All Episodes
Sept. 8, 2025 - Louder with Crowder
58:53
🔴The Murder of A Ukrainian Refugee is A Tipping Point in American History 2025-09-08 18:08
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Neely was a well-known Michael Jackson impersonator seen here in this video.
Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine noting he'd seen him perform many times and always would make people smile.
There was no attack.
Mr. Neely did not attack anyone.
He did not touch anyone.
He did not hit anyone.
But he was choked to death.
And that can't stand.
Jordan Neely was crying out that he was hungry and thirsty when he was fatally attacked on the train by a 24-year-old former Marine named Daniel Penny.
Growing tensions in New York City over the death of a subway rider.
Protesters swarming the subway station, disrupting the service, demanding justice for Jordan Neely.
He wasn't a homeless person in distress.
He was a professional artist who stopped traffic in New York City with his talent and his abilities.
Jordan was not annoying.
Someone on the train.
Jordan was screaming for help.
Just looking at that video, you know it's wrong.
No one has the right to take the life of another person.
Come again, stupid.
No one has the right to take the life of another person.
Really?
Death penalty?
I guess you're against that.
Uh deadly use of force.
What about take the life of someone who's in the process of trying to kill an innocent person?
Tell that to a rapist in New York.
Yeah.
Kathy Hogel.
Tell that to a rape, uh, a rape victim.
You know what else took out?
Stick out to me there.
They said, he was screaming, he was hungry and thirsty.
Who gives a shit?
That's what my kids do if I put them in a timeout, right?
They all of a sudden they're hoping from a call from the governor.
Like, no, no, no, you can't, you can't, whatever it is.
You can't push your sister, you can't push your brother.
Oh, but I'm hungry, but I'm thirsty.
I go, well, then stay hungry and thirsty until you come and till you apologize.
That's something that someone is doing because they wanna they want to get out of dealing with the consequences of their actions.
Screaming, threatening, and then okay, we're gonna restrain you.
Oh, man, I'm thirsty.
Tough shit.
Yeah, no kidding.
By the way, they want you to wait right up until the moment.
Somebody can mean screaming, they can seem out of their mind, they could cover themselves with feces.
They want you to wait right up to the moment where they try to punch you in the face.
Yeah.
Or they try to stab your own.
That try isn't good enough.
It has to be it has to be done.
This is this is my whole point.
Like at that point, you like restrained?
That's the the easiest part of what you get.
Yeah.
I'm sorry.
This whole culture of you just got to deal with it.
Again, it's prioritizing these people over us.
Yep.
And by the way, they're doing it right now on CNN.
Watch.
Right now.
They're prioritizing criminals running rampant in Chicago.
Tom Holman was in Chicago doing a major immigration enforcement action.
And on the military front, I'll just note we have reported uh in months ago that the point was to at some point bring the U.S. military when it came to immigration enforcement.
This has been top of mind for them for a long time.
They've had discussions internally about how to move National Guard from one state to uh operate in another state.
So this has been part of their planning all along.
It just comes down to how do you do it and does it stand up legally?
Yeah.
And then the question is whether I just add one more thing to piggyback off of what Ayesha said.
There's also a question of what the facts are.
I mean, the president is barbie.
DC is now a crime-free zone.
It's just not true.
I pushed back on that a little gently last night when we were talking and said, Mr. President, there is still crime in DC.
Yeah, but was there a lot more crime?
We're a lot more people dying because you've had your policy unfettered.
We're a lot more people dying in DC.
And do you think that if they send in the National Guard and try anything different, there'll be more or fewer murders every weekend in Chicago?
They never start.
They never start with the jumping off point.
Hey, maybe you don't deserve to die.
How about that?
You live in the United States.
Before we talk about any other rights, first one, right to life.
You have the right to not be assaulted and not be killed.
It's almost like that's the primary function of government.
External threats like terrorists and uh known drug cartels.
Oops sorry, Krasnisteen and Rand Paul say they need due process.
And internal threats, like gangs and serial violent offenders.
No, no, no, no.
Due process.
Dude, come on, guys.
We gotta make sure we're not animals here.
What kind of a society would we be if we put a man behind bars after his first or thirteenth crime?
Yeah, and look, the the the Rand Paul guys, I just it's it's worse than that.
It's when he says, oh, they might strike us.
They already were.
Yeah.
This guy was planning and and carrying out the murder of American forces anywhere that he could find them.
And you're worried that if we take him out, maybe other people will get pissed off and attack us?
Actually, what might happen is other people might have somebody taste their food for a while.
Other people might make sure that we don't know what car they're driving in for a while that are terrorists.
So they may put their head back down in the sand for just a little bit.
You don't just let people continue to kill you and then go, no, no, no, no, no, we can't do anything about it.
Yeah.
That's the one case where you can look at it and go, of course that guy should die immediately.
Of course, the minute the missiles lock on, push the button.
I'm gonna tell my son that if he ever has a bully in school that uh he can't bounce his head off the pavement because another bully will just take his place.
Yes, exactly.
Yes.
Sometimes bullies see you make an example of one and they move on.
Yes.
Matter of fact, that's the most likely scenario if you do it effectively and violently enough.
And by that I mean morally.
It's the morally um actually, it's not a more moral decision.
If you are dealing with a violent bully who is harming people, and you don't violently deal with them to eliminate the threat, I believe that you're actually uh abdicating your moral duty.
Yes.
That's what we're supposed to do.
So why the silence on this murder?
Well, the victim, uh, Irina Zerutska is a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee, very attractive white European woman.
I, by the way, also dressing down, so clearly wasn't trying to uh grab a bunch of attention there on the uh the public uh or or the the train, the rail she was riding on.
She's not a charity case, she was working, she was coming back from work, you know, contributing, so migrated here to avoid a war zone, came here and was contributing, went to work.
Yeah.
What do you think would have happened if she was black and he was what you know what?
If she was a he and was black, and the killer was white, what do you think would happen?
You know, I can tell you what would happen because George Floyd died after many, many, many minutes of being treated very charitably by the police, putting him in a car, loosening the handcuffs, giving him air conditioning, getting him a drink, and it still was seen as one of the greatest evils of our country, equal to slavery.
Or Mike Brown, who uh had just robbed a convenience store only moments prior and was trying to grab Officer Darren Wilson's gun and repeatedly hitting him in the face, and he was shot as a result, and he was venerated.
This is an actual woman who had done nothing wrong.
You can't even argue hands up, don't shoot, because there was no conflict.
She wasn't an activist.
She wasn't in a gray area, even.
She was a completely helpless victim whose death is the direct result of a corrupt you want to talk systemic corruption?
What kind of a system do we have that allows a violent offender off 14 times to kill someone like this?
Also, it comes with really bad timing, right?
Because you see this on scene, and they're more concerned, they really want to make sure that you know Donald Trump's a fascist because he wants to cut down on crime.
Crime is crime is down.
People are safer.
Read this from Axios.
They have stabbing fuels MAGA's crime message.
Oh no.
I'm more concerned with the uh I'm more concerned with the stabbing.
It's me, Mr. Old Fashioned.
Unbelievable.
The article writes, the uh the rising number of surveillance cameras in public spaces, including on Charlotte's light rail, has become an accelerant in these cases, a big accelerant.
The video is easily shared or leaked and can instantly pollinate across social media.
A visual counterpoint to statistics showing crime decreases.
Uh, let me give you a few lies here.
Crime decreases.
Wait a second, are you talking about post-COVID?
We saw a huge rise.
Has it gone down to pre-COVID levels?
It depends on the town.
Not in DC, not in Chicago, not quite certain about Charlotte, but if you're saying, hey, it's half of a two, three hundred percent increase, it's still more than it was before.
And you know what else?
It's a lot harder to swallow the pill of a senseless murder when it's one that was entirely preventable.
And here's the thing.
When you look at what the left their policies are not just designed for uh to protect bad people, they are designed around protecting people from facing accountability for entirely preventable murders.
Do you understand that?
Abre Abrego Garcia, human trafficker.
Let me ask you, you think human traffickers are more or less likely to kill somebody than non-human traffickers?
When you look at illegal aliens, for example, taking over entire towns, part of trend arawa, however you pronounce it, I don't care because they're subhuman scum in uh Colorado.
Do you think those people are more or less likely to kill innocent Americans?
When you have sanctuary cities and people come in here and they're completely off the books, often running drugs and contribute to crime more than the average American citizen, despite what the left tells you.
Do you think those people are more or less likely to kill innocent Americans?
When you have catch and release and no cash bail and a revolving door as you had in New York City, do you think people who've already committed one, two, three, four, five, thirteen, sometimes twenty something violent crimes, do you think they're more likely or less likely to kill an innocent person?
These people didn't die because there are a few bad apples.
These people, people like Zerutzka, died because these bad apples that were known, inspected, bad apple, thrown back out with the rest of you.
Entirely preventable.
Why does the left always protect those who harm you?
Why is Axios publishing this story right now?
It says it's a visual counterpoint to the the statistics that crime is going not fast enough, not low enough.
What is it?
I don't even care that crime is going down.
And they're tweaking.
The direction of crime right now doesn't even matter to this story.
The visual counterpoint, yeah, you get to see evil.
And what's their slant that we should get rid of these cameras?
What what's their point?
Well, they they don't like these that the public sees it.
This influx of uh surveillance videos is i if is really dangerous.
Let me ask you this.
How many videos of Alligator Alcatraz did you post?
How many videos of poor Abrego Garcia who knows speak of English crying did you post?
So you have a problem with a video of an MS-13 proven gang member.
Just look at the tattoos, right?
We covered that for a long time.
You have a problem showing that he's a gang member.
You you don't have a problem with him saying I don't speak an English and feeling bad for him, but you have a problem with the video showing that he beat his wife?
You have a problem with the video being shown of him trafficking human beings.
Hey, do you did you have a problem with I can't breathe?
George Floyd being shown?
Or do you have a problem with the lead up to it being shown?
Did what vi what videos I'm just I'm I'm confused.
What videos are we allowed to show?
Did you have a problem with there are fine people on both sides being shown?
Or did you have a problem with the video that was eight seconds longer?
Where President Trump said, I'm not talking about neo-Nazis or white supremacists who should be condemned totally.
So you're very selective in which videos you have a problem with.
The issue is I actually think the videos, as far as journalistic merit, are most valuable when they give American citizens um the information and ability to make more informed decisions, especially as it relates to protecting life and limb.
I think those are probably most appropriate.
It's almost like it's the primary job of journalists.
I'll give you the solution here.
Hope someone's listening, because I know they were on H1Bs.
Judges, gone.
Soft on crime, you let someone out.
If they commit another violent crime, if they harm anyone, and they're out there because you allowed them to be out there, whether it's a written IOU like this case, or a shortened sentence, you no longer are a judge.
You're not allowed to see a courtroom, period.
Think of it like malpractice with a doctor.
Yep.
You get super malpractice, you lose, lose your right to be a doctor.
Gone.
Done.
No more, and then we'll replace them with judges that use good judgment.
And then you, right now personally, start carrying a firearm.
I want everyone on that bus, sorry, on that train, or Daniel Penny.
I want everyone on that subway carrying.
Could you have stopped it?
No, this was completely random violence as far as in the moment, you'd probably be very confused.
This guy was only emboldened to commit that violence because he was so so fearless as it related to consequences from society or the legal system.
But but some of those other violent crimes were committed in public.
They could have taken out the trash for us, though.
Yeah.
Imagine.
Seriously, at that point, who who knows he's gonna stop?
Nobody knows he's gonna stop.
You pull out your gun, bang, bang, bang, here you go.
Yep.
Here's a medal.
Thank you very much for taking this piece of crap off the streets.
I don't care if it's because he's schizophrenic or not.
He's killing people.
No, one stab and that's it.
So armed robbery and assault.
So he committed an armed robbery, right?
Assault.
Um he threatened people.
Um so let me just do the let's say that there's an average of if you are in a public setting, whether it's a subway, a bus, and a restaurant, wherever you're committing an armed robber, let's say it's an average of five people, okay, over the course of ten crimes.
All right, so now you're looking at fifty.
What are the chances that one of them is concealed carrying?
I'd like to see those odds go up.
If 10% of this country is carrying firearms, guess what?
This guy runs into someone who blows him away before he gets to kill a 23-year-old girl.
How about that?
So judges gone.
Culture of concealed carry, and more importantly, along with the judges, the systemic issue, we need a fast track, an express lane for good Samaritans.
We don't need people being afraid to be the next Daniel Penny.
We need people going, well, hey, even if I'm a little bit wrong on this one, at least I'll get the Daniel Penny treatment where I get a I get a medal, and I don't have to pay a dime because I help save American citizens.
And I know what you're gonna say.
We're gonna have some gray area, we're gonna have some people who are a little bit trigger-happy.
I'm okay with it.
You know why?
We've tried it the other way for so long.
Yes.
Judges gone, start carrying your guns, and we need a system of laws that rewards good Samaritans who don't abandon their moral duty to protect those vulnerable among us.
Shoot them.
Should be the policy from our systems.
In other words, if people have a question and go to a judge.
So we now have a judge in this alternative universe, uh, alternative universe here.
We now have a judge, we now have the law, and someone goes, hey, your honor, I have a question.
If I'm on a bus or if I'm on a subway and I'm legally carrying a firearm, and I see someone beating up uh a lady, or I see someone threatening to kill everyone on the subway, uh, or I see them shoving around a lady or mugging someone.
Am I allowed to?
And the judge can respond without hesitation, shoot them.
Come see me.
There's your there's your alternative universe.
Sound better?
Does it sound too extreme?
Or, you know, you can keep playing PC football and deny the realities.
Music Especially when you're trying to just keep to yourself.
Oh, lay it's random mass.
I love that we threw Don Lemon in there.
It's a lot of fun.
Uh was there an update or something?
I saw that uh Noodles was uh different stories are happening right now with uh relating to President Trump and just different conversations about vaccine stuff, but there was one thing specifically uh talking about immigration enforcement.
So the the stuff that he was doing in in LA, like targeting these different areas went to the Supreme Court, and they're like, Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course he can do it.
Uh lifts the limits on the immigration enforcement tactics.
Right.
So you mean you mean you have a question as to whether the pres the president of the president of the United States, like that uh can enforce yes, of course he what?
Yeah, it's dismissed.
Thank you very much.
Like it should be that fast.
Can he go into places with federal agents and find them?
No matter if they're in a home depot parking lot or at some farm that they know.
Yes, of course.
Let me the hell are you talking about?
Yeah.
And they it's just another example of the left constantly defending criminals.
They want a society where criminals can run free and you're terrified to protect yourself.
That's that's the perfect society, just so you know, for leftists.
Why are they elected?
Why what's their motivation?
Because you're easily controllable.
You're easily controllable.
Daddy government is the one who protects you.
Let me give you two uh two scenarios, okay?
So we say, what would the left do if they had unfettered power?
Well, you you have the answer.
So let's just go with that story right there.
Okay.
The left will create sanctuary cities.
How do I know?
because they've done so.
And then when these sanctuary cities result in rampant violent crime and people concerned to walk the streets safely, uh, the government, the federal government that was elected, would not have the ability to go in and do anything about it.
Why?
Because the liberals have said they have no right to.
Thank God the Supreme Court stepped in, but they're going to create sanctuary cities.
They're going to keep these criminals in their cities.
They're not going to prosecute.
They're not going to allow any outside forces, even if it's under their federal purview, right?
They're not going to allow the federal government to come in and deal with the problem.
Oh, and by the way, if you live there, not only are these going to remain sanctuary cities, and the federal government can't solve it, but you of course are not allowed to carry a firearm or even have one loaded in your house.
Call the police who we've defunded.
Yes.
Wait, call the so-called racist cops who are just gonna shoot you.
So that's dealing with illegal immigrants.
Then let's deal with the American citizens right here.
Let's go with Charlotte.
Okay.
Well, what would they do?
This man's a serial violent offender.
He absolutely should be allowed out with no bail.
How do we know that?
Because they did it many times.
Okay.
And then what would we do to deal with this violent crime?
Nothing.
We need to treat it just like cancer or heart disease or diabetes.
We need to be compassionate because we're not going to arrest our way out of homelessness.
Okay.
Well, then what do I do if I am law, I'm a law abiding citizen?
How do I protect myself from someone who's a serial offender 14 times?
Well, you can't have a firearm, you can't protect yourself because we know the left doesn't want that either.
Call the cops who, by the way, we've also defunded.
Every step of the way, you're going, hey, um, your honor, I follow the law, I pay my taxes.
What can I do to ensure the safety of my shut up, nothing?
And every single time.
They've got throngs of illegal aliens and serial violent felons.
Don't you make me don't you care about a tattoo when he was young?
It doesn't mean anything now.
How about what about me though?
What about me?
I have a family.
I'm in the I'm in this country.
I don't want to live in fear.
I know you're saying they're afraid.
They're not that afraid across the border to get here and they're committing crimes.
It's a revolving door, but I kind of am.
Shut up, white boy.
Yeah.
Every step of the way?
Give me one example.
One example where systemically, if the left had their way as far as policy, it would favor the American taxpayer, the American working taxpayer, the law-abiding backbone of America.
Give me an example.
Well, there is in California where they they made the law where you can steal up to $999.
True.
So that they actually the criminals now don't call them criminals.
Right.
That's their income.
Right.
They now have to pay taxes on that income.
True.
That's right.
So that thousand dollars that they stole from you, they have to pay, you know, it's like the price of Christ in the case.
If you get the showcase, you still have to pay the taxes.
Yeah.
I mean, no word yet on uh how they'll prosecute these violent felons who don't pay taxes uh because they tend to let them out on an IOU.
Oh, they prosecute them.
Well, not not just not just violent felons.
Sorry, I want to make sure everybody has a timeline right.
He was released, I think, in 2020.
Uh I believe it was September if I'm off on this just a little bit.
Uh don't worry, I'll get the the part right that is important.
I believe in September.
In February, he was arrested again.
After serving five years in prison, in February, not even going a full six months, arrested again.
Or I I think roughing up uh a family member.
His sister, I think it's important to mention that it's another woman.
I couldn't remember for the city.
He's assaulting another woman.
Yeah, and so assaulting another woman.
And then around that same time frame, his mom apparently, and this is this was something that couldn't find as many sources as I'd like to, had him involuntarily committed where he was diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Maybe, maybe we do have it now.
There we go.
Voluntarily involuntarily, like, hey, he is crazy.
I'm gonna do this.
Then gets arrested.
Hold on, let me let me keep going here, right?
Gets arrested again, and then no, no, no, put put back out on the street, that's totally fine.
And then in 2024, had an incident where he called 911, apparently he misused the 911 services.
They did a wellness check as well, and he said that somebody had put some man-made object in his body that was controlling his behavior.
That's in 2024.
This year went before a judge and uh the IOU, yeah, you can kind of come back.
All of this is in the purview.
Like all of this is like the rearview mirror of this guy's behavior over here.
And the judge is like, yeah, you go back out with the uh the citizens.
And then if if you can't trust anybody, his own legal team comes out and says this guy is not fit to stand trial, can we do something about this?
That was in July.
Is anybody at some point going, there are alarm bells going off every single step of the way.
If you're not fit to stay on trial, you're not fit to be in society.
Of course, of course.
You should be sequestered.
Here's the door to the jail.
We have a cell for you.
That's exactly what should happen.
If you're not fit to stay in trial, you're not fit to walk out of this courtroom.
Or at the very least a mental facility.
Yeah, if we could bring some asylums back, that'd be great.
Yeah.
Imagine being in the family.
Yes.
Imagine being the family of that girl where you and I don't know.
Look, uh I have no idea if they're here, how many of them are still in Ukraine.
If they can unfortunately, you kind of know how a lot of these people vote if they're living in urban areas and and and and and female.
But imagine the parents' line of question.
Wait a second, what happened?
Wait, when did this happen?
What was my daughter doing?
Who was this man?
It was it was the 14th time.
Why was he not in prison?
Yeah.
What was his bail?
It was nothing.
Wait, he said he would go back?
You guys knew this person was insane and violent?
And my daughter is dead?
Why didn't Oh, he's black.
I guess there's nothing you can do.
Nothing.
Nothing we could do about it at all.
By the way, there are a lot of people out there right now saying that uh President Trump is eerily quiet on this as well.
He's not.
He's addressed it.
We have the clip.
Oh, okay.
Let's uh do we have the clip right now?
All right, let's play it.
I just give my love and hope to the family of the young woman who was stabbed this morning or last night in Charlotte by a madman, a lunatic, just got up and started straight on the tape.
Not not really watchable because it's so horrible.
But uh just viciously stab.
She's just sitting there.
So they're evil people.
We have to be able to handle that.
If we don't handle that, we don't have a country.
100% right.
And look, my our friend, Mr. Gunzengear, he he says this a lot, plan accordingly.
Plan accordingly with a lot of different situations that you put out there.
Plan accordingly.
Land if you're on the taxpayer money.
Plan accordingly.
Yeah, exactly.
If you're carrying, but ladies, if you're on a train, plan accordingly.
Well, you know what though?
No, hold on a second.
I'm gonna I'm gonna go.
I don't want to c don't want to uh I'm not saying that he is, but that idea is a cop-out.
What is let's be honest here.
Hey, bring up that clip.
Bring up the clip again of of Zarutskka uh sorry, getting on the uh the the uh train.
And I'm gonna finish my thought because I wanted to make sure I said it the way I want to do.
Sorry, go ahead.
No, no, no, no.
I mean I could do it after this.
Okay.
Well, I just I I'm probably gonna go a different direction and I don't want to put words in your mouths in your mouth.
Until they allow you to carry everywhere, until these judges don't just let people back out that are schizophrenic and say that they can't stay in trial.
Until this is all fixed, plan accordingly.
Because the government is not helping us right now with anything that they're doing.
The DAs aren't helping us, the judges aren't helping us.
Unfortunately, uh law enforcement doesn't seem to be helping us in a lot of these cases.
Plan accordingly.
Yeah.
And I'll tell you how can I get help.
I'll tell you what that is.
So um, you know, we applied this to mass shootings, right?
Uh to school shootings.
You should not be have putting your kids in public school.
Right?
93, 94% of guns of mass shootings occur in gun-free zones.
Don't put your children in one of the most vulnerable gun-free zones for eight hours a day.
There's a start.
Private school is better.
Private school with security is better.
Homeschooling is best.
But there's a there are a couple of steps.
If you're an individual, you're an adult here in the United States, and you don't want to be a victim of this.
Well, um, first off, don't live in a major urban area if you can avoid it.
Of course, avoid public transit in an urban area.
And the left wants all of you on mass transit.
That's why Mom Donnie wants more of it and wants it to be free.
Of course you shouldn't.
In particular, after dark.
But I'll take it another step further.
Let's uh play the clip the the portion of the clip where she actually gets on that train.
No.
Uh I have it.
I have it.
If the one where she's walking out, yeah, the one where she's walking in.
Okay.
Noodles got it.
All right, let's play this.
All right.
So it looks like it's nighttime, so pause.
Okay.
Urban area.
Don't live there if you can avoid it.
Public transit.
Don't take it if you can avoid it.
Night time.
That's where you shouldn't be taking it, in particular if you can avoid it, and please avoid doing so alone.
Now, just to be clear, I'm not giving you any advice that I have not practiced myself.
When I had to live in New York City, I did everything I could to get out of there as quickly as possible, and I wouldn't be traveling on the subway alone at night.
And then I would be very, very aware of my surroundings if I happen to find myself in those single-digit instances.
Keep playing.
Okay, pause.
Choosing a seat.
Here's the cold water.
I wouldn't sit with a blind spot to a man on public transit at night who is part of a demographic and seemingly emulating a culture in bright red where they make up 13% of the population, but over half of the violent crime.
I would profile him.
And if you're a woman, you don't have the luxury of not.
Now, none of this is to say that this is her fault.
It's the fault of anyone other than the system and the judge and the culture that we have.
But I do want to address the culture.
I do want to address that little voice in the back of your head where you know what I'm talking about.
You get on that subway, you get on that train at night, and you go, oh, I don't want to move to a seat where someone might think that I'm racist and think that I didn't pick this seat.
Who cares?
Go to where you think is statistically safest.
Because you've already put yourself, unfortunately, in a risk pool that is much more dangerous than at that moment in time, someone living in a suburban or rural area driving their own car.
The idea of offending someone has nothing to do with it.
And if there's no other seat available, which obviously isn't the case here, you should have eyes on that person the entire time.
Would it have stopped?
No.
I'm just gonna tell you we need to change this culture.
We need to change the culture of poor poor victim when it's a perpetrator, and we need to change the culture of I don't want to offend anyone when it's about maintaining your life.
Am I saying that if it was a white woman or Hispanic woman sitting there with a baby in her arms instead of a young black male that she would be less likely to commit a violent crime against you?
Absolutely.
So plan accordingly.
Let's be real about what that means.
Let's be real about what that means.
A white woman who's recently moved to this country by herself on public transit at night, sitting in front of a large young black male in her blind spot, that shouldn't happen.
It shouldn't happen, and we shouldn't be a culture that wants people to be so colorblind and risk blind that they don't take it into account immediately when they find themselves in that situation.
And black men watching, do you get it?
Does that offend you?
Let me ask you this, black men.
If it was your daughter, would you give her the same advice?
If it was your daughter, and you could present this as a choose your own path.
If it was your daughter and she had to come home from her job late at night on a subway or on a train, on a bus, and there are a few seats open, somewhere next to a white guy in a polo and khakis, an older woman, a Hispanic couple, and a lone black male in a hoodie with his hood over his dreads.
Which seat would be the least preferable for your black daughter to take?
Your job is to keep her safe, black father.
Be honest.
You start not understand where we're coming from.
Plan accordingly.
Yep.
It sucks, but listen, I mean, this we want to prevent future cases like this.
And look, I I get she's Ukrainian.
She's probably not looking at the same, you know, this country in the same lens that we are necessarily, but that's why We're saying this.
Yeah.
It's not victim blaming or shaming in any way, shape, or form.
We're just saying, hey, in these situations, get away.
Well, she's supposed to think.
She watches U.S. news, she watches World News, which is CNN.
She watches NBC.
She watches, you know, mainstream media.
It's where she gets her news.
Yeah.
They say there's nothing wrong.
In DC there is.
In the White House, there is.
Someone's going down.
I know I'm I'm sitting in the hot seat.
Let me ask you.
I know that plenty of you have uh have daughters here and there.
What would you tell your daughter?
Where should she sit?
Oh, it's easy.
Like if you would that be the worst seat in the house?
Would you tell her that if you had to teach her?
I would say in I listen, let me let me make this very easy for people who are maybe a little squeamish on this topic right now.
I would not sit where she sat.
I'm 6'4, 250 pounds, I can handle myself.
Yeah, you'd sit on the track.
I would not sit.
Yeah.
I wouldn't sit there.
So here's here's why.
There's two good options when she goes in there.
One is sitting with any other person on the in that car, basically.
Standing by the door.
The other one is there's a row of seats that faces the middle of the train.
It's not the back front thing, it faces the middle.
That would just to her right that she could have sat in as well.
Again, not victim blaming.
Just saying.
That's where I would have sat or I would have stood up.
And I would never have turned my back on that person on that train.
Ever.
And if I got onto a train and didn't feel safe, I would have felt like no less of a man going, not this car, not this time at night.
I'll walk.
Yep.
I'll do something different.
Don't ever be afraid of any of that.
And I certainly would have not had earbuds in and been on my phone and senses completely taken up by a screen.
That was everybody in that car, basically.
That's a very dangerous at night in those situations, just giving you tips.
That's a very dangerous thing to do.
Be aware of your surroundings.
Make sure that you can see what's going on in the car, especially if you're among the most vulnerable people, and that is women by themselves.
It's just too dangerous.
I'm sorry.
We'll do a better job in the future.
But until we do, it's just too dangerous.
Yeah.
And I as the guy who has uh the oldest daughter in the room, uh, the one who's closest to this kind of situation.
Uh I personally would not want her writing public transportation at all.
Nope.
At all.
Day, night, completely black passenger, white passenger, Asian passenger, homeless passenger.
I don't care.
There's a guy on every bus, there's a guy on every train.
If you've been on one, holy shit.
Yeah.
They had to change the name of the there's one in Seattle that they changed the name of because it was the South Lake Union Transit.
They change it to the jerk off on your jacket express.
No, no, no.
They call it South Lake Union Transit.
Oh, yeah.
And so it said slugged on the side of the little bus there in the trains.
Um, but no, I if it were me, you know, if that's me, um, you know, right now I'm doing fine.
My daughter's probably gonna have a car when she's 16, 17.
Uh, if I'm not doing so fine at that time, I work a second job.
My wife works another job.
We, I she's gonna have a car, she's gonna have a mode of transportation, she's gonna have, you know, a beater, $500, $1,000 beat or something she can go home in by herself.
I'm not taking the risk of public transit.
Yep, ever.
I'll I I'm gonna, you know, I teach my daughter lots of things.
We went to the range, you do you see.
I I teach her defense and she knows how to take care of herself.
She knows how to be aware.
The headphones thing is crazy.
It's crazy to have two headphones working in both ears when you're in public.
But yeah, I would say public tran public transit is crazy.
I I agree with you.
And that's what I have those uh uh actually we gave them all out as a Christmas party, those bows where it's it clips around your ears, so it's like having a speaker near your ear, but uh, completely open.
They have the headphones, I have a pair of beats that have the ambient uh kind of like how you're pro for shooting is yeah, where you can hear your music, but you can also hear the flight attendant go, well, you like to have some concocola or depression.
And you're like, yeah, all right.
Uh but yeah, if it's first and foremost, no public transit, you know, transit at all.
And the headphone thing is it's a real real issue.
Um headphones, being aware.
First off, I mean, when I sit at a you know, when I sit at a restaurant, uh period, I I never sit at a place where my back is just open to the door.
And yes, having a higher profile, you know, but obviously I try and be somewhere a little bit private, but you always should make sure that you can face the exits, that you can see people coming in, and certainly on a bus.
In other words, you don't have control over where you sit at a restaurant, you can choose where you sit at the table, but on a bus, you can you can either sit somewhere where no one is behind you, or you can sit right like you said, facing the middle of the bus, these line up sideways.
Uh at least I got a fighting chance on seeing somebody coming.
And you gotta be armed with something.
Yeah, I mean, that lady, nothing she could have done.
No, of course.
Wait, if she was armed, nothing she could have done.
That's uh that guy just.
Well, what she could have done, what she nothing in that moment.
Nothing in that moment.
What she could if she found herself there, what would have been, and we used to teach this, right?
Not just stranger danger.
She could have been sitting, facing the rest of the bus, using the buddy system, where both of them have guns.
But we can't teach that because that's scary and that might offend some people.
That would give that would give at least one of them a fighting chance.
In other words, there are some things, but we don't how do you teach kids stranger danger?
And I don't know.
I hope I'm not letting the cat of the bag.
But yeah, Josh was there with his daughter, and even his young boy, he was, you know, he b had him uh using my lever action rifle, and Josh was basically shooting with his hands, but getting him familiar with it.
And I'm watching that going, this is that's that's what this used to be.
Teaching people how to be responsible and preparing for these scenarios.
Also, I know what people are gonna say.
You know, you're far more likely to die in a car crash than being mugged or shut up.
Who cares?
That's like when people say you're more likely to be struck by lightning than be bitten by a shark.
Okay, I understand that because I spend ninety-nine point nine nine nine nine percent of my time on fucking land.
But when I go into the shark's house, am I more likely to be bitten?
In other words, if I spent 50% of my life on land and 50% in the water, you and I both know that I'd be more likely to be bitten by something that lives in the water than struck by lightning on land.
The same thing here.
Sure, I'm more likely to die of a car accident than be mugged, but does that likelihood go up if I'm by myself after dark on public transit?
Of course it does.
You put on your you put on your headlights at night, you do things to keep yourself safe, like put on a seatbelt.
That's all we're saying.
Is yeah, do those things to keep yourself safer.
Her situation is different though.
You know, she did come from Ukraine.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Coming from a different uh environment, different country, a different culture.
She's probably never seen a black person before.
She well, um that's what uh the point I try to make earlier uh was she's watched our mainstream media.
Yeah.
That's her idea of what Americans are based on what she has been told through the mainstream media her whole life.
But let me ask you this.
So she has no idea what she seeks what she's expecting.
She has no idea to be cautious of that.
Other people in the train knew that.
There's no one in front of that guy.
Right.
There's there was no one.
There was a uh there's a reason why there's no one in front of that guy.
Right.
Let me ask you this.
This is a hypothetical.
Uh the judge, what do I have?
It's uh magistrate judge Teresa Stokes.
Okay, let's say there's a there's an alternative universe.
I'm not giving her judgehood based on the based on those eyes.
No, no, exactly.
But let's say there's an alternative universe where Zarutska gets on uh that train.
Okay, looks, sees uh sees that man uh de Carlos Brown.
Carlos Brown Jr.
Looks at him and and uh knowingly, very obviously chooses another seat, and De Carlos Brown Jr. goes, what you don't want to sit you don't want to sit in front of me?
And she says, That's right.
He says, Why not?
Because I'm black, and she says yes.
And it becomes an incident.
And it gets taken before a judge.
And he goes, she went to another seat and said it was because I was black.
And I said, Is it because I'm black?
And she said, What did you say?
And she said, Well, I said yes, because you are more likely to commit crime, and I don't want to be hurt, so I decided to sit somewhere else.
You want to bet that judge would give her a talking to about prejudice and discrimination?
Honestly, in your heart of hearts.
If she just said, yes, he said, why are you sitting there?
And I said, Because you are a black man and I don't want to be hurt.
It is late at night, and I want to be safe, so I'm going to sit here where I can see him because he is dressed in red with hoodie and uh has uh dread looks, and uh they are more likely to commit crime.
Do you think that judge would go, Oh, I think you need to go to uh sensitivity training uh to learn that we that all people are different.
Be honest.
What do you think the judge would do?
Because it's the same judge who let this guy out on an IOU.
Yeah.
That's what I'm trying to address.
Let's be honest about this.
And you know what?
You know who should not be offended by this at all, who won't be?
Law-abiding black male Americans.
Yeah.
You know why?
You can go watch Black and White on the Great, where I sat down at a barber shop, and every single one of them said, Yeah, I get it.
One guy said, I'm more concerned, right?
Like, why do you think it is that black people are more scared when we find ourselves on Martin Luther King Jr.
Boulevard, right?
Like I know white people, but we feel that way too.
They said that.
We have our own things too that we that we're also afraid of.
Right.
You know, skinny white guy, muscle shirt, uh, lesions all over his skin.
Yeah.
Hair m of course sunken cheeks.
Set of seeds.
The guy might stab you.
He might be he might be tweaking right now.
He might just slam your head against the window because he thinks that you're a bull.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Sometimes he's right.
Now there is, see, there's an example of this, and this made the news this morning.
There was a shooting in Israel.
I don't I don't remember which city, but I thought it was somewhere outside of Jerusalem, but I could be wrong, but it was in Israel.
And uh I think five or six people were killed, several um severely injured.
But bring the mood up.
No, no, no.
Listen, the part of this that I think what we're saying is what we want to happen is that a guy that had, I believe had got his concealed carry permit or training less than a year ago, was actually first to be able to respond and help take down some cool of the shooters.
Great.
I think there are a couple of shooters.
I think you could also see some of the other security forces come behind him and him re-engage.
Like he ran towards it as everybody's running away.
You can see him on the video, very clearly doing it.
Engages, struggles with one, retreats again.
Some of the other people come to help, and he goes back in again.
That's a hero.
That's exactly the kind of thing that we want because they're standing on a bus.
Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang.
They've got people trapped.
Bang, bang, bang.
He if he doesn't show up to start at least putting up some of a fight, how many more people die?
How many more people seriously injured?
Do we have video?
There is video out there of this.
So just look at it.
Let's see if we can find it.
And I'll tell you this too.
Like the left wants you to be so afraid that you don't even take into your own hand what it is that you can control.
Right?
They they want they want you to avoid, for example, owning a firearm.
Their approach is you're more likely to have it used against you.
Do you have children?
How would you feel if it's like, yeah, but I can control that.
And they want to tell you that by the way, but but trust the system until we defund the police.
Like, let me give you an example.
People people out there are actually afraid that if you own a firearm and you have children in the house, then oh my gosh, it's now a death sentence.
Let me tell you how you can control it.
Of course I have children in the house.
My firearms are under lock and key.
I have biometric safes, I have uh different passcode safes.
But you know what else?
I have spoken with them about firearms.
They have held my unloaded firearms, and I have told them how they work.
And I have told them what they do if they see a firearm.
And I have told them at what age it will be taken with dad to go use a firearm.
And you know what else I've done to just really, really make sure is place an unloaded firearm on a counter while I am there to see if they do exactly what it is they've been taught to do, and they do, after which point it gets loaded and placed back in a biometric safe.
I can control those things.
If I were just go, kids, I can't have the tool that would protect them.
No, of course.
You'll have some morons who leave a loaded gun next to the toothbrush.
But you don't have to do that.
It's really easy for you to take basic safety measures.
Here's another one.
Don't get on mass public transit at night and sit in front of a black man who looks like he's a member of the bloods.
You can control those things.
Sorry, go ahead.
I've got I've got a source with multiple angles.
I was seeing if uh I was seeing if they were gonna send one in.
Yeah, there's one specifically that I mean it's kind of grainy.
Like there's one specifically that's more of like an overhead shot that kind of spot shadows.
And then we'll we'll take some chats.
I'm sure people want to sound off, and then we'll send you over to Russell Brand.
Uh I know we're going late today.
We had that it would have been perfect time, that savant trailer.
What the hell was that?
What was that?
That sounded like uh a Gallimimus.
That was people running.
Yes.
Oh, ready.
Yeah, so looking kind of the top left here.
There you go.
The circle comes around him.
Everybody else is flaying.
This is just a normal citizen coming up, engages.
He starts to actually struggle with one of the perpetrators there.
I don't know if he gets shot at, but he runs back to the back of the bus, and then you've got some security forces running up to help.
But here's the thing.
He didn't just go away.
He bought them some time at least.
Well, and then he goes back in.
Look.
He goes back in to make sure he can help.
Good for him.
That's that's phenomenal.
But by the way, at some point we can look at this too, but when the original footage actually, there it's much clearer.
It's from a car right behind like a calf that kind of pulls sideways, and you see people start running this.
The guy play it really quickly because this guy, this guy gets his he's committed to uh the safety and security, but he's doing it in like a very nonchalant kind of Turkish shooter at the Olympics kind of way.
Yeah.
Uh so you'll see.
Let me see.
So he's in that car right there, the cab that just moved.
Okay, so people are running away.
So shooting attack.
He's in the white cab, gets out.
I don't know.
He doesn't move super fast, isn't really ducking, tries to get his uh I guess.
If you can find that guy's because what happens is he he can't get her out right there.
He goes around to the other side.
It's a very old lady who moves very slowly as well.
But as he's standing there, the glass in the bus windshield right next to his head starts shattering.
He doesn't even flinch.
Wow.
Like, I'm not sure if that was nerves of steel or if he's completely unaware that bullets just went right past his head.
Yeah.
And he was he got his passenger to safety.
It's adrenaline.
People get people get focused with adrenaline like that.
They, you know, you kind of focus and zone in.
I can imagine.
I mean, I've never obviously been in that scenario.
I will I was this is another false equivalency that the left will do.
They go, oh, so what?
You think that you're gonna be Superman with your gun, someone has an AR-15?
Okay, again, just like you're more likely to be struck by lightning than bitten by a shark, you're more likely to die in a car crash and be.
It's not an accurate comparison.
Let me prove it to you.
Uh in any type of conflict, armed or not.
Do you believe that an element of surprise is an advantage?
Meaning, do you think you're more likely to win a fight if you sucker punch somebody who's not looking versus a countdown rock em sock and robots?
Of course you do, right?
So when someone is entering a gun-free zone to shoot a bunch of people, they are not expecting you to be there to shoot back.
It's not the same as an armed standoff with police officers.
That's a boxing match.
You happening to be armed is a sucker punch against an evil person.
That's why so many people are stopped by concealed carry holders in this country.
That's why I love those videos of people going into like a you know a shop or a restaurant or something, trying to hold the place up and then a concealed carry pulls one out, and you could just their reaction is just like a Scooby-Doo cartoon or like a Looney Tunes cartoon.
They're wheels are spinning, but no ground being gone.
Yeah, they'll Yeah, exactly.
I'll tell actually, not only when people the left goes, what do you think?
You're gonna stop him with your revolver.
Matter of fact, statistically, if there is a mass shooter, that's the most likely scenario.
Do you realize?
If you have a firearm and you use it, the most likely scenario is that you stop them.
Because there's half a million to over two million defensive uses of firearms every year.
Even if you don't kill them, even if you're not Superman or whatever, even if you don't kill them, the sheer thought that, oh shit, I might get clapped back.
Yes, stops it.
Changes everything.
And he's not looking for you.
Yeah.
It's just one of those things.
Yep.
Maybe.
Statistically, that's the most likely scenario is that I pull it out.
He's not looking for me.
Bang, bang, bang.
At least he ducks for cover by some time.
Yes, statistically, everyone is better off.
Of course, there are straight bullets.
That happens.
Let me ask you this.
If you're one of the victims, there's a mass shooter because it's something else the left uses.
Yeah, what if you hit an innocent bystander?
Okay, picture those people right there outside of Jerusalem.
They're running because there's a mass shooter.
If at that moment in time, someone goes, freeze.
All right, I'm gonna start time back in about uh five seconds.
There's a guy right there with a firearm.
He's only had his concealed carry permit for one year.
Now he can take that and try and shoot this man, but there might be the risk of a straight bullet.
Do you want to take that chance or do you want him to stay in that cab?
You have five every single person goes, of course!
Of course, please.
There's a guy with a gun.
Please send him in, send him in, send him in.
The left hates you.
They want you to die.
They want you to be fishing a barrel and they want you to die, so long as they have their political cloud.
Let's take some chats.
Or let's just another video.
No, we we had the video of the the bullets, but that's fine.
It doesn't matter.
I was able to tell that story.
And the guy that did approach was not the cab driver, just to be clear.
Okay.
Um I just wanted to make sure.
So he was.
No, no, no.
He was getting his passenger to safety.
Oh, okay.
And bullets went right by his head.
Hey, the windshield.
Big tip for that guy.
No, I didn't even know.
I said it exactly right.
He got it wrong, and I was correcting him.
Well, when you played the video, it made it seem like that was the hero of the code.
Yeah, it did.
I think we were all under that impression.
Yeah, I wasn't all yep, that's what I thought.
I explained exactly what we're doing.
Because then you said about the whizzing of the bullets and the thing, and I made the point of like, well, maybe it's adrenaline, he's focused.
He's gonna go take out the threat.
Well, you excellent recall, Josh.
And you were wrong.
Yeah, you even said he was like the Turkish shooter.
Yeah.
You did say that.
You said that.
You compared him to another shooter.
There's so many things that you said that clearly would make us fake.
He's not even moving fast.
He's moving slow.
He's calm, he's collected.
Yeah.
Nerves of steel, he said.
Pretty sure he also said, Yeah, by the way, he's the guy in that cab.
I think he did say that.
I'm okay.
Roll the tape.
He was in monish.
It's okay.
Hey, Chad, I was wrongly admonished.
Listen, I understand that you like me being admonished.
I get it.
Put that aside for a second and realize that I was wrongly admonished.
And help me.
No, no, no, no, no.
Come on.
Don't say that.
They literally said admonish him again.
Yeah, because guys, that's a nuts.
Once you pound him under the dirt, you can't stomp him anymore.
It's just mush.
Let's grab some chess.
All right.
Stomp on Mush.
Yeah, it's sometimes a gack.
It's fun.
You gotta get the whole crew in there.
Yeah.
All right.
We'll find another way to admonish him.
Okay.
A couple of chats.
All right.
First chat from Road Rage 11.
Yeah.
Question for the crew.
Do you think judges will ever be held accountable for release of criminals who commit more crime?
No.
God, I wish so.
It's tough.
But a great idea.
Yeah.
I mean, in this case, it's like, why are we doing why did this happen?
Like, I really want to understand why this person was let go after being, you know, schizophrenic.
Yeah, why?
Saying, I know, but I'm I want to know Black female judge, black guy.
I want to know why it was allowed to happen.
A lot of times you hear judges say, Well, my hands are tied, I have to do XYZ for this case, right?
If somebody Yeah, maybe but it I'm just saying, like if somebody comes in, there should be like, okay, we should be able to at least do this.
If somebody's crazy and they're they're in your court, no bail.
They don't get to go home.
They get to go into the jail system right now until they get this case gets adjudicated.
That's true.
You know exactly why.
You mean that feminism.
If this is all f it's all come on, people deserve a second chance.
Wait, people deserve 12.
They deserve 14 chances.
If men vote, that man is cool, hand Luke working the railway all the live long day until he drops dead, and that's how it should be.
Yeah.
Sorry.
We would have no soft-on-crime policies.
No, I would have no, you can't carry a firearm if not for the feminist and feminine overall influence on our politics.
We'd have no males in female sports.
None of these things would be issues because men overwhelmingly vote against all those policies.
The only demographic big enough is liberal, typically white women.
They vote for these, and then of course they're black female brethren and people in this country.
Men would say, no, of course not.
Wait, what?
How many times?
Yeah, yeah, execute him.
Yeah.
And Gerald, you mentioned uh when judges go, all right, I you say I understand.
Oh, my hands are tied, or something I can do.
Usually when that's being said by a judge, it's because they have to enforce the law.
Yeah, that's what I mean.
They're going, hey, hey, I my hands are tied.
You have to go to jail.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I feel we're up to me.
I let yeah.
Right.
No, I know.
That's what I'm saying.
I want their hands tied on crazy people being before them.
We know they're crazy because their lawyer said they're crazy.
Yeah.
And that's their defense.
There's got to be some kind of minimum thing.
And it it's not just, it's not just us, it's the police that have to deal with this.
My dad's a police officer.
He he talks about all that.
His biggest problem, his biggest fight is with uh with local attorneys, DAs, and the judges.
Yep.
It's their biggest fight.
Because he's like, uh again, I'll see a guy.
He sees him on the street.
It's like you you're back, huh?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the guy, and not only is the guy, you know, a threat to his his neighborhood and his community to himself.
Of course.
He's like, it sucks.
We gotta see this guy.
He's not getting any help.
He just goes in, has the quick trial, then he's right back out.
Yeah.
And what do you think he's gonna do?
You think he's gonna go back to drinking and drugs?
No, probably not.
His own mom said he shouldn't have been let out.
Yeah, only after he assaulted his sister.
It had to be his 13th crime or whatever it was.
And even then finally, I never finally the mom goes, we should maybe we should do something.
Because now it's hit home.
Yeah, exactly.
He's been terrorizing the rest of the other people.
But now that it's my house.
Yeah.
When it's other people.
Just like Jordan Neely.
His father kicked him out of the house because he was a piece of shit.
Yep.
And then they go on the news and go, uh, this shouldn't have happened to my son.
He was a professional artist.
Fuck you.
No, you're exactly right.
Yeah, and you know what else?
Anyway.
Sorry.
No, you're right.
I don't want to hear it ever again.
Like, by the way, he got off because this is another story, an example of white privilege.
This boy was caught vandalizing the school gymnasium and he didn't get sentenced because he's white.
Oh, really?
This guy committed 14 fucking crimes and then killed somebody because he was let out because he was black.
Shut up.
Let's grab the final chat.
All right.
Final chat from Skank Hunt 42.
Okay.
As Arena was a refugee here under federal protection, can this murder be federally prosecuted and the death penalty be given immediately?
What more proof is needed than the video?
None.
Yeah, I mean it doesn't need to be any more proof in the video.
Um I don't know if it could be uh prosecuted federally and this person be given the death penalty.
Um maybe we could have a bill.
I mean, I think that should be the case.
I don't know if legally that will be the case.
Yeah, I don't want to fund this guy's existence.
Oh, but your honor, my client was crazy.
Oh, I'm really sorry.
Sorry to hear that death penalty.
I heard recently your honor, whatever.
Death penalty.
I heard recently that uh oftentimes the death penalty can cost more than than jailing someone.
I was the one who told you the death penalty.
It's cheaper to keep him alive forever.
Insane.
Let's get some work out of them then.
Do they do they do like the you know, like when the the lady got the uh kidnapped her boyfriend and put him in like a bot farm where he had to like post stuff?
Can we do that?
Can we do something like that?
That's what we always used to do.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's what we always used to do.
Labor, hard labor, picking up trash, doing the kind of jobs, you know, that uh many Americans don't want to do.
We don't need the illegal aliens, just put these prisoners to work.
We should get them to work, put them in a call center, have them calling Indian families all day, all night long and scamming them out of their money, and all the proceeds go to the federal government.
Yep.
That's not a bad idea.
And then lower taxes.
They'd be out of numbers to call in six weeks, though.
So I I will tell you this, I've changed my opinion even on that.
Like you guys tell me if if you've had this development.
Um, I was never really like pro or anti-death penalty growing up.
I thought whatever was cheapest, I find as I get older.
Um, I'm very pro-death penalty.
I think you can make the death penalty cheaper.
I agree.
I think you could sell tickets.
Hey, if they say the second amendment wasn't meant for semi-automatic handguns, all right.
Well, then um uh let's just say that pleading the fifth wasn't meant for someone who on camera with 360 degrees of coverage, killing an innocent person.
It shouldn't apply to that person, the due process.
Like we we if we're gonna talk about technology, should we really have a system of appeals that exists where they can have a lawyer come out and say this person didn't really do it and we all watch it, how many times do we have to watch it and waste taxpayer resources?
If you want to say that it doesn't apply to uh, for example, social media, the First Amendment, because uh it's technology, all right.
It only applies, I guess, to the printing press.
If you want to say that doesn't apply to modern firearms, well then wouldn't we say the most applicable is with DNA testing and video evidence that we shouldn't have to drag this out forever, the person is guilty, or at least at a certain point, have the jury if it if the actual act of murder is committed on camera, irrefutably with witnesses witnesses in person on camera, and the jury can watch the footage.
Shouldn't we just be able to give them an express lane to go, well, yeah, of course he did it.
Uh uh-uh, why?
Because I watched him do it right there, say his name, and then say, I can't wait to kill this person.
Uh do we all agree?
Yeah, jury of peers, dead.
It's just it's never, it's always the ACLU and the RAN Paul.
The civil rights only applies when protecting the worst among us and stripping you of your rights.
I am so pro-death penalty now.
That's the one thing that I think has changed the most.
Is when I was a kid, I would watch movies where let's say like a bad guy would get his comeuppance, but they always tried to make you feel like, oh, he was a little misunderstood, and I'd still feel bad because I always thought that, ah, but you know what?
People can change, and people can.
People can be redeemed.
But as I've gotten older and dealt with people who I know have no conscience, guilt, no semblance of of attempting to be honest, where it doesn't even enter into their thought process.
Like I've encountered these people where you are simply a resource.
And whatever they can get from you, they don't care what happens to you.
I feel like as I as I've gotten older, this is not a think, it's a feel.
Uh I've changed where my default position is.
Prove to me that you're one of the few who can actually change.
It can happen.
But people don't really tend to change.
They often tend to get worse unless there's no other option.
And because of that, I think you should fry.
And I want to make an example of you.
I really do.
I want to make an example of you.
And the older I get, someone like this, uh De Carlos Brown Jr.
I guarantee you, if you were to ask 14-year-old me, maybe 21-year-old me.
I'd be like, Yeah, in theory, okay, I support the death penalty, but you know, uh, it's still a tragedy.
Guarantee you, I could sit him in that chair, strap him down, flip that switch, and not even be queasy for dinner.
You let me know if that's you, because here's the one thing.
Export Selection