An activist poet has been randomly stabbed to death in front of his girlfriend after they attended a wedding together.
His name was Ryan Carson, and he died at the age of 32 years old.
It's tremendously sad. I want to say that off the bat, but I will tell you why this particular stabbing has political significance and why people are discussing Ryan Carson's death so much today.
Ryan Carson, allegedly, according to Andy Ngo, was an Antifa member.
What we can tell you for sure is that Ryan Carson, just like the young man that we showed you yesterday in Philadelphia, was without question a leftist activist.
And bizarrely, just like the young man from Philadelphia that we discussed on yesterday's show, he also was an activist in terms of trying to establish safe havens for drug addicts and for homeless people.
Ryan specifically wanted throughout New York City and to establish safe injection sites for drug addicts.
Take a listen to Ryan in his own words.
Hello, my name is Ryan Thorson Carson, and I'm a political organizer and policy analyst from Brooklyn, New York.
Like many people, my life has been shaped by the opioid epidemic that has ravaged our country.
I've lost family and friends to the epidemic, including my best friend to a lethal heroin overdose in 2016.
My story is unfortunately common.
For many, the opioid crisis hits close to home.
It's time to focus on new strategies to fight back.
One strategy is safe injection facilities.
The facilities are a part of a harm reduction approach toward drug use.
They provide sterile injection equipment, information about drugs and basic health care, treatment and rehabilitation referrals, access to medical staff, and, crucially, counseling.
So this is weird. It's a weird thing to take up as a platform, in my opinion.
We now have two young men, this young Ryan Carson and this Philadelphia man, Josh Kruger, who are really focused on making sure that drug addicts feel more at home, right?
That the system is not coming after drug addicts.
Well, as a quick update to Josh Kruger, we remember he was fatally shot in his own home.
Police are also investigating whether or not that was drug-related.
So he himself may have somehow been involved in drug crimes, allegedly.
We'll have to do an update on that story when the police have their conclusions.
But with this guy Ryan Carson, it is strange to me as it always is strange to me that there are people that are
trying to convince you That homeless people and drug addicts are really good
people, right?
Despite the fact that they're on the streets and I have spoken out against this tons of times
I have been open about the fact I have drug addicts in my own family that live on the streets
The idea that these people are just on some bad times is completely ludicrous
It is dishonest and it is a narrative that is going to get people killed
Okay, it's gonna get people killed These people are desperate.
They will do anything for drugs.
If you gave them $2,000 a month to spend on rent, they would choose to live on the streets and spend every single penny on the next high.
That is the reality.
The majority of people that you see that are homeless on the streets and are screaming at themselves are either high themselves, mentally unstable, or both.
And so Ryan, who wanted to be a hero to drug addicts and to people that we find that are
wandering the streets, who wanted to create a safe haven for those that are suffering from
drug addicts so that they could shoot up, met an unfortunate fate. He was killed, he was stabbed
to death by a man that I am going to assume, we won't know because he has not yet been caught,
was on drugs given the fact that it was 4 a.m. and he was acting erratically on the streets
of New York. You can take a look at this video to see what happened. I'll talk you through it
in case you're listening to the podcast, but viewer discretion advised. What we have here is
Ryan and his girlfriend sitting on a bench and they begin to walk. They were coming back from
a wedding at 4 a.m. in the morning and what takes place and what you can see is that this man seems
to be kicking something, you can hear it, and Ryan approaches him. His girlfriend stops in her tracks,
Ryan approaches him.
Now according to his friends, this is just the kind of guy that Ryan was.
He thought that he could always talk to somebody.
One friend shared a story about how he stopped himself from being mugged by just giving the homeless person his money.
Well, this is not what happens here.
You see, the guy approaches Ryan.
He threatens him. He tells him that he will kill him.
Ryan then begins to defend himself and realizes, obviously, that this is serious.
And then Ryan gets stabbed by this man.
He is on the street, bleeding out.
His girlfriend is above him.
It looks like she's scared to approach him.
She tells another young woman, who appears to maybe know the person that just stabbed him, to just keep the guy back.
Unfortunately, she was not able to save Ryan Carson.
Ryan Carson later died.
Okay, so he spent his last moments on this earth on that sidewalk
He spent his last moments approaching that individual likely convinced that he could somehow do something that he
could somehow stop him That's just the media depiction of homelessness and crime
statistics That's wrong and that you have no right to be fearful of
crazy people When you see a crazy person you cross the street you don't
approach them. It is a known thing Take it from me. I was born in New York.
I spent seven years in New York City.
But at 4 a.m. in the morning, nothing good can happen in the city.
You get inside. You take an Uber.
You don't take the subway. You don't approach a homeless man.
There is nothing good that happens, no matter how good and fluffy you feel on the inside, no matter how hard you want to virtue signal as a white person that you're not scared of black people, even when they're behaving erratically and acting like they're on drugs, and telling you that they're going to kill you.
By the way, it should be obvious by now that this is why the Marine who took out that homeless person on the subway is a hero, because this could have been the conclusion.
He said he was going to harm people on the subway, and he likely was going to harm people on that subway.
Except, fortunately, there was a Marine there to take care of the circumstance.
You don't wait to find out.
You don't feel goodness in your heart and sadness for this individual.
You protect yourself.
That is what should be abundantly obvious.
Protect yourself. Now, regarding his girlfriend, Claudia Morales is her name that you saw in that video, who was the last person that he saw while he was on this earth.
Claudia is also an activist.
She was a BLM anti-police activist, which is ironic given the fact that they are now asking the police to help them find out who killed Ryan on the streets.
Claudia once posted this long message onto Facebook, which was pro-BLM. And it ended with this.
The police do not protect you.
BLM, hope you're on the right side of history.
Thank you, Claudia, who was referring to protests, participating in BLM protests.
She was pro-defund the police.
And now, of course, she and Ryan's friends are all looking to the police to try to figure out who committed this heinous act.
And it was no doubt a heinous act.
It's not something to applaud. It's sad.
It is sad to me that people continue to delude themselves about the reality of what is happening in Democrat cities.
It is sad to me that these people create videos trying to help drug addicts, trying to help homeless people, and trying to further delude others into believing that the problem is simply racism.
The problem is simply that we do not have enough compassion.
You should not be an idiot.
You should not be an idiot. Do not have so much compassion that you would put yourself into harm's way at 4 a.m.
in the morning with a knife-wielding maniac.
That is not compassion.
That is stupidity. So, if I sound harsh, oh well, okay?
That is a circumstance. If you want to stay alive, you should get a little harsher as well.
All right, ladies and gentlemen, if you like this video, you are definitely going to like the full episode even better.