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Sept. 10, 2025 - Louder with Crowder
01:09:17
🔴Iryna Zarutska Was Failed - And We Won't Forget Who Did It 2025-09-10 18:13
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We're broken and we're disgusted.
We cannot normalize this pain.
I don't consider this just a George Floyd issue.
I consider this an American issue.
It's emblematic of what kind of nonsense has been taking place for far too long and something needs to be done about it.
And people seeing George's murder played out in eight minutes and 46 seconds of real time.
It moved the country.
It moved the world.
The protests in response to the killing of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and Amanda Arbery and Nina Popp aren't simply a reaction to those particular tragedies, as heartbreaking as they are.
They speak to decades' worth of anguish and frustration.
Much respect to him.
He's an angel looking over all of us, looking over all these black kids in the black community.
Actress Carrie Washington tweets, a guilty verdict, but this fight for justice is not over.
We have a lot of work to do.
Now we all fed up in nukes coming back for everything.
Rock stars, boxes, watch the news.
They're burning cop cars.
Kill another nuke who break the law and call us outlaws.
I will have want us to keep it peaceful.
When I watched the tape of George Floyd's death and heard him cry out for his mama, my first thought was for all of the black mothers and how the pain and anguish of bearing witness to that must have been excruciating.
Colin Kaepernick is providing financial assistance to protesters who need legal representation.
He wrote, when civility leads to death, revolting is the only logical reaction.
It's painful.
Unfortunately, as a black man, we've been in these rooms way too many times.
Have you?
He's an angel?
I'm going to tell you the truth about George Floyd.
George Floyd may not have stabbed an innocent woman on the subway yet, but he was on his way.
That angel looking from above.
Yeah, sure, your first instinct when you see an out-of-context clip, of course, your heart will break.
Your humanity will get the better of you because no one wants to see someone die, especially when at that point you believe that that's someone who's as harmless as a fly because he's been presented and innocent.
My second instinct took several minutes to do some research and see the rap sheet was, oh, this is someone who was going to continue and it's going to get worse.
Let's bring up George Floyd's rap sheet.
Nine arrests, right?
Included robbery with a deadly weapon.
It included theft.
It included violent crimes.
It included substance-related charges, trespassing.
Nine arrests, including robbery with a deadly weapon.
I believe there's some kind of assault in there.
Hey, what is that?
That looks pretty familiar.
What?
Deja vu?
Oh, there's DeCarlos Brown.
Robbery with a deadly weapon.
Disorderly conduct.
Assault of his sister.
Can we have a comparison?
Oh, so George Floyd, your angel, was a de Carlos Brown Jr. who just wasn't as far along the path yet.
You venerated DeCarlos Brown Jr.
You emboldened de Carlos Brown Jr.
There is no doubt in my mind that George Floyd, after Arrest 9, That he wasn't going to straighten up and fly right before arrest 10, just like DeCarlos Brown Jr. didn't at time 13.
At this point, are we splitting hairs?
9 versus 14.
He's an angel, man.
Rest in peace, Kang.
Okay?
What about the people he assaulted and he robbed?
You know, two years ago, the DC, the former D.C. police chief, came out in a press conference and said that the average homicide suspect has been arrested 11 times prior.
Yeah.
So he was two away from that.
The average.
Do we think, now, here's the thing, especially with that in mind, the three-strike policy that's racist, it would have put DeCarlos Brown Jr. in a cell with George Floyd.
There is no difference.
There is no difference in all the signs of character that we see.
Now, I could go through that list.
I could give you the rap sheet of Zarutska.
Oh, wait, there isn't one.
There's no march for her.
Maybe there will be.
And it will likely be very peaceful.
Cultural differences.
Yeah.
By the way, DeCarlos Brown Sr., also a career criminal, his brother shot a man in the face, I think a 65-year-old man, if I remember correctly, in 2012, 2014, while trying to steal his phone.
Yeah.
A phone's not worth that.
Jeez.
You know what?
Not only George Floyd, when you talk about that, because that brings me to George Floyd is DeCarlos Brown, is Mike Brown.
Same name, same asshole, moral fiber.
Mike Brown, serial offender, also the, I guess you would say, originator of Hands Up, Don't Shoot, that lie, his best friend, just got shot, killed.
Mike Brown was taken too early, grabbing a cop's gun and assaulting him.
I guess, would you say the right time for his friend?
The Hands Up, Don't Shoot?
That sound like a guy who was going around hands up, not shooting?
That sound does it sound like a guy who was living his life like Zarutska?
Who did the system fail?
George Floyd is DeCarlos Brown Jr.
There is no difference in how they lived their life.
One is no longer around or was no longer around to commit the kind of heinous act of evil that we saw from DeCarlos Brown Jr.
That's who you chose to venerate.
What do you think the other young black men who could be the next George Floyd?
What do you think they think when they go, whoa, Beyonce?
LeBron said, angel man.
The policy used to be don't air manifestos, don't give the name of some kind of a violent criminal or a mass shooter because we don't want to inspire people.
We don't want to give them the notoriety that they seek.
Let's give this serial violent felon who robbed a woman at gunpoint with a child in the house a golden casket.
That'll inspire a generation of young black men to live their lives better.
And at the same time, let's shit on Ben Carson and Condoleezza Rice because they're not black enough.
What kind of a message do you think you're sending?
And you say that we respond, that us responding, we, the responders, are making it about race.
Can anyone point me?
Here's another challenge.
Can anyone point me to a white guy, any white guy, and I'm talking about a celebrity, any white criminal who was arrested 9 or 14 times for the crimes of assault, robbery with a deadly weapon, beating a woman, robbing a woman at gunpoint with no care for the child in the vicinity.
Can anyone point me to an example of a single white guy who had a parade of celebrities and politicians venerating him?
Let's say it's not gold, giving him a copper urn.
Ever?
Ever.
Comment.
That's not rhetorical.
Ever.
Point me to one example.
Because I just gave you a bunch.
You got George Floyd.
You got Mike Brown.
You got Trayvon Martin.
I know he was younger.
You have Tamir Rice.
How many examples?
You'll say, it's really this simple.
The left will say, the common denominator is black.
It's being black in America, right?
Driving while black.
The left looks at it.
The left looks at the rap sheet of Floyd, Mike Brown, DeCarlos Jr., they look at the rap sheet of all those in stop and frisk and three-strike policy.
They look at all that and they say the common denominator is black.
You and I look at it and say the common denominator is crime.
And the left says, no, no, no, it's black.
And we say, well, then why does the crime intersect with the black?
And they go, don't make it a race thing.
You just said it was black.
And as I understand it, what's the name of the lady who tweeted at me?
So it's Abigail Schreier.
She says she responded to kind of a lot of people.
But she is willing to come on the show, and we're trying to give her a link.
Yep.
Thanks for the kind invitation.
So we've sent her a direct message and ready for her now.
Okay, we are ready whenever she wants to come on.
And we do have to really soon, by the way.
And a matter of fact, let's just do this now, see if we can get her linked up.
I don't know if I'll be here tomorrow because I may be on location.
Hopefully in a black community to discuss this, you know, just serving myself.
Schreier?
Schreier.
Schreier.
And we're going to get to the allies.
The difference.
And this is the big difference because all those people you saw, those montages, the Bidens, the Kamala Harris's, the Barack Obamas, they were in charge for a very long time.
Well, the adults are in the room now.
The adults are in the room now, and we don't care.
We're unconcerned with your accusations of racism.
We're more concerned with protecting the innocent in this country.
So if you're not a member, please click that button right there.
You can join Rumble Premium.
Mug Club is Rumble Premium.
Rumble Premium is Mug Club.
The stuff you've heard today, picture here and that on YouTube in 2016, 2018.
Can't do it.
We can only do it because we are supported by viewers like you.
If this matters to you, if you want it to continue, we will continue to take the arrows for you.
And hey, you may disagree, but I know that often we're saying the things that you wish you could say and you don't have a platform.
We want to be the platform, the megaphone for you, the American working, law-abiding taxpayer.
Because I'll tell you something that we're not supposed to say.
You matter.
And I know the left just says, hey, you matter.
Let me tell you this.
American working law-abiding taxpayer.
You matter more than the criminals.
So the allies.
Hey, will anyone do something about this?
Does anyone care?
Let's start with President Trump cares.
Seems to care a lot.
In Charlotte, North Carolina, we saw the results of these policies when a 23-year-old woman who came here from Ukraine met her bloody end on a public train.
And here's a picture of it.
This is the picture of it.
And this is a picture of the woman, a beautiful young girl that never had problems in life.
In Charlotte, North Carolina, we saw the results of these policies when a 23 year old woman who came here from Ukraine met her bloody end on a public train.
And here's a picture of it.
This is the picture of it.
And this is a picture of the woman, a beautiful young girl that never had problems in life with a magnificent future in this country.
And now she's dead.
She was slaughtered by a deranged monster who was roaming free after 14 prior arrests.
We are going to prosecute him to the fullest extent of the law.
We have taken the case because it's murder on mass transit.
Progressive DAs cannot handle this case.
The progressive DA in North Carolina in Charlotte, his name is Spencer Merriweather.
He believed in letting him sign a written promise to appear.
He participated in passing that, agreeing to let criminal defendants sign a written promise to appear in court.
That's what he was allowed to do in July.
Weeks later, he murdered Irena.
Unbelievable that this happened no longer.
We have jurisdiction now.
We will not let a progressive DA keep this case.
I want to add one thing that I hope the family won't mind me sharing.
But after Irina's death, the embassy in Ukraine called and said, we'll help you bring her home.
And her family said no.
They said she loved America.
We're going to bury her here.
So I think we can give her an America to be proud of.
As Mr. Barnacle said, something here is broken, and we're here to fix it.
We're happy to take your questions.
Stark contrast.
Go back to one other point that I was making.
George Floyd, Mike Brown could just as easily and would be the next DeCarlos Brown Jr.
You know who else could be?
Abrego Garcia.
MS-13.
Yeah, he's reformed.
Well, it wasn't that long ago that he was trafficking humans.
Let me ask you this.
Would any of you feel bad if DeCarlos Brown Jr. was in Alligator Alcatraz as opposed to that train car?
I know he's not an illegal immigrant.
I'm just making a point.
Would any of you feel bad about it?
I'm glad that the Abrego Garcias and their ilk of this country are no longer free to roam.
And hey, you may say it's not severe enough for them to be deported, trafficking people, allegedly, and beating up on women.
That's not alleged.
That happened.
That's right.
I say that these are signs.
These are warning signs.
But that doesn't mean Mr. Old Fashion, because we always used to think that.
That's why we had policies like three strikes.
Guess I'm just guess I'm just a man of a bygone era, right?
And so are you.
No word yet if Schreier will be coming on the program.
My guess is probably not today.
So we can open this up and open it to your chats and anything else that everyone wants to say.
Yeah, so one minute.
Before we do that, there's a video that's been released.
I mean, I'll set that up in just a second, but this is causing a lot of people to do a lot of research right now.
And by a lot of research, I mean, like, you know, simply doing any research on statistics.
Just so all of you out there, like, facts are not racist.
This is how we've built our entire society.
We do threat assessments to make sure that we are safe when I'm walking with my family, when I'm around a loose dog, right?
To take it out of the human realm.
Like, I always do kind of a general thing.
You do too.
Everywhere you walk, you choose where you walk, you choose where you don't walk, you choose where you go, where you don't go.
They're actively telling people right now that it's insensitive to look at data and just go, hey, what is the data telling us right now?
It doesn't mean that I'm going to be a racist person for this.
It just means that I'm going to go, oh, this is a higher likelihood.
I'm flying to Chicago on Friday.
I'm going to have that.
I'm in an airport.
I'm going to be on a train for a minute.
I'm going to be aware of my surroundings.
Wouldn't it be better to tell people to be aware?
Hey, not every black person, not every Hispanic person, not every white, whatever you want to say.
Not everyone, but be aware.
Hear the statistics.
So a lot of people are looking those up right now.
A lot of people are getting challenged.
A lot of people are being thrown out there as race baiters and they're just trying to get people to be angry.
But then you have some other people, and this is where this clip that we have comes in.
Is it going to make me mad?
Probably going to make you a little mad.
Oh, boy.
Have responses like this.
It's a really sick mindset.
Once again, lineage of evil.
One thing I will say, I talked to 99.9% of black people about this story, about what transpired.
And it's horrible.
I think we all agree on that.
He talked to 99.9% of total population black people.
He's been very busy.
Oh, I think he meant to say that 99% of the people he talks to were black.
Oh, okay.
Understood.
Understood.
Wanted me to give a message.
On behalf of 99.9% of black people, I'm here to talk to the white ignorance out there and let y'all know we are deeply uncaring.
That is correct.
We don't care, bruh.
I'm sorry.
We don't give not an ounce of caring about here's the thing.
He may be an evil piece of shit, but he could be right.
Maybe that's why no one did anything for 95 seconds.
He's not right, though.
Talked to what, five people?
Made it up.
Makes this show in his bedroom.
Sure.
He's going to get clicks.
He's going to get views.
I can't say he's wrong right now because I don't know the people he talked to, but he did say 99.5.
And my God, that sounds authoritative.
No, no, no.
99.9.
Oh, geez.
Sorry.
Yeah, get an admonishment.
Because it'll just hit me right in the face.
No, no, no.
I deserve that admonishment.
He has spoken with 99.9% of population black people.
I'm holding.
Until it goes away.
And they are deeply uncaring.
Let me guess.
Let me guess.
I haven't seen this clip.
Okay, so do you still have it accessible?
Yes.
Okay, let me guess.
I haven't seen the rest of this clip, but if he goes on to explain why, it's either because you were uncaring about insert George Floyd, insert whatever false martyr, false prophet here, or we are uncaring because we have had to insert a list of grievances here that even though he'll say he's not, justifies murder and crime.
Let me guess.
That's why they don't care because they've had to live.
He's going to say because we've had to live under the thumb of white oppression.
So we don't care about that white girl, not even from this country who oppressed no one ever because we've had to deal with the whole, we've had to deal with a whole lot.
So don't expect us to care when you have treated us so badly, even though the black community is 12 times more likely to kill white people than vice versa.
Let's see if I have it right.
First time seeing the clip.
What happened to this girl on the train?
And let me tell you why, okay, so I know some of y'all are spitting out the raisins in your potato salad.
Let me tell you why.
Because I'm old enough to remember a man named Jordan Neely, okay, who was on the train and who was wrongfully taken from this planet.
And then he was not only seen as not guilty, but he goes on in an interview to say that he would do it again.
On top of that, he got a meeting with the president and the vice president.
That's correct.
His only thing, his only accomplishment for meeting the president of the United States was that he took the life of a black man, an innocent black man on the train.
Damn.
In this country, that was celebrated.
That was approved, okay?
That was applauded by this country.
I just wanted to let you know.
I haven't come across not one black victim that this country has seen as a black victim.
How about four, you know, shit and noodles we go again?
You see, every single thing that he says is predicated on race and not on the behavior.
I can tell you where he's wrong.
George Floyd, gold casket.
Country was burned down because everyone supported that black victim.
There aren't enough black people to burn down these locales.
You understand that.
Now, the difference between him and Neely, it's not that big of a difference.
It's that people bought the lie of George Floyd.
So had he been completely innocent and had he been someone who had actually been maliciously killed or strangled by a police officer, had that been the case, of course, Americans would be outraged.
Now, in comparison to what people found out pretty quickly with Jordan Neely and Daniel Penny, it's the behavior.
It's the man who was harassing, acting insane on a subway car and scaring people and making threats.
You know, other black and Hispanic people on the subway.
And so Americans tired of living under, you say living under the oppression of white people.
Those people on that subway, some of whom were black, are tired of living.
They were tired of living under the oppression of unfettered crime in their cities.
And so people were happy to see a young man with no malice try and do something about it.
But you go black, white, you go black, white, okay?
We go behavior, and then I match up the behavior, the criminal behavior, with a statistical reality.
Let me, I'm nothing special, and I mean that as far as like, I just predicted that to a T. I don't say this to Bregg, I say this so that you can have a little introspection here.
Why do you think I'm able to do that?
Why do you think I knew what he was going to say next before he said it?
And that happens at least a dozen times a month on this show.
It's because my values are indifferent.
And so I'm able to judge information that comes in and narratives that I'm being fed.
I'm able to cross-reference them with values and realize that there's a pattern of being sold a false bill of goods.
Once you notice those patterns, it's pretty easy to see that pattern occurring again.
I'm not a wizard.
I know that the only way a black talking head, who, by the way, is filled to the brim with actual racism, actual vitriolic race-based hatred, I'm able to know that the only way he could possibly justify being uncaring of an innocent white young woman is because something,
something, something, something was done wrong at some point in time to someone who looked like me.
There is no other case that he could possibly make.
And the fact that there is anyone out there in the United States of America who couldn't predict the exact same thing is a failure.
It's a failure on our society.
It's a failure from our media.
They have not just failed.
They haven't just failed to inform you of these trends that could save your life.
They have deliberately hidden them and lied about them.
You know, you just said something, Gerald.
You said crime statistics aren't racist.
Do you know that was the actual YouTube policy?
They had to have an internal discussion.
If creators could cite crime statistics, you know, that's why I can't remember if it was the FBI or the DOJ stopped recording the race of both the perpetrator and the victim.
Yeah.
You actually have to go to different data sets and try to connect them.
Yeah.
The policy of the biggest media company on earth was raw crime statistics are racist and can't be presented.
Now, I know they're changing that now.
They're changing it because of you.
They're changing it because we've been here first.
When I say we, I mean us here and you watching.
We have been here first.
I know you see the Johnny come latelies, but you know why you remember.
You know that I was clear back in 2015 at least that all this goes away very, very quickly if we don't band together.
And it doesn't even mean that we'll agree on everything.
But we banded together precisely because crime statistics, according to Google, Alphabet, YouTube, big tech, was racist as a matter of policy.
All right.
I want to just go to chats?
Yeah.
Let's see what the audience has to say about that.
Okay.
I don't think the broad is calling in.
All right.
Maybe we'll do it another day.
Yep.
Probably.
Hopeful.
All right.
The first chat is a two-parter from Rhino Trikes.
Question for the team.
Is it time for white parents to have that conversation with their kids?
The talk where black people are told that all white cops are out to kill them.
Is it time we had a talk to white kids about who's likely to kill them?
Yeah.
And I can tell you that my dad in Detroit with the first, this is when they did the integration, you know, the racial integration busing system where they brought in people from different zip codes.
They were all just thrown into a school amidst race riots and said like, yeah, that'll work out.
And my dad's mom, and I believe his father, probably mom more likely, had this conversation.
She said, hey, just so you know, when you get on the bus tomorrow, you're going to see some, so you're going to see a lot of kids who don't look like you.
And you need to know that they're just like you.
And you walk up and say, hi, I'm Darren, shake their hand and make a new friend.
He got the shit kicked out of him for his troubles.
Because at that same time, those kids' parents were saying, these people hate you, and their dads are cops, and they've been killing people like us.
Matter of fact, let me give you a pretty clear anecdotal.
I don't want to say story because it's multiple.
Every single member of my father's family, him, his siblings, his friends growing up in Detroit, got the shit kicked out of them by a group of black people at least once.
Every single one.
My dad and my uncle, multiple times.
Never once did they do it to someone else.
And never once did they see it go the other way.
They never saw it.
Every single one.
You want to know what would really heal this nation?
And I apologize for the profanity.
It's a little bit of a purge, Valve.
You know what would heal this country?
Is if, well, in that video or in a future video, a white person would step in, start beating the shit out of the black perpetrator, the violent black perpetrator, and then you would see from that security camera footage, that aerial footage, that angle we all know too well, a black person come in, screen right, and throw a few good ones to the perp as well.
The predator handshake of beating up black violent criminals.
If a white guy stepped in and did that, and a black man stepped in and saw the predatorial evil behavior and acted as a good Samaritan, regardless of race, you'd have a lot of white people go, good.
Good.
More of us have a lot in common.
More of us have a lot in common, then there's hope here.
And I'll tell you why that's so necessary because how many times have we seen the opposite?
How many times have we seen the opposite where a white guy or woman, by the way, is getting their ass beaten and a group of black people come in with no context and join in because white person bad.
That video, that's what you need for healing.
And then do it several hundred thousand more times in real life.
Sorry, best we can do is Nelly and Tim McGraw.
Yeah.
And that being said, I will say that's an example of the white man capitalizing off of the black man's work because Tim McGraw did nothing.
He did not.
That song was awful.
There's a lot more of that now, actually.
Is there?
Country hip-hop crossovers.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's a lot more.
I really like when Timberland takes an entire, was it Five for Fighting or was it too late?
One Republic?
I like when he takes it and he too late to apologize.
And he adds, hep.
They looped it three times.
That's true.
But you know what?
That's the same thing.
Tim McGraw walked in where Nelly did it.
I can't go on the avenue.
$15 million.
Good.
I'm going to go back to being a fake country star.
Play dress up as a cowboy.
Yeah.
Oh, my gosh.
Where I bring my portable gym on the road.
And I know what you're thinking.
Maybe a squat rack?
No.
Maybe some rubber bands?
No.
I bring an entire set of rafters.
All right.
Let's go.
All right.
Next chat from, let's see, Pedro the Mexican 15.
Hi, Pedro.
Question for the crew.
Do you think the left will ever see their inner racism?
If Arena was black and the killer was white, Charlotte would be burning.
Yeah, it would.
But instead, they make every excuse because of melanin.
Well, they know it.
Yeah.
They know that they're racist.
The left doesn't think about right and wrong, good and evil.
The left thinks, what can we use?
What can we use?
In other words, they know.
Barack Obama, I always point this example.
He knows that the 77 cents on the dollar women right in the workplace compared to men.
That is the most debunked statistic.
Frankly, of any statistic that I can think of.
Maybe there's another one that you guys could draw my attention to, but that was when it just compared average salaries of men to average salaries of women.
It didn't take into account degrees, time work, none of it, right?
So it was debunked very, very quickly by pretty much all economists.
And he still cited it.
The left is doing the same thing.
When they say, and driving while black, and we have an epidemic in this country of young black men being killed by the police, and that even goes to cashless bail and defund the police and catch and release.
They know that statistically it's not true.
They know it because they silenced one of their own at Harvard when he told them.
Yeah.
They know.
So are they going to face their inner racism?
No.
They don't see it as racism.
This is my thought on this.
They don't see it as racism at all.
And that Abby Phillip clip really did show that.
Instead of taking the opportunity now with the most clear-cut case that I can think of, maybe there's another one, but this is the most clear-cut case that I can think of of somebody not needing to be on the streets anymore because they are completely unsafe to be around this person, right?
Take all the other stuff out of it if you want, right?
Even if you're Abby Phillip and you're trying to make this point.
They get mad and hung up on the fact, what, you're going to put him in jail for schizophrenia?
No, I'm not putting him in jail for schizophrenia.
We don't put people in jail for that.
We put them in mental hospitals.
That would actually be a fantastic place.
But for life, Gerald?
Yes.
Mean, you can't go out and live on the streets and have a rehabilitation pro.
You know why?
Because every time we let this guy out since 2020, he commits a crime.
Every time we try to give this guy a second chance, he hurts an innocent, law-abiding citizen in the process.
So here's what we have to do now.
We have to put him in a mental hospital because I'm not going to just keep putting him out there.
And they don't take that opportunity.
Instead, they go with the, well, we need to be compassionate about this.
No, you don't.
You need to be compassionate to me, the law-abiding citizen.
We have to be compassionate to people coming from other countries.
No, you don't.
You need to be compassionate to me, the taxpaying U.S. citizen.
Every single time you're compassionate to the wrong person.
Yep.
And you don't see that all you're doing is perpetuating this same thing to happen again and again.
And again, instead of coming out and having the moral clarity, two black people on that show could have said, you know what?
You're right.
This guy walked around and said, I got that white girl.
And I'm sorry.
And on behalf of whoever, I'm sorry that that happened.
We got to do better.
This guy shouldn't have been on the streets.
I don't know why he was.
That judge needs to be removed.
Whoever's in this place.
That would have been a very non-controversial thing to say.
Right.
The easiest path forward instead, we're not being compassionate.
We should let these people walk the streets because what are we going to do?
Put them in jail because they have schizophrenia?
How dare you?
I can't believe you said that out loud.
Oh my gosh.
Guys, clip that for me.
That's what they did.
I don't think they have to come out and apologize for their whole race or for what somebody did, but it's so easy.
I'm sorry.
It would help.
I've done it before.
I've stood in the place of people that did bad things because I looked like them, not black on white, but something else.
And it was a moment that was powerful for the person that I did it with.
And I said, hey, I'm not them, but on behalf of them, I'm sorry.
Nobody has said sorry to you.
I'm sorry that this happened.
It would be fantastic if a Van Jones or somebody out there said, you know what?
We've got a lot of problems to fix.
But on behalf of the black community, I'm sorry that you're 12 times more likely to be murdered if you're white than the other way around.
I'm sorry that such a high proportion of crime is committed.
And yeah, maybe I think some systemic, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry on this one, okay?
Wasn't me, but I'm sorry.
Because if you can blame me for all the ales of slavery, it wasn't me either.
Can we just have a moment where somebody takes some damn responsibility for what's going on in your community and says, we'll try our best to fix it.
I'm sorry this is happening.
Doesn't mean I agree with everything you say.
But in this case, man, I'm sorry.
I hate watching that girl die too.
That was insane.
Irana should be with us today.
She's not.
Let's fix it.
Yeah.
We're sorry what you're going to say, Josh.
Sorry, Josh.
No, I had a whole point.
Everyone, by the way, seems kind of moot now.
No, no, no.
I'm saying that.
No, no, no.
I've already been as a black apologist.
You're not.
You're not.
What's the matter?
Arian, got your tongue.
Jesus Christ.
No, I under, but I understand your point too.
Like, look, no one is saying that this should be at the foot of someone who had nothing to do with it.
But what I'm saying is with that being said, it is super easy to go out there and go on that show and go, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
But maybe we should think about the fact that it was 14 times.
Yeah.
And on the 14th time, he was let out with no bail and that he was deemed to be not fit for trial.
Maybe there is something to that.
Maybe not a, you know, maybe we shouldn't put him away for life.
Maybe that's the argument.
Yeah.
Maybe it's not away for life in a jail.
Maybe it's like, maybe try to understand her point.
Maybe you guys come to some kind of middle ground because just going out there and saying, oh, you can't just lock somebody up for life just because they've been arrested 14 times and that they're not fit for trial and they've been to prison for assaulting women on multiple occasions.
Yeah.
There's a middle ground, I think.
You don't have to come out there.
What I was saying is you don't have to come out there and apologize for your whole race.
No, yeah, I get it.
But you also don't have to go out there and just attack this lady across the table because she suggested that somebody who's a danger to society should be locked up and away from society because the left loves to, you know, protect us all.
We saw it with the two segments today.
We're seeing with this segment, and we're seeing it with that My Body, My Choice, the vaccination segment in Florida.
Yeah.
They argued that they're same point, but on different sides.
Yeah.
At a certain point, you go, oh, I guess it's not protection.
It's control.
Yeah.
Also, hey, where was the veneration for David Dorne?
There's a perfect contrast.
Yeah.
During the riots, David Dorne, black guy, black guy, officer.
He wasn't even on call, wasn't on duty.
I think it was retired sergeant.
Chief.
I thought he was a chief.
Showed up because he got a call from another black guy that a store was being looted and they were stealing TVs.
Showed up to try and stop them, was shot.
Shot dead.
We sold shirts and we gave the proceeds to, I believe it was an organization of the family's choosing.
Where's he?
Why is it always that the examples of examples?
Let's just use the term examples.
Hey, that man's an example.
Why are they never examples in the black community?
Ben Carson, not an example.
David Dorne, not an example.
Connolly's right, not an example.
Colin Powell, not an example.
Jay-Z, example.
Beyonce, example.
Okay.
George Floyd.
George Floyd, example.
And heaven looking down on us, apparently.
Now, one good thing I want to bring up is the murals.
You know the murals of George Floyd, so there's a lot going around right now.
There's a specific person who put this out, but Elon Musk has tagged on to it, and so has Andrew Tate donating money.
So he said, I think the original post was, I have $500,000 to be given out in $10,000 grants each to paint murals for arena around the United States and major American cities.
Elon Musk put a million dollars on top of that.
And then Andrew Tate said he's matching it.
So it's a couple of million dollars or so right now has been raised theoretically to go put these murals up.
It's like, that's, we should be protecting innocent people.
Yeah.
You want to put up these George Floyd mural pieces of crap?
Let's put something up that we actually should be saying, hey, we need more people like this.
You want to talk about an immigrant that comes to this country and loves this country and their family loves this country so much that when the Ukrainian embassy reaches out and says, hey, we'll do everything that we can to get you back here and get this person buried on their home soil where they grew up.
And they say, no, I love America.
This family loves America.
She loved America and we want to be here.
That's the kind of person we want.
Why does the left care?
Why are the leftist media, the mainstream media, care more about a Brega Garcia than Aria Zarutzka?
Two immigrants.
Oh, sorry.
Sorry.
Two immigrants.
Two different stories.
One's dead.
One's illegal.
One had to get sent back to his own fucking country.
Yeah.
Or Ghana.
Oh, originally, that was the original thing.
The original thing was Maryland Man sent to El Salvador where he's from?
Yeah.
I'll tell you why.
It's the same people who paint a mural of serial violent offender and woman beater George Floyd and want to erase Columbus Day and the Lincoln Memorial because they did some bad things.
The Lincoln Memorial's on the chopping block now?
Yeah, they did.
At one point, yeah.
They wanted to get rid of it.
I think they did take.
I knew they took down some Washington, George Washington statue somewhere, but Lincoln and emancipate that monument.
Yeah.
So think about that.
So it's like they did bad things.
Okay.
Well, sort of George Floyd.
Much worse than Lincoln, I would argue.
But here's the difference.
They also did good things.
They great things.
Yeah.
I wouldn't even say good things.
I would say great things.
Sure.
That's your white privilege talking about it.
World allow it.
World altering, changing things.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They didn't just jam a speedball up their ass and ask for some AC to be turned on in a paddy wagon.
Culture forming things.
Yeah.
So wait, but you're you're erecting a memorial of a of a of a nothing but criminal his entire life while erasing someone who changed the world for the better.
Oh, okay.
I get it.
It's selective outrage.
It's not about what actually upsets.
It's not about right and wrong.
And then LeBron says he's an angel looking down on all his all these children.
Motherfucker wasn't even looking down on his own children.
Yeah.
Oh, you guys, you hear that?
There's an Indian going to die outside.
Wait, hold on.
Do you hear that?
It's the faint sound of, oh, shit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, LeBron said, George Floyd is an angel.
Show me any other angel.
Did an angel appear to marry?
And he shall be a son on you.
Give me your money, bitch.
I don't think.
Good timing on the horn.
That train's killing it today.
It's just hit.
Hey, I think Lucifer was an age.
You're going to have a virgin.
You was going to have a virgin birth.
Not when I get true with you.
Oh, that's not nice.
And for the record, that was not directed at Josh.
Just Josh, my.
No, I know.
And by the way, everyone is exhausted and just like this stuff because we actually, I know a lot of people out there, like, we actually care.
I mean, that's why it's so funny that Schreier says that.
It's like, we, you know, we're the ones who had Stephen Williford on the first place to give him a place to speak.
Yeah.
We're the ones who raised money.
How much money did Schreier raise for David Dorn?
How much did she raise for Charity with Hurricane Hurt?
Like these people, they never have a dog in the fight.
That's the thing.
When you offer solutions, when you're first, when you go out and you're willing to say what a lot of people think, it's really easy for the man who doesn't enter the arena to say, well, I don't think you should.
Well, what have you done of consequence?
Yeah, it's like when I go to a baseball game and a guy drops a ball he dove for.
Yeah.
I go, you got to catch that.
Yeah.
Oh, really?
Thank you.
270 pounds from the top deck?
Oh, guy with a hot dog in his hand, really?
Yeah.
Shut your mouth.
You're wiping your mustard.
You're like, yeah, come up here to that faggot.
My favorite thing I ever saw was a right fielder.
He didn't get to a ball fast enough and it became a double.
And one of the guys in the stands near me was like, oh, come on, you got to catch that, Finley.
And he just looked back, took his glove off, and went like this.
And it was the whole crowd was like, ah!
I tell you the one I've told the story, but I was in Chicago to see my friend Chael was fighting Michael Bisping.
Now, Chail's a friend, but Michael Bisping, like, I've communicated with him.
We're friendly.
I like him.
And he was fighting Michael Bisping.
So I just got into it and everyone, because Chao was the bad guy.
And so people were booing him.
And Michael Bisping came out.
And I just went, boo!
Boo!
Go back over the pond, you limey.
And a guy behind me looked, he went, hey, that's fucking disrespectful.
And I just was, all right, I'm sorry.
You don't know that I know them, but I could, I get it.
He's about to get punched in the face, and I'm, I'm here with a $19 pint.
And, okay.
And then I went like this, and he went, and it turned back.
We had a moment.
He's like, all right.
You know what's great about that is he didn't hit and threaten you.
He didn't tell you to do anything.
He didn't command anything.
He just aggressively said something to you.
Yeah.
And then I remember the next day, I was with my friend in Phil Davis, actually, that same trip we were in Chicago, Phil Davis, who had just fought Rashad Evans and lost.
And he lost, and it was a very big, because he was a U-Penn wrestler, and Rashad Evans was on top of him.
It was kind of boring, and Rashad Evans was just kind of laying on him and smothering him.
And so the crowd started booing.
And I saw Phil Davis the next day.
And he had like a black guy, but he was pretty much funny.
He's like, hey, man, I said, hey, I said, I love you.
I'm a big fan.
I said, you know, I know you're going to.
I didn't say bounce back because I said, I said, I can't believe the crowd was booing.
He said, Yeah, man, I was the one who should have been booing.
I was the one underneath them.
It's a really nice.
Actually, he doesn't sound like that, but he's black, so I did the voice.
All right, let's chat.
Was it you Penn or Penn State?
I know you've confused me.
Where's the one where the guy raped the kids?
Penn State.
Penn State.
Okay, just making sure.
You're right.
It's a good qualifier.
That does narrow it down.
That's it.
Because I was in the trash talk where you shot up and said, I'm going to do you worse.
And he said, I'm going to do you worse than that coach did those kids at your college.
And Phil Davis was just like, all right, man, it's kind of messed up, but okay.
He didn't care.
It's kind of messed up, but okay.
All right.
All right.
Next chat from Revenant 19.
Question for the crew: What do you all think about bringing back public execution?
I honestly believe as barbaric as we used to think it was.
It's the only real thing that could put a stop to this violence.
Well, I don't think it'll put a real thing to put a stop to the violence.
I'm not morally opposed to the family and those affected, and I think they are in most states able to witness the execution.
I mean, I guess I'm, I mean, I don't want us to do it in the middle of a football stadium like dude.
I've said it time and time again: sell tickets.
Okay.
All right.
I'm on the tickets.
And then a portion of the proceeds goes.
If there's a victim, portion of proceeds goes to victims' families.
Or, you know, you take a lot of that for tax, tax money.
Because they say execution is sometimes more expensive than keeping them in prison for life.
So I say sell tickets and, you know, bring back the Coliseum.
Maybe that's a little dramatic.
Yeah.
I am a comedian after all.
I don't think this Coliseum will have sharks.
Oh, no, wait.
No Coliseum had sharks.
Next show.
They're going to put me to death.
Buy tickets now.
There will not be a tour.
I'm fine with it.
I don't think it would stop it.
I do think, I understand your train of thought.
I do think fast tracking, like I said, if it is overwhelming video evidence, testimony, witnesses, we know beyond any shadow of a doubt that this person killed somebody in cold blood.
Yes.
You die.
That's it.
Next.
I'm not talking about, in other words, let's find common ground there.
We're not talking about any of the gray area cases.
We're talking about cases like this.
Right.
Unlike the left, I still believe in innocent until proven guilty.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
I realistically, I do think that a public execution would have negative effects as well.
Yeah.
There would be people, there would be riots.
There would be people attempting to, you know, I guess terror.
You'd lose like terror at the execution.
Yeah.
It's just, you'd have to be a lot of security.
It would be expensive.
Yeah.
I don't, I think it wouldn't.
The pros don't outweigh the cons on it, I don't think.
No, no, I understand.
And I understand that you're, you know, it's hyperbole to make a point, but I will say this: the idea that the reason I support the death penalty so much more is because I realize it's the only consistent position for me to take if I value human life.
To value human life, in other words, if everyone has the right to life, then the government only exists to protect that right.
They don't grant that right.
And their primary role is to protect the right to life.
And if they are not executing, ending the lives of people who are taking innocent lives and they're failing their duty.
So I think it's the only morally consistent position.
And I think it's necessary.
And I wanted to go back to one point, too, where you was like, this guy, okay, it's not only 14 times.
Why should he be locked away?
It's not like, it's not like 10 DUIs.
No.
Which is still, I mean, 10 DUIs would be like, geez, you have a problem.
You need to be locked away.
Yeah.
You can't have keys.
But it's not like they're minor crime jaywalking, you know, felony speeding or whatever.
Which they also legalized in New York jaywalking because it was racist.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's also racist.
Saying you can't jaywalk is racist.
It's odd that white people are able to follow these rules as a statistic.
There's still white people who can jaywalk.
I get it, but it's just odd that we have, again, oh, it's racist.
All right.
How many more traffic accidents need to take place until we go?
Maybe we should go back to Jaywalker and like, say, we can't do that.
But with this, it's 14 times.
But it's, here's the other thing.
The reason he needs to be locked away for life is it's 14 times.
And at least in one instance, his justification was someone put something in my body that made me do it.
And so you go, oh, you're crazy.
And there's no rationalizing this with you.
In other words, there's no reason we can't.
So you're not able to learn and improve.
In other words, I believe you're going to do it a 15th time.
Why?
Because you may say or think that someone put something in your body that turned you into a murderer or armed robber.
So yeah, this is one of those unsolvable cases.
So we're going to, you know, now air on the side of protecting the innocent.
We need institutions for these people.
And, you know, it's not, it's not locking them up.
That term implies that you're putting them in prison in a cell where they're going to have to fight every day or you have to join a gang.
No, you can put people in an institution where if they are a danger to society and they don't have anyone to take care of them, they don't have a caretaker.
So I'm going to make sure they take their meds on a regimen.
We had to do something about it.
Yeah, that's the middle crown, guys.
Yeah, that's the middle ground.
You had two options.
You let this person maraud and kill, or hear me out, you kill them.
And they said, okay, well, hey, why don't we come up with another option where we don't actually kill everybody that's just kind of like, you know, goes crazy and has a bit of a nutty.
Why don't we put them in a mental institution?
Like, okay, fine, but as long as they're not around me, like they have to go into the middle institution and not be around anybody else.
Otherwise, we will go back to just killing them because that's what we've done forever.
And it seems to work.
Once you kill them, they really rarely ever come back and do anything bad again to this civilian population.
And then you're like, well, we can't do that.
Now they don't deserve to be locked up.
Okay, then we have to go back to killing them.
You don't understand.
You're not giving me a lot of options here for people who are violent offenders who are out of their minds.
They're roaming the streets.
I'll take either of the last two.
Hurting people.
I'll accept either of the last two.
Yeah.
Also, by the way, there are people who have, and this happens, have psychotic breaks, and they come, especially if it's like substance-induced, where if you institutionalize them and you find out, oh, wait, turns out this guy ate, you know, turns out this guy went to Willie Nelson's and had a brownie and he thought he was Jesus, but we've had him here now for four or five months, and he's been completely rational, seems to recognize it, regrets it.
Okay, there's maybe a path toward getting this person back into.
Let me give you a really clear example.
Gosh, no.
Yeah, Bernie Goetz.
Berkowitz and Bernie Getz.
Who do they say?
Subway?
Yeah, Bernie Goetz.
Bernie Goetz had been mugged, had been a victim of, yeah, I believe these were black guys.
And then said, it's not going to happen again.
Got a firearm.
And the next time that he was being mugged on a subway, he shot them.
Some people would say it was excessive.
Let's assume that it was.
He said, follow a guy up the stairs and shoot him as he was crawling away.
I don't think you followed him up the stairs.
I think you shot him in the corner sitting and he like delivered a line.
He shot him in the kneecap.
He delivered a line.
Yeah.
By the way, that guy was involved with the gang that was going to rob, that was going to mug him at knife points, just to be clear.
So it wasn't like he just picked a rent on the way out and like, hey, you, what, me?
Just threw the paper.
Why say hi to the dentist for me or whatever the fuck?
Whoa.
Nice.
On point.
There you go.
Do you know what Bernie Goetz has done since then?
Absolutely nothing.
Yeah.
He's never harmed another person.
He just had too much.
I'm sorry.
We don't treat.
Because he's white?
No, it's because he's not a threat.
What about the guy who do it for the kids, Tim?
You know him.
Plus.
Sherry Plush.
Yeah.
Same kind of story, right?
There's plenty of examples.
Oh, yeah.
There's plenty of examples of black people in that same scenario or a similar scenario.
There was the guy not too long ago.
You talked about the Carl Lee.
You know, Free Carl Lee.
Who's that?
I have a friend named Carl Lee.
Oh.
Is it his friend?
It's not.
No, he's a gentle giant.
I completely forgot to work now.
Matthew McConaughey is a judge.
Samuel L. Jackson's the black guy who killed the white guy or shot.
Oh, civil action?
No, before that.
Samuel L. Jackson.
No, not that.
But you were talking earlier about how I got ding-dong ditch.
There's like this new trend on TikTok where these kids, they're not ding-dong and ditching.
They're kicking the door.
Like they're donkey kicking the door and then running away.
That happened to me.
It happened around the same time it happened to me.
It happened to a black guy at like three in the morning, and he had heard it happening around the neighborhood.
And they did it to his house at three in the morning, and he opened fired and killed at least one of the teenagers who was doing it.
And I'm on that guy's side.
Like that's, I'm sure he wouldn't do anything like crazy out in public or be unstable.
I think that he thought people were breaking into his house.
They're kicking the door.
They had broken into other people's houses.
They're kicking down the door.
He's protecting his family.
Yeah.
Of course.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's unfortunate that they made a mistake and he had to make a choice, but that's not someone who's a threat.
Yeah.
Unless you're kicking the door.
In other words, like you look at it, you go, wait, hold on a second.
Has this man shot anybody else who was not kicking in his door in the middle of the night?
No?
Okay.
That's very different from a man who commits a crime 14 times seeking out victims.
Yeah.
We shouldn't even have to have this conversation.
The only reason we do have to have this conversation is because the left lies to you so much that you almost feel like you have to explain that there isn't an equivalency.
We've always known this.
We've always known this.
So, all right, let's grab one more chat.
And I know we've gone late.
We started late today.
Thanks for bearing with us.
A time to kill was the time to kill.
A time to kill.
Sorry, totally derailed, but you know.
That's right.
I remember that one.
Yeah.
Civil action was, was that also Matthew McGahn?
Or was that John Travolta?
Or is that the general's daughter?
I don't know.
Travolta was in the general's daughter, yes.
Oh, look, it's time.
Oh, to kill who?
Yeah.
Oh, you.
You know what DeCarlos, you know what DeCarlos Brown Jr. calls the time to kill?
Every time.
That's what that guy thinks.
Hopefully no one time.
I hope his time to kill is very soon where the state kills him.
Yeah.
That's my only problem with the feds taking over the case.
They can't institute the death penalty if they're taking it from them.
I don't know if they can take it from them necessarily, but whatever they do, this guy needs there needs to be an example here.
Yeah.
A quick one.
All right.
Well, final chat from Raging Oak Tree.
Hope there's a Good Samaritan in prison.
Sorry.
Sorry, man.
What?
Who?
Noodles.
Hopefully there's a Good Samaritan.
What?
In prison.
In prison.
Oh, sorry, I interrupted you.
Noodles, you matter.
Fair.
All right.
Raging Oak Tree asks.
Read to me, bitch.
These soft on crime Democrat mayors.
Is there a chance that if a conservative changes his party registration to Democrat and runs a tough on crime platform, they could win?
What?
What?
No, you can't just change your registration from Republican to Democrat and get people to vote for you, can you?
Also, tough on crime doesn't work with Democrats.
No.
They don't believe it.
Another chat.
I'm sorry.
I appreciate it.
That's not a good question.
It's not a terrible question.
Do better next time.
We love you.
Whatever.
What was the name?
That came from Raging Oak Tree.
Raging Oak Tree.
All right.
Rage Harder.
All right.
Two people asked basically the same chat, so I'll just read them both.
Animal 008 asks, What advice do you have for young women to prepare them for the DiCarloses of the world?
And thank you.
And then Frowline April asks, I could use some help giving my daughters the talk to keep them safe when they're out on their own.
How could I do this without showing my utter disgust and rage?
She looks like my 16-year-old.
Oh, you mean Zarutska looks like your 16-year-old?
I wouldn't be primarily concerned with disgust.
I mean, rage, you know, you want to be level-headed whenever you're explaining something to children just because it's more effective or to young adults because it's more effective.
Yeah, look, we shouldn't.
I know that we shouldn't have to have this conversation, and I am in no way victim blaming.
That's the left.
But if you were to, and the same thing would be for your son.
So, first off, don't do mass transit.
Okay.
Avoid it.
Especially at night.
I mean.
Yeah.
So, yeah, yes, exactly.
Avoid it.
Then, in particular, avoid it at night.
Now, if that is not an option, and at some point they need to be on mass transit, and this would apply across the board, is be with a friend, be armed if they can, know how to use it, and be vigilant.
Situational awareness, meaning they're going to have to assess risks.
They're going to have to enter a new subway car, a new place, a new arena, whatever it is, and go, okay, where's the most vulnerable position?
Where's the least vulnerable position?
So, when you assess the risks, you will assess place, time, and person.
Okay?
Place, time, person.
Let's start with time.
After dark, bad things happen.
Okay?
No matter what, they should have some kind of a buddy system, especially if they're a woman.
Okay.
No matter what, assuming all of the baseline, buddy system, avoid all the things that I said, be armed, know how to use it.
Okay.
Then you go to place.
All right.
Most vulnerable place.
It's always in the middle of said place.
You want to have your back to a wall.
You would ideally be somewhere where you have a better view of the place.
So, for example, if you're at a concert, front row, more vulnerable than back row.
If you're in a restaurant, middle table, more vulnerable than a booth with your back to the wall where you can see the entrance and exits.
So place, assess.
If something were to happen, where would you be safest?
And it doesn't mean they have to live in constant fear.
This becomes second nature.
And then people.
Who is more likely or appears to be more likely of a threat?
We used to learn this when we were kids when they said the stranger danger.
You know, because the problem is, and I've run into this, and I don't know about you, but I do these exercises with my kids as often in bathtim, where I go, okay, we're going to play this stranger game.
And I go, I go, hey, I'm a really friend.
I go, I'm really friendly.
Do you guys want to be my friend?
They go, no.
And I go, really?
But I have a really, hey, I heard you like puppies.
And my daughter goes, yes.
I go, I got puppies in my car.
She goes, no.
But there were a few times she was like, really?
I'm like, no, no, you always say no.
They're really cute one, maybe.
Are they Joe Lewis's puppies?
Yeah, exactly.
And then finally, they go, well, what do we, so I go, so you go and tell a grown-up.
They go, but what if the other grown-up's a stranger?
I'm like, fuck.
So but when we were kids, we were taught, hey, you leave and you tell a grown-up that you know, or a police officer.
Or my dad told me, much more safe, much more, find a mom with a child.
Yeah, yeah.
In other words, a mother with a child.
And I would say the same if it's a father with a child, is far more likely to be someone safe.
So if you walk in someplace, you go, okay, a couple with a child, okay, probably not as unsafe.
A single woman, if you're a woman, just less of a physical threat.
Okay.
A man by himself, what's the degree of, and then you would look, how is he presenting himself?
Is he emulating the look of a criminal?
You know, like someone who you may see in a hip-hop video who is entirely famous because they shot someone or were shot nine times.
Statistical reality, 12 times.
Okay, walk into this room.
Who's 12 times more likely to kill me?
And you know what?
If it's a black guy who's honest, he'll go, I get it.
I get it.
He should be just as pissed as the next guy.
He should be just as pissed at the fact that's a statistical reality and he's not amongst them.
It doesn't mean, by the way, it's much, much less likely that you are assaulted or mugged or kidnapped or killed by a black person.
It's much less likely compared, you know, when you meet a black person on the street.
Of course, we all know that.
But if you find yourself in a scenario, the risk goes up.
Okay, let's do it the other way.
All right.
You're getting on a subway.
Oof, the risk goes up.
You're doing it at night.
Risk goes up.
You're by yourself.
Risk goes up.
You're sitting in a place where you can't see what is behind you.
Risk goes up.
What's behind you at night when you're alone in a subway car and you can't see what's there is a black male.
Risk has just gone up a lot.
A lot.
The most likely scenario is you're fine, but you have put yourself at a risk that it's a risk you don't need to take.
And now let's change one thing.
You're not armed at all.
You are out of options.
At that point, you just have to take it.
You just have to take it.
And the left and the media, they've conditioned us to try and silence that.
Now they'll say, yeah, rape culture.
And that means you should be aware.
Don't leave your drink alone.
Okay.
Hey.
What are you going to tell a young girl who has to get home and doesn't have a car in a major city?
You know, one of the cities you run.
She can't cover her drink.
There's no drink.
She can't cover her drink.
Maybe she can put her thumb over her Stanley straw.
Would you tell them the truth?
Like, well, don't get on there at night in a predominantly black area and sit in the middle of the car where you have multiple black men behind you.
Because that's more risky.
That's more risky than in a jazz club at a hotel lobby taking a tinkle while your friend watches your martini for a few minutes.
It reminds me of when I was a kid.
I will tell you this, just to give you an idea how awful the bullshit is.
Centennial Regional High School, year might have been 2002.
Maybe it was 2001.
They still felt the need to talk to us about AIDS for some reason.
And someone came in.
Was it us or was it you specifically?
That was a private one-on-one conversation.
Stephen, we've noticed some behavioral habits.
Yes.
And we want to partake.
And I want to see you in my office later.
It's not the fact that I was being sodomized by the janitor when you walked in, was it?
He had an office?
Yes.
He said office.
That's why I went there.
He said there were puppies.
All I see is grooms.
I didn't see them so much as felt them.
All of them.
But they had someone come in and talk about AIDS and like in the AIDS, and this is what happens.
And to avoid risk, to avoid AIDS, and they said, like, you know, obviously they said use a condom.
And then at one point, they said, like, and if someone has a cut or an open wound, make sure you don't touch it.
And that was like one of the first things they said.
Emma asked him, I said, yeah.
So if I'm trying to avoid AIDS, or HIV, at that point, I don't think I fully understood the difference.
I said, if I'm trying to avoid it, is it more important that I don't touch my friend's cut or not have butt sex with a strange man?
They said, well, we're not talking about, we're not judging, we're not, we're just talking about ways to avoid AIDS.
I said, sure, sure, sure.
But if I'm trying to, as a way to avoid, would it be a better way to avoid AIDS to not touch my friend's cut, which I don't plan to do, by the way.
I'm not planning on touching cuts.
What's the most effective form of risk management?
Or like not have butt sex.
I mean, with any man, but like particularly like a strange man.
Like specifically one that I don't know.
Yeah, specifically one I don't know.
Over the road truck.
If I don't know his medical history.
And they wouldn't give me an answer.
And they wouldn't give me an answer.
And these people, this was a public school, these people want you to hand over the raising of your children to the state, or in that case, a province.
Think about that.
The same people telling you that, you know what, throw your friend a band-aid from across the room.
You won't get AIDS.
Just like, just throwing some gauze at him, leave me alone.
Help me put on a tourniquet.
Ah, sorry.
I'm the only one who knows how, but.
I can't.
I don't know if you have AIDS, bro.
I can't, I say, while having sodomy with us.
Like, the point is, like, it's just what?
What?
What are you?
So they're teaching us that.
And these are the same people teaching your kids that we have a system that is genociding trans and killing in record numbers young black men.
And so, my God, something needs to be done about it.
And just like the something to be done with AIDS, don't touch your friend's cut.
There's solutions.
The something to be done about it.
These people who want to raise your kids, it will be soft on crime.
It will be cashless bail.
It will be defund the police.
It will be Black Lives Matter.
All of their solutions, because they are predicated on a lie, will be equally not just wrong.
They will equally be a lie.
Hope that answers your question.
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