INSOMNIA STREAM: ADL FILES PART 1.mp3
09/09/2023 Singer
00:02:52 People down to the river. 00:04:07 Little Mary Fagin. She went to town one day, she went to the pencil factory to get a little face. She left her home at 7:00.
00:04:21 She kissed her mother goodbye. Not one time did the poor child think that she was going to die.
00:04:29 The end of Dylan met her with a brutal heart we know.
00:04:35 He smiled and said to Mary. You'll go home no more. He sneaked along behind her till she reached the middle room. He left and said Little Mary.
00:04:49 You've met your fatal doom.
00:05:15 Can you please me was the watchman and Winnie wound the tea away down in the basement? Little Mary, he could see he called.
00:05:27 The police.
00:05:29 Their names I do not know. They came to the pencil factory and told mute he must go home. Mother sits the weeping. She weeps and moans all day. She prays to meet her baby in a better world someday.
00:05:49 Just long past the sitting. You bet he did not fail. Solicitor. You taught me. He sent the proof to you.
00:06:00 Astonished at the question, the Angels, they did say.
00:06:06 He killed 4 Mary upon one holiday.
00:06:11 Now come all you good people, wherever you may be, supposing little merry belong to you or me.
Devon Stack
00:06:51 Welcome to the insomnia stream. 00:06:56 The ADL files part one.
00:07:01 I'm your host, of course. Devin stack.
00:07:05 Tonight we're going to talk about the origin of the ADL. A lot of people know like the the headline they know, like the the surface level.
00:07:13 Story I and I was.
00:07:14 I I'd always heard the.
00:07:16 The rumors.
00:07:19 But I never really heard it dug into detail.
00:07:24 So I decided that it would be be refreshing perhaps to go through the actual court documents, go through the transcripts, and because you know this whole time, right, for those of you who don't know, we'll we'll go, you know, in a second. But the ADL has a completely different story.
00:07:46 Of what happened?
00:07:48 Of course, they, they, they, they need to have a completely different story or else, well, you'll see. It's it's not exactly a good origin story for them, is it?
00:07:59 So that's exactly what I did. I went through all the the court documents, read through all the transcripts and kind of put together a timeline to kind of explain how it happened.
00:08:14 Now real briefly.
00:08:18 The the official story.
00:08:22 Of the ADL.
00:08:24 Is that over 100 years ago and?
00:08:27 In 1913.
00:08:29 At the National Pencil Company.
00:08:33 An innocent Jew.
00:08:36 Leo Frank.
00:08:38 Was accused of murdering a young girl by the name of Mary Fagan.
00:08:46 And the racist Southerners?
00:08:50 Who hated Jews?
00:08:54 Decided to.
00:08:56 Arrest him and charge him with this ludicrous charge.
00:09:01 And when they didn't get their way, they they lynched him and hung him.
00:09:06 And the ADL was created to protect Jews from suffering the same fate.
00:09:15 And that's the official story.
00:09:17 That's the story that is taught in law schools. That's the story that if you go to any university, you will learn.
00:09:26 And that is the story that the ADL will tell anyone that is willing to listen.
00:09:32 But it's a.
00:09:32 Little more complicated than that, as you might as you might imagine.
00:09:37 So let's let's let's get our time machine.
00:09:41 And let's go back to the.
00:09:44 The the 19/19/13.
00:09:48 In Atlanta, GA.
00:09:51 Now First off.
00:09:54 Something that that a lot of people don't know, I think partially because.
00:09:59 The way that the South has been portrayed by Jewish movies and television shows and and Jewish intellectuals and professors.
00:10:13 One of the things that makes the story ludicrous to begin with is anti-Semitism.
00:10:20 Wasn't really a a big thing in the South.
00:10:24 A lot of people forget that a lot of the rich people in the South were Jews.
00:10:29 A lot of the the slit. Well, I mean, many of the slave owners, but the slave trade was almost entirely Jewish.
00:10:37 And the the ruling class was very heavily either they were Jewish themselves, or they had lots of business dealings with Jews.
00:10:48 It was not that weird for a Jew to marry a Gentile back then.
00:10:55 It was, it was. It was equally it was.
00:10:58 An equal footing.
00:11:00 For a a Jew to marry, say, a Protestant, as it was for a Protestant to marry a Catholic.
00:11:09 Now that would that would start to change.
00:11:12 As the Jews that lived in the South began to be the kinds of Jews that.
00:11:18 Leo Frank wants.
00:11:22 And Leo Frank was the son of immigrants from Eastern Europe that came around the slightly before the turn of the century, but his his father was a Jew that came from Prussia.
00:11:39 Around 1865.
00:11:43 He was a salesman.
00:11:46 They lived in New York City.
00:11:49 After working for a few years, I think in his 40s.
00:11:53 He saved up enough money.
00:11:56 To where he and his wife and the rest of his family lived off of usury.
00:12:01 That is to say, the money that they had saved, they started lending out and they lived off the interest on those loans that they were giving out. And that's just that's how they lived for the rest of their days.
00:12:15 Leo Frank.
00:12:17 Who grew up in Brooklyn.
00:12:20 And move to the South.
00:12:25 After college to run a pencil factory.
00:12:31 That's why he was in Georgia.
00:12:35 They they set up national pencil company.
00:12:39 Were they employed? Basically child labor.
00:12:43 And *******.
00:12:47 And that was primarily who worked.
00:12:50 At the.
00:12:52 The National Pencil company.
00:12:55 So let's go through.
00:12:56 Kind of the the events as they unfolded.
00:13:02 We're going to start at April 26.
00:13:09 April 26th.
00:13:11 1913.
00:13:15 Now in April 26th, 1913.
00:13:21 Newt Lee, who was the night watchman.
00:13:25 For the National Pencil company.
00:13:29 Was told to show up.
00:13:36 He wanted to, or the Leo Frank had told him the day before.
00:13:41 That he should show up two hours early, he normally would show up at 6:00 PM.
00:13:46 After everyone was kind of clocking out and leaving and he would watch the the factory all night long.
00:13:55 And then in the morning, he would hand the keys over to whoever was opening the factory up in the morning.
00:14:03 But Leo Frank the day before had told him that he wanted to leave work early.
00:14:09 And go to a baseball game with his brother-in-law.
00:14:15 So Newt Lee.
00:14:17 Arrives at work.
00:14:20 At 4:00 PM, instead of 6:00 PM.
00:14:25 And when he gets there.
00:14:33 Lee bustles out of his office.
00:14:37 And tell I'm sorry, Leo. Frank bustles.
00:14:41 Out of his office.
00:14:44 Seems very nervous. In fact something that's kind of funny. It keeps coming. It keeps popping up in the original like this isn't me editorializing or trying to make it or adding color to the story.
00:14:56 Sorry, they actually use these words multiple times. Multiple witnesses describe Leo Frank when he's in this nervous state that he's described in in by several people as as obsessively rubbing his hands together.
00:15:17 So Leo Frank bustles out of his office. He's rubbing his hands together. He seems agitated. He he seems a little confused as to why the the night watchman is is there early?
00:15:30 And when the night Watchman says, well, you told me to come here 2 hours.
00:15:34 Early boss.
00:15:37 Leo Frank tells him, well, why don't you just leave for a couple hours and then come back at 6:00 like.
00:15:45 Your normal time.
00:15:49 Nutley then says, well, you know, I got up early because, you know, he's a night watchman. So he sleeps during the day. And he says, well, I got up early. Can I just go take a nap inside the factory and then you can wake me up in 2 hours?
00:16:04 And I'll start my shift then.
00:16:07 And Leo, Frank, still agitated. Nervous says. No. No, no, no. You have to leave. Go out and have.
00:16:13 A good time.
00:16:15 God have a good time and come back in two hours.
00:16:21 And so that's exactly what Nutley.
00:16:26 Now this is this isn't the pencil factory, but this is basically the kind of this is the conditions that you had there. This is about the age of the.
00:16:35 The workers that were working there.
00:16:39 So Newt Lee comes back.
00:16:42 And when he comes back, he's surprised to find the double doors.
00:16:47 That lead into the upper part of the factory are locked.
00:16:53 He said that they were never locked before he'd worked there for about a month as the night watchman and and had never experienced them being locked, but he had the keys so he unlocked the the double doors and started to head up to Leo Frank's office.
00:17:10 And Leo, Frank once again bustles out of his office.
00:17:14 He's rubbing his hands.
00:17:16 He's very nervous.
00:17:21 And this time, he's so nervous.
00:17:24 As he's telling the night watchman Ohk. OK, well, now you're going to start your shift. I'm going to clock out now.
00:17:30 His hands are shaking so badly.
00:17:34 He can't you. He himself cannot use the the machine to clock out.
00:17:39 So this is let me shrink that down so.
00:17:42 You can see it I guess.
00:17:43 So it's something similar similar to this.
00:17:47 You know, punch clock. I mean, I I don't think anyone these days would still be using one of these, but when I was very young at one of my first jobs, they still had a mechanical punch clock. Funny thing, I actually worked for a Jew. They had a mechanical punch clock.
00:18:01 And the way that it worked was.
00:18:04 You just have this card.
00:18:06 And you drop it into a slot.
00:18:09 And the the machine would would like had some kind of spring loaded mechanism in there that would that would punch the.
00:18:16 Time onto the card.
00:18:19 And each time you you popped it in there, it punched the time of, you know, whatever time.
00:18:23 You popped it in there.
00:18:25 And this this is important because it.
00:18:30 It wasn't just when you came in and out.
00:18:33 But if you were the night watchman and make sure that you weren't just when everyone went home, you didn't. Just.
00:18:38 Go off to get drunk.
00:18:40 They would require you to keep punching the clock.
00:18:44 Every half hour.
00:18:47 Well, Leo, Frank.
00:18:49 When he went to punch the clock to leave was so nervous that Newt Lee had to assist him.
00:18:57 In punching the time card to leave.
00:19:05 When they got outside because Newt Lee walked him out to the the the exit.
00:19:12 They were met by JM Gant.
00:19:17 Jim Gant had been fired.
00:19:20 A week prior, prior.
00:19:23 Because allegedly.
00:19:25 He was his book showed that he was short a dollar.
00:19:32 That might that might not sound like a big deal to you, but a dollar was a was a lot was significantly more money back then.
00:19:40 And so they they had fired him.
00:19:44 There are some people that think he was fired for other reasons that we'll get into here in a minute.
00:19:50 Upon seeing.
00:19:53 JM Gantt.
00:19:56 Leo Frank jumped, according to Newt Lee's testimony, and Jim Gantz testimony. He he physically jumped back, startled.
00:20:07 And wouldn't make eye contact with him, stared at the ground and acted just really weird.
00:20:13 Jim Gant said well, hey, I'm I'm here to. I I left some shoes upstairs.
00:20:20 And I want to get to the these shoes that I had left behind.
00:20:24 And get them repaired.
00:20:28 Leo Frank told Gant that all well the the boy that works here, that cleans up the place. He he he threw those shoes away.
00:20:39 And for some reason JM Gant didn't believe him.
00:20:44 And said, well what?
00:20:46 What can you describe the shoes to me?
00:20:50 And Leo Frank could not describe the shoes.
00:20:53 And not wanting to get into a confrontation, just told him, OK, you can go get the shoes. But Nutley has to come. Go with you and just hurry up.
00:21:06 So Jim Gant entered the factory, retrieved his shoes and left.
00:21:12 Without incident.
00:21:14 Leo Frank then went home.
00:21:21 Nutley then punched the clock.
00:21:24 Shortly after six.
00:21:27 And began his shift.
00:21:32 During his shift.
00:21:35 He received a phone call.
00:21:38 From Leo Frank, something that had never happened before in the month that he had worked there.
00:21:43 Leo Frank was not one to just randomly call up the factory in the middle of the night and ask if things were OK.
00:21:51 But that's exactly what Leo Frank did.
00:21:55 In fact, he called twice.
00:21:57 Asking if things were OK.
00:22:01 Newt Lee thought this was uh.
00:22:04 Out of character thought it was a little strange.
00:22:08 But not that big of a deal.
00:22:13 Sometime late into the evening or early into the morning rather.
00:22:19 Around 3:30 in the morning.
00:22:22 Newt Lee went down to the basement to use the bathroom.
00:22:28 While he was in the basement.
00:22:31 He saw.
00:22:33 What looked like a body.
00:22:35 At first, he thought that the factory workers.
00:22:39 We're playing a trick on him.
00:22:41 Kind of a a new guy hazing sort of a thing, but as he got closer, he realized it was the body of a of.
00:22:48 A white girl.
00:22:52 He ran upstairs and called the Police Department.
00:23:00 The police responded with, I believe, three different officers.
00:23:07 When they first approached the the body.
00:23:11 She was so covered in.
00:23:13 Soot and and just crap that was in the basement.
00:23:18 They couldn't tell if she was white or black.
00:23:23 Until they.
00:23:25 Inspect of the body closer.
00:23:28 Here's a quote from the responding officer quote. They turned her over and her face was full of dirt and dust.
00:23:37 They took a piece of paper.
00:23:39 And rub the dirt off her face and we could tell. Then it was a white girl.
00:23:45 I pulled up her clothes and we could tell by the skin on her knee that she was a white girl.
00:23:52 Her face was punctured full of holes and was swollen and black.
00:23:58 She had a cut on her left side of her head, as if she had been struck there.
00:24:04 And there was little blood there.
00:24:07 The cord was around her neck.
00:24:10 Sunk into her flesh.
00:24:13 She also had a piece.
00:24:14 Of her under clothing around her neck.
00:24:17 The cord was still tight around her neck.
00:24:21 The tongue was protruding just the least bit.
00:24:24 I began to.
00:24:25 Look around and found a couple of notes.
00:24:30 The cord was pulled tight and cut into the flesh.
00:24:34 And tight just as tight as it could be.
00:24:41 Oh, there we go.
00:24:43 Now this is not actually as as far as I know.
00:24:48 That's not an actual photo. I believe that's a magazine that came in and reenacted some of the scenes.
00:24:58 That, but that is the real place where.
00:25:00 They found the body.
00:25:02 And and sort of the condition except for her dress was pulled up over her head.
00:25:13 These are her clothes.
00:25:17 UM.
00:25:19 And then the notes.
00:25:21 There were two.
00:25:22 Notes that that were really kind of bizarre.
00:25:27 They've been kind of scribbled on from a notepad that that they found nearby.
00:25:33 And a pencil they found nearby.
00:25:38 The first note said.
00:25:40 He said he would love me, lay down like the night which did it, but that long, tall black ***** did it by himself.
00:25:51 And the other note said, Mama, that ***** higher down here did this. I went to get water and he pushed me down this hole, a long, tall ***** black that has it woke long, lean, tall, *****. I write while play with me.
00:26:11 So they were kind of nonsensical, but you could sort of tell that.
00:26:14 Like maybe a black guy wrote it.
00:26:19 So immediately the responding officers.
00:26:23 They thought that it was the night watchman.
00:26:28 And they arrested him on the spot.
00:26:34 Deputy Rogers.
00:26:36 Knew a girl that worked at the the factory.
00:26:41 Her name was Grace Hicks.
00:26:46 He called her or they they had her. They. I don't think she had a phone. They they they retrieved her and got her to come check out the body.
00:26:54 And she identified her as.
00:26:57 A former employee.
00:27:00 Who had been laid off a week prior.
00:27:06 By the name of Mary Fagan.
00:27:09 Now, people were often laid off.
00:27:12 From these factories and then rehired.
00:27:16 The the way that they ran their business.
00:27:20 Because they didn't want to pay anyone unless they were working their fingers to the bone.
00:27:26 Is if there was a a delay in getting some of the materials like so for example. I think the reason for Mary Fagan getting laid off at the pencil factory was some of the metal was was slow to arrive and so they just laid off anyone that worked with the metal and that's what Mary Fagan did.
00:27:47 You know, pencils back then were weren't any different than pencils now?
00:27:53 The little metal sheath at the top of the.
00:27:57 The pencil that holds the eraser.
00:28:00 Mary Fagan, again aged 13, worked 50 hours a week.
00:28:07 Putting those metal caps on the tops of the pencils.
00:28:13 That the erasers were were inserted into.
00:28:18 She made a whopping.
00:28:20 Now let's see here. What was it $0.16 an hour, I think.
00:28:25 What was it?
00:28:29 Yeah, I think it's $0.16 an hour, but regardless, she got paid $1.20 a day.
00:28:36 $1.20 a day so the paycheck that she, well, we'll get it out in a second.
00:28:43 So they, they discovered it was, it was Mary Fagan.
00:28:47 Who had worked there up until about.
00:28:48 A week ago.
00:28:52 This is Mary Fagan.
00:28:55 Just prior to her death.
00:29:07 After they identified the body.
00:29:12 Cops went down and picked up Leo Frank from his home.
00:29:19 And justice told them that something had happened at the at the pencil factory.
00:29:25 According to John Black, one of the officers that went to go pick him up with Deputy Deputy Rogers.
00:29:34 Frank was extremely nervous.
00:29:37 And quote constantly rubbing his hands.
00:29:41 Like I'm not making that up.
00:29:43 He was constantly rubbing his hands.
00:29:47 He was shaking, visibly shaking.
00:29:51 The entire ride to the the pencil factory.
00:29:56 When he when asked if he knew who Mary Fagan was, he said he wasn't sure that he'd have to look at his books.
00:30:09 When they arrived at the factory.
00:30:12 Frank went through his books in his office.
00:30:16 Went down to the the list of employees found Mary Fagans name and said Ohh yeah I guess.
00:30:21 She does work here.
00:30:27 Shortly after that, he went and got the went to the Punch card machine.
00:30:35 Because at the time, they still had Newt Lee in in handcuffs at the factory.
00:30:41 And uh.
00:30:43 Leo Frank said, well, I don't really know this guy too well. We only hired him a month ago.
00:30:49 Uh, let me check his punch card.
00:30:52 And see if he was punching in every half hour like he was supposed to.
00:30:58 He went to the Punch card machine and retrieved the punch card.
00:31:03 And sure enough, he had been punching in every half hour.
00:31:08 As he was supposed to.
00:31:11 The cops inspected the the punch card.
00:31:15 And then Leo, Frank.
00:31:17 Took it back into the office with him.
00:31:31 The cops then took Leo Frank to the police station.
00:31:35 To question him about, you know, obviously what had happened if he knew of any suspects.
00:31:41 In addition to implying that perhaps the night Watchman had something to do with it that Newt Lee.
00:31:48 Was someone that he didn't know, so maybe he had something to do with it.
00:31:52 He also implied that.
00:31:56 Ghant, the man who came to retrieve his shoes the day before, he said. Well, I know that he's friends with Mary Fagan, which is odd because just moments before, he had no idea who Mary Fagan was, even though she worked literally across the hall from his office.
00:32:16 And you know.
00:32:19 Obviously she worked there, as we'll find out well as he told the cops. Rather, she had been there.
00:32:28 The day before.
00:32:30 She was there at noon, he said. She showed up at noon or around noon shortly after noon to retrieve her paycheck.
00:32:39 For $1.20.
00:32:45 He said that perhaps.
00:32:48 This Gantt character.
00:32:50 Had done something, or maybe it was this Newt Lee guy.
00:32:56 So let's retrace the the steps.
00:32:59 Of Mary Fagan.
00:33:03 On our last day.
00:33:05 On earth.
00:33:10 So as I said before, she was laid off about a week prior.
00:33:15 Due to materials shortages.
00:33:19 She earned. I have it here. Now she's got she earned $0.10 an hour operating the the the nearline machine that inserted the rubbery racers into the metal tips of the pencils.
00:33:31 And she worked 55 hours a week.
00:33:35 She worked across the hall from Leo Frank's office.
00:33:39 And you know about for about $1.20 a day.
00:33:47 That or on the morning before she was found April 26th.
00:33:52 She left her home shortly before noon.
00:33:56 To get our paycheck.
00:34:00 She bought a streetcar.
00:34:03 And while she was on the streetcar headed to her former employer.
00:34:13 Was seen by a little boy that.
00:34:14 She was friends with.
00:34:18 The boys name was George Epps.
00:34:24 George Epps said that they should hang out after she picks up her paycheck.
00:34:30 She said, yeah, OK, let's. I'll meet you at 1:00.
00:34:36 And when she failed to show up at 1:00.
00:34:40 George Epps went to her parents house to see if she was home.
00:34:45 And her parents said that they didn't know where she was.
00:34:50 In fact, she didn't.
00:34:51 Come home at all that night.
00:34:55 Her stepdad, her father, had died when she was a baby.
00:35:01 And so her mothering married a man by the last, with the last name of Coleman.
00:35:06 Who had mostly raised her from when she was an infant.
00:35:10 He went downtown and waited outside of the movie theater, where he thought perhaps that she'd gone to see a movie.
00:35:16 And looked for the people leaving the the movie theater.
00:35:20 And didn't see. Didn't see her went home. The mother was was very upset and thought for sure something had happened to her.
00:35:30 And the father and or the stepfather rather.
00:35:33 Told her. Well, maybe she went. You know, after she picked up her check.
00:35:38 You know, cause back then you know, 13 sounds like a little baby now. But like, you know she.
00:35:44 Had a full time job.
00:35:46 13 and was riding train car, you know, streetcars all over town and you know they they suspected that maybe she'd gone to see her grandmother, who lived in a different city.
00:36:03 That's this is.
00:36:05 This is Mrs. Fagan or Mrs. Coleman rather. But Mary Fagans mom.
00:36:16 The next morning there was a knock.
00:36:18 At the door.
00:36:21 And one of Mary's coworkers.
00:36:25 Was a 16 year old girl named Helen Ferguson.
00:36:30 And Helen Ferguson had bad news. She had heard that Mary's body had been found.
00:36:36 And was at the morgue.
00:36:38 And she told the parents what had happened.
00:36:41 And her mom fainted away. And I don't know. Like, it's some of the journalism around this story is sensationalized, as you might.
00:36:51 Respect. But they, according to to one article, she fainted and fell on the floor and stayed there for like over a day, like refusing to get up. I don't know if that that that's real, but you know, maybe, I don't know.
00:37:11 This is the body.
00:37:15 Mary Fagan this is at the autopsy photo.
00:37:21 They had her at the the coroner's office and they asked that because the mother was incapable of going going anywhere. At least that part of the story is right are true.
00:37:30 They had the stepfather come down and identify the body.
00:37:35 And he positively ID the body as that of.
00:37:40 Of Mary Fagan.
00:37:46 On April 29th, so just a couple days later they had the funeral.
00:37:56 And Nutley was arrested.
00:38:00 For suspicion of murder.
00:38:04 Of Mary Fagan.
00:38:09 Now here's the thing at the time.
00:38:13 While the ADL will tell you that there was this, this wild anti-Semitism.
00:38:21 That drove the police to go after.
00:38:25 Leo Frank and accuse him of doing this.
00:38:30 That's not what happened.
00:38:33 They they arrested Newt Lee.
00:38:38 The whole town thought he was the killer.
00:38:41 He was a he was a black guy that raped a a white girl and they they'd seen plenty of that over the years.
00:38:49 And so that's what made sense.
00:38:52 The weird note.
00:38:54 Seem to at least have the you know, offer the possibility that he had.
00:38:59 Scribbled some weird note to try to. You know, I don't know what what he was thinking to write that note, but that, you know, they thought maybe maybe this was some, you know, weird ***** logic that ohh if I write this note somehow like.
00:39:12 I'll get away.
00:39:15 And so they they had him in custody. He was the original suspect.
00:39:19 They also arrested lots of other people. They arrested this guy. He was a his name was Mullinax.
00:39:31 And Mullen acts, I forget his first name, but he was ohh. It's Arthur. Arthur mullinax.
00:39:36 He was the driver of the streetcar.
00:39:41 That Mary wrote on occasionally.
00:39:44 And some witness said that he had seen Mary with with, you know, walking down the the street that the pencil factory was on with Mary.
00:39:55 That ended up being ********. And you know, he had a good alibi. So they released him.
00:40:03 They also arrested JM Gant.
00:40:06 Because of what Leo Frank had said.
00:40:09 And about how they they were, you know, he had known her and that there were rumors that maybe at one point they were romantically involved even.
00:40:18 In fact, there were some people.
00:40:21 Who suspected that Leo Frank had fired Jim Gant?
00:40:26 Because he was jealous of the close connection that he had with Mary Fagan.
00:40:34 And that he had concocted the story about him being short of dollars so that he could fire him and.
00:40:38 Get him out of the way, so to speak.
00:40:43 But at the time Leo Frank was did not become a suspect until they started. They had time to start.
00:40:50 Interviewing Newt Lee.
00:40:52 About what he had done.
00:40:55 And how his. You know, his story seemed to check out. He was the one that.
00:40:58 Called the cops.
00:41:00 Which would be unusual if he was trying to get away with it. He he noticed all the same nervous behavior that the cops themselves had independently noticed.
00:41:09 Out, Leo frank. Acting kind of strange and rubbing his hands together and being really jittery. You know, when he mentioned that he was too jittery to clock out, you know it added up because when the cops were there at the factory with Leo Frank, he was too jittery to unlock doors. And, you know, he was shaking so badly, he wasn't able to.
00:41:31 Operate the elevator, correct?
00:41:33 And so when Newt Lee kind of gave him the storyline, it it all seemed to make sense. It also didn't seem to make sense why, if Leo Frank had plans to leave early and go with his brother-in-law to the baseball game, why he didn't do that.
00:41:52 And also didn't make sense why he told Newt Lee to leave.
00:41:56 And come back in two hours.
00:41:59 And so they the way that they did, I don't know.
00:42:03 If it's still like this in Georgia.
00:42:06 But the way that they their legal system worked at the time was they had almost you almost had two different grand juries.
00:42:17 And the first grand jury was the the coroner's grand jury. Or they had it there. There's another name for it. It's like the coroners. They might just be called the coroner's jury. But that's basically the corner. Gets seven different people together.
00:42:35 And they kind of discuss the facts of the case or what they're, you know, what they know about it. They interview people, in this case, several witnesses. And if they think that they have a, a, a, it doesn't have to just be 1 suspect. They could have a couple different suspects.
00:42:55 They then send that to the grand jury and the grand jury consists of 21 people.
00:43:03 And the grand jury then takes a look at the same facts, and then they're the ones that send it to the prosecutor after they they take a.
00:43:13 Look at the facts.
00:43:16 So why was it that that Leo Frank?
00:43:25 Was arrested and these other men were let go.
00:43:33 Well, first of all.
00:43:35 Leo Frank.
00:43:37 His story didn't seem to add up.
00:43:42 Leo Frank said that.
00:43:44 Yes, Mary Fagan had showed up sometime around noon or so.
00:43:51 And when she had left.
00:43:53 She had he had overheard her talking to a girl outside and and that was that.
00:44:03 The the the thing was though, there were. There was number girl outside. They interviewed every single girl that worked at the factory, and none of them said that or none of them had even seen Mary Fagan that day.
00:44:16 The he didn't have a good reason for why he decided to not go to the baseball game.
00:44:22 All the sudden.
00:44:24 He also was insistent for some reason that he never left his office, that not even for a moment, not even to use the bathroom. He never left his office.
00:44:34 And that didn't seem to make any sense that he just came in and and didn't leave his office for like 8 hours.
00:44:42 And and that he was so insistent about it.
00:44:46 It also didn't make sense.
00:44:49 Because there was a a witness, a witness friendly to him.
00:44:57 Let's see here.
00:44:59 This woman, Miss Montaigne stover.
00:45:02 Who served as a character witness for the defense.
00:45:07 Later in the trial.
00:45:09 Who said that she had gone to go get her paycheck?
00:45:14 Right around the same window of of Mary Fagans disappearance, right around noon.
00:45:20 And that he wasn't in his office at all.
00:45:23 And then she'd waited for about.
00:45:24 5 to 10 minutes.
00:45:26 And decided that, well, he must not be here and and left.
00:45:32 Later, Leo Frank would say, well, maybe the the the phrase he used was maybe I unconsciously went to the bathroom.
00:45:44 By the way, the bathroom was situated exactly next to where they they the the police determined.
00:45:53 Mary Fagan was murdered.
00:46:01 The case really blew up.
00:46:06 When this man, Jim Connelly.
00:46:09 Was arrested. He was another one of the ******* that worked at the factory.
00:46:15 Someone at the factory called the police because they saw him washing his shirt.
00:46:20 And they thought it was. He was washing blood from the shirt.
00:46:25 When the police arrived, they found him wearing the shirt. There was still damp.
00:46:30 And they took it for chemical testing.
00:46:35 He had said that it wasn't. It wasn't blood that it was rust and it was just dirty and it was one of the only shirts he owned and that he was supposed to go talk to the grand jury.
00:46:48 And so he wanted to wash his shirt before he went and talked to the grand jury.
00:46:53 The the shirt tested out or tested negative for blood and that it was.
00:46:59 In fact, rust.
00:47:00 And so they believed his story.
00:47:04 But while in custody.
00:47:06 He made some pretty wild claims.
00:47:11 He claimed.
00:47:13 That when he showed up to work that day at the office.
00:47:18 Because he was, he was, they called him the ***** sweeper. But he was the janitor. But they called him in. All in many of the documents and in the the news reports, they referred to him as the ***** sweep.
00:47:31 But he was the the janitor, and he showed up and he said Leo Frank.
00:47:36 Came came to him.
00:47:39 And confessed that he needed his help.
00:47:43 He said that he had attempted to have a sexual encounter with Mary Fagan.
00:47:49 She had refused.
00:47:50 And had fallen and hit her head.
00:47:54 And he said, I I I guess I might have.
00:47:57 Hit her and she fell and hit her head against something.
00:48:01 And I need help with, you know, moving her.
00:48:07 They said that this or according to.
00:48:10 Jim Connelly here, Leo Frank said that this took place in the lathe room.
00:48:16 And the lathe room is where police found clump of hair and blood on one of the lay lay the machines and this was right next to the bathroom where Leo Frank said maybe he unconsciously went to at one point.
00:48:35 Connolly then said that he moved the body.
00:48:40 To the basement.
00:48:42 And was going to dispose of it.
00:48:45 And didn't get to it. Apparently, before the the night watchman found it.
00:48:55 Connelly Connelly also said that this wasn't the first time.
00:49:01 That Leo Frank had encounters, so to speak.
00:49:06 With the women that worked at the factory.
00:49:09 Conley said that often Frank would have him guard the door of his office or guard the stairs so that no one would come up to the second floor when he was having these encounters with women that worked at the factory or or little girls. Really, that worked at the factory.
00:49:30 Now this this was backed up by testimony from the women that worked at the factory.
00:49:37 According to a woman or I guess a girl. These these were all girls. None of them were 18, Nelly Wood.
00:49:45 Well, actually first there was several girls that testified that he was handsy with the girls on the floor during during, you know, work hours. But when they had to go to his office, it was always kind of a creep fest because they they wondered if you know what he was going to try this time. Nellie pettis.
00:50:03 Was a girl that was offered money.
00:50:06 She said that she went to get her pay for her sister-in-law. She didn't actually work at the the factory, but her sister-in-law did.
00:50:14 And she went to get her sister in law's pay because she was ill.
00:50:18 And when she went to to see Leo Frank at his office, he propositioned her, tried to get her to have sex.
00:50:26 When she wouldn't have sex with him, he opened up a drawer full of money and said, well, you know well, how about now? And and she said that quote, I told him to go to hell and then I left his office.
00:50:39 Another Nelly. It must have been a popular name. Nelly wood.
00:50:43 Said that, when she went to go get her paycheck from him that he touched her breast and then act like it was a joke, but then strongly asked or implied that he wanted to have sex with her and tried to close the door to his office and she fled the office before.
00:51:00 Things escalated to a Mary Fagan type situation.
00:51:07 There was also a.
00:51:11 An affidavit.
00:51:13 From the the maid.
00:51:16 The black maid because you know, even though the, you know, slavery was over, all the rich people still had slaves. Basically, you know, they just paid them like a a couple dollars a week or something.
00:51:28 But they had a black maid.
00:51:31 And she gave a let's see if I can find it here. This was states exhibit J.
00:51:40 Bring this up here.
00:51:43 And I'm going to read this to you.
00:51:48 So this is the affidavit of Manoa McKnight.
00:51:55 Alright, personally alright. Blah blah blah. On Saturday morning, April 26, 1913 so this would have been the the morning after.
00:52:06 Oh, I'm sorry, the morning of.
00:52:09 Mr. Leo Frank left home about 8:00. So 8:00 in the morning. He left to go to work. This is the day that Mary Fagan has killed.
00:52:18 And Albert McKnight, my husband, was there Saturday too.
00:52:23 Albert McKnight got there, I guess about 1:15 PM and he was there when Mr. Leo came home for dinner.
00:52:35 And that's in parentheses. It says dinner is what they called lunch back then. Like when you read this, when you read the court documents, they keep talking about everyone having dinner at noon. And I guess that's just what they call it back then. I guess dinner was called supper or something, but lunch was called dinner, I guess in in 19 in the South, at least in 1913.
00:52:56 So that's about 1:30. He had dinner. Mr. Frank did not eat any dinner, but he left in about 10 minutes.
00:53:04 So that would that means he would have gone home the day after or this would have been during the time of shortly after Mary Fagan would have been killed and he came home and ate dinner and then left again.
00:53:17 Mr. Frank, come back to the house at 7:00 that night.
00:53:21 And Albert, that's her husband was there when he got there. Albert had gone home that evening. But he come back. I don't know what time he got there, but he come some time before Mr. Frank did. And Mr. Frank eat supper about 7:00 and then I left.
00:53:41 There and that night, about 8:00. I left Mr. Frank.
00:53:47 Sunday morning I got there about 8:00 and there was an automobile standing in front of the house. I didn't pay any attention to.
00:53:54 It I saw a man in the automobile get a bucket of water and pour it into it. Mr. Frank's wife was downstairs and Mr. and Missus Selig were upstairs.
00:54:08 That's his mother and father-in-law that lived with him.
00:54:13 Albert was there Sunday morning, but I don't remember what time he got there. I called them down to breakfast about 8:30 and I found that Mister Leo was gone.
00:54:23 UM.
00:54:25 Then she goes on talks about how.
00:54:27 They they ate or whatever.
00:54:30 Let's see if we.
00:54:30 Get to here, here.
00:54:36 So here we go.
00:54:39 On Tuesday.
00:54:41 Frank says to me so that this is so she she's just recounting the OR recounting the time when the cops can't pick them up or whatever.
00:54:50 And then she talks about Tuesday, which was a couple of days later. This is after the police have already arrested a couple of people with their starting to think Leo Frank is.
00:54:57 Involved on Tuesday, Mr. Leo Frank says to me it's mighty bad mannola I might have to go to jail about this girl and I don't know anything about it.
00:55:09 Miss Lucille said to Mrs. Selig that Frank didn't rest so good.
00:55:14 Saturday night and she was drunk and wouldn't let her sleep with him and she said ** *** slept on the floor on her rug by the bed because Leo Frank was drinking.
00:55:28 Miss Lucille said Sunday that Frank told her Saturday night that he was in trouble and that he didn't know the reason why he would murder. So this is this is the so Saturday night, the night of the murder, he came home drunk.
00:55:42 And while he's drunk, he says I'm.
00:55:43 In big trouble.
00:55:45 And I don't know why I would murder and he told his wife to get the pistol and let him kill himself.
00:55:52 So this was Saturday night.
00:55:54 The Knight of the slain.
00:55:59 Of Mary Fagan and the maid is is testifying that Leo Frank.
00:56:05 Is demanding to get the pistol out and kill himself because he's killed somebody.
00:56:10 I heard Miss Lucille say that Mrs. Seleg that it this is so hard to read because it's just weird black, you know, southern.
00:56:20 Stuff. And it's also kind of written up by like, you know it's it's a transcript.
00:56:26 So there's typos and stuff. Anyway, let's see here. She didn't know what to do, all right? She didn't know what to think. I haven't heard Miss Lucille say whether she believed it or not. I don't know why missus Frank didn't come up to see your husband, but it was a pretty good while before she come up to see him. Maybe two weeks. So what she's talking about there is once they did arrest Leo Frank.
00:56:46 His dutiful wife, as she's portrayed by the ADL and the Pro Frank crowd, didn't go to see him for two straight weeks after his arrest.
00:56:59 She would tell me. Wasn't it mighty bad that he was locked up? She would say mannola, I don't know.
00:57:04 What I'm gonna.
00:57:05 Do when I left home to go to the Solicitor General's office, they told me to mind how I talked. They pay me 350 a week, but last week they paid me $4.00 and one week she paid me 650.
00:57:18 Up to the time of the murder, I was getting 350 a week.
00:57:22 And the week right after the murder. I don't remember how much she paid me. And the next week they paid me 350 and the next week they paid me 650 and the next next.
00:57:32 Week they paid.
00:57:32 Me $4.00 the next week, $4.
00:57:35 I don't remember which one.
00:57:36 Because, again, these, she's not a brainiac, so it's it's.
00:57:39 It's like a rambling thing.
00:57:42 The the mother-in-law gave me $5.00, but it wasn't for my work and they didn't tell me what it was for. She just said here's $5. Manila. I understood that it was a tip for me to keep quiet. They would tell me to mind how I talked and Miss Lucille gave me a hat.
00:58:03 Question is that the reason why you didn't tell the solicitor yesterday about all this? That Miss Lucille and others have told you not to say anything about? What?
00:58:10 Happened answer. Yes, Sir. Is that true? Answer Yes, Sir. Question. And what is the reason that you would rather have been locked up last night than tell? Or is that the reason?
00:58:23 Answer Yes, Sir. Question has Mr. Pickett or Mr. Cravens or Mr. Campbell or myself influenced you in any way or threatens you in any way to make this statement answer? No, Sir.
00:58:34 Question you make it out of your own free will and accord in the presence of miss of Mr. Gordon. Your attorney. Answer Yes, Sir. Sign. Minola McKnight.
00:58:46 So the maid is saying that that he was he came home drunk and said that he'd killed someone that he wanted to kill himself, that he was in trouble. The inexplicably raised her pay by a significant amount and gave her $5. And we're telling her to to not, you know, to to watch how she talked before she went and talked to the.
00:59:07 A lawyer.
00:59:11 So that was that was another reason why they they thought it was guilty the, the, the other reason they thought he was guilty was Connelly. When they, even though his story sounded a little fantastic at 1st and and it changed a little bit when he first came in. It has a lot of like, the Jesse Miss Kelly.
00:59:30 Vibe to it in the same, you know, like the the Satanic Panic Edition that I did, where I talked about the West Memphis 3, where you had this like, super low IQ kid confessing to the the murder of the the, the three kids that were murdered in West Memphis.
00:59:48 Or at least his his role in the murder and his story kind of changes and he just sounds like a ******* ******. That it? That's kind of the same thing. And that's kind of what the ADL and other people will say. Ohh, this low IQ negra was just he was lying. In fact, the defense that was that was their.
01:00:07 That was their strategy was, they said, well, we're going to use the racist whites attitudes towards blacks in this trial and try to make it sound as if he was the the real killer.
01:00:19 And they they made it sound like he was just like this, this monster and his. And look, he probably wasn't that great. He'd been in trouble with the law a couple of times before. Nothing for like, you know, not, like rape and murder, but for, like, petty theft and stuff like that. And, you know, he wasn't like the smart. I mean, he was a janitor.
01:00:39 The pencil factory, you know, was was exactly the smartest guy in the world. And so his story got was a little weird in in in some places. But the things that didn't change.
01:00:52 Were the the events around that day with in terms of Leo Frank having him be the lookout when he has different girls around the girls stories cooperating that that he was kind of a scumbag, that he was like that?
01:01:08 UM.
01:01:09 And they when they took him to the factory to act out, you know, the the where the body was, where he moved the body, you know, at what point, you know, did he, how did he get the body down into the basement and all that stuff?
01:01:27 Everything he said matched up exactly with the blood stains that they found with the hair and blood that was found on the machine. There was a drag marks from coming from the elevator to where she was found. The her face was all cut up and stuff because it sounded like.
01:01:48 From what he was saying, that those wounds were actually.
01:01:53 After she had died, the reason why her face the the wounds on her face didn't bleed is they were those wounds were all post mortem. It was when she they were. He was dragging. You know her basically dragging her with her face on the ground, dragging her face around as she as he dragged the body around.
01:02:13 And that all lined up exactly with the evidence that they found. So you'd have to believe.
01:02:20 If he was the killer and that Leo Frank was not involved in any way shape or form, you'd have to believe that Leo Frank was in his office. He gave the check to Mary Fagan.
01:02:36 And then Mary Fagan left the office, and then this guy comes at like he's at work.
01:02:45 He's at work.
01:02:46 And decides to cause according to the defense, he decided.
01:02:51 To rob her.
01:02:52 Of her dollar 20.
01:02:55 Right outside his boss's office.
01:02:59 And then after he robs her, he he throws her down the like, because according to the defense, he never used the elevator. He dragged her down the ******* stairs and then tossed her down at the like, if you it's hard to see in this graphic is the the resolution is not very.
01:03:15 Good. But you can kind of see there's like a ladder going to the the.
01:03:20 Now the prosecution said that she was at the 2nd floor or what looks like the third floor if you count the basement. This graphic here and that she was dragged into the elevator. The elevator went down to the bottom and then she was dragged out of the elevator and left in the in the pile of trash. And that's what made sense. You know, she was she was killed in that.
01:03:40 Room that's in the far right. That's where the machinery was.
01:03:43 At the on the second or what looks like the third floor and then taken down and left in the trash. The defense said that, you know, they couldn't get around the fact that that she would have been killed right there. The office of Leo Frank, by the way, is that bill or that room that's on the far left of the the second floor?
01:04:03 Looks like the third floor. So Leo Frank would have had to have been like right there.
01:04:10 While while Mary Mary was getting killed right outside his office and then not heard her getting dragged out, dragged down a flight of stairs, and then thrown down a a hole into the basement.
01:04:26 And then he just left. And you know, like, it doesn't make any sense.
01:04:34 UM.
01:04:37 So the defense claimed that that Connolly was this, this psychopath, and and just made it all up. But Connolly said that you know that he was promised $200.00 and that Leo Frank said that he had rich family in New York and that if he could just get rid of the body that.
01:04:57 That he would pay him a a stack of money and send him to go get a job in New York so that, you know, people wouldn't question him about.
01:05:06 And when asked about why he was changing his story a couple of times, he said that, well, he still thought that again, this guy's like, super Low IQ. He said that he still thought that, you know, he could. He could tell maybe he's part of the truth or or maybe make up some lie. He could still get the $200.
01:05:26 And the the the sweet job in New York that Leo Frank was going to give him if he could get Leo Frank off. But he was just.
01:05:33 Too dumb to come up with a good line.
01:05:37 The other thing that was that doesn't look so good for Leo. Frank is the pencil factory employed a a detective agency.
01:05:48 The day after the body was found, they hired the Pinkerton Detective Agency.
01:05:55 And they paid them with the understanding that we're gonna, you know, you're going to find out who did this. And we we just want to find out who did it. Doesn't matter who it is. We're not. We're not trying to pay you with any.
01:06:07 Kind of bias, just try to find out who did it. And the Pinkerton Detective Agency determined it was Leo Frank.
01:06:14 So the pencil factory fired Pinkerton and refused to pay them, and Pinkerton had to sue them to get partial payment. And and it was tied up in courts for a long time. They never got all their money.
01:06:30 So after the Pinkerton Detective Agency determined it was Leo Frank, they went and hired another detective agency called the the Burns Detective Agency.
01:06:42 The Burns Detective Agency initially tried to bribe the police. They tried to bribe an undercover cop.
01:06:52 In the amount of $1000.
01:06:55 And that's $1000 in 1913 money.
01:06:59 Which let's just find out what that is, because that's a ridiculous amount, I'm guessing. Uh. Let's see here. That's because. I mean, if if she's making if if if Mary Fagan's making $1.20 a day and that's like a that's almost a yeah, it's like 800 days. That's like a few years of salary.
01:07:18 Or inflation calculator. All right, so $1000.
01:07:25 In 1913.
01:07:34 Yeah, it's, it's.
01:07:35 Uh, it was $31,000.
01:07:37 So they were trying to bribe a an undercover cop, $31,000 for the original copy of the affidavits that Newt Lee had given where he talked about the cause. That's who they were at the time. Still trying to. They were trying to blame the the night watch.
01:07:55 And they also wanted copies of all the other files that that the police had. Now, this is kind of funny because in 1913, you wouldn't expect that the police would have, you know, the ability to to have, like, recording devices, but they just barely did. They literally had a dictaphone.
01:08:16 They hooked up a dictaphone like, which is like I'm talking like, this is like Thomas Edison type recording equipment. OK. Yeah. Like, where it's it's literally a wax cylinder that rotates and.
01:08:30 You have to. Almost.
01:08:30 Yell into it to really get any good recordings and it it it shakes a needle.
01:08:37 That carves into a wax cylinder that you can then later play back. You can only play it back a few times before they go bad or whatever, but they actually got a dictaphone and wired it into like this. This suitcase and met with one of the detectives.
01:08:56 At a hotel and the at the detective at the hotel.
01:09:01 Tried to bribe them with, you know, in today's money, $31,000 and you'll find out why in a second. Why they had so much ******* money.
01:09:09 And, you know, was turned down, you know, or, you know, it was recorded. So it was a setup and the the reputation of the, the the detective agency was.
01:09:21 Was then called into question when this came out into the press.
01:09:24 So the Burns Detective Agency dumped him as a client.
01:09:28 And then they said Leo Frank was guilty.
01:09:32 So both detective agencies that were hired by Leo Franks, Frank and his friends, to try to clear his name both said that he was guilty.
01:09:48 Leo Frank refused to testify.
01:09:53 And be cross examined, but instead said that he would read a prepared statement.
01:10:00 The prepared statement was 4 hours long.
01:10:04 Three of the the first three hours of which were just a intricate an overly detailed explanation of all the accounting math that he was doing that day in his office had nothing at all to do with with the the the situation.
01:10:23 And at the last hour of testimony, that's when we found out that he might have unconsciously went to the bathroom during the time that he was missing. And up until that point, he had been telling police that he never left his office, not even.
01:10:38 For a second.
01:10:41 This didn't sit well with the jury.
01:10:44 The testimony of the the the *****, Connolly, believe it or not, as much as he was kind of a shifty ******, the the jury actually believed his story too, because Leo Frank had the most expensive.
01:11:01 Lawyers in the South, in fact, up until its point, this was the most expensive trial.
01:11:08 In history in the South.
01:11:10 And it was one of the longest. It lasted 27 days and the.
01:11:17 Expensive defense attorneys.
01:11:20 Who in today's money there I think. And and back then, money weary, went over like 1000 was like $30,000. And I think one of them was making $12,000 or something like that. So you can do the math. I mean, these guys are making a ton of fun.
01:11:33 And they grilled him for two days straight, trying to get him to get tripped up in his story. He never got tripped up in his story. Once he had settled on.
01:11:42 It in fact, there's like this funny quote, he said. Something like like I I wish I'd written it down, but it was something like when a done lying and starts telling the truth, he tell the truth or something.
01:11:57 And so yeah, anyway, so the everyone starts to kind of believe the story.
01:12:09 The the money that was pouring into the case from out of town was was kind of insane. In fact, there's an article I'm going to read part of it.
01:12:21 Let's see here.
01:12:26 This is by Ron Unz, who some of.
01:12:29 You might be familiar with.
01:12:31 Ray talks about the the the just the, the the crazy amount of cash that was pouring into this case because you got to remember something I might I probably didn't really mention here because I just assumed people.
01:12:42 Knew this. Leo Frank wasn't just some Jew that ran a pencil factory. Leo. Frank was the president of the.
01:12:51 An eye breath of of Atlanta.
01:12:57 And in fact.
01:12:59 That that would have made him one of the most powerful Jews really in the South. And after he was incarcerated, the the benign bride chapter elected him while he was in custody, elected him president again.
01:13:15 So he was.
01:13:16 Very popular with the Banai Breath, which is a secret society still exists today. It's kind of like the it's actually, I think it's a spin off of the Masons. It's like a Jewish spin off of the Masons. It's a secret society that started. It's a secret Jewish society. I should say that.
01:13:32 Started in America.
01:13:33 OK.
01:13:37 Let's see here. I'm gonna go to this article here in a second. I'm going to find my my.
01:13:41 Place. So I was like researching this all the way up until we went live. Just because there was so many. It's it's a it. It's a really confusing case to research because you have all of the disinformation coming from the ADL and all the the in fact there was a.
01:13:58 A book that was considered.
01:14:00 The official book of what happened with Leo Franco was used by colleges for decades, and in this book the Jewish author described crowds of anti Semites outside the courtroom shouting that they were going to kill the Jew. And let's string up the Jew and even now.
01:14:20 The current historians have have stopped quoting that book because there's zero evidence of any of it.
01:14:27 Like he didn't have any sources, he just added that to his book and he he did that in many parts of the book. There's zero sources whatsoever. When you look at the original documents, there's no news reporters talking about angry mobs outside the courtroom yelling about Jews. And they really, as I said before, they really liked this and sensationalized this stuff.
01:14:47 And that's the kind of.
01:14:48 Thing they would have included.
01:14:50 So his name was dinnerstein.
01:14:53 Yeah, in fact, here it is for nearly half a century, leading scholar account of the incident had probably been Leonard Dinnerstein's book, The Leo Frank case, first published in 1966.
01:15:07 And Dinnerstein, the University of Arizona professor specializing in Jewish history, entirely supported Frank's innocence. But although the work was won, a national war and carries glowing blurbs from several other prestigious publications, and has surely graced the reading list of endless college courses.
01:15:26 I was not all at all impressed. Among other things, the book appears to be.
01:15:31 The original source for some of the most lurid examples of alleged anti-Semitic public outbursts that apparently have no basis in reality and seem to have been simply fabricated by the author and given his lack of any citations.
01:15:45 So that was pretty much the the situation with with how people saw this case starting in 1966 as the the campaign to clear his name after his death ramped up.
01:16:01 But anyway, let's go down to where the money is.
01:16:04 OK.
01:16:10 Here we go.
01:16:12 A central element of the Frank case was the massive financial temptations being offered by Frank's Jewish backers and the huge numbers of Atlanta citizens both high and low, who apparently shifted their positions on Frank's guilt and eager hopes of capturing some of the largesse.
01:16:28 But although this important theme was heavily emphasized, they seem to most he's talk about some other book. Let's.
01:16:35 See here. Blah blah blah blah.
01:16:38 Blah blah. Let me get to the part where he's talking about the.
01:16:42 Here we go.
01:16:50 There was a.
01:16:52 The reason why this became a national story? Because look, this would have been a big story in 1913, people got murdered back in 1913. So why would there be national headlines in San Francisco and New York and Chicago about a, a 13 year old pencil factory worker who was was?
01:17:12 It doesn't make any sense except for the fact that the person accused of killing her was a rich Jew, and Beni breath was a very large organization and had its tentacles all throughout the country and the same with the Masons. Did you know there was a lot of rich, powerful Jews? There were members of benign Brits still are today. It's still, you know, in fact.
01:17:33 The ADL, as founded after this case, was the ADL benign Brit. They just dropped the of benign breath and modernized it to just the ADL. But basically, you know, some of the people that.
01:17:50 Donated to their cause, or Albert Lasker of Chicago, so Albert Lasker of Chicago, the unchallenged monarch of American consumer advertising, which constituted the lifeblood of our mainstream newspapers and magazines. Not only did he ultimately provide the lion shares of the funds for Frank's defense.
01:18:11 But he focused his energy upon shaping the media coverage surrounding.
01:18:15 Case given his dominant business influence in that sector, we should not be surprised that a huge wave of unremitting pro Frank propaganda soon began appearing across the country in both local and national publications, extending to the most of Americans most popular and highly regarded media outlets was scarcely a single word.
01:18:35 Told of the other side, this even included all of Atlanta's own leading newspapers, which suddenly reversed their previous positions and became convinced that of Frank's innocence, Lasker also enlisted the powerful Jewish figures and Franks cause, including New York, the New York Times.
01:18:51 Owner Adolf Ox, American Jewish Committee President Lewis Marshall and leading Wall Street financier Jacob Schiff. The times in particular began devoting enormous coverage to this previously obscure Georgia murder case, and in many of its articles are widely republished elsewhere.
01:19:10 So they they ran this media campaign in all and and tried to blame this guy instead of Leo Frank for the murder.
01:19:20 As well.
01:19:22 So eventually, not only.
01:19:25 Did the coroners.
01:19:30 Unanimously decide to indict Leo Frank. Not only did the grand jury, which included four Jews.
01:19:37 The grand jury of 21 include four Jews unanimously decided to indict Leo Frank, but Leo Frank was also found guilty.
01:19:49 In a court of law by.
01:19:51 Twelve of his peers.
01:19:55 It's the longest, most bitterly fought case in history of Georgia ends when jury brings in the verdict of not or of guilty after four hours of deliberation.
01:20:05 So he was found guilty and the judge in the case.
01:20:09 Judge or rule that he would be put.
01:20:11 To death by hanging.
01:20:17 On August 26th.
01:20:21 Now on October 4th, they they filed an appeal.
01:20:26 And Judge Leonard Rowan.
01:20:29 On October 31st denied the motion for a new trial and scheduled his execution for his 30th for Leo Frank's 30th birthday on April 17th of 1914.
01:20:44 On December 15th, the defense presented its case to the Georgia Supreme Court.
01:20:51 And the Supreme Court denied.
01:20:54 The the motion for a new trial on February 17th of 1914.
01:21:00 On February 24th, again this guy had endless money. They calculated it out. It would be about $24 million in today's.
01:21:06 Money, $24 million for legal defense for a guy that killed a.
01:21:12 A girl at a pencil factory.
01:21:15 February 24th, Jim Jim Connolly was sentenced to one year on a chain gang for his role as accessory for murder.
01:21:24 April 6 Defense filed a motion in Fulton County Superior Court to set aside Frank's guilty verdict.
01:21:30 And on June 6, the Fulton County Superior Court denied the motion to set aside the verdict. The defense appeals to the Georgia Supreme Court, and on October 14th, this is so it's been like he was supposed to.
01:21:42 Be killed already? It's now October 14th of full year. Later, the Georgia Supreme Court denied the appeal on November 14th. And again this is.
01:21:53 This is well after you was supposed to be executed in April of 1914. It's now November. The Georgia Supreme Court affirmed that the trial and the judge judgment in the Leo Frank case, Leo Frank's attorney, appealed to the United States District Court of North Georgia.
01:22:12 And the the execution was pushed back to June 22nd of 1915. So now his execution has been pushed.
01:22:21 Backed by over a year.
01:22:25 In 1915, on April 9th, the United States Supreme Court reject the appeal and Frank is rescheduled for execution on June 22nd.
01:22:34 On May 21st, Frank's legal team appeals to the pardons and Parole Board of Georgia Prison Commission to recommend clemency on behalf of Frank, and the appeal is denied. So it's not just like this angry mob of Georgia, you know, some angry 12 angry men in Georgia that hated.
01:22:51 Jews, it was the the coroner's jury. It was the grand jury. It was the actual jury. It was the the the Georgia Superior Court, the Georgia Supreme Court, the United States Supreme Court. I mean, every court that took a look at the facts of this case.
01:23:13 Rejected it, rejected any any chance of appeal.
01:23:18 No one along this long line of of of of jurors, thought that he was innocent.
01:23:26 And then on June 20th.
01:23:30 Probably because of some of that $24 million that was being pumped into the case.
01:23:36 The governor made the very unpopular decision, so unpopular, in fact, that he obviously did not win reelection and actually fled the state.
01:23:45 After afterwards.
01:23:47 Governor John M Slatten commuted the sentence.
01:23:52 Of Leo Frank and sentenced him from death.
01:23:56 Two life in prison.
01:24:01 So that was on June 20th of.
01:24:04 Of 1915.
01:24:07 And he was supposed to be executed in April of, I think it was April, right of 1914.
01:24:17 Well, that didn't sit well with the public.
01:24:23 Especially not the people and and Mary Fanning or Mary Fagans's hometown.
01:24:33 So on August 16th, 1915.
01:24:38 Angry residents of her hometown stormed the jail with weapons like they they showed up with guns, stormed the jail.
01:24:47 And took him out of the jail.
01:24:51 And hung him.
01:25:03 Now the no charges were ever sought for the people that hung him. They kind of just let it go away.
01:25:10 Even the national newspapers that were trying to say how innocent he was up until that moment.
01:25:17 One of the reasons why it's suspected that they they there was no press pressure.
01:25:26 Excuse me, hang on.
01:25:30 Ah, sorry.
01:25:31 Throats will dry.
01:25:33 One of the reasons why they suspect that there wasn't any pressure.
01:25:37 From the press to.
01:25:40 Go after these people who look, they're like, proudly posing for photos. I mean, look at this guy in the bottom right.
01:25:46 That that's like AT shirt. I think that right.
01:25:49 There, let me see.
01:25:51 The this look at the Snuggie on on this guy. That guy right here.
01:25:59 He's just like, Yep.
01:26:05 That might have to be a T-shirt.
01:26:08 Just that guy looking smug.
01:26:14 One of the reasons they didn't go after these guys and the reason why the press didn't push to go after these guys.
01:26:20 Is that Chicago ad man that rallied this and he was a member of the night breath. He was Jewish. Obviously. All those guys, all the all the newspaper people at the time.
01:26:30 And obviously including like the New York Times and everything else. And one of the reasons why they let it go in one of his memoirs.
01:26:39 He talks about the case and he said that he was personally discussed. He met Leo Frank once. He was personally disgusted by him and thought he was a pervert. And when he found out that he'd been lynched, he he the the emotion he felt was relief.
01:27:01 And that's for one of his big donors. That's.
01:27:03 For one of.
01:27:04 The That's the main character in terms of funneling that 24,000,000. You know in today's money into the case from rich Jews around the country, the guy that was campaigning to get him free this whole time.
01:27:16 When he found out that he had been lynched, he felt relief.
01:27:21 Because he thought he was a disgusting pervert and he just didn't want to deal with that anymore.
01:27:31 So what happened afterwards? Why? Why did the the the ADL get formed?
01:27:40 Let's take a look here.
01:27:49 And get to the.
01:28:08 OK.
01:28:13 The the benign.
01:28:14 Breath because he was the president of a benign breath chapter, decided I needed a public relation.
01:28:20 Operation and that's actually how they worded it. They needed a public relations operation that would that would try to coordinate things in the same way that that guy in Chicago had coordinated the fundraising, but also try to spread the word to the Jewish newspapers when one of their guys gets in trouble to try to.
01:28:39 You know, apply pressure, but also they needed a a group that was already organized to apply pressure, not just to the public. Using the the press, but also to apply political pressure to district attorneys and things like that when they had a guy in trouble.
01:28:57 And so they they started up the benign breath.
01:29:01 Or I'm sorry, the ADL, benign breath, who then immediately started trying to exonerate and and to this day, has still attempted to exonerate Leo Frank. In fact, they will tell you that they have exonerated Leo Frank.
01:29:17 But what they won't tell you is I believe it was in 1986.
01:29:23 Or somewhere in the 1980s it might have been a little bit later than that. They eventually got a.
01:29:32 Not a pardon. What did they get?
01:29:35 Hang on.
01:29:35 SEC. Sorry. My notes are kind of a mess over here because I just there were.
01:29:39 So many ******* notes here.
01:29:42 Here we go.
01:29:47 Hear it? Yeah. So the first attempt.
01:29:51 Was in 1982.
01:29:55 They tried to get him pardon.
01:30:00 In other words, after he's dead.
01:30:03 The second attempt was in 1986.
01:30:07 And the only way the reason they were able to get it in 1986 was.
01:30:14 When they when they presented their case to the relevant authorities in 1982, they concluded that he was still guilty.
01:30:24 And so in 1986, they had a different strategy. Instead of trying to prove that he was innocent.
01:30:31 They said that well, regardless of of whether or not he's guilty or innocent, the fact that citizens were allowed to kidnap him from the jail.
01:30:41 And hang him.
01:30:42 Violated his civil rights.
01:30:46 And because that violated his civil rights.
01:30:50 They need to grant him a pardon.
01:30:54 And so that's how that that's that's what happened.
01:30:57 So in 1986, according to the board.
01:31:03 It says.
01:31:05 Quote without attempting to address the question of guilt or innocence, and in recognition of the state's failure to protect the person of Leo.
01:31:13 Frank and thereby preserve his opportunity for continued legal appeal of his conviction and in recognition of the state's failure to bring his killers to justice, and as an effort to heal old wounds. The State Board of Pardons and Paroles, in compliance with its constitutional and statutory authority, hereby.
01:31:33 France Leo M Frank a pardon.
01:31:36 So that's how they pardoned him. So when they act like he was proven innocent years later, he wasn't.
01:31:43 They they tried to to do that in 1982. In fact there there's a good chance they bribed one of the witnesses who was now really old. So the new story was in 1982, a young boy who used to work at the factory. Who?
01:32:03 It wasn't really instrumental to the case.
01:32:04 At all. He would have been like 10 years old, and they they dug this ******* bag of bones up in 1982. I mean, he was literally like a bag of bones at that point. Like he would. He was like 82.
01:32:18 They got him and they put him on this tour where he would go around telling everyone that would listen, that he had lied back then and kept his mouth shut, that he had seen Connelly carrying Mary Fagan by himself with with Leo Frank nowhere to be seen.
01:32:37 And he'd seen him throw her down like the the garbage chute, the little trap door thing that the defense was saying, that that's what happen.
01:32:45 And his story doesn't make any sense for a number of reasons. The first one, like why wouldn't he say anything?
01:32:53 Right. I mean, even if, as he said, he was scared because Connolly threatened him.
01:33:00 Connolly was was incarcerated.
01:33:03 Connolly was in jail.
01:33:06 He then said the reason he didn't tell anyone was he went home and told his parents and his parents told him not to say anything because they didn't want any publicity.
01:33:19 But the his parents would have known that if he didn't say anything when he went their 10 year old son when he went to work the next day, he'd be at work with a murdering, murderous *****.
01:33:33 Like according to this guy, according to Alonzo, Man.
01:33:38 His parents said Ohh. There's a murderous ***** at your and and and this this is in.
01:33:43 The South. There's a a ***** who murdered a little white girl at your work. Yeah. Don't say anything. Just go back to work. Don't tell the cops. Just keep working around this murderous ***** that killed one of your coworkers.
01:33:58 Yeah, we don't want the publicity.
01:34:00 You know, uh, that's fine. So by the time he tells this story, he's he's destitute and he requires heart surgery because he has heart problems. So there's a lot of people who think that the ADL kind of, you know, threw a little, threw a little money his way to and helped him pay for his surgeries.
01:34:22 And but yeah, so this guy came out of left field in 1982, but it didn't even really matter because they used his testimony in 1982 to try to get the pardon. And they considered the, the they considered that information when they rejected the part in 1982, which is why they had to go a completely different route in 1986.
01:34:42 In 2008.
01:34:45 They were able to get, you know, the the longer the, the time between the the actual murder and, you know, the longer the the time between that and and the present, the easier it is to lie about it. These, especially when you had that book written by that Jew in 1966 and subsequent books that would all just quote his book.
01:35:05 Cause that's what they will do. That's kind of like what the media does, right. The media will write a story that lies about something and then a bunch of other news outlets will will write their stories, quoting the original Lie story.
01:35:16 And this is what they did with this is they had some Jew write a lie book in 1966 make like, just completely making **** up with 0 footnotes, 0 ability to back up any of his claims. And then everyone else that wrote a book about Leo Frank would just cite that book.
01:35:34 Instead of having to look at any kind of original source and there's no, there's not. There's zero. I looked, there's zero account anywhere of of anything about anti-Semitism until until.
01:35:47 Halfway through the trial, when the rich Jews that are giving money to Leo Frank to try to get them off, including the the New York Times and the the guy from Chicago, when they're starting to make it a national story, they know that these stories are going to be printed in northern newspapers. And so the strategy of blaming the angry *****.
01:36:06 That that killed the white woman and and painting him as some kind of ******* animal because they thought that would that would fly with southern audiences and and southern juries, they completely switched tactics and said that it was just anti-Semitism and that's why that you know in the.
01:36:22 Reporting that that was that's what was going on. So all of a sudden the, the the news stories took a weird turn and start. Instead of blaming the animal like *****, that was full of rage. And one of the white girl it it just totally flipped to anti-Semitism is is what's going on here. But there's there's zero.
01:36:42 Count 0 account of any kind of angry mobs or anyone even mentioning really that he's Jewish. In fact, the the prosecutor at his law firm had a Jewish partner at one point.
01:36:55 You know, like I said during this time period, there wasn't a whole lot of anti Jewish sentiment sentiment in the in the South.
01:37:04 There's a lot of anti black sentiment in the South, but there wasn't a lot of anti Jewish sentiment at the in.
01:37:09 The South at the time.
01:37:11 But then there's zero record of that anywhere. In 2008, a state historical marker was erected by the Georgia Historical Society, the Jewish American Society for Historical Preserve.
01:37:22 And Temple Koi Emeth near the building at 1200 Roswell Rd. Marietta, where Frank was lynched in 2015. The Georgia Historical Society, Atlanta History History Center and the Jewish American Society for Historical Preservation dedicated Georgia Historical siding marker honoring the governor.
01:37:42 John M Slatin in the Atlanta History Center and it just talks about how he had pardoned Leo Frank. It's this says in respectful memory of the thousands across America denied justice by lynching victims of hatred, prejudice and ignorance.
01:38:00 You know, so obviously talking about Leo Frank without actually mentioning his name, because again, he's he's still guilty. Even the pardon, when they they gave him the pardon. They say that. No, he's still guilty. We're just doing this to because we couldn't protect him from the lynch mob. So that's that's the only angle they have here is. Well, he was lynched. Well, he was sentenced to hanging anyway.
01:38:22 So you know what's the big you know, what's the big deal?
01:38:26 They're still fighting it today. In 2019, Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard founded an 8 member panel called the Conviction Integrity Unit to investigate the cases.
01:38:37 Of Wayne Williams and Frank, the board will reexamine the case and make recommendations to Howard on whether they should be readjusted. So even today.
01:38:48 Even today, they're still trying to work on this cold case and try to make it so Leo Frank's name is cleared, otherwise everyone finds.
01:38:56 Out that that.
01:38:57 The ADL is was started to protect a a Jewish murderer of of of children.
01:39:07 So anyway, that's the.
01:39:09 That's the very overly detailed version of what happened.
01:39:14 You know Leo Frank.
01:39:17 Underage girls at a factory that he often hit on that he propositioned for sex that he tried to pay for sex.
01:39:26 He would have rendezvous with teenage girls in his office while he hired the janitor to to keep watch outside.
01:39:35 And he got angry when they would reject his advances.
01:39:41 Mary Fagan went in there to get her paycheck.
01:39:45 Of $1.20 after being laid off.
01:39:49 He tried to pull the same **** with her.
01:39:53 And somehow, whether it was because I mean the crazy thing is his story of of oh, well, she fell and hit her head. I'm sure that like that was part of it. But the she was strangled as well. So it wasn't like in, in, in some kind of moment of passion, you know? Oh, she slipped and fell.
01:40:13 Or you know.
01:40:14 They accidentally hit her and she hit her head and and now, now she's dead. The cord was embedded 1/4 of an inch into her neck and her tongue was still hanging out when they found her body.
01:40:25 So maybe she hit her head because they did find the clump of hair and blood.
01:40:29 On the machine.
01:40:30 But she was strangled with a cord afterwards.
01:40:36 And so after he did that.
01:40:38 He freaks out.
01:40:40 He gets the the janitor to get rid of the body. The janitor who's got the IQ of like a child. It does a sloppy job.
01:40:50 And the night watchman finds the body. Meanwhile, Leo Frank is getting drunk, going home, telling his wife that he that he he killed someone that he wants to kill himself according to his his maid. And then another. Another detail I forgot to mention.
01:41:10 Even though the burial plot for Leo Frank.
01:41:16 When they purchased the plot included a plot for his wife who never remarried. She explicitly put in her will that she did not want to be buried next to Leo Frank.
01:41:29 So that in addition to her not visiting him at all for the first two weeks that he was incarcerated.
01:41:35 It makes you wonder what she knew.
01:41:40 And that is the story of how the ADL was founded.
01:41:46 That is the story I'm trying to think. If there's anything else that I left out in the little details.
01:41:51 UM.
01:41:57 I mean, there's that, that article that I was reading has a lot of really good info. I just don't want to sit here and just read an article that you.
01:42:04 There is some.
01:42:06 Other details I want to add here though.
01:42:09 Let's see here. Where was it at here.
01:42:25 Here we go.
01:42:32 So that during the media campaign.
01:42:37 There we go back a century ago, just today, our media creates our reality.
01:42:41 And with Frank's innocence being proclaimed nationwide near unanimous fashion, a long list of prominent figures who soon persuaded the demand of the new trial for the convicted murderer, including this. This is disappointing, including Thomas Edison and Henry Ford.
01:42:57 And Jane Adams, they all they all believed he was innocent because the way it was being.
01:43:05 Ironically enough, Lasker himself plunged into the crusade despite apparently having very mixed personal feelings about the man whose cause he was championing. His later biography, this is this is the part I was talking about, but I wanted to read it from here reveals that upon his personal meeting with Frank that he perceived him as quote, a pervert and quote a disgusting individual.
01:43:26 So much so that even at that he that he even hoped that after he managed to free.
01:43:31 Frank, that he would quickly perish in some accident.
01:43:37 Furthermore, in his private correspondence, he freely admitted that a large fraction of the massive funding that he and numerous other wealthy Jews from across the country were providing have been spent on perjured testimony.
01:43:51 And there was also hints that he explored bribing various judges, given the facts that Lasker and Frank Frank's other major backers were clearly guilty of serious felonies, and others could have received lengthy prison terms for their legal.
01:44:05 Conduct with the New York Times and the rest of the Liberal N media now providing such a heavy coverage of the case, Frank's defense team was forced to abandon the racially inflammatory rhetoric aimed at his black accuser, which had previously been at the centerpiece of the trial strategy. Instead, they began concocting a tale of rampant local anti-Semitism previously.
01:44:26 Unnoticed by all observers and adopted it as a major grounds for their appeal for the verdict.
01:44:31 The unprincipled legal methods pursued by Frank's backers, illustrated by a single example, Georgia law and normally required, are normally required that defendant present in court to hear the reading of the verdict. But given the popular motions in the case, the judge suggested that this provision be waived and the prosecution is sent it only if the defense.
01:44:53 Lawyers promised not to use this small irregularity as grounds for an appeal, so in other words, the defense said, well, look, we'll we'll allow Frank not to be present during the reading of the verdict, so that you know, because this is a special case, but only if the defense agrees that they won't use this as grounds as an appeal. And then the second the trial was over, they used it for.
01:45:13 Grounds for an appeal, it was denied, but they still used it.
01:45:17 To give you an idea of the kinds of lawyers.
01:45:19 That he had for almost 2 years the nearly limitless funds deployed by Franks supporters cover the costs of 13 separate appeals of the state and federal levels, including the US Supreme Court, while the national media was used to endlessly vilifying Georgia's system of justice and.
01:45:37 Harsh possible terms. Naturally, this soon generated a local reaction. During this period, outraged Georgians began to denounce the wealthy Jews who were spending such enormous sums to subvert the local criminal justice.
01:45:50 System on one one of the very few journalists willing to oppose Frank's position was Georgia publisher Tom Watson, a populist firebrand. In an editorial, he reasonably declared. We cannot have one law for the Jew and another for the Gentile. Sound familiar? While he also later lamented that quote, it's a bad state of affairs.
01:46:11 And the idea gets abroad that the law is too weak to punish a man who has plenty of money.
01:46:16 Sound familiar? Again, a former Georgia governor in indignantly inquired, are we to understand that anybody except a Jew can be punished for a?
01:46:27 The clear facts indicate that this was indeed a massive miscarriage of justice in Frank's case, but virtually all of it occurred in Frank's favour. All of the appeals were ultimately rejected and Frank's execution date for the rape of murder of the young girl finally drew near. But just days before he was scheduled to leave office.
01:46:47 Georgia's outgoing governor commuted the sentence, provoking enormous storm of popular protest.
01:46:53 And that's the guy, you know, you gotta you.
01:46:55 Got the rest. So anyway that's the case.
01:46:58 I went through, I read through lots of meandering transcripts. I'm sorry if this was kind of long and meandering. It's like you should see all the **** I had to go through just to get it down to this much. There's a reason why I guess people don't really go into detail about it, because there really is. They hired so many people to go in and testify, and there's just so much garbage testimony that's.
01:47:18 Just blaming random people that that later you find out have nothing to do with anything. They they even arrested some random guy in Texas by the name of Bowens because he he used to work with Mary Fagan at the factory. But he, you know, he was in Texas during the murder, and so they they let him go.
01:47:38 Now they arrested him in Texas, like, right after the murder, and then let him go because he was actually in anyway.
01:47:44 And so there was, they were. They were just trying to find anyone they.
01:47:47 Could pin this on.
01:47:49 And they they, you know, at the end of the day it was, it was the nervous quaking hand rubbing Jew Leo Frank.
01:47:58 All right, so let's take a look at.
01:48:02 Hyper chats, shall we?
01:48:06 I mean, holy ****.
01:48:08 I can't believe this whole time.
01:48:11 There were so many opportunities to.
Oye Veh guy
01:48:12 Play vain. Devon Stack
01:48:14 I never. I never did the olivey. 01:48:20 There should have been some way vein.
01:48:21 So I made-up.
01:48:29 Man oh man.
01:48:32 Man oh man.
01:48:35 OK.
01:48:37 Let's pop this out here.
01:48:44 And by the way, this is the first of a series.
01:48:47 I just wanted to get this story out of the way.
01:48:50 It's actually not the bulk of what I've been researching this week, it's just that I I felt like it'd be weird to leave it out.
01:48:58 But the ADL, I mean this is this is pre ADL in a way. This is what led to the ADL being created.
01:49:05 The ADL went on for a well. I mean, obviously it's still going on today, but it went on to defend basically the worst of the worst and we're going to go over a lot of that. They they were involved in in, in covering for mass murdering gangsters, mobsters they gave.
01:49:25 Awards to people that were responsible for the deaths of 10s of thousands of people. Bootleggers.
01:49:30 Whose product is estimated to have killed like 34,000 Americans during the prohibition. Like literally 34,000 Americans died by drinking this, this poisoned liquor that they were importing in from Canada, and the ADL was there to.
01:49:50 Cover for them the the whole way across the ADL was involved in spying on Americans, they they their offices in San Francisco are raided in the 1980s.
01:50:02 We're going to go through all that. And of course, there's Jonathan Pauler. There's there's the list goes on and on. It's a little stunning. In fact the, the, the, the ADL is involved to some degree with what happened at Waco. I mean, it's they they have been just a a.
01:50:22 Like this idea that the ADL it was oh, they used to be good. And then they turned bad. They got all woke and they turned all lefty. No, they they started out bad. They started out defending A pedophile murderer. That was their. That's how they started.
01:50:40 They started out defending A ********** murderer.
01:50:44 And it just got worse from there.
01:50:47 Like it literally got.
01:50:49 Worse from there.
01:50:50 And they embedded themselves in law enforcement agencies from the local level all the way up to the FBI and the CIA.
01:50:58 And they've just been a part of the at this point, they're part of the federal government.
01:51:05 Because rich Jews learn that all you have to do, apparently white people are really afraid of being called racist and and anti-Semitic.
01:51:14 And so that's all you have to do to get people, you know, to get what you want.
01:51:18 Just call. Apparently all you have to do is call a white person anti Semite and you get whatever the **** you want. Everyone's so *******.
01:51:24 Afraid of being called that?
01:51:26 And you know, you get a century of doing that and you'd be surprised at what you can accomplish. So we're going to be covering this. There's going to be at least two streams most likely. It's going to be like the PAT Con series where we really dive deep into a lot of this stuff. And like I said, some of it, there's, there's a lot more documentation. It's not like.
01:51:47 I'm not having to sift through 1915 or 1913.
01:51:52 Court transcripts and and, you know, trying to find copies of because this stuff is hard to find anyway, and trying to find, you know, reading newspaper articles from like 1913 that are, you know they're sensational lies and you don't know like how much of it's real. And so you're having to rely more on the the court.
01:52:10 Transcripts, which are all kind of butchered and.
01:52:13 And hard to find and.
01:52:17 Yeah. So luckily the newer stuff, there's more evidence of it that's easier to digest and easier to research. But we're going to be going through the whole history of the ADL. This is just the the the **** ******* evil beginnings of it. And so it might be, it might be like four or five streams. Honestly, by the time we're done.
01:52:38 We might take breaks in between because I don't think I can just do 80 all like like I did with Pat Con, right? I couldn't do all, Pat, con all the time. I had to, like, break it up a little bit.
01:52:47 But we'll get through them and we'll get, we'll bring it all the way up to today because the stuff they're involved with today is is just as bad, you know, like it it it didn't it? It's never. It's not a case of of a a good, a good institution that had good motives, that was slowly corrupted by by leftist politics or whatever.
01:53:07 It was bad from the get go. It was created for bad reasons. As I've demonstrated tonight and it it got worse. It got worse and worse and worse, and now it's. It's what you see today. And look, Jews are afraid to say that because they're just.
01:53:24 They're tribal and that the same way you don't see right wing Jews criticize left wing Jews to the degree that they they they deserve criticism. They won't go after these organizations and they certainly won't frame it.
01:53:44 Has anything other than?
01:53:45 They'll never say that, for example, that the ADL's bad for white people, they'll say that the ADL's bad for Jews because that's how Jews literally see everything. And that's something that I think a lot of people need to wrap around their head that those of you who maybe don't understand why Jewish power is such a corrosive.
01:54:06 Influence on on the West. It's not just because.
01:54:09 Because, oh, they're all bad. They're all bad. They're all evil. Even the quote, UN quote good ones. They all think in terms of that. They're so tribal. It's all in terms of is it is this good or bad for Jews? It's never is this good or bad for for white people when they're supporting other causes. And this includes the ADL. But this includes right wing.
01:54:30 Jews or left wing Jews when they're supporting other causes like they're supporting like black.
01:54:36 Groups, you know, like maybe it's not Black lives Matter. Maybe it is. Maybe, but maybe it's just the N double ACP or something like that. They're supporting that because it's good for Jews, not because it's good for black people. They're doing it because the Jews want to diversify societies because it it prevents them from being seen.
01:54:56 As the alien group within a society that's that's mostly homogeneous.
01:55:01 If they can dilute the mix, it's harder to decipher what the ingredients are.
01:55:06 You know, if you've got, there's think of it this way, if you if you drop a penny on a table next to a a bunch of quarters, it's real easy to see that penny.
01:55:19 Right. It's really easy to see that penny, it's a different color. It's a different size. It's got a different thing on it. It sticks right out in this in this table full of quarters. But if you just dump out a whole jar of change and then ask me to tell you know, how many pennies are there, I'm not *******.
01:55:32 Rain Man and.
01:55:33 No one can. No one can just sit there.
01:55:34 And look, because that's and.
01:55:36 That's the camouflage that that the Jewish Jewish people.
01:55:39 Diaspora Jews in the Western countries, that's what they desire. That's what makes them feel safe.
01:55:45 And so even when you have right wing Jews as this, you know, ban the ADL hashtag.
01:55:51 Gets more traction on, on Twitter and people start talking about it in terms of of like, oh, well, well, you know, the the video. And then they, they they have to jump on the bandwagon, right? They can't be because that's just as obvious, right. If they're a Jew when they don't say anything, right, they don't want to do that.
01:56:06 There they don't want to be the Jew that sticks out because he's not saying anything.
01:56:10 So they feel like they have to say something. So what do?
01:56:12 They say they say well.
01:56:13 Actually the ADL. It's bad for Jews.
01:56:19 It's bad for Jews.
01:56:21 And so that's why it's bad. Not not that it's bad for Western civilization. Not that it's bad for white people. They're playing the same game that you see people say that well, you know, critical race theory. It's bad for blacks. It's bad for blacks.
01:56:36 You know, they can't just say no. It's it's it's great for blacks.
01:56:40 It's it's, it's bad for.
01:56:41 White people.
01:56:45 And the the ADL has been viscerally and viciously anti white and anti Western civilization and Jewish supremacist from its founding and and and and on.
01:57:03 And I just want that to be clear and look if it's not clear if there's, if there's people that still have doubts and they think it's, oh, that was that it was the the sweeping *****, as they call them. Right. Connolly Connolly was the guy, the suspicious black guy.
01:57:16 Right.
01:57:18 You know what? That's fine. If you want to. I mean, it's that's not what happened. But if you want to believe that, it doesn't matter. Because, like I said, it just goes downhill from here. You know, the if you think the.
01:57:29 It started out great and then got bad. OK, well, they got bad pretty quick. OK, I'm gonna tell you that right now. It's a sharp downhill ride from from this point.
01:57:40 So anyway, look forward to those streams. Let me take a look at the Hyper Jets.
01:57:47 Let's see here.
01:57:51 Hammer of Thorazine, Hammer of Thor. Wait, hold on.
01:57:56 Sorry my I got so many notes up now that I usually don't have notes and This is why.
01:58:03 Abra of thorazine.
Singer
01:58:05 When you're trying to save money. Speaker 3
01:58:07 A good rule to follow is to. Jim Neighbors
01:58:16 Take it from these your neighbors. It'll pay dividends. Devon Stack
01:58:19 New Mexico's governor issued a public health emergency to ban carrying the carrying of guns. 01:58:25 For 30 plus days, not even Illinois or New York tried this. These types of edicts are exactly how we.
01:58:32 Will be and are targeted. Next will be free speech emergencies from the government and not just some terms of service. This will continue.
01:58:47 Thoughts. And I don't know if this is.
01:58:48 A Part 2 or so let me see.
01:58:51 Yeah, well, OK. So yeah, I saw that. I saw that. What? Yesterday, I think, right.
01:58:58 And it'll look, it's going to be legally challenged and it's going to be thrown out of.
01:59:03 You know, it'll it's against the law, but that's. Yeah, that's just what's going to happen. The Constitution is it? It's it's. It is just a piece of paper.
01:59:15 It's just a piece of paper and it doesn't really matter what it says if if there aren't people there to enforce it, the quality of people have have rapidly declined in this country.
01:59:28 New Mexico was just, I mean.
01:59:33 For those of you who have.
01:59:34 Been there, you know why?
01:59:38 You know, the quality has always been a little or if you've seen breaking.
01:59:41 Bad, which is basically a documentary.
01:59:44 You know, look, that's just the way that it is. It's it's not the, it's not your, it's it's not the country that your parents.
01:59:54 Grew up in.
01:59:55 It's just that that, that country is gone now and so expect more of this and.
02:00:03 Who knows how quickly? Like I said, this will be challenged legally and whatever, but there will come a time when and as there always does, you know that's how the left gets most of what they want is through the courts. So they'll come a time when that'll go through the courts and and and it'll be held up by the court.
02:00:21 How much time do we have? I mean, I don't know. I think that.
02:00:24 That's almost impossible to know.
02:00:28 And then hammer thorazine again.
02:00:33 Our languages descent into meaninglessness continues. 2 men get several years because the ATF says business cards are actual machine guns. The EPA goes after Berkeley declaring their filters to be pesticides.
02:00:49 Allowing any linguistic rust to form like gender nonsense only leads to this and worse.
02:00:58 I don't know about the ATF and the business card machine gun thing. What is that about?
02:01:04 But yeah, that's.
02:01:09 I mean, look, that's everyone saw that coming. That that's always been the case, though the left has been doing that. I mean, just think of like it start out with illegal aliens. Then it was illegal immigrants. That one is undocumented immigrants and then and what are we now or dreamers, you know? Like, that's that's just what happens.
02:01:29 That's what happens and and what like. Does anyone say illegal aliens anymore? Of course not. Why? Because Republicans were afraid of being called anti-Semitic and racist. So they fold like a a wet paper bag when they're faced with those kinds of allegations and they're like.
02:01:47 Oh no, I'll say undocumented.
02:01:51 Anything, anything to avoid being called a racist.
02:01:55 John Skywalker, you should look at the film Mississippi Burning 1988. It's based off the 1964 killings of three civil rights workers, two Jews and a black man by the KKK. The civil rights men were trying to establish black voting anyways, the film seems quite hyperbolic and propagandized.
02:02:15 We also cover the actual event.
02:02:18 UM.
02:02:21 Yeah, I mean, I might, I might do that at some point and then also have you seen Europe with the last battle? Yeah, I've seen it. I've almost finished it. Is it worth doing a stream or or two over like you did with the burns libel additions? I never knew much about the events it covers, although I do find parts of it from the narration.
02:02:42 Hard to believe. Still pretty good though. Thoughts.
02:02:45 I I mean.
02:02:46 Look, I think I think it's it exists already. I don't need to make a stream on it. People want to watch it. They can watch it. It's long as ****.
02:02:55 Yeah, I mean, I don't, I don't know which parts you're talking about, but I'd have to. I'd have to watch it. I watched it years ago. It's I.
02:03:02 Mean it's been out a long time.
02:03:04 Have you seen the movie gravity? Matt John Skywalker, you nickel and diming me with, like ******* paragraphs here. See this? This is why This is why people not, not even me. By the way, start talking about minimums. Alright? Cause of you, John Skywalker. It's people like you throwing like little dollars like I'm some kind of ******* stripper on the day shift. All right, like you have to ******* settle down with this ****.
02:03:25 Have you seen the the movie gravity 2013 with Sandra Bullock? Yes, I've seen it. Is it sort of base film of Bullock's character gets trapped in space alone and must overcome adversity and grief to survive.
02:03:38 But is it sort of based? No, it's not based, it's it's it's girl Power girl power in space. What are you talking about? A homage to white resilience perhaps? No, it's it's girl power and space.
02:03:51 Or too strong a female lead? Yeah. Girl power in space.
02:03:56 People connect with female leads better, right? I don't know if you're if you're a ***.
02:04:01 Or if you're, if you have a vagina, do you have a hairy vagina? I mean, I why would I connect to a female character more than a male character?
02:04:11 That's insane.
02:04:12 My non existent channel since we are in habit of shutting, why go so hard against the flat Earthers when there are followers of real provable Jewish sign up on the far right? I speak of atheism whose acceptance in the West has coincided with the acceptance of all degeneracy. Atheists hate God.
02:04:32 And God tells us to hate those who hate the father. So why do you go so hard again? Are you?
02:04:38 A Flat Earth.
02:04:40 I'll tell you.
02:04:41 What I can prove the earth isn't flat? I can't prove whether God exists or not.
02:04:47 That's why, OK.
02:04:49 And and and that's that's actually that's that's that's really why that's the beginning of it.
02:04:56 Why do you give atheists a free pass? What's more damaging? So you're a flat Earther is what you're saying. You're an angry flat.
02:05:01 Or third.
02:05:02 No, the earth isn't flat and.
02:05:06 I'm not giving a free pass to anyone, I just don't have strong. I'm not like, religiously Super faithful, to be honest, right? Like all the religious institutions that are somehow like really great, have all failed us. So what I can totally understand why some people are atheists. I get.
02:05:23 It I mean I.
02:05:24 Got it.
02:05:25 I don't think it's good to be atheist. I think that that you're right and to some extent, but I'm not going to get mad at people for understanding that. Like what churches, what church is not falling at this point, you know? So but yeah. And and look, you can't prove that that God exists. IC can prove the Earth isn't flat.
02:05:46 And so I'm. I'm going against people who are ignoring proof who ignoring facts.
02:05:54 And and and when you're talking about something that's faith-based, you know, you can go on your own little religious crusade if you want, but I'm not going to sit there and get mad at people because they don't have faith when when I myself struggle with faith, I think everyone does. If you don't, then you're lying.
02:06:12 Or you're stupid. Uh HHHHHH, you know.
02:06:17 A bunch of HG's.
02:06:19 Cash flow checkout.
02:06:26 I'd like to return this duck.
02:06:29 HGH more eggs. Who is your favorite Supreme Court Justice?
02:06:35 Well, like living.
02:06:38 I don't think I have a favorite living one.
02:06:41 I guess I'd say Scalia, until he murdered him.
02:06:45 I mean any, any, any Supreme Court Justice, they have to murder. How about that?
02:06:53 That's how. That's how you know that.
02:06:54 He was a.
02:06:55 That he was a real a real.
02:06:58 Or real ******, I guess.
02:07:01 Harmless G This week, a new biography by Elon Musk will be released. It was written by Walter Isaacson, an elite Jewish academic and journalist who previously wrote best selling biographies on Steve Jobs, Henry Kissinger and several other figures. It is supposed to be going to.
02:07:21 Would be twice as long as the 2015 Elon Musk biography by Ashley Vance.
02:07:26 I read the Ashley Vance book a few weeks ago and I'm interested to see how it compares to what this Jew has to say and how the Jew describes recent events disclaimer.
02:07:36 I will not give him money.
02:07:38 I wonder if he's the one I read.
02:07:41 I read 2 Steve Jobs. I don't know. I did. Did I? I read one Steve Jobs. I I read the Wozniak autobiography.
02:07:49 And then the Steve Jobs biography, to see how it.
02:07:52 I think he did write that one.
02:07:56 Yeah. I don't know. Maybe I'll check it out. I wonder if he'll talk about.
02:08:00 Elon's past and where he got some of his money from. And look, there's just there's things about his past that don't add up to me.
02:08:08 And and the possibility of Jewish lineage through his mother. Is is. Is there still I mean I.
02:08:12 Don't know it's it's a Gray area.
02:08:17 John Connor, I know you creative types don't like criticism. I thrive on criticism. But you need to get in. You need to engage with your gab audience more. That's not criticism. That's just you're just telling me how to do my job. If you said, like, I don't like the.
02:08:33 Graphics or I don't?
02:08:35 But like I only have so much I can. There's always so much of me I can do when I'm doing.
02:08:41 Research, you know, 10 hours a day for three days. I don't have time to be hanging out on gem. You want us off these Jew platforms? And we are. I know you're busy, but you have time to argue with ********* on Twitter instead. Spare some time to engage with us more. Please don't hate me.
02:08:56 I don't hate you, but.
02:08:56 Hey, Cuban.
02:08:58 I'm just saying I that was a time when I wasn't researching the ADL and I I was. That was my. That was my mission, was to to expose flat towards and I went to where they were actually, although I'm sure there's a lot of flat towards a lot of pancake heads on a on gab.
02:09:16 What's with all these pancake questions? Gore boy, 1488. I'm not a pankok, but oh, here it comes.
02:09:23 But some anime is good. No, it's not. The jabs had a very low Jewish influence and that made some pretty bass shows during the time. There are lots of gay animes out there now, but isn't that the same with American cinema as well? No, I would say American cinema has always been Jewish cinema from the.
02:09:41 There's no. That's the one thing I think people need to get out of their head. It's not that they're that there was American cinema and then the Jews subverted it. It was always Jewish Jewish cinema. They founded the studios. They founded Hollywood. So every Hollywood movie was a Jewish movie, like, literally a Jewish movie.
02:10:01 It's just that the American public would have only would only.
02:10:03 Tolerate so much.
02:10:05 And then of course, you had the, the, the Catholics with the the haze code step in and kind of police the Jews and their films because they were threatening boycotts back when they had the power to do that.
02:10:17 Now they don't.
02:10:19 Because, like every other religious institution, they've they've kind of dropped the ball.
02:10:26 So no, it's it's not like American cinema was was good and then the Jews got involved. It's. It was always Jewish. It's just they they could only they had to be very subtle. You look at, by the way. And that wasn't even like time. You look at the pre code movies like before the haze code there there was a reason why the the haze code was instituted.
02:10:46 You look at movies from the 1920s and 30s, you might be surprised at at how much nudity and sex and and other, you know, degenerate **** that's in there.
02:10:55 UM as far as the anime stuff. Look, it's the same thing. It's it's not that it's what how much Jew involvement there is in anime. It's how much Japanese involvement there is. It's not white, you know. It's OK to appreciate non white things by the way.
02:11:16 It's OK to appreciate, you know.
02:11:20 Like the pyramids or you know, although there be people that there are some white, we was kangs people. It's OK to appreciate certain things that that whites didn't create or whatever. It's just when it when it gets to a level of becoming part of your identity is when it's ******* gay. And I think that's.
02:11:39 Very few people who are into anime are just into.
02:11:43 It a little bit.
02:11:46 And you know what I mean? There's very few people that are into anime that are just kind of into anime.
02:11:52 Harmless G.
02:11:54 I think the uh.
02:11:56 The first book by Walter Isaacson might check out before the must biography.
02:12:02 Is the wait.
Easy E
02:12:03 Hold what? Devon Stack
02:12:04 I think the first book by Walter Isaacson. I might check out before the Musk biography, the code breaker, Jennifer. 02:12:13 Doudna, gene editing and the future of the human race since last week I read the revolutionary phenotype.
02:12:23 OK.
02:12:25 Plato mutt, have you ever seen a Bronx tale? 1930 or 1993? Robert De Niro's directorial debut? It's about the integration of an Italian American neighborhood in New York in the 1960s. Be perfect fodder for an insomnia stream. I'd love to see your.
02:12:44 Take on it.
02:12:45 I'm sure I saw.
02:12:46 It like a long time ago, but I haven't seen it in a long time.
02:12:50 I don't know. I don't know how much.
02:12:53 I care about Italian integration though right now.
02:12:58 But I don't know. Maybe harmless G on the anime question. Oh my God, I will say this. If you look into the big names anime, they are Japanese equivalent of white **** libs. They are the high mutational load people whose defective instincts lead them to advocate Japan.
02:13:19 Open its borders and becoming paws like the West. OK well there.
02:13:22 Oh. Alrighty Jay Ray, 1981.
02:13:34 The ADL has their tentacles in everything. Beating them is a step forward, but that's not the final boss. Big Deb. No, it's not the final boss, but it is definitely a it is a bus.
02:13:49 They call me Mr. Negs. I suppose the ADL is a start. Next is AIPAC, which would be the next target of public ire. Well, the Israel lobby is.
02:14:02 That's the problem is there's, I mean, there's groups that people haven't heard of, like one group that's tied to the ADL, that I'm going to bring up is the what was it? The?
02:14:14 The JDL, the Jewish Defense League, I think it was called or I forget, but it was it was a terrorist organization with heavy ties to the ADL. They had some radical anti white rabbi that and you know they they were Jewish supremacists through and through. They bombed the office.
02:14:33 Some it was like, you know, like it wasn't care, but it was like some Muslim, you know, group like care.
02:14:41 Back in the 90s, they they were a militant group that and they stretched all throughout the West and.
02:14:53 Yeah, they, they, they.
02:14:56 The ADL had a lot of they were very cozy with a lot of these little groups, but there's so many of these little groups all over the place that were involved in, in espionage, involved in spying involved in murder.
02:15:10 Involved in terrorism, I mean, the Jews have basically had a free pass.
02:15:16 What do you think happens to a group that has almost unlimited funds and is never talked about in the press because they own the press and is never even or rarely, I should say, rarely prosecuted because they they have a lot of the.
02:15:36 The the judges, a lot of the prosecutors, a lot of the lawyers and a lot of the political clout to even prevent that sort of investigation from, from even getting that.
02:15:48 More so, we'll go through a lot of this stuff. You'll be surprised at how many organizations the ADL is tied to. I think. And then, yeah, maybe later on we can go over some of these other big ones.
02:16:00 But one thing at a time, man. I'm so I'm up to my eyeballs and ******* ADL research right now.
02:16:09 Man of low moral fibre been waiting a long time for this one. **** the ADL. **** Leo Frank funk band.
02:16:15 Britt, Richard. By the way, that's another one that because it's basically the ADL that we're going to have to, we have to talk about the benign breath **** John Slaton. Justice was served in Georgia. The ugly kite is burning in hell. **** greenblatt. Barely 100 years ago, they say history repeats itself. Well, I sure as hell hope.
02:16:36 Well, you know, there you go. Rying says HGH, which I think is a whole cold.
02:16:50 White cake? Simply.
02:16:52 Simply just says I can't find the.
02:16:56 So you get that one.
02:16:59 Ryan says based Devon original document stack. Yeah, that's the only way to do it with stuff like this because I found that there were so many people that had done.
02:17:07 Videos in the ADL, but they never really told.
02:17:10 The story they would just like. Yeah, Leo. Frank raped this ***** to death and then tried to.
02:17:14 Blame it on.
02:17:15 A black guy and it's like, oh, that makes sense. I mean, I I could see that happening, but.
02:17:19 Like what? You know, do tell. And I couldn't find anyone that really got into the.
02:17:23 Into the the.
02:17:26 The meat and potatoes, I guess.
02:17:30 Grenade says William here. Devin. There is a 32nd clip that shows the consequences of whites losing World War 2. Jews won World War 2.
02:17:42 I don't know if I can. I don't know if I can handle.
02:17:45 I don't know if I can handle YouTube links tonight.
02:17:47 I'm I'm grouchy tonight.
02:17:54 I'm grouchy tonight.
02:17:58 Uh, well.
02:18:01 Alright, whatever, I'll do this one. I'm.
02:18:04 I can't promise that.
02:18:07 Then I'll do anymore.
02:18:11 What is? What do we got here?
02:18:16 Alright, I hate that I have to change this every ******* time.
02:18:24 That's one of the reasons why I hate lynx. It's such a pain in my.
02:18:27 *** I own the fuller brush, man. I work me way too, Carly.
02:18:29 Who's there?
02:18:37 Oh yeah. No, that's uh.
02:18:40 For those who don't know, the Three Little Pigs cartoons, actually one of the most successful cartoons Disney ever made.
02:18:46 In fact, it was the most successful in terms of merchandising for a really long time, and it ran in theaters forever, like for like, usually these shorts would play and then they'd be out of the theater, you know, a couple weeks later. And this thing was in theaters for years, but.
02:19:05 The Big bad wolf when he first shows up shows up as a Jewish salesman, and after World War Two they edited him out and and there you go. You have the version on the right.
02:19:20 So there you go.
02:19:22 Romel says thanks for your work. Appreciate that polar bear Odyssey says rabbinic Judaism doesn't see women as human until they're married, much less non Jewish females. That's why it's no big deal for the ADL that Frank murdered her example of a rabbi. Explain it.
02:19:42 Yeah, I get it. I'm not going to play it, but there's a link for people that want to check it out. It's not.
02:19:46 Even that it's.
02:19:47 Just goys aren't human. It's OK. You can literally kill a goy, and it's it's totally fine.
02:19:55 I mean, do you feel like you're gonna go to hell for eating a hamburger? I mean, someone had to kill that cow to get.
02:20:02 What you needed and if a.
02:20:04 Jew has to kill.
02:20:05 Someone to get what he needs, you know.
02:20:07 Long as he's not another Jew, it's totally fine.
02:20:10 So the fact that's a 13 year old girl, you know? So what?
02:20:14 That's everything that ADL is heavily into also is covering not just up for a crime like this, but for the.
02:20:20 The rampant human trafficking that was going on, the human trafficking aspect of Jewish behavior is not like some new thing with Epstein or something like that, or like these Ukrainian girls that get trafficked around the world. And this isn't like a new thing. The the mass immigration and of Jews.
02:20:40 Into New York City around the turn of the century. That's one of the problems that again, you look at the original documents, that's one of the problems that the the city government was was reeling with trying to figure out a solution to because all these Jews were were heavy into the white slave trade.
02:20:59 I mean which is?
02:20:59 What they called it back then?
02:21:03 Uh. Let's see here.
02:21:06 Night Train 88 night train.
02:21:20 A merchant that came to the South in 1865, just in time for the end of the Yankee.
02:21:25 War. I believe he would have been called a carpetbagger. Ohh yeah. You're talking about his dad, Leo. Frank's dad came here in 1865 from Prussia and immediately.
02:21:40 Started making money off off the goy.
02:21:45 Hank the White Fist, Hank the white fist.
02:21:55 Longtime listener usually replay Waffen. Thanks for all the great content you were one of the first streams I found when I went down the JQ path.
02:22:03 Well, I appreciate that. And just just hold on tight because that path is about to get very steep and slippery.
02:22:14 Devon Stack for fewer, huh? Devin Stack for free. That's an interesting name.
02:22:34 Hey, Devin, I'm a big replay guy because I like to listen while I'm at work, but I wanted to pop in and support and also ask a question, do you think turning black people against Jews and harnessing their destructive nature would be a viable strategy, really looking forward to the replay I.
02:22:54 Look, I mean.
02:22:58 Getting getting everyone to understand what Jews are about and how they operate is important. Whether they're black or not, but but you don't wield the the remote control.
02:23:12 You don't have the remote control. You can get small numbers of black people to which and they already exist right to be, and they they always have to some extent, Jews have a.
02:23:27 Had a weird relationship with blacks.
02:23:30 And that's always been the case, right? In fact, this case that we went over tonight was was often cited by Farrakhan. I think Malcolm X even talked about it, you know, so this this case.
02:23:45 Just something that blacks talk about because they see it as a case of of Jews blaming blacks for stuff, right?
02:23:53 And there's always going to be that population of blacks that that is understands the corrosive nature of Jews and understands that a lot of what they complain about when it comes to white people, they're actually really complaining about Jews. But you don't you don't. Most blacks are just. I mean, they're turbo.
02:24:15 They're just following directions.
02:24:18 I mean, you know, manner of speaking, they were kind of bred to do that, right? So you know, so.
02:24:25 You don't have the remote control. I mean you can get the the more autonomous ones to understand it, but the the hordes of angry black people, by the way, sometimes they do. They do chimp out of the Jews. There was a case in I want to say Brooklyn, where they some Israeli, some famous Israeli.
02:24:45 Who was driving around in the in a motor illegally and like a motorcade with their own, like Jew cops, you know, I mean, like they do. And, you know, they act like they don't know they have their own law enforcement and everything in the same way Scientology has, like its own Navy. And they crashed their car into, like, some black kids and killed like, a little black girl.
02:25:06 I forget the what year it was, but it was like I think it was. It was, I think it was in the 80s and there was a whole neighborhood there was, it was the the Jew, Jewish immigrants living like right up against the black neighborhoods and and. And in some there was tension already kind of building because.
02:25:23 Of the the Jewish immigrants were basically forcing the blacks out of their neighborhoods, regenta flying, if you will, but also they were buying up the businesses and jacking the they were being Jews, right? And the blacks were already getting kind of *****. And. And when that happened, there was a black riots against Jews for like, a week or so and a couple of Jews.
02:25:44 That killed, so it happens. It's just it's just not very often. I mean, blacks will riot just for no reason.
02:25:54 So if you give them a reason, you.
02:25:56 Know by the way, that's another funny thing. When I was researching this story, one of the.
02:26:01 Things that I.
02:26:01 Found and about at Atlanta just I guess.
02:26:09 Seven years prior to this murder, there was a race riot. There was a race riot in Atlanta in 1906.
02:26:16 You know, so like yet again.
02:26:20 Race riots are just a normal feature of having black people in your society.
02:26:28 OK, let's take a look here.
02:26:33 Where are we at? Where are we at?
02:26:40 The Great Plains Calvary Great Plains, Calvary.
02:26:54 Great plants Calvary. Thank you for all you do. Professor stack. This has to be a pat cons. This has Pat Con series energy. You feel like coast to coast sized hole in my heart and the hearts of others during many AM hours never give up. Yeah, let's. I'd like to be. I'd like to be a a broadcaster in the vein.
02:27:13 Of you know, late night Coast to coast. Of course not talking about aliens and ghosts and stuff like that. Things that actually.
02:27:21 Matter because we just don't have the we don't have the luxury anymore. We don't have the luxury of of of listening to ghost stories. You know it's time to grow up. We got plenty of scary things in reality.
02:27:33 We can talk about.
02:27:35 But yeah, absolutely. I appreciate that.
02:27:38 Flatulent fill flatulent fill with the *** **** money.
Easy E
02:27:44 This power money is the only weapon that that you have to defend itself. Devon Stack
02:27:49 Go, Julie, this *** is. 02:28:08 Flatulent fill.
02:28:10 And all you say is thanks for all you do. You mean you're not going to nickel and dime? Dime me a dollar apiece paragraphs about.
02:28:18 That's a movie you want.
02:28:24 Oh, I'm just being a.
02:28:25 ****, I'm a little cranky. I I I.
02:28:29 It's been overwhelming the amount of research. I didn't realize how bad I mean. I knew they were.
02:28:34 Bad I didn't realize.
02:28:36 How bad the ADL was like? Like until this week, when I was just like.
02:28:40 Wait, hold on. What?
02:28:42 It just like it just it's it was hard. That's why to break it up into a series because all I wanted.
02:28:48 Was like I wanted to be able to do 1 stream like 1 coherent narrative that would that. Would, you know, include like I wouldn't sit there and maybe drill down on every single little thing, but just mention some of the, you know, mention this, you know, the the Mary Fagan stuff and.
02:29:04 And mention like the you know, like the gangster stuff. And it's just like **** like you turn over a rock and it's like you never know what you're gonna find. It's like there's so much **** that that it just keeps getting deeper and deeper.
02:29:18 So I just haven't got, I haven't got.
02:29:19 A lot of sleep this week.
02:29:24 But thank you very much. Flashlight Phil. John Conner. Did you see the Cocker interview with Colonel McGregor? He alludes to Jewish donors and government from Eastern Europe and their desire for war with Russia. If you could please play this first minute clip, it sums up nicely. Ah, no, I'm not going to play it.
02:29:42 Right.
02:29:45 It has nothing to do with talking about tonight and it's just, you know, people want to see it. Plus, it's like you said it he's.
02:29:50 Just alluding to it.
02:29:52 And you know, wake me up when he actually says it's Jewish donors.
02:29:56 I mean all he says was, I mean to summarize, because I saw the interview. All he says is is like there's he hints that there's a a.
02:30:07 Not not. I don't even know if he says. I don't think he says genetic, but like he hints that there's like a historic reason why these people in the State Department might dislike Russia and and whatever. But it's, you know, it's kind of weak sauce, honestly.
02:30:25 I mean it. It's, you know, I guess for Tucker it's not. But I mean that's I hate you. I don't want to do qualifiers like.
02:30:30 That you.
02:30:31 Know I don't. I don't. I don't do. I mean, I I'm not the one that like when I.
02:30:35 Stream. I don't be like, well, you know.
02:30:38 I'm use code words because I'm.
02:30:40 I don't have Tucker money.
02:30:43 Tucker can Tucker can afford to just say it. Just be like oh.
02:30:46 You mean the Jews?
02:30:48 But he won't say that.
02:30:50 My fat little ******** toe.
02:30:54 My fat little ******** toe.
Easy E
02:30:56 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself with. Devon Stack
02:31:02 Look how Julie. 02:31:03 This *** is.
02:31:21 Alright, I met a girl who I've made very based with very little effort and she likes me well. I mean she likes you if you can make her base with very little effort. And by the way.
02:31:32 It's a good way to know if you actually.
02:31:34 If she's your girl or not.
02:31:36 Like these people?
02:31:37 That are that, that, that, that say stuff.
02:31:39 Like Ohh you know I can't get my girl to to see this.
02:31:42 It's like, well, there's.
02:31:43 Today, if we don't want to tell.
02:31:44 You this she's not your.
02:31:45 Girl. Then you know she might be like the female roommate that you have sex with and you know, not saying it's gonna.
02:31:51 Be all bad, but.
02:31:54 She's not yours.
02:31:55 If she's disagreeing with you on big things, I get it. I get it. Right? I'm. I'm.
02:32:00 Realistic. But that would be a problem for me, but that's good for you. She's but she's overweight part I'm in my early 20s and make low 6 figures and I'm in great shape.
02:32:15 Should I try to stick with it and see if she succeeds in losing weight or keep my options open? I'm genuinely at a loss. Yeah, you know what I would? Why not? Because if you know, if she's yours.
02:32:26 It's a good it's a good uh.
02:32:28 It's a good test of of can you work together on something because you're going to have to work together on a lot of problems in life. They're going to be a lot, you know, even if you're if, if things work out great, you're going to have more. Well, part of it's like, how overweight are we? Are we talking like ******* 600 pounds, or are we talking like, she's, you know.
02:32:46 Little chubbies you know. So I mean, if you first of all, if you you have to be able to find her if you.
02:32:52 Don't find her attractive right now then that's a problem. But if you can find her attractive and it's just like, hey, you know, let's work on this thing. Yeah, work on it.
02:33:01 Work on it I they only it's a.
02:33:03 Problem and and it it's relatively easy thing to.
02:33:09 To to to tackle and it's a good demonstration of her ability to follow through with things and for her ability to have some kind of discipline and that which all important things if you're going to have a family and yeah. And look, you want. You wanted to be healthy, right.
02:33:29 It's a. It's a look. It's a hard subject to to discuss with women, so that might even that. Might that might answer the question for you. You might bring it up to her. I don't know what you know, if you've talked about this, whether or not, but if you.
02:33:43 Talk to her about it and she's, you know.
02:33:46 That might that might just do it. She might.
02:33:47 Be like why do?
02:33:48 You call me fat like that.
02:33:49 Might be the end of it so, but if yeah, I I'd say go for it, man.
02:33:56 But also you know only if you're already attracted to it, you because you can't make yourself be attracted to someone.
02:34:06 And that's I think that's important for. That's very important for men.
02:34:10 Shiggy Diggy shiggy diggy.
02:34:20 Hey, ma'am, in Washington, we're nice until we're not. Big fan. Quick question. As someone born in 1998, that makes me feel old. One of my favorite movies, one of my favorite movies is Fast and Furious.
02:34:35 So yeah, you gotta be are you?
02:34:36 I hope, I hope it's not really what year did that come out being in 2000. OK, so you were eight when you said, OK, that meant OK.
02:34:45 I'll, I'll let you be.
02:34:47 I'll let you like that movie when you're 8. Alright, that that that makes a little sense. Uh, did you guys really have to go through the metal detectors on your way into school? I grew up in the Deep South. I think you said and it gets cut off.
02:35:03 I didn't cause I didn't. I wasn't in LA, but in LA you did. Uh, there's still schools where you have to do that, and it depends on how black your neighborhood is. Really. I think there's schools in Chicago where you have to do that. I think there's schools in San Francisco. I think you have to do.
02:35:19 That, I mean, there's.
02:35:22 There are definitely schools that where you have to do that. My school there was a a security guard and they did have like a kind of like the the metal detector that bouncers have. But it wasn't like I went to like the the suburban White Kids School to some extent and.
02:35:40 So it wasn't.
02:35:42 It wasn't as much of a problem now.
02:35:44 There were other.
02:35:45 Schools in in that in in the town that I lived in that absolutely had they had tighter security than that. But yeah, that's.
02:35:54 That's that's a reality of it all depends on how diverse your neighborhood.
02:35:59 Rying says no pressure, no reason to be neurotic or no pressure kites, no reason to be neurotic.
02:36:08 I'm not sure what you're referring to on that one, but yes, there is no reason for them to be neurotic. But I think it is, I think, to some degree that's just genetic. They call me Mr. Nags. Leo Frank went to Ivy League School. Can you imagine if more people like him are in positions of power? Oh, wait, exactly.
02:36:28 Exactly. These people are everywhere.
02:36:32 And they think that you're livestock. And if they have to slaughter a calf every once in a while to to get their rocks off, then so be it. Zazi mataz bot. Thanks for the show. Do you think the band, the ADL trend, will do anything to wake? The normie is.
02:36:50 Is this a soft intro to the JQ for the norm or for normies?
02:36:56 I don't know.
02:36:56 I try not to get too optimistic about that because while it has been way more successful than than I ever imagined, and while it has prompted people.
02:37:08 That you wouldn't normally see criticizing anything even remotely Jewish.
02:37:16 They're doing it in safe terms. They're doing it in the same way that conservatives did when they talked about critical race theory being bad for blacks, right? And so I think that they're going to keep it in those safe terms. And I think that a lot of, like, the libertarian.
02:37:35 Style Republicans will. That's how they'll see it is. But you know the ADL. You know, they, they, they, they really don't do. I mean, their whole Charter is to to stop anti-Semitism but really they're generating it you know like it's you know that kind of that kind of thing.
02:37:52 It's still, I guess, in a way it's good because I think it it blunts the taboo.
02:37:58 Of of just talking about Jews like I.
02:38:01 I remember saying.
02:38:04 In streams in the past, that one way that you can tell how brainwashed I guess the public is when it comes to Jews is if you were to walk into a public place and just yell Mexicans like you might get a couple looks, but like no one would. Really nothing would really happen, you know.
02:38:24 But if you walked into a public place.
02:38:25 And yelled Jews.
02:38:27 People would get uncomfortable. People would get instantly they they tense up and they would. They would look at you and.
02:38:33 Wonder like what's going to happen?
02:38:35 And that's just, that's the way it is. So is it kind of blunting that a little bit? I yeah, I think so. But I don't know, I I don't want to get my hopes up on this, we'll.
02:38:45 See what?
02:38:46 Happens. I will say that there's been more mainstream criticism of Jews in the last couple of years than I've ever seen in the rest of my life combined.
02:38:57 Eugene Greenbeard finally caught you live this moment, a couple of streams back made me laugh out loud, so I just had to make this mock up clip. Feel free to make your own better version for the stream or just use this one if you want keep up the great work.
02:39:15 All right, I'll take a look.
02:39:18 I'll take a look.
02:39:33 Is this where it kills my stream though?
Speaker
02:39:35 Is your mother a? Speaker 3
02:39:37 Are you blind? Devon Stack
02:39:39 Tell me. 02:39:42 There you go.
02:39:43 No, it's got auto play don't autoplay.
02:39:47 Don't auto play. Stop auto playing.
02:39:52 OK.
02:39:54 Yeah, I keep forgetting to add that as a.
02:39:57 As a clip.
02:40:02 Great Plains Calvary.
02:40:05 After asking the anime question last, Oh my God.
02:40:11 Ah, enough of the anime.
02:40:17 Hearing the Vader scream? No, with some mean magic. Take some electric Jew paper to spend the the grocery store.
02:40:24 Yeah, I I.
02:40:27 If I ever if I never hear another anime question.
02:40:33 I'll be is that like the AQ?
02:40:35 The anime question.
02:40:38 Well, I appreciate that Great Plains.
02:40:42 Ohh man as As for the the.
02:40:47 There you go.
02:40:51 Disregard, disregard.
02:41:09 Disregard. Hey Devin Hollies watched your show but never caught you live. I once created a QR code that had a link to one of your videos. I put the QR code onto hundreds of stickers that I created with a label maker. Then I put them up all over town. Something easy to do and a lot of people could do it. Well, that's pretty cool.
02:41:28 Yeah, I wonder how often QR codes are actually scanned.
02:41:33 I mean, I'm sure they are to some extent, but I wonder like I really do, because I remember when they first came out trying to use them on projects that I was, you know, for marketing and most people know what, how they were back then. I think people know what they are now. I don't know. Is that like a common thing?
02:41:52 If you see a QR code like on a poster or just, you know, is that something people? Because every phone now just does it right? Like it's pretty automatic. Or maybe you still have to get the.
02:42:01 Reader app I don't know.
02:42:04 But yeah, that's pretty cool. Hopefully that that that worked. Yeah, it's it's difficult to know maybe what you could do is if you did like something like that, you could have it send it to like a link that counts how many hits it gets, you know, like a link shortener kind of a thing that then reroutes it to whatever. And then you'd have like, a good accounting of, like, OK, well, I got.
02:42:25 I got, you know, 300 scans or or whatever, right?
02:42:29 That'd be cool. Yeah, well, thanks. I appreciate that disregard.
02:42:34 Thanks for the support also.
02:42:36 A lowly, scribing God's army. Great show tonight. Appreciate that data tapes. Thank you for your work and commitment.
02:42:44 Well, data tapes.
02:42:50 That's that's. That's how I feel.
02:42:52 Yeah, that's how I gotta do. It's what I gotta do. I'm.
02:42:54 Just doing what I got to do.
02:42:56 But appreciate that data tapes.
02:42:59 HHH more HG. Thank you for the content. Appreciate that.
02:43:05 There is no higher form of moral authoritative justice than a lynching of a guilty man protected by a corrupt system. I agree.
02:43:13 And you know, they make it sound like the South was just going around lynching black people all day long. That's not the case. They. Yeah. Certainly black people got lynched, but they they lynched white people too. And you might not agree with that form of justice, but.
02:43:33 I kind of feel like in a way it makes you more accountable. It's it, it makes it more personal. You know, the blood's on your hands, you know, like it it's it's a lot. It's kind of like having to kill your own food, you know? I mean, it's like one thing to let the government kind of do the.
02:43:47 Dirty work for you, but it's quite another thing to actually have to get your hands dirty and do yourself. So there's an aspect to it.
02:43:54 Well, you know, no one likes mob rule or I don't know, maybe no one, but there's something, you know, something.
02:44:02 I don't. Maybe.
02:44:03 Maybe admirable about it, and certainly in this case, certainly in this case, I know, yeah, I'm. I'm talking generally speaking with, with, with, with lynching. But like, in this case, absolutely.
02:44:16 If there was ever a justified lynching, this would be it.
02:44:20 Because they just carried out, they all they did was they carried out the lawful sentence and then they ran the governor.
02:44:25 Out of town.
02:44:28 Inkstone Frodo of GTK Radio, announced his show weekly Roundup with Mark Webber may be cancelled due to lack of funding. I think the show is a valuable resource and a good supplement to his to this channel. If anyone is interested, perhaps they can check out GTK radio and consider.
02:44:48 Sending support their way? Yeah, Freddy's cool. He's a good guy.
02:44:55 I'll, I'll I.
02:44:56 Actually haven't been watching any of his new stuff lately, so maybe I'll.
02:45:00 Hey, I'll do that right now. Maybe I'll add GD. I'm assuming he's on Odyssey, right?
02:45:09 I'm going to.
02:45:09 Go there and.
02:45:10 I never know who to subscribe to you.
02:45:13 So I don't subscribe to many people or really almost anybody.
02:45:24 There we go.
02:45:29 I am now following.
02:45:35 He he he gets his views are OK. Looks like he's getting well. I mean, you know, he's I don't know what other platforms he's on, but on Odyssey, he's getting like 1000 views plus per episode.
02:45:49 That's not too shabby.
02:45:52 But yeah, I like Freddie. He's a good guy. I I support supporting him.
02:45:58 Opera comma dot hey Dev and it's kind of funny. Jews call themselves God, chose God's chosen people if they are God's chosen people, why would God even choose the people that look like goblins? They're it chosen. What are you talking about? Looks like goblins.
02:46:14 What are you talking about?
02:46:18 Are you kidding me?
02:46:20 Hold on a second.
02:46:22 Let me look at Leo Frank here. Are you trying to tell me?
02:46:27 That or is he?
02:46:30 Well, yeah, kind of like.
02:46:32 I think you kind of got a point there. It kind of looks like a.
02:46:36 Hey goblin.
02:46:40 Alright, alright, OK.
02:46:42 I was. I was skeptical at first.
02:46:46 Here we go. Grabler stabler.
02:46:50 How Professor Stack will appreciate that.
02:46:53 Great Plains Calvary for a true crime autist like me. This dream was more riveting than the content of many creators who focused solely on such matter and would likely never touch the subject. I hope Mary Soul has found some peace in her story being told.
02:47:12 Yeah. You know, there are people that are still telling the story. It's not just me. I was able to find some websites, including I think it's the. What is it called?
02:47:22 The Leo Frank, I think Leo frankcase.org. There's also a woman named Mary Fagan. Who is.
02:47:33 Is the namesake. Obviously she didn't have any kids because she was murdered when she was 13, but she's like the great grand niece or something like that. And she's she's collected a lot of original documents and she has, like, you know, like a whole room full of this stuff. And she's as vocal as possible about keeping her name alive.
02:47:54 And also highlighting the guilt of of Leo Frank.
02:47:59 Unfortunately, the the power of the ADL is kind of.
02:48:04 Of shifting what is known about this case into a bunch of Jewish lies?
02:48:11 Uh. Let's see here.
02:48:15 Grabler Stabler Hill, black Pilled appreciate that airlift, the nemesis, Devin Mullin. You over here $1.00 one dollar $1.00. Hey, there's been a lot of inflation since then.
02:48:29 And by the way, I'm not.
02:48:29 The one that was bringing it up.
02:48:31 I don't. I don't mind. Like I said, I don't mind. I've I've said it before. I don't mind $1.00, but there's some people that are abusing my my kindness. That's all I'm going to say. There are some people that I think are are pushing it too far.
02:48:48 Alright, there we go. Hammer. Thorazine. Hammer. Thorazine.
02:48:58 Regarding illegals, we're now at migrants, which implies a right to free movement anywhere in a migratory sense, like geese or whales. Migration also suggests that borders don't exist. Immigrant suggests that immigration, which is legal process.
02:49:15 So using migrant implies the legal aspect isn't important. It also implies and just in the same way that like the geese implies this, it implies they're not going to stay.
02:49:27 It implies now they're just passing through and they're going to go back home.
02:49:32 It doesn't it it it so it's a complete perversion of the language. Well, and with Fred also refugee you know same thing his shambo remnant. I recently ordered the ugly truth about the ADL by Lyndon Larouche. Haven't read it yet, but it's short. It seems like there may be some.
02:49:52 Recent info in there for you to check out on this topic. Take care. Yeah. I I I think I did go over a PDF of that for parts of this.
02:50:03 I had a couple of different books I had to go through to get all the little nitty gritty details and I didn't cover all of it. Obviously, it would have been way too long and it was already hard to keep all my notes straight. At a certain point.
02:50:18 Adamak Kalashnikova, Devon, could you reveal them or review the movie? Jesus, revolution. It's a great example of religious institutions failing us. The movie portrays boomers in a very positive light, as if they made Christianity better. But it's obvious from the movie how boomers strayed from the faith.
02:50:38 The Jesus revolution, huh?
02:50:42 I don't know if I've heard of that.
02:50:46 Jesus, revolution.
02:50:50 Let me see.
02:50:55 Jesus, revolution.
02:50:59 Also tonight arson for hire.
02:51:07 This is like a brand. Ohh.
02:51:09 I know what this is.
02:51:13 Yeah, we I think we've played the.
02:51:15 I think we played this trailer during the stream at one point. Yeah, I know what this is.
02:51:20 I haven't seen it, but I know I I know you're talking about. Yeah, it's. It's basically like, hey, Christianity should be like, you know, the hippie movement.
02:51:28 Look at this.
02:51:29 Wasn't he a Jew too? Like the guy who did this? I thought he was. I don't.
02:51:33 Know I'll look into it again.
02:51:35 Billy Bob, a movie that sums up the propaganda in the 90s, is that is worth doing a review.
02:51:40 Is higher learning.
02:51:41 Here's a scene that of said movie that's most that that is most forgot. Good old David Rappaport. Yeah, is is that's the the Coolio one, right where?
02:51:54 Michelle Pfeiffer comes into the inner city and.
02:51:58 And teaches all the black people how to be human. I think I've covered this a little bit, like a little bit.
02:52:08 How do you feel knowing that this country doesn't belong to any long?
02:52:13 And then what do you think of that?
02:52:17 Why is it so quiet?
02:52:17 How do you feel knowing that?
02:52:19 When you graduate from college.
02:52:23 This is so ******* quota.
02:52:25 People don't realize how far down the drain America's gone.
02:52:30 I'll place it. It's like too.
02:52:31 Think about that.
02:52:32 Quiet to ******* hear people know how to normalize their audio and I got it cranked up as loud as it gets on here on my end.
02:52:40 Ah, let's see here. Billy Bob just stopped in to hit the fire button and send some shekels. I'll listen to the replay. Keep up the good work off the bad. We'll appreciate that.
02:52:52 Devious, Dave, you got to start putting down the hammer on some of these spurges PS anime socks. Ban all the anime *****.
02:53:03 Yeah, anime I'm I'm.
02:53:06 I'm done. I'm. I'm as done with anime as I.
02:53:08 Am with Flat Earth.
02:53:10 White cake in opening scene of Saving Private Ryan the first gravestone, the old man passes as a Star of David. It's flashed by quickly. Then the rows of crosses continue, but Spielberg wants the viewer to think of the Holocaust right off the bat. Absolutely. Well, didn't you know, World War 2 is where your grandpa went.
02:53:28 And saved the Jews.
02:53:31 ********, ******, ********, ****** or $1.00? Where's the ******** fagot 1?
02:53:38 There it is.
Easy E
02:53:39 Do you have that much money in your bank at home? Devon Stack
02:53:44 I'd buy that for a dollar. 02:53:53 So far I do see the ADL had their cage rattled by Elon Musk.
02:53:57 Lawsuit, but as soon as Elon just talks about doing a lawsuit instead of justice doing it, then nothing. Nothing's going to get done. Why do people keep hyping this up as if?
02:54:11 This up if nothing is getting done well. People are optimists. People are generally optimist. This is why they believe in stuff like Q, Anon and and all this other nonsense.
02:54:22 I I'm cautiously optimistic about this. I don't know that he's actually going.
02:54:27 To sue the ADL.
02:54:29 I don't know that even if he did.
02:54:30 Anything would ever.
02:54:31 Come of it, I don't know that.
02:54:34 I mean, look, the news cycle in America and just in the West in general is so quick. It really doesn't take much to distract people and go on to the next story and.
02:54:42 Then it's forgotten.
02:54:45 I think people are just so it's like when Tucker briefly mentioned white replacement and then that's already gone, right? He doesn't really talk about that now and he could. He could. He could focus solely on that and he doesn't talk about that. And so it's it's one of those things where people are are so desperate for.
02:55:04 They want people, they want people that they perceive as having power and influence, saying the things that they want to be said and and supporting the things they want.
02:55:16 Reported and in the same way that that I think a lot of people kind of projected their hopes and dreams on the Trump and some people still do. Inexplicably, despite his record. Look, I and I did in the 2016, I I fully was like, yeah, this guy's going to ******* he's finally going to stop the immigration problem.
02:55:36 Before it's too late, because I thought that, you know, in 2016 there was still time to stop it. You know, there wasn't, but it was a it.
02:55:43 Was a hopeful thought.
02:55:46 And I think people are feeling that way about this. They feel that there's, oh, finally, they're actually going to get somewhere with this.
02:55:55 Yeah, and and I and I and I don't, I don't.
02:55:59 I don't count my chickens before they hatch. You know, I'm not going to.
02:56:03 Tell that whole joke again, but.
02:56:09 We'll see what happens. We'll see what happens. The Beach Boys, The Beach Boys.
02:56:20 **** the ideal and the murdering child ******. They rode in on? Absolutely, absolutely.
02:56:28 Mel Gibson, Mel Gibson.
02:56:43 You always say Eastern European Jews arrived at the turn of the century.
02:56:48 I don't know if you know the history or not, but the Tsar Alexander the second was killed by a Jewish terrorist group basically the 19th century Antifa. His son began the famous pogroms and the Jews.
02:57:00 And then the Jews fled to America. Yeah, I I know. Yeah, I know the.
02:57:05 I know the back story, it's just that.
02:57:09 I wish they'd stayed there.
02:57:11 You know, I wish they'd stayed there.
02:57:15 You know, and face the music like, you know, I I really wish they hadn't come here.
02:57:21 It because.
02:57:23 It it seems like.
02:57:26 Look, I I'm not.
02:57:28 Saying that the the Jews that were already here.
02:57:31 Were not a problem, but they weren't as much of A.
02:57:34 Problem. You know what, I.
02:57:36 Mean like? I feel like this. This is the this sent.
02:57:39 It over the edge.
02:57:41 You know, this migration really kind of like.
02:57:44 I almost feel like.
02:57:46 We were at least doing a good job of handling the amount of Jews.
02:57:51 They had this kind of.
02:57:53 This kind of tipped the balance in a major way.
02:57:57 Yeah. And maybe look and maybe maybe we'll do a stream on that.
02:58:00 Well, but yeah, absolutely.
02:58:05 All right, then we got. Oh, we got, like, gigantic **** money.
02:58:10 Gigantic humongous **** money from hey, would you **** **?
02:58:17 Well, with * **** like that, I don't know if anyone's going to blow you. That's that's uh.
02:58:22 That's very much appreciated there.
Easy E
02:58:24 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend yourself with. Devon Stack
02:58:29 Go, Julie, this bag is. Speaker 3
02:58:56 That is not included is under your control. Devon Stack
02:59:02 All right. 02:59:04 Hey, would you **** **? Hey, man. Catching the tail end of this thought of talking to people like Heareth or Jack White. Your legend professor stack. Also all I could see is a yellow lemon tree. Yes. Enjoy the five hundo.
02:59:23 All right. Well, first of all, I'm not sure who.
02:59:27 I've heard the name Jack White. I've never heard. Well, maybe I've heard the other name here. Jim, let me look and see these people are.
02:59:34 Higher, higher ref. Higher ref. What is that?
02:59:39 Shall I look on Odyssey for that?
02:59:48 Is this it? Is this the person?
02:59:53 I don't think so. It doesn't look like it's in English.
03:00:01 Well, it's some kind of Welsh thing.
03:00:10 I think I'll be on Twitter maybe.
03:00:23 Well, I doubt that's the there's like some.
03:00:26 Only fans girl with with goddess Haaretz.
03:00:32 Yeah, that's who you're mean. Yeah, not sure who that is.
03:00:37 Let's see Jack White.
03:00:40 I feel like that I've heard that name.
03:00:48 Jack White, there's a bunch of Jack whites on Twitter.
03:00:52 Not sure which one that would be. We'll check out to see.
03:01:05 That's music I don't.
03:01:08 I don't think that's what you mean.
03:01:10 Is it?
03:01:12 Let's check why they.
03:01:17 That sounds peaceful.
03:01:20 Maybe, maybe we'll have that in the background. It's a song about missing whales, I guess. Yeah, I'm not sure they.
03:01:27 Are then.
03:01:29 Also, all I could see is a yellow lemon tree.
03:01:34 I'm not sure what that means. All I could see was a yellow lemon tree.
03:01:39 Yeah, I'm not. I'm a little little.
03:01:42 OK, this is putting me to sleep. We're putting this. We're turning this on.
03:01:48 Not sure what the.
03:01:50 The yellow lemon trees thing, but appreciate that. Hey, would you **** **? They call me Mr. Nags. You didn't appoint yourself, but because of your dedication effort, God has granted you with an audience, even without a face. Your voice is starting to reach many more. Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf that the spoken word, rather than the written word.
03:02:11 Is the fuel.
03:02:11 Behind mass movements, God bless well, the very kind words, and I appreciate that.
03:02:18 And I just think the.
03:02:21 I think the spoken word is more interesting, honestly. I mean.
03:02:26 And plus you can listen to me while you're.
03:02:28 Doing work so.
03:02:32 It's it's more convenient. Let's face it, is what it is.
03:02:36 All right. Well, I appreciate that very much beach guys, Beach Boys.
03:03:05 Well, that's.
Singer
03:03:10 That will keep him busy for a while. Devon Stack
03:03:15 I haven't played that one in a while. 03:03:18 Let's here got here late. Then anyone ever sends you Alex Jones talking about how the ADL is run by Super Nazis.
03:03:27 Ohh yeah, we'll we'll go over that. But but, but we're going chronologically and we got a lot between now and Alex Jones.
03:03:35 But yeah, no, I've definitely seen that clip.
03:03:39 Night train 88.
03:03:45 Night Train 88 look into Judah Benjamin. He was the national treasurer for the CSA, infamously corrupt, and fled to Europe upon the Souths defeat. Early life, you guessed it, was that the guy that was the.
03:04:02 He was this, I think I came across him when I was researching this too. He was the.
03:04:09 Not the secretary of war, but he was the was he the treasurer for the Confederates?
03:04:15 Oh yeah, I guess that's what you said. Literally. That's what you just said. Yeah, he's the he was the treasurer. Uh. Yeah. No, I I that was part of the research when they were talking one of the arguments in one of the books when they were talking about how the Southerners weren't all that.
03:04:29 Anti-Semitic at all. Back then they mentioned how you know the Confederates had a A Jewish treasurer and how there were lots of prominent Jews in the South, and that just wasn't like a it really wasn't a thing that that took place until all these.
03:04:45 Eastern European Jews showed up in New York and spread into the rest of the country and started ******* everything up.
03:04:51 And and then Southerners started to get mad because they these these well groups like the ADL for example, you know?
03:05:02 White cake? I thought it was strange to hear Black Rock making deals to buy up large swaths of Ukraine while the war was on. When the war started, Putin seemed based. But now, but I now know he's a crypto Jew and it makes me wonder.
03:05:17 If both sides are in on the war thoughts, I mean, I don't think he's an actual Jew, you know?
03:05:24 I know that he he has a lot of connections with Jews and all the Russian not all, but like most of the I don't know if it's most, I don't know the exact numbers but like a lot of the Russian oligarchs are are Jewish and.
03:05:40 I think Putin might have been.
03:05:43 I don't know.
03:05:43 If I don't know that he was a Shabbat goy, but like he he he did live in a Jewish neighborhood and and at one point and and was very closely associated with Jews when he was younger.
03:05:55 As far as I look, I think it's pretty basic. I think that Russia wants, doesn't or rather doesn't want NATO.
03:06:05 Involved that closely to their borders.
03:06:09 And I think that the United States kind of engineered this conflict. They wanted this to happen and.
03:06:18 They got it.
03:06:20 Whether Putin wanted it to happen or not. I mean, maybe, maybe he wanted it to happen too. Maybe. Maybe he sees this native stuff as an excuse for a expansion of the the former Soviet Union. I mean, I.
03:06:35 Don't. I don't know.
03:06:37 But I will.
03:06:38 Say I mean, it's hard to know it, it's.
03:06:40 It's asking you to to read the minds of of the, you know, rule of rulers of nation.
03:06:48 And it's it's. It's really impossible to do that.
03:06:52 And all I can really go with is what makes sense from a strategic standpoint and what makes sense is you don't want NATO that close.
03:07:01 To your borders of your Russia.
03:07:03 And they made that abundantly clear several times leading up to the war.
03:07:08 White cake? I thought it was. Is that?
03:07:11 The right one.
03:07:13 Actually, that's the one I just did.
03:07:17 Glock 23, part one you really need to get your cat neutered. It will give him a better quality of life. I've had many cats neutered and they do not cut their balls off to neuter them. Cats still haunt like crazy after being neutered but they stay close to home and won't go missing for days.
03:07:38 What was your Part 2? I don't see your Part 2.
03:07:41 I I don't know. Churro is, is.
03:07:46 He's like his.
03:07:46 Own I don't see churro as like my cat.
03:07:50 I see churro as a chill cat that comes and hangs out.
03:07:56 You know, every once in a while, although.
03:07:58 It's it's been increasingly often cause it got it got all super hot again, so he actually was here all day long until classified cat kicked him out before the stream.
03:08:08 I I don't know. I kind of like that. He's just like some cat that lives out.
03:08:11 There, you know.
03:08:15 I don't wanna. I don't want. I don't wanna take his. I don't wanna take his ability to spread his churro seed.
03:08:20 Out to the other feral cats.
03:08:23 Because if you know.
03:08:25 I was talking to my neighbor.
03:08:28 I was talking about how like.
03:08:30 You know, I'd be sad if Churro died and and I was like, yeah, you know, every time he's gone for, like, a few days, I get worried that, like, he's not coming back and whatever and.
03:08:42 And then my.
03:08:42 Neighbor just said like the most, like farmer asked **** in the world, he said. Well, the good thing about cats is and when they die, you can always get another one.
03:08:55 And I was like, yeah, I guess I guess.
03:08:57 You're right.
03:09:02 Well, yeah, yeah. I'm trying to look at it more like that and less like a city kid, you know?
03:09:07 But yeah, I I don't know. He's.
03:09:09 Made it a year.
03:09:11 I'd have to look back at this. You know, whatever the ghost cat stream was, but I'm almost positive that that the first ghost cat stream was.
03:09:19 It's got to be a year.
03:09:20 Now I think it was in September.
03:09:23 If it's not a year now it's it's like we're coming right up to it cause.
03:09:29 I'm almost positive.
03:09:31 It was September. I'll take a look.
03:09:34 I'll take a look and see when maybe we'll do like a ghost cat year anniversary edition.
03:09:42 But yeah, he's he's doing just good. I mean, he's he's.
03:09:46 You can tell he gets in fights with things because he comes up scratched up and ****** ** a lot, but it doesn't seem to faze him.
03:09:54 Hey, would you **** **?
03:09:57 Hey, would you **** ** with another *** **** money? Don't know.
03:10:02 Today, we'll be reading the best Christmas ever. Our story begins with.
03:10:07 The magic *****.
03:10:18 Where did the soul men?
Speaker 3
03:10:19 Go where? Speaker 7
03:10:31 The best. Devon Stack
03:10:32 Christmas. Ever. 03:10:36 All right.
03:10:37 Hey Professor Stack, have you considered covering these topics on more recent items like Barbie movie or other industry garbage? Also learn refrigeration. I make bank doing this job. Cheers lads. Hail to the chat. Well, I appreciate that. You know, I I try.
03:10:56 To stay away from the.
03:10:57 The newer movies, just because I think a lot of it's just so obvious it's low hanging fruit. It's low effort because they're new most people don't. I mean I don't know, maybe maybe the younger people would find it more helpful than the the older people. But the older people aren't going to.
03:11:15 And by older I mean like like 20 and older. You know, they're not going to identify with a movie that's coming out, like right now. I mean, I doubt it. At least most people grow out of that pretty quick. And so that's why I like going after the older stuff because it's stuff that already got in your head and maybe you didn't realize it. So talking about a movie.
03:11:36 That that you might have seen when you were, you know, like that guy that was eight years.
03:11:40 Old and watched Tokyo drift.
03:11:43 Or whatever, because you're, you know, when you're a dumb kid like that. You like stupid **** like that and you're you, you don't. You don't notice the the subversive nature of it. Most of the.
03:11:54 Time. So I think that's or or even maybe not you, but you can see like you know it's it's a way of understanding like why are the boomers the way that they are?
03:12:03 No. That's why you know that kind.
03:12:04 The thing. So that's that's kind of why I don't bother with that stuff. I mean, I do every once in a while, but like usually not as far as the refrigeration stuff goes.
03:12:16 I don't know. Maybe I could learn how to do HVAC stuff. I'm I'm going to have to do it anyway to put mine in. I mean, I I've kind of. I got the idea. But yeah, especially where I'm at, where it gets so hot if I just.
03:12:27 Did installs on.
03:12:29 If all I did was install mini splits.
03:12:31 Right. Like if that's all I.
03:12:33 I could probably make a lot of money because it's something that the average person can't just pick up and do real quick. You don't need like a ton of extra equipment, and I have what you need. But you do need something that's, you know, it's not just like, oh, just, you know, here's a wrench and a screwdriver and, you know, do I want? And I got the ******* mini split installed.
03:12:54 So it's slightly more complicated, like slightly more complicated than than you know, just installing something.
03:13:01 I don't know like a like a A evaporative cooler or something like that, and it's just complicated enough to where you could probably charge people to do it. I don't know. I I I do have to make money on the side, doing odds and ends kinds of things, but I never really considered going heavy into doing HVAC stuff or or anything like that.
03:13:23 Maybe, maybe someday, maybe. Maybe if I need to.
03:13:27 Need to make some moolah.
03:13:30 But appreciate the support there.
03:13:33 Man of low moral fiber. *** **** anime faggs tonight. Knock it off. Bash bass. Sean Strickland beat up Anime Nerd is real Ed.
03:13:45 Aids. Ed. Sonya. I don't know what is tonight and made fun of him for beating off to anime. Do not waste your life watching *** cartoons. Exactly. Well, it's like I said, not everyone who watches anime is a ******. But every ****** watches anime.
03:14:02 White cake. It's been rumored that a hot war between NATO and Russia could kick off before the next US election, the logic being that the emergency powers will have to be implemented and the US will officially become a dictatorship. Yeah, people have been saying that, though. You got to. If you go back and and listen to well, I mean, Speaking of the art bell stuff, you can listen to old art.
03:14:23 Episodes and or or, you know, maybe the more edgy people like Bill Cooper or even Alex Jones for that matter, in the 1990s they were saying the same stuff like, Oh yeah, yeah. And and now, granted times have.
03:14:36 Changed, but this is this is a fear that is is often repeated and it has no ones followed through with the with that threat. Yet is that impossible? Absolutely not. It's not impossible. Would I even be surprised? I no, I wouldn't.
03:14:54 Really be surprised.
03:14:55 I'll just tell you what I tell everyone with this stuff. It's like.
03:14:58 I wouldn't sit there and wring your hands expecting it to happen, but I would live your life in such a way to where, if it did, you'd.
03:15:04 Be prepared for it and I think that's just the best way to live your life with all this, all this stuff.
03:15:11 It'd be a big deal. It'd be a big deal, but like, they've my mom. I remember my mom telling me that she was afraid Obama was going to cancel elections back in.
03:15:25 I guess it would have been.
03:15:28 I guess it would been like around or not 2008.
03:15:34 Or 2012 I guess it.
03:15:36 Was like I don't or.
03:15:37 Or maybe it was two, I don't remember, but my.
03:15:40 Mom thought Obama was never going to leave office.
03:15:42 She thought he was going to be.
03:15:44 You know President forever and you know there there.
03:15:47 Were people that?
03:15:48 Thought Bush was going to do the same thing. You know, the people like the lefty, 911 guys at the time, they thought that Bush was going to, you know, declare himself, you know, king or whatever. Lots of people like the militia movement people, especially after Waco and all this stuff.
03:16:06 They thought the Clintons were going to.
03:16:07 Do that. It's just it's one of those things where.
03:16:13 Yeah, it could happen, and I don't even think it's that far fetched, but it hasn't happened before and I don't think we're quite there yet. And if it does happen, just be ready for it.
03:16:26 As I am, I am ready for anything.
03:16:29 Ah, let's see here. White cake. Any plans to do a show with raging dissident? He's Canadian, so he mostly covers that angle. But it would still be very interesting to hear.
03:16:41 The two of.
03:16:41 You converse? Yeah, I.
03:16:43 Know I used to talk to that guy on my old Telegram account. I got. I keep someone brought him up.
03:16:48 I think last stream I gotta get.
03:16:51 I gotta get reconnected with him. It's been a long time since I talked to him.
03:16:56 Yeah, he's a cool guy.
03:16:58 Night Nation review black Pilled this is her here with music.
03:17:06 Or high with music.
03:17:11 Is this song? This song is not it though, right?
03:17:25 Why was I supposed to talk to her again? Was she does she do? Like.
03:17:31 Throw the Jew down the well remixes or something.
Speaker 6
03:17:42 Hey everybody, I just wanted to make a really short video officially announcing the release of my next album Woven and give you guys. Devon Stack
03:17:51 When was that March? 03:17:59 What's the song that has the most views?
03:18:08 Featuring Emily yukas. Huh. What is this one going to be like?
03:18:21 Maybe it is throw the Julie on the welder remix. Let's see.
Speaker 7
03:18:41 So enticing, is it even real? I can't tell if you can more. 03:18:54 Or if you're stuck inside your virtual world video game.
03:19:10 Chosen it's all.
Devon Stack
03:19:11 Well, it's not bad. Speaker 7
03:19:16 I can't. Devon Stack
03:19:17 And it's making me sleepy, though right now not. Not like in a bad way like. 03:19:21 Boring, but like as in.
03:19:24 I'm tired and it's soothing.
03:19:27 I'll take a look at that.
03:19:30 I thought when I saw Emily Yuccas, I thought like it was going to be a.
03:19:33 Lot more aggressive.
03:19:37 Alright, Great Plains Calvary.
03:19:41 You have power. You have influence me. Magic lies within you, Mr. Stack, and my heart tells me you will use all these things wisely.
03:19:51 Feel like you're on like Anakin Skywalker getting a.
03:19:54 And getting the Ben Kenobi speech some 4 Chan Anon who took up the name of Murdoch, Murdoch once said. Don't heil me. Heil victory. You embody that statement. Well, I appreciate that. That's very kind of you.
03:20:12 Night Nation review. Alright, OK, that's just the.
03:20:16 That's the link to the music. We just took a look at.
03:20:20 Jack White.
03:20:23 Well, that's, that's the other guy. Let me see here.
03:20:41 He's like 7 years old.
03:20:43 What are you talking about? He's like 7.
03:20:50 No, I'll check these out. What are these? Just are these. Wait, hold on. Are these like cartoons or something? What is this?
Speaker 3
03:21:07 Follow me. Follow. Devon Stack
03:21:10 Oh, it's music, OK? 03:21:16 What's his most viewed?
Speaker 3
03:21:43 Ever since fathers gone, none will. 03:21:50 Anything I say at all fear and shadows fall.
03:22:02 And they.
Devon Stack
03:22:09 That's a little slow, but. 03:22:12 I'm sure he's got other stuff. All right. Well, OK. Good to know.
03:22:18 Let's see here.
03:22:21 Hey, would you **** **?
03:22:23 Says call me.
03:22:25 The N word.
03:22:27 How dare you? How *******.
03:22:32 Double dog.
03:22:32 You guys are calling yourself.
03:22:33 Your dog.
03:22:36 You need to look at regular chat more often, especially when you're asking questions. I don't know what questions I was asking, but.
03:22:45 I know. I wish you could have both open. It's hard to have regular chat open and have and have the.
03:22:52 The hyper chats up and I don't think you.
03:22:53 Can do.
03:22:54 Both Glock 23. Oh, here's finally Part 2. He won't get into fights anymore trying to mate with girls. That's the cause of most cat fights with. And those fights can be brutal, so he won't get his face clawed up anymore. Male cats stop spraying passed to mark their territory after.
03:23:12 Being neutered also, he won't make homeless kittens. I what if I want the homeless kittens?
03:23:16 OK.
03:23:17 What if I want little churros?
03:23:19 All over the desert.
03:23:22 Little coyote snacks walking.
03:23:27 I don't know. I I don't know. We'll see.
03:23:31 Great Plains Calvary.
03:23:34 Haywood was the name of a commie labor organizer years ago. Well, there you go.
03:23:41 I don't know.
03:23:42 I talk about, hey, would you **** **?
03:23:46 I don't think he's a commie labor organizer, but there's a lot of heywoods out there.
03:23:53 The IST or theist been thinking about how Westerners have organized themselves GroupWise, social status, economic connections since the Enlightenment. The French Revolution slogan was liberty equality.
03:24:11 Fraternity. So fraternity seems to be the main mechanism that changed society from family based society to.
03:24:21 May then just say to Mason.
03:24:27 Liberty, equality, fraternity. So fraternity seems to be the main mechanism that changed society from from family. Not sure you're getting that there.
03:24:39 Are you saying that we have a lack of fraternity now, or are you saying that they like the powers of, you know, the ruling class has fraternity?
03:24:50 You know, benign breath as an example, is a fraternity of sorts.
03:24:55 I will say this whites don't have any, any fraternity, there's there's and I think it's because you can't have it strictly race based, I think.
03:25:03 Has to be a religious component to it.
03:25:06 For it to work, you know, I mean, just because it's, uh.
03:25:11 You can have alliances and and have tribalism, but you know, among other whites. But if I I would, I would wager that even within benign breath, right, while they're supported by all Jews especially the ADL, is supported by all Jews. That benign breath specifically probably has some kind of religious.
03:25:33 Constraint maybe I'm wrong, maybe they don't, but I bet they have some kind of religious like you can't be like, maybe maybe you're an atheist Jew. I mean, I don't know. Maybe you can.
03:25:45 Yeah, but that's it's something that's sorely lacking. We we don't have any kind of fraternity. That's something I would like to remedy when I'm in a position to, if I ever get into a position to do that. But that would be.
03:25:57 That'd be fantastic to.
03:25:59 Have that kind of that. I don't mean like some kind of gay secret, secret handshake type ****, but I.
03:26:03 Mean like an actual group? That's.
03:26:07 That's that's going to last beyond our ourselves.
03:26:11 Jay Ray, 1981.
03:26:14 When arguing about European white replacement, just say we are 8.
03:26:17 Percent of the world.
03:26:19 Yeah, we we used to be a a much larger chunk. I don't know what what it was, but we were closer to like 30% not that long ago. And then we started feeding Africa.
03:26:28 Big mistake. Big mistake.
03:26:33 Big mistake feeding Africa.
03:26:36 Cream cheese privilege. Hey, Devin, are people still allowed to vote for Trump even though he's being indicted?
03:26:43 Well, I mean so.
03:26:44 Far there's a bunch of states that are trying to get him off the ballot, but I don't know how successful they'll be. I'm sure it'll be a.
03:26:52 Hard fought legal battle on both sides, but we'll see. I don't know that it matters.
03:26:58 I I kind of don't know if this next election is really going to matter.
03:27:03 I I think that.
03:27:05 If Trump runs and wins.
03:27:07 There will probably be some kind of conflict.
03:27:11 I think if he runs and loses, there could be some kind of conflict.
03:27:15 And if he runs and wins, I don't know that we'll even know that he ran and won because.
03:27:21 I think he ran in one last time and you know, I mean, so it's like.
03:27:26 And or. I mean, here's the thing, too. Here's the demoralizing effect is, like, so many people are kind of like, ohh, so I guess elections don't matter anymore because.
03:27:34 They don't. So are they even going to be motivated to go vote? Maybe they'll just resign to whatever the system tells them happened, you know.
03:27:41 Because that's kind of what they did last time. I don't see it getting any better.
03:27:47 But yeah, I I I I think that it's.
03:27:50 The idea that he's going to be taking off the the ballot in, I mean, I don't know, we'll have to see. We'll have to see. It's this kind of thing.
03:27:58 That would go straight to the Supreme Court.
03:28:01 And I and I don't know enough about the laws around, you know, around. I don't think that he's.
03:28:06 I don't think that constitutionally you can keep someone.
03:28:10 Even if he's indicted or, or even if he's in jail, I don't think you can keep him from.
03:28:14 Running for President, I don't think that this qualifies you, but I could be wrong about that.
03:28:20 UM.
03:28:22 Great Plains Calvary, Haywood specifically focused on connecting communism to racial issues. Might be worth a stream someday.
03:28:30 Well, there you go.
03:28:33 Alright, that's the very last one.
03:28:39 And then it's.
03:28:39 The link.
03:28:43 Harry Haywood and he's black.
03:28:47 And he's.
03:28:48 He's ******* black.
Easy E
03:28:50 Straight outta Compton. Devon Stack
03:28:52 All right. 03:28:54 I'm gonna go ahead and shut her down now. We're at 3 1/2 hours.
03:29:00 Ohh I am exhausted, I'm exhausted.
03:29:04 I have been up since 3:00 this morning.
03:29:07 So my time I've been up for.
03:29:11 What 20?
03:29:14 22 hours, something like that. I've.
03:29:17 Been up a.
03:29:17 Lot of.
03:29:18 Time because when I start researching this stuff, I just start. You know, I just go. I run with it and then I'll just take little naps when I absolutely need to.
03:29:27 And yeah, this this stuff, it's pretty heavy stuff, but it's also interesting, I guess.
03:29:34 All right, guys, thank you for the support. I really appreciate it and I hope you all have a wonderful rest of your weekend.
03:29:40 I don't think Wednesday.
03:29:43 Will be Part 2 of the ADL stuff, but Saturday? Absolutely. We'll we'll pick back up on the ADL stuff. I'm still trying to workout interviews with with people. It's just been exceptionally hot and there's and, and I've been doing an exceptional amount of research, so I haven't really gotten back to anyone and I'm just bad at that. I'm just bad.
03:30:03 At getting back to people.
03:30:04 But don't take it personally if you're one of those people.
03:30:06 I'm just.
03:30:07 I get in my own little world sometimes, and that's just what it that's the way.
03:30:11 It is so.
03:30:12 Alright guys, I will talk to you soon for black pill time, of course.
03:30:22 Devon steck.
Introducer
03:30:25 I am pleased to be able to introduce to you. 03:30:29 James B. Comedy the director of the FBI.
James B. Comey
03:30:33 Good afternoon everybody. It is an honor to be here. Your advocacy for such a wide range of issues and constituents is simply amazing. From anti-Semitism to voting rights and immigration issues, from gender and LGBT equality to anti Muslim prejudice, from separation of church and state. 03:30:50 With cyber bullying, you have pushed and prodded for the passage of comprehensive hate crimes legislation. Your leadership in tracking and exposing domestic and international terrorism threats is invaluable.
03:31:04 Your experience in hate crime prevention and investigations is essential and makes us better. Your research has helped FBI agents and analysts as they conduct assessments and prepare intelligence reports and the training you voluntarily provide in classrooms, in conferences and at the Community level is eye opening and insightful.
03:31:26 Now, if this sounds a little bit like a love letter to the ADL, it is because I intended so. Since 1913 you have advocated for fairness and equality.
03:31:38 For inclusion and acceptance, you have never been indifferent. You have never been complacent and the words silence does not appear in your language. We in the FBI must never remain silent, no matter how difficult the matter and how difficult the case, no matter how long it takes to seek justice. And like you, we must.
03:31:58 Always, always be on the side of the good. So thank you for what you do.
03:32:04 Thank you for making us better. We are honored to stand beside you. Thank you.
Devon Stack
03:32:18 Thank you.