Violent Criminal BODYSLAMS Judge During Sentencing
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There are probably a lot of things that I am known for in the public sphere, but I think chief among them is the fact that I don't particularly feel bad when it comes to criminality.
Probably the most viral video that I ever did, which a lot of people know me for, was going through George Floyd's criminal history.
I was amazed people that were baptizing themselves in the streets where George Floyd was killed or rather where George Floyd died.
I shouldn't say he was killed because he was not murdered by police.
That is my stance and I'm sticking to it.
People wearing his t-shirt, suddenly trying to turn him into some sort of a martyr
and just excusing the fact that he lived a life of violent crime.
Very, very bizarre to see this.
And it's not the only circumstance.
It seems that we are even looking at this in terms of Gypsy Rose Blanchard.
People are going, oh, but look at what she went through as a child.
It's understandable why she did this thing, why she committed this crime.
Let's turn her into a celebrity.
You see, Netflix has gone through this.
The washing of Jeffrey Dahmer's violent crimes by trying to look into his childhood
and make viewers feel bad for that individual.
I don't suffer that.
I don't suffer from feeling bad for individuals that do horrific things.
Take this recent circumstances I'm sure that you have seen in the media.
The clip has gone absolutely viral.
It is a clip of a man named Diobra Reddin.
He is 30 years old.
Most recently, he pled guilty to the felony charge of attempted battery with substantial bodily harm after prosecutors accused him of threatening to bust another man's kneecaps and swinging with a bat at him.
In February 2023, he also pleaded guilty to malicious destruction of property.
Court records also reveal that Diobra Redden has gone through the district court's mental health court program twice since 2020.
He's been convicted in three prior felonies, attempted theft in 2015, battery with substantial bodily harm in 2018, and battery constituting domestic violence in 2021.
He's also previously been accused of kicking an officer while he was being arrested in 2016 and biting a woman and breaking a vehicle's windows as part of the 2018 battery charge.
Does that sound like a person that you want to live next door to?
A person that you want to live around your children, maybe have access to parks, just be walking around freely?
Or is there something that you feel bad about when you hear that?
Well, people... Apparently do.
We'll take a look at this video, as I've mentioned recently, of him being sentenced by Judge Mary Kay Hothis from the Clark County District Court, while she was at least mid-sentencing him when he decided to attack her.
Take a look. I appreciate that, but I think it's time that he gets a taste of something else, because I just can't with that history.
In accordance with the laws of the state of Nevada, this court is adjourned.
Thank you.
Seems like a nice guy.
Can't imagine how he ever ended up in prison.
Well, apparently his family, his foster mother, being among the family members who have spoken out, and she just wants you to understand, she was obviously in a state of shock when she saw that.
She doesn't condone what he did, but she describes that situation as heartbreaking, and she thinks that the reason he did it was because he was just getting his life on track, and he was very surprised to hear the sentencing that was being handed down to him.
She said, quote, And that's her justification for why he acted that way.
Adding to that is his sister, LaDonna Daniels.
She wants people to understand that her brother has a mental condition that has not been taken into consideration.
It was not being taken into consideration as he was being sentenced.
They believe he suffers from bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and exposure to cocaine in
his system when he was born, which are all contributing factors to his reaction in court
that led to him attacking the judge.
So we should be understanding because he has schizophrenia.
He was also introduced to cocaine when he was a child.
Again, we're going to go back and look into the childhood of a person.
And I guess as a society we're supposed to say, well, release him.
I told you he was exposed to cocaine when he was really young.
Now again, I might just be a cold-hearted biatch, but to me, everything that they're telling us about him signals that he should be in prison forever, right?
If you're telling me that he suffers from a mental condition, that makes it so that he reacts in a violent manner.
All throughout his life, apparently.
That's what is being best evident.
This person is not fit to be walking the streets.
He is not fit to be in society, okay?
He is not fit to be near playgrounds and parks.
I don't want to see him at a grocery store.
I don't want to see him at a parking lot.
I don't want to see him anywhere.
Green eggs and ham, okay?
Not here nor there.
Nowhere do I want to see this person in society, okay?
But I guess that makes me a bad person.
So he was due to be sentenced again in a courtroom following this incident.
Obviously the charges have been upped as he just brutally beat a judge.
And here is how he is now being held.
You can see in this photograph that they have him muzzled to prevent him from biting people and they have his hands covered.
I deem that to be appropriate.
Obviously, this is a violent individual who, again, we just watched him beat down a judge.
But never fear!
Twitter is here! Somebody saw this image and said, no, he is the victim.
This person, tweeting under an account handle that says the viral underclass, Wrote, how it started, how it's going, it's called a slave iron bit.
And he does a side-by-side of D'Obra Redden next to a pictorial, a picture, a drawing, rather, of a slave wearing a bit where they are being muzzled and their neck is locked.
And you're supposed to, I don't know, man, look at your heartstrings and go, oh my God, no.
How could they do this to black people?
Obviously, it's because of racism.
It must be because of racism.
Everything's racist.
No! Because he's a violent maniac.
And obviously, this had to be done to keep the public at large safe.
That used to be aspirational, by the way.
Keeping the public at large safe.
No longer feeling bad for prisoners and criminals and convicts is something that I think we should aspire to in 2024.
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If you think that is ridiculous and egregious, trying to make us feel bad for Dio Brat Reddin, this story coming out of Norway, I could not believe.
You may have heard his name.
The psychopathic maniac's name, rather, is Anders Breivik.
Now, in case you're wondering and you have not heard of who Anders Breivik is, here is his backstory.
He's a neo-Nazi who killed 77 people in Norway in 2011, okay?
He killed eight people with a car bomb in Oslo, and then he shot dead 69 people at a summer youth camp.
So, what happened because of this?
Well, in case you don't know about Norway, they believe in humanity.
They believe that no matter what somebody does, they should be treated humanely.
And he was only sentenced to 21 years.
By the way, that's because that is the maximum penalty that a court in Norway can impose.
OK?
So, he was sentenced to 21 years in solitary confinement.
And Anders Breivik is now suing Norway over his prison isolation.
Now, when you think of prison isolation, when you think of people that are in solitary confinement, you might be reflecting on the American prison system.
Not in Norway.
I want you to actually take a look at this video of the prison that Anders Breivik is being held in.
Take a look. So you can see a washer.
You can see a dryer.
You can see a gym.
You can see a flat-screen TV. You can see plush leather chairs.
There are birds. Oh, animals.
How nice, because the prisoners may need that.
The prisoners may need access to an animal to make them feel good.
You see there are books on the shelves.
There is access to a yard.
It's covered in snow at the moment, but also you can see some sort of an indoor patio as well.
Oh, look! Also, there is a gym, a basketball court rather, in the communal area.
This is the prison that he is being held at and we're supposed to feel bad for him.
You want to know what his conditions are?
I will list them to you. This is his world.
This is according to a BBC article.
He has access to three cells, one for sleeping, one for studying, one for exercising, plus daily access to an exercise yard.
He's allowed to play video games.
He's allowed to watch TV and read newspapers.
He also has access to a computer.
He is allowed to prepare his own food and do his own washing.
And he is given access.
He's allowed to have phone conversations with a quote-unquote female friend.
I'm sure that's probably some crazy person that's attracted to him.
There's always one in every crowd.
He is given contact with the prison staff, his lawyers, a priest, as well as health professionals.
And he has declined to play chess with volunteers because some good-hearted people say, I will play chess with this maniac.
He doesn't want to do that.
He also built a gingerbread house as part of a prison competition.
Now, to be clear, he has been in isolation, if that's what we're calling it, for 12 years.
And his lawyer is saying that these conditions are inhumane.
She says, quote, that he lives in a completely locked world.
He does not wish to be alive anymore.
Now, in my view, that is more of a reason than anything to keep him alive forever.
You want me to feel bad that he is suffering after he murdered 77 people?
He shot and killed 69 people?
He blew up eight people with a car bomb?
And she is appearing before the judge to say that he is living in an inhumane circumstance with access to all of that?
Have we gone mad?
Really, that is my question. Have we just gone completely mad in the Western world?
A mass formation psychosis brought to us by the media which keeps trying to rebrand psychopaths as people that should be understood, that we should feel something for.
Where is your empathy?
Where is your sympathy? Where is your understanding for all of these criminals and these drug addicts who keep committing crimes and murders?
Don't you just want them walking amongst you?
I don't. I never did.
I don't feel bad for them, no matter what the circumstances.
I don't need to look into their childhood and look deep into their hearts because they are harming people in this society.
That's what I want for 2024.
I want all of us to wake up to the fact that we need to stop feeling bad for criminals.
Honestly, not a big ask.
Hey guys, if you liked this video, you will definitely like the full episode even better.