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Feb. 1, 2024 - Candace Owens
11:25
The Climate Crazies Are at It Again
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I was spanked growing up.
I got spankings the whole time.
Scary spankings.
My mom used to throw shoes at us, and then if she missed, she'd make us bring the shoe back to her.
That's scary stuff, you know?
You're like a kid, like, bring it back, I missed.
And then you're just kind of trying to dodge your mom and be like, oh gosh, how am I going to hand her the shoe but also run away because that shoe's coming at me.
And yeah, so I'm from Generation.
Your kids got whooped.
Suddenly, obviously, it doesn't happen anymore.
And I think that we are seeing really what the product is.
We're harvesting the kids right now that were never spanked.
I see things sometimes, and I am not promoting that you should beat your kids.
I don't beat mine.
But I do see things sometimes happening in society that just makes me wonder, what if some of these kids did get spanked?
For example, over at the Louvre in France, the Mona Lisa, obviously, it was a painting from Leonardo da Vinci, 1507, 1503, whenever it was.
Look at these climate activists when they saw this wonderful historic piece of art.
Now look, I don't speak French and I have no idea what it is that they are saying,
but I do know that that is absolutely unacceptable in a society.
You can't even imagine people doing that in a civilized society.
Now, to be clear, obviously, it's the Mona Lisa, and because of its worth, it is behind some glass.
We've been seeing these sort of climate protests happening, especially all throughout Europe, where people are not Protesting.
We're using that word way too loosely.
Obviously, what that is, is it's an act of vandalism.
And it's costing these cities, it's costing these museums tons of money.
And you wonder, why are they doing this?
Why are they continuing to do this?
Well, it's because they're obviously getting a slap on the wrist.
They understand that there really is no harsh penalties that are happening to them.
The majority of these individuals get delayed sentencing, are ordered to pay some form of a ridiculous restitution, have to wait six months while they're on probation maybe, and then they're back on their way.
And it's getting more obnoxious, by the way.
They're starting to sit down in the middle of streets, blocking people from getting to work.
You may have seen clips of this where people that are understandably very angry and upset, cab drivers, get out and they're starting to physically move these protesters because, again, this is not a protest.
What gives somebody the right to stop you from getting to work to feed your family, to make you late for an hour, showing up to work so that you can't clock in because they're upset about the climate crisis?
They have no right.
There is no punishment.
But I weigh this against what's happening in the United States as well.
We don't have as many of these climate ridiculous protests here.
But I weigh it against what has happened here.
It brings me back to the BLM's Summer of Love.
Who could forget the Summer of Love?
I love this still of them trying to convince us that it was a mostly peaceful protest.
This is real, by the way.
CNN, that is the headline.
Fiery but mostly peaceful protests after police shooting.
And yeah, emphasis on the fiery, obviously.
We know they just kind of burned America down.
The media rushed to essentially say to everyone that was participating in this criminality that it was totally okay.
We have your back.
I will give you the numbers.
Just in a couple of weeks, from May 25th until June 8th, it cost anywhere between $1 to $2 billion nationally.
The vandalism, the looting, that is how much it cost our nation.
And yet, as I said, You had judges, you had celebrities, you had an entire ecosystem that told these kids, it's okay because you have a feeling.
Who could forget, I always bring it up because we should never forget this, those two Ivy League lawyers out of New York City.
Do you remember them?
Their names were, are rather, Arooj Rahman and Colinford Mattis.
Colin Firmatus, young black man, was very well accomplished.
Graduated from Princeton University.
He was well on his way, working at a fancy law firm called Prior Cashman in the city.
Also, and I'm gonna say strangely, had three foster children.
I find that to be strange only because of the arguments that they later made in court
about his depressive condition and the fact that he was an alcoholic,
which led him to text his friend, Her name was Arooj Rahman.
She also, similarly, had graduated from Fordham University.
She got her law degree.
And they just started texting each other, talking about how they just wanted to do hoodrat stuff as friends, right?
Specifically, she texted to him, I hope they burn everything down.
This is following the death of George Floyd.
Need to burn down all the police stations, probably all the courts, too.
This is a real text exchange, a text exchange between two people that are out of law school, Ivy League law schools.
She also wrote to him, throwing bottles and tear gas, lit some fires but were put out, fireworks going and Molotovs rolling.
And when she said Molotovs rolling, she meant that.
She really meant that, because they linked up together, and here is one of the classic photos of them that ended up getting them in trouble.
They just picked up some beer bottles and created some Molotov cocktails, went on a little ride and decided to torch a New York police Department police car.
They threw the Molotov cocktail in there.
Thankfully, there was no police officer in the cruiser, so nobody got hurt.
But yeah, this could have been homicidal.
So you're going, of course, obviously they got in tons of trouble.
This would have been an act of terrorism anywhere else where we believed in rules, where we believed in regulations, where we believed that you shouldn't just be allowed to casually try to kill police officers.
But no, I remember they were arrested, and then they were released, and we were just going, what on earth is going on here?
Well, I now would like to update you on what has happened in that case.
They downgraded the charges.
At first, they were looking at 10 years, again, for terrorist actions.
But they just said, because of extenuating circumstances, that being the fact that George Floyd died in Minnesota, we have to be understanding of what these two lawyers were going through emotionally.
And so instead, prosecutors recommended that they receive max two years, and don't you worry, because they didn't get those two years.
Arooj Rahman was sentenced to 15 months in prison last November, and they also requested time served for her, followed by a year of supervised release.
And you're not going to believe what the judge said to her when he sentenced her.
He said, quote, You're a remarkable person who did a terrible thing on one night.
Ah, so loving.
We all get a little crazy when we're watching the news.
We all call up our homies and we're just like, hey, let's just throw a Molotov cocktail into a police cruiser because we're emotional and that's totally understandable, says this judge.
This is a bad night.
He's having a bad night.
Similarly, for our friend Colinford Mattis, when the judge handed down his sentence, he told him, But it wasn't his fault, you know?
But he wasn't the one egging it on.
It was really the girl's fault.
But don't forget, also, she's a remarkable person, so you get it.
This is just a slap on the wrist.
There's no trouble, of course, if you are boycotting, emphasis, or protesting any form of criminal activity
as long as you are doing what the state sanctions, what the state wants you to see.
And obviously we understood that there was very much a conspiracy,
a federal conspiracy to further the George Floyd riots just ahead of another election.
Now, why am I telling you this?
Because I want you to weigh this in contrast to something that just took place actually here in Tennessee.
And I'm not ashamed that it took place in Tennessee because the Tennessee state wasn't involved at all.
Instead, the feds got involved when six pro-life actual protesters decided to peacefully protest outside of a clinic.
Do you want to know what they did?
Horrific.
Why would the feds get involved?
Did they throw a Molotov cocktail?
No.
Did they hurt somebody?
No.
They sang hymns.
Take a listen.
I'll ask the question, did that scare you?
Were you terrified for your life when they were singing the hymns?
Well, Biden's Department of Justice certainly got wind of this and decided that something had to be done.
And so what they did is they sent the FBI to make sure that these individuals were arrested.
Here is footage of one of those arrests of A young man named Paul Vaughn.
This took place in Centerville, Tennessee.
The DOJ eventually charged him with conspiracy against rights secured by the FACE Act.
Take a look at this footage.
No, I want to know why you were banging on my door with a gun.
You're not going to tell me anything?
I tried.
No, you didn't!
You did not try!
So you just imagine that you're a wife, your husband went down and sang some hymns because he is pro-life at the clinic, and the next thing you know, you've got feds banging on the door to arrest him, and they've got guns.
I mean, what's the situation have to be in order to imagine having your door banged on and looking at federal officers carrying guns?
I don't know what the situation would need to be, but in my mind, it definitely doesn't seem appropriate for Christians singing hymns Outside of a clinic where they are about to murder unborn children and rip them limb from limb.
I don't know, but this is Biden's DOJ, and they have appointed a person, Kristen Clark, if you're not familiar with her, she is the DOJ's Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights.
And she is the person that is very proud to oversee the prosecution of what is known as the FACE Act.
That stands for Freedom of Access to Clinic And she has been very clear that anybody that she deems hostile to her pro-baby-killing spree is going to have to face the Department of Justice.
So that, my friends, is how your taxpaying dollars are being spent, right?
When you wonder, my gosh, we just have so many federal agents.
They're saying we should have even more federal agents.
I'm just amazed at what they choose to prosecute.
Who they choose to handhold, what they deem to be dangerous, what they deem to be something that is worthy of their attention, and what they don't.
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