Episode 148. Live Streamed Su*cides and much more.
CONTACT US: Email: paranaughtica@gmail.com Twitter: @paranaughtica Facebook: The Paranaughtica PodcastContact Cricket: Website: www.theindividuale.com Twitter: @Individualethe Greetings to you beautiful people.....Thank you all for tuning in and I hope to catch your ear on the next one!Today, we are covering the phenomenon of live-streaming your own suicide, or some elses, we shall see.All of these are very disconcerting. We aren’t getting too graphic in the stories but just graphic enough that you get the idea.And, we add a lot of flare and extra goodies for your wandering earholes.....Please, don’t forget to Like, Share, and Subscribe....and give us 5-star reviews...or a 4 star, but accompany it with a like and a share. At any rate, become a subscriber....it helps out the show so much!We can’t thank you enough. CHECK YOUR LOCAL WATER TREATMENT LEVELS: EWG Tap Water Database Oh, to check out a small batch of Coops’ music, go to this this link — https://on.soundcloud.com/Q1XRaY9WSpzawV9r7 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Usually you see it coming on the corner of your eye and you have time to break.
This motherfucker popped out of nowhere.
Oh, I know.
You can be given less than a quarter second's reaction time, especially if you don't have very wide-ranging headlamps.
Like driving in a newer car the other day, I remember thinking to myself, like, wow, this is what other people see.
This is amazing.
Yeah.
I can see so much of the road.
In mine, it's like this tiny little cone out in front of me.
Anyway, other than hitting a deer, getting fat.
Like a papaya.
Round and chunky in some places.
Not good.
Not good for a start of the winter.
Already getting fat.
What do you mean?
That's the best time of the year to have extra fat on you.
When it's cold.
No.
It's never going to go away at this point.
I'm at that age where it's like my metabolism is slowing way down.
All I eat is junk food now because I'm just like, I just eat whatever.
Give me whatever.
Give me those chocolate cakes.
Give me that ice cream.
I feel like that's more so it than you know, like it than it being cold, though, man.
It is.
That might just be your problem, my pick.
Yeah, I lost my self-control of eating food.
Well, you know, shit happens.
I'm all right with it.
It'll all be good.
There you go.
Well, hey, did you hear this thing about Trump blowing Pill Clinton?
Heard it about five minutes ago from you.
Yeah, because I'm like, man, that is some straight up tabloid news.
It's awesome.
Love it.
Like the mass circulation.
What's that?
Like, hey, like a couple weeks ago, you know, planets dying.
It's like, now it's like Bill Clinton blew Trump, guys.
Yeah, it came out of left field.
You know, like, well, you know, we went from, did Hassan shock his dog to now we can now we can all ask ourselves, did Trump blow Bill Clinton?
I mean, is Bill, and more importantly, like, was this a contrivance?
Was he forced to?
Was it some kind of obligation?
Did he lose a bet?
Or is Bill just have some kind of innate ability to force everyone within his general vicinity to perform Felicio?
That's the real question.
Yeah.
Maybe he's just got that magic.
I think it's a mix of everything.
On top of the whole blackmail thing.
Like they're all blowing each other, you know?
Like everybody.
It's like a big blow circle, circle jerk, and they all have something on each other.
That's the only way that fucking government can work.
But they all have to be compromised, man.
And they all have to then, at that point, They all have to like help each other out when the shit comes down.
It's like, no, no, you know, that's not true.
That's not true.
Even though everyone knows it is.
It's just the government.
I mean, this might shock people, but the people who really act like they don't like Trump, a lot of them are not actually actively working against him.
No.
A lot of people think this.
But nah, like, you know, come on, dude.
Like, our government would be way more effective if it wanted to be.
It's not.
It's working for him.
Yeah, exactly.
And with them.
So it's like, you know, all these people that we always point to that, you know, are especially bad examples.
They're just the most obvious ones, really.
Right.
Right.
I'm going to be in the boat that he definitely deep-throated Bill.
I don't know if it was a deep throat.
It probably went in there like a little, like, half.
I don't know.
You know, he's probably got a tiny little winky.
Oh, Billy.
Oh, Billy.
It's a pretty bold claim.
I mean, lots of people are saying that he bloomed, but you're saying like he did us.
You were saying it performed a specific and an intimate sore.
Yes.
Oh, Trump was into it, dude.
That's what we do here.
We go above and beyond.
Trump definitely went above and beyond.
So it all, like, it just came.
I just saw it on Twitter or whatever.
So I just looked into it.
And it's all from this email that's between Mark Epstein and Jeffrey Epstein.
And I have that email right here.
And I'm going to read through it because let's just see what it says.
So from Mark L. Epstein, something's redacted.
And then it was sent on March 21st, March 21st, 2018 at 2.54 p.m. to Jeffrey E. Subject is, hey.
And the importance, he has importance here, high.
This is highly important.
And then he says, this is Mark Epstein.
He says, I'd rather be in Donnie D's shoes.
And then Jeffrey Epstein gets that email.
And he responds on Wednesday, March 21st, the same day, about seven hours later.
And he says, hey.
And he says, you mean Donnie T?
And then he goes on to say, let's see.
No, it goes March 21st, 9.54 a.m.
Okay, so this is going a little bit back in time.
So before Jeffrey sent you me Donnie T, Mark Epstein said, you and your boy Donnie can make a remake of the movie Get Hard that was sent via tin can and string.
I don't know why they have these like not in order.
March 21st at 937, it doesn't say a.m. or p.m. like the other ones do.
Jeffrey Epstein wrote, and I thought I had cirrus.
Cirrus is like a problem.
I'm frustrated.
I'm agitated, something like that.
So I don't know what that means.
And then on Wednesday, March 21st, 2018, at 4.32 a.m.
So again, we're going backwards in time.
Mark Epstein wrote, ask him if Putin, Vladimir Putin, has the photos of Trump blowing Bubba.
All right, hold on now.
Back up.
Ask him if Putin has the photos of Trump blowing Bubba.
Now, Clinton's name is Bubba.
That's his nickname, Bubba.
Hillary Clinton was Evergreen, or is Evergreen.
So let's see.
Jeffrey Epstein says, this is sent March 19th.
So the next day, 2.15 p.m. to redacted.
Subject is, once again, hey.
He says, all good, Bannon with me.
Most likely referring to Steve Bannon.
And then on Monday, March 19th, at 1.49 p.m., Mark Epstein wrote, how are you doing?
A while back, you mentioned that you were pre-diabetic.
Has anything changed with that?
What is your boy Donald up to now?
Please note.
And this comes from the House Oversight.
030719.
If anyone wants to look into that.
That's the email.
Trump blowing Bubba.
Putin has the photos.
What do you think of this?
Well, I'd say that already there's more that you could dig into and authenticate here than we had for the PP tapes.
So I wonder how much traction this will get after the initial thing.
Because remember, they circulated that so much.
And I always wonder when they really hype up evidence if they're not hyping up something that's fake to hide other things that are real.
Oh, yeah.
Happens all the time.
You know, because nothing ever came of that.
You know, it's like a reverse Biden laptop.
Because, you know, there's things that get that get emphasized that are just bullshit and things that get hushed that are real, that are for real.
Absolutely.
So I feel like a lot of the veracity of this will come from how quickly it disappears and whether or not they address it officially.
I almost feel like if they don't, that lends it more veracity.
Not necessarily make it untrue if they do address it.
But it just makes it harder to automatically lean on the side of it.
It's definitely true, though.
At the same time, you know, all these people are freaks.
So like, so like, can you really not see it?
Come on.
Well, here's the thing, man.
Anytime anything like this gets in the news, it's usually another one in these circles.
Like, is this really that far-fetched?
It's not.
But when this stuff comes in the news, again, with Trump, it gets in the news cycle.
People talk about it.
It goes all over Twitter.
Everyone's like, this needs, something needs to be done about it.
Something needs to be done about it.
And then like House oversight of the fucking Congress, Senate, whatever comes out and they say, oh, it wasn't true.
Nothing was true.
Not real.
Fake news.
And that's it.
Carpets thrown over it.
It happens every single time.
Look at this.
Trump has 93 felony charges.
He's been accused of how many girls have accused him of raping them.
And how many payouts has Trump given to all these girls?
Dude, it's in the millions, multi-millions that Trump has paid out to these victims.
But he's not a creeper, right?
It's our president.
Nothing he does can be wrong.
Like, this is just another one of those things.
Trump is literally blowing Clinton.
And then they're going to come out and just say, never happen.
And then people, what option do you have?
Well, yeah.
We don't control this shit.
Well, an argument I see a lot of people always make is the, you know, if this evidence was so damning, why didn't they come out with it earlier?
Right.
And my answer is because they needed to curate it.
Well, yeah.
And it's like the same reason why we keep getting like X number of blah, blah, blah, like coming out each time one of these releases comes out.
And I'm always like, why is it never just the whole thing?
Why do you got to keep releasing more?
Why do you have to rotate legislation to release things again?
Like, what do you mean there's more?
What do you mean there's more things to release?
Like it was like, you know, I feel like, you know, copy and paste, copy and paste all and like, you know, select all the people that were actually damaged and delete their names is pretty simple.
Yeah, exactly.
Like they could do that.
They could have done that a long time ago if they actually wanted to do their due diligence.
Like that's the thing.
The most ridiculous thing about this whole fiasco is how it came out.
Like which, you know, as much as I was celebrating tabloid news and stuff, that was also partially sarcastic because it's also kind of gross when it's serious info.
Oh, yeah.
See, like, when it's just some dude blowing other powerful dude, I'm just like, sweet.
Now, that is some, like, you know, that is the tabloid BS I can get behind because it's, you know, stupid blackmail stuff.
But realistically, like, nobody's really being hurt.
And more than likely, they're all just participating parties here.
Absolutely.
So, you know, like, this is a whole different scenario from all of the other stuff.
Like, regardless.
Yeah.
So it's, so I'm like, you know, I want to know if he did all the other shit.
He did it all.
He did it all.
You'll never know because they always pay out.
So everything gets shut up.
I'm looking at a picture of Bill Clinton when he was president.
I'm sitting at the desk in the Oval Office.
And the caption is, I absolutely love this photo of Bill Clinton and Donald Trump spending time together.
And it's just Bill Clinton sitting in a chair.
Nice.
No, Trump's under there giving him a below.
And let me read this really quick.
So this is from Politico.
It's a timeline of the Epstein files.
So January 30th, Kash Patel vows to expose Epstein connections.
February 21st, Pam Bonnie says, client list, the client list is sitting on my desk.
February 27th, Bondi hands out those Epstein files.
Phase one binders, which we never got a phase two, did we?
Or did we get a phase two?
Phase two was phase two was the secondary release that was forced through legislation or whatever.
And I guess, which, you know, they never really called phase two because they were so embarrassed calling the first one phase one and having everybody hold up that shit, like going, doo, doo, doo, doo.
Like, that was just so stupid.
So stupid.
They did not want to remind people of the first time.
So they didn't actually call the second release phase two.
Yeah.
And I guess, you know, the third phase would be the part upon us now where we're getting all these new emails and stuff.
And some of it's new, some of it's old.
Some of it they're really trying to hype up so we don't look at other parts, you know, like this particular thing, which I think honestly, like, like I was saying, you know, being like participants and stuff, I think this, their concern is more of this points to, you know, this being some kind of club or ritual shit.
And they don't really want to go into that.
Because, you know, because then the next question is, you know, like, well, you did, there was nobody else to give you a, to give you a release there, man.
Like, you know, you needed like one of the most powerful people around to do it for you.
So I'm like, yeah, so that was definitely, so, you know, then that leads, of course, to people asking, you know, what is ritual?
What are rituals?
What do these people do behind closed doors?
Why would you blow another guy if you're not even into it?
Oh, because you got to do what you got to do.
It's a Freemason thing.
Yeah.
Skull and crossbones.
They would sit in a coffin and naked and masturbate in front of everybody.
Yeah.
So I think that's more so their concern than anybody like, because I think a lot of people are thinking that they're trying to avoid the topic because they're all like, it'll make him look unmanly or some stupid shit.
And I'm like, nah, it's going to, it reveals the whole ritualism shit.
And you're like, but why would two dudes do this who, you know, historically don't even really express much swinging that direction.
So it's like, you know, but suddenly you're just willing to do it.
Yeah, there's something behind it.
So let's continue with this timeline here.
So on specified date in May, old Bondi reportedly tells Trump his name appears in the Epstein files.
Oh, shit.
May 7th comes around.
Bondi references tens of thousands of videos of Epstein with children or child porn, and there are hundreds of victims, this disgusting, horrible human being.
That whole thing she said, just all fucking fakery.
July 7th comes around.
DOJ memo.
Oh, sorry.
This is the DOJ memo is what I referenced as phase two, which said there was no client list, even though Pan Bondi is like, I have it on my desk.
But then they're like, no client list.
And Epstein's death was definitely a suicide.
And then July 8th, Trump calls Epstein questions a desecration.
July 12th, Patel defends DOJ memo and calls conspiracies false.
Not only Patel, but who was the other guy?
Podcaster.
Oh, Kash Patel.
The deputy fucking FBI guy.
Oh, I can't even remember his name.
I thought that was.
I thought that was Kash Patel.
Holy shit.
Who is it?
Departe director.
Well, yeah, Kash Patel's a director.
God, I'm so bad with these dudes.
Holy shit.
I don't even remember.
Why can't we remember?
D'Souza?
No.
No.
See, unless I look him up, I always forget what they actually do.
Dan Bongino.
Yeah, the deputy director.
Yeah.
Oh, for God.
Dan Bongino.
I've never remembered his name.
Yeah, it's so easy.
Sorry, the dude who sadly, like, I've referenced his rule before, which I always found actually, sadly, to be a pretty effective one, which is, you know, wait on news for a little while before you go ahead and make definitive claims.
They called it, he called it the Bongino rule.
And then, you know, we see him go into the actual FBI and, you know, go beyond just speculating as a podcaster.
And it's like, well, you know what?
Now that I'm not a journalist and actually can do real damage.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What about that rule?
He hasn't, I haven't seen him around at all lately.
I just see Kash Patel putting out these stupid fucking little interviews, but I haven't seen Dan Bongino anywhere.
Where did he go?
I don't know.
Maybe he got embarrassed and quit.
Oh, dude.
He didn't really want to say anything publicly, like to attack anybody and end up like, you know, disappeared.
So he was just basically like, let me just retire and get out of this.
I'm too embarrassed by all this.
And they're just like, okay, you can quit.
Because, I mean, did he even quit?
I don't know if he quit or not.
I know there's talks that he was going to be leaving by the end of the year.
I don't know.
Maybe there were times when he genuinely felt like he wanted to fix things.
But, you know, like, you get corrupted.
I think he went in there hoping.
You get in too deep and then you get embarrassed.
And then the best thing you could do is has to quit.
Yeah.
I think he went in there hoping that he could make a change, like you said.
And then he realized, holy shit, this is a machine that I cannot go against.
It will run me over.
So, yeah.
I mean, that's what happens, dude.
You either play ball or you're out.
And everybody's just like, well, why don't you say a whole bunch of public stuff against him?
And they're just like, yeah, because, you know, I'm not dead.
That's why.
Because I like to be alive and quit, not die.
Exactly.
Like, yeah, they don't realize.
People asking these things don't realize the gravity of the situation, like the level of blackmail that these people are put in.
Yeah.
They don't.
They can't comprehend it.
They're like, that can never happen.
Like, you can't just be like, yeah, I'm going to say something.
And I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, you're announcing a press release.
Like, you better be a thousand feet underground in an undisclosed location without any phones or nothing.
Yeah.
And so Kash Patel, when on the July 12th, when he defends the DOJ memo, he says, quote, the conspiracy theories just aren't true.
Never have been.
And pledged to serve as long as Trump calls on me.
Yeah, nothing's ever, no, nothing's real.
All the conspiracy theory is completely false.
Fucking ridiculous.
July 13th, Trump defends Bondi as fantastic.
She's just fantastic.
An untrue social hero.
They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who's doing a fantastic job.
We're on one team.
MAGA.
Right.
July 15th.
Trump downplays Epstein case as boring.
Remember that?
Give a little.
It's like she was casting a Final Fantasy spell.
Did you hear that?
We're on one team.
MAGA.
Like, why did you?
I think she fired it.
Yeah.
I cast MAGA.
And so during one of these press hearings on July 15th, Trump downsplays Epstein.
You know, speaking to the reporters, he's asked about Epstein and he's just like, Epstein, we're still talking about Epstein.
You remember that shit?
It's fucking just all stupid.
Did I just interrupt?
Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein?
This guy's been talked about for years.
You're asking, we have Texas, we have this, we have all of the things.
And are people still talking about this guy, this creep?
That is unbelievable.
Do you want to waste the time?
And do you feel like answering?
I don't mind answering.
I mean, I can't believe you're asking a question on Epstein at a time like this where we're having some of the greatest success and also tragedy.
So July 15th as well, Trump claims Bondi never told him about his name appearing in the files.
She never told me my name was in there.
She never told me my name is in the files.
No, no, no, no, she's never.
She's giving us just a very quick briefing.
Right.
Right.
The real question is: what phase are we on at this point?
Like 17.
Like, I called like the middle part where they like, I just got to skip to the major events.
Trump calls Epstein case a hoax invented by radical left Democrats.
I kind of like Decker desecration better.
Yeah.
Desecration was way cooler.
This is a Democratic desecration.
The next day, July 17th, old Carolyn Levitt.
And I'm like, I feel like that was a bit of unintentional honesty.
Why, yes, his whole case was kind of a desecration.
So Caroline Levitt, old puppet sock she is.
No special prosecutor for Epstein.
Who was it?
Maureen Comey?
James Comey's daughter.
Oh, good God.
Good God.
But they're like, no, we're not giving a special prosecutor an Epstein case.
But of course, Maureen Comey, she got pushed out the doors because the light was on her.
A little too bright.
A little too bright.
They couldn't get away with it anymore.
All right, they caught on.
We got to get rid of her.
Bring in someone else.
July 17th as well.
Wall Street Journal reports Trump allegedly wrote Epstein a racy letter to mark the disgraced financier's 50th birthday in 2003.
Which was true.
This did happen.
He scribbled a naked woman with boobs and then he signed his name and it was like her pube hair or some shit like that.
Good times.
Good times.
Did literally like the scary movie thing with Titanic.
Yeah.
True stick figure.
That's great.
And then July 17th, Trump asks Bondi to unseal grand jury transcripts.
We're ready to move the court tomorrow.
Yeah, what happened?
Nothing.
July 18th, Trump sues the Wall Street Journal over its report about everything we're talking about.
He's saying one thing and the actual journalists who do the research are reporting the facts.
Trump says, no, that's not true.
I am the boss.
I am God.
Nothing goes over Trump.
But have you ever considered nuh and he's right?
I'm like, get some getting some pretty expert level argumentation here.
I'm waiting for one of them to just go up to the podium and be like, ladies and gentlemen, look over there.
And then just turn around and run away.
And run away.
Little smoke bomb.
Poof.
All right.
And then this political politico thing ends here on July 22nd.
Trump urges DOJ to go after none other than Obama.
Russia hoax.
You see, they use these big events to take the attention away from these other big events.
I do thoroughly support going after everyone.
Yeah, you kind of have involved in this.
You have to.
Yeah, I was going to say, I would like to note that I do fully support them going after everyone involved in this.
It's just a problem of the only reason they want you to go after X person is because they want you to look away from Y. Exactly.
And they're not really going to go after X person.
Like, what happened?
How God after did Obama get after this?
Jesus.
He thought, oh, no, I got to draft some letters.
Yeah.
No, he's still out there like doing speeches.
Like, he just gave a speech.
Nothing, nothing.
All these people are like, yeah, they're going to get him.
Hillary Clinton's going to prison.
Nancy Pelosi is going to prison.
Bill Clinton's going to prison.
James Comey's going to prison.
Nobody's going to prison, you people.
Nobody.
These people live in a different world than us.
There are two laws.
Their laws, our laws.
Yeah.
None of them are going to prison.
Not one of them.
It's so fucking pitiful.
I know.
It's sad that people are like, yeah, they're going to get them.
Just believing the hype.
They'll believe anything these fucking assholes say.
They get people caught up in the minutiae of X person is bad.
And they get everyone fighting over his bad.
And I'm like, well, all of you are right when you're arguing one of the other ones is bad.
I'm like, you're all halfway there.
Like, y'all realize that some of them are scum, but like, how can you not extend that to the rest of them when none of them ever throw them out or nothing?
Like, how the heck with like, you know, doing actual serious stuff and actually like, you know, enforcing laws on people, which never happens.
Like, how about like, you know, how often do they even get fired or even lose elections for God's sake?
It's a joke.
Like, they get, like, they, they go, they talk about how they're all going against each other, but ain't nobody going against.
Yeah, and they're all friends on the sidelines.
Oh, shit, breaking.
This is this just in, dude.
Breaking.
Texas Paul on Twitter, realtexaspaw.com.
Meet Bubba Salisbury, son of Odessa oil industry magnate Dick Salisbury, also friend of Kash Patel and JD Vance.
Old fucking Palantir's little sh little fucking fuck toy.
This is who the Epstein Fallatio email is rumored to be referring to, not Bill Clinton.
This is what Texas Paul said.
They're referring to Dick Salisbury.
Well, obviously we need a meme from this that says it's Salisbury Steak Day.
Extra Salisbury Steak.
It just so happens that Ghislaine Maxwell was known to own a horse named Bubba.
So was Trump blowing the horse?
Could be.
We actually can't know.
Like everyone's just kind of assuming Bubba's Bill Clinton here.
But that is a good point.
It could be a horse.
Yeah.
Could be another dude they nicknamed Bubba.
Like, I'm pretty sure Bill Clinton isn't the only person in the world with that nickname.
Exactly.
It could be any Bubba.
It could be any Bubba.
But now I want to go with the horse thing.
That makes more sense to me.
And someone needs to make one of those AI videos with Bubba the horse and Trump.
That is just a picture of Maxwell's horse.
It has wide eyes and the camera zooms in on its face.
Just one of those little gifs, you know?
Me?
Okay, enough of this.
Enough of this.
Who is Bubba?
I guess we'll never know because, well, we don't have the power to do the investigations, even though we're supposed to.
I mean, if somehow it does come out, I would love to find out.
Kash Patel, I guess that's on you, buddy.
Dan Bongino.
Yes, in the great words of the Sent.
Yeah, in the great words.
Yeah.
In the great words of the Centaur episode with Christopher Walking.
It was a horse.
It was a horse.
They're like, okay, so on the other side, I'm never going to know?
No, you'll never know.
And he's like, oh, yeah, they didn't do it then.
It was a horse.
Oh, you said I would never know.
What the hell?
Okay.
All right.
Enough news.
Enough fucking news.
One thing.
Fuck Dave Pourney.
Fuck you, barstool, whatever the fuck you call yourself.
I just can't stand that fucking guy, dude.
Fuck you.
Fuck you, Dave Pourney, you porky fucking pig.
Fuck off.
Pick up your shekels and walk away.
You're such a little pussy that someone comes up to you and says a little phrase and throws some coins at you.
You should be fucking happy someone just gave you free money, you fucking dick.
Then you have to go sue people.
You fucking suck.
You are a shit stain on society.
Go fuck yourself, Dave Pourney.
Okay, I'm done.
Well, that's a lot cheaper than throwing coins.
What is?
What's cheaper?
What he just said.
Didn't have to spend anything on it.
Oh, yeah.
You didn't.
You have free shekels.
And you fucking sue him.
It's funny, people making pictures of pizzas because Dave's famous for going to pizza shops and raiding their pizzas.
He's a fucking retard.
Yeah.
But like some people make pictures and they put a bunch of coins on the, like instead of pepperoni.
I want somebody to like sue him for saying that he sucks and have like the court be like, I'm sorry.
It has been a matter of public record that you do in fact suck.
Yes.
It is the court of public opinion.
I mean, you could like, if you do enough awful things, there is actually a point where you can't be defamed because you're just genuinely that bad.
Yeah.
So it's pretty much like whatever people claimed of you.
You could realistically make the argument that there is an horse claim.
He isn't there yet, but he's certainly working on it.
He's getting there, dude.
He is getting there.
I feel like filing defamation lawsuits over something this trivial really like pushes you a lot further in that direction.
But you could be immune to defamation eventually just by being that terrible.
Because you know what's one defense to a defamation is the truth is a defense.
You know, like if you say somebody did something horrible, like definitively and you know it and have proof and stuff, like blah, blah, blah.
And they sue you for it for defamation.
Well, if it turns out they actually did that, then the truth is a defense.
Or if they, you know, you say they're a philanderer and they cheated and they say that impugns their character and then it comes out that they did cheat.
Like, boom.
You know, you can't defame somebody because you told them that they did what they did.
Is this something like the Alexis Wilkins thing?
Kash Patel's honeypot girlfriend?
The truth being a defense?
Well, yeah, like a lot of times those come down to more like do insults like damage your reputation in ways like a lot of times you can use that as your defense.
Like say like, oh, you know, if you're a scumbag because you do X or Y bad thing and people calling you a scumbag defames you, but then it turns out you did the thing, it's going to be pretty hard to sue people and win for saying you did the thing you did.
Okay.
So yeah, like sorry, that was a really like long-winded explanation.
All right.
So with that in mind, let's go over this really quick.
Alexis Wilkins.
So Alexis Wilkins, which is Kash Patel's honeypot girlfriend, she's suing podcaster Elijah Schaefer for $5 million over his accusation that she is a Mossad honeypot.
Alexis Wilkins, girlfriend of FBI, blah, blah, blah file $5 million defamation lawsuit against conservative podcaster in federal Florida federal court.
The suit accuses Schaefer of falsely implying through a retweet that she is a Mossad honeypot agent tasked with compromising Patel, leading to harassment and reputational damage.
This is Wilkins' third such lawsuit against conservative figures for similar allegations, highlighting tensions in the MAGA circles over free speech and personal attacks.
Yeah, so hold on.
This is the actual complaint that was filed in court.
Defendant Elijah D. Schaefer has perpetuated a malicious lie about Alexis Wilkins, falsely claiming that she, an American-born country singer, is an agent of a foreign government assigned to manipulate and compromise the director of the FBI.
Defendant, an internet personality who makes a living as a podcaster and political commentator, profiting on churning controversy and outrage is using this fabricated narrative as self-enriching clickbait and has published it to a sizable audience, painting a target on Miss Wilkins for no reason other her association with FBI.
They missed a word there.
For no reason, oh no, I guess I did.
For no reason other than they missed that word, her association with FBI director Kash Patel.
Accordingly, Miss Wilkins seeks to hold defendant accountable for his malicious and knowing lies.
Okay, go, Cricket.
What does this mean?
Where's this heading?
Where does this lead?
Where is this heading?
Well, first off, that makes it very complex because a few of the cases I've looked at, like not being the lawyer, I still love looking at what other lawyers say.
Like I've always seen people in their arguments, in particular retweets, you know, is not necessarily condoning and repeating the same words.
So why are they not suing the original person in the first place?
Right.
That says to me that they're going after somebody higher profile to make a big stink about this more so.
And like, it's also going to muddy the waters of, you know, does retweeting constitute like condoning stuff?
Like I'll retweet like all kinds of weird shit like that I don't necessarily like condone because it's funny or stupid.
And it's like, you know, if you turn around and it's like, oh, you agree with all these things and it's like that this other person also retweeted.
It's like or that, you know, like you agree with this statement.
I'm like, nah, not necessarily.
You might even just be trying to, what's the word, achieve greater awareness.
Like some people, some people will do the hate retweet where they'll just try to like, you know, expose something so that more people attack it.
Yeah.
There's a lot of motivations you could argue here.
And so, you know, if just the fact that like I can come up with this many arguments for why you may not necessarily do, you might not necessarily be definitively making this claim seems like it would make it really hard to stick it on this person.
I don't know if they'd constitute a public figure or not.
It would definitely make it harder if they do.
Like them being adjacent to one may not necessarily make them one.
So that then it lowers the like threshold a bit.
Because when you actually to defame somebody public, you got to really go hard.
Very hard.
It's so hard to say.
Whereas to defame somebody private, that's where you can do things like, you know, argue it damages your reputation just for them to say it.
It is so hilarious that they had to put in there a country singer.
Yeah, what country singer are they referencing?
I mean, who the fuck knows what this is?
I think this is just muddying more waters.
People not paying attention to certain things.
Like the same with fucking, like, look, Candace Owens getting sued by fucking that man over there in France.
And then getting to prove that, or then getting to prove maleness without actually showing the goods.
I feel like there's a really easy, definitive, and simple five-second test that one could perform.
I mean, like, you know.
It would be very easy, but instead they have, they have the daughter go in there and say, look, she's my mom.
Had a child, so therefore, therefore that nails down what's downstairs.
And I'm like, the hell it does.
No shit.
But like, yeah, that part was pretty funny.
Unreal.
I mean, this is a person who would have full diplomatic immunity to just literally whip out the goods and say, yeah, I got a bush in a foreign country and nobody could do anything about it and would prove forever.
Just pull it out, dude.
Because everybody would just be forced to deal with it.
Pull it out.
Flip it around.
It's like a show it off to Trump.
I'm sure that's what I'm saying.
I was about to say it.
Somebody who gets all these diplomat, you know, these people get all these immunities when they go around.
Like, they could easily prove themselves.
But nah, let's have somebody like attest.
And again, it just sounds like more attempts to muddy the lotteries to slow things down and make everyone more confused.
Yeah.
So, you know, that's how I see it.
So, you know, you get to, you get to, like, annoying questions.
Like, now you have to find out who the country singer is because they're obliquely referencing them.
Probably in some attempt to not further defame them or some nonsense.
And I'm like, yeah, I'm sure.
I'm sure that the country singer feels equally defamed and it's just like super eager to go after people.
You could tell by the fact that they didn't use his name in the press release.
Like whoever that guy is, is probably just like, you know, this should not, why does this involve me exactly?
Like, why do I have to be in this?
You always hear like all these other people where they'll like name a bunch of people and then they'll be like, end, and they'll just like end some others or stuff like that.
And you always wonder who are the some others and they're always probably just like random people.
Like, I don't want anything to do with this.
Or they're the main conspirator one of the two.
And speaking of the real world and being corrupted, that leads us right into today's episode.
Live stream suicides.
I don't know how you'd want to do this.
I'll read a little bit.
You can read a little bit.
That way you're, uh...
Yeah, my voice is gonna go down.
The psychology behind live streaming suicide is intricate, embodying a combination of personal motivations and the potent yet frequently skewed social dynamics present on online platforms.
Beyond the presence of underlying mental health issues such as severe depression, those who choose to live stream their suicide may be in pursuit of validation or trying to inflict punishment on others or reaching out for assistance.
So, let's touch on a few motives of the person who was live streaming.
Numerous individuals who broadcast their suicide or share suicidal ideations are experiencing a crisis and are fervently seeking intervention from others.
Because, well, I mean, of course.
It's probably the easiest way to show it.
The necessity for connection and affirmation.
The realm of social media has the potential to provide individuals, particularly the youth, with a sense of visibility and validation that they might not experience in their real-world interactions.
Yep, the good old parasocial relationship where, you know, you know somebody better online than you do in real life.
Oh, yes.
All that fun stuff.
The terminally online people, yeah.
Yep.
Certain individuals, especially those who have experienced online bullying or are involved in toxic relationships, might resort to a public suicide as a means of agendaing themselves against those who have inflicted harm upon them.
Oh, yeah.
And of course, a digital suicide note, which, you know, you're essentially creating a meme of you dying by recording it.
For certain individuals, it provides an individual opportunity to share their suffering with a broader audience.
As a conventional note, may not adequately reflect their emotional condition.
And I would note you also risk creating an action-actual memes of you dying if you do this.
So don't do this.
Don't do it.
Like, you're even setting people up with the footage.
It's a bad idea.
It's really bad.
The impacts of social media pressure is the last one, of course.
When a person experiences emotional, psychological vulnerability, the assessment or approval from a public audience may become pivotal to their ultimate decisions.
And that one in particular would be where we get the really spontaneous ones where they're just like not really planning on it before then.
Like usually a lot of the rest of them were more than likely stays.
That last one is just, you know, a lot of times they just get bullied into doing it.
You remember just a few years ago?
It's probably a handful of years ago.
I forget her name.
It was a girl and a guy.
The guy was depressed and like they kind of liked each other.
Well, he kind of liked her and she was just fucking with him mentally, like psychologically just fucking with him.
And he didn't realize it.
And she was like, and at one point he's like, I just want to kill myself, whatever.
And so she's like, all right, just do it.
What are you waiting for?
Just go ahead, do it.
And for like weeks or months, she just kept urging him to just do it.
And he ended up doing it.
I think he shot himself or put himself in a car and left the car running in the garage or something.
I forget exactly.
But that's this.
She fucking convinced him to kill himself.
Yeah, see, I was going to say, that's a real life version where you get pushed into it.
Fucking bitch.
And then she only served just a few years of jail.
Yep.
See, in that case, like, you have to physically distance yourself.
That's the trick.
Like, when people say, oh, just log off and whatnot.
You got to understand that people who grew up with this stuff and have effectively nursed into it from like young ages, like, it is a connection with their real life.
Like, their whole lives are intertwined with it.
They can't help themselves.
Like, they didn't have that whole period where it didn't exist like the rest of us do.
Yeah.
Like, there's a, like, and an awful lot of them can't handle that pressure.
Like, that, like, that, like, so, you know, I can tell them to just log off, but, but, you know, I spent like a good 30 years without a cell phone.
Right.
So it's like, I went without shit and didn't use, didn't stay connected to people.
Yeah, so this name, this girl's name was Michelle Carter.
She was 17 at the time, and the boy was Conrad Roy III.
He was 18.
Both of them struggled with depression and mental health issues.
And in July of 2014, she convinced him to kill himself, and he did do it with carbon monoxide poisoning in his pickup truck in a Kmart parking lot.
There's still Kmarts out there.
That's so awful.
Interesting.
Wait, how recent, what year again?
2014.
Oh, okay, 2014.
I'm like, I guess there'd still be Kmarts.
I don't know how many left.
Probably in like the Midwest, there are quite a few left.
But so while Carter initially encouraged Roy to seek help, her tone changed dramatically and she began to campaign of coercion and repeatedly urging him to just do it.
She was sentenced to 15 months in prison, but was released early for good behavior in January of 2020.
She only served 11 months, dude, after convincing this dude to kill himself.
Good God, she did everything sure to push the guy off a cliff.
Seriously.
Documentaries are made.
That's ridiculous.
Movies were made.
Fuck that.
What a bitch.
What a bitch.
Anyway, let's get into a bit of a background, some background information on the enigma at hand here with this live recording suicide.
So suicide ranks among the four most causes of mortality globally.
And as of 2020, it was the second leading cause of death in the United States for individuals aged 15 to 34.
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported that suicide was the third leading cause of death among adolescents in the U.S. from 1999 to 2006.
In 2020, the suicide rate in the U.S. was recorded at 13.5 per 100,000 individuals.
And in 2021, suicide accounted for 48,183 deaths, making it a significant cause of mortality in the United States.
Between 2000 and 2018, suicide rates rose by 30%, although there was a slight decline observed in 2019 and 2020.
And I don't have the actual records here, but obviously from 2020 to now, I'm sure the suicide rate has gone significantly up.
In fact, I'm going to look right now.
Just due to like COVID and all that.
Man, what a depressing number.
13.5 per 100,000.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a lot.
So 2020, 13.5 per 100,000.
2021, 14.
Well, in those years, it stayed at 14.1 per 100,000 or 14.2 per 100,000.
So it didn't rise too much higher, but it definitely rose.
I remember seeing it, and I predicted at the time, and as time went on, yeah, the trend only rose over the next few years because a lot of people were citing, oh, it only went up a little bit.
It's not that bad.
And I'm thinking, you're waiting not enough time.
Give people another six months of being stuck.
Yeah, it grew quite a bit after that.
So suicide continues to be a major public health concern globally, despite ongoing prevention initiatives and treatment options.
It has been recognized as not merely an individual issue, but also one that is shaped by social and environmental influences.
Increasing evidence suggests that online activities have impacted behaviors related to suicide.
The proliferation of social media in the 21st century has been remarkable.
Consequently, a wide array of resources is available to the public in different formats, particularly on social media platforms like Facebook or Instagram or Twitter or YouTube, Snapchat, TikTok.
While these platforms were designed to facilitate virtual connections, they can also give rise to cyberbullying, feelings of insecurity and emotional turmoil, which may, in some cases, lead individuals to contemplate suicide.
Bullying, regardless of whether it occurs on social media or in other contexts, whether physical or not, markedly heightens the likelihood of suicidal behavior among victims.
Since the advent of social media, there have been instances where individuals have ended their lives due to cyber bullying.
Additionally, from 2010 to 2022, there has been a rise in suicide rates among adolescents, coinciding with increased engagement with social media in their daily routines.
Media algorithms often amplify videos and posts to alert the nation about escalating issues which can resonate with the impressionable and immature minds of adolescents.
Consequently, social media may pose increased risks by promoting various pro-suicidal websites, message boards, chat rooms, and forums.
So, what's the impact of these pro-suicidal sites, message boards, chat rooms, and forums, Cricket?
I mean, I mean, people on social media try to do that.
All the time.
Well, the trick is, is they're not promoting them out on the main page because that's going to get you modded and bad.
Yeah, yeah, flagged immediately.
They send people links to these things through DMs to not get caught.
It's like the Roblox stuff.
You got to specify, like, when you're talking about this, you're talking about people sharing links and stuff amongst each other, not necessarily like posts going viral, because yeah, those things get flagged and took down real quick.
But they share private messages.
Well, they social media platforms have revolutionized conventional communication methods.
That's right.
You can be a dick to anyone anywhere in the world now and not just the people in your immediate vicinity.
What a magical place we live in.
A vast amount of information regarding suicide is accessible on the internet and through social media channels.
Because, I mean, to a certain extent, like, you know, methods and stuff, maybe.
I mean, I don't think most people necessarily needed to learn how to die, though.
The content found on social media concerning suicide can have a direct impact on suicidal behavior, influencing it in both detrimental and beneficial ways.
Yeah, that's the thing is, like, what it primarily drives is lazy and really dangerous means of attempts, and a lot of times, really crazy methods that often end up hurting others as well.
There's some collateral damage, like there's like there's certain compounds that I will not reference because I don't want people looking them up that people used that then ended up just getting a bunch of people who were not suicidal sick and then they didn't die.
Well, they were plenty of people did, but the point is, is it's not even reliable.
So, but yeah, like, you know, that's what happens if you, you know, are basing your knowledge off of viral social media posts and the what that get modded and then, well, like, that that's when you have to share things through DMs.
Because these things get noticed for a while, but they never go too far.
Because, of course, these things are against every TOS in the universe.
But they go far enough.
Social cognitive theory significantly contributes to understanding suicide attempts that are influenced by social media.
This theory is exemplified when individuals are affected by content they encounter, which subsequently changes their behaviors through various processes.
This phenomenon is evident when individuals share their suicide attempts on online platforms or endorse suicidal behavior more broadly.
Participants on these social media platforms can also apply peer pressure, motivating others to end their lives, glorifying individuals who have committed suicide and enabling suicide agreements.
I mean, well, I mean, if you're thinking about it, if you're pushing a depopulation agenda, like some of these could even be bots, just pushing people to do this stuff.
Like, it doesn't have to be all people necessarily.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Because, you know, there's kind of a, you know, like vested interest.
And you know, they're out there.
You know, these companies create bots to do this.
Yeah.
And another, I was about to say another angle of this that has actually come up, and I've seen it referenced a lot recently with people, is that freaking all of these algorithms are actually designed to drive negative engagement.
And yeah, I can't imagine that's good for people's health.
No.
Emotionally, mentally, physically, spiritually.
That's why I got to log off every so often and get away from that shit.
Yeah.
For instance, in 2008, a Japanese message board revealed that the individuals could take their own lives using, oh, look, and this thing I wasn't going to reference.
Fuck it, I am doing it.
I guess I am.
Hydrogen sulfide gas.
Soon after 220 individuals attempted suicide in this manner with 200 days succeeding, they're not mentioning the part about how about some other people also got it and some failed and killed other people.
A research project was carried out involving a systematic online search for 12 terms related to suicide to evaluate such as, well, a whole bunch of things, suicide methods, how optimal methods.
I'm sure they had like painless in there somewhere.
To evaluate the search outcomes.
The findings revealed that pro-suicide websites and forums discussing general suicide-related topics frequently appeared among the top results of the search.
Interesting.
And yeah, in that case, your Google algorithm is actually kind of apparently has a vested interest in you wanting to be depressed and promote suicide.
Which isn't really shocking at all if you think about the overall depopulation won't.
I'm sure Palantir has nothing to do with it.
You know, not everybody, like, you know, not everybody's going to get sick, so maybe you need to talk some people off the edge.
While social media has been a significant factor in young adult suicide, some individuals in this demographic derive comfort and solace from these platforms.
Young adults are forging connections with others in similar circumstances, which helps alleviate their feelings of loneliness.
Ah, digital Stockholm.
Horrible.
Older generations often perceive social media and live streaming as a greater infringement on their privacy compared to younger individuals.
Now, that is very true.
According to the American Association of Suicidology, suicide rates are highest among individuals aged 45 to 64, with a rate of 19.6 per 100,000 people in 2015.
This is followed by those aged 65 and older who have a rate of 16.6 per 100,000 people.
And then individuals aged 15 to 24 with a rate of 12.5 per 100,000 people.
And any rate, any number higher than zero is sad.
Yeah, and those numbers only get higher over the years, as we already mentioned.
So let's get into a few cases here.
First one's in 2006.
13-year-old Megan Meyer took her own life by hanging herself in her bedroom closet after receiving a series of MySpace messages from a friend's mother and her 18-year-old accomplice.
This is so fucked up.
Who pretended to be a 16-year-old boy named Josh Evans and urged Megan to end her life.
The mother, Lori Drew, was charged with federal conspiracy in connection with computer fraud and abuse.
That case would be United States v. Drew.
But she was ultimately acquitted.
This lady literally pretended to be someone else and convinced this girl to fucking kill herself.
Acquitted.
In 2012, Amanda Todd, a high school student from Canada, took her own life after enduring blackmail from a stalker and facing persistent cyberbullying and harassment at her school.
On September 7th, she uploaded a nine-minute video on YouTube entitled My Story, Struggling, Bullying, Suicide, Self-Harm, in which she utilized a series of flashcards to narrate her experiences with bullying.
The video gained widespread attention posthumously, going viral after her death on October 10th, 2012.
And it accumulated over 1 million, 1.6 million views by October 13th, just three days later, with numerous news outlets worldwide linking to it and doing shows, broadcasting it on their news stations.
And in 2014, Conrad Roy took his own life.
Again, we already mentioned this by Michelle Carter.
2015, Sadie Riggs, a teenager from Pennsylvania, entered her life reportedly due to online bullying and harassment related to her appearance at school.
In an effort to halt the bullying, Sadie's aunt, Sarah Smith, reached out to various social media platforms, law enforcement, and Sadie's educational institution.
And in a desperate measure, Smith even went so far as to destroy Sadie's phone in her presence to try to put an end to the harassment.
However, no charges were ever brought against any of the alleged perpetrators.
And then, in 2016, Chien Chian Chang, a director of an animal shelter in Taiwan, took her own life following her appearance on a television program that discussed that discussed animal euthanasia.
A devoted animal advocate, Xian faced charges for euthanizing stray animals due to the severe overcrowding in shelters across Taiwan.
After her television appearance, she was labeled as an executioner and a female butcher, leading to severe cyberbullying and harassment directed at her and the shelter she managed.
Ultimately, she died by injecting herself with the same substance that she used to euthanize the animals, leaving behind a note that expressed the sentiment that, quote, all lives are equal, end quote.
Who was the politician who shot her own dog?
Was it Luna or Luna Habba?
One of these ladies that's in government right now talked about killing her own dog, glorifying it.
I forget.
I thought that was Pam Bondi.
It might have been.
I think she was born in.
Caroline Red Levin.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Like I said, I don't know what any of them did.
Other than disappointed me.
Christy Gnome.
Christy Gnome.
And a goat.
Killed a dog and a goat.
Sounds like she's doing some fucking sacrifice.
I was about to say, was there like a was there like a chicken and an eye of nude involved or some shit here?
Oh, you know there was, dude.
You know it.
Circle of Solomon, Pentagram.
It was all there, dude.
Yeah.
Christy Noam, South Dakota governor, Christy Gnome, animal murderer.
Yeah, like the theme in a lot of these seems to be that it's like societally encouraged on a passive level just by a very, very lackadaisical approach to punishment.
100%.
Like, very clearly pushing someone to die is given like 15 months or just literally nothing.
Just acquitted.
That's the sort of crime where you just basically want someone to be courageous to a small extent to be willing to do it.
Just willing to, yeah, just willing to maybe take a little bit of punishment, but they know they're not going to go away for a really long time.
And that is pretty messed up, especially the ones where, you know, they do a whole lot more than just tell somebody to end themselves.
Some of these involve like physical abuse and stuff.
And they still are just like, oh, well, you know, like, because you didn't kill them ultimately.
Yeah.
Yeah, dude.
It's sad, man.
This whole thing is sad.
It's worth it to be alive, people.
And I think if you're listening to this, you know that.
In a case from Florida in 2018, two preteen individuals were taken into custody and faced charges of cyberstalking after being accused of engaging in cyberbullying against another middle school student, 12-year-old Gabriella Green.
Allegations arose regarding the dissemination of online rumors about her, and she tragically took her own life shortly after a conversation with one of her tormentors, who reportedly said, quote, if you're going to do it, just do it.
End quote, before terminating the call, as stated by law enforcement.
And in 2019, Canadian Inuk pop artist Kelly Frazier, renowned for her Inuktiktut language renditions of popular music, was discovered to season her residents close to Winnipeg, Manitoba.
What is that?
Inuktitut?
Inuktitut?
Ah, no.
Is that how you pronounce that?
No idea.
Inuktitut?
Yes.
Exactly like that, definitively.
That sounds right.
Without ever looking it up.
Definitely.
Yes.
The cause of her death, Kelly Frazier, was determined to be suicide.
A conclusion that Frasier's family linked to childhood traumas, racism, and ongoing cyberbullying.
Man, those native women up in Canada, they have it pretty fucking hard.
It's like a giant, Canada is like a giant American reservation.
Now, come on, they're pretending to give the land back to them.
Yeah.
I'm sure they'll really hold true on that the second they actually make demands of some sort that actually inconvenience the government.
So it's like they treat them like garbage on one hand, and then simultaneously they try to give them land and then decide, you don't need the land.
Yeah.
You're just in the rotation for being the next one to be acknowledged.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, my first thought is if you're going to take it away from the people that have it now and give it back to the people that used to have it, like, how would you, how would you not just think the government would just take it away from you again if you're any kind of problem?
Yeah.
No, that's exactly it.
You ain't keeping that.
Come on.
Canada needs to get their shit together, man.
Or they wouldn't have had the power to take it away.
Canada used to be a really great country.
And like, wow, they are just fucked.
So is the United States.
But I used to love Canada.
That place went downhill quick.
Yeah, Canada is further down the hole, sadly, in terms of ridiculous totalitarianism stories.
And the level of justification necessary for it.
They're almost up there with Britain at this point.
They're getting close.
Yeah.
Like Britain, I always hold as the example of the absolute worst one.
Which, really, when I say Britain, I mean the UK/slash EU, pretty much the entire region, minus some small enclaves such as Poland that held out more stubbornly.
They're all pretty well degraded at this point.
Very much so.
I mean, you know, New York, New York is now a giant Muslim slum.
Texas has more mosques than churches.
What do you mean they'll have free buses now?
More mosques than churches.
Well, I mean, the important thing is when you get shivved on the bus, you didn't have to pay anything to ride it.
That's true.
Michigan, Dearborn, Michigan, more mosques than hospitals.
Like, it's nuts, dude.
This place is going right according to plan.
Like, if you read the Talmud, or not the Talmud, but the Quran, the Quran.
Yeah.
Their whole plan is there.
Like, slowly take over the United States.
All these prophets that they had over the years.
They always talked and still to this day talk about infiltrating the United States from within.
Same with the Jews.
Same with all these other nations.
I don't know, man.
We're fucked.
We're fucked 30 years from now when we're like old and can't do shit with canes and shit.
We're so fucked.
Well, yeah.
See, the nice thing is we got to enjoy all this time in the between.
The people that are really screwed are the ones that are actually able-bodied and could deal with it.
That's true.
Most everybody else, if anything, dodged a bullet.
It's just, I always think like how shitty it's going to be when we get rounded up when we're old and just taken outside and our heads chopped off.
Like, fuck, man.
Or shot, you know, whatever.
Just completely defenseless.
I don't know.
That actually sounds pretty fast.
It is.
That doesn't sound nearly as bad as a lot of the things that could happen, honestly.
I would take that.
It's you're not wrong, but the lead up to it, the time between like, oh shit, they're here to fucking kneeling down and like that in your head.
That's a long time.
You know what I mean?
Every second is like 20 minutes.
And then it happens.
And then who knows?
Who knows what happens after that?
Why is it?
Well, it's never good.
So this next thing I have here is from Inside Edition.
Inside Edition, it's called The Dark Disturbing Trend of Teens Live Streaming Suicide and How It Can Be Stopped.
This comes from 2017.
On December 30th, 2017 in Polk County, Georgia, Caitlin Nicole Davis posted a 43-minute live stream to social media platform live.me.
Never heard of it.
In the video, Davis can be seen setting up a noose on a large tree.
That's creepy.
She later climbs into a onto a foothold in the tree, apologizes to the camera, and steps off.
The viewers watch this whole thing happen.
In the 15 minutes of the recording, as the sky darkens and Davis's body hangs in the foreground, slowly moving with the winds, her phone rings loudly in the background, and people can be heard calling her name in the distance.
How fucked up is that?
She had regularly shared her feelings of depression and hopelessness on the site prior to taking her life.
The footage was later copied and repeatedly posted on Facebook and other websites, as always happens, which caused a major outcry to which authorities had no answer.
What do we do?
They would later say that there was and is nothing they can do to completely erase it, which is the case for essentially everything posted online.
Unless you're a billionaire who can go and contact these fucking tech companies and pay them off to take your name off the internet.
Like Trump.
Yeah, I was about to say, if you could buy the Wayback Machine.
Yeah.
Then you can disappear.
You can.
You can change everything.
You can change history.
So, in the following month after Caitlin Nicole Davis died, 14-year-old Nakia Vinant tragically took her own life by hanging herself with a scarf in the bathroom of her foster home in Florida, all while live streaming on Facebook.
The duration was two hours.
This video.
And despite the presence of numerous Facebook addicts who were viewing the live stream, not a single fucking person contacted 911 until the broadcast had concluded.
And obviously, unfortunately, by that time, Nakia was already deceased.
And to make matters worse, the situation was exacerbated by a series of grave errors that led law enforcement to two incorrect locations before they ultimately located the correct address.
So they could probably have saved her life if they weren't so incompetent.
Now, when the police arrived, they discovered Nakia hanging in the bathroom while her foster parents were asleep in their bed.
Fuck.
Motherfuckers.
Imagine that.
Damn, that's messed up.
And in 2008, Abraham Biggs, a 19-year-old from Pembroke Pines, Florida, was actively blogging on an online bodybuilding message board and had provided a link to his page on Justin.tv, a platform for live video streaming.
This one's really fucked up.
So Abraham was a student at Broward County College and often spoke about his depression on bodybuilding.com, the website.
He is quoted as saying, I hate myself and I hate living.
I have let everyone down and I feel as though I will never change or never improve.
I have thought about and attempted suicide many times in the past.
So when asked about the note, Wendy Crane, an investigator with the medical examiner's office, would respond, quote, people were egging him on and saying things like, go ahead and do it, Faggot.
End quote.
Such jouchebags, dude.
During the live stream, the viewers and agitators alike would watch as Abraham ingested a large quantity of numerous different medications, including opiates such as Vicodin and benzodiazepine such as muscle relaxers.
And on top of all of that, he was taking more medications that he was needed for his bipolar disorder.
Or was taking.
I can't say needed, because I'm pretty indifferent to the whole NSIDS, whatever, the fucking psychotropics, the Zolofs.
I feel like those things fuck people up more.
Oh, SSRIs.
Yeah, the SSRIs, yeah.
I feel like they fuck up people more than they help them.
Yeah, they, uh... Prozac.
I still remember when one of them, I don't remember which one it was, but we were all, like, me and all my friends were joking about it because we're like, oh, look, you're a little happier.
And then it's like, one of the side effects is you might be a little stabby.
Might stab people a little.
Just a little stabbing.
Oh, fuck.
What's a little stabbing among friends?
Just feeling some stabbing.
Just under the blade today.
Feeling no stabbiness.
And I'm like, how in the fuck is that even a thing that we give to humans?
No, it's horrible.
Like, here's this thing.
Oh, it might make you crazy and stab people.
Okay, but it might make you happy.
All right.
Well, I mean, like, what if it combines making you happy with stabbing people?
Oh, well, now we have a fucking problem.
Now, don't wait.
So, yeah.
I thought that was the most hilarious thing, but it came out like side effects may include stabbiness.
And I'm like, why are they, why are they even spec they even specified like stabby?
Like, like, you know, not shooty or like punchy or poisony.
Stabby specifically.
Like, like, it compels you to obtain a blade and strike at your neighbor.
Like, what the hell?
I wanted to just quickly look up like the worst side effect warnings, but.
I was about to say, I mean, everything you can think of is a side effect.
Well, if you think about it, like, some psychiatric warnings say keep away from sharp objects.
Is that because there's a lot of shit that makes you stabby?
Yeah, right.
Right.
Right, dude.
Maybe the sharp objects isn't necessarily to keep you safe, but to keep others.
Yes.
Yes.
I've like I've had this conversation with doctors, dude.
I mean, because I've been in the field and yeah, dealt with medications and administrating them.
But I'm just really against SSRIs and all these mood disorder pills and stuff, dude.
I've seen the damages.
I've only seen it get worse instead of better.
So I'm just adamantly against it.
I can't say that's just my opinion.
Some people think it helps them and good.
God bless you.
Just don't get a knife and stab people.
Don't get a little stabby.
If your side effects include stabbiness, hide the knives.
Simple.
Next, it's going to be like, side effects include inability to remember to hide knives.
Yeah.
Short-term memory loss.
Specifically where knives are placed.
So, Abraham Biggs here, let's just get back to this.
When casually, or while casually downing all these pills, this pill cocktail he had, just fucking, he was just casually taking them down while he was talking.
So people were shocked at the moment, you know, at the moment, and the type of the jokes he was taking.
And he would downplay the severity of it all by just saying, like, you know, oh, this is my typical Saturday.
I do this all the time.
Placating, like, like the government does.
And approximately 12 hours prior to the event that would ultimately be Abraham's final act, he began posting on his blog about his intentions to end his life, as if people watching couldn't see the signs.
However, most, if not all, of the other bloggers who witnessed his undoing thought that it was merely a performance piece, given that Abraham had a history of making lighthearted threats about taking his own life and had even staged such a hex before.
As a result, they were initially doubtful of his assertions, yet it soon became evident that they had genuinely occurred.
Boy who cried wolf type of situation.
He's just joking.
He jokes all the time.
Once he had consumed all the pills prescribed to him, he quickly chose to lie down on a bed, which I believe was his father's bed, facing away from the camera.
But after some time, viewers began to notice that Abe appeared to be unresponsive, as his stillness was evident, and any slight movement would have been noticeable.
Unfortunately, it became clear that he wasn't moving.
He was most likely dead.
That was a point when a discussion between the viewers happened as to whether or not he was moving and eventually prompted one of the site's users to reach out to law enforcement who then managed to track down the teenager through his computer's IP address, despite the fact that Abraham was even using the supposed best VPN anyone can pay for.
Nord VPN.
How do you think they did that?
Well, how could that have happened?
No way.
I don't know.
Whoever was doing it was definitely not performing a NordVPN ad rate.
Because the cops couldn't find Nakia Vinant.
They went to like three different locations before they found her.
But here they instantly found him, even though he was using the VPN.
Well, you know, that's one of the unfortunately often unwhistered about unfortunate secrets of VPNs that they're pretty much all run shot through with the government at like all kinds of multiple levels.
And if anything, a lot of the privacy that it gives you is more of a veneer than actual protection.
Most of it's just to keep you from getting like sued or some shit, because you can obfuscate things that way.
But realistically, if they need to find you, they can find you.
Don't think they can't.
The argument I would say is that it says to mean that they're shot through and can find you is that China doesn't even ban them.
Like, UK is trying to ban them, but China don't.
Why does China not?
Because China can see find you anyways.
And they want to know what you're doing when you're on a VPN doing stuff that you don't want them to see.
Yeah, and typically VPNs are used mostly for people in countries who are like blocked access to watch videos and streaming and shit.
So they just get a VPN and you get around that shit.
That's the useful function.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The useful function is to say, oh, look, I'm in Turkey now.
Yeah.
Like, give me Turkish Netflix.
I want to know what's going on in Turkey.
Turkey porn.
That's what I want.
It's just, you know, a huge part of it is that privacy that they try to sell people, which I always have to warn you, like, just assume everything that you ever send that way.
Just imagine screaming it at the top of your lungs out your front window.
If you wouldn't be willing to do that, probably don't send it through that shit.
Yeah.
So the primary cause of death between the ages of 15 and 24 is unintentional injuries, which includes car accidents, risky activities such as extreme games of Truth or Dare, a childhood favorite.
Considering that this age group spends the majority, if not all, of their conscious time online, it's not surprising that they turn to social media to express their deepest thoughts and share their toughest experiences and regrets.
Now back in the day when people faced suicidal thoughts, you know, before smartphones, laptops, and tablets existed, they typically communicated these negative feelings of dread and despair through handwritten notes to friends or face-to-face discussions.
Nowadays, that's all gone.
Experts assert that when individuals observe violent or suicidal behaviors online and fail to take action, it could be likened to what's known as the bystander effect, a social pathological phenomenon where the likelihood of providing assistance to a victim diminishes in the presence of others.
Kaveri Subarmanayam, the associate director at the Children's Digital Media Center at Los Angeles, had this to say about streaming suicides.
Quote, One of the things we have found in our research is people's networks are somewhat exaggerated online, like 1500 friends or followers.
I think the bystander effect is what you are sometimes seeing in these suicides.
There is psychological distance between you and the screen.
People watching don't think they are the only one.
Sadly, I think we are going to see more of this until we have better systems within technology and more research into understanding how and why this happens.
When people, young people, are putting all of their thoughts, all of their feelings, all of the things that they are doing online, it shouldn't be any surprise to anyone that when they are struggling, that they put that out there too.
End quote.
Deep.
Very deep.
Now, as the number of online suicides rises, prominent social media platforms entangled in this tragic trend, like the notorious Facebook, claim they are developing strategies to assist individuals facing mental health crises.
Because who needs a state-licensed professional when you have the blessings of mental health Facebook bots to navigate to you through your virtual life?
Mark Markey Mark Zuckerberg.
Hey, want me to do this next part?
Yeah, go ahead.
Okay.
All right.
Mark Markey Mark Zuckerberg, the alleged co-founder of Facebook, would go on to issue a statement regarding the streaming of self-harm and acts of violence following multiple instances of people doing just that.
Mark Zuckerberg, somewhat relation to Mark Zuckerberg, as in he's the same guy, wrote in a Facebook post, following those instances over the last few weeks.
We've seen people hurting themselves and others on Facebook, either live or in video posted later.
It's heartbreaking, and I've been reflecting on how we can do better for our community.
And he's like, I'm very disappointed that you did something beyond gluing your pizza with actual super glue.
Yeah, the dude's a lizard.
He doesn't have feelings and emotions.
Yeah, like all of these statements come down to, I realize that I might be viable if you decide that I am a publisher rather than a platform.
So yeah, this is sad.
It's blah, right?
Yeah.
Facebook announced they would add 3,000 employees over the next year to help review millions of videos and posts reported by users.
One man who was not reported enough by other users was a man named Steve Stevens, who shared a video of himself shooting an elderly man in Cleveland using Facebook Live.
Yeah, that was fucked up.
Damn, Facebook Live is more dangerous than anyone ever thought.
The fucked up video, man.
Sorry, I'm like, I'm taking the piss way too much on the Facebook Live being the one that killed him.
This occurred just a month after the 49-year-old James M. Jeffrey from Alabama tragically took his own life while live streaming on the platform.
And in the same month, another guy recorded himself murdering his 11-month-year-old daughter.
Oh, Jesus.
And two separate videos that he then uploaded to the social media platform like the psycho media, like the psychopath that he was.
And I would hope that they were at least close together because otherwise, what the hell?
How was that kept on there for long periods?
So fucked.
Oh, so fucked.
Okay.
So, anyways, I'm thoroughly traumatized.
You want to take over again?
Yeah, yeah.
So, in this next article, it's from Miami Herald.
The question is asked, why are people live streaming their suicides?
What's the deal with airplane food?
That really does sound out of touch.
The psychological elements linked to a public suicide, especially when it comes to live streaming, are intricate.
Just like the various motivations behind suicide, the reasons for opting to live stream such an event are equally varied.
Of it, Kathy Ramslin, the American non-fiction author and professor of forensic psychology, said, quote, Some people want to punish with their suicide.
Some want to feel that connection to social media to take away the solitary feeling of the act, but still be in an environment they feel at home in.
Here, I'm going to do a regular because I don't want to downplay this.
It's like Mickey Mass's dad.
Make a joke out of it.
Haha, it's terminal.
Some want to feel that connection to social media to take away the solitary feeling of the act, but still be in an environment they feel at home in.
Some want to get their name in the media, not for fame, but because they don't think they'll be around for that, but because they want attention and they want people to notice.
People who are considering suicide may make a statement they want others to hear, and live streaming gives them the opportunity to magnify that statement.
End quote.
It increases the chances of what experts call suicide contagion, which is also common after celebrities kill themselves.
Phyllis Alonghi.
Phyllis Olongi, the clinical director at the Society for Prevention of Teen Suicide in New Jersey, said, quote, Imagine an adolescent feeling emotionally lost, almost invisible, and witnessing the notoriety or memorialization of a teen who completed suicide, gaining attention in their immediate community, as well as a vast amount of attention obtained on social media.
This is the essence of contagion.
End quote.
That's fucked.
They did it.
I'm going to do it.
Oh, yeah.
Think about how much attention it garners, how many people magnify the message, repeat it, share it out of morbid curiosity before it ends up disappearing.
Yeah.
Not to mention the ones who share it just because they're sick in the head and want to encourage it.
Right.
So, you know, when nobody's paying any attention to you at all, all that negative attention looks really attractive.
That's right.
Looking pretty damn good.
So, Frederick J. Bowdy, a 33-year-old aspiring actor from Texas, killed himself in North Hollywood in July of 2013.
His manager, Sean Kurzweil, tells the Los Angeles Daily News that Bowdy shot himself in the head while streaming live from his car near Cumpston Street and Folcher Avenue.
Authorities say Bowdy was arrested the week prior in Santa Clarita on suspicion of sexual assault involving a female companion who was free on a $100,000 bond.
This next one's pretty tough, dude.
I'm going to get this name wrong, so forgive me.
I get most names wrong.
You want me to read this one?
Do it.
I'll do it.
Do it a lot.
I'll bite the bullet.
I'll do it just so I have to say it.
All right.
Lo Zhao Mao Maozi.
Lo Zhao Mao Mao.
Lo Zhao Mao Maozi is his name.
My many hours of Genshin impact were not in vain.
The Chinese female internet influence.
I learned something.
Sadly.
Yep, I learned something.
I learned how to badly pronounce Chinese names.
Sadly ended her life by consuming pesticide during a live stream on Duoyin, the Chinese counterpart of TikTok.
This heartbreaking incident has ignited a fierce discussion online about the possible accountability of the audience on the platform for, quote, encouraging such actions, which some believe may have prayed a role in this tragic occurrence.
In a brief video that would turn out to be her last, she stated, This is likely my final video as I've been enduring depression for an extended period.
Well, damn, it doesn't sound like you were necessarily locked in yet.
She claimed to those who watched that she had spent more than two months in a hospital and said that her friends were cognizant of her depression.
Still on the fence, but pretty much there.
At one point in the video, she remarked, This live stream video is not intended as a promotion for selling products.
Well, thank freaking God for whoever was sponsoring you.
Damn.
Yeah, was it like, I just take a minute to advertise, and they're like, the hell you don't pull the stream.
Yeah.
Yeah, this live stream was brought to you by Peloton too.
Oh, God.
Screenshots, all live streams, actually.
Screenshots circulate.
Creech out circulated widely on the internet, depicting the moment when Lo Zhao Mao Maozi pulled into view a bottle of pesticide.
People watching her urged her to drink it quickly.
Well, others considered reaching out to the authorities.
So, yeah, Jesus.
A person identifying as a threat of the deceased stated that Lo Zhao Mao Maozi had no intention of taking her own life.
Rather, she aimed to capture her boyfriend's attention through this act.
Oh, so it was just an attention-getting thing, so it wasn't even an intentional suicide.
That's even more fucked.
Yeah.
Oh, damn.
Yeah.
The pesticide she ingested was mixed with the beverage, and her decision to consume it was influenced by someone's encouragement, as revealed by a friend.
This friend also noted that she reached out to the hospital independently after the live stream ended.
According to the Beijing news, Lo Zhao Mao Maozi's family get better pledged to hold the account audience accountable.
With 678,000 followers on the platform, Lo Zhao Mao Maozi had shared 38 short videos primarily focused on fashion rather than in any indication of self-harm.
Ding Jinkum, a lawyer from the Shanghai-based Dabang law firm, informed the paper that those who harassed the girl are believed to have played a pivotal role in her suicide.
Absolutely.
Because they wanted to call them the Dabang law firm.
But yeah, I would say looking at that story that they definitely did.
I think you have learned Chinese just by reading that.
Yep, I have learned enough to offend whoever also happens to have that name.
And dude, it's crazy.
In this video, like she was really, really hesitant at drinking it.
And she put it to her lips and like didn't want to drink it.
And I don't know, like maybe 10 seconds or something like that.
She was doing that.
And then she finally took a big chug, like took a couple drinks or something.
And then she like instantly fucking regretted it.
And she started feeling extremely nauseous and shitty.
And she regretted doing it.
How could you?
In the video, it's fucked up.
I've seen it.
It's not good.
Yeah, imagine being the person who typed you should do it while it was to her lips and got her to do it.
Like, how would you?
Like, you know, they're probably a sociopath and are actually happy with it, but I couldn't live with myself if I did that shit.
Yeah.
That's messed up.
Yeah, they probably kill kittens.
All right, I'll do one more.
Oh, hold on.
I have some Chinese phrases.
Dua shao kain?
How much money?
Tai Guile.
Too expensive.
Ziji.
Thank you.
Buke.
You're welcome.
And the last one here.
Du Buki.
That's sorry.
There you go.
We learned things on this fucking on this show, man.
This is an educational channel.
Seriously.
Educational.
A quick note: Ding Jinken.
That is such a sweet name.
I'd be down with that name.
I would rock it.
Ding Jinken.
Sweet.
Like, you seriously, you sound like an action hero.
Ding Jinken.
Yeah.
All right, so this next one is really fucking sad.
So fucked.
Girl accidentally shoots cousin then herself.
This is from 2021.
You guys, a lot of you might have seen this.
It was in the news for sure.
So two young cousins, girl and a boy, were broadcasting live from an apartment in St. Louis when one of them, the older girl, accidentally shot her little cousin.
Fatally.
Shot him and then took her own life.
It's so messed up.
So 12-year-old Paris Harvey shot her 14-year-old cousin, Kieran Harvey, before turning the gun on herself.
Initially, police labeled the situation as a murder suicide, but it would turn out to be something much worse.
Almost unspeakable.
That's horrible.
Susan, the grandmother of the girl, shared with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that she witnessed the Instagram live video being created by the two cousins as it was going down in a downtown St. Louis apartment that the family had rented for their March birthday celebrations.
Paris and Kieran were in a bathroom by themselves recording the video in the mirror prior to the incident.
Family members reported that following Kieran's shooting, the video depicted Paris attempting to grab the firearm, which may have inadvertently discharged once more.
They expressed their belief that the gun belonged to Kieran.
Both children sustained gunshot wounds to the head.
The mother, Shanice Harvey, would later comment, quote, it was no murder.
It wasn't a suicide.
It was a freak accident.
It happened.
Yeah, I've seen the video.
I didn't know that.
Like, I can understand, like, oops, there was a round chambered, but a full mag?
Right, right.
Like, we had an entire magazine and we're just kind of playing around with it.
Like, how many rules of gun safety were violated here?
All of them.
All of them.
All four.
Simultaneously, pretty much.
They knew she had a gun.
They said it belonged to her.
Well, and they were playing around with it.
So fucking ridiculous.
There's live ammo in it when you're not even supposed to do that with a gun that's not loaded.
It's unbelievable.
Because you could have some fucking freak situation where some chambered, where some chambered round gets stuck up in there or some shit and you don't realize it.
Yeah.
So, you know, the worst thing that ever happens is you murder the floor.
You murder.
That's so sad, dude.
The crow.
So, yeah, just don't do any of that.
It's not a cool action toy.
No, it's not.
Isn't that how the how the Brandon Lee?
What's his name?
Brandon Lee.
Brandon Lee, yeah, I was going to say it was you messing around with the gun and accidentally shot himself.
Well, no, the fucking people on the set, the people on the set, like there was actually someone left around.
It was supposed to be a blank, but there was something lodged in the thing or in the barrel.
And then when they shot it, that blank shot whatever was in the fucking.
Oh, that thing.
Just a big bullshit thing, man.
Like, that was on purpose.
Yeah.
That was on purpose.
Which, again, demonstrates, like, even if you literally can't load it, you might have to treat it like it's loaded.
Always.
Guns scare me, dude.
Honestly.
When people have them around me, I am, like, frightened because shit happens.
And people, when they're playing with their guns.
I mean, stuff like that's what prompted them to actually get stage weapons instead of just having decommissioned firearms on the set.
Yeah.
Being like, oh, this will be fun.
Nobody's going to fix.
Nobody's going to make these shoot again or anything.
No.
Fucking what?
So yeah, just don't fuck with things like that.
Alec Baldwin, Alex Baldwin.
Yeah, I was going to say that.
Which one shot the director?
Alec Baldwin, yeah.
That just happened like 2024, 2023 or something.
Yeah, it was like some kind of, did it hit just the director?
Did it hit two people?
I thought it hit two people, but one of them died.
I know the woman director died.
I know that.
Yeah, I know one of them died from it.
Fucked up situation.
So again, just don't play with that shit.
No, man.
For God's sake, Nerf exists for a reason.
Nerf.
Yeah, it's Nerf or nothing.
Fuck, man.
Don't use that shit.
Don't fuck around with it.
All right.
I was about to say, why do people like Nerf?
Because, you know, you could put an eye out is a lot better than you could put the hole through the back of your damn head.
Yeah, dude.
Idiots playing Russian roulette.
Like, fuck that.
What are you doing?
Oh, I might, I might shoot myself in the head or I might not.
Like, come on.
Come the fuck on.
Like, how bored do you have to be?
Alright, so a man streamed suicide on Instagram Wife says woman friend tortured him.
We're just going to do a few a few more articles here.
All right.
Want to read this one?
Yeah, I'll do this one.
In September of 2023, a 35-year-old man in Gurugrum allegedly died by suicide while he was live streaming on Instagram from a hotel room after being invited by a female friend to celebrate her birthday.
The wife of the victim accused this woman of blackmailing her husband and forcing him to hang himself.
Whoa.
Yeah.
She would later tell the police at the hotel, my husband was forced to die by suicide and stream it live on Instagram.
She was constantly blackmailing Vikram and demanding money from him.
She had some objectival videos of them, which she threatened to make or threatened to upload online.
She tortured Vikram twice and forced him to kill himself.
Wow.
Those videos were not worth it, dude.
Okay.
Wow.
The female suspect worked at a real estate company and had only been friends with the victim for a couple of months.
That's more fucked up.
No updates have been available on the outcome, but that is more fucked up because I feel like by now we should have found out what those videos were.
Which now, like, that really makes begs the question of, damn, how bad were those videos?
Pretty bad.
That somebody could talk you into offing yourself and then the news just – and then the news which pretty much drinks innocent people's blood and will gladly freaking like sensationalize your pain.
Didn't think to, like, follow up on it.
Yeah, that's sus to me.
Very sus.
Very sus.
Like, why not look into that?
Like, it was it just not interesting enough?
Because I'll tell you right now, I am interested.
Or is it just hard to find the info?
Because it probably got published on some, like, local bullshit, but never got national news.
And then you got to wonder that that is.
Yeah, I found that one.
That sounds like some national news shit.
That one was deep in some crazy website that I've never been to, but it's awesome because it's torture.
It's not torture.
It's a bunch of videos of like a whole other region.
I think it's South America or something.
It's a website just devoted to all the crimes that happened in that one area.
Well, it said Gurugram, and I remember, and I was thinking as I was reading that, like, what province is that?
Like, what town?
Because that's not a country.
That's like a place.
That sounds more like India.
But then when I look back up, it doesn't actually say the country specifically.
Yeah, that's India.
Oh, is that in India?
Okay.
That's so messed up.
Pretty fucked up, dude.
What was on the video that shamed him so much?
I mean, like...
She had objectionable videos of them, which she threatened to make.
Yeah, that's why I'd be like, what over there would shame you so much that you'd off yourself?
Like, damn.
Like, what shames you?
Fuck, dude.
See, that's where speculation can't come into play because you just don't know.
I mean, he could have been just extremely depressed.
Maybe he just, like, lost his wife, lost his kids, whatever.
I mean, it said they only knew each other for like two months.
Like, damn.
Damn, dude.
That's messed up.
Okay, next one.
Priest kills self live streams suicide on Facebook.
I mean, I'm not going to look for it.
I would not.
I'm not looking for that.
Alright, so priest kills self.
Live stream suicide on Facebook.
In 2023, again in India, a 28-year-old temple priest allegedly ended his life by hanging himself at the temple.
I gotta say, allegedly.
So Ram Shankir Das, a priest at Nirasima Temple, live streamed the suicide on Facebook, alleging that harassment by police forced him to take the extreme step.
Police had registered a case against Ram Shankur Das in connection with the disappearance of an elderly leader of the temple, Ram Sharan Das.
Ram Sharon Das, 80, was missing since January.
The body of 28-year-old Ram Shankur Das was found hanging in his room at the temple premises.
And in the video, Ram Shakir Das made serious allegations against the chief of police in Ray Gonz and a constable posted in his security.
Going against the gov, dudes.
You know what's going to happen, right?
Police officer Manoj Sharma would tell reporters.
Well, I guess there is another way to avoid being sued for defamation, though, isn't there?
Would tell reporters, quote, Priest Ram Shankara Das was addicted to drugs and he committed suicide under the influence of drugs.
The allegations he made against the police are totally false.
End quote.
And when the priest did not show up for two days.
I feel like the first statement, your first statement is probably true, and the second one's probably bogus.
When the priest did not show up for two days, police opened the door of his room, and it was seen that he had made a noose of his clothes and hanged himself while not far, well, not far away from him sat a computer with a webcam.
Damn.
That is the weirdest part about this.
These people are doing this stuff in a way, quote, publicly, but also kind of like not publicly, because all you have is a webcam feed of them.
You don't necessarily know exactly where they are.
You're just a person somewhere is doing this.
That's bizarre, isn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm going to get something to drink really quick.
My mouth is so dry.
So go ahead and just start reading this one.
All right, next one.
U.S. Mission.Musician.
U.S. Mission dies.
U.S. musician dies after live streaming suicide on Facebook.
As reported by witnesses, Jared McLemore, 33, a prominent musician in Memphis, enters Murphy's bar early on Saturday morning, just moments after igniting himself in a parking lot situated across the street.
The live stream captures McLemore pouring kerosene over himself, while the desperate cries of onlookers are audible in the background.
The overwhelming smell of kerosene filled the room.
Jim Duckworth, a witness, was quoted as saying.
Kimberly Kohler, another witness, stated, it looked like a movie, like someone wearing a flame-retardant suit.
There were some people who thought that it was a joke.
Kohler said McLemore's former girlfriend was working just a few feet away.
The two had broken up after a toxic relationship.
Well, I mean, I feel like there's some real evidence to the relationship being toxic being demonstrated here.
Yeah, I think it was almost like he waited for us to be over so that he would be the center of attention.
He wanted it to go down in some sick way and for everybody to see it, Kohler said.
God damn.
Uh, yeah.
God damn.
Wait, it was apparent.
So he broke up with you and then set himself on fire.
I'm like, yeah, I mean, I'm not really confused about who was the toxic one at that point.
Like, unless he's like, unless you were, you know, unless you were feeling a little stabby before then, and that's why he broke up with you.
And then he was feeling a little flamey afterwards.
And the witch case, everybody, all of these are just side effects.
Different stories about medications.
Side effects, he might feel a little flamey.
A little stabby and a little burning.
What can I say?
Might feel a little flamey, a little stabby, a little burning, a little cutty.
A little cuddy.
Oh.
Yep.
We're just trying to make light of this crazy, negative, dark stuff, people.
We're not making fun of these people.
I guess it's just horrible shit.
These people, man.
I don't know.
No, I feel bad for pretty much everyone who died.
Absolutely.
Like in horrible ways.
A lot of contempt for the ones who pushed them into it.
Yeah.
It's yeah.
Just know that you're not cool or edgy.
You are a fucking bastard.
Total bastard.
Fuck off.
Fuck you.
All right.
French teenager.
There's a lot of shit that you can push people into doing that only hurts them and doesn't make them die.
Push them to do dumb shit, not this.
Absolutely.
All right.
French teenager, 19 commits suicide by jumping in front of train.
The unnamed French woman had sent a text to one of her friends several minutes before her death to make them aware of what she was about to do.
She also told other internet users of her intentions on the Periscope app.
Periscope is a smartphone application that allows users to stream video, live video via their Twitter account.
The video usually remains accessible for 24 hours.
The app was purchased by Jack Dorsey and Twitter in 2015.
I actually didn't know that about Periscope.
I didn't either.
I didn't know that Periscope was connected to Twitter, honestly.
I guess I'll leave it in.
I thought it was a separate app.
Gotta make a note.
So, yeah, actually, that is relevant because I had no idea that was the case.
Okay, okay.
Fair enough.
The more you know, the more you realize that you don't know.
Yeah, fair enough.
It's a part of the learning process.
Reports state that the woman mentioned that she was raped and even said the name of the person that was responsible.
Footage of the woman's death was removed by Periscope, but there were people who republished it on other platforms and was still available on YouTube.
And it is forever on the internet.
It's nasty.
In the censored, I mean, dude, fuck, there are websites just dedicated specifically to gore.
You know, like people die every day in horrible fucking ways, and it's recorded.
Like cartel torture, killing murders.
Holy shit.
Those are some of the worst.
And just people who die by train, suicides, murders, whatever.
It's everything is out there.
Cameras everywhere.
Everyone has one in their pocket.
There are three on every fucking street corner.
Like, man.
And then people just take that footage and they put it on these websites.
Like, theync.com is one.
I think Best Gore was closed down.
Rotten was closed down.
I don't even know.
Maybe no anymore.
Anyway, where are we here?
Okay.
So gruesome.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's horrible.
In the censored video, still in the censored video, still on YouTube, the woman is seen on a couch, smoking a cigarette, saying the video is, quote, not designed to create a buzz, but to make people react, to open their minds, and nothing else.
End quote.
Whoa.
That's something crazy to say.
Make people react.
That's messed up.
To open their minds.
So in that case, that person was pretty much just strictly trying to traumatize other people with their suicide.
I mean, she said she was raped.
Pretty much.
I'm just stalking you.
Yeah, that's what it seems like.
The video then cuts to a black screen, and what appear to be the voices of emergency personnel can be faintly heard.
Messages of concern from Periscope users are seen flashing up on the screen.
Police said they jumped to action immediately after they were informed by somebody watching that stream.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the end of today's episode.
Live stream suicides.
Hopefully you enjoyed this episode.
And if you did, ladies and gentlemen, please give us a five-star review.
Leave a comment.
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It could be negative.
We don't care.
Just leave a comment.
Leave a four-star.
That's shit.
You know, like, share, subscribe.
All that fun stuff.
And especially, I think I just want to emphasize this.
If you absolutely hated this, let us know.
Give us a comment.
Email us at paranautica at gmail.com.
Tell us how shitty this fucking podcast is.
Just know that we will be very confused if you give us a five-star review and then proceed to tell us how much you hate us.
We'll have no idea how to take that.
You'll get one overall.
You know, that's a that's a better approach.
That's a better approach.
I like that.
And actually, we actually have a pretty good we're up there in the stars.
We got at least four.
We have a bunch of fucking reviews.
We're doing pretty good.
People like it.
People like it.
I mean, we're just like a couple of idiots.
I like to think we're worthy of at least 75 stars.
We want no less than 75 stars.
Oh, fuck.
Just watched Austin Powers last night.
Fucking fantastic movie.
Yeah.
So I guess that's the last word.
You should always distrust your government and the internet isn't real life.
True that.
When it is real life, it sucks.
But before that, let's end it with just by chance.
You know, if you did have a fantastic time, because I wasn't here with my little dialogue.
I got to finish my dialogue.
If you had a fantastic time here, please help us out by spreading the name of the show to your family and friends, even total strangers in secluded dark alleyways.
Because word of mouth does wonders.
And we'd actually appreciate it.
As much as we're talking shit about ourselves, we enjoy doing this.
It's fun.
It's stressful at times.
It's fun though.
So until next time, take care of yourselves.
Take care of one another.
Cheers, everybody.
Guess say your thing.
Say your thing.
I already did.
Say it again.
Always distrust the government.
And social media.
Yeah.
Yes.
Throw that in.
There you go.
Also, I think it just disconnected me, so I have not a chance.
I have no idea.
Snowball's chance on hell that actually got through, anyways, because it just said it kicked me.
What?
No, it says you're good on my end.
That's it.
All right.
Either good night or good morning or good evening.
Buenas noches, buenes diaz.
Um, goodnight.
Peace out.
I want you to get up right now and go to the window and get your head out of here.
I'm a smack of hell, and I'm not gonna take this anymore.