Ep. 1668 - The Case Of The Child Killer Released From Prison Just Got Even More Insane
Today on the Matt Walsh Show, the story of the child killer who was released on parole after a few years in prison is even crazier than you think. I've been investigating this case and found some new pieces of this case that are absolutely mind boggling. Also, the mayor of Chicago continues his open rebellion and treason against the United States. Why isn't he already arrested? And a Hollywood actress says that it's an act of "violence" to expect young people to get married.
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Ep.1668
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Today, Matt Wall Show, the story of the child killer who was released on parole after a few years in prison is even crazier than you think.
I've been investigating this case and found some new pieces that are absolutely mind-boggling.
You have to hear this.
Also, the mayor of Chicago continues his open rebellion and treason against the United States.
Why isn't he already arrested?
And a Hollywood actress says that it's an act of violence to expect young people to get married.
We'll talk about all that and more today on The Matt Wall Show.
We'll talk about all that and more today on The Matt Wall Show.
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When we outlined the crimes of 42-year-old Ronald Exantis yesterday, it was very difficult to imagine how the story could possibly become any more disturbing and infuriating and insulting to our intelligence than it already was.
Exantis, as we discussed, brutally murdered a six-year-old child in Kentucky named Logan Tipton in December of 2015 before violently attacking Logan's siblings and his father.
He stabbed Logan's sister and threw his father across the room, seriously injuring him.
On the night of the crime, Ronald Exantis admitted to officers that he deserved to die for what he had done.
And he was right about that.
But he wasn't put to death.
Instead, the jury found him not guilty by reason of insanity for killing Logan Tipton and guilty of assault in the attacks on everyone else in the family.
And as a result, he is now a free man.
For a home invasion in which he slaughtered a child, Ronald Exantis ultimately served less than a decade in prison in a state that's overwhelmingly conservative, no less.
In other words, unless the slain child's father murders Ronald Exantis, as he's vowed to do, then this particular child killer won't suffer any meaningful form of justice for his crimes.
In the state of Kentucky, child murder is now treated like tax evasion.
The punishments are equivalent.
And that's how things stood as of yesterday.
Somehow, though, this story has just become even more incomprehensible and enraging.
And the more you look into what happened here and how it happened, the more you realize that drastic action needs to be taken.
And after, you know, researching this over the last uh 24 hours, I have a pretty good idea of how to go about that.
And we'll start with this news statement from the Kentucky Parole Board.
They claim that really they didn't have anything to do with the release of Ronald Exantis.
It's not their fault, they say.
Quote: Despite repeatedly voting for Ronald Exantis to remain in prison, parole board members have faced significant threats over the last several days, even having their personal addresses released publicly.
We are encouraging individuals to take these threats seriously and to prioritize factual information, which is that the board did not release Exantus.
Instead, a law passed by the General Assembly did.
Now, first of all, you'll notice that they make themselves the victims in this scenario right off the bat.
Forget about the grieving parents who have to watch their son's killer go free.
Forget about Logan's siblings who are traumatized for life, and who now have to worry that Ronald Exantis will, you know, finish the job that he that he started with this with this family.
Forget about the millions of Americans who have lost faith in the judicial system as a result of this farce.
The real victim, according to the Kentucky Parole Board, is the Kentucky Parole Board.
Of course, no one should threaten the Kentucky Parole Board.
No one condones that.
I don't condone it.
But you have to wonder why their first instinct is to talk about themselves in a case like this.
You also have to wonder if they actually voted to keep Ronald Exantis in prison as they claim, since the parole board's meetings aren't public.
This is what they claim now.
Oh no, we all wanted to keep him.
Well, how do we know that?
We'll just have to take their word for it, I guess.
And more importantly, you have to wonder what law passed by the General Assembly is responsible for the release of Ronald Exanthus and whether or not the parole board could have done anything about it.
And this is where the story becomes truly insane.
Okay, well, it was already insane, but this is where somehow it gets crazier.
So my team, my producers reached out to the Kentucky Parole Board yesterday.
And when they reached out, my team was told that Ronald Exantis, who again broke into a home in the middle of the night, murdered a child, and then tried to kill an entire family.
But what we were told is that he is still considered a nonviolent offender in Kentucky.
Yes, you heard that correctly.
A man who stabbed a child to death so viciously that the blade bent, and who then tried to kill the child's siblings and his father is a nonviolent offender in Kentucky.
Now I'm gonna quote directly from the Kentucky Parole Board uh spokeswoman in her conversation with my producers.
This is what she said.
Quoting directly.
Quote, his conviction classifies him as a nonviolent offender.
Violent offenders have to serve at least 85% of their sentence, with his conviction being nonviolent, the time he earned in the areas, jail credit, uh good time credit, education credit, reduced his sentence.
That's what we were told.
Direct quote.
Nonviolent offender.
To put it another way, if you're a nonviolent offender in Kentucky, you only have to serve 20% of your sentence.
If you're a violent offender, you have to serve 85%, which is still too low, by the way.
Why, why eighty, why not 100%?
Why don't we just require every violent offender to serve 100% of their sentence?
In fact, why don't we require every nonviolent offender?
This was your sentence.
Why shouldn't you serve it?
20% is ridiculous.
You leaving aside the fact that this obviously was not a nonviolent crime.
And as it turns out, a conviction for second degree assault, which is what Ronald Exantis received for attacking the father and his children, is considered nonviolent.
So the murder of the child in Kentucky doesn't count because he was not guilty by reason of insanity.
So we just pretend that it didn't happen.
And then the rest of the crime is uh nonviolent.
You know, breaking in and assaulting the family is nonviolent.
Now, you know, when we heard this, to me, it's I'm reacting the same way you did, which is like that can't possibly be true.
What do you mean he's a nonviolent offender?
But indeed, apparently, from what I can tell, that is the law of the land.
In Kentucky, you can stomp on somebody's head, breaking their bones and forcing them to black out, and you'll still be considered a nonviolent offender.
That happened in a recent case.
Only if you're if you're convicted of first degree assault as opposed to second degree assault, are you considered violent?
And the only difference between first degree and second degree assault is that in first degree assault, you inflict grave life-threatening injuries that bring somebody to the to the brink of death.
Second degree assault is everything else.
Every other kind of assault that does not result in absolute imminent life-threatening injuries is second degree.
And all those kinds of assault are apparently nonviolent.
You are nonviolent if you violently attack somebody as long as your violent attack doesn't leave their head like dangling from their from their neck, basically.
Oh, and by the way, if you're a nonviolent felon, then you can keep your voting rights too.
You also have a much easier time getting your record expunged.
So there are perks to being a violent psychopath who happens to be nonviolent at the same time, somehow.
Now, this law, which has been approved several times by the Kentucky legislature over the past decade, obviously must change immediately.
Every lawmaker in the state must answer why it hasn't already been changed.
You have to explain to us how this is, how have you allowed this to be possible?
The idea that a home invader who violently attacks every single one of the vic of the victims who breaks into a house and attacks every member of the family, including the children, is really nonviolent, is such an obviously outrageous suggestion that no reasonable person can possibly defend it.
And yet it's in the law.
It's a thing that no one can possibly defend, makes no sense at all, and yet there it is.
The only rational assumption that can be made, or the most generous assumption that can be made, is that lawmakers in Kentucky didn't realize what they voted for.
They signed off on the legislation without thinking through the implications or reading the legislation.
That's the best case scenario, which is still inexcusable.
The worst case scenario, of course, is that they want exactly this.
They want child killers to go free as quickly as possible.
And you'd hate to think that that is a possibility, but it's hard to come to any other conclusion, especially if they don't change the law immediately.
Keep in mind that the Ronald Exantis case is for those of us not in Kentucky, is a new is a new case.
Like we have maybe we hadn't heard of this before.
I hadn't heard of it.
But it's not a new case.
This happened, he was convicted of his nonviolent offense in 2018.
He was found not guilty by reason of insanity, quote unquote, in 2018.
Kentucky lawmakers have had since 2018 at least to respond to this outrage by changing the law, and they haven't.
Now, at the same time, it's also not the case that the Kentucky Parole Board is absolved of all responsibility here.
Okay, they do not get off the hook.
I want to be very clear about that.
So if you've been calling and criticizing the Kentucky Parole Board and demanding accountability and letting them know how you feel, you should keep doing that.
Shouldn't make threats, obviously.
Nobody condones that's wrong, and it's also very counterproductive.
But if you're asking for accountability, if you're asking for answers, yeah, you should absolutely still be doing that.
Now it's true that for nonviolent offenders, very large sentencing reductions are possible.
Let's put that section of the law up on the screen.
As you can see, inmates can receive 10 days of credit for each month served if they behave well.
They can receive seven days of credit per month if they perform meritorious service while in prison.
And they can receive another seven days of credit per month if they do something exceptional during an emergency.
And additionally, inmates can receive roughly half a year in education credit and a drug treatment program.
Now you add this all together, throw in some uh time served, and it's not unusual from a purely mathematical perspective for somebody with a you know court with that the way this is set up, somebody with a 20-year sentence getting out of prison in less than a decade is um, yeah, that's that's how it's set up is for that to happen.
But the parole board still doesn't have to unleash child killers on the public with no strings attached.
It's true the law indicates that the state shall release inmates once their credits allow for it, but the parole board is entitled to add conditions on a case-by-case basis that the convict has to follow after he's been released.
And if any of those conditions are violated, he has to go back to jail.
Uh quote, upon intake of an inmate uh ordered to mandatory reentry supervision by the board, the department shall establish appropriate terms and conditions of supervision.
What are the appropriate terms and conditions on Ronald Exantis?
What conditions were placed, if any?
Now we don't know the answer to that question.
The parole board hasn't said anything about it, and they haven't responded to our questions on that topic either.
And that suggests, of course, that no serious conditions were imposed.
I mean, if they were, then you'd think that they would say that in their statement, whether they're self-pitying, woe is me.
Stop being mean to us.
You think they'd stay that say in that statement, hey, we imposed the harshest possible conditions on this guy that we possibly could.
And you know what?
If he steps out of line even an inch, he's gone back to prison and we made sure of it.
They didn't say that.
So we can assume that didn't happen, that there was no severe restrictions, or at least nothing out of the ordinary was imposed.
And if that's the case, it's yet another travesty of justice in this case, one of many.
Any reasonable parole board would do everything in its power to put this killer back in prison.
If the law requires his release, if that's true, that their hands were tied, there was nothing they could do, then you still have the capability to do everything in your power to protect the community with the most demanding restrictive post-release conditions imaginable.
And in the meantime, you should be calling for a change in the law.
It shouldn't, it shouldn't, it shouldn't fall to podcast hosts from out of state and people on Twitter to do that for you.
If the Kentucky Parole Board was really forced by the law, forced to release Ronald Exantis, why haven't they all been in front of cameras every day, screaming to the heavens about this outrage that they were forced by law to participate in?
If that were me and I'm on the parole board and you're telling me I have to release, I can't, I don't even get a vote.
I'd be out in front of cameras every single day saying, look at what happened.
I mean, I wouldn't wait for you to find out in the news.
I wouldn't wait for people to call me outraged.
I'd be going to them and saying you guys should be outraged about this.
Look at what's happening.
Why aren't they working tirelessly to make changes to the law?
I mean, you know what I would actually do?
You know what you would do, what any normal person would do?
If you're on the parole board and this child killer is brought before you, and you're told you have to rubber stamp his release and you don't have a choice, you know what any normal, decent, good person would do?
You resign.
You say, I am not going to put my stamp on this, I am not going to be a part of it.
I will resign in protest.
There is no way, I don't care what the law says, there is no way that my name is going to be on this.
So I'm going to resign and I'm going to go to the public and I'm going to tell them about this, and we're going to rally support, we're going to change this law.
Did any of them do that?
No, just saying, well, the law made me do it.
Sorry, not good enough.
Sorry, not good enough.
There are many things that they could have done and should have done if they wanted to be the good guys in this situation.
They didn't do any of those things.
And the most important change that needs to be made, and this is true across the country and not just in Kentucky, is that the so-called insanity defense must be at a minimum drastically reined in, if not abolished entirely.
Okay, the insanity defense is insane in and of itself.
And we don't even realize, we can't wrap our head around just how bad it's gotten.
And how many psychotic killers are currently walking around in our communities because of this?
And look, we didn't always have insanity defenses in this country.
In the early 19th century, when juries acquitted somebody because he was insane, it was really a form of jury nullification.
They were excusing a crime of passion, usually.
That's usually what I meant.
Like when a Danel Sickles, a congressman, shot the attorney general of D.C. because he was having an affair with his wife.
And they said it was a crime of passion.
And later on, when states adopted a formal definition of insanity, they didn't all agree on the same precise rules, and they still don't.
But today, by far, the most widely used definition of insanity in most states and in most courtrooms, including in Kentucky, involves a two part test.
So if a defendant fails either prong of the test, then he's insane.
And can be acquitted, can be found not guilty based on it.
And here are the two prongs, okay?
Prong number one.
Does the defendant understand the nature and quality of the act that he has committed?
In other words, instead of firing a gun, did he think that he was, you know, uh blowing a feather or firing a uh super soaker or something?
Right?
Did he have no clue what he was even doing?
And if the defendant fails this test, then he's insane under the law and can be found not guilty by reason of insanity.
Now, of course, one of the big problems is that uh you can't possibly know whether he understood what he was doing.
I mean, they can have all the fancy tests they want to have, but at the end of the day, you're really it really comes down to the honor system.
Like it comes down to asking the guy, did he understand what he was doing?
Because there's there's no way to read his mind.
There's you especially can't read his mind after the fact.
So how do you know whether he knew what he was doing?
The only way to do it, I mean, they can have, and they'll object and they'll say that well, we don't just ask.
Yeah, but that's basically what you do, because that's all you can do.
And of course, the criminal has every incentive to lie.
But even if a defendant does understand what he's done, he still has a potential insanity defense.
Okay, so this could be someone who says, Yeah, I shot him.
Yeah, I stabbed that child.
And they could still be insane, because that brings us to the second prong.
The second prong is did the defendant know that what he was doing was wrong?
Or was he so far gone that he couldn't distinguish right from wrong?
And if that's the case, then he's insane.
And under the law in Kentucky, he can't be held responsible for murdering a child.
Under the law in Kentucky and in many other states, that lets you off the hook so completely that it doesn't even count that that now you're not you count as a nonviolent person.
Like we just pretend it never happened.
It's like it never happened.
Now, the second prong, at least, uh, should be eliminated from the law completely.
Okay, so that's my that I I'm making this is my actual suggestion of how to reform this law.
Really, I'd like to see it gotten rid of completely, but if you're gonna have it, that second prong should not exist.
It's far too easy to abuse, and everybody should be able to see why.
Someone who doesn't understand right from wrong, okay.
That is not insane.
That's not uh a medical condition.
There's a word we used to use for people like that.
You know what the word was?
Evil.
Okay.
Nobody commits an evil act thinking or admitting to themselves that it's evil.
Unless you're a super villain in a comic book, you are not hatching some evil plot that you say to yourself, this is evil, and I'm gonna do it because I want to do an evil thing.
That's not the way it works.
Every atrocity, every genocide, every mass shooting, all of it has been committed by someone who believed or told themselves that it was for some reason necessary or justified.
Every single one.
So if that's the definition of insane, then every evil act that's ever been committed is an act of insanity.
And nobody should ever be punished for anything.
I mean, the idea, just think about the idea.
Think about this.
What we're saying, so you go and kill someone, and then the judge asks, well, did you think it was wrong?
No, I didn't.
Okay, well, never mind then.
See you later.
Head on back out to the community.
Go ahead, move back into your house and live now.
Yeah, sure.
No, it's okay, everybody.
This is someone who doesn't think it's wrong to kill people.
So then it's okay for them to be out in the community.
I mean, I'm not exaggerating.
That is literally what we're doing.
And we've been doing it for decades.
And no one is doing anything to change it.
People are dying like every day because of this sort of thing.
And no one is changing it.
There is no serious effort to change it at all anywhere.
Period.
Once you start making excuses for people who can't separate right from wrong and pretend that they're victims in need of some therapy and some pills, you provide a ready-made excuse, legal defense for some of the most evil and dangerous psychopaths on the planet.
In the case of Ronald Exanthus, the defense team wasn't even able to demonstrate that he suffered from any specific mental disorder.
As ridiculous as those two prongs are, Ronald Exanthus didn't even clear any either of those hurdles.
He knew what he was doing, and he knew that it was wrong.
We talked about this yesterday.
He was on the record saying that this was wrong right after it happened.
And he still got off.
All the defense team had to do was argue that he suffered from some kind of vague mental fog.
And that was enough for an acquittal on first degree murder.
And defense lawyers have been adopting this strategy for a very long time.
This is nothing new.
This has been happening for a very long time.
When John Wayne Gacy was on trial for murdering dozens of young men and boys and burying their bodies in a crawl space and tossing them in the river, his lawyers argue that he was insane.
And after all, I mean, what kind of person would murder so many people?
Who would do this?
Clearly, you're not mentally well if you did this.
This is what we don't need to sit down and do any tests.
That's the other thing that's so ridiculous about this.
So you got a serial killer, murdered a bunch of young boys, and then you go to sit down and do a do a Rorschach test to find out if he's mentally normal.
No, I can tell you that he's not because uh, well, look what he did.
And then the next question is, so what?
What does it have to do with anything?
Obviously, you know, any argument that the even in that case, the defense lawyer made was, well, he didn't know right from wrong.
He must not have understood precisely what he was doing in the same way that all of us do.
Now, in Gacy's case, the jury thankfully didn't buy it.
But in other similar cases, they did.
Take the case of uh Albert Fish, for example.
In the 1920s, again, it's been going on for a long time.
He uh murdered and molested several children.
He was also a cannibal.
And the crimes are too horrific to describe, but the point is at trial, a psychiatrist was asked whether Fish knew the difference between right and wrong.
And the psychiatrist responded that he did know the difference, but that his knowledge was, quote, perverted based on his opinion of sin atonement and religion, and thus was an insane knowledge.
An insane knowledge.
Yeah, he knew what he was doing, but he knew it insanely.
Now, it's obviously hard to make sense of what that means.
It's double speak.
Insane knowledge is like a is a uh uh you know, contradiction in terms.
But um, and a big part of the problem with the insanity offense in general, is in many cases, is that psychopaths will think they're doing something that's right.
Again, and that's that's that's why they're psychopaths.
They might not understand, you know, general norms about right and wrong either.
So what do we do with them?
Well, in the case of Albert Fish, and the, you know, the jury had a solution.
They decided that Fish was insane by any conventional definition.
Uh, they agreed, they said, well, yeah, he's a cannibal and he's killing children.
Yeah, he's probably insane.
But you know what they did?
They convicted him anyway.
They simply discarded all of the ridiculous contortions about insanity that the lawyers were talking about.
And uh they convicted him anyway.
And Albert Fish was sent to the electric chair, and he was executed.
And that was the end of him.
That's how every criminal defendant who commits a depraved act of psychopathic violence, like Ronald Exanthus, should be treated by our legal system from now on.
Forget the academic discussions of insanity and who, you know, who understands right and wrong and who doesn't.
If a criminal commits a heinous and unspeakable act of violence, he should be executed.
That's it.
Uh, this is an approach that we need to adopt as quickly as possible because every other day, a new violent felon is being released from prison or not tried at all on the basis of a fraudulent insanity defense.
Just a few weeks ago, we discussed the case of um 18-year-old uh named Cora Vetis who who ambushed her friend for no apparent reason in her home, stabbed her friend so many times in the neck that she lost her ability to speak.
And at trial, she was found not guilty by reason of insanity, which in California means that she could be out of prison in a few months.
There's this case from Aurora, Colorado.
A man, quote, a man accused of attempting to kidnap an elementary school student during recess last year is expected to have his charges dropped, according to multiple outlets.
The 18th Judicial District Attorney's Office of Colorado intends to dismiss charges against Solomon Gallaghan, the 33-year-old was arrested and charged with attempted kidnapping in April 2024.
Eric Ross, a spokesperson for the uh district attorney's office, shared that a doctor has found Gallaghan incompetent to stand trial.
Authorities said Gallagher has a criminal history, which includes a 2012 conviction for failing to register as a sex offender.
Now, in cases like this, the defendant goes to a psychiatric facility.
Then at some point in the future, he's released.
With no criminal record.
That's it.
That's what happened with Ronald Exantis.
He was found not guilty by reason of insanity for murdering Logan Tipton.
In theory, that means he'd have to spend an indefinite period of time in a psychiatric hospital, but in practice, after he stops taking drugs, he's uh suddenly normal again.
So he's uh allowed to go free.
That's the way it goes.
Here's a similar story for the New York Post quote.
A woman who authorities say fatally stabbed a three-year-old boy as he sat in a grocery cart outside of an Ohio supermarket and wounded his mother, has been found incompetent to stand trial.
Uh Cuyahaga County Common Please Judge John Rousseau issued the ruling on Friday, said that Bianca Ellis of Cleveland will remain hospitalized indefinitely and could eventually stand trial if she improves.
Or maybe they just release her one of these days.
They probably will.
That's the way these things go.
We shouldn't have to wait for a trial in any of these cases.
We shouldn't, we we we uh we shouldn't give doctors any leeway to unleash these killers on the public.
Nor should we allow parole boards to tally up good time credits so that criminals are released 10 years early.
There should be an immediate trial within a week.
Especially in a case when the guilt is beyond any doubt whatsoever.
We know they did it.
No question about it.
Um, so you have the trial.
You still we still have trials in this country.
Yep, you have the trial.
Have it quickly.
And if you're found guilty of killing a child or trying to kill a child, then you should die.
Quickly.
That's a very workable system.
We've had it in the past.
We should adopt it again.
There is no downside at all, except the considerable downside experienced by the child killers.
But if your first priority in dealing with child killers is to protect them from uncomfortable experiences, if the first thing you're worried about is how they're gonna feel, then you are nearly as evil as they are.
And I mean that sincerely.
In the meantime, in Kentucky, everyone from state legislatures to legislators to the parole board, all of them need to take action immediately so that Ronald Exantis and everyone like him is returned to prison as quickly as possible.
Stop pretending that violent attacks where somebody clearly tries to kill another person or does kill another person, are somehow nonviolent.
Stop conflating evil with insanity.
And above all, stop conflating insanity with something that anyone in society should have to deal with.
Once you are insane to the point that you kill or attempt to kill another human being, you deserve the Albert Fish treatment.
Nothing more and nothing less.
Now your lawyers can prattle on about how you're nuts and how you have no idea what's going on and you didn't understand what you did, and you didn't know right from wrong.
They can do that all they want.
In response, we can and we must do exactly what the jury in Albert Fish's case did.
Don't listen to a word of it.
Doesn't matter.
Oh, he didn't.
Oh, that's what he was experiencing.
Okay, well, what did he do?
Oh, he killed, he murdered someone in cold blood.
Okay, well, that's all that matters.
That's what jury should do.
And then you put them to death.
And then once we have a system like that, then and only then will we have some semblance of justice in our country again.
Now let's get to our five headlines.
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All right, we got a couple of uh quick, just quick uh headlines today before we get to the cancellation.
Uh Mayor Brandon Johnson of Chicago had uh a big announcement yesterday.
Let's listen to that.
Today we are signing an executive order aimed at reigning in this out of control administration.
The order establishes ice free zones.
That means that city property and unwilling private businesses will no longer serve as staging grounds for these raids.
Here's uh a little more from the Daily Wire.
Chicago Democratic mayor Brandon Johnson will create ice-free zones across the Sanctuary City as the Trump administration continues its immigration sweeps while facing an uptick in violence.
The Windy City's mayor said during a news conference on Monday that his latest action is focused on reigning in this out of control administration.
Um basically what we just saw.
So this is a this is a uh treasonous conspiracy against the United States states, which he is announcing publicly and proudly.
And not for the first time.
So my question is then, and not to sound like a broken record, but my question is, why is he still a free man?
Why hasn't Brandon Johnson been cuffed and shackled?
Why isn't he being dragged in front of cameras in chains?
Okay, why aren't there leg irons around this guy right now, as we speak?
Why not?
Let me put a point, because if you think that, and I think that there are still, of course, everyone on the left, they're very scandalized anytime I talk like that or anyone talks like that.
Because even though they'll try to put Donald Trump in prison for crimes they make up, it's like, well, the moment you try to hold one of them accountable, then it's a big scandal.
But I think even conservatives, many conservatives think that this is, you know, it's a little overdone.
That, well, okay.
And this is a response I get a lot from even people on the right.
They'll say, oh, we're not real.
You really think, do you honestly think that Trump should send in federal agents, break down his door, put them in handcuffs, the mayor of Chicago and arrest him?
You really think Yes, I do.
Yes, that is actually what he should do in real life.
And I think I think here so imagine this hypothetical, just to uh I think clarify things a little bit.
So imagine that a Republican mayor, or even a Democrat mayor, actually.
I think that this would apply for either party.
Imagine that any mayor were to announce that he was setting up IRS free zones in his city.
And in these IRS free zones, um individuals and businesses would be exempt from paying taxes.
Okay.
Imagine that I imagine that some city makes the mistake of making me the mayor somehow.
Imagine that that horrifying scenario.
And let's say I get up and I say, okay, this is here are these are our IRS free zones.
And if you're in these these zones, you don't have to pay federal taxes, any of them.
And um, and and also my city is a sanctuary city for people guilty of tax evasion.
If you commit tax evasion, come run to our city and we we won't let them get you.
And uh, and if any IRS agents show up to try to collect, well, there we're we're gonna bar them from they won't be allowed.
We're not gonna allow them in.
IRS free zone, sanctuary city.
So imagine that I say that as the mayor of this.
Here's my question.
How long would it take before the I'm not asking if this would happen, but just how long would it take before the feds are knocking down my door and carrying me away in handcuffs?
Would it would it be even would it be a day?
Like, do you think I'd make it a day from the moment, let's say I give that press conference at 11 a.m. on a Tuesday.
Do I make it to dinner time before I'm in a federal prison?
Well, we all know the answer.
Um the answer is no.
I mean, it would be, I don't I don't think I'd make it off the stage.
Like, I don't even know if I'd make it to prison alive.
That that that is how much they would crack down.
I I don't I think your your life is in danger at that point.
I mean, they're coming out guns drawn, like an army of them, and you make one false move and uh it's good night.
I mean, that is the amount of force they would use in the scenario I just described.
And whatever the exact time frame and however much force they use, what what is clear at any rate is that uh is that I'd be in prison for that, for sure.
No question about it, no question about it.
I'm getting I'm getting arrested.
I'm not seeing the light of day until my trial, and I'm getting convicted, and I'm going to prison for the rest of my life.
Now, also I'd be the most popular mayor in the country for about 45 minutes before I'm arrested, but but uh I would certainly be arrested, right?
I mean, and that's and that's the point.
So then my question is, what is the difference between that hypothetical scenario and Brandon Johnson?
What exactly is the difference?
Well, there's there's there's one difference that I can think of, which is that the income tax is actually immoral.
So that hypothetical mayor could it could at least make a moral argument in favor of his actions.
Like you can make a moral argument.
You could make the moral argument that the income tax is is uh is um is an abomination.
That's not gonna, it's not a good legal argument.
Like legally, you're screwed.
There's no legal argument for it whatsoever.
But uh so that that's maybe the one difference.
Whereas on the other hand, enforcing immigration law is not immoral.
Quite the contrary.
Um, our leaders are uh not only are morally entitled to enforce immigration law, but they are morally responsible to do so.
But putting aside that, you know, the the the situations are identical.
Okay, let's put put aside the fact that the that again, the income tax is actually an abomination.
Um the situations are identical because in both cases, a mayor is acting in a lawless manner to aid and abed criminal activity.
And he is he is going to war against the federal government and federal law.
He is saying that not only am I not going to follow federal law, I'm going to openly defy it, and I'm going to assist anyone else who openly defies federal law.
I am saying that in my city, you are allowed to commit federal crimes, and I will protect you in doing so.
Okay, in both in the tax situation, the ice situation, that that's what's being said by the mayor.
It's treason.
It is treason.
Again, this is not overstating it.
This is not being uh hyperbolic.
Okay, words like treason get thrown around a lot.
People get emotional, they call everything treason.
This is actually treason.
So I go back to my initial question.
Why is Brandon Johnson still a free man?
How is he?
Why are you letting him do this?
Why have you not arrested him the same way you would if he did that exact same thing with taxes?
And I think we're at a point where we really need an answer to that question.
You know, because also if you if you let him, you know, one one of the big reasons why me as the fictional mayor, why they would uh break down my door and haul me away to prison if I declare it a tax-free zone, is that they would know that uh if they don't respond that way,
that well, okay, now you have set a precedent, and next thing you know, nobody's paying federal taxes, and that's a that's a disaster if you're the federal government.
You can't allow that to happen.
Same thing applies here.
You let him get away with this.
You let him just get up there and say, Yeah, you know what?
I'm not even you you aren't even allowed, you're not allowed to be here.
I'm gonna keep you out.
In my city, immigration law doesn't exist.
You let him get away with that, as as these sanctuaries, so-called sanctuary city mayors have been getting away with it for years.
But the more, you know, there's escalation, escalation, escalation, and the more you allow it, uh, the more you have guarantee that you're just gonna get more of it.
And then you end up with a then you have anarchy.
And then and then you have the total delegitimization of the the government.
The whole system collapses at that point.
Like Brandon Johnson is throwing down the gauntlet, and he's saying that he he's he's putting the challenge down.
Right?
He's calling your bluff, basically.
That's what's happening here.
Because the Trump administration has been supported a lot of what they've done.
They're sending ice out, they're sending, they're trying to mobilize the National Guard in situations where I think it's warranted.
But you know, Brandon Johnson's calling their bluff.
And he's saying, yeah, you know what, you'll send the National Guard out, you'll send ice, you'll round up some illegals, but you're not actually, you're not really gonna, you're not ready.
You're not really gonna go to the mat on this, are you?
That's what he's saying to the Trump administration.
And um he's calling the bluff.
You're gonna let him do it, or you're gonna or not?
That's the question.
Let's talk about this.
This um feels like kind of a throwback, but it's not really a throwback because the race hustle is still alive and well in this country, uh, which is evidenced by this.
So a mom in Florida has gone to the media to cry and demand an apology because of a racist song that her child's teacher sang to her child.
So that's the it feels like a story out of 2020, but no, this is from this is this week, I think.
And it's a big controversy in the school.
Here's the story.
Listen.
Hi, Legend.
Did you have a birthday last week?
Yes.
Legend Whittaker just turned six years old.
Can we sing happy birthday to you?
He attends Floral Avenue Elementary in Bartow, where his class and teacher celebrate it with a song.
Happy birthday to you.
But what happened next?
Would you like the funny song now that I sing to you?
Stirred up hurt feelings and anger.
Happy birthday to you.
You live in the monkey.
And you smell like what you have a crab, everybody.
I don't like stuff right now.
Legend says the song hurt his feelings.
His mother, Desiree Prater says the teacher sent her the video, and she went straight to the main office.
I automatically said that's unacceptable.
And I don't feel I don't think nothing's funny about it.
Prater says there's a history of black people being described that way, which makes it extremely upsetting.
My skin is boiling.
I don't even like racism, and to know where we come from and our ancestors, and for us to be labeled like that, because when they call it this money, they basically stand that we're ugly, we act like a monkey, and all this and that.
I don't like that at all.
Hoe County Public Schools district staff and the HR department are reviewing this.
I followed up with additional questions like is this the first time this teacher has sung this song to students?
And I also asked, while this is being reviewed, will the teacher still be in the classrooms?
I've not heard back yet.
I don't play games about my child.
In a letter to the school board, Prather asked for an apology, immediate disciplinary action, and counseling for her son.
After receiving no response, she decided to show up in person.
Dad is just kept saying it's the active investigation.
They can't, they can't answer no questions or anything like that.
Unacceptable, she says.
Um, unacceptable.
I think is what she was trying to say.
It's unacceptable.
Well, I'll tell you what's unacceptable, first of all, ma'am, is naming your child legend.
Okay, it's not a real name.
That it you you can't name your child that.
You're just you can't.
You shouldn't be allowed to.
That's not and it it also, by the way, it's like way too much pressure on your kid.
That is way that is setting the bar way too high.
Your child was born, you got an infant, and you're saying legend.
Okay, icon.
Is that his middle name?
Icon.
That is that is way too much pressure on a child because now you gotta like now, now it's it's you're setting your child up to be ironic.
That's either he has to live up to that and do something truly legendary and be one of the great figures in history, right?
Is you have a name like that, you you gotta go out and do you like go cure cancer or something land on Mars.
I mean, do something.
Uh, but the reason I wouldn't give my kid a name like that is because now I'm worried that I've set them up for you know uh for uh for uh for uh something for irony.
Because now if they grow up and they're like 30 and unemployed, can't hold down a job.
Right, and their name is legend.
I don't know, I feel like you're setting your kid up for that.
So that's the first problem.
Second problem is that uh, well, this is obviously nonsense.
I mean, that that version of the birthday song.
Right.
You you s you uh you live in a zoo, you smell like a monkey, you look like one too.
That hey, that's a classic.
I mean, we were singing that when I was a kid.
And not only that, the teacher asks the kid in the video if he wants to hear the funny version of the song, which also shows you that this is a thing they do in the classroom.
It's pretty clear from the context that she does this for all the kids.
She sings the birthday song, it's on their birthday, and then there's the funny version, and she asks them.
She asks them, do you want to do that?
And he said yes.
So she's likely done that version of the song countless times for countless kids.
Which is why she sent the video to the mom, thinking that it was just a cute, fun little thing.
Not knowing the mom is a sociopath who will gladly take this fun, you know, kind gesture and use it to try to get the teacher fired.
That's what gets me.
That's what gets me about this sort of thing is just how casually evil these uh race hustlers are.
Now, granted, this mom is obviously not the brightest bulb in the bunch.
Uh, not even a dim bulb.
Okay, she she's a she's a bulb that was in a that's in a like a recess light in the basement, hasn't been changed since 2013.
Just nothing going on.
Nothing going on upstairs.
Her internal monologue is like hold music.
Okay, that's so so that's what we're dealing with.
And yet, she obviously knew that there was no offense intended, that it wasn't racist.
Uh her kids' teacher did not call her child a monkey as a racist slur and then send her a video of it.
Okay, that obviously didn't happen.
And uh even this mom, who isn't fluent in English, even though it's the only language she speaks, understands that.
She's just doing this to take advantage to get some attention.
Maybe win a few bucks in a lawsuit, right?
And in the process, just like casually destroy the life and career of a woman who didn't do anything except try to honor her child on his birthday.
And the fact that she has the mom's phone number also tells me that I I mean, I guess she would have the phone number as a teacher, but I don't know, just having the phone number, sending a text, that kind of tells me they maybe they've communicated in the past.
And it's the child's teacher, so they're probably on a friendly up to this point on friendly terms.
Right?
You come in, you drop your kid off, you have a friendly conversation, and they're on those terms, and she sends a is and the mom takes that and just says, Okay, I'm just gonna destroy your life now.
No, just because.
Just because I feel like it.
I mean, you gotta be totally soulless.
So it is uh evil and wrong.
And this is what shows us that as much as we want to tell ourselves that uh wokeness, quote unquote, is dead.
I think the reports of the demise of wokeness were premature.
Now, maybe that term, I think the term is dead.
Right?
It's an outdated term.
It's like 10 years ago, everybody, nobody called said woke, it was uh SJW, social justice warrior.
And after a few years, nobody used that term anymore.
But was the SJW, was that phenomenon over just because the term isn't used anymore?
No, of course not.
And now it was woke, and that lasted for five years, and no one really uses that term anymore.
But the phenomenon that it's describing, that it's labeling, that is still very much alive, sad to say.
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Now let's get to our daily cancellation.
For our daily cancellation today, we have Emma Watson, the uh Harry Potter actress appeared on the Jay Shetty podcast a few days ago to share her philosophy of life.
And the conversation ran for two and a half hours due to the law that was passed uh uh, you know, eight years ago, I think it was, requiring that every podcast interview must be 120 minutes at a minimum.
Nobody's allowed to have a 15-minute conversation anymore.
If you've noticed that, it's because, like, yeah, there you see all these kinds of, and you think, is there some law requires?
Yeah, there is, actually.
You can't just get a quick update about Emma Watson's life if for some reason you were interested in that.
Instead, you need to give you her entire life story.
We need her to tell us everything she thinks about everything.
We need every Emma Watson opinion, thought, musing in one YouTube video.
We need a we need a video with a runtime nearly as long as the first Godfather film.
Except it's just this random celebrity sitting in a chair and rambling.
Which by the way, you know, if you're Joe Rogan, so Joe Rogan came along and his thing was the these epically long conversations that are actually interesting.
He's really good at that.
He's good at having an interesting conversation that goes for three hours.
But just because he did that and he's good at it and it's popular, it doesn't mean that every podcaster needs it.
You don't need to do that.
Just so you know, for all the new pod up and coming podcasters out there, I don't think this guy's really up and coming, but for all the other podcasters, and you want to do the interview thing, podcast thing.
I was like, I don't think we need any more.
We've already got plenty of them.
But you don't need to go for two and a half hours, and you really shouldn't, actually.
Being able to keep a conversation interesting for that long is a is like the rarest of skills.
Almost no one has that skill.
Joe Rogan has it, a few other people have it.
You probably don't have it.
So just make it a 10-minute interview, 15-minute interview, and and we'll move on, okay.
Anyway, there was one brief section of this epic saga of an interview that has gotten some attention.
Umma spoke out against the violence being inflicted on people, especially young people, especially young women.
But she was not talking about the violent crime epidemic.
Certainly was not talking about the problem of political violence, which is being inflicted nearly exclusively by the left on the right.
No, this is a different kind of violence that she's worried about.
Listen.
You talked about how getting asked the question, when are you getting married?
Yes.
Well, why and you married yet?
Yes.
And there's something every woman's hearing.
Well, what's your reaction when you hear that?
I'm just so happy not to be divorced yet.
Like that sounds like a really negative answer, but I just like, I think that we have we're being pressured and forced into this thing that like, I believe is a kind of miracle.
I might never be worthy of it.
I hope it happens to me.
Any point, basically before about a year ago.
It would have been carnage.
I just didn't know myself well enough yet.
I didn't have a clear enough idea of what my purpose, my vision, like how I was going to be of service.
I didn't know where I really felt like I needed to be.
I think I have some of those answers now.
So when I meet someone, I can say, hi, I'm Emma.
This is what I care about.
This is where the people I love the most live.
This is where it's meaningful for me to be in the world.
And then they can decide whether they can see that there's a way that I can serve what they're trying to do and they can serve what I'm trying to do.
But before that, like they would have just got like a very mixed signal.
I mean, there's some parts of me that have stayed utterly consistent.
But there are some parts that like I was really still teasing out and figuring out.
And I think it's such a violence and it's such a cruelty on people, and especially young people, I think, to make, and especially women, to make them feel like they have no worth or like they haven't succeeded yet in life because they haven't forced to its culmination something that I just don't think can or should ever be forced.
So the violence that Emma Watson is worried about is the violence of asking somebody when they're gonna get married.
It's the violence Of pressuring young people to get married and have children.
And you know, she'd be making a good point, admittedly, if young people were frequently threatened at gunpoint for not getting married soon enough.
But that is not exactly a regular occurrence, as far as I know.
In fact, in our society, the pressure to get married is not only nonviolent, but is considerably less intense than it's ever been for any generation of young people since like the dawn of humanity.
There is more pressure on someone in their early 20s to not get married than there is on someone in their late 20s to get married.
It is like inarguable that there is less stigma around being unmarried or marrying late than at any other point in the history of Western civilization.
Young people today face less pressure than ever to get married.
But they also complain about the meager pressure they do experience more than any other generation ever has.
You know, the term shotgun wedding was coined for a reason.
It used to have a very literal connotation.
And yet, even back then, nobody considered the pressure to get married as an act of violence.
That description is only used now at a time when there is comparatively speaking, basically no pressure.
And this is, of course, the pattern on the left.
They they complain that their lifestyle choices are not accepted.
And the more that those choices are accepted, the more they complain about the lack of acceptance.
We could throw a parade in every city in the country to celebrate childless cat ladies.
We could have a national holiday in their honor.
We could renovate the Statue of Liberty so that she's holding a cat and a glass of white wine and engrave the words childlessness is awesome across the front of it.
And still, if even one person amid the cheering throngs looked at Emma slightly ascance, or God forbid, asked her when she's getting married, still, she would complain that she's being unfair unfairly pressured.
She would claim that she's essentially the victim of a violent crime.
Which is a very close to the exact scenario we've seen with the LGBT camp.
Clamoring for acceptance.
They get way more of it than they ever should have.
And yet their whines and cries of non-acceptance only grow louder.
I mean, that's how it works with not with uh narcissists.
Now, putting that aside, what do we make of the rest of Emma's um cat lady soliloquy?
Well, she says that it would have been carnage had she attempted to get married before she had figured herself out.
Or in her words, quoting, if I tried to get married at any point before about a year ago, it would have been carnage.
I didn't know myself well enough.
I didn't have a clear idea of my purpose, my vision, how I was going to be of service.
I didn't know where I really felt like I needed to be.
I think I have some of those answers now.
So when I meet someone, I can say, hi, I'm Emma.
This is what I care about.
This is where the people I love the most live.
This is where it's meaningful for me to be in the world.
And then they could decide whether they can see that there's a way that I can serve what they're trying to do, and they can serve what I'm trying to do.
It's not clear why it took her until the age of 35 to figure out where her family lives.
I don't know what that means.
She can tell people this is where my loved ones live.
It's that, do you not have GPS?
You can't, you couldn't have figured that out before.
It's also not clear what the phrase, uh, this is where it's meaningful for me to be in the world means.
She's looking for a meaningful place in the world but still hasn't figured out how to speak a meaningful sentence.
Might be part of your problem.
You want to find meaning in the world, learn how to speak meaningfully, could be the first step.
But if we could sift through all the self-actualization, mumbo jumbo and get to the core of her message, such as there is any kind of core or any kind of message.
She appears to be saying that she didn't know herself well enough to get married until about a year ago at the age of 34.
So she had to wait until she figured out herself before she could consider getting married.
But there are two big problems with that approach.
And the first is that it's it's mostly pretentious, narcissistic nonsense.
You know, people like Emma like to think that they're very complex, deeply nuanced, enigmatic, which is why it takes them decades to understand themselves.
I mean, you hear this all the time from people.
I just got to understand myself.
There's so many, there's so many facets to me.
I'm so, I just so complicated.
You never know.
I I just don't, I don't know.
I the vast tapestry of my identity is is so, it's so I can't get it's astronomical in its size.
I can't get my arms around it.
Well, it really isn't that complicated.
Uh Emma needed to stare longingly at her own reflection in the mirror for 34 years to crack the code of her own identity.
I can do it just by listening to her ramble for two minutes.
She is a pompous, self-indulgent, insecure snob.
So there you go, Emma.
I've figured it out for you.
That's the answer to the riddle.
I have just assembled the jigsaw puzzle of your life for you.
Turns out it wasn't like one of those hard puzzles with a thousand pieces.
It was more like a paw patrol puzzle for toddlers with four pieces.
The other problem is that to the extent that you need to sort of come into your own, find yourself, achieve some level of personal growth.
None of that is going to happen just by sitting around and thinking about it.
Personal growth and discovery are not achieved by mentally and emotionally willing them into existence.
And even less are they achieved the way that I suspect Emma thinks she achieved it by watching a bunch of self-help videos on YouTube and doing yoga.
You will grow and figure yourself out by doing.
Not by thinking in a vacuum, not by feeling in a vacuum, not by meditating, not by trying to self-actualize, but by doing, by taking on the responsibilities of adulthood.
I was not mature enough to get married when I got married at the age of 25.
And if I waited until this magical moment of maturity to materialize on its own, then I would I'd still be waiting today at the age of 39.
I have grown enough now to be a father and a husband because I became a father and a husband.
That that's why why how did I become qualified to be a father and husband?
Well, I became qualified by doing it.
Was I qualified before I did it?
No.
How could I be?
I'd never done it before.
Am I qualified now?
Yeah, I've been doing it for 14 years.
You grow and come into your own through responsibility and through obligation and expectation.
This is why I think a lot of people, young people and people of my generation, miss.
This obligation, expectation, responsibility.
You can't wait, you can't say, well, I'll take on all that stuff when I'm when I feel like I'm ready.
You'll never be ready.
Like that is the fire in which your grown adult self will be forged.
And if you wait until you feel ready to enter into that fire, you'll never be ready.
You need to be in the fire to be ready for it.
And I don't mean to say that family life is like being burned alive in a fire.
I'm not trying to say that.
I'm only saying that you you need uh friction, you need pressure, you need toil, you need work in order to create anything good, anything worthwhile.
And this is true, especially true when it comes to creating your own mature, responsible, competent, unselfish adult self.
Now, Emma has spent nearly two decades of her adult life trying to get herself mentally and emotionally prepared to be a grown woman, to be a wife and a mother.
But after all that time, she's no more prepared at 35 than she was at 25 or 22.
Like you can't learn how to swim by sitting around and staring at the pool.
It doesn't matter how long you stare at it.
You can stare at it for 10 years.
You walk up to the pool, you don't know how to swim.
You say, I'm gonna sit here and look at it and think about it until I'm ready.
20 years later, you're still gonna be just as unqualified to jump in the pool as you were when you first got there.
There's no way to do it except by getting into the water.
And Emma, like many women in her generation and many men, has refused to get in the water.
And now she thinks she'll be able to swim flawlessly just because she's psyched herself up for it.
If anything, that false confidence will make her more likely to drown, not less.
And and the same is true of marriage.
By waiting, by spending nearly two decades of adult life living for herself, all she's done is create habits Of selfishness that will make marriage more difficult, more challenging.
Not impossible, still worth doing, but it it's it actually adds difficulties.
So she has achieved the opposite of what she intended.
But at least she knows where her family lives now or something.
So that's that's at least one positive.
And that is why Emma Watson is today canceled.
That will do it for the show today.
Thanks for watching.
Thanks for listening.
Talk to you tomorrow.
Have a great day.
Godspeed.
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