is radicalizing to the nation. | ||
The wholesale collapse of the media ecosystem that is trying to tell you the reverse is happening in our nation is at hand. | ||
You can see the dying embers of it here in this clip of Van Jones. | ||
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Let's go. | |
And it's about forcing him to be there. | ||
When you are mentally ill, you have a hard time knowing that you are mentally ill. | ||
But also, I mean, people like Charlie Kirk fan, they've been looking for opportunities to make this some sort of like reciprocal George Floyd situation. | ||
And I I that's the part that I think he's almost giving away the game. | ||
And it's sad to see a lot of people going along with it. | ||
You know, I need to say a couple of things. | ||
One is, and what happened to that young woman was horrible. | ||
And it's everybody's nightmare. | ||
If you're in a public space, uh subway, whatever, that something bad's gonna happen to you or somebody you care about. | ||
So it does strike a chord. | ||
We don't know why that man did what he did. | ||
And for Charlie Kirk to say we know he did it because she's white when there's no evidence of that, is just pure race uh race mongering, hate mongering, it's wrong. | ||
Then he says that if something like that had happened the other way, there would be sweeping changes imposed on society. | ||
Where is the George Floyd policing act? | ||
It didn't pass. | ||
Even when you had a white police officer murder a black man on live television, the whole world saw, there were no sleeping changes. | ||
In fact, not not one law was passed at the federal level. | ||
So that's that's I think that's an important thing to point out. | ||
The other thing is you mentioned the thing about cashless bail. | ||
I think this is a big challenge that we have. | ||
Would you have felt better if there had been cash bail and the mom had come and put down a thousand dollars to let him out? | ||
It's not about cashless bail or no cashless bail. | ||
It's about the fact that we don't know how to deal with people who were hurting in the way this man was hurting, hurt people, hurt people. | ||
What happened was horrible, but it becomes an opportunity for people to jump on bandwagons and then for someone like Charlie Kirk, he should be ashamed of himself. | ||
No one mentioned the word race, white, black, or anything except him. | ||
What people mentioned is the the horror of what happened to this young woman. | ||
Girl. | ||
All right. | ||
Nobody mentioned race, huh? | ||
Nobody mentioned race. | ||
Well, the killer mentioned race. | ||
The killer mentioned race. | ||
Killer says I got that white girl. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
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Me and Jones, we're on this one. | |
Yeah, bro. | ||
We didn't get it, bro. | ||
We didn't get it, bro. | ||
There you go. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Got that white girl. | ||
Nobody mentioned race, says Van Jones. | ||
This isn't a race thing. | ||
How dare we? | ||
How dare we notice absolutely no sympathy for the young white refugees, 23 years old, never harmed a fly. | ||
Gets her throat slit, dies alone, cowering in fear and terror. | ||
No sympathy for her. | ||
How dare we notice the pattern that is before us? | ||
And what is that pattern exactly? | ||
Ooh, Van Jones' not gonna like this, is he? | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, that pattern is right here before us. | ||
We went viral this week, uh, two days ago, putting uh this out, but let's go through it right now. | ||
Because we did a little bit of research, and we've done a little more on black on white crime. | ||
We're gonna talk about black crime in totality right now. | ||
Black people make up twelve percent of the population in America. | ||
The vast majority of violent crime in the black community is men's. | ||
That's about six percent of our nation. | ||
Do you know that one in every twenty-two black men will commit murder in their lifetime in America? | ||
One in twenty two. | ||
We check the stats. | ||
I mean, that makes this the single most dangerous demographic on earth. | ||
It's hard to actually compare demographics here. | ||
Van Jones. | ||
Maybe you can speak to this one of these days. | ||
I mean, you're gonna have to like find in other countries, including third world countries, including South Sudan or Somalia, numbers that reflect American black men crime rates. | ||
We searched. | ||
It was virtually impossible to saw to find an actual population of people that were more violent at a higher rate, given their percentages of the population. | ||
They make up only six percent of the population, but commit fifty-one percent of the murders. | ||
How's that even statistically possible? | ||
This is something that I mean needs to be studied, needs to be shouted from the rooftop. | ||
What do you what do you do with a population like this? | ||
Black men are nine times more likely to commit a violent crime than the entire general population of the United States of America. | ||
How'd we get there? | ||
We talked a little bit about the socioeconomics. | ||
Oh, the socioeconomics. | ||
Oh, they're they're poor, they're in poverty. | ||
That's bullshit. | ||
I know a lot of poor people. | ||
I was raised as a very poor person. | ||
I was raised in dirt. | ||
I had nothing. | ||
You probably had nothing or less than nothing. | ||
Any of you go into debt in your young lives? | ||
Did that immediately mean that you started looting every 7-Eleven that you saw? | ||
Breaking into every Nike store, stealing in mass, ripping through the self-checkout lanes at Walmart. | ||
The idea that it's only because of poverty is because blacks have been systematically oppressed, they can't get jobs, that that's the reason why they're violent, is disproven in every Asian country. | ||
Every Asian country, and these countries have very low crime. | ||
People live on like a dollar a day. | ||
There are a lot of places like that. | ||
There are a lot of places in the world where people live on pennies compared to somebody on welfare here in this country. | ||
And they have de minimis, if not vanishingly zero crime rates. | ||
So stop trying to make these like fake comparisons. | ||
There is something, though, that we were able to find in the data. | ||
That 70% of black children are born without dads. | ||
Born without somebody who would whoop you, born without the structure that is required for a young man to learn about the rules around them in society. | ||
And what does that mean? | ||
What is a father there to do? | ||
To spank his children, to discipline, to be the heavy. | ||
That's what the dad does. | ||
I am a dad to four children. | ||
I hope I can have four more or 40 more. | ||
I don't know. | ||
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I don't know. | |
Don't tell my wife. | ||
But that's what my job is. | ||
My role is the enforcer in the family. | ||
I ensure that my children understand that we live in a world of thermodynamics. | ||
And that if you continue to defy the rules, that there will be a severe punishment for that. | ||
The punishment comes in different forms. | ||
Sometimes it's no ice cream tonight. | ||
Sometimes it's a spanking. | ||
But there are going to be punishments for bad behavior. | ||
You learn that from a young age from your father. | ||
If you take that out of the equation, and the disciplinarian leaves, and being a parent is a high stress and high engagement activity, and it's just the mom, then well, the enforcer is gone. | ||
And the children never learn action reaction. | ||
For every action, there is an equal opposite reaction. | ||
Matt Walsh is out today saying that armed robbery needs to be met with capital punishment. | ||
And that's how you begin to reduce severely violent crime in this country. | ||
And we're going to talk a little bit about exactly how quickly you could lock up violent crime in this country. | ||
Yeah, we have an underincarceration problem in America, not an over-incarceration problem. | ||
We need to build more prisons and do it immediately in order to save our population. | ||
64% of black children are raised by a single parent. | ||
Nine million black children under the age of 18 in the United States. | ||
Six million of them live in fatherless households. | ||
Now, what does the data say about fatherless households? | ||
Well, because these kids don't ever have any discipline, and because it is human's nature to while out, they're going to have to learn one way or another, that there's some walls you can't crash into. | ||
You know, DeCarlos Brown Jr., President Trump's out this morning saying we got it death penalty. | ||
President Trump's Truth Social, ladies and gentlemen, right here. | ||
The animal who violently killed a beautiful young lady from Ukraine who came to America searching for peace and safety should be given quick, there is no doubt, trial, and only awarded the death penalty, says President Trump. | ||
There can be no other option, President Donald J. Trump. | ||
It's President Trump's only post today. | ||
President really cares very much about this topic And is now stating the death penalty. | ||
Our reporting yesterday, we contacted the DOJ as soon as we learned of the federal charges, and the DOJ said, uh, you need to, well, like the death penalty is what we're going to be pushing for. | ||
That's what DOJ spokesperson told me directly. | ||
You could see life in prison. | ||
This animal will never breathe free air again. | ||
These federal charges are going to be brought by federal prosecutors that are not going to be effing around with this. | ||
But the animal goes in the cage now. | ||
But it didn't have to be this way. | ||
What if the Carlos Brown Jr. had a father that was present? | ||
DeCarlos Brown Jr.'s father is in jail for violent crime. | ||
Isn't that interesting? | ||
So is his brother. | ||
Same thing. | ||
His brother killed a white guy. | ||
Isn't that remarkable? | ||
Alax, if we don't have that in the script, please get that for me. | ||
I want to make sure that I give you the names, times, dates of exactly what happened. | ||
It's almost like this kind of stuff is hereditary. | ||
It's like when you have no fathers, that spawns this style of behavior. | ||
And that's exactly what's exactly what the data shows. | ||
Kids without fathers are far more likely to live in poverty, half as likely to graduate college, and twice as likely to end up in prison. | ||
70% of juveniles in state facilities come from single parent household. | ||
This is your fatherlessness to criminal to prison pipeline. | ||
Now, you'll won't be surprised to find out that the actual bad guy here is the federal government. | ||
Black fatherlessness has tripled since the advent of the Great Society, the creation of welfare state programs that incentivize fatherlessness in the in these in the most impoverished communities. | ||
After the passage, the numbers doubled almost instantly of black fatherlessness to 30% in the 1970s. | ||
Now it's at 60%, with no end in sight, by the way. | ||
It's not like these numbers are getting better. | ||
They're getting far worse. | ||
At what point do we reach 100% black fatherlessness in the home? | ||
What will that America look like? | ||
What will that country look like when there's zero black fathers? | ||
Where every black father is precisely the father of DeCarlos Brown Jr. | ||
Team, get me DeCarlos Brown Sr. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
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There we go. | |
Okay. | ||
Let's go ahead and look a little bit at this family history, shall we? | ||
Arena Zestruka's killer was a ha has a half-brother named Stacy DeJan Brown, who shot and killed a white 65-year-old man in the face while he was walking home from work in 2012. | ||
He then used the Charlotte Light rail system to flee the scene. | ||
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Oh, cool. | |
Got it. | ||
Here's here's here's his brother. | ||
Their father, DeCarlos Brown Sr., is also a criminal with prior arrest for breaking and entering felony conspiracy, larceny, and possession of a weapon in the university on the University of North Carolina, Charlotte campus. | ||
This is why you lock up criminals and you lock them up for good. | ||
Is this offending you? | ||
Van Jones? | ||
I hope so. | ||
I hope Van Jones is horrified at looking at the government's data. | ||
This is FBI data that we are witnessing. | ||
That a white person is 30 times more likely to be killed by a black person than the other way around. | ||
30 times more likely. | ||
How is that possible given the fact that I'm just going to use black men here? | ||
Because the statistics show that it's that it is the it is predominantly black men. | ||
They're 6% of the population. | ||
White people are 60 plus percent of the population. | ||
Yet a white person is 30 times more likely to be killed by a black person. | ||
Again, mathematically, it doesn't even work. | ||
None of these numbers would work. | ||
There were 560,000 violent interactions between blacks and whites. | ||
47 470,000 were black on white. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Let's go and look at the actual source here, shall we? | ||
This is from the Bureau of Justice Statistics. | ||
There were in 2019 562,550 violent racial black on white incidents, interracial correction, black white incidents, and 84% of them were black on white. | ||
84%. | ||
Again, given the actual numbers of the makeup of the percentages of the population, this shouldn't even be possible. | ||
In 2024, there were 450 black on white homicides and less than 100. | ||
White on black. | ||
Again, shouldn't even be possible. | ||
We'll show you the data. | ||
Hopefully, Van Jones is watching. | ||
Hey, Van. | ||
Do you think that there's no trend line here? | ||
Is it racist to talk about this? | ||
FBI racist? | ||
Brookings institution that provides these numbers, racist. | ||
The Bureau of Labor and Justice Statistics, Bureau of Labor and Statistics, Bureau of Justice Statistics, is that racist fan. | ||
The vast majority of racial crime in the United States is intra-racial. | ||
But when it does come to interracial homicide, for example, the chance of a white person being killed by a black person is far higher than a black person being killed by a white person. | ||
It's time to talk about this issue. | ||
And to talk not only about like why we don't have to live like this, why we shouldn't ever allow ourselves to live like this, how abjectly evil and immoral it is, but to talk about what we can do to fix it. | ||
What are we exactly going to do to fix it? | ||
Get a load of this. | ||
I loved this post. | ||
This is data that shows what happens when you start locking up habitual criminals. | ||
A 10-strike law preventing people from leaving prison after 10 violent offenses would reduce all crime by 20%. | ||
Five strike would reduce by 40%. | ||
Three strikes would cut in half all violent crime in the country. | ||
I think that everybody can understand, especially in the baseball culture, three strikes are out. | ||
Okay, why not? | ||
Three-strike law would cut in half the probability of Arena Zastruka being alive today, happily working and building her little American dream, uh, would be it would increase by 50%. | ||
Anyone would take that. | ||
Two-strike law would remove two-thirds of all violent crime. | ||
And I think that you could almost argue that it would reduce more than that. | ||
Here's why. | ||
Contagion points. | ||
Broken windows theory. | ||
As soon as somebody, as soon as a young man from one of these fatherless communities in one of these bad neighborhoods, in one of these horrible ghettos in America, and I know this because I used to live in one. | ||
as soon as they see that gangbanger that they look up to, that has a nice car or nice rims or whatever, selling guns out of the back of his car, I literally witnessed this. | ||
As soon as they see him disappear and never come back, and his girlfriends, baby mamas, they weep for him, They're like left destitute. | ||
Like, that's a great incentive, actually. | ||
The moment that they watch him be arrested and then let back on the street again and again and again, that is the opposite incentive. | ||
That says continue this lifestyle. | ||
You can actually save an entire generation of young black men, who, as all the data shows, is the problem here. | ||
The single most violent population, arguably on earth. | ||
You could save them by doing what I suppose fathers should be doing in their households, which are showing action-reaction, the laws of thermodynamics. | ||
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. | ||
Energy is neither created or destroyed. | ||
Teach them that lesson by having a two-strike law would remove two-thirds of violent crime. | ||
Well, I bet it would remove 99%. | ||
Because if those criminals are immediately taken off the street, there is no contagion point. | ||
That actually sends a massive message to everyone that nobody is effing around anymore. | ||
And there has been a lot of effing around, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Why was this murderer on the street? | ||
Why was DeCarlos Brown Jr. allowed to roam free? | ||
Oh boy. | ||
Had a really interesting commentary on this yesterday as we looked into the judges that liberated DeCarlos Brown Jr. to slaughter. | ||
But what you'll not be shocked to learn is that there is an entire DEI woke ecosystem that is designed to ensure that DeCarlos Brown Jr. kills as many white people as they possibly. | ||
Because they hate white people. | ||
I mean, at some point, you have to just you have to just look at the statistics and the way that this is covered and say that there is something darker here. | ||
There's something more evil and sinister here. | ||
The indifference to this. | ||
And the purposeful release of those who have been the most violent on the unsuspecting populations and the attacks that are predominantly and overwhelmingly white children and white women are happening from these monsters. | ||
And they're being released by a witch's kitchen of black women who, in the case of DeCarlos Brown Jr., make up a robed woke, DEI, death cult. | ||
This is what happened in Charlotte, North Carolina with the release of DeCarlos Brown Jr. covered exquisitely here by Jesse Waters last night. | ||
The reason I call it a DEI death cult is because DEI killed Arena Zastruca. | ||
Obviously, DeCarlos Brown Jr. did, but DeCarlos Brown Jr., of course, didn't belong in the streets at all. | ||
It is DEI celebration, restorative justice policies that allowed him to kill and to be free. | ||
Here's that reporting. | ||
This is Teresa Stokes, a hairstoner who doesn't even have a law degree, but just made a career criminal and a schizophrenic who beat his own sister when he was out on parole. | ||
Pinky promised that he'd behave. | ||
Ms. Stokes wasn't elected. | ||
She was nominated by the clerk in Mecklenburg County. | ||
The sitting clerk is Alyssa Chin Gary. | ||
On her LinkedIn page, she calls herself a clerk and a DEI consultant and a racial equity organizer. | ||
And her life mission? | ||
Reparations. | ||
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We are here to honor them, to lift their names, and to continue the intergenerational work that we are required to do to eliminate structural racism. | |
Ms. Stokes was nominated by Judge Carla Archie. | ||
Judge Archie is friends with Eric Holder, Obama's wingman. | ||
And Judge Archie isn't just any judge. | ||
In 2019, she was the DEI champion of the year. | ||
Is this starting to make sense? | ||
Did a woman die because of DEI? | ||
Just a couple months ago, a guy shot five people on New Year's, and Judge Archie sentenced them to a year and a half for shooting five people, a year and a half. | ||
This is a DEI court, and they have blood on their hands. | ||
And if the people in robes are on the same side as the bad guys, that's suicide. | ||
Are you okay with the country committing judicial suicide? | ||
I'm not. | ||
DEI died when Kamala lost. | ||
It's illegal. | ||
And releasing felons with dozens of arrests for social justice is a crime against the country. | ||
They've set up these dangerous DEI courts in cities nationwide, catching and releasing criminals to prey on innocent people. | ||
These courts need to be systematically dismantled. | ||
And that needs to happen immediately. | ||
Just a few weeks ago, a one-year-old white boy was horrifically beaten by a black worker on his first day of daycare. | ||
In this time of anti-white hatred, we have to be more vigilant about who we allow to have access to our most vulnerable population. | ||
It's not just adults. | ||
We've reached out to this child's family. | ||
We really hope to get in touch with them. | ||
If you do know them, email us. | ||
We've done our best to try and get a hold of them. | ||
We want to do something nice for this child. | ||
Kill all white people. | ||
Racist serial killer is indicted for killing three more hikers in random attacks, bringing the body count to six. | ||
Kill all white people. | ||
You can't actually find an example where it goes the opposite way. | ||
You'd That's not it doesn't exist. | ||
I mean, if it did exist, of course, you'd know about it. | ||
It'd be plastered in every textbook and muraled on every street. | ||
There is no example of it going the other way. | ||
36-year-old black man screamed, I want to kill all white people, I want all white people dead. | ||
Before stabbing two white teenage girls age 14 and 16 who were visiting New York City with her parents eating at a restaurant on Christmas morning. | ||
The 16-year-old was stabbed in the back. | ||
The knife nicked her lungs, and her younger sister was stabbed in the thigh. | ||
Hutcherson was booked. | ||
This is the mass stabber who screamed, kill all white people, was booked on felony counts of attempted murder, assault, criminal possession of a weapon and misdemeanor, endangerment of a welfare of a child, according to the MTA. | ||
He's not been charged with a hate crime. | ||
Time for the feds to step in on this. | ||
Prior to the Christmas stabbing, he was last arrested on November 7th for threatening to shoot a stranger in the Bronx. | ||
He was given a plea deal on a lesser offense and was released without incarcerations. | ||
He has 13 prior convictions. | ||
Somebody should tell Van Jones about that. | ||
It's always the most innocent. | ||
It's always the most precious and the most defenseless. | ||
Whether it's a young woman from Ukraine, who's 23, weighs less than 100 pounds, or there's a young child, Canon Hinnett. | ||
Today, actually, marks the fifth anniversary of the murder of Canon Hinnett in North Carolina of all places by Darius Semmons. | ||
Hennett was playing in the front yard with his two older sisters. | ||
Semmons just walked over and shot them point blank range, execution style. | ||
Wiped from the history books. | ||
Wiped from the history books. | ||
If the reverse happened, then every city in America would be set on fire. | ||
Of course, I would also be decrying it and would be calling it absolutely by its name, which is unspeakable evil. | ||
But it didn't happen. | ||
In fact, small black children are murdered on a near daily basis in America by other black people. | ||
We never hear their names either. | ||
I know this because it happened in my neighborhood. | ||
One of the kids that I was coaching football against. | ||
Actually, I had the producer team pull this. | ||
He was just sitting there. | ||
He was sitting on his front step and just got just drive by, comes through, sprays bullet, kills him. | ||
His name was Dave Von McNeil. | ||
I'll never forget his name. | ||
Dave On McNeil. | ||
You never heard of it. | ||
Nobody ever cared. | ||
Nobody cared. | ||
Do you know that locking up, like doing this would actually save so many black people? | ||
Doing this, locking up the actual criminals in our nation, doing this. | ||
Would the people that it would save the very most would be black people because the vast majority of that crime is against other blacks? | ||
Here's his photo. | ||
unidentified
|
Ladies and gentlemen. | |
That's the same football league that I coached when I was living in Washington, DC. | ||
Is it time to have this conversation? | ||
How many times does this have to happen? | ||
How many times does it happen and we don't even hear about it? | ||
RIP Emily Carson, 25, killed in cold blood by Willie Holmes, repeat offender, stabbed her in the back after a verbal exchange. | ||
I wonder what he shouted. | ||
I wonder what he shouted. | ||
I wonder if it had something to do with white people. | ||
Say her name, Dr. Julie Chenul. | ||
She was killed yesterday while walking her dogs in Auburn, Alabama. | ||
Rashad Dabney was arrested and charged. | ||
Rashad stole her truck, left her dog, slaughtered her, literally hacked her to pieces in Alabama. | ||
And her dog, her little dog, like sat there and guarded her bloody lifeless body. | ||
That's what happened in Alabama. | ||
He stole her uh Ford F-150. | ||
So that's the price of uh driving your pickup truck to a park and walking your dog in Alabama. | ||
The media continues to tell us that the scariest thing in America is white man, or that there is systemic racism for a cops or police against black people. | ||
In fact, the opposite is true. | ||
They'd probably you look at states like Alabama as like an example of backward antebellum racism, when actually this is the reality on a day-to-day basis. | ||
Rashad, she's a by the way, she's a doctor. | ||
She's hey, she's a literal doctor, she's a veterinarian, hacked to death for her truck. | ||
They're not random acts. | ||
And it's time to stop calling them random acts. | ||
Always happens, uh always always seems to happen against white women, blonde white women. | ||
Maybe they're not actually random here. | ||
Swifty Coed was executed as she slept by uh career criminal who broke in and went on a shopping spree with her credit card. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, would you look at that? | |
All of it preventable. | ||
All of it. | ||
If it were happening to any other race, and that's not including white people, if it were happening to Asians, if it were happening to Hispanics, if it were happening to whatever. | ||
Then this would be seen as the single greatest crime against humanity. | ||
It would be covered on a nightly basis. | ||
Every new addition, every new body on the pile would be seen as the new incentive for our country to change, for our judicial system to change, for people to be held accountable, for judges to be maybe locked up to allow for it. | ||
Every new data point would be screamed from the rooftop. | ||
But instead, it's disappeared. | ||
But it's breaking through. | ||
People are now realizing that they're being hunted. | ||
And that there is a real problem in this nation. | ||
Suspected Missouri killer who stalked and murdered middle-aged white men, threatened to shoot up school and kill all white people. | ||
Wow. | ||
No, this isn't one of the stories that I've covered before. | ||
This is just another one that follows the exact same pattern. | ||
Remember, in Charlotte, he told you what he was doing. | ||
I got that white. | ||
So now we've heard from the monster. | ||
And our suspicions have been confirmed. | ||
He says he's demon-possessed. | ||
Okay, fine. | ||
Probably, actually, I believe in that. | ||
I believe it completely. | ||
He says that there's something foreign inside of his body. | ||
There's material inside of his body that's forcing him to act this way. | ||
I mean, this is what the mass shooter just did in Minneapolis. | ||
That's what he said. | ||
That's what he admits to. | ||
And we refuse to have that conversation. | ||
Not on this program. | ||
That's all the data. | ||
Now it's time to get serious about this. | ||
Like as good men and women, it is now imperative that we do something, that we stand up and then we disallow it. | ||
So you can expect this program and this channel to be constantly covering this. | ||
And to be putting all of the pieces together, to be having a very honest conversation about what the reality is in this nation. | ||
And that includes phone calls like this. | ||
This is DeCarlos Brown Jr. speaking from the court from speaking from his jail cell. | ||
Explaining why did he do this? | ||
Go. | ||
unidentified
|
So you said something in your body did what? | |
Nah, the material, to tell you using my body to stabilize it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So she just got saved. | ||
You know, that's not me. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm talking about this for no reason. | |
She did that. | ||
She's they did that. | ||
Now they gotta investigate the material in my body. | ||
unidentified
|
She's from um, she's from the Ukraine. | |
She's from Russia. | ||
And you know, they got a warrant. | ||
They had a war going on against the United States. | ||
So I'm just trying to understand out of all people watch her. | ||
That's hey, it ain't I don't have nothing. | ||
I just lashed out on her. | ||
That's that's what happened. | ||
They lashed out on her. | ||
Who else working out? | ||
Well who else working the material? | ||
unidentified
|
Who was whoever was working the material they lashed out on? | |
They notice how they always use they them pronouns. | ||
You know, so that's always the case. | ||
Isn't that wild? | ||
It's always they, there's always multiple. | ||
There's always it's always it's always a plurality that is being used in situations like this. | ||
Isn't that isn't that remarkable and horrifying? | ||
Knifeman accused of stabbing Ukrainian refugee to death gives chilling reason for the attack. | ||
He says the material that the government planted inside of my body is causing me to act out. | ||
His sister, Tracy Brown, by the way, his mother wanted him locked up. | ||
His court-appointed lawyer wanted him locked up. | ||
The judges refused to lock him up. | ||
Tracy Brown, 33, shared shocking audio with the Daily Mail of a phone call that she had uh six days after he was arrested, where he explained what was going through his mind when he launched the bloody attack. | ||
The 34-year-old, her brother, who is schizophrenic to Carlos Brown Jr., can be heard telling his sister they believe the government planted foreign materials into his brain and that they were in control of his actions when he pulled the knife. | ||
In the audio recording from the afternoon, Brown can be heard saying, I hurt my hand stabbing her. | ||
I don't even know the lady. | ||
I never said not one word to the lady at all. | ||
It's scary, ain't it? | ||
Why would somebody stab somebody for no reason? | ||
He added that he wanted police to investigate the materials controlling him. | ||
He referred to the attack in the third person. | ||
While he referred to the attacker in the third person, demonic, it's demonic, it's demon, it's demon activity. | ||
I don't know what to say about this, other than they need to be removed from civilized society. | ||
This is a society built, as John Adams would say, for a wholly moral people and inadequate for any other. | ||
That mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent. | ||
That's precisely what you have here. | ||
Crime charges are possible. | ||
Harmony Dillon broke that news on our program. | ||
And of course, President Trump now calling for the death penalty here. | ||
We have some lingering questions for certain. | ||
And uh we're very thankful to have somebody who knows a lot about law and order on our program uh to chat about it. | ||
Um quite frankly, it's not exactly like tough conversations to have because you have to stare into darkness, but that you must stare into darkness in order to fix, in order to fight it. | ||
unidentified
|
You have to. | |
My goodness. | ||
I we're not gonna play it on the show. | ||
We've decided not to, but you should go over to my ex-account and go check out like the actual uncensored footage. | ||
Alex Jones broke it yesterday, and the actual uncensored footage will radicalize you beyond uh anything else that I've seen, any media I've seen in a very, very long time. | ||
As we have Said, this is the actual George Floyd. | ||
This is the actual George Floyd. | ||
They told you that George Floyd was just an innocent person who was butchered, killed, and betrayed by the systems around him, the structural failures of our society. | ||
And this is the actual version of that. | ||
It's just the total and complete inverse. | ||
It's amazing how God works in these situations. | ||
It's amazing how God makes fools of people in moments like this. | ||
And we don't want to be made fools of. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, before we next get to our next guest and shifting gears, Alio Capital is the investment vehicle for me and my family. | ||
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Political, social, or economic news doesn't matter. | ||
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Ladies and gentlemen, a man who is running to be the attorney general of our second most populous state. | ||
So he's going to uh potentially have a lot on his hands when it comes to cases like this. | ||
And in fact, there is a case in Texas that has eerie similarities to what happened in Charlotte. | ||
And but it but the but the vision, the view into that case is even worse. | ||
The ability to actually have insight into what happened there is even worse in the Carmelo Anthony uh circumstance than in Charlotte. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, Chip Roy, congressman from Texas, joins the program live now. | ||
Chip Roy Congressman, thank you so much for being on the program today. | ||
Um I just wanna maybe get your take on what can Congress do to rein the habitual release of these criminals by judges and by those who seek to terrorize society. | ||
It is again a 99-one issue. | ||
Uh, we put a polling yesterday. | ||
We can grab the poll for you today. | ||
It is the single most uniting issue in the nation, Congressman, that Americans want safer cities and safer streets. | ||
99% of the country say they do. | ||
One percent says they don't. | ||
Um, the floor is yours. | ||
Well, Benny, great to be on. | ||
Uh, sorry I have a sinus infection, so I lost my voice. | ||
But look, this is too important of an issue not to address it. | ||
I went on the floor of the house last night to give a speech about the extent to which our way of life is under purposeful assault by the radical left. | ||
And Republicans, conservatives, are playing into their hands with their jailbreak bills and all of the stuff talking about letting criminals out. | ||
Meanwhile, you have the Red Collective and NGOs and George Soros and radical progressives in cities, purposefully putting these criminals, these animals on our streets. | ||
President Trump is right to call him the death penalty and to call for prosecution. | ||
As a former federal prosecutor, you damn right DOJ should prosecute him in the absence of prosecution in North Carolina. | ||
But importantly, it's not just him. | ||
I'm with you. | ||
He might be demon-possessed, he's evil, whatever went awry in his life, drugs, but the people who led him on the street. | ||
Yes, the Judges, the politicians, the Red Collective and the NGOs and the university think tanks and the funding to purposefully do that, combined with wide open borders, | ||
purposeful, putting criminals from Venezuela and around the world onto our streets, combined with radical Islam, Sharia law, and a host of other things attacking our Western civilization and our way of life. | ||
We have to stop it. | ||
What is the capacity for Congress? | ||
And perhaps, you know, perhaps you were one of the best as a former federal prosecutor to answer this question. | ||
What is the capacity for Congress to pass uh strike laws, right? | ||
Where you have, and we put up this this chart uh earlier in the show, Congressman, where you reduce crimes by 80% or more, I would argue probably more like 90%. | ||
If you have like a three or a two-strike law for violent crime. | ||
Uh, what is the capacity for Congress to pass sort of like mandatory minimums for judges in circumstances like this? | ||
Is that possible? | ||
Is it constitutional? | ||
Can it be done? | ||
Okay, well, certainly with the criminals, we had good three strike you're out laws and sentencing guidelines that were tough, and they've been getting watered down, they've been getting diluted, and that's a problem. | ||
We need to fix that. | ||
But to the point about judges, we certainly need to have accountability for judges who are the ones letting these people out. | ||
And we can use the spending hook, federal funds. | ||
We certainly can, as members of Congress, hold the judiciary accountable. | ||
And by the way, we should impeach some judges. | ||
Yes. | ||
And we should reform the judiciary. | ||
I tried to get legislation moved in the big beautiful bill. | ||
I got, unfortunately, I lost that fight, but we're gonna keep trying to move it because Democrats won't help us. | ||
So you gotta use reconciliation like the big beautiful bill to get the changes you need to hold the judiciary accountable. | ||
We can do that with federal judges, but at the state level, you can use the power of the purse. | ||
We can go look at judges, I'm sorry, look at governors and legislatures in North Carolina and all over the country, and say, wait a minute, you're not getting all these federal grants, you're not getting this additional funding if you're gonna allow your people to be terrorized and then constrain what they do and hold the judges accountable. | ||
We need to do that in DC. | ||
What about Texas? | ||
So you are running for the Attorney General of Texas, and in Texas, there is a very eerily similar case that has caught an enormous amount of national attention. | ||
I'm sure there's many others, quite frankly, of inter inter and intra-racial violence by the single most violent demographic in America, which is young black men, Carmelo Anthony, who stabbed for no reason. | ||
We have been following this case to the letter, and every single filing, and everything. | ||
Nobody can give any reason that Carmelo Anthony stabbed to death Austin Metcalf in Texas. | ||
Uh, and now there's footage of it that has been viewed by some reporters that has been viewed by some journalists, but they refuse to release it. | ||
As attorney general, would you release this footage? | ||
Uh, how would you be approaching this case? | ||
Well, we would follow all the laws to make sure information is public that should be. | ||
Um, and we've got you know, strong public information laws in Texas, and you gotta make that stuff available. | ||
But importantly, uh, we've got to elevate these crimes. | ||
And I think working with the legislature to frankly do even more to get power to the AG's office and the uh state police, the Texas Rangers, DPS, to step in when Austin and Dallas and Houston and San Antonio are doing the job that needs to be done. | ||
We can step in and do more. | ||
We have original jurisdiction in a lot of areas. | ||
We've got expanded jurisdiction and election integrity this session. | ||
I think we need expanded jurisdiction to go clean up where these Soros DAs are endangering our people. | ||
But one of the things that's important here is what you're doing. | ||
You said you weren't gonna play the clip on your show, but you put it out on Twitter. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
But people need to watch the clip. | ||
Yes. | ||
They need to see this clip you're talking about. | ||
They need to know the stories. | ||
For example, there's somebody in San Antonio people aren't talking about. | ||
Um, Jimmy Friesenhan, he's a cop. | ||
He's now never going to be the same. | ||
He almost died because somebody was let out four times and was at a restaurant where Jimmy was working, and then struggled over a gun when that guy was working as a security guard, the cop, and the gun went off and he shot him, and it went through his spinal column. | ||
And now he can he can't walk. | ||
He barely survived, and his life is inextricably changed forever. | ||
The DA in Bear County in San Antonio is one of the Red Collective targets, the Red Collective, and that people need to know this. | ||
It's a coordinated approach by George Soros, the Red Collective, all of these leftists to fuel radical DAs to let these scumbags back out on the street. | ||
We have to go after them. | ||
We have to go after the NGOs. | ||
We have to go after the DAs. | ||
We need stronger legislation in Texas to remove those DAs. | ||
We added some last session. | ||
It needs to go further. | ||
We cannot have this. | ||
Enough is enough. | ||
And so we've got to take every action necessary to strengthen our streets. | ||
It looks like here's here is some of the background of what you were just talking about today. | ||
And here is the officer. | ||
It looks like he was a he's also a veteran. | ||
He's also a marine veteran, it looks like. | ||
And the father of a young little girl, a little baby. | ||
Awful. | ||
So final question. | ||
And I know that you you're losing your voice, so I don't want to, you know, belabor or uh ext, you know, extend that. | ||
But this is too hard to ask. | ||
This is too important. | ||
I have to ask, you know, a lot of these charges are state charges. | ||
You know, there's nothing like not like a ton of federal charges, right? | ||
There's a like the vast majority of crime gets handled on a state level. | ||
The vast majority gets handled by an attorney general and local district attorneys and so on. | ||
You know, if you were to win as attorney general of Texas, you'd be overseeing America's arguably fastest growing population, I believe, and the second largest population, and maybe soon to be the largest population. | ||
So you'd have enormous power. | ||
Uh what would be your what would be the rule that you would fight for for three strikes or you're out? | ||
Like, how would you keep violent offenders from being released back on the street? | ||
It seems very common sense to make a two or three strike or like zero strike, as far as I'm concerned at this point, because my blood's boiling, Congressman. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Uh, because I have two daughters, I have two sons. | ||
Uh could have been them, right? | ||
It just it could have been them. | ||
And every parent looks at it like that and sees their daughter right there in Arena Zastruka's face. | ||
Um what would be your policy there? | ||
Because it seems like a pretty common sense policy. | ||
Like, are you creating, are you behaving violently? | ||
You're never, you're you're never gonna be let out again. | ||
Yeah, you're gonna taste free air when you're 70 and you're too feeble to do anything to anyone ever again. | ||
30 years hard labor. | ||
Like, what are what's gonna be your policy? | ||
Well, first of all, the attorney general has to obviously follow the wall that the legislature puts forward. | ||
So I would use every tool at my disposal to advance the policies you're talking about to get the legislature to act, to pass stronger laws to ensure nobody's released, to hold the judges accountable, make for easier removal of the judges, easier removal of the DAs for the criminals themselves, where you have original jurisdiction, the AG, go after them. | ||
Usually we have to work in concert with DAs under our statutes under the law, but you can go work with them aggressively to go after the criminals and charge them with the you know strongest crimes possible, but importantly, working with Governor Abbott and Working with Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick to get the best laws and strongest laws possible. | ||
But there's another piece to this. | ||
When I was a federal prosecutor, I worked in collaboration under Project Safe Neighborhoods to take the crimes that were for the most egregious violators and get them into the federal system where you can really throw the book at them and lock them up. | ||
And I think that's an important part of this. | ||
Collaborating with local law enforcement with the feds to say, look, you're a violent offender multiple times. | ||
You used a firearm, you're a felony possession. | ||
You were created, you know, in this case, right? | ||
In North Carolina, you conducted this crime on transportation, transit. | ||
Those are all statutes that federally allow for prosecution. | ||
So when you start doing that team up approach, you can lock these people away for a long time. | ||
And we can do more of that, straighten the laws, and use every tool at our disposal. | ||
But you gotta hold the judges and DAs accountable. | ||
And the last thing, we have to go after the money. | ||
Those folks are conspirators. | ||
They're co-conspirators. | ||
They are liable because they're the ones doing it intentionally for political purposes, endangering our daughters, endangering our families. | ||
So we have to go after them too. | ||
Again, I hate to ask follow-up, but you mean that you want to prosecute George Soros or his uh foundations that elect these prosecutors that lead to the wholesale slaughter of Americans and Texans. | ||
You gotta look at all the statutes, and you gotta go look at all the liability uh provisions under our code. | ||
But it is foreseeable that you that people will be harmed by the actions of those people. | ||
I understand free speech, but these guys are taking specific action to take specific steps to have DAs in collaboration with them. | ||
Go look at the Ren Collective. | ||
They're telling them what to do. | ||
This isn't just free speech. | ||
Oh, go elect a leftist. | ||
They are working with them to carry out the policies that are resulting directly in the death of Texas. | ||
So we should take every step possible under the law. | ||
You gotta look at all the statutes and figure out what you can do criminally or civilly, or both, and go after them. | ||
But follow the money. | ||
That's what we have to do. | ||
Yeah, I think there's so many Americans that would love to see more foreign billionaires that are trying to destroy our republic in prison and charged and not allowed and their passports burned and their properties seized. | ||
Boy, that would be a great America for me. | ||
Uh, and a safer America and a better America. | ||
And ladies and gentlemen, Chiproy is fighting for that, even through a uh broken voice. | ||
Yeah, he's one of the men who just gives those great speeches on the House floor, and he's somebody that you should follow. | ||
He's got 500,000 subscribers here on X. Make sure that you fight alongside the people who are fighting for us. | ||
Godspeed, Congressman. | ||
Thanks, Benny. | ||
God bless. | ||
unidentified
|
God bless. | |
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We don't have to live like this, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We don't have to live like this. | ||
We don't have to. | ||
President Trump yesterday. | ||
Wandering through what would otherwise be a bum-stained, piss-filled vagrancy sidewalk. | ||
Where teams of people, even up until, you know, we were we were early at the White House. | ||
We were uh at the White House like weeks after uh the president took office, and there were still homeless encampments, tents, liens twos, all throughout the city. | ||
And this in particular block that President Trump traveled to yesterday was one of them. | ||
President Trump got in to a vehicle yesterday, and nobody knew where he was going. | ||
Turns out that he was going to Joe's Stone Crab. | ||
And he was dining at a restaurant. | ||
It's uh close to the White House, but it's a couple blocks away, and it's exactly across from a park that had a homeless encampment. | ||
I well remember it because I had to walk by it every single day. | ||
President Donald Trump had dinner Tuesday night at a seafood restaurant near the White House, promoting his deployment of the National Guard and federalizing the police force, an effort to crack down on crime and nations capitalist motorcade, made a trip to Joe's seafood, prime steak, and stone crab on 15th Street in Northwest Quadrant of the city following weeks of the president posting about mobilizing authorities. | ||
The cheers were heard as the president stepped from his limo, uh, though there was also a smattering of booze and chance from protesters uh opposing his policies in Israel war, Hamas, Gaza. | ||
We're standing right here in the middle of Washington, DC, which, as you know, over a year ago was a very unsafe place over the last 20 years, and now it's virtually no crime, says President Trump. | ||
Here's President Trump outside. | ||
Nobody does it like him, nobody ever will again. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
The restaurants now, the restaurants now are booming. | ||
People are going out to dinner where they didn't go out for years, and it's a safe city. | ||
And I just want to thank the National Guard. | ||
We loved uh working with the mayor and the uh the chief. | ||
And uh we all work together, and the the outcome is really spectacular. | ||
We have a capital that's very, very safe right now. | ||
It can be done. | ||
You yeah uh you can't just lock up the problem. | ||
Yeah, you can. | ||
Yes, you can. | ||
How much data do we have to put up there? | ||
Better is you can literally lock away the problem. | ||
You can lock up the problem. | ||
If you have a two or three-strike law, I mean again, Matt Walsh is arguing. | ||
Listen, all we all you need to do is make violent crime, capital punishment. | ||
You know, this this is what they do in some countries around the world, some very safe countries. | ||
You mug someone, you put a gun in some woman's face and take her purse. | ||
That's a capital punishment offense. | ||
You're gone. | ||
You're gone. | ||
You're found guilty in a court of law, and it's over. | ||
You know how much you'll cut down on violent crime when the criminal has to make that that decision. | ||
Because the reality is that nobody's that desperate. | ||
Oh, it's crime, it's uh oh, it's poverty. | ||
No, nobody's that desperate. | ||
They're doing it because they get away with it because there's a benefit and very little downside. | ||
You have to think like this. | ||
And it's something that's hard to actually consider, but there's a portion of our population that is perfectly happy going to jail again and again and again and again because they get benefit from it. | ||
You can grab the woman's purse, steal her truck. | ||
This just happened in Alabama, let her little dogs sit there while she's slaughtered. | ||
Man, you get a truck out of it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe they won't even put me in jail for it. | ||
I'll just get out on a pond. | ||
Cashless bail. | ||
I'll just walk free that day. | ||
Kill them. | ||
President Trump greeted with cheers in Washington, D.C. It's beautiful to see. | ||
unidentified
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Here we go. | |
We have a safe city now. | ||
Like we did it in 12 days, but now it's almost a month. | ||
We have a safe city. | ||
So that's good. | ||
Enjoy yourself. | ||
We won't be mugged going home, okay. | ||
Have a good time, everybody. | ||
Thank you, I'm busy cards. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I guess. | |
Where's your family? | ||
unidentified
|
They're back in Atlanta. | |
Oh, okay. | ||
Say hello, bro. | ||
unidentified
|
Have a good time, man. | |
don't drink too much All right. | ||
There he goes. | ||
Obviously, uh, we don't need to talk further about the circumstances of me and my family in Washington, D.C. I'm done talking about all that uh for the time being, but uh uh nobody knows. | ||
Nobody knows like I do exactly what a horrible, crime-ridden, failed state, narco state Washington, DC was to clean it up. | ||
You can do it. | ||
That's sort of the point of the show. | ||
Like, here's the problem. | ||
We don't have to live like this. | ||
Here's the solution. | ||
Two and three strike rules get rid of 90% of the crime. | ||
What like what somebody make the argument as to why a violent criminal should ever breathe free air again? | ||
Make the argument. | ||
I want to know. | ||
What is it? | ||
You're a violent criminal. | ||
You rob some woman with a gun. | ||
You get out on cashless bail, you're gonna do it again. | ||
I mean, like there was no punishment. | ||
Do you come from a fatherless household? | ||
You've never learned punishment. | ||
It is unfortunately falls to society to show action reaction and punishment, severity and thermodynamics to these people. | ||
And so that's what you got to do. | ||
So let's get about doing it. | ||
And then as soon as the little kids in the neighborhood look around and all the gangbangers are gone, never to be seen again. | ||
30 years hard labor. | ||
You'll see them when they're in a walker and can barely lift their walker as they walk down the street. | ||
Not good. | ||
Not good. | ||
For the criminal element, great for the rest of us. | ||
What is the argument against that? | ||
You have some 20-year-old or some 30-year-old, commits a violent crime. | ||
Matt Walsh is arguing capital punishment. | ||
Maybe they just do 30 years hard labor. | ||
And then they come out like bent, broken. | ||
And like the same, like everybody sees the result of that process. | ||
It'll take decades, but then they walk the you know, you begin to see the people who committed violent crime like matriculate out. | ||
And they can bear they can barely lift a pack of gum. | ||
They're broke. | ||
Their life has been completely and totally wasted. | ||
Wow. | ||
That's a great incentive structure to not commit violent crime. | ||
President Trump, of course, in doing his best to ensure that little black children like the ones who I witnessed get shot up in mass shootings, played the video for you, murdered the little kids shot up. | ||
Dave on McNeil's name. | ||
Played in the same football league I coached in. | ||
Little kid, I think it was six, was he eight? | ||
He was little. | ||
Little kid. | ||
President Trump is doing this in order to ensure that little black kids don't get shot on their doorsteps. | ||
Like what happened in the football league that I was coaching in. | ||
And for that, he's getting protests. | ||
Here's Donald Trump getting protested uh last night. | ||
The left-wing protesters now, like that they don't they don't know what to do. | ||
So we're just gonna fight against, we're gonna fight in favor of more black crime. | ||
unidentified
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Here we go. | |
Oh my god! | ||
Free DC! | ||
Free Palestine! | ||
unidentified
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Trump is the handler! | |
Free DC! | ||
Free Palestine! | ||
Trump is the Hitler! | ||
Oh my god! | ||
Free Palestine! | ||
Trump is the handler of our God! | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Okay. | ||
Great. | ||
Ooh, man. | ||
A scorching hot take here. | ||
The brother, now we've heard from the mother, the sister, and now the brother of DeCarlos Brown Jr. | ||
Charlotte Train slaughter suspect should have never been freed to kill. | ||
His brother says they could have prevented it. | ||
And then he goes on to tell here in the Daily Mail. | ||
Uh, and let's see, who is speaking? | ||
The brother of accused Charlotte Light Rail butcher DeCarlos Brown Jr. blamed the system that allowed the mentally ill ex-con. | ||
It's incredible here. | ||
We're actually seeing something remarkable. | ||
We're seeing the people who would otherwise be like marching with Ben Crump or Al Sharpton. | ||
Like we're seeing his family say, why would you allow my brother out of jail? | ||
This is an incredible moment that we're actually witnessing here. | ||
Normally it'd be Al Sharpton, like, you know, linking arms with his mom or his family or his daughter or whatever. | ||
But now, no, what you what you're seeing is his mom say that my son is a sociopath and violent, and he beat me up and he beat up his sister, and he shouldn't be free. | ||
That's incredible, actually. | ||
And now we're seeing his brother here talk about DeCarlos Brown Jr., the butcher, saying that he should have never been released. | ||
I think that they could have uh pretty much prevented this, says Jeremiah Brown, who's his brother, who shares a father with Brown, he told the post, New York Post, referring to lax terms that the magistrate judge set for DeCarlos Brown Jr. when he was released from jail. | ||
Uh Brown is a schizophrenic homeless man with a prison record and numerous arrests for violence. | ||
He stands accused now of murdering. | ||
Uh I didn't even know he had mental problems. | ||
You can't just let him walk free, especially because of the mental issues, says his brother Jeremiah. | ||
Well, duh, right? | ||
He could do it again. | ||
This is his brother speaking. | ||
They could just treat him for his mental illness, lock him up in an institution like they used to. | ||
But there are consequences for his actions. | ||
And he should suffer those consequences, says Jeremiah. | ||
Uh, he only met his brother once or twice. | ||
Again, broken households, broken homes, degenerate fathers. | ||
Uh uh propagate degeneracy. | ||
But it's good to see this. | ||
I mean, honestly. | ||
It's wonderful to see. | ||
I'm I'm I'm I'm shocked. | ||
You know, Van Jones, after his initial little like uh femme-coded screed there, doesn't work anymore. | ||
Van Jones, after his little screed, I would love to go debate Van. | ||
Man, I really hope we can debate Van one of these days. | ||
I would love to debate him. | ||
Put me on Piers Morgan with Van Jones. | ||
We'll come with the facts. | ||
We'd love to talk through these facts with Van. | ||
Like, will Van Jones like say that black crime is a problem in America? | ||
Is he like gonna say that? | ||
Will Van Jones say what the killer's own family is saying? | ||
That like, well, he's a habitual criminal. | ||
He should have never been out on the street. | ||
He's the problem. | ||
This is the problem. | ||
And there are greater overall trends and pattern recognition. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
Like, will Van Jones say that? | ||
What if he's confronted with this data? | ||
Will Van Jones accept it? | ||
Will he whimper and cry and call me a racist? | ||
I bet he will. | ||
We're not gonna stop talking about it, man. | ||
We're not going to stop, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Although it might cause us a little bit of stress. | ||
The reason why is just because it's tough, tough topic. | ||
It's a tough subject matters. | ||
It's a lot easier to do shows on, like, you know, President Trump, BTFOs, Putin with the B2 flyover. | ||
Got stealth, got stealth right behind me here in a sweet studio. | ||
Again, massive shout outs to Gates Garcia and his show and make sure that we have all of his uh social media to put up. | ||
Producers. | ||
I want to make sure that we do that. | ||
No one ever Nefalo Gates, he does incredible work. | ||
Uh, no, it's not the easiest subject matter. | ||
And, you know, sometimes it makes for a lack of peace as we know head home, go see my kids, and I'm inspired, and I stand up with a full heart to once again fight another day because I see my children. | ||
I say it, not my family. | ||
No way, not me. | ||
Not me, not my family won't happen to my kids. | ||
Not gonna happen to my kid. | ||
I'm gonna do everything in my power as a father to make sure that's not gonna make up not going to be my kids. | ||
You got to see the world clearly. | ||
I am stressed when I get home. | ||
Days like yesterday, internet outages, stuff like that cause stress. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, the Bon Charge Red Light mask. | ||
This gets slapped on my face after my kids are asleep, because my kids, my kids are like, what is that exactly? | ||
It's like a sauna. | ||
But it just heats in an infrared the skin in front of the mask instead of all the air around you. | ||
So it's far more targeted, but it's less heat. | ||
And the evidence-based truth about a sauna is that it is so good for your skin, your heart, your mood, for the chemicals that interact in your skin, for being caught here all day inside of a darkened studio. | ||
It's gonna be even worse today, right? | ||
It takes longer when you're out of the studio. | ||
But I like live in this tight little black box. | ||
I think a lot of people do, fluorescently lit. | ||
And so this infrared sauna, man, I'm telling you, it helps me recharge. | ||
I do about 10 to 20 minutes every single day, right before bed. | ||
And it helps boost collagen and elastin production, super lightweight, can travel, and it leaves you feeling relaxed and euphoric and chill before bed. | ||
It's awesome. | ||
Go to Bondcharge.com/slash Benny and use the coupon code Benny for 15% off. | ||
That's B-O-N-C-H-A-R-G-E.com slash Benny. | ||
Use coupon code Benny for 15% off. | ||
These statements and products have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. | ||
And these products are not intended to diagnose treat or cure or prevent any disease. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, uh, given all of that, I think that it's very important to uh talk about the destruction of the corporate media. | ||
And how does that happen exactly? | ||
Well, President Trump signed an order to crack down on prescription drug advertising yesterday. | ||
Little birdies tell me that this is a first step in a series of steps to ban pharma ads from TV. | ||
Now, you might remember that hilariously and comically and probably criminally, I would argue, it should be criminal at least. | ||
There was a obscenity of Pfizer ads. | ||
Pfizer sponsored literally every segment on the COVID vaccine. | ||
Pfizer sponsored every segment after COVID and during COVID. | ||
It was like the there was like a comedy. | ||
Hey, Alex, do we have that? | ||
There was like a comedy of supercuts that are like sponsored by Pfizer. | ||
Get me that. | ||
Give me that. | ||
We're not, we're not popping off without it. | ||
Like sponsored by Pfizer, sponsored by Pfizer, sponsored by Fire. | ||
This this report about COVID and the vaccine sponsored by Pfizer. | ||
How's the how is that legal? | ||
How is it legal for DeCarlos Brown Jr. to be freed by a magistrate judge that also helps run a rehabilitation clinic and state order to pay her clinic money? | ||
How is that not a massive conflict of interest? | ||
How's it not a massive conflict of interest when Pfizer does the same thing with news coverage? | ||
You don't hate the media enough. | ||
And this is the way, this is the first step of the destruction of the media. | ||
You take away big pharma advertising. | ||
I'm telling you, CNN and MSNBC will not exist within the year. | ||
They won't exist in their current form within the year. | ||
You'll see mass firings, mass layoffs. | ||
You will get rid of some of the harshest and most poisonous contagions in our media ecosystem. | ||
And also, ladies and gentlemen, in our bloodstreams as well. | ||
So it's a beautiful thing. | ||
Here's from the White House. | ||
President Donald Trump just signed an executive order that represents the most significant action in a generation to rein in misleading pharmaceutical advertisements. | ||
It's a beautiful thing. | ||
This is him very happy there with Jay Bhattacharya, Robert Kennedy. | ||
The Trump administration is planning to ramp up oversight of the enforcement of direct consumer prescription drug advertising and will stop short of an outright ban. | ||
But they're going to do – I hear they're going to do the outright ban, President Trump. | ||
On Tuesday, signed an executive memorandum instructing the Department of Health and Human Services to ensure transparency and accuracy in direct counteradvertising, including requiring greater disclosures of side effects. | ||
The Food and Drug Administration set out approximately 100 cease and desist enforcement letters, as well as thousands of warning letters to inform companies and agencies of prioritizing enforcement. | ||
The announcement follows the administration's Make America Healthy Again concession report, commission report, correction, which includes a call to focus on egregious violations demonstrating harm stemming from online influencers and telehealth companies. | ||
Cracking down on prescription drug advertising has been a major priority of RFK. | ||
RFK is speaking here after the crackdown from the White House lawn. | ||
Let's go. | ||
The president just signed an executive order that's an historic change. | ||
And the way that pharmaceutical advertising is done on television. | ||
And the order basically reinstates or gives us now the opportunity to reinstate the 1997 rules. | ||
Prior to 1997, pharmaceutical advertisers were required to put all the side effects on their ads. | ||
Many of them didn't advertise because at length and because of what it did to the length of the advertising. | ||
And that the removal of that requirement in 1997, FDA changed the rule to allow them to report the side effects on a website or on a telephone. | ||
And they know they only had to report a few of them on television. | ||
And that's regular proliferation of these ads. | ||
We have there's only two countries in the world that allowed direct to consumer advertising by pharmaceutical companies on television. | ||
Or one of those countries, New Zealand is the other. | ||
It's had a disastrous impact on human health, on people's relationships with their doctors. | ||
And really on uh the entire gestalt where Americans are led to believe that there's a pill for every oh. | ||
Good for him. | ||
Way to go, RFK Jr. | ||
Yes. | ||
I can prove it, by the way. | ||
Here's the uh supercut of brought to you by Pfizer, brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
Do you remember this era of American TV? | ||
Do you remember this? | ||
Here we go. | ||
unidentified
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Countdown to the Royal Wedding is brought to you by Pfizer. | |
And now a CBS Sports Update brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
unidentified
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Meet the press data download, brought to you by Pfizer. | |
This portion of CBS This Morning, sponsored by Pfizer. | ||
On how to find the hidden sugars in the American family diet. | ||
Sponsored by Pfizer. | ||
Making a difference. | ||
Brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
unidentified
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CNN tonight. | |
Brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
Early start, brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
Friday night on Aaron Burnett out front, brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
This week with George Stephanopoulos is brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
Wow. | ||
Good morning, America is brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
unidentified
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CBS Health Watch, sponsored by Pfizer. | |
Anderson Cooper 360. | ||
Brought to you by Pfizer. | ||
All of these ads brought to you by all of these ads, all of these reports during the COVID era. | ||
How many of these shows covered COVID or vaccine or COVID policies or Dr. Fauci? | ||
How many of them? | ||
This is open graft and corruption. | ||
It is a despicable evil, especially after everything, all the data and everything that we're learning right now. | ||
And I'm so glad they're putting a stop to it. | ||
You heard RFK Jr. say there, like we are the one of two nations that allows for pharmaceutical advertising on television. | ||
You can see what they're going after. | ||
The sacred calf, the golden chalice, the holy grail is pharmaceutical ads on TV. | ||
Unplug those, and you destroy TV networks as we know it. | ||
You destroyed those networks. | ||
It's a wonderful thing. | ||
It'll be good for our nation. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we don't talk enough about good for the nation. | ||
We're going to do good on this channel. | ||
Wait and see. | ||
We hope that our internet is back tomorrow. | ||
Killer Klein will be locking in to ensure that. | ||
For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty in God for pulling down strongholds. | ||
There is a woke stronghold of evil that allows for these this one percent, I would argue, probably one percent of the population to terrorize the rest of the 99%. | ||
It's time for us to fight back, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
And to do so, we must lock in with our creator. | ||
God will pull down their stronghold. | ||
Their weapons of warfare must be prayer and prayer first. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, it's your boy Benny. | ||
Thank you to Gates Garcia, by the way, we wanted to shout out uh his channel and his uh social right here. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, this is Gates. | ||
Uh Gates' uh uh X account and then also uh Instagram account, his show We the People is really rad. | ||
Here's some swag. | ||
Um and you should go follow him. | ||
He's got nearly 10,000 followers. | ||
Let's make sure that we pop up over 10,000 for gates. | ||
And uh of course it's gonna be a regular on the show, it's pretty rad, dude. | ||
Um also here's his Instagram, uh, right there, and then the We Are the People Media page and pop that up so that we're doing our very best to uh thank the people who allowed for us to uh get our production up and going. | ||
You can see cool interviews there with Riley Gaines and so on. | ||
Um let's make sure that we have Gates on the program booked uh sometime this sometime this week. | ||
Uh to chat through. | ||
Everything that's happening in the world today. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, uh, we are thankful for you, we are thankful for our partners, we're thankful for everybody here that allows us for all this to happen, and most importantly. | ||
We're thankful to our Lord and Creator who allows for us to seek out truth and be salt and light in the world. | ||
This is what we wish to do. | ||
It is a holy uh and upright quest to make the world a safer place and a better place and to dispatch evil. | ||
That's what we're gonna do on this program. | ||
And remember, in the end, we win. | ||
It's your boy Benny. | ||
See ya. | ||
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Found myself in a train at the station when it hits home. | |
i wanna be left alone Please take me far, far away. | ||
I can't watch it anymore. | ||
She covers her face. | ||
you might call me I'll wait for the next thing and reach my own day. | ||
You can't fix a savage animal rabbit and damage. | ||
Oh, no. | ||
Oh, no. | ||
mercy for the wicked is cruel to the innocent In a car with my brothers, leave it our odds and running at all. | ||
That's Chicago win. | ||
I just wanted. | ||
to be left alone You might call me hate four race. | ||
I will the next train and reach my old A. And guess what, my friend? | ||
Everything will be okay. | ||
Guess what day, what day? | ||
Yes, hump day. | ||
The biggest ships in the sea, all owned by the oldest kings, and a dying legacy, media deal we'll the penny so come to mind the salt from Lives for fun. | ||
Leave the gold and bring the gun. | ||
We sail for number one Soon will the penny show come to mine the salt from Lives for fun. | ||
Leave the gold and bring the gun. |