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Feb. 1, 2018 - Get Off My Lawn - Gavin McInnes
40:00
Get Off My Lawn #75 | State of the Schmoozin
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That's a great little jam from the day punk ended and rap began.
That was Johnny Rotten, who had changed his name back to John Leiden, featured there and Africa Bombata.
Interesting combination, right?
You know, I think every man who has a major accomplishment in life is envious of Johnny Rotten because you want an act too.
You know, I had vice and was worried that would be my legacy, and I'd always be that guy, but I feel content that I had a second kick at the can, a second career.
And Johnny Rotten had that after the Sex Pistols.
He had pill.
He's not really permanently known as the Sex Pistols guy.
That's obviously a part of his legacy, but he also has a lot to contribute.
And this song was really cool and weird.
Africa Bambata, of course, was the guy in the Bronx who was part of this movement to stop killing each other, stop these gang wars, and just have rap battles.
Seemed silly at the time, but it saved lives.
So this was an interesting sort of passing of the buck.
Why is it every time I touch something, I lose my connection on that TV?
It's got the most fragile HDMI ever.
Here's a little bit more of the video so you can see it, because it is a very visual experience.
Yeah, yeah!
The United States!
The United States!
Hey, look out!
The world nations are on the rise!
The democratic communist relationship!
Won't stand in the way of the Islamic force!
The CIA!
Anyway, those money.
Dream about destruction.
One annoying thing about that song, though, is they keep the chorus, they go, I'm in a time zone.
I'm in a time zone.
Yeah, I know you're in a time zone, dude.
We've got a fun show today.
Today is the Antifa Special.
We're going to focus on lawsuits that are being brought against the alt-left.
And I think it's clear that their days are numbered.
They're going to have to start to face the consequences.
You can't strangle a guy and almost kill him in the name of your made-up justice, assuming that he's a Nazi, and not face consequences, not go to jail, not get sued.
So we're going to talk about Jack Murphy, who I hope to have on the show soon, but also talk to people who are suing Berkeley for the riots.
And I also want to focus on, I want to indulge myself in my favorite movie, Animal House, and talk about this Doug Kenney biography, I guess you'd call it, where they've gone over Nash Lampoon, Harvard Lampoon, of which I'm a member, and they've talked about Animal House and Kenny Shack in this great movie called A Futile and Stupid Gesture.
But before, before we get to that, you know, the more that Trump says horrible things like the rest of the world sucks and is a shithole, the more we realize it's true.
I love that he plants these seeds.
Did you see this article up here?
In Cambodia, nine Westerners are arrested for lascivious behavior.
Pornographic dancing in Cambodia.
These people could be facing a year in prison for dancing.
And there's photos of this disgusting dance.
Look at that.
Why, they seem to be mimicking fornication and lying on top of each other.
I noticed a reaction, by the way, from some Westerners, some Canadians, where, well, they should have known that Cambodia is a very sacred place.
Oh, really?
I remember I saying to my dad once, what's going on with Cambodia?
And he goes, well, let's put it this way.
If you can fuck a child for the price of a pint, it's probably not a good place to be.
I mean, that's true of all of Southeast Asia.
It's a disgusting mess.
Where God knows what happens if you get caught smoking a joint, but dancing in a funny way, which go back to that picture.
It's called joking.
Okay?
Even if they were having sex in public, they deserve maybe a $20 fine.
But joking about sex, that's allowed.
Anyway, that is a great example of other countries being a shithole.
But I don't know if you remember, Trump did a State of the Union recently, and we reported on it live from CRTV.
But some people went to different campuses to get the take on Trump's Tuesday night State of the Union.
Today to the State of the Union last night.
Some people were saying that it was the most racist State of the Union that's ever happened.
What was your reaction to everything that was said?
I didn't watch it because I couldn't bring myself to watch it.
Quite racist at the very least.
If not up there with most racist.
Wow.
It's already quickly climbing the scale.
Some of the people said today that they thought his immigration stance that he outlined last night.
Can I just say that a pea coat is a good look this winter?
They're cheap, and you're never cold in them.
I know we have all this Gore-Tex, all this technology.
I have a Peacoat.
It's like wearing a house.
You have to ask people around you, is it cold out?
Last night was especially hateful.
Very offensive.
What do you think of that?
It's something that I wouldn't have expected to happen in our lifetime.
It's offensive.
It is crazy, but I'm not shocked by what he's done in the past.
Pretty ugly.
I believe what I'm hearing about his rough nature and the hate that he probably set up.
He told the Democrats the wall got 10 feet higher because they didn't stand up and give him applause at one point.
What do you think of all that?
It's the behavior of someone who refuses to accept accountability for their failures.
Refuses to accept accountability.
You ready for the smoking gun here, folks, ladies and gentlemen?
This video was recorded on Sunday, two days before, or sorry, maybe it was Friday.
Anyway, it was recorded several days before Trump's State of the Union.
All these people you see here are lying.
In other words, the left is totally full of shit.
They don't believe any of the stuff they say.
It's all fashion to them.
Trump is Hitler.
I'm better than him.
He's stupid.
He has sex with prostitutes and they urinate on beds and stuff and he works with Russia to collude.
And that's it.
That's my look.
Okay, that's fine.
I've been into fashion before, but we now have conclusive evidence that you're all lying.
Anyway, let's get into Animal House and see about these antifa lawsuits.
Saw a great movie last night, a futile and stupid gesture about Doug Kenney.
You may remember him as Stork from Animal House, where he goes, what are we supposed to do, you moron?
Animal House is my favorite movie, and I've always been fascinated with Harvard Lampoo.
And I was actually indoctrinated as an honorary member.
I'll show you.
You can see the coin there.
It was a few years ago.
I'm not supposed to talk about it.
They're very sensitive about the whole secret ceremony, and they take you to all the secret rooms in the church.
And I was hammered because my flight was late.
And I think they were sort of, why is this guy here?
The woman running it was a black woman, a black girl.
And I couldn't help but think, wow, PCs even infiltrated secret societies now.
But maybe she was qualified for the job and she was wonderful.
Who knows?
I don't know how funny she was.
There was one other black guy who had a pipe who spoke in this super aristocratic accent.
And I realized, if you're African and you go to Harvard, you are a billionaire.
And you've been going to private schools your whole life.
So he had this right.
Yes, yes, sir.
I couldn't help but notice, Mr. McInnes, that you were somewhat untoward.
I was like, Jesus Christ, you're only missing a monocle and a giant white mustache.
But it was a fascinating group.
And I think they were sort of confused by me and thought I was an asshole.
And then I had brought John Belushi's exact costume from Animal House with the college sweatshirt cut off and the khakis.
So while I was doing my speech with my suit, I took off my suit right down to my underwear and then put on the John Belushi thing.
And I believe, although you never know if you're misremembering things, I believe that ingratiated me to them and we had a great night.
But Doug Kenney was a guy, Harvard student, middle class guy, whose dad was a tennis instructor and always resented the way they looked down on his father in this posh neighborhood in Ohio where he was from.
And that's why he made Caddyshack to sort of crap on the Ted Knights of the world, you know, the stuffy country club owner.
And also put on a pedestal the Rodney Dangerfield, the nouveau riche, the white trash rich guys who are at these clubs.
And that's, by the way, whom I describe Trump as.
I can't believe I just used the word whom.
I see Trump as Rodney Dangerfield in Caddyshack.
But anyway, he started National Hampoon, brilliant magazine, hilarious.
PG O'Rourke did a guide to all the races that is so offensive and shocking that you need to read it to remember who you are.
And I was watching this movie going, this is who I am.
Like, I forgot.
I'm from the era of being blatantly offensive.
And you tend to forget in this day and age, especially the past two years during this PC zenith.
But Doug Kenney really pioneered the idea of not holding back with jokes and willfully offending people, knowing it's going to piss them off, getting in trouble on purpose.
I mean, the whole concept of a food fight.
Why are you doing that?
To transport food from one end of the room to the other?
No, it's just a stupid gesture that says, I mean, I feel the same way about most of my tattoos.
Greg and Tiny Toes, my daughter's dead hamsters.
It's just a...
Anyway, Doug did Harvard Lampoon, made Animal House, which is the greatest movie ever made.
And then he did Caddyshack.
It was literally the most successful comedy ever made.
Then he did Caddyshack as a follow-up.
It got bad reviews.
Killed himself.
Then the long-term reviews started coming in.
Actually, Doug, it's brilliant.
Oh, too late.
But this movie does an incredible job of conveying this incredibly complicated story.
Let's just have a brief look at the trailer.
We call this success mostly an excuse to party.
You ruin this company.
We keep them back a failure.
All right, stop for a second.
One thing that's sort of not glossed over, but doesn't get the gravitas it needs, two things actually.
One is Doug Kenny's first divorce.
And the way boomers got divorced back then, it was like taking a dump.
It was not a big deal.
It was an inconvenience.
It was like dyeing your hair blonde.
It was just a change in your life.
And I think it desperately pollutes a person to get divorced.
And it ruins the children's lives.
Now, he didn't have children, so that wasn't the case in that.
But I'm sick of movies and culture in general trivializing divorce.
Secondly, and this is a bigger one, cocaine.
Now, there's a wonderful documentary called All Things Must Pass about Tower Records and how they used cocaine to power the wheels.
And that's fine if you're young and everything.
But cocaine has some downsides, especially as you get older.
And as I've described on the show before, you have a massive up that's through the roof, it's off the screen, but you have a massive down too.
So you go from this normal life to whoosh, whoosh, whoosh, whoosh.
You're just borrowing the fun from tomorrow.
So Saturday night is awesome, but Sunday night is hell.
The total balance is still zero, but you put all your eggs in Saturday's basket.
And I think it leads to suicide.
I know Boston Mike was a guy that used to hang around New York in a gang called DMS.
He played Russian roulette.
He was a cocaine dealer, played Russian roulette, blew his head off.
You see it all the time with these people where they can't take the lows of cocaine.
We just had one the other day.
Who was it, the cocaine head?
Oh yeah, that porn star, August Ames.
Lots of porn stars commit suicide, and I blame Coke.
But okay, so get back to the movie.
Sorry.
Lap, goddammit!
We need to see someone.
Inside that bungalow, some of the creators of Animal House.
Stop!
Did you recognize her?
That was what's her name, Barbara Ann, from the original Animal House.
There's all kinds of little shout-outs to Animal House fans.
And by the way, sorry to harp on Animal House, but you need to re-watch this film.
Every single scene, it's all part of the long plot, but every single scene is a sketch that stands up by itself.
A really racy sketch, like when they walk into a black bar and they go, we're gonna die.
And the record scratches to a stop.
Do you mind if we dance with your dates?
And he rips the table up.
Like you would never see that today.
And every time I see that scene, by the way, I think, this is how the New York Times lives.
They want to be friends with blacks so bad.
And they go, Otis, my man.
And the record goes, we don't want the New York Times in here.
It was, you know, Animal House was Harold Ramos and Doug Kennedy, a bunch of guys, just amalgamating all their craziest college stories into one.
And it really is a culmination of maybe 30 years of a thousand people going to college, which is what a movie should be.
I want the totally over-the-top parts.
I want it to be a relentless roller coaster with tits.
Go ahead.
Working on their next movie, Catty Cat.
And I'm sure it's going to be just as crazy.
Dog, we need to decide.
Is it clear he's jerking his dick off here?
Yeah, because we can make it higher or lower depending on which size of my dog.
These actors don't look exactly like real people.
And John Belichi, guys.
You think I looked like Will Forte when I was 27?
You think Will Forte is 27?
By the way, stop.
That's enough.
Anyway, we've seen it.
But that is another brilliant part of the movie.
And another brilliant part of Doug Kenney was no b and just saying, I'm going to explain.
There's a scene, that scene that they just showed.
They stopped the movie and they have a scroll of all the licenses they've taken out of context and all the things they've added that didn't really fit and all the changes they made to make the movie magic.
And I remember doing that with Vice all the time.
I'd say, by the way, that was a lie.
I just wanted to get to this part or something.
Or you show, you know, that the person's standing on a crate.
That's funny.
Fisher Spooner was a band like that, an Electroclash band that would say, stop, stop, stop, in the middle of a show and say, I don't like you standing there.
And they'd move people or pull up, like literally pull back the curtains and talk to the sound guy and then start to show up again.
I love that stuff.
I love honesty in art.
And Doug Kenney was the master of it.
Brilliant, brilliant guy.
And the reason that he was so successful is because he took huge risks and had giant balls.
And the reason he's dead is he did too much cocaine.
The world is in the world's instruction.
You ain't got no.
The Fire.
Antifa update, Antifa update.
Every once in a while, we like to check in on the alt left and the insane things they're doing.
I met a guy from ABC News the other day at a party and he had just quit his job and he told me that they did a whole feature on Antifa and ABC News goes, whoa, whoa, whoa, what are you doing here?
You made them look violent.
And the producer said, they are violent.
In fact, they're very vocal about it and very proud of it.
I don't understand what you want to hide.
And they go, no, we can't run this.
You have to go and talk to the SPLC and get the other side.
He goes, I do have the other side.
Yes, but you have to have them justifying the violence, at least, from the SPLC.
What?
Okay.
So the fake news, I have an insider telling me that the fake news on Antifa is even more extreme than you can imagine.
This guy is not particularly right-wing.
He just wanted to tell the story.
But the amazing thing I find about Antifa is not just their mainstream acceptance and that their shirts are available at Walmart and that CNN keeps falling for that stupid name, anti-fascist.
He's an anti-fascist protester.
Yeah, he hates fascism.
That's why he's trying to murder someone for going to hear a talk.
But the crazy thing about this is they go through like people like me and you and find our jobs, get us fired, all because this person who's new right or libertarian might know alt-right people.
Those alt-right people might be Nazis or no Nazis, and that Nazi might be anti-Semitic and he might want another Holocaust, maybe.
So they do all that hard work based on a thousand maybe's.
Meanwhile, radically Imams are spewing anti-Semitism in the U.S. with impunity.
Last July, an imam at Davis Islamic Center in Northern California preached Jews were contaminating Muslim shrines with their quote-unquote filth and, get this, called for their genocide.
There's no ambiguity here.
This is not a maybe.
This guy wants all Jews to die.
He said, oh Allah, count them one by one and annihilate them down to the very last one.
By the way, a little side note here.
Where are the Jews pissed off at this guy?
Pamela Geller, the Jewish Defense League, are about the only ones I see speaking out about this.
This guy should be getting harassed at the airport.
When he lands anywhere, there should be tons of Jewish people screaming for their defense.
Meanwhile, they're obsessed with Heather Heyer and some mentally ill autist in a Dodge charger.
That's not a pattern.
This is a pattern.
Why don't you care about the pattern?
It really boggles my mind.
Why are you so worried about someone?
You know, a good example of this is this guy, Jack Murphy, who I have to get on the show.
So he is, he's a libertarian.
He's pretty much a liberal.
And he is photographed near Richard Spencer, just in the vicinity.
So Jack Murphy, who's actually Jewish.
I forget his real name, but it's listed there if you scroll up, Goldman or something.
So he's pictured in a photograph with Richard Spencer.
The guy's a libertarian liberal.
John Goldman is his name.
And so he gets doxxed.
But he's not a Nazi.
He doesn't agree With them.
In fact, he was yelling at Richard Spencer and getting into an argument with him.
But no, no, you're near him.
Forget imams.
You're near someone who's alt-right, so you have to be fired.
So this guy's a teacher.
He gets fired from his job.
So he decides to sue.
He is fighting back, and he says, I hope to put a chill on Antifa and their supporters, thinking that they could just go around ruining people's lives.
Somebody has to take a stand, and I'm going to be that person, says Jack Murphy.
Now, who outed him?
A very interesting woman.
I tried to get her on the show.
She poched, claiming that there's footage of this, but a deplorable, some guy, there was a mob of 500 people trying to kill us, throwing batteries and feces.
Some guy comes at me, walks in front of my pass.
I nail him.
Then the cops come in and jump on him because we were about to be killed.
And so she portrays it as I hit him and then ran behind the police.
But that's why, by the way, she refuses to be on the show.
But I want her to come on the show and discuss doxing this guy and getting him fired.
This is a guy who teaches at charter schools.
He's a father.
And she is, I believe her to be totally irrational.
I mean, she is an anti-Fa activist.
She doesn't hide her face.
That's one plus for her.
And I like anarchists in theory.
But she met this Turkish Muslim guy and she went back to Turkey with him because he's Muslim and he's a person of color and that's great to have in your Rolodex.
And it's this willful naivete we saw with Pippa Beca, who went to hitchhiking to prove that Muslims aren't rapists and she was murdered.
You know, it's the Timothy Treadwill thing all over again.
I'm going to go befriend the grizzly bears to show you're uptight.
But this is, in her words, this is what happened with her Muslim boyfriend.
I endured threats that I would be burnt with cigarettes, flinching as he faked with his lit cigarette.
I had to duck to avoid having sharp objects thrown at my face.
I had water angrily poured over my head.
Unwanted sex, question mark?
Rape?
All the time.
He did not stop to determine whether I was consensual to sex.
She gets beaten and raped and abused, eventually thrown in jail over there.
And she remains unthwarted in her attack on no, Nazis.
It's Nazis.
It's the rumor, this faint whiff of someone that might be right wing.
But Jack Murphy isn't the only one.
Look at this.
UC Berkeley faces lawsuit over violent rioting at free speech event.
They've got a bunch of people suing Berkeley and the college, I mean, and the city and the police for allowing this riot to happen.
And they did.
There was no police for miles.
Friend of ours, Proud Boy, was knocked unconscious and beaten after he was unconscious, which is particularly disturbing.
But yeah, it was a planned attack as far as I'm concerned.
They wanted a riot to happen there so they could later say, well, we can't have Republicans here.
Gets too crazy.
Isn't that insane, though?
I mean, that's like saying, I'm going to cut the brakes on this family's minivan so I can make minivans look bad.
Actually, they did that with Fast and Furious, right?
They sent illegal guns over the border to Mexico saying, oh, I hope this makes guns look bad.
Yeah, but you're going to get people killed, you lunatic?
Anyway, one of the plaintiffs is Katrina Redelsheimer.
Let's talk to her.
Katrina Redelsheimer, are you there?
I'm here.
Hello.
How are you doing?
I'm doing pretty well.
I'm glad to be out of the Bay Area.
Do you go to Berkeley as a student?
I do not know.
I do have a sibling who went to Berkeley, but my connection to Berkeley is really just I lived in the Bay Area for a decade and an awful lot of events and stuff take place there that I attended over the year with significantly less incident than attempting to see Milo.
Now, are you a conservative?
Are you right-wing?
I would say I'm right libertarian or arguably even anarcho-capitalist.
So not a traditional conservative, definitely not fully aligned with all of Milo's views.
But I'm also a free speech extremist like him.
So I would kind of go see anybody that people are trying to shut down.
Well, like New York City, Berkeley believes that if you're not completely left and you don't have a Shea Guevara shirt on, you're a Nazi who wants to commit ethnic cleansing against the entire country and round people up into camps and murder them all.
Yep, turns out.
So, okay, because that's sort of a separate subject, but I've always, I was going to say, what's it like living in that area?
But I know, I live in New York City.
I do a talk and people beat up old men and strangle them.
Right.
No, it's crazy because when I first moved to the Bay Area, and that was, you know, a little over 10 years ago, I was actually very impressed because I've never been shy about my views.
And I expected a little bit of ostracism, a little bit of resistance.
I'm an anti-environmentalist, for instance, and that's a big thing in San Francisco.
But the entire time I've lived there, I've been totally open and people were very like, yeah, man, cool, like you do, you, you know?
And they seem to legitimately embrace this individualism and this diversity of opinion and that kind of thing.
I never, I once had a problem, never, never, never.
And something in the last two years changed.
And I don't think it just changed in Berkeley.
I think it changed across the country, maybe even globally, where suddenly the people who are saying, like, you know, yeah, man, whatever, that's cool, were suddenly saying, you know, stay away from me or you deserve to be shut down.
And yeah, then on the extreme end, either punching people or an awful lot of people who are okay that that's happening.
And that was very disturbing to see, although pretty eye-opening.
I mean, I think it's kind of revealing the true character of a lot of people.
Yeah, it really is a zenith in the past two years.
Now, I was talking about a night for freedom that we did the other night, and all these antifoot people were outside screaming.
The police instantly erected these two fences that were honestly maybe 18 feet high.
Maybe I'm exaggerating.
12 feet high.
They were massive.
You couldn't climb them.
I don't know where these fences came from.
And yes, one guy did get strangled and they dashed his head against the pavement and he had a cardiac arrest.
The dude who did it has gone to jail for a long time.
But the police were there and they kept the protesters away.
Conversely, Berkeley, we saw cops sitting on their asses, frustrated that they had to sit on their asses, by the way.
I never say f the police.
I say f the police's boss.
And we find out later that Jesse Aguera, who's friends, Jesse Aguera, the mayor of Berkeley, who's friends with Yvette Falerca on Facebook, he's basically part of these anti-fug groups.
There's a lot of evidence to suggest that he told not just the cops, but the Berkeley cops to stand down in order to foment a riot so then he could later say, hey, we can't have Republicans in our city.
It causes too much trouble.
Is that a fair assessment?
It seems like it.
I mean, obviously, we'll see what we find out in Discovery, but he was tweeting out before the event that he felt Milo shouldn't be allowed to come to campus.
So clearly not a First Amendment fan at the very least.
He's not in charge of the UC police, who were the first group to kind of stand down.
And you're absolutely right that kind of a lot of the rank and file cops there were not happy about that decision.
A lot of them weren't even called in that night to work.
So they were really not happy about that.
But the decision being made between the university and the head of the university police was essentially the same thing.
They were, I suppose, I'm not sure what they were protecting.
I mean, they retreated inside a university building, but that building sustained quite a bit of damage, about $100,000.
So they weren't really protecting the university property.
Arguably, they, you know, Milo, I think, was inside there.
So maybe they were helping protect Milo.
And then other than that, they're protecting themselves.
And right, rather than like happened in New York, erecting a barricade that separated the people who were protesting from the people who were trying to attend the talk, which is what we saw at virtually every other campus that Milo went and spoke at, you know, successfully, even where there was violence, they erected barricades that essentially just funneled everyone into the same place with like total chaos, no direction on where to go.
And we just kind of got caught up in that maelstrom.
Yeah.
Well, we had a guy, a friend of mine, Paul, we call him, he got brained with a protester sign, knocked out cold.
It was all over the news.
And then they started beating him, his unconscious body, beating him with signs and stuff.
What happened to you that day, that night?
So we were part of a group of about, by that point, eight people.
And we had some people earlier, but they bailed, probably wiser than us, I guess.
And we were thinking that the event was going to go on.
We were just waiting for the doors to open.
Had no idea that it was canceled.
And right before we were about to give up and leave, they decided to start their black block march.
So they all lined up and they were marching from the left of us across to the right.
And there were also protesters to the right of us, some of whom had threatened us earlier.
So we felt we weren't in a position to safely evacuate.
And our best bet was to just kind of try and stand there, be very quiet, not talk to anyone, very passive.
You know, a lot of us were in completely neutral clothing.
There's the famous Make Bitcoin Great Again hat.
Right.
Chiara Broadways got pepper sprayed.
Yeah.
She was in our group.
One guy had a Trump beanie.
Other than that, everyone was in completely plain sort of street clothes.
Didn't engage with them at all.
But as they started to walk past us, they came out in honestly a very coordinated attack.
Someone came out with a flashlight to disorient Kiara.
Then some people came in to start yelling at us and then started claiming that we were being violent when we were just standing there.
Then a guy came in and hit my husband on the head with a flagpole.
That gave him a concussion and his memory kind of goes out from there.
Then someone came in, pepper sprayed every single one of us.
And from that point, we were pretty much just helpless.
They mobbed my husband.
They beat him unconscious, broke his ribs.
That was this Ian Dabney Miller guy who apparently worked for the university, at least at the time, who bragged about doing that on social media.
And then meanwhile, all I could think to do was turn around and face the barricade to try and at least protect my face.
And people were coming up, pelting me with more sticks.
And I don't even know what else.
Someone sprayed chemicals down my back and I was trapped there until some good Samaritans on the other side of the barricade pulled me over and got me out of out of harm's way.
Unbelievable.
You know, I don't doubt that Jesse Aguero planned this and more evidence keeps coming up.
For example, have you seen this Where are the Berkeley police thing trending where Berkeley police are quitting, not showing up?
They're having trouble recruiting.
I did hear about that, yeah.
So that's more proof that the police are mad about this.
But the other thing about it is how sinister are you to plan a riot for political gains?
Like, I understand maybe cutting the mics at a rally or something to make yourself look good.
That's even dastardly.
Or, you know, refusing to show up or slashing the tires of the bus that was bringing people.
Those are all horrible things.
But to allow for a riot, I mean, the risks there of someone dying, it's either remarkably naive and just stupid to not realize that a riot can be dangerous or just evil.
Right.
Yeah.
I think the left overplayed their hand big time in 2017, and they're still seeing the consequences and the fallout from that.
But at the same time, they also are evil.
You know, it's like someone easily could have died.
I could have died.
You know, I fell, hit my head on the concrete, got a concussion.
My husband could have died.
Your boy could have died.
He's also in a lawsuit, actually.
He suffered the worst of anyone that we've been able to find.
But yeah, I mean, people all the time, you know, people die in bar fights.
You know, it's very much just coincidence that someone died at Charlottesville at an ostensibly right-wing event before they died in one of these left-wing attacks.
But at the same time, the people who are doing this, at least in Berkeley, this isn't their first rodeo, right?
They know to some extent how to organize a mob.
And it sounds weird to say that a riot is organized, but from sitting there on the ground, it was very clear that there were people directing things.
There were people who had orders and were carrying them out.
And the level of violence and the level of damage that was committed was to a certain extent very intentional.
And yes, of course, someone still could have died, but it was weird to see this sort of controlled chaos that they were in.
these people are like moonies.
They're cults.
Especially in Berkeley, a lot of these kids are homeless and they're brainwashed kids in a cult.
Like here in New York, that guy who strangled the old man, he's looking at 15 to 20 years.
I don't think he realized that when he did it.
Or we had a guy, Jovie Valle, was wearing a MAGA hat in New York and he got smashed with a bottle.
I think the guy who did that has never done that before and doesn't realize that a bottle can sever your facial arteries, permanently disfiguring you.
It's assault battery.
It can be manslaughter.
And you could be looking at a long time.
We see this with the deplorable, sorry, yeah, the J-20, Disrupt J-20 thing.
Those guys were looking at decades in prison.
I don't think these idiots understand what they're doing.
I don't think so.
No.
And that's part of the reason why I filed the lawsuit because in a few, you know, on the fringes, they get away with this stuff sometimes.
Berkeley still hasn't arrested anyone, even the people that we've identified, right?
One person was arrested that night.
I'm not sure what related to, but certainly not related to assaulting us.
Everyone else has, on a criminal charges basis, basically gotten away with it.
But we still have the civil court option.
And right now, I think we have a lot of people who think that they can go out and do this.
They can go out and LARP as street fighters and then expect to go and still get a white collar job or still get supported by their parents or, you know, still be able to own a home and just be kind of an average person who happens to do this horrible violence at night.
And it really should be one or the other that you have to choose.
That's why they wear masks is because they want to have a separate identity.
There's the riot me and the work me.
So who exactly are you suing?
So we're suing the individuals that we've been able to identify so far.
And then in Discovery, we hope to identify a whole lot more.
How many is that?
Right now we have two.
Samian Miller and we have Raha Mirabdahl.
Miller, I already mentioned how we caught him.
Mirabdahl assaulted a friend of mine at a subsequent event and got arrested from that.
So because of that, we got her picture and we found out who she is.
She's a nurse at a children's hospital, by the way.
Speaking of people having incompatible jobs with, you know, being a violent revolutionary.
Yeah, they're always teachers or something.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then we're suing the university.
The university has certain premises, liability obligations to people who are, you know, the campus is open to the public.
It was a public event.
So suing them under those.
Then the more, you could say, stretch claim where we're kind of trying a new sort of constitutional argument is against the police.
So the Berkeley city police and the university police.
And then the city of Berkeley is named as well.
Does the city of Berkeley include Jesse Aguero?
We didn't name him personally.
I'm not sure about that part of the suit.
I refer you to my lawyer.
Sorry.
He's the bad guy in all this, I think.
I think he's the first domino.
Yeah, probably.
Bad man.
And how many people are on your side of this suit?
There are four plaintiffs.
Although, if there are other people who are interested in getting involved who are attacked that night, my lawyers are very, very interested in helping out anyone.
And not just at Berkeley, by the way.
I mean, plenty of your boys have had similar horrific, well, some often worse experiences.
And the attorneys helping me are very eager to push back against this.
Yeah, I have that one.
Well, I got to get my guys together with you because there was the one who was knocked out where they beat him after he was down.
But there was three other guys that were in an ambulance with their heads cut open.
So I think we can get this up to 10 just right there.
That'd be awesome.
Oh, great.
Well, it's nice to see someone fighting back for a change because these spoiled brats have been getting away with all but murder for a long time now and painting the narrative as the victims simultaneously.
It's shocking.
Yeah, it's been interesting to see the number of people who, I mean, I think it's faded at this point, but an awful lot of people just in major, major denial mode.
I was hearing that the riot was actually orchestrated by Milo and Breitbart.
They funded people to come in.
And, you know, on my perspective, I got hurt.
I just want, I don't, if that's true, I want that to come to light too.
You know, I want to sue whoever's responsible.
I want to hold people to account.
I don't care what side they're on.
That's something I don't think you hear leftists say too often, unfortunately.
But, you know.
Yeah, it's America.
It's not Venezuela.
You're allowed to go listen to a talk.
Yeah.
Sorry, I interrupted you there.
Was that the last thing you said?
No, I was just saying that so far there isn't any evidence of that, right?
I mean, a lot, a lot, a lot of research has been done largely independently, you know, by us and by other amazing people on the internet.
You know, Pave Darker is the guy who found Ian Miller.
He's just some dude in the UK with an internet connection, you know, and a will to do the right thing.
It's amazing what we can figure out, you know, finding people like Eric Clanton the way that, you know, the Chans did, it's just, it's really amazing.
They're not able to get away with this stuff as much anymore.
And even when you have the institutional apathy that we see in Berkeley, there's still, you know, there's still the civil court, there's still the federal system, and they're still just making us think about it on social media.
So it makes a huge difference with shows like yours publicizing this stuff because people can't just deny it anymore.
You know, the legacy media can't just cover it up.
There's too many ways to get the information out there.
Okay, so how do we get in contact with you if we find more people?
Should I put an email on the screen here or how should we do this?
If they can reach out to me on Twitter, that would be great.
I'm at S Misanthrope on there.
Or I also have the email smisanthropy at gmail that they can contact me at.
All right.
Those are right there on the screen right now.
And thank you for doing this.
Well, let's keep in constant contact so we see the development of this case.
Yeah, let's do it.
All right.
See you later.
Let's take a moment to look at some incredibly obese cheerleaders, shall we?
We've got cool snake skins on.
Oh my God.
I'm getting exhausted just watching them.
I mean, I would be exhausted doing this.
But if I was carrying a person on my person, If I had people wrapped around my waist, what's going on now?
Uh-oh, and kind of a flip.
This is pathetic.
This is not good.
This is terrible.
Look, she slammed into her.
They're moshing now.
Oh, they're gonna throw up.
You can't let yourself get that exhausted.
I kind of like it.
It's kind of sexual in a weird way.
Oh, this is good now.
Now it's getting good.
All right.
You know what?
What was that?
This is both good and horribly embarrassing at the same time.
I mean, they're on some beautiful grass, but even though there was some good moments there, I'm afraid, ladies, you're going to have to get off my lawn.
I'm pleased to tell you today that I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever.
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