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Feb. 26, 2024 - Lionel Nation
57:20
The American Justice System Mocked and Ridiculed by the Arrogant Queen Fani
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You know, last night, Mrs. Ellen and I had the occasion of going to something which was kind of interesting.
I gotta tell you this story.
It was a SAG Awards viewing party.
Never been to one of those.
Oh, we'll go.
I looked in and I thought, wow.
Wow.
First of all, it's packed.
Just packed at this theater in Chelsea.
I mean, it was just packed with people.
So we did this thing called the red carpet.
This was worth the price of admission right there.
Never saw anything like it.
So we got in there.
They said dress festive.
I've never seen anything like it in my life.
I don't want to, I am, I'm always, I don't want to say a people person, people, I'm not a people person, sort of, but I love to watch people, and I saw people that, I mean, I definitely think we were the oldest people there,
I think, I think, I don't know if it's older, but it was a cacophony of People, I guess, from the entertainment angle, I've been, I guess, saying after, well, it was after then, you know, since 93. Right?
So, I think it's pretty good.
You know what I mean?
It's alright.
So I went there, and I'm seeing this, and we're standing outside because it's freezing.
I didn't want to bring a coat with me because there's no coat check.
I'm not going to walk around with a coat.
So I'm thinking, oh, yeah, we had to kind of wait.
And walking behind us, I want you to imagine this guy who's about 6 '3", weighs 90 pounds, black guy, wearing a hat, something like from coming, it's like he went to the prize closet and got the funkiest hat.
You don't know what it is.
Is it Egyptian?
I don't know what the hell it is.
It was just this weird hat.
With a ball on top of it and all those other kinds of things.
Anyway, he does that and lo and behold, he starts screaming, singing.
I will not be ignored.
You know, I don't know what he's singing.
It's not from a song.
He basically is saying, I'm a lunatic.
And I thought, how did this guy get in here?
What does he think this is?
A soup line?
I don't know what the hell he did.
And there's one rule about New York is, no matter who's behind you, no matter what you think, you do not say anything.
You do not say, hey, you want to keep it down?
There's people around here.
No.
No, no.
Nay, nay, nay, nay, nay, nay, nay, nay, nay.
Not today.
You don't know who's got a gun, who's got a knife.
You just keep your mouth shut.
So we kept your mouth shut.
And I thought, but this guy is some homeless street lunatic.
I mean, he looked, maybe not, it's a nice jacket, sort of, I guess, I don't know.
And he walks, he goes, hey!
And he starts knowing people.
You know, whatever it is.
I thought, he's a lunatic.
Or is he?
Or is he?
Or is he somebody just acting like, you know, like, whatever.
He's just one of those people that's, you know, I don't know.
And there we have it last night.
There we have it again.
And if you have not seen this, I want you to make a point.
And I know, I recognize that, you know, there are some folks in our group, when I say our group, it's like, this was the theater group last night.
You know, the entertainment group, that crowd.
I'll tell you more about that later because I don't think you're interested in it.
But I could spend an hour on what I saw.
People and posing and it's not enough.
I find this fascinating.
I find this fascinating.
There is this sense of it is not enough to be Gay in the entertainment business.
You've got to be, hey!
You know, Monty Rock III, RuPaul, loud!
Hey!
What?
Where?
Where did this happen?
And then, you look over, and there are people, I guess, used to call them lesbian, I guess, couples, and they're very quiet.
I begin, I can hang with the lesbians.
A little bit easier than this.
Why is this artificial flamboyance and this make-believe excitement, why is that part and parcel with the expression of a sexuality?
That's another topic that I could go on and on about.
When did this start?
When did this...
When?
Okay, Oscar Wilde.
Fine.
Maybe, maybe, maybe the...
I don't know.
It was just...
It was...
But...
That's in that part of that section.
The other part is we're watching the first two parts of the Wendy Williams documentary.
Please watch that.
Tell me what you think.
So complicated.
So issue-oriented.
I could do two weeks on that one.
Whereas most people would say, ew, and they wouldn't see it.
They wouldn't understand how complicated this story is.
It is complicated.
Really complicated.
She seems to be crazy.
But is she that crazy?
Did they put this out to support those who want to see her finances cut?
I mean, she's clearly crazy.
She has lymphedema.
Her feet are swollen.
She has Graves' disease.
This is hyperthyroidism.
Proptosis, where her eyes are bugging out like they're going to just pop out.
And it gives that crazy look.
And I thought, if I didn't know better, the people who want her to be subject to the guardianship, which is what all this is about, wanted this out.
Including her family and sons and her ex-husband because she looks like a lunatic and it hasn't even gotten started yet.
That's that story which we can be talking about.
Which most people I know fail to understand the complexity of the issue, the genius of the issue, the story, how crazy is crazy in view of and this idea of Of, you know, mental illness and the entertainment agency.
Third issue.
I'm glad to see Robert Downey Jr. is going to get Best Supporting Actor.
And he deserves it.
But not for this.
He phoned this one in.
Anybody can do it.
Okay, he shaved his head.
This guy is such a great actor.
In Chaplin?
Tropic Thunder was the greatest ever, but nobody will give him credit for that because he got a pass on that.
They probably said, okay, Bobby D, listen, we'll let you go on this.
He did blackface, but it was so brilliant.
We understood it.
Everybody understood it.
They had to say, okay, this obviously is not racist.
They had to, probably reluctantly.
Mrs. L and I knew his father very well, Robert Downey Sr.
And I'm sure he's thinking, I wonder if his father could have ever seen this because his father was a producer in his own right.
Anyway.
But it's about Oppenheimer.
Quick, quick, quick show of hands.
I have a movie I'm going to put you out called Bebe.
It's based on Bebe Netanyahu.
And it chronicles the storied bravery of the IDF in trying to wipe out Hamas in Gaza on October the 7th, showing brave IDF soldiers and commandos going into hospitals and flooding tunnels with seawater to get those Hamas killers has some of the best actors ever.
This is a hypothetical now.
Killian What's-His-Face.
Brad Pitt.
Matt Damon.
George Clooney.
He's got everybody, you can imagine.
Gary Oldman, I think, is the best actor alive today.
Daniel Day-Lewis.
Too athletic.
My name is...
Come on, stop it.
But for pound for pound, just...
I think Gary Oldman is it.
The best actor ever was, of course, Spencer Tracy.
Nobody.
The guy could read an envelope.
Anyway.
That story wouldn't be made.
About B.B.?
Great acting.
We don't give a damn about that.
We're not going to do some movie that extols the bravery and the virtues of IDF of Israeli officers.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no.
But why not?
They've fallen in love with this Oppenheimer story, and it's a bunch of bullshit.
Robert Downey Jr. shaved his head.
Okay, fine.
Killian, what's his name?
Lost weight.
Okay, fine, fine.
Matt Damon.
I'm sorry, Matt Damon.
He might be a good actor, but whenever I see him, he's like, oh, wait a minute, they're sparky.
Wait a minute, always piquant.
Watch what he says very carefully.
Sparky says, funny how in Victorian times, since you weren't supposed to like sex anyway, in a way it didn't matter whether you were gay or straight, you were expected to close your eyes and think of England.
Very good!
Yes!
Touché, mon frere!
Touché indeed!
Don Howell says, break out the bourbon, today is my 59th birthday.
Sadly, it is the first without my mother who passed away in June.
Ah, 2023.
Well, let me tell you something, my friend.
Danny Howell, happy birthday to you.
Let's give Danny a big birthday.
Welcome around, Danny.
Send your love to him.
Isn't that great?
Isn't that great?
Thank you, Danny.
And happy birthday.
Many, many more to you, my friend.
You're on the cusp of 60, which is the new 58. Anyway.
Break out the bourbon.
By the way, I can't wait.
I'm getting my new package from Puckered Butt Hot Sauce.
This huge collection of sauces.
Including, I think, Pepper X. Got some Reaper and some...
That is the connoisseur's connoisseur.
Interestingly enough, the owner of that company...
Use peppers to stamp out alcoholism, which I think all your friends agree you have.
And I'm kidding, of course.
Anyway, happy birthday.
Oppenheimer was a commie.
I don't know why people are having a hard time with this.
He basically did this stuff.
The story is complete nonsense.
And what I want to tell you, one thing before we get to the story, if there's one thing, if there's one thing I teach you, show you, I provide for you.
If there's one thing, just one thing I can make you grasp and embrace, it is this very simple thing about gradation.
It's like, well, well, for example, what is love?
Love for your country, love for your family, love for your pet, romantic love, love of a concept, love of a team, love of a sport, love.
Versus admiration, versus infatuation.
Stop!
That's the way I live in gray.
Make America gray again.
I love this.
Yeah, it was a commie, but the commies were different.
Don't you understand that in the left, during that time coming out of World War I, there were people who realized that there was an absolute economic capitalism as we knew it.
Pose this brutal inferiority to the system of the rest of the world.
And let's hear it for Russia, who really won the war.
The Russians beat Hitler.
The Russians were fighting fascism.
The Russians.
Russia, Russia, Russia.
It's a different story than what we're doing now.
We didn't have this cold war then.
So these people came out of it.
And if you don't understand that, there's no way to...
Did you see that picture yesterday of Trump with Javier Millet at the CPAC?
Wasn't that great?
Do you know who Millet is?
No.
Do you know anything about him?
No.
Do you ever know about the World Economic Forum?
What?
But they just see him because he's got funky hair and he's hugging Trump and they think he's a great guy.
People don't say, well, yeah, but you can still be good for Trump but not like him.
This is called gray.
We live in gray.
There are gradations to things.
So the whole story about, you understand, about Oppenheimer is bullshit.
That's not true.
The way they say it.
He was not this.
He was this weird, kind of a strange person who was very, but, but, but, but.
It was okay at first, but everybody, everybody, everybody, from Einstein to, who was it, to Zillard to certainly him later on.
To everybody who worked on it.
Up to and including Dwight Eisenhower, MacArthur, Stimson, Curtis LeMay, MacArthur, Eisenhower, LeMay.
And they all said, no, don't drop it.
No, no, no, no, no.
No need to.
And Truman said, uh-uh.
I gotta drop it because I gotta make sure those rooskies know what we have.
Because Truman, that's another one too.
You like Truman?
You sure about that?
No, you don't.
Gray, gray, gray.
Some was good, some was...
It doesn't work like that.
But he was the one who said, no, we're going to do it.
And the best part was Klaus Fuchs, Stalin knew it.
Stalin already knew all about that.
Is that in that movie?
Of course not!
It's about this romantic, the color and the lights and the overacting.
So I could have put the same people as Sparky would.
I'm sure Sparky and I would be in the front row.
Bebe.
I don't know who would play Bebe.
Maybe Kelsey Grammer.
Forget what people would look like.
Or Emanuel Lewis, TV's Webster.
You wouldn't do that.
Would you see that, Sparky?
The brave...
IDF going in.
No!
Lefties would hate that.
But it's true.
Says who?
Says they.
It's good acting.
Yeah, but it's not true.
You didn't care about Oppenheimer.
What are you talking about?
How many times do I see things in movies that have nothing to do with law?
I think this is a great movie.
This is the worst!
If I did a movie, if I did a show on surgery, and I did a guy with psychic surgery where I pretended to stick my hand in his gut and pulled out the tumor, they would say, that's great acting.
He would say, there's no such thing as psychic surgery.
Don't you understand how this works?
Entertainment world is a complete, it is a fantasy world.
And they're not lefties.
Let me say this again, and listen to me carefully.
They're children.
Listen carefully to these very important words from our sponsor, but I want you to think about this in the meantime.
They're children.
And who are the people who are really doing it?
Well, let me tell you one guy who should be getting an award for temerity and tenacity and intrepidity, and that's Mike Lindell.
And you know his product.
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Yesterday I was watching, again, the absolutely horrid...
And by the way, when I say watching, it was sent to me, sent by virtue of this, you know, whatever is on YouTube or whatever.
By the way, YouTube is...
Let me make sure people understand it.
YouTube is a wonderful, wonderful, wonderful...
Put it this way.
It is my channel.
It is what I watch exclusively.
I watch, with the exception of like last night, I had to program the quote DVR for the first time to watch this Wendy Williamson.
I have no time.
I don't watch anything on regular TV.
This was worthwhile, though.
Because I spend most of my time on YouTube.
And it sends things to me.
It sends interesting...
It knows what I'm watching.
And I'm...
I was watching a...
I'm doing my private channel, and I was discussing this piece on AI that is so good.
But it would be a snooze fest for most people.
He's back, ladies and gentlemen.
Sparky says, You might be right.
You might be right?
Equivalency shouldn't be drawn between World War II and present-day Gaza.
In World War II, they were relatively discreet of leaving alleged, or allied, rather, public oblivious, real-time.
Nowadays, they're open and notorious.
Well, you know, it's also, Sparky, which is a very interesting thing, and by the way, I appreciate that.
Sparky, how do you think people would have handled Doolittle's raid?
Well, let's talk about this.
What's the difference between World War II and Gaza?
But seriously, what is it?
Based upon us, what do you think it is?
What do you think that is?
What's the difference?
What's the difference?
Tell me.
When you're in Israel, if you're in Tel Aviv, if you're in Starod, if you're in Beersheba, or you're in Haifa, wherever you are, how do you look at Hamas?
What do you think if you were there?
What do you think if you were in there and you say, what do you think about settlers?
What do you say?
Come on.
We're settlers.
A bunch of people saying, we're going to move in here.
Who are you?
We're the settlers.
Get out.
No, they're kind of like, people say they're squatters.
If you're in Israel, you know what I'd probably say?
Well, this is our place.
I mean, let's face it.
You know, we say nationalism.
We're the best and we're the greatest.
Get out!
Right?
They do it.
Don't you understand how that works?
If you don't understand how people think, what's the point?
They view, they are telling you that Hamas is an existential threat to their everything, and they don't want to hear from you talking about, well, you've got to put a proportional threat.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
There's no proportional anything.
So anyway, so that's, so I'm just saying, it's, you have to, you have to get it.
And I, and while we're on this subject, which is what you, and I kept, and I'm listening to this, I'm listening to this CPAC, I'm thinking, these people don't have anything to do.
I love this Jack Posobiec, probiotic, whatever his name is.
I don't know who this guy is.
But God bless him.
But he's a Christian.
Okay.
I've met a few.
I know what that's about.
But no, no, no, no, no.
He knows what Jesus thinks.
Not you.
He does.
And the first thing Jesus would say, if I said, oh, you're not going to believe this.
What is it, Jesus?
Well, I don't know if you want to hear this.
Why?
They kill.
I don't know what the purpose of your trip was to this planet because I don't think anybody got the message.
I don't think they got the message.
What do you mean?
Well, I'm just saying I don't think they got the message.
I don't think they are paying attention to any of this stuff and I don't think, I do not think that these folks, honest to God, understand.
Anything.
Do you hear what I'm saying?
Nothing.
I don't think they understand anything.
I don't think they're paying attention.
I don't think they get it.
I just don't think they understand.
Because death to them is like, it doesn't really mean anything.
Murder, death, children, infants, fetuses, capital punishment, war.
Nothing.
Transhumanism, torture, Incarceration, the death penalty.
I mean, I really, I gotta tell you something.
I really, and I say that, I'm not saying it to be sacrilegious.
I'm saying, what would you really tell Jesus?
What would you tell Jesus?
What would you say?
What are they doing?
I don't know what they're doing.
I don't understand this.
I don't understand any of this stuff.
Why do they, I don't know.
We're doing a movie where they're celebrating a guy who killed a quarter of a million people with bombs.
And by the way, The one who killed more people is what we did with regular firebombs.
Jesus!
By the way, how does it feel like to have your name as a Jesus?
What if it had been Sparky?
Sparky, damn it!
Sparky!
What if your name was...
Sorry about that.
We realized that Japan was wooden.
There was no concrete.
And it was all wood.
Everything was wood.
Temples and this and that.
And we firebombed it.
Curtis LeMay came down to the city.
I'll show you how to do that.
We killed more people.
We destroyed more property with plain old bombs in the center areas than we did with the World War II.
But you know why?
We said, well, September 7th.
I mean, December 7th.
October 7th.
December 7th.
Yesterday.
December 7th.
Huh?
Huh?
Once we get it in our head that that's okay, you did it, you did it, we're done with you.
Oh, we're through.
Once we feel justified, you're through.
We are done with you.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely.
We are so done with you.
You never want to be at the receiving end of us being right about something.
Oh, dear God, no.
Dear God, no.
Don't do that.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
We will...
You don't know what it is.
So that's that.
Okay?
So we had this thing I was going to tell you at the start.
There's so many things I want to talk to you about.
This SAG thing, which I talk about in my private channel, more just what I saw and how I don't fit into any of this stuff.
We walked in, we did the red carpet, and we just got the hell out of there.
Sorry!
Not interested.
Which is okay.
Which is groovy.
Because I'm not an internet.
I'm just me.
I'm not showbiz.
Anyway.
So.
Then.
We have that.
We have people.
How about great.
Nikki Haley.
By the way.
How does Nikki Haley feel?
Nikki Haley says.
I know exactly what's going on.
Nikki Haley says.
You know how much money I got in my coffers?
My campaign account that I can spend theoretically forever while I investigate running again for my campaign.
Oh.
Travel, meals, a driver, an office, limo.
I got it all.
Airfare.
I'm always running.
So it's the greatest deal in the world.
I'll go anywhere.
I'll run for office in...
You know, whatever.
In Madrid, I don't care.
It's about money.
I'm doing great.
I put my name out.
I'm going to be on more boards.
I'm going to be Boeing and this and Bechtel and blah, blah, blah.
They want me to be on all this.
I'm solid.
I am solid.
I don't care about that.
Don't feel bad for me.
Oh, no, no, no.
But it is a kind of a kick.
You know, your own state.
Because your state knows you better than anybody else.
We can't say that about Chuck Schumer.
We have a senator named Kristen Gillibrand.
We never see her.
We never see her.
I don't even know if she's still there.
She's just gone.
Like peep booty giggity giggity.
Just gone.
Now I will tell you something.
And this is the absolute truth.
Whether you want to believe this or not, this may bother you, depending on who you are.
But if you're watching me, probably you won't.
Number one, Donald Trump has not aged in, we're looking at, well, 2015, he really started when he came down, I think.
So we're looking at nine years, roughly, right?
And normally, you know, when you get older, like when you're, like, you know, you notice when you're a kid, like, hey, all of a sudden, he's so cute.
Boom!
Hey, boy, he got big.
And then he kind of looks the same, you know.
And then...
You see people in high school like, boy, the ugly duckling turns into something else.
And then when you get into the back nine of your life, then you really see, whoa!
Who knew?
I like when they say, what do they look like now?
It's so terrible.
They always say, look at these beautiful actresses and now look at them.
What does this mean?
But anyway, Trump, remember how Obama just, I mean, he absolutely, this guy, This guy aged.
Remember, that hair went gray, and good for him, he didn't die, but he just, I mean, and George W. Bush, oh my God.
Now, I understand that, you know, Trump does a little spray tan, and, you know, he looked great when his hair was white.
Looked fantastic.
But, okay.
He looks the same, though.
He looks great.
He's quick.
When you see him with Malay, and you hear them talk, you realize, this is how good this guy is.
He's an anomaly.
Whether you like him or not, it doesn't really matter.
He looks terrific.
Biden is just cratering.
Put it this way, there's a free fall and then his free fall is speeding up.
It's getting even worse.
So then, as we watch this horror develop, he has something that no other politician has said.
In my lifetime, he goes in and he does something.
Why were the Beatles that great?
Why?
Part because they were great, but also they're like dogs start barking when one dog barks, the other dog barks, and when a kid starts crying, the other kid cries.
There's a group, it's Gustave Le Bon.
People thought it was hip to see who could out-love the Beatles.
This is a different story.
Sparky says, Had a barber and bank teller with concentration camp serial tattoos when I was a kid.
Many Americans knew of concentration camps but weren't familiar with atrocities until the Holocaust miniseries.
That is true.
And by the way, never do this but understand the difference between a concentration camp and a death camp.
These are what?
I said that there are differences.
Wait, what?
I said, no, I'm not saying that.
People don't even want to know that.
No, you've got to get certain distinctions.
Because when you say a concentration camp, it's a different story.
Now, watch this.
Ready for this?
Watch what I'm doing.
See this?
Boom.
Concentration versus a death camp.
You have the types of camps.
This is from the Holocaust Explained.
Concentration camps.
A concentration camp is a place where people are concentrated and imprisoned without trial.
Inmates are usually exploited for labor and kept in harsh conditions, although this is not always the case.
Then there's concentration camps and extermination camps.
It is key to separate concentration from extermination camps.
And it goes on and on.
Extermination camps were used to murder.
Now, I hate people.
I'm sorry to bring this up to people, but this is absolutely true.
You want to talk about this or not?
The biggest problem, and Sparky, I think you'll agree with me, the biggest problem that people have is with the word genocide.
Genocide, by the way, genocide is the origin.
It's the 1940s.
Genocide.
Yes, genocide.
It comes from...
I think it was Raphael Lemkin.
It was a new term and a new...
Yes.
Genocide, a new term and a new concentration.
So it's new.
And by the way, whenever you get into things, you can learn about a society by how words mean.
I remember, I'm old enough to remember, that...
What the hell is this?
Oh my lord.
Look at these reactions.
Did you see that?
I forgot to turn this off.
All of a sudden I said something and there's...
I'm talking about death camps and all of a sudden there's fireworks.
I did not do this.
This is the reaction setting, which is so nice.
You're not...
How do I say this?
You are not demeaning something by wanting to understand how things work.
So when genocide came out, the word, people heard this and they imagined genocide.
And they thought of cattle cars and extermination and this horror.
And yes, that's a part of it, but that's not it.
That's good that you know that.
But under the genocide treaty, And I think it's a wrong term, but if you understand truly what genocide means, it means, by the way, the elimination or the targeting of a group in part or in whole, and not necessarily death, but for continued attack, for removal, displacement, and there's ethnic cleansing, and these words, and I promise you, let me stop right there.
The first thing I do is I run to the dictionary.
Tell me what that means.
What's the difference?
What's the difference?
I told you before, we have a thing called aggravated battery.
Aggravated battery is a term which used to be called mayhem.
Mayhem was a term that was used in common law.
Anytime I did something that would disenable you from fighting, I took out an eye, I lopped off an arm, I did something that prevented you from fighting.
That was mayhem versus murder.
That was fascinating to me.
When I was a kid, I remember black.
It was, I remember, colored, negro, colored, negro, colored, black was later on, well, yeah, well, black, believe it or not, when James Brown says, I'm black and I'm proud, say it loud, black?
Well, black was, oh, that's far too, that's far too, you know, not far, no, no, no, just stay away from black, don't say that.
White, well, white's okay, but don't say black.
Well, no, black's okay.
Then there was Afro.
I mean, the Afro hairstyle.
Afro-American.
Which, technically speaking, I don't know if Afro or Afro-American, but I think Franco-American, Sino-American, Russo-American.
Afro, the O, I think would be more correct.
But anyway, it was Afro-American, then African-American, then people of color, and then, you know, there's all kinds of variations of it.
Kid, this distinction or this elevation of the etymology or the transition of people who work with the death, a grave digger, undertaker, mortician, funeral director, thanatician.
They were saying, this is from Greek thanatos, for death.
Never took off, but that's what they were thinking.
So there's all these derivations.
The gay folks...
When gay, I don't know how long gay's been around, but I kind of remember later on, queer was considered negative.
Now it's embraced.
But then, you know, there are some groups of people that we can say certain things and certain things you cannot.
If you're a member of a group, if you're a group, there's a fellow who does a great...
Have you ever seen him on TV?
He shows...
Hey, how you doing?
He goes, and bust your head.
He's this kid from that kid.
He's a young guy.
And he uses every Italian-American epithet there is.
He can say it, but you can't.
It's like, I don't want to go into the derivation of the N word.
So what am I saying?
Through that convoluted explanation, to you perhaps, is the following.
We have to explain to people that you may not like the word Genocide, but under the treaty, that's the word that's being used.
And that's the word that has a...
That's the word that is preferred.
That's the word that's used.
That's the word that is under the treaty used to determine these things.
Other people have a hard time with it.
It's like, well, I don't care whether you have a hard time with it or not.
That's the way that is.
But the thing is, nobody understands the perspective of this.
Nobody grasps it.
Why?
Because you have to understand grays and nuances and you have to understand what people think.
How we think to them, how they think.
Remember, you're in a goldfish bowl.
You're on this table.
You can't see the other bowl.
They can't see you.
In your world, in your world, you see things that, well, it's very clear.
We're the good guys.
They're the bad guys.
We live in a world, and by the way, we look, the reason why I think we look so stupid is that we have this idea of complete and total arrogance.
We went to Iraq, Libya, we destroyed it, Afghanistan, and then just sort of left?
I don't know.
We're the only country that's amnesic.
The subject of today's piece is the American justice system mocked and ridiculed by an arrogant queen funny.
I don't think anybody yet really understands that is the one that I would jump on.
She is the Please, don't take this the wrong way.
I know people are going to do it.
She is the Willie Horton of...
She's the Lee Atwater.
What do you mean?
Willie Horton was the story.
This is what destroyed Michael Dukakis.
Lee Atwater, who was a partner in the old days with Roger Stone and I don't know who else.
There was another one, I think.
Could it be Segretti?
I don't think so.
But anyway.
This was a picture.
There's this terrible...
Look at the graphics.
There's this bad mugshot.
He went out on furlough, I think, and raped somebody.
It might have been...
Was he on...
I'll let you look at that.
It might have been on Dukakis' watch as governor.
I don't know.
Anyway.
Willie Horton.
Huh?
Yeah, I know, but I don't know if he was from Massachusetts or if it was somebody else or another state.
I know it was Dukakis.
Remember poor Kitty who was alcoholic and she drank...
Mouthwash.
It's so sad.
Remember that one?
Dukakis was.
But the point is, people said, you're pointing to Willie Horton because he's black.
Yep.
But it turns out he was a rapist.
Yeah, but you're saying you're picking him out because he's black.
Well, that was true.
But do you think a stockbroker?
Do you think some guy from, you know, some Merrill Lynch insider trader?
I don't think that's going to...
Capture the idea.
So anyway, so here comes Fannie Wilson.
Fannie Wilson, Willis rather, is the most, is the perfect example of arrogance.
Now people will say, well she's black.
But that's not it.
But that's what people are going to say.
Because remember, we're up against a group of people who will immediately try to disqualify you because of either who you are, you're crazy, you're a conspiracy theorist, you're a nut, you're a MAGA, whatever it is.
They always find a way.
To get around who you are and what you're saying by who you are.
And Fannie Willis is when you see her, when you see her in action, you cannot believe the level of arrogance, the level of entitled meanness.
Stand by for one second, dear friends, as we listen to this critical word about what happens if all of a sudden there's a disaster and you and your family can't eat.
Let's talk about a very serious subject, emergency food.
That's right, emergency food.
I know, I know.
At first blush, it's difficult for most people to think about something that they just take for granted, ever-reaching emergency status.
We're used to stores always being open, deliveries always made, no supply chain disasters, no ransomware catastrophes, none of that stuff.
Nothing shutting down our gas stations, right?
No trucking strikes, no war, no protests from farmers, nothing catastrophic in terms of weather.
Nope, that can't happen to us.
Uh-uh.
And I understand it's a defense mechanism that we have because the idea of ever not being able to eat or locate food is seemingly incomprehensible.
Well, it's not.
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Trust me.
Let's go back to Willie Horton.
Imagine this.
In 74, Willie Horton had...
I don't know if we...
Willie is 72, by the way.
He's still with us.
On June the 6th, by the way, he was a robber and a terrible person.
In June, he was released as a part of a weekend furlough program in Massachusetts.
And then it turns out that he was in Maryland.
He twice raped a woman after pistol whipping, stabbing, binding, and gagging her fiancé.
He then stole the car belonging to the man he had assaulted.
He was later shot and captured.
Okay, this was Willie Horton.
And this was like, oh boy.
And people, of course, said that this was all about race and Willie Horton was this scary-looking black guy.
Now, I'm sure Lee Atwater would have said, well, of course, but that happens to be the fact.
Yeah, but it's because he's black.
Well, it may be because he's black, but maybe that's something we have to discuss.
But irrespective, it's the truth.
Now, Fannie Willis, if you watch five minutes of her, people will say, I can't.
Who is that?
Who is that?
That's the district attorney who wants to put President Trump and 15 other people or so in prison indefinitely for racketeering.
This woman.
Really?
Uh-huh.
This woman?
This woman.
Yep.
What do you think about that?
Huh?
How do you like that?
You think she's got any problems with that?
Any qualms?
Nope.
That's her.
You can't believe it unless you see her.
Now, one could argue, is it because she's black?
I really think not.
It's the arrogance.
It's the way she talks.
Nobody looks at Letitia James and says, oh, look at this woman.
No, because at least Letitia James is Gentlewomanly.
She's not, you know, you may disagree with what she's doing, but she doesn't act like a fool in front of people.
Jack Smith doesn't do that.
Other people don't do that.
I mean, you know, it doesn't happen.
There's no Roberta...
Kaplan, I think, who represented E. Jean Carroll, didn't act like this.
No, no, this is clearly, clearly, clearly a once-in-a-lifetime.
You never see this.
And this woman is so deranged and so disconnected from reality, this entitled lunatic, that she's basically handing it over to people who, in any event.
So, what does this mean?
Well, that's a good question.
And the thing which you've got to understand is that these are realities that are sitting there and being handed to you.
You can do one of two things.
You can talk about them or not.
You can exploit them or not.
And what I want you to understand more than anything else is to utilize the words Of, and the theory behind, realism.
Remember, when people ask me, you know, what is your political affiliation?
I always quote Balzac, because anybody can use Balzac.
The name is okay with me.
But I'm with the opposition.
And that's, I'm always, no matter where I am, I'm with the opposition, because there is no group I've ever found that I agree with.
There's always, no, not these groups.
I'm with the other group.
Who?
The other group.
Okay, let's go to the Republicans.
Nah, I'm not with these.
Like CPAC, I can't handle these people.
They don't even know.
They don't even know.
It's like, put it this way.
CPAC is to conservatism or whatever you want to call this.
What F Troop was to Ken Burns' Civil War documentary.
I mean, they're kind of the same, but not really.
You know, Larry Storch is not my idea of a U.S. grant.
Or Ken Burns, for that matter.
So you've got to ask yourself this question.
How are we going to do it?
Well, we understand reality and what people think like.
And when it comes to running for office and what people really care about and the way they act.
And I can't say this enough, but my reality may be a problem.
My reality may hurt your feelings.
My reality may do a lot of things.
And you may not like it, but it is true.
It is true.
That's all.
That's all I want to say.
Sparky, Georgia, Sparky says, Aaron Magruder's The Boondocks has a prison named Willie Horton Prison.
You are just, you are a veritable proponent of that.
Willie Horton was one of the greatest things ever.
Willie Horton was just...
These are realities that happen.
These are realities.
And I'm not...
I'm not apologizing for them.
I'm accepting them.
This is a reality.
I will never forget the horrible things that people said about Chris Christie because he's fat.
Now, nobody will admit to this, but they hate him because he was fat.
I could not, I literally, literally could not believe what people were saying about he was fat.
And for reasons I can't explain, maybe, I will say that if we've really devolved into that level, there's really no excuse for us.
But that's just one of those things.
This is one of those things.
Reality tells me that's the way people are going to act.
And if I wanted to go, and if I wanted to say, if I said, ladies and gentlemen, I'm here to speak with you, would you tell me why black people don't vote?
What?
Why do not black people?
And we'll start with that, but let's go to other groups of people.
Why is it?
Please tell me this.
How dare you?
Wait a minute.
Remember, I'm always Googling.
I'm always, always, always Googling.
Always.
You look at what is it?
Why aren't we?
How do I let people speak?
How do I do it?
How do I explain this?
Look at this one.
This is one thing.
This is from Bloomberg government.
This is the share of 2020 population and then reported voters.
Just go look and see for yourself.
Um...
Let me see.
For example, this is 2020.
The group of white alone, not Hispanic, not Latino, they represented 62.4% of the population.
But 70.3% of reported voters.
60% of the population were 70% of the voters.
Now let's look at Hispanic or Latino.
Share of the 2020 U.S. population, 18 and older, 16.8%.
Of those who voted, 11. Think about that.
Black represented 12.7% of the population.
And 12.3% voted.
So that was very interesting.
And Asian, 6.3% of the population, 4.4% voted.
How am I supposed to deal with this?
What do I have to do?
Why won't you vote?
And what do I have to do?
Do you feel like it's not worth it?
Do you feel like it's a waste of time?
Just tell me.
Do you feel like it's a waste of time?
Just tell me.
Do you feel like this is some kind of a...
Just tell me.
Tell me.
That's all it is.
Just tell me what you think.
Tell me what the truth is.
That's all.
Tell me what your thoughts are.
Tell me how you think about this.
Tell me the way...
Tell me what you feel.
What would get your attention?
What is he not saying?
Why won't you vote for Trump?
Tell me.
Why?
Forget CPAC.
I don't care about those people.
They're going to vote anyway.
I don't care about Carrie Lake.
They're going to vote anyway.
What do I care about Carrie Lake for?
Why don't more black people vote?
Why don't more Hispanics vote?
How do we get them to vote for Trump?
Anybody interested in that?
No, of course not.
They don't think about that.
Why?
Because by virtue of this social media mentality that we live in today, I don't know how to say this.
We live in a world where it's just...
Very, very sad.
Now, Sparky and Dan Howell, by the way, Dan Howell, Sparky, you and I will agree, is Dan Howell's 59th birthday today.
Let's make sure that we send our, again, our love and our respect to Dan Howell.
He's a member of the family, member of the conspiratorium.
God bless you for that.
My friends, I may or I may not.
I do not know.
We have a very interesting group.
That we are going to be speaking with tonight.
I can't really tell you about it, but I will.
I don't.
But they're like-minded folks.
I've got to figure some way out.
Sundays we might have to change a little bit.
So I don't know because we have a Zoom.
We are working 24 hours a day to get out the good work.
In any event, you must subscribe to the network, to the channel here.
And you must hit that little bell so you're notified of live streams and new videos.
You must.
There's no other way around it.
Okay?
And what I want you to do in the meantime, I want you to promise me, you're going to think.
You're going to think about everything.
You're going to question everything.
You're going to say, I'm not satisfied with my rendition of the facts.
I want to explore the truth.
Whether the truth is considered problematic, Soothing or frightening?
I want to know the truth.
That's it.
Okay?
That's it.
I love you, dear friends.
I love you.
It is always, I want you to know this, an honor to speak with you.
You remind me of the fact that the fight is worth fighting, that yes, there are great people in the world who really get it, and you are they.
Alright?
So anyway, have a great and glorious Sunday to you, my friends.
Remember, we may or may not talk today.
I don't know.
It just depends.
Or I may just do a regular video, but you've got to be subscribed so that you know what happens.
You get to know them first.
And what I do is, if I put a video up later, members get the video first.
So that's part of the gig.
Thank you.
Have a wonderful day.
Again, Dan, happy birthday to you, brother.
Have a great and glorious day.
See you the next time.
And don't forget, the monkey's dead.
The show's over.
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