2:56:22

INSOMNIA STREAM: GALLUP EDITION.mp3

08/14/2024
Numbers Lady
00:25:53 Good.
00:00:05 70.
00:00:09 Group.
00:00:10 70.
00:00:14 Who? Who 288?
00:00:24 13297.
00:00:28 132-976-0318.
00:00:38 60318263192.
00:00:49 6319.
00:00:52 37842.
00:00:58 February.
Enigma
00:01:24 Yeah, yeah.
00:01:32 Good.
00:01:54 Devotion.
00:02:05 Emotional. Afraid we.
00:02:18 Try to destroy.
00:02:23 Just look into your heart, my friend.
00:02:29 To yourself.
00:02:31 The returns to the South.
00:03:00 Cry yourself.
00:03:04 Believing.
00:03:06 Don't care.
00:03:14 Return to.
00:03:44 Oh.
00:03:53 The beginning of the end.
00:03:56 That's return to your son.
00:04:32 Yeah.
00:09:11 Look.
Devon Stack
00:09:36 Welcome to the insomnia stream Gallup edition.
00:09:44 Ohh it's going to be a fun 1:00 tonight.
00:09:48 It's going to be a fun one tonight. I finally get to share gallop with everyone.
00:09:53 I've mentioned it before.
00:09:57 But I finally get to. I get to share.
00:09:59 With the whole world.
00:10:02 I'm your host, of course. Devon stack. We're going to talk about a little city in New Mexico.
00:10:11 Little small town.
00:10:14 Apparently, according to their sign here, the most patriotic small town in America.
00:10:20 Very small population, only 21,000.
00:10:26 Have you ever had the the pleasure of of visiting Gallup?
00:10:33 You probably know what you're what you're in for, Dalton. New Mexico is a small town on the Arizona New Mexico border.
00:10:44 If you've ever traveled E on I-40 from LA, going through Arizona, Albuquerque and stuff.
00:10:56 You've probably had to stop there for gas.
00:10:58 Yeah.
00:11:00 It's basically the halfway point between lower it's the halfway point, but it's where you stop for gas. If you're going from, like, Flagstaff to to Albuquerque, and I've had to make that stop.
00:11:16 Several times in my lifetime.
00:11:20 And it doesn't seem to matter.
00:11:23 Whether it's at noon, midnight.
00:11:28 You know four in the afternoon, 4:00 in the morning. Doesn't seem to.
00:11:31 Matter.
00:11:32 Every time.
00:11:34 Without exception.
00:11:37 And I and I know what I'm I know what's going to happen. So like.
00:11:40 I'm trying to just. I just need to.
00:11:41 Get just get.
00:11:42 The gas just get the gas and get.
00:11:45 The **** out of.
00:11:45 Here, don't. Don't look at the firework shops. Just just get the kiss and get it. And every time, every time there's a confrontation.
00:11:57 Of some sort or an incident of some sort involving a drunk Indian.
00:12:03 Sometimes a an Indian under the influence of who knows what.
00:12:09 But it's every time, every time, and you just have. It's it's like you just have to try not to get murdered in those situations because you just get the, you get the dead eyed, no soul stare.
00:12:25 We have an example of that tonight, for those of you have not experienced that first hand, it's it's quite something. It's quite something to just look at the dark dead eyes.
00:12:35 Of what you assume is a human being.
00:12:40 And just realize there's nothing behind those eyes. There's nothing. It's it's all lizard brain, and it's all unpredictable.
00:12:51 But it only it wasn't always like that.
00:12:54 Which is odd.
00:12:56 Because they're the reason why there's so many Indians in Gallup, NM is the Navajo Nation is essentially bordering.
00:13:06 Gallup NM.
00:13:08 And Gallup NM.
00:13:11 Cells. Alcohol.
00:13:14 Whereas the Navajo Nation does not.
00:13:18 And so if you live in Window rock.
00:13:21 Or some neighboring area and you're an alcoholic Indian.
00:13:27 Little redundant. You go to Galton New Mexico and get funked up.
00:13:33 And again, you might wonder.
00:13:37 Well, if it wasn't always like that, I mean, it's not like alcohol is a new thing, right? It's not a new thing.
00:13:46 To or, you know, at least it's new. You could say the Indians within the last, you know, couple centuries, but it's not.
00:13:55 It's not like it it.
00:13:56 It it it alcohol appeared in the United.
00:13:58 States.
00:13:59 In like the 1960s or something. So what? What changed? What changed? Exactly? Well, before we tackle that.
00:14:07 Question.
00:14:09 We all have to remember we all have to recognize.
00:14:13 That we are we are all on stormland.
00:14:18 We have to recognize that we are on stolen land taken by the white man.
00:14:25 And then before we showed up.
00:14:27 It was, it was. It was. It was a paradise. It was a complete paradise.
00:14:31 Many years before Columbus, much before old Chris Columbus lived the lordly, red skinned Indian peaceful, happy red skinned Indian.
00:14:43 There were three, just like the eagle flew about like birds. The people flew because they like to do it. It was easy. Nothing to it.
00:14:54 Oh.
00:14:58 That's right. They flew around like the eagle free as birds until the white man came and destroyed their culture. So now that we've recognized that.
00:15:11 It's odd you look at.
00:15:14 A old photo of.
00:15:16 Of Gallup NM, which was, you know, prior to I-40 it.
00:15:19 Was it was on Route 66.
00:15:23 Now the reason why they call it Gallup.
00:15:27 Is it was started or the the IT was basically a.
00:15:32 Hey.
00:15:35 It was, it was the.
00:15:36 Center of one of the the the railroads. I'm from. I thought I wrote it down.
00:15:44 I did not write it down, alright. Well, anyway, the one of the railroads was headquartered there, and Gallup was the name of the guy who gave out the paychecks to the railroad. Railroad workers. He was David L Gallup.
00:16:03 And so when people were going to get paid, they'd say, well, we're going to gallop because we're he's the guy that has the paychecks, and eventually they started just calling it. Gallup, NM. This was the late 1800s.
00:16:18 As it grew as a railroad hub, there was also a coal mining nearby. It attracted a lot of European immigrants because those were the only kinds of immigrants that we had back then. In the early 1900s.
00:16:34 It also attracted, of course, Native Americans from the reservation, but most of them stayed on the reservation.
00:16:42 They had a large festival. I guess you could say intertribal festival every year we'll talk about that in a moment and people would come from all around the.
00:16:54 World.
00:16:55 To see the the great culture.
00:16:59 On display the the the costumes the I.
00:17:03 Don't know what you'd call.
00:17:03 Them the, the, the headdresses, the jewelry.
00:17:08 Lots of old white chicks, but stuff made out of turquoise and silver and they still do with, you know, dream catchers and feathers and garbage and stuff.
00:17:19 They would come from miles around, you know, from all around the world to see these this pow wow.
00:17:25 This parade, not so much these days. That's another thing that's changed.
00:17:32 And you might wonder why.
00:17:35 Why? Why did everything change? Why was everything so picturesque? Is well, it's picturesque as a route 66 desert town can be in the southwest.
00:17:48 In the early 1950s.
00:17:51 And then why the rapid decline?
00:17:56 Now here is a news report or it's a kind of a news story from 1989.
00:18:07 And this is when the problems were in full swing.
00:18:11 The problems in Gallup that that still plague Gallup today.
00:18:16 Were on full display.
00:18:19 And the Albuquerque Journal.
00:18:22 Had done a report because Gallup, prior to the Internet.
00:18:26 Prior to.
00:18:29 Well, just I guess prior to the Internet, really mass Communications 1989, it was real easy to have very localized problems in a town like Gallup, and no one knew about it unless you were passing through Gallup, or unless you lived in Gallup. You know, population 21,000 today. I don't know what it was back then, but probably at least, you know, similar or less.
00:18:50 And so some small town in the middle of ******* nowhere has some problems, and no one really knows about it, not even the people in neighboring Albuquerque, unless they have some kind of connection to that town.
00:19:02 So the Albuquerque Journal, I think it was the Albuquerque Journal did an expose.
00:19:09 On the problems in Gallup.
00:19:11 Which prompted national news media to go.
00:19:17 Investigate.
News Caster
00:19:21 Healing tonight with a vital issue which has brought us here to Gallup NM. It's an issue you undoubtedly have heard about of late. It has received widespread state and national attention. While it certainly is not confined to Gallup, we have come here because Gallup has become a focal point. The issue is the nation struggle against alcoholism.
00:19:21 Right.
00:19:40 Producer Matthew Sneddon has been a close observer of the recent developments that have brought so much attention to Gallup.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:19:49 The Indian capital of the world until recently, that has been Gallup's sole claim to fame. A border town, population 22,000, promoting tourism, Native American arts and crafts, and beautiful scenery.
00:20:06 But a problem which afflicts many towns bordering Indian reservations, that of alcoholism, has finally caught up with Gallup.
00:20:14 To many, it is a town under the influence.
Devon Stack
00:20:18 It is a town under the influence now for those of you who are not aware.
00:20:24 Native Americans never developed.
00:20:27 Alcoholic beverages. They never figured out how to ferment things and and make alcohol. And so for maybe thousands of years.
00:20:38 They never learned, or their bodies never learned to metabolize alcohol.
00:20:45 There was never any kind of selection pressures to get rid of people who, well, there is is, is hard. The selection pressures at work now, but for for thousands of years they weren't.
00:20:57 And So what you have now in Native Americans are people whose bodies cannot.
00:21:07 Efficiently, get rid of alcohol once, and once it's in your system. So what happens is they get drunker faster and stay drunker longer.
00:21:20 Now another thing that a lot of people don't understand if you're, especially if you're not American, is that.
00:21:26 If you live on the reservation.
00:21:29 Pretty much everything's free.
00:21:32 Your Healthcare is free, your housing is free, you get free money, you get free food. We'll go over some of that in detail.
00:21:38 Here.
00:21:38 In a minute, but.
00:21:41 There's no real motivation to do anything.
00:21:45 On top of that, once again, as we've seen in other instances where white people are living in close proximity to other people who have had a different evolutionary path, they're not well suited for white society.
00:22:06 They're not in a position position to be competitive in white societies.
00:22:13 So even if they were to avoid alcohol and go and try to compete in the city with white people, as we've seen in other streams with black people under those same conditions.
00:22:29 They're not going to perform at the same level.
00:22:33 And so they find it easier.
00:22:36 To just get drunk all day.
00:22:38 And do nothing, and that's what many of them do.
Drunk Indian
00:22:44 Do they think about us? Hey, we patronize this city. That's where the money is coming from.
Devon Stack
00:22:54 Yeah. There we go. There's the there's the beginnings of the dead eyed maniac.
00:23:02 Very upset. A lot of people who have never had encounters with Native Americans also don't realize, and I look, I guess it's understandable.
00:23:11 They have a massive chip on their shoulder when it comes to white people. I guess you could say, as do black.
00:23:20 That, you know, they all, for the most part, lowkey hate us.
00:23:27 And you know, in a very similar way.
00:23:29 That pretty much all.
00:23:30 Blacks and generalizing here low key hate white people.
00:23:37 And it's over some, you know, ancestral grievances and and and, you know, we could argue about that. The validity of that, if you would like it some other time. But right now let's move around and take a look at at Gallup.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:23:54 There are so many drunks in Gallup, the vast majority being Indian, that Gallup has earned the name Drunk City, McKinley County, where Gallup is the only municipality, ranks #1 in the US on the Composite Index of alcohol problems. It has six times as many alcohol related deaths as the national average.
00:24:15 Deaths resulting from traffic fatalities, exposure and illness.
Devon Stack
00:24:21 So this is basically what you.
00:24:23 See if you go to Gallup.
00:24:26 You see, Indians just like to get that footage they just played. It's not like they had to spend weeks camped out in in areas hoping to find the drunk.
00:24:36 That would be.
00:24:37 The easiest assignment as a cameraman. Hey, go get me footage of drunks in Gallup.
00:24:42 Ohh OK, I'll be back in 15 minutes.
00:24:45 So that's what they did is they just had to drive downtown. It looks like that.
00:24:48 All.
00:24:48 The time they're always drunk Indians stumbling around, falling down, passing out. They get, they die on a fairly regular basis because they pass out on a highway where they it, it's it gets cold in Gallup.
00:25:05 People don't think about that, it's because it's the desert. But the elevation is.
00:25:09 6500 feet up, so it gets cold in the winters, and when you're warm and you know full of alcohol and stumbling back to the reservation and you pass out the side of the road and then it gets down to 0°, you die.
00:25:26 And so there's Indians that that die in the snow. There's Indians that that die because they decide to sleep under a truck at a truck stop. And then the truck runs them over when they start going, they get hit by trains. They get into fights and and kill each other.
00:25:47 They it's it's it's, it's madness, it's madness. And it's been going on for several decades, but again, for some reason it wasn't going on until starting about the the 1960s.
Public Official
00:26:04 Every day we find that somebody frozen or somebody run over by a car, run over by a train vehicle accident, head on accident, roll over. You mean it? It happens here. And after a while you just become hardened to it and you just think it's a a way of life.
Devon Stack
00:26:22 And I can attest to this, this is just it's just a given.
00:26:26 And there it it's it's not quite this bad in Albuquerque, but there's a similar attitude all throughout New Mexico, or really in throughout Arizona. Any area that borders a Indian Reservation that has these kinds of problems, it's just kind of you just accept it.
00:26:46 You just accept that there's drunk India.
00:26:49 And you're going to have.
00:26:50 To ******* deal.
00:26:50 With.
00:26:50 It at some point or another during the week if if you're out in public, you know it might be a car that that swerves out of nowhere and and you have to avoid it while you're driving home from work and you just know you're just like, oh, there's a there's a drunk Indian, he's going to.
00:27:08 Probably kill someone or himself or you know, actually they rarely kill themselves. Somehow they they they always survive their accidents, but not so much for the people they hit.
00:27:18 So this is the mayor.
00:27:20 Of Gallup, who's basically saying it's.
00:27:24 That's just how it is here.
00:27:27 And so we get to their one.
00:27:29 Of our favorite drinks garden Deluxe.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:27:35 The drink of choice among the many Alcoholics is the locally produced Garden Deluxe and inexpensive concoction barred wine and part hard liquor.
Cashier
00:27:45 Can we carry this?
Devon Stack
00:27:48 Good old garden deluxe.
00:27:51 Garden deluxe? Yeah, it's basically just liquor and and cheap wine mixed together. It's just like the worst the worst alcohol ever. Just like here's some like Everclear and the booms or something we mixed together.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:28:09 Many in Gallup blame the liquor industry for the alcoholism here. Gallup has twice as many liquor licenses per capita as anywhere else in New Mexico, and serving hours at many liquor establishments begin as early as seven in the morning.
Devon Stack
00:28:27 Yeah, that's something very at the time, very liberal. I don't know if they've changed them.
00:28:33 Very liberal drinking laws.
00:28:37 You can pretty much buy alcohol, at least when I lived in Albuquerque, I think you could. You could still go to like 7-11 at 1:00 in the morning and and buy a bottle of vodka if you wanted.
00:28:49 Yeah.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:28:51 But liquor dealers say they've been given a bum rap.
Abe Garcia - Liquor Indian
00:28:55 Very unfairly true, especially by by the present administration. You know, we are licensed by the state. We are probably more governed than any agency, any business in the state.
00:29:12 And our position is, hey, you know, if if we're doing something wrong, punish us.
Devon Stack
00:29:19 Well, be careful what you wish for. Now this is going to be the big argument.
00:29:23 The big argument is.
00:29:26 Do they have some responsibility?
00:29:31 Were the the the people providing the liquor to the Indians, do they hold some responsibility?
00:29:41 You could say the same thing like a lot of people talk about now, like is do the pornographers have the responsibility or is it solely on the people watching the ****?
00:29:56 Do the food manufacturers making gooey slop? Do they have some kind of responsibility, or is it solely on the the people eating the gooey slop?
00:30:08 Now I think this is the kind of question that really gets complicated simply because of the existence of a multicultural society. I think a lot of these questions don't have to be asked when you have a a monolithic ethnically at least society, because the people providing these.
00:30:26 Devices, if you will.
00:30:29 It's no longer. Ohh, I'm just. I'm making this alcohol and selling it to those ******* Indians. Because who cares?
00:30:37 It's I'm making this alcohol and selling it to my family. It's destroying my family. Maybe I should be more responsible about how I do.
00:30:45 It.
00:30:47 Or in the case of *********** I, who carries a bunch of ******* goyum. I ruined a bunch of ******* goyim.
00:30:54 I get mine.
00:30:56 And that's the prime with multicultural site. Well, one of the many problems with multicultural societies is people just don't give a **** about each other. It's every man for themselves.
00:31:07 But there's more to it than that. We'll get into that in a second.
Navaho Official
00:31:10 The liquor industry has to have a place of accountability. They have to be accountable for what they are doing.
00:31:18 They have to be accountable for the the result of the action from substance that they are selling. They have to be responsible if they are not responsible, then who is?
Devon Stack
00:31:32 And that's the kind of **** that makes white people say you are, you **** ****.
00:31:37 Have some personal responsibility for yourself.
00:31:41 But if we're being fair.
00:31:44 As I've as I've described, these people don't really have any good defense against it.
00:31:51 In the same way, a lot of young men, especially if you know you're like 10 years old with a a A smartphone with *********** is.
00:32:00 Is it really on the?
00:32:02 All on the the 10 year old kid.
00:32:07 That's uniquely susceptible to this thing that nature nature never intended.
00:32:16 This situation that is unnatural in every way, shape or form is the same thing with these guys, right?
00:32:24 They're not designed to handle alcohol.
00:32:29 But their their complete lack of personal responsibility, which extends far beyond when it comes to Native Americans. It extends far beyond just, you know, trying to take, you know, the their inability to take responsibility for their drinking habits. It goes here, there's all kinds of, you know, nothing's our fault that goes on in, in this.
00:32:49 Society.
00:32:51 But.
00:32:53 That said, that said.
00:32:55 Perhaps it's a little more complicated than that.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:32:59 Drunken gallop has been a way of life for thousands of Native Americans for generations since Indian prohibition was repealed in 1953. Historically little was done to stop it, but in recent years, many Gallup residents have fought to combat the problem.
Devon Stack
00:33:18 Wait a second. What's this Indian prohibition?
00:33:23 You speak of.
00:33:26 Well, here we go.
00:33:28 Get ready guys.
00:33:31 You see, what happened was when the white people showed up.
00:33:35 With their alcohol.
00:33:37 They realized fairly quickly.
00:33:39 Wow, Indians cannot hold their liquor.
00:33:44 And they get really crazy when they drink.
00:33:47 And violent. And they're already kind of violent. And so we've got this population of low IQ, low impulse control, violent, you know, uncivilized. You know, the savagery is only.
00:34:02 Increased when you give them alcohol.
00:34:07 And so white people had the the wherewithal to ban the sale of alcohol.
00:34:16 Two Indians.
00:34:19 In 1832.
00:34:22 They had the trade and intercourse act. This act prohibited the sale of alcohol to Native Americans within within Indian country.
00:34:32 And if you were to sell Indians alcohol, you would actually.
00:34:36 You could go to jail.
00:34:38 And they were also obviously put the Indians who were buying the.
00:34:42 Alcohol in jail?
00:34:44 This was in place. These these kinds of laws were in place for actually a really long time, a much longer time than people realize.
00:34:55 This went on, you know, even going to the 1924 Indian Citizens Citizenship Act.
00:35:02 When they were granted citizenship, it did not change their prohibition to alcohol.
00:35:09 So even though they were considered, you know, quote UN quote American citizens, they there was limits.
00:35:15 Because the white people knew.
00:35:17 You are not the same as us.
00:35:20 You cannot handle the same things the way we can, and alcohol is one of those things. And so you are banned from purchasing alcohol.
00:35:30 And white people are banned from selling it to you.
00:35:36 But the problem is.
00:35:38 Little by little.
00:35:40 This idea that we're all.
00:35:43 We're all God's children. We can't be different. You know, there's only one race, the human race.
00:35:52 It's impossible that that we would have differences beyond just skin color.
00:36:00 Right, it's only this esthetic difference that we have. We just look different and nothing else. Evolution doesn't touch anything other than outward appearances. That's the only thing that race defines. In fact, you know, the people today will even say race is that's junk science.
00:36:18 That's not even not even a real thing.
00:36:21 Even though you can.
00:36:22 Test for it it it has no real thing.
00:36:27 And so eventually.
00:36:29 Because of this way of thinking, this poison that had entered America.
00:36:35 I don't know. Maybe around the turn of the century, when all of a sudden we had an influx of.
00:36:41 Of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe.
00:36:44 Pushing these kinds of ideas, which then were amplified around World War Two when more Jewish intellectuals came from Germany, the Frankfurt School, et cetera.
00:36:55 So by the 1950s, it was hard to make the argument that you could ban a race.
00:37:03 From purchasing alcohol.
00:37:06 And by the late 1950s.
00:37:09 Most of those laws.
00:37:11 Had been repealed.
00:37:13 Or modified or they just stopped and forcing them.
00:37:17 And gradually, by 1970, they were all gone.
00:37:27 And in 1989.
00:37:30 When this story was produced, it didn't take long, right? It didn't take.
00:37:34 Long.
00:37:36 This is this was Gallup NM.
Cop
00:37:38 Guys breaking up the skull.
00:37:40 Standing right in front of the bar, guys break it up.
00:37:41 Permission.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:37:47 On any given Friday or Saturday night, Gallup police round up hundreds of intoxicated Native Americans and put them into protective custody, holding sales to dry out.
00:37:58 For 12 hours.
00:38:05 Hi.
00:38:06 When released, they parade back into downtown to be fed by charitable organizations. Then they are back on the street, panhandling money, selling their plasma or collecting aluminum cans for money to buy more liquor.
00:38:25 It is a cycle which has become routine for many.
Public Official
00:38:30 We pick up anywhere from 50 to 200 people a night and we have a room that we put them in and there's no beds in there. There's no showers. Toilet facilities are limited. The people are literally stacked in there. They vomit over on each other.
00:38:49 They bump it on the floor. They lay on it. They urinate on each other and and that's inhumane. It's just something that that we we got accustomed to and and thought and really didn't stop to think of how bad it about it really is.
00:39:04 As an example, the Police Department picked up 29,000 people for protective custody last year. In the whole state of Illinois, which is several million people more than the than the city of Gallup, which is 17,000. They only picked up 29,000. So so that.
00:39:24 That gives you an idea of the magnitude of it. It's an epidemic.
Devon Stack
00:39:31 So in case you missed that gallop.
00:39:35 With the population.
00:39:37 Of at the time of this, about 22,000 people.
00:39:42 We're picking up more drunks than the entire state of Illinois, Illinois, where Chicago is.
00:39:53 Little tiny gallop, population 22,000 in New Mexico desert.
00:39:59 Next to an Indian Reservation was picking up more drunks than the entire state of Illinois.
00:40:10 Within within just a couple decades of them removing these laws.
00:40:14 Banning Indians from drinking.
00:40:19 But then of course it's it's our fault.
00:40:22 They just need.
00:40:23 More money. That's the problem for those.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:40:26 Who want help? There isn't much available. Gallup currently has one, three to seven day Detoxification Center, which has 28 bed.
00:40:36 Bids, yet it is only funded to operate 16 bids. The 128 day rehabilitation program has 42 bids, but is funded to operate. Only twelve of these and hence has a long waiting list for many in Gallup, the lack of funding for the care of those who can't afford it is intolerable.
Devon Stack
00:40:58 Well, let's, let's see here.
00:41:00 What they what? They're leaving out.
00:41:03 Is this the city of Gallup?
00:41:06 OK, it's not the Navajo Nation, it's not window rock. It's not the reservation where all these Indians are coming from.
00:41:16 Now.
00:41:17 If you are a member of the Navajo Nation.
00:41:21 As a result of the white guilt treaties.
00:41:26 And the federal programs, the white guilt federal programs.
00:41:31 That have.
00:41:33 Been or and and.
00:41:34 Entire agencies that have been created over the years.
00:41:39 They they one thing they cannot complain about is lack of resources. There's an entire agency called the Indian Health Service.
00:41:52 You get free healthcare, you get free primary, you know healthcare.
00:41:57 You get free specialized medical care. So like if you know if you have to go see a specialist like if you have insurance in America, you know what it's like, right? You have to go to see your primary care doctor. And then they refer you to a specialist and and every time you're paying co-pays.
00:42:14 And you have to help your insurance covers, you know, whatever specialist it is and you have to help your insurance covers whatever medication they decide to prescribe to you. Or if there's a procedure that you have to get, you have to hope that your insurance covers that. It probably doesn't cover.
00:42:30 All of it.
00:42:31 Well, if you're a Navajo.
00:42:34 There's no such thing as Co.
00:42:35 Pays you get free.
00:42:38 Health care, you get the primary care is free. The specialist is free, you get mental health services, you get dental care. A lot of people with good jobs don't.
00:42:48 Even get dental care.
00:42:50 An emergency services. So in other words, if you if you're one of these drunks and you have to get hauled off in an ambulance, you don't get a 700.
00:42:58 Dollar ambulance bill.
00:43:01 It's just taken care of.
00:43:05 They operate entire. They have entire hospitals that have been built by you by the white man on these reservations, clinics, health stations.
00:43:16 Their preventative care.
00:43:18 Health promotion, disease prevention and a special diabetes program just for Indians.
00:43:25 Because in the end, in addition to not.
00:43:28 Having bodies that can easily metabolize alcohol, they also never were were.
00:43:36 They never had sugar really readily available in their diets.
00:43:41 And so they get diabetes like crazy.
00:43:45 And more so than even blacks like blacks get diabetes like crazy. But Indians really ******* get diabetes.
00:43:52 Because back in, you know, 500 years ago, if they wanted a hamburger, they had to go wrestle a ******* Buffalo to the ground and kill it with their bare hands. And and now they can just go to McDonald's with free McDonald's money.
00:44:07 Free white, you know, paid for by white people McDonald's money.
00:44:14 After they they kicked back an 18 pack of Keystone light or nickel lobe. I don't know why they they they seem to really love Michelob.
Public Official
00:44:23 That that at.
Devon Stack
00:44:24 Least that's how it was. Maybe it's different now, but like when I was in New Mexico, the Indians love ******* Michelob.
00:44:35 But yeah, they have a Bureau of Indian education.
00:44:40 They get free schools.
00:44:43 They get not just, you know, elementary school and high school and all that stuff they get, you know, free trade school. They get free college. I mean, Elizabeth Warren.
00:44:54 Pretended to be an Indian, but so that she'd more easily get accepted and do a better school. That's that's just that you get a front row seat or or front line. If you apply the, especially if it's a state school. But if you apply anywhere.
00:45:09 And your it doesn't matter what your what, your school records look like if you just apply.
00:45:15 To a college.
00:45:17 You're getting in and it's getting paid for.
00:45:22 They have grants.
00:45:24 They have scholarships and because I mean, let's face it, there's not a whole lot, even if they're their funding was low.
00:45:33 Most of the Indians are getting ******* drunk and passing out and getting run over by cars in Gallup, so it's not like there's a lot of competition for for these grants and scholarships.
00:45:42 Yeah.
00:45:44 You also have the Navajo Nation Higher Education office.
00:45:49 You get a housing.
00:45:53 Free housing.
00:45:55 In fact, part of when the Navajo Nation was created.
00:46:00 They they gave.
00:46:02 Acres upon acres upon acres to each individual Indian.
00:46:07 And then they also, you know, they give you like if you want to live in like, an apartment, they give you a housing allowance.
00:46:17 Which is kind of funny that one of the names of of the agencies is called the Native American Housing Assistance and self determination Areas and Act.
00:46:28 It's like really self determination really. You're going to, you're going to sneak that in there like like.
00:46:35 This is a class of a classic example of don't feed the the animals at the zoo.
00:46:41 You know or or if you're like in some kind of National Forest, you know, don't feed, don't feed the animals.
00:46:49 Because it will become dependent and they won't be able to hunt anymore.
00:46:57 It's like churro. He doesn't bring back quite as many dead animals as he used to because he's he's gotten lazy.
00:47:06 This perfect example then.
00:47:08 Everything's ******* free.
00:47:14 Why? Why would they try?
00:47:16 Why would they try?
00:47:18 They have the Novo Housing Authority, they have the housing improvement program.
00:47:24 They get grants for repairing their houses, renovation of their house. They get Indian loan guarantees. So if they do want a loan, if, like all this free stuff isn't enough and they have to get a loan from a bank, well, banks know that these ******* aren't going to pay them back, right? Well, they don't care. They'll give you a loan anyway because the federal government will guarantee.
00:47:48 The loan.
00:47:49 So if you're a bank and an Indian wants a loan and they don't pay it back, it's fine because the federal government, you, you, white people, will pay it.
00:47:57 Back.
00:47:58 White people will collectively pay it back.
00:48:02 So it's it's it's all good.
00:48:06 You have the Native American Business Development Institute.
00:48:10 So if you if you're, you know, have some hair braiding schemed to start a business, you know, you get grants for that.
00:48:20 You get technical assistance grants to help develop your business.
00:48:25 There's the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
00:48:29 Which is.
00:48:31 You know all the social services it's it's it's never ending.
00:48:36 They have basic, you know, like welfare type programs, financial assistance for low income families with children.
00:48:45 They get free legal services, so if you get in legal trouble, they have their own tribal courts, their own tribal police. So they're like this quasi country and it's called the Navajo Nation. So they have like kind of like their own jurisdiction.
00:49:05 If you've ever had to drive through the Navajo Nation.
00:49:11 They have their own.
00:49:14 Laws. It's it's it's it is like.
00:49:16 You're going into another country, kind of.
00:49:18 Another country that.
00:49:20 Parasitically leeches off of the United States.
00:49:25 But is allowed to pretend to be its own country.
00:49:31 They got the roads paid for. It's the, you know, the Indian Reservation roads program.
00:49:37 So they don't. They don't have to worry about the construction or.
00:49:39 Maintenance of the roads.
00:49:42 They they get, they get grants for water infrastructure.
00:49:51 Waste, you know, sewers, telecommunications, electricity.
00:50:00 Yeah, I I I've told the story. I knew a girl.
00:50:04 An Indian girl who lived on the reservation and she worked just for extra money because everything was free. I asked her about, like, what? What? What? You know, what do you guys get? You know, you, you and your husband get. And she said well everything.
00:50:19 'S free except for our phone bill.
00:50:22 Because the federal government, or it's not a utility, you know, we have to pay.
00:50:26 Our own phone bill, but.
00:50:28 Everything else is free food, housing, electricity, everything.
00:50:39 So that's that's.
00:50:41 It's it's a little rich.
00:50:44 It's a little rich to hear them complain about not having enough resources.
00:50:51 Now, Gallup might not have these resources. Gallup is is not on the reservation. Gallup is part of the New Mexico jurisdiction, right? So it's it's just a city in New Mexico. So, yeah, they they might not have the resources to deal with this problem. Clearly they don't.
00:51:09 Yeah.
00:51:11 But the reservation the the thing creating the problem does have these resources.
00:51:17 But they don't really talk about that in this news report.
00:51:23 So these are some of the photos that were in the Albuquerque Journal expose, I guess.
00:51:30 There's a drunk Indian that's sleep in the snow. Like that's snow that's on him.
00:51:39 Well, that's a.
00:51:40 It's a beautiful.
00:51:42 That's such a beautiful, noble people, right?
00:51:47 And he's happy he got his garden deluxe. He got his garden deluxe. He's all ready to go for the night.
00:51:54 Well, she's got her garden deluxe. I think it's.
00:51:57 A she it's.
00:51:58 It's tough. It's tough to know. It's that's the other thing. If you never lived.
00:52:07 Close to a reservation. It can be tough to know. It can be tough to know what you're dealing.
00:52:10 With exactly.
00:52:13 So Yep.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:52:17 Gallops leaders are pressing for increases in liquor excise taxes locally and statewide to fund alcohol treatment programs. They want money to construct a much larger alcohol detox and rehabilitation center, and they are asking for local authority to close, drive up windows and to decrease serving.
00:52:37 Dollars, but with a powerful liquor lobby.
00:52:39 In Santa Fe.
Devon Stack
00:52:42 That always blew my friends minds that were from out of.
00:52:45 State.
00:52:45 That we had drive through liquor liquor stores. I don't know if they still do and in Mexico, but that was a normal thing. Tell you what, they're not so picky about your your ID when you, when you go to the drive through liquor store.
00:53:01 Many, many underage liquor purchases were were made at the the drive through liquor store when I was a teenager.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:53:10 But with the powerful liquor lobby in Santa Fe, passage of the legislation is uncertain.
00:53:16 Despite all of Gallup's efforts to end its alcohol problems, critics contend that the source of the problem is on the reservation, since 98% of the Indians placed in protective custody are not from Gallup and more than a third of them live in Arizona. They say that until the employment rate increases there.
Old Lady
00:53:20 Pretty.
00:53:22 And.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:53:36 Along with the standard of living, these measures will treat symptoms and not causes.
Devon Stack
00:53:43 Ah, yes, it's it's about employment.
00:53:47 It's about employment opportunities. Well, it's like I've often said.
00:53:51 If you gave and, the world would never stand for this.
00:53:57 If you gave white people a reservation.
00:54:00 Let's say and you gave them like a ****** part of the country. You carved out a piece in Nevada.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:54:04 That.
Devon Stack
00:54:05 Just like you know the the salt flats, like just the worst part of Nevada. Just fine, like like the kinds of places where we test atomic bombs, maybe even the place where we, we already tested atomic. Like radioactive desert. Just give it to white people. None of this. None of this ******** where we get free healthcare.
00:54:26 And free everything else just here you go.
00:54:28 Here's your land.
00:54:30 You you have your.
00:54:31 Own government it's your own jurisdiction.
00:54:35 You don't have to parasitically suck off everyone around you.
00:54:40 It's just that this is a white ethno state.
00:54:44 And star the Navajo Nation. It's the white nation.
00:54:49 You think there'd be a big problem with unemployment?
00:54:53 And all these other issues.
00:54:56 Or do you?
00:54:56 Think that it would basically be like be like white Wakanda within a a couple of decades.
00:55:03 And that everyone would be banging on the ******* door trying to get in.
00:55:08 And calling you racist for not letting them in.
00:55:13 I remember back not that long ago when people were first, like when I was popular, to talk about the white ethno state and non whites had never heard of an idea like that.
00:55:25 And you would see these Internet interactions like these Internet debates that were taking place.
00:55:32 And.
00:55:34 There was fear in their eyes.
00:55:37 Because they couldn't make a good argument against it.
00:55:41 They couldn't make a good argument against white people just leaving if they're, you know, if we're so terrible, right, if we're so awful with these racist and it's, you know, intolerable to live around us because of all of our racism, then how about we just pack up and leave?
00:55:57 We pack up and leave and we'll go to.
00:55:59 This place that.
00:56:00 We'll even let you pick.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:56:01 It.
Devon Stack
00:56:02 You know, like I said, it could be a desert waste land or a frozen tundra. Doesn't ******* matter. We'll go and we'll make it awesome.
00:56:11 And there was fear in their eyes.
00:56:14 Now, of course, it was a ridiculous idea. It would. They would never get traction. But you could tell they just the idea, scare it, terrified them.
00:56:25 It terrified them.
00:56:28 And it should.
00:56:34 Stuff like Indian reservations couldn't exist if suddenly overnight they had to be self-sustaining.
00:56:41 They'd be mass starvation.
00:56:44 Now that's an extreme example, but what do you?
00:56:46 Think would happen to everybody else.
00:56:49 You think America is bad when it's diverse? What if all the white people suddenly disappeared?
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:57:00 If Gallup's anti alcoholism legislation is passed in the state legislature, federal aid is expected to be forthcoming. Yet even with the go ahead, the new detox and rehabilitation center would not be operating until well into 1990.
00:57:18 In the first month of 198933 people were reported to have died of alcohol related causes in Gallup and McKinley County, more than one per day. At that rate, literally hundreds more will die before a single measure will have been implemented.
Speaker
00:57:19 What?
Producer Matthew Sneddon
00:57:36 And if that trend continues gallop residents may find drunk city a title difficult for their community to shake.
Indian
00:57:45 They want us to.
00:57:46 Get the hell out of gallon.
Devon Stack
00:57:51 Again, this is a normal thing. If you have to stop and gallop, you will see something similar to this.
00:57:57 They didn't have to try hard to get this footage, so then they they decide to let's get some community leaders together and talk about.
00:58:04 How do we solve this problem?
00:58:07 And it never gets the. The conversation is never actual conversation, because the one thing, the one just like when we talk about why are black ghettos so full of crime?
00:58:18 And now we can just say well.
00:58:19 Because they're black.
00:58:21 And that's what happens when black people take over a city, it becomes like an African city.
00:58:28 That's just what happens. Go figure.
00:58:30 Who would have thought?
00:58:32 Who have thought there's not, there's.
00:58:33 An entire continent that we can look at and see what's going to happen, right?
00:58:39 But just like people are unable to admit that they're unable to face that uncomfortable truth, I don't think it's that uncomfortable for me. I think it's just obvious. It's just it's what's uncomfortable is, is how uncomfortable it is for other whites.
00:58:52 Yeah.
00:58:53 Almost makes me ashamed of of being white. This this ******* **** behavior.
00:59:01 But it's the same things at play here.
00:59:04 They they can't, even though it's. It's clearly an Indian problem. It's clearly a drunken Indian problem.
00:59:11 Everyone that's involved with this problem is a drunk Indian.
00:59:17 Everyone.
00:59:19 Not not like 80% a 100% of the problem is drunk Indians.
00:59:26 And listen, listen to how they try to pretend like.
00:59:29 It's not.
News Caster
00:59:29 Conejo the statistics we've seen show that about 90% of the people who are picked up for drunkenness or treated for it here in Gallup are Native Americans, most of them from the Navajo Nation. Are there any explanation, suggestions as to why this seeming heavy incidence of?
00:59:48 Drinking among Navajos?
David Conejo
00:59:49 Neil. What? What I want to say first of all is I.
00:59:51 Think for the Navajo people, there are.
00:59:53 A great majority of them who do not even drink, we see a large percentage of neighborhood people because there's a jobless rate. There's a homeless rate and they're so visible on the streets, but in reality, I think there are many other ethnic groups who may have a drinking problem. However, they have jobs, so they're not on the streets.
01:00:15 That day and night, you don't see them as often. Also, those who need the recovery or treatment.
01:00:21 Because they have third party insurance will oftentimes go to Albuquerque, Durango or other places. And so it seems that the statistics then become skewed to indicate that Navajos have a much greater problem than other ethnic ethnic groups. But I'm not sure that I'm in agreement with that.
Devon Stack
01:00:38 You don't. You don't even believe what you're look at that look on his face. You don't even believe that.
01:00:45 You know how absurd that is.
01:00:50 Indians don't even believe that.
01:00:55 It's, you know, there's probably like the the numbers are skewed and there's probably other ethnic group, no, it's it's ******* Indians did and everyone knows it. Everyone ******* knows it.
01:01:05 When it was illegal to give them alcohol, this problem didn't exist.
01:01:12 This problem I mean and to a smaller degree that existed because there's, you know, you're going to always have someone smuggling alcohol or whatever, but it wasn't like this.
01:01:23 And that that stupefied that look on your face.
01:01:28 You don't even ******* believe it.
01:01:33 But the problem is New Mexico. Well, as we used to say, it ain't that new.
01:01:38 And the people in the ruling class in New Mexico are basically, it's Mexico. The last names are all the same last names.
01:01:50 And so it's a state-run by by Mexicans that's full of Indians and then white engineers testing weapons. You know, that's basically what it is.
01:02:02 So you can't solve the problem because you can't admit.
01:02:06 That the problem exists. You can't just say, well, yeah, it's better when we just banned Indians from drinking. Why don't we? Why don't we just do that?
01:02:14 That would fix it.
01:02:19 And now the problem is even worse, because it becomes generational.
01:02:26 You get fetal alcohol syndrome.
01:02:30 So now not only do you have this, this group of low impulse control, low IQ ill equipped to handle the temptations of of alcohol on a genetic level and unable to compete in white society, all of their their needs paid for.
01:02:49 In this.
01:02:51 Horribly failed socialist type situation where they're they're or I don't know. You could really call it socialist even. It's it's worse than that. Like, they're not even getting.
01:03:03 They don't put anything in. It's just parasitic 100%.
01:03:07 So all everything's getting paid for. They just exist to exist.
01:03:12 And then they're all on out. They're all drinking all the time. And you know both the.
01:03:18 Mother and the.
01:03:18 Father. So their kids come out ******* *******. So not only do they have the genetic baggage of their parents, they also have the fetal alcohol syndrome.
01:03:31 And so they, which is permanent, you know, like when that doesn't go away.
01:03:36 So now you've got the bad genetics and A and brain damage.
01:03:41 Permanent brain damage.
01:03:44 And then those two, you know, like a couple, you know, a a mother and a father that both have the bad genetics and the brain damage and are still drinking.
01:03:54 Have another kit like it just compounds so they start. Follow this. This white chick decides that she wants to help you know this. This drunk Indian guy and do a video on on how how can we face the problems of fetal alcohol syndrome in places like Gallup. And this is the subject of her little documentary.
Matthew Kelley, PHD
01:04:16 Gary was one of these guys that falls through the cracks. When I took him.
01:04:20 Into some of the.
01:04:22 Organizations that take care of mentally disabled people. He was too high functioning. On one level, he was too violent on another level, like he would slam doors and and get irritated. He would scare the the service providers. They didn't really want to deal with him, yet he wasn't passively mentally ********.
01:04:43 Like like like the clients are.
Veronica Scoopmire
01:04:47 I was out one day and I heard very arguing with another gentleman and all of a sudden I seen coke flying everywhere and I said, Gary, what's wrong? I said you're all dressed up today and the guy was picking a fight with him. And I said, you look just like a little Angel and you're nice, clean clothes. And he said one time I was an Angel.
01:05:06 He said. But this guy stole my daughter and all I want to do is kick his ***.
Bill Keeler
01:05:11 Kerry is an interesting.
Devon Stack
01:05:14 I guess that's like a cute, fun story. I don't. OK. So yeah. So you they have you have the the the white woman factor working against you as always in issues like this, there's always there's always that variable that we have to deal with that the white women that think it think it's all ******* fun and games for some reason.
01:05:38 So anyway, and then you get like the boomer guy who does the you know, we're all the same. We should pull, you know, he should just pull himself up by his bootstraps without recognizing the fact that now there's like a genetic issue here that's that's got the compounding.
01:05:57 Variable of of brain damage. It's not as.
01:06:00 Simple. You know you you.
01:06:02 You ******* ******. You're you're sitting there selling all this ******* Indian ********.
01:06:06 To like rich, stupid, rich white ladies to go decorate their ******* house in Santa Fe. And you're you're expecting this guy to just like, well, it's. He just needs to pull himself up.
01:06:17 By his bootstraps.
Bill Keeler
01:06:19 To person.
01:06:21 The guy or whatever he is, I don't know. He we all know Gary has a.
01:06:26 Lot of problems.
01:06:28 And sometimes I think that Garry's problems, a lot of them are self-inflicted.
01:06:34 I know his background and kind of where he came from and the the stories surrounding how he was brought up and.
01:06:45 His birth defect and and things like that. But I still think that people.
01:06:53 Are still able to kind of take care of themselves in spite of that sort of stuff.
Devon Stack
01:07:00 Now white people.
01:07:03 Are still able to take care of themselves in spite of those sort of problems. You can't apply the same standards that you apply to your people to other people out of some misguided fantasy that we're all the ******* same. This is a problem that if you want it to go away, you're going to have to take care of.
01:07:21 It cause Garry's not going to do it.
01:07:25 Garry's not going to take care of the problem. If you want the problem to go away, you're going to.
01:07:29 Have to take care of the problem.
01:07:33 And that's the truth. Whether you're talking about Gary or Tyrone.
01:07:37 Tyrone's not going to take.
01:07:39 Care of the problem either.
01:07:41 Neither is Enrique.
01:07:46 This is the kind.
01:07:47 Of problem that doesn't take care of itself.
01:07:51 It's like when I was talking about then last stream at East Saint Louis.
01:07:55 How many centuries of failure before you say oh?
01:08:00 This we got this all wrong.
01:08:03 I guess there isn't just one race, the human race.
01:08:08 Is it going to take 500 years of Indian reservations being these complete failures?
01:08:17 Before you're like, oh, they're not just like us.
01:08:30 Here's Gary with his.
01:08:32 Genius mom.
Adelaide Murphy
01:08:35 So what do you wish for your son, Gary? Where our wish that we could have a nice house and and.
01:08:49 House all together.
01:08:55 So you've had some alcohol problems in the family home.
01:09:01 Is your husband. That's what was wrong with him.
01:09:08 Did he drink every day?
01:09:10 Just not here.
01:09:27 So do do you sometimes do you drink yourself?
01:09:32 There are sometimes not. Are you worried about your grandchildren's drinking problem? Just drinking when as they get a little older?
Devon Stack
01:09:36 Yeah, sometimes it doesn't like every day.
Interviewer
01:09:50 So what happened? How did you become homeless?
Indian with a drinking problem
01:09:55 My mom.
01:09:56 Too much. My mom drink too much.
01:10:02 They don't have a they don't have a good house in the house. It's like time.
01:10:11 Stone.
01:10:15 You know or.
01:10:17 Just depend on my check on the 1st everyone's check.
01:10:22 Just depend on mine.
Adelaide Murphy
01:10:26 You get a check for what?
01:10:35 And then you get your check.
Indian with a drinking problem
01:10:47 Throws the chips and sometimes the words starting.
Interviewer
01:11:00 Haven't you been drinking?
Devon Stack
01:11:06 There's the dead eyed look right there.
01:11:11 That is the if you see that, look if you're ever in Gallup NM, and you see that look, your life is in danger.
01:11:22 I'm telling you right now, if you see that look your life.
01:11:26 Is in danger.
01:11:30 And not just in Gallup. If you see that look on an Indians face, no matter where you are, your life is in danger.
01:11:41 Is the dead eyed nothing going on behind those eyes? Look.
01:11:49 See, she's mad because she's trying to.
01:11:51 Do this documentary.
01:11:52 She puts him up in a hotel.
01:11:55 Tells him not to drink like that's going to help. And of course, what does he do? Well, he's. He's in this fancy hotel downtown. He's going to ******* go drink.
01:12:05 So she comes to interview him and and is surprised that he's.
01:12:07 *******.
01:12:09 Blasted out of his mind.
Interviewer
01:12:18 I smelled funny yesterday and they asked you not to put people downtown, told me that you were drinking.
Devon Stack
01:12:29 Instant violence.
01:12:32 I'm telling you, with that exception, I went to high school with a an Indian guy.
01:12:38 Scary ****** ****** when he drank.
01:12:41 He got that look in his ******* eye and we would get in fights. He and I don't mean like normal high school kid fights. I mean, at 1:00 we we were at a party.
01:12:52 He broke a bottle on it on the edge of a table and started stabbing someone with the broken glass.
01:13:02 That's the kind of **** that you you can expect from that look.
01:13:06 You see that look, you're in ******* trouble.
01:13:10 Like I I don't know how this hopefully this guy behind the camera is a big ******* guy, because I don't know how she hasn't been raped yet.
Interviewer
01:13:19 Have you been drinking?
Indian with a drinking problem
01:13:24 It's not their business what I do.
Interviewer
01:13:30 I have to make.
01:13:30 Sure, though, because you told me you were drinking. I got in this room, remember?
01:13:39 Just don't get the truth, Garrick.
01:13:43 What happens? What happens?
01:13:48 What happened? Sorry.
Indian with a drinking problem
01:13:57 The smoke team changed the world.
01:13:59 Start chilling.
Devon Stack
01:14:03 I'm gonna have to start killing.
01:14:09 That's what he said. He said. I don't think this movie is.
01:14:11 Going to change the world.
01:14:13 I'm going to have to start killing with that. With that, look in his face.
01:14:21 This is what I'm talking about. This is this is not this is.
01:14:24 Par for the course.
01:14:26 Nothing about this scenario was shocking to me because I grew up around it.
01:14:33 I'm going to have to start killing. That's where their mind goes when they have alcohol.
01:14:49 So this is the Navajo Nation as I've, as I said, it's pretty big.
01:14:54 Takes them a big chunk of Arizona.
01:14:57 Goes into Utah, Colorado.
01:15:00 And New Mexico.
01:15:04 I've had to drive through that whole area a couple of times.
01:15:10 I drove through it once during COVID and it was it was. It was after it was, after all, the mask mandates were have been gone, every like, literally everywhere else. But they still had mask mandates. And it was weird. They wouldn't let me. I I had to hope I wasn't going to run out of gas.
01:15:26 Because they wouldn't let me into anywhere without a ******* mask on. I didn't have a ******* mask.
01:15:34 Because they were, they were extra afraid. I think it's because of the whole, you know, the AIDS blankets or the the smallpox blanket story.
01:15:44 They thought they're doing the white man's doing it again.
01:15:48 They're they're trying to wipe us out with this COVID thing.
01:15:55 So this is another.
01:15:56 Report.
01:15:58 This is a representative of the the Navajo Nation and this happened in the 80s. He's complaining because someone in the Reagan administration started hinting that maybe.
01:16:11 Maybe it wasn't working out this Indian Reservation.
01:16:17 Situation they had this arrangement they had.
01:16:20 Then maybe it it kind of looked like a giant ******* failure, no matter how you tried to measure it.
01:16:28 And that, you know, because Reagan's whole thing, right with small government and cutting the fat and that sort of thing maybe.
01:16:37 Maybe any reservations should be on the chopping block.
01:16:42 Maybe we should dissolve all these treaties and agreements that we have because it's not helping them and it's certainly not helping us.
01:16:54 And so this led to this news report.
01:16:58 Where? That he's he's very concerned because that's his entire existence. You take that away and he he'd have to go get.
01:17:08 A real job.
01:17:11 And what's he? What's he qualified to?
01:17:13 You.
Indian Councilman
01:17:15 The whole Reagan administrations concept is that let's cut federal monies going into these agencies or to this particular group.
01:17:27 And then we'll ask the private sector to pick up those services that the federal government was extending to that group.
01:17:36 While on any Indian Reservation, not only on a naval reservation but on any Indian Reservation, we don't have the private sector development that they're talking about. And so once you cut out the federal aid to that specific reservation.
01:17:52 You really have problems and we were depending on federal government to give us the necessary funds to develop the reservation. Navajo Reservation is like any other developing country. If you don't have the money coming in here, we can't continue to develop. And because of the.
01:18:11 Budget cuts by the federal government across the nation for any minority, not only the Indians, the blacks and the Chicanos in this country.
01:18:19 It's almost like a tongue time bomb at some point.
01:18:25 The people are going to, you know, really rise up and say, you know, this isn't right.
Devon Stack
01:18:31 Threat of violence.
01:18:34 That's immediately where his head goes.
01:18:37 Well, if you cut off our money, we're going to be like a ticking time bomb, just like the blacks and the Hispanics.
01:18:47 Better not take away our Gibbs. We'll ******* chimp the **** out in a way you've never even seen before.
01:18:59 People say violence doesn't solve anything. They're not very good at.
01:19:03 And history.
01:19:07 Threats of violence seem to solve lots of things.
01:19:11 So he that's the first thing he does. He threatens violence after a bunch of ******** excuses about, well, if you take away the money, we'll have to actually provide our own stuff and we don't. We're not. We're not equipped to do.
01:19:24 That.
01:19:25 And look again. Yeah, you're you're not, you're not.
01:19:29 So you should either go back to the ******* Stone Age and preserve this culture.
01:19:34 You'll you're always going on about.
01:19:37 And live like you know, go hunt Buffalo and **** like that or whatever the **** you want to do. You've got you got a lot of land. You got a lot of land.
01:19:46 You know you've got all that land. You're telling me you can't.
01:19:49 You can't make that work.
01:19:52 Either do that.
01:19:55 Preserve your your heritage and your culture and whatever.
01:19:58 Independent of the United States.
01:20:02 Or.
01:20:05 A satellite, something. It's not possible we. So that's why it's in this impossible.
01:20:11 Problem.
01:20:14 The wet dream of assimilation isn't possible. It's.
01:20:16 Not he and.
01:20:18 He knows it, he knows it's not possible.
01:20:21 The only people who don't know what's not possible are these ******* Maga boomer types that think that, like, we're all ******* the same.
01:20:31 Oh yeah, if we if.
01:20:32 All we did is we cut off all the the money going to the Indian reservations. Then it would turn into like, this booming ******* utopia.
01:20:40 Yeah, it it would be the the IT would be the silicon Prairie.
01:20:45 Right.
01:20:48 All of a sudden you'd have like Navajo.
01:20:51 Operating system is being developed in Navajo Robots and Navajo AI, right?
01:20:57 I mean, **** they. They always like to talk about the code talkers, right? They already know how to code.
01:21:08 Obviously that's ********.
01:21:11 They would. They would either all die immediately.
01:21:17 Or they'd have to revert back.
01:21:19 To the Stone Age.
01:21:25 But they blame it on jobs. And I thought this was interesting. They start to say, well, you know, it's tough.
01:21:32 It's extra bad. It's hard for them to get jobs, listen to how many of these ******* don't even have jobs.
Narrator
01:21:38 In two of the most populous areas, where half of the Navajo population lives, unemployment is estimated at up to 85%. The problem stems largely from the fact that the government is the main employer on the reservation. Thus, when government.
01:21:42 Yeah.
01:21:53 Programs were drastically cut. So were people.
Devon Stack
01:21:58 So unemployment is 85% and the remaining 15% almost all have government jobs. Government jobs that only exist because of the free money programs.
01:22:12 Because they have to hire Indians to help it administer the organizations that they have set up to give.
01:22:20 Indians free stuff.
01:22:22 So what they're saying is, if they were to shut down the agencies that give Indians free stuff, that's the only employer.
01:22:33 And so they not only will they not have the free stuff anymore.
01:22:39 No one would have a.
01:22:40 Job.
01:22:41 Because that's the only place to work.
01:22:45 Because even after all these years.
01:22:48 Indians have not managed to create any kind of industry at all.
01:22:54 Beyond selling fried bread at the side of the road.
01:22:59 Not one company.
01:23:01 Nothing.
01:23:03 Well, it's all you know, casinos, right and this is I think before the the.
01:23:09 The explosion of Indian casinos, so I guess you could say they allow other people to run casinos on their which is what it is.
01:23:17 On their reservations.
01:23:21 But that's it.
01:23:22 I guess they they sell fireworks. That's about it.
01:23:29 So.
Narrator
01:23:33 Are you in the Police Department seeing any effects from these high rates of unemployment on the reservation?
Indian Councilman
01:23:39 There.
Navaho Spokesman
01:23:40 Rise in crime with that present unemployment rate. Yes, where people that don't have anything to do.
01:23:47 They're like, is it going to go?
01:23:50 You know, but whatever these bars bootlegging places, and they don't have any money to begin with, they stop owning, you know, personal, personal stuff, jewelry and things like this. And it just builds. The sage brush is it is a bar where it it does contribute a lot to what we're talking about here in that.
01:24:08 It is the closest bar here to the reservation.
01:24:11 And it does contribute a lot to.
01:24:12 Our problem here.
Devon Stack
01:24:16 Yeah. So they don't have jobs. The ones that do have jobs only have jobs because they're passing out the free goodies that everyone's getting.
01:24:27 And they are selling their plasma using their they. They act like they're. That's like they don't they don't have the the the Indian check they have the Indian check.
01:24:39 But they're spending it all on 12 packs of Budweiser. They're selling their plasma.
01:24:45 They're stealing ****. He acts like, oh, they're putting all their personal jewelry. OK, yeah, I'm sure. I'm sure all that belongs to them, too, right? They're they're stealing stuff.
01:24:56 They're stealing. You know? They're, they're they're they're they're mugging people.
01:25:02 The all this crime so they.
01:25:04 Can afford more alcohol?
01:25:06 You would think with all this going on, they're not even. They don't even seem to have the ability to start making their own alcohol in the reservation like you would think they'd be like this big moonshine operation, right?
01:25:19 But they don't even have.
01:25:19 The IQ to do that.
Narrator
01:25:26 Taking the offensive has seemed more urgent out here since Secretary Wyatt talked about failed socialism and the need for more Indian independence navajo's fear that the secretary's comments foreshadow termination.
Indian Councilman
01:25:39 If you look at what?
01:25:43 Secretary, what is saying on surface? And if you look at his statement, I don't, I don't think that's what he's talking about. But if you look at between the line in terms of what he's saying.
01:25:56 I think he's talking more about assimilation.
01:26:01 And gradually assimilating the Indian people, which in itself in the long run is probably a termination, I fear that because most Indian people that I know.
01:26:15 And.
01:26:16 Most neighborhoods that I know, as I stated, you know, want to come back into the reservation and they want to remain here. We have every right to be different. We have our own cultural identity. We have our own language. We have our own land.
01:26:35 It wasn't the Navajos who did all of that to themselves. It was a federal government with the Navajo tribe over 100 years ago, we gave up so much of our land. The Washington, DC, where the capital is used to be in the country. Years ago, Gallup, NM and the city that that land is on used to be the Navajo Country.
01:26:55 Years ago, in exchange for that, the federal government says, look.
01:26:59 We'll leave you a.
01:27:00 Own.
01:27:02 You build your own government will help you with your health problem. Educational problem. This is going to be your reservation and you build your own government here. You leave other folks alone out there. Let them live like the way they want to live. And that's why I believe that basically we have every right to be different.
01:27:22 We have rights to our land and which rights to our culture rights to our land rights to our.
01:27:28 Water and and that's why I think we deserve to be treated different because we were put in that situation to begin with. It wasn't really of our doing is the federal government who to to told us that.
Devon Stack
01:27:42 So this brainiac basically says they will never be able to assimilate. They're not. It's not that he sees it.
01:27:49 As a termination.
01:27:51 Which it would be if it was. It's not even possible, but that's really the only way you could make it work, right?
01:27:57 Is clergy Kalergi plan their way into the the white population? Yeah, you'd have to breed out their bad genes with the white genes, and then you'd have some mediocre.
01:28:06 You know, **** ****** that would sort of be able to maybe make it through society.
01:28:13 And you know, you do that long enough and.
01:28:16 You know, I I guess I mean that's that's he knows that that's what you and that's that's really eight that's a solution I guess.
01:28:25 Otherwise, he says, we have to have this land, but he also seems to recognize the only way they can even maintain their own land is.
01:28:34 With with all.
01:28:35 The free stuff from the federal government.
01:28:37 And so they have to maintain this level of white guilt. It will never go away. Just like with the black population, it will.
David Conejo
01:28:44 Never go away.
Devon Stack
01:28:46 They'll never be able to to let you forget it, because the second you do, you'll be asking yourself, well, why are we paying for you, exactly?
01:28:57 What are we getting out of this?
01:29:00 Because the answer is always nothing.
01:29:06 In fact.
01:29:08 I did some math.
01:29:11 And with the help of ChatGPT, who that actually came up with this number.
01:29:16 The estimate that it came up with when I asked it.
Matthew Kelley, PHD
01:29:20 To.
Devon Stack
01:29:22 Tally up all the the programs that Indians are are given for free, specifically Navajos.
01:29:31 And what was the the cost?
01:29:34 Per Navajo per year.
01:29:40 And it was about $70,000.
01:29:46 $70,000.
01:29:50 Per Navajo.
01:29:52 Per year.
01:30:00 And it's a net that's, that's all loss.
01:30:04 I've talked about how at the end of a a black person's life.
01:30:08 The math works out to where it's it's something like 1/4 of $1,000,000 or whatever, right? That they're a a net loss financially for the country, every every single black person or you know by average, right?
01:30:20 Indians are 70K a year.
01:30:26 Or these navajos.
01:30:33 So who knows?
01:30:37 Now if you want to see this was gallop.
01:30:43 They do these.
01:30:45 You know, the Gallup is the the.
01:30:50 The Center for these intertribal pow wows or whatever, right? Forget the name of it. I think they'll say here in a second.
01:31:01 But it's it's where they the all these Indian tribes meet together and they have this big festival.
01:31:08 And it used to be.
01:31:09 Kind of a big deal.
01:31:10 Yeah.
01:31:11 Attracted a lot of tourism, a lot of white people from all around the world that wanted to see what the Native Americans you know looked like and and, you know, their their culture and whatnot. It was a big opportunity for them to sell a lot of their garbage, blankets and feathers and dream catchers and.
01:31:32 You know turquoise jewelry and kachina dolls and fireworks and whatever the **** else, fry bread.
01:31:40 And.
01:31:42 It was. It was a relatively wholesome event.
01:31:47 And so I found some footage of these events prior to the.
01:31:54 Lifting.
01:31:56 Of the alcohol prohibition on Indians.
50's Narrator
01:32:02 In mid August of each year, the American Indian extends an invitation to the nation to come to gallop.
01:32:08 New Mexico for the annual intertribal Indian ceremonial. Thousands of visitors thrilled to the beat of town town.
Devon Stack
01:32:19 Also notice how none of them are like 500 lbs and full diabetes yet.
News Caster
01:32:19 To the exquisite.
50's Narrator
01:32:25 Costume the tribesmen passing in an unforgettable review of Aboriginal splendor, reliving the ancient glories of their proud race.
60's Narrator
01:32:48 Once every year, as the summer nears its end, the little travelled roads that are laid over the lonely caplock messes of Western New Mexico and cut through its broad valleys.
01:33:00 Come to life.
01:33:01 As they resound with the clatter of wagon wheels, the rhythmic thumping of pools.
01:33:06 The occasional rumble of a pickup truck.
01:33:13 For late summer is the time for the Indian ceremonials, held annually at Gallop and attended by representatives of over 30 southwestern tribes.
01:33:28 This is a festive occasion and not only for the Indians themselves. Thousands of white visitors were named to California make the trip to Gallup to be on hand for the colourful event that has seen nationwide theme.
01:33:41 Over the years.
01:33:46 On the east and the W White Man in his iron horse.
01:33:51 From the four corners of the reservation and the many pueblos Red man and covered wagons, and on horseback.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
01:34:07 The drink of choice among the many Alcoholics is the locally produced Garden Deluxe.
01:34:15 Garden deluxe.
01:34:20 Charging deluxe.
01:34:25 Guards.
News Caster
01:34:29 It is a miracle more people were not injured or killed at a gala parade.
01:34:34 New state police video tonight shows the moments of suspected drunk driver drove right into the crowd. There's new search teams Alexis Kaneski.
Alexa Skoeneski
01:34:42 Yeah, that's right. The surveillance video state police collected really shows how a pleasant evening for families took a very scary turn. You can see a happy crowd enjoying kids dancing in the parade.
01:34:53 For the opening of the Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial Centennial celebration earlier this month, the dancers jump out of the way as a speeding SUV heads towards them garden Deluxe.
01:35:05 Another view down the parade route shows a mom grabbing her daughter and jumping.
01:35:10 The way the SUV barely misses a man in a wheelchair, dash Cam shows the aftermath. Officers move in and families leave. Confused. Now, a man at the parade with his family explains how he jumped into the SUV and stopped the driver. Police arrested Jeff Irving. He ended up blowing a .24, which is three times.
01:35:31 The legal limit for driving it all started when a Gallup police officer confronted Irving about drinking in his car and harassing people at the parade. He bolted in his SUV at the station. He tried to blame police and his passengers for causing all of this.
Abe Garcia - Liquor Indian
01:35:49 How did the accident Hector?
Matthew Kelley, PHD
01:35:50 Ohh.
Abe Garcia - Liquor Indian
01:35:50 Just the first week.
Cop
01:35:55 Do you remember which way you were traveling?
Witness
01:35:56 Yeah, I want to travel downtown. That those people will start coming. Wait.
Adelaide Murphy
01:36:00 Oh my God.
Alexa Skoeneski
01:36:03 15 people were injured, including two officers. Many were left crying and scared like this little girl. A store was left damaged.
Abe Garcia - Liquor Indian
01:36:13 This vehicle was parked here from the, you know, intact broke that tire off and turned it building.
Alexa Skoeneski
01:36:20 Irving is facing more than a dozen felonies for leaving the scene and causing serious injuries, and he is also charged with DWI back to.
News Caster
01:36:29 You, Alexa, thank you. A judge agreed that Irving is a danger to society and he ruled that he should be held in jail until trial.
Interviewer
01:36:37 I heard you've been drinking, Gary.
01:36:40 True.
News Caster
01:36:47 Chilling.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
01:36:49 The garden deluxe.
Devon Stack
01:36:52 So yeah, now when they have that same event, you might get run over by a drunken Indian driving through the ******* parade. And you know, that's just the way it is now. They still ******* do it. They still ******* do it. But who wants to go to that ****, right?
01:37:12 And you would think well, with this problem, as bad as it is, Devin, like, don't you? I mean, they're clearly, clearly, they're cracking down. They got to crack down on this because this is no good for anybody. You know, like they they, they should probably start rounding these guys. ************.
01:37:31 Just drove an SUV that white people bought him right through the middle of the parade.
01:37:38 This is this is out of control, I I bet.
01:37:41 I bet they're really cracking down hard to try if they look, if you can't solve it, maybe at least we can stick them in jail, right? It's not the best solution, but it's a solution, right?
News Caster
01:37:51 State leaders are calling it unbelievable, even appalling, after a New Mexico District Attorney intentionally trashed more than 100 drunk driving cases.
Jessica Garrate
01:38:01 Score.
01:38:01 People arrested for DWI's many repeat offenders have been handed free passes from prosecution.
Newsman
01:38:09 November 2017, a traffic stop east of Gallup.
01:38:14 Lorena SOE has difficulty standing fails sobriety test blows up, .16 is arrested and charged with her third DWI, aggravated if convicted, so faced a mandatory 30 days in jail. License revocation and ignition interlock.
Public Official
01:38:19 I want.
Newsman
01:38:35 And substance abuse treatment. But instead of prosecuting SOE case, the McKinley County DA dismissed it when deputies stopped Darren Deshaney north of.
01:38:46 Show up, he had slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, an open bottle of vodka, prior DWI's and a revoked drivers license. After refusing a breathalyzer to, Shanley was arrested for aggravated DWI, third offense. Eight months later, the DA.
01:39:06 Inexplicably drop the charges. It's the same story for Rita Banali charged with her second DWI charges dismissed Derrick Watchman aggravated second. DWI dismissed Howard Joe.
01:39:23 Aggravated DWI dismissed Shannon Yazzi third DWI, dismissed the list goes on and on a news 13 investigation, finds over a three-year period, the McKinley County DA routinely dropped scores of drunk driving cases.
01:39:43 For defendants charged with everything from DWI, first offense to aggravated drunk driving, third offense, the first red flag came with the release of a mothers against drunk Driving survey, which showed a whopping 71% of McKinley.
01:40:02 And these DWI cases were being dismissed by the DA here in Gallup, more than 100 routine drunk driving cases simply weren't prosecuted.
01:40:16 It was a practice that began in 2014 by then Gallup DA Carl Gilson.
Devon Stack
01:40:25 And diversity is our strength.
01:40:31 See, all you have to do is get a DA in there. That's like, well, I'm not going to throw my ******* grandma in jail. And this this is just part of.
01:40:39 Our culture now.
01:40:42 This is part of our culture.
01:40:49 We're just going to dismiss all these, Kate. This is just what we do.
01:40:56 And look, they they.
01:40:57 In their defense, they don't even have the.
01:41:01 The available prosecutors or even judges to.
01:41:05 To make it through all these ******* cases, there's so many ******* case.
01:41:08 Yes.
Newsman
01:41:10 In which record numbers of drunk driving cases were simply discarded by prosecutors? For example, Kenneth Bitsey charged with his second DWI Open container, expired registration and no insurance. However, eleven months after Betsy was arrested, the.
01:41:29 DA dismissed the charges.
01:41:32 Giving Bitsy a free pass to avoid mandatory penalties, including jail time and ignition interlock, and a treatment program, prosecutors gave fame the gay a free ride by dismissing his 2016 drunk driving case. The gay was later arrested.
01:41:52 Three more times on DWI related charges 10 months after Karen Smith was arrested in Gallup for her third DWI, prosecutors dropped the case.
01:42:05 Two years later, Smith was arrested in Albuquerque for aggravated DWI, but Trina Graves, April 2016, DWI arrest was not prosecuted by the Gallup PDA. Six months later, Gray was charged with vehicular homicide.
01:42:24 After a passenger in her truck was killed in a DWI related crash.
Devon Stack
01:42:31 So they're they're not even prosecuting the cases.
01:42:35 It's just, it's that out of control. This is like I said, if if you go to Gallup, you're going to see some **** you're going to see some **** because nothing has changed. If anything, it's just gotten worse.
01:42:52 So you might think to yourself, but clearly I mean.
01:42:55 Obviously these guys, OK, they're letting off some of these people and that's not a good look. But I mean, obviously the guy who drove through the the middle of the parade.
01:43:08 Right. They didn't. They didn't let him off, right? That.
01:43:10 That would be insane.
01:43:12 They'd be insane if they let him.
01:43:14 Off this afternoon, the man who police say drove through a parade in Gallup two years ago will not be going to jail, his legal team confirmed. Jeff Irving received a suspended sentence. He's expected to enter and complete a recovery program. 15 people, including two Gallup police officers, were hurt.
01:43:32 And Irving drove through the intertribal Indian ceremonial parade in 2022.
01:43:39 Oh.
01:43:41 Oh, OK.
01:43:44 So.
01:43:49 So he doesn't do any jail time.
01:43:50 Either.
01:43:54 Ah.
01:43:57 Yeah, the, the, the.
01:43:58 The problem in this country is white supremacy.
01:44:01 Isn't it? Isn't that the problem?
01:44:05 Gallup is this is just this is what Gallup is now.
Newsman
01:44:11 At over 80.
01:44:12 Mph.
Cop
01:44:13 Males leaning out the back. I'm not sure what he's doing.
01:44:16 He's starting to throw stuff out at.
01:44:17 Us Metro he just threw.
01:44:19 A shovel at my unit metro.
01:44:22 Looks like the bikes going to.
01:44:23 Be coming out next.
Newsman
01:44:24 All of this is what Gallup police dodged during a chase earlier this month with two guys in a truck who even drove the wrong way on I-40 trying to get away. Investigators say Gerald John and Ray Lee gym were inside that White Dodge pickup truck.
01:44:41 Accused of brandishing a gun at a motel.
01:44:45 They took off when Gallup PD tried to stop them at the Redwood Lodge close to midnight, driving fast and on the wrong side of the main drag through gallop.
Speaker 19
01:44:50 80 miles.
Indian Councilman
01:44:57 Started learning SO and state.
Newsman
01:44:58 Police within minutes, the suspects were on I-40 with a flat front tire and a truck bed full of junk.
Cop
01:45:05 Males leaning out the back. I'm not sure what he's doing.
Jessica Garrate
01:45:08 He's starting to throw stuff out at.
Newsman
01:45:09 His metro.
01:45:10 Probably hoping to keep police off their tail, the suspects.
01:45:13 Threw out at.
01:45:14 Higher a gas canister, then bigger items.
Cop
01:45:18 Here comes the bike 33 slowing down.
Newsman
01:45:20 Those suspects even threw cinder blocks at following. Officers even threw one at a semi truck before crossing into oncoming traffic, leaving through semis.
01:45:34 State police responded as the dangerous situation kept.
01:45:37 Unfolding on the freeway.
01:45:40 The state police shotgun blast told the suspects failed to stop them just as Gallup police backed off from the chase.
Navaho Spokesman
01:45:47 Just FYI, that vehicles going on the on coming off ramp towards the 26th, no, they just 45 cent, three.
Newsman
01:45:53 The two suspects crashed head on into a semi. Both died immediately.
Devon Stack
01:46:01 Well, I guess sometimes the problem takes care of itself, right?
01:46:11 How much of our resources as a people?
01:46:15 Are just put towards this. How can you watch this or these these streams over?
01:46:24 And over again.
01:46:25 And not understand that diversity is not our strength. It's it's the poison that's unraveling us as a civilization.
01:46:33 And it's ****** because you have guys like this, right? This is this is supposed to be a feel good story, a feel it it's embarrassing.
01:46:43 This is supposed to be a feel good story about a white cop who's trying to help out all the drunks in Gallup. And it's just it's like a ******* humiliation ritual.
Cop
01:46:56 Turned OK, right?
Newsman
01:46:57 Up Jack Graham is a guardian Angel to many in Gallup as a service aide with the Police Department. His sole job is to help intoxicated people. Yeah, we received permission to ride with him when we first caught up with him. He already had four people in his van and dropped them off.
Cop
01:47:02 Yes.
01:47:05 Be careful. Be careful. I'm not.
01:47:13 Right.
01:47:16 Yeah, buddy, come on. Can you make it on your own? OK, come on.
Newsman
01:47:16 You sober up.
01:47:22 5 minutes after he left, he talks. He ran into this man just a couple minutes later, our interview was interrupted by another intoxicated person.
Cop
01:47:24 Come on.
01:47:32 Ernie.
01:47:34 OK, hop on and everybody.
Newsman
01:47:36 Graham is trying to prevent what just happened to three pedestrians were just killed in a span of three days. One man was sleeping under a semi that rolled over him. Another was hit by a train and a third person was hit by a car.
Cop
01:47:41 Let my buddy.
01:47:51 The way they stay, they playing matador and one vehicle hit him and that was it.
Newsman
01:47:58 It suspected those killed were drinking.
Cop
01:48:01 Or they'll walk right out. You know, not even know it. And people be slamming on their brakes.
Newsman
01:48:06 In 2009, nine pedestrians were killed by cars and.
01:48:10 Finley County, just too shy of the most populated county in the state, Bernalillo County by 6 tonight, Graham had safely transported 39 people to detox. It's not an easy job.
Cop
01:48:15 OK. Have a seat right there.
01:48:24 Yeah, I got hit one. I got 3 teeth taken, knocked out. I've been spit on at BC's, thrown out me.
01:48:32 Urinated on?
Newsman
01:48:33 But he says it's all worth it to keep people alive.
Cop
01:48:36 Now you're gonna go with me for the night. OK. I think helping the people you know outweighs what?
01:48:41 They do to me.
Devon Stack
01:48:43 It doesn't.
01:48:46 It doesn't.
01:48:50 And this is when we have we have to change as a people.
01:48:56 I I think I think helping these people stay alive. Why do you want them to stay alive?
01:49:04 The guy who knocked four of your teeth out, the guy who ****** on you? Like why?
01:49:07 Why do you want them to stay alive?
01:49:16 How are you even referring to them as people at this point?
01:49:26 This is suicidal.
01:49:32 This is a metaphor for what's going on, and obviously this is an extreme example, but this.
01:49:36 Kind of ********.
01:49:37 Is exactly what's causing us to die out as a people.
01:49:43 Well, I think it's all worth it.
01:49:45 It's all worth it to have my my teeth kicked in be **** on and ****** on.
01:49:51 Because they have to keep them.
01:49:53 Them brown people alive.
01:49:56 Well, it's totally worth it to have those 3 little girls stabbed to death.
01:50:02 Because I gotta keep those brown people alive.
01:50:08 No, it's totally worth it to become the rape capital of the world. We got to keep those brown people alive.
01:50:26 At some ******* point, you're gonna have to worry about keeping the white people alive.
01:50:39 So anyway, this is this is Gallup NM.
01:50:43 And when there's story after story after story after story, I could go on and on all night, you know, like it's like literally endless. Like it goes on and on and on and on and on.
01:51:05 And all and.
01:51:06 All of this comes from the the white people's inability to.
01:51:11 To admit, oh, there's there's racial differences.
01:51:18 We can't treat treat other races as if they're like us because they're not.
01:51:23 We can't give them the same free if if look, if we're hell bent on having them live around us.
01:51:29 We can't grant them the same freedoms.
01:51:34 We can't give them the same responsibilities.
01:51:40 You know, and another way that this another example of this would be.
01:51:46 If you if you just take black.
01:51:50 Gun crime out of the the gun crime statistics in America.
01:51:54 We become like as safe as like Switzerland and **** like that.
01:51:59 OK. Well then maybe we ban black people from owning guns.
01:52:07 A sane society would do that.
01:52:12 If you're, look, if you're hell bent on having black people in your society, then there should.
01:52:16 Be different rules.
01:52:23 It's like those people that look if you're hell bent on having an exotic pet.
01:52:27 Right. If for some reason you want to have a ******* tiger instead of just like a little house cat, you can't. You can't treat it the same way you would a house cat.
01:52:38 You can't let the tiger just run loose outside.
01:52:48 I think the argument is pretty strong for just not having a tiger, but if you if you have to have a tiger for some reason.
01:52:55 You can't just act like it's like everything else.
01:53:07 Well, I feel bad for the Tigers. We like, we hurt their their ecosystem and not to take care of this tiger. Alright, great, I guess.
01:53:20 But you can't just let it run free.
01:53:22 In the neighborhood.
01:53:29 There are literally different subspecies.
01:53:34 If you defined humans the same way you define every other ******* animal on this planet, Native Americans would be a different subspecies. Black people would be a different subspecies.
01:53:51 Asians would be a different subspecies.
01:54:04 That's just the truth.
01:54:07 And that.
01:54:10 Ladies and gentlemen.
01:54:13 Is Gallup NM.
01:54:17 So hope you guys learned something, especially if you ever plan on going through Gallup.
01:54:22 You see that dead eyed stare. Your life is in danger.
01:54:28 Good chance you will see that dead eyed stare, by the way.
01:54:32 It's a very good possibility that dead eyed Stair will will appear if you like. I said, even if.
01:54:37 You're just stopping for gas.
01:54:39 And that's all you should do. Don't go to the Denny's. Don't even go to the jack-in-the-box. Drive through.
01:54:47 You're playing with fire.
01:54:49 Just just get.
01:54:50 The ******* gas. And get the **** out of there.
01:54:57 And have your head on a swivel.
01:55:01 The entire time beginning several miles before you get to Gallup, and until you're well, well beyond Gallup.
01:55:14 You got ******* these the all these Indians are driving cars, you know. It's it's.
01:55:20 They're not just riding horses and passing out the side of the road anymore. They're driving ******* cars into families and killing them off.
01:55:27 On a fairly regular basis.
01:55:31 Anyway, let's take a look at Hyper chats here.
01:55:36 From the hyper chads.
01:55:39 There may or may not be an issue with the.
01:55:42 The Rumble rants plugin stopped working today, so I activated uh, something that is supposed to keep all of the history of the Rumble chat so I can scroll through it and and and see stuff.
01:56:01 But the plugin stopped working today. I don't know why, it's because I think Rumble updated their site because some things look a little different. It's not that funked up the plug in or whatever. I wish they would just have it built in like a normal platform, but whatever. But I am looking here. It does seem to be working. It does look like it works so.
01:56:22 We'll get to those in a moment here.
01:56:25 Uh, let's take a look here.
01:56:27 I'm going to fix this thing.
Navaho Spokesman
01:56:28 Yeah.
Devon Stack
01:56:30 About wires and.
01:56:35 Removing some technology or some technology around at my desk and I've got.
01:56:42 It's a bit of a it's it's chaotic, there's wires and **** everywhere right now.
01:56:48 Alright.
01:56:51 Here we go, Troy, 87, says I had a job where I had to go from Gallup to Farmington about once a month. Well, farmington's another ******* that's got its own problems with that exception. There were Native Americans passed out on the side of the highway regardless of the time. Yeah, it's.
01:57:12 That's it that it's it's like clockwork.
01:57:16 You can always. You can always count on.
01:57:17 That.
01:57:19 You can't count on much in New Mexico, but you can count on that blue chord.
Jessica Garrate
01:57:25 Good. Really good. Good, real.
Devon Stack
01:57:30 Blue Court says good evening, Mr. Stack. Looking forward to the stream. I hope all is well. All is pretty much well.
01:57:37 I think Cheryl had an incident with a snake.
01:57:42 Because he was gone for a couple of days and then he went. I heard him yelling, but he was not at the door.
01:57:48 He was somewhere else and he was like he was like behind the house. But I could hear him. So I went out and called his name.
01:57:57 And usually he comes trotting up all nice and happy, like, oh, I get to go.
01:58:01 In the House, you know, whatever.
01:58:03 But instead he poked his head from around the corner.
01:58:07 And I was like, you know, come on, come inside. You know what? It's it's hot as ****. Get in the house.
01:58:14 And he.
01:58:15 Basically, army crawled very an army like in slow motion, very slowly to me.
01:58:22 And was like super freaked out. He was like he was in Gallup. Like, he was looking around like, like there was going to be some drunk Indian coming out of the bushes at any moment.
01:58:32 And it was really weird. And when even when he was in the house, he was, like, very suspicious of everything. And I was like, man, something ******* happened to him. I don't know what it was.
01:58:40 But.
01:58:40 Something definitely happened to him and I couldn't figure it out. I was kind of hoping like like he would get over it pretty quick, but it was whatever it was, it was pretty traumatic. And then I let him out because he was crying at the door.
01:58:54 And there was this stick.
01:58:57 That was in the like the mulch of the plants outside the door. And because we had gotten some rain, it's it developed some weird black spots on it. Like, I guess, like mildew or something like that and.
01:59:16 If you're a stupid cat.
01:59:18 It could maybe look like a snake, but he saw it and got really freaked out and started batting at it like, you know, trying to kill it and and then he ran off and hit.
01:59:29 And now he's he's never done any. That stick has been there, like, forever, and he's never done it like that before. I got rid of the stick cause like all right. Like he's apparently afraid of the stick, and he's very suspicious around the front. I think he had an incident with a, with a rattlesnake by the front door.
01:59:48 When I wasn't around or something because he's still all ******* weird.
01:59:54 For those of you old school listeners, you might remember I saved them from a rattlesnake.
02:00:00 In fact, I don't know. I mean, it's on my telegram. It would take forever to find it, but I I had. I actually killed the rattlesnake.
02:00:10 That had him cornered on top of a a beehive.
02:00:14 Last year, was it? Or maybe it was two years ago. It's been a while and time flies out here in the desert.
02:00:21 So it's not his first run in with the snake, but he I don't think he got big because if he got bit.
02:00:26 He'd be dead, you know, that's just the cat. Can't take a rattlesnake snake bite. So I don't know what happened to him. He's all ******* weird now.
02:00:35 But I'm sure you'll get over it. It's only.
02:00:37 Been a couple of days.
02:00:39 But thanks for the support there. Blue chord chosen Jawas says that last dream was definitely a good one, Truro 2024. Hopefully Truro regains his confidence in 2024.
02:00:50 Gorilla hands. Yeah, well, that Speaking of, you got Gorilla hands.
Interviewer
02:00:56 I can see.
Devon Stack
02:01:01 Gorilla Hands says good evening, Mr. Stack. I was wondering what is your opinion on our generation of men? We are the same age. Gen. X millennial. I used to have such high hopes for our generation. Now I feel that we have been beaten down and demoralized by the media and society. So many are brainwashed by mainstream media.
02:01:23 Well, I'll tell you what. I haven't had high hopes for a generation of Americans.
02:01:31 Ever.
02:01:34 It's look, it's the same programming and I know that, you know, we give boomers a lot of ****. Gen. X, for some reason, escapes a lot of it. Millennials get a lot of ****, but mostly from boomers and zoomers get a lot of **** for being faggs. Yeah, I haven't seen, like, a positive development.
02:01:54 And like I haven't seen a a generation that's been particularly based.
02:02:00 You know, like so it I I I just think it's we're we're dealing with a.
02:02:06 A. It's it gets worse before it gets better type situation.
02:02:12 And.
02:02:15 You know, there's going to be there's going to be cool people and based people in every generation, and those are the people that are going to succeed and get and and hopefully those are the people who are going to.
02:02:29 Survive the selection pressures.
02:02:32 And as a result, we'll have a better generation down the road, but I don't think it's anytime soon. I think that you're going to just have.
02:02:41 A A lot of rough times ahead.
02:02:46 So that's just the way that it is. And as far as being brainwashed by the mainstream media and yeah, I think boomers are are brainwashed by the TV, but I think Gen. XI, you know, it's half of them are probably brainwashed by TV and half of them brainwashed by like you know like.
02:03:06 Maybe maybe like the?
02:03:10 Like the Obama stuff, you know, like the the hope and change kind of stuff that's more millennial, I guess.
02:03:17 But yeah, I I don't see Gen. X as being particularly based or millennials being especially not millennials, I think they really they're they're like the Obama generation. I guess you could say. And then zoomers are like, what like 25% flag? So it's like they're, you know, just just because there's a handful of based ones doesn't mean.
02:03:38 I mean, if you're if we're just talking about groups here, right, we're just talking about groups. The majority of the groups, it doesn't, it seems to.
02:03:44 Be getting worse.
02:03:46 Not better. And I I I suppose that's what you should expect, right? I suppose that's what you should expect. And look, I feel like.
02:03:58 You know, like I've always said, you have to zoom out the graph. There's going to be ups and downs. It's not going to just be some linear straight down, the whole kind of a thing. There's going to be little peaks and valleys as the with the trend line I think is pretty clear for white people.
02:04:15 We're headed for some dark times, and that's OK that's OK because.
02:04:22 We've, we've, we've been through dark times before and we'll be through dark times again, but This is why I do what I do is, hopefully enough people will hear these kinds of yeah, or will experience this kind of deprogramming, right?
02:04:38 Like they'll they'll see the evidence that everything they were told is is complete ******* ******** about how we're all, you know, we're all the same. And and because that that's like a big one. Like that. White people. If. Look, if you want white people to have a future, this is probably one of the biggest, the toughest lesson for them to understand for some reason because.
02:04:57 I think there's some biology behind white people having this this.
02:05:03 Altruism. You know the suicidal altruism, but I think that, you know eventually, eventually.
02:05:11 We'll get through it.
02:05:14 Gorilla hands again to continue the conversation. It's very depressing to see most of my or most of I think you meant my friends live meaningless lives, no hope and obsessed with video games and sports ball. Can I get a?
02:05:30 A. There's classified cat.
02:05:35 Hey, where's that button? I need to get set up the string thing.
Speaker
02:05:39 Chuck it.
Devon Stack
02:05:40 So these are these are all my fingertips instead of a big long list. Yeah, I think I would say the same with with my friends and with probably the friends of. Again, I think it's intergenerational. I think just men in general.
02:05:54 In the West.
02:05:56 Are obsessed with fiction.
02:05:59 Sports ball or video games or?
02:06:02 Something stupid.
02:06:05 I think that generally speaking, and that might always be the case, I think that might always be the case. To some extent, it's just.
02:06:12 Not always a problem.
02:06:14 You know, it's it's not always a problem that that man, you know, you got.
02:06:19 To think of the Bell curve right?
02:06:21 Where a big chunk of the mid wit chunk.
02:06:25 Of of men.
02:06:27 Are going to be preoccupied by stupid ****. Maybe that's just the way societies have always been and and always will be. It's always the the the people at the the right side of.
02:06:38 The bell curve.
02:06:40 And well, and sometimes with the help of the people on.
02:06:43 The left side of.
02:06:43 The bell curve that they get things done.
02:06:47 And the middle kind of justice goes with.
02:06:49 The flow.
02:06:50 And right now, they're just in the flow and they don't realize that flow is going down a drain.
02:06:57 Dog Face Pony Soldier says the other night I had a chance to tune in to Churro's Insomnio stream classified cat drop by.
02:07:08 And had one of the furriest debates ever classified held an impassioned position for TMD? I don't know what that is.
02:07:20 I actually don't know that I'm trying to think what that be. Well, Truro is all about TKD. I also don't know what that is.
02:07:27 They destroy neighborhoods, they make streets unsafe, meowed classified. What is what is. What is this? What is this?
Veronica Scoopmire
02:07:39 I am not Mr. defect.
Adelaide Murphy
02:07:41 Hello.
Veronica Scoopmire
02:07:44 And I don't see why. How can the doctor say that?
02:07:46 I am.
Adelaide Murphy
02:07:48 Say.
Devon Stack
02:07:50 Oh, what is this? What is this dog faced? Pony soldier? Yeah, but the road cultures destroy societies.
02:07:58 Exclaimed Truro. The debate got heated, then physical. There was a slashing, growling, mashing of teeth. The likes I have never seen before, and just when I thought the madness was over.
02:08:12 Hope it's over soon. That's when they answered the dreaded calling of the hyper chats well.
02:08:20 Or hyper cats, I guess you said.
02:08:24 Why? Why?
Jessica Garrate
02:08:27 Why?
Devon Stack
02:08:31 Like who take who takes The Who makes the takes the time to write all that.
02:08:38 All right. Well, anyway.
02:08:41 Now that's over lamp shade the denier. The video on Shelly versus Kramer against restrictive covenants would be interesting. A brief was written by 4 Jews. Phillip Ellman, Oscar Davis, Hilbert Zarky and Stanley Silverberg. Their names were omitted so as not to give the impression that a bunch of Jewish lawyers.
02:09:01 The DOJ put this out.
02:09:03 But but as as is often the case, a bunch of Jewish lawyers did.
02:09:09 Back to the fewer says after your sperg out over the whoops the last couple weeks, I was wondering what the Italian dudes name is who stole your girl, bro? I'm gonna go beat that Diego's *** for you. Hell, stack. Yeah, that's like, that's literally never happened to anyone, ever.
02:09:30 Yeah. What's that? I'm trying to think of.
02:09:34 What's that movie from?
02:09:36 Or or that were that were.
02:09:37 The.
02:09:39 I don't know. There's a scene where the the Italian guys trying to.
02:09:43 To because Italians, especially in the 90s, movies were always trying to act like they were black.
02:09:48 And they said something like, oh, once you go black, you never go back, but once you go Italian, you know?
02:09:55 I'm Italian, you know.
02:10:00 Ohh I forget I forget movie that is that alright? I just like I'm babbling now.
02:10:05 Beach Boys Beach Boys.
02:10:13 Beach Boys looking forward to.
02:10:15 The stream well.
02:10:16 Hopefully I did not disappoint.
02:10:20 Hammer thorazine with a.
Jessica Garrate
02:10:22 Big Dono money is pie. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend itself with.
Devon Stack
02:10:29 Julie, this *** is.
02:10:47 All right, we got Hammer Thors. Oh, what did I just do? I just made the thing going.
02:10:53 Here we go. Hammer authority. I lost my cat sham of over 18 years today. Well, that's.
02:11:01 That's no good. Let's bring up a picture of Shawn here.
02:11:08 That's quite the high Rep Sean looks like a very.
02:11:12 Very like a long haired churro.
02:11:17 Scale is down.
02:11:20 Arsham.
02:11:22 Very regal looking.
02:11:25 Cat lost my cat sham of over 18 years today. I always appreciate who you have when you have them. Attached is a picture for of him, for anyone who is curious by classified. Some top shelf stuff on me. While I appreciate that, so does.
02:11:42 Classified but.
02:11:44 F's in chat for sham yeah, you know, and people, if you don't, if you don't have, if you've ever had like a pet for like a long time, you don't know. It's like it. It does suck. Like it's not gay to.
02:11:57 Be like kind of bummed out by that.
02:12:01 I've had classified a long time.
02:12:03 And you know.
02:12:07 If classified ever dies, I'm gonna kill myself.
02:12:11 No. Like you know, if I've had a cat that I had a cat named Gus Gustafer or Officer Fluffing stuff, we would sometimes refer to him. As it turned out, he was actually a woman. We just.
02:12:24 He identified as a male, or at least I thought it was a dude. So his name was Gus.
02:12:30 I had him for a long time.
02:12:34 I had to put him down because he just had.
02:12:35 So many.
02:12:36 Things like breaking on him like he went blind. There was just ******** and ******* on himself and was or herself. But.
02:12:43 And it was it was rough. It was rough, rough doing that going through that.
02:12:48 Me and my roommate at the time.
02:12:52 Like got drunk and and.
02:12:55 And I did. I I cried a little bit. I cried a little bit.
02:12:59 And.
02:13:01 Point out some of my forwarding for for Gus, so.
02:13:05 I know what you're going through and it sucks. It does suck.
02:13:10 So everyone uh hail hail sham.
02:13:14 And yeah, the best. The best way to really.
02:13:19 Get through it is, you know, get Sham 2.0.
02:13:25 Go go find a replacement. I mean, not that anything could ever replace. I'm sure you feel no one could replace Sean, but.
02:13:35 You know, there's an opening now, right? There's an opening and you can help take care of another furry little friend. But that sucks, man. And.
02:13:49 Hopefully.
02:13:51 Hopefully it's not too rough and hopefully you know. Hopefully it was had a long, happy life and I'm sure.
02:13:58 He probably did so.
02:14:01 FF's and chat for sham.
02:14:05 Pronouns based bad assays, hail stack.
02:14:09 Appreciate that man of low moral fiber says, oh Boy, Gallup addition. For those of you that have never had to live around Navajos, count your blessings. You know this is.
02:14:22 This is, I think, educational for a lot of people.
02:14:25 I think that.
02:14:27 Yeah, yeah. I've never had the.
02:14:29 Pleasure.
02:14:31 Corn popped. The bad dude says recently, heard that some of the theories in physics come from Kabbalah, usually see Jews talking about these theories. My assumption is that Jews are pushing these, which are BS to be able to come off superior.
02:14:48 And getting to positions of power.
02:14:50 Throwing that your way, if you think you could do a video on it, I can also send you a short video on concerning the the physics theories that come from Kabbalah if you need.
02:15:02 I mean, I don't know. I think that, I mean some physics theories are just, you know, they are.
02:15:07 Just theories but.
02:15:11 Some, like you got to remember, like the scientifically, when you talk about theories, I mean gravity is still technically a theory. That doesn't mean that we can't demonstrate that it's real and there's lots of things that are are still called theories that in common parlance, people would call them like laws.
02:15:32 Like people will say, like the law of gravity, right? Cause it's, you know.
02:15:36 It's pretty much you can, it's predictable and detectable and you can demonstrate it whatever. And I don't know. I don't know that that I mean, I guess maybe there, who knows. I don't know what theories you're you're talking about specifically, but a lot of times these don't. These theories don't stick around long if they.
02:15:55 They don't hold up. You know, if they can't be, if they if there's a problem with them.
02:16:04 Jiving with our observations, they usually go away, so if anything, I almost feel like there might be Jews trying to trying to make the like Kabbalah sound real by saying look, it's it. It mirrors the laws of physics. You know, I I feel like that's probably more likely than than Jews trying to.
02:16:23 Insert Kabbalah into science, but who knows, who knows?
02:16:27 Man of low moral fiber says for the ******* Italians who keep spurting out, ask yourself why Western European descend the people from Germany, France, England, Holland, Belgium, etcetera. And America don't need to describe themselves as a hyphenated American. It's just you ******* Italians and Irish grow up and be.
02:16:46 And be white where you go. Advice from man of low moral fiber for the.
02:16:53 That's a good one.
02:16:54 I don't have.
02:16:54 Any OK, I went through all my my, my good ones.
02:17:01 How about for all you uh, cannoli kites out there? Or pasta? How about pasta, Paget?
02:17:09 For all your pasta fajitas out there.
02:17:12 Uh. Let's see here Bessemer 72.
02:17:28 Hi Devin. Last stream was very interesting. I like learning where things went walking and how we got into this mess. It's so obvious people do best within their own groups. Well, I think tonight.
02:17:43 Tonight definitely demonstrates that right? And by the way, that goes for both groups. That goes for for Navajos and white people. You think the Navajos are are doing great? Like obviously they're not.
02:17:55 You know, it sucks for us too, because we.
02:17:56 Have to like be around.
02:17:58 It, but if anyone like honestly it's it seems to me.
02:18:02 More devastating for them than it is for us. It sucks for us. Don't think wrong and we're putting way too many resources and money and all like it's it's it's not good, but it's it's really not good for them either. And I think they would be doing better if we were to cut them off and let them be. Let them go, let them go back to the.
02:18:22 ******* Stone Age.
02:18:24 Let them go back to the Stone Age and look. Treat it like the way the the Indian Government like you know dot India. Indian government treats that island of uncontacted people or the Brazilian government treats those you know jungle tribes do that just say **** it. You guys want it? Preserve your culture and you want your proud.
02:18:45 People and and whatever, and you have proud traditions and language. Then go do it. Put your money where your mouth is. Well, our money, I guess, right.
02:18:55 The urban quail farmer says drunk timber ******* will always be envious of the area and ability to consume alcohol. They heinous because they ain't.
02:19:04 Us.
02:19:05 Well, I, like I said, I had a I had a.
02:19:07 Friend in high.
02:19:07 School, who was Navajo?
02:19:12 And he would. It wouldn't take long. He would have. You wouldn't want to be like he was a pothead, too. And I would. That was way preferable because he would still be like a *******.
Speaker
02:19:22 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:19:23 Like he was the only one I knew that would smoke pot and then be mean, you know, like be like angry.
02:19:31 It seemed like any any and every substance.
02:19:33 That he took.
02:19:34 Made him angry, but at least with the pot it also seemed to subdue him enough like he was like * **** and he was angry and he still kind of had the dead eyes. But he was also couch locked and and wasn't stabbing people with broken bottles.
02:19:49 But the second he started drinking alcohol, it was like, yeah, party's over, you know, great. He's drinking. This is going to this is.
02:19:56 Not going to end well.
02:19:59 Uh. Let's see here.
02:20:02 Fraud says reservations are better than reparations. Yeah, I mean, to some extent, right? I mean, I guess you could say.
02:20:11 If you could create black reservations, would it be better?
02:20:18 I mean, it might be better, right? I mean.
02:20:20 You just wouldn't you?
02:20:21 Wouldn't want to live in border town.
02:20:24 Because I guess what you could say is Gallup.
02:20:27 While it started out as a White City in a white town, no one's making us live there, right? Just don't live in. I wouldn't live in Gallup. And so maybe you have, like, a similar kind of a thing, right?
02:20:38 You'd have some.
02:20:40 Border town to the the the Wakanda Reservation that had similar problems and.
02:20:47 You know, sipping on some scissors up instead of drinking the garden Deluxe. But you wouldn't have to live in that town, right? You can just move far away from that town.
02:20:58 And so, yeah, maybe I I look I my solution is still I want a reservation. I think white people should get their reservation rather than give every other every other group their own little ******* country. Just give us one.
02:21:14 Man of low moral fiber says for those who have never been to Gallup, it has a massive oil refinery within the city limits, so the entire town also smells like.
02:21:23 Gas all the time, every day, even when it's windy. It's also at 6000 plus feet of elevation, so it takes fewer beers to get drunk. They get hammered on less than 3 beers. Yeah, I forgot about that aspect of it. I used to live at 11 in Albuquerque, like 5000 feet, but I've lived at at 6000.
02:21:43 Feet before and it you, you do acclimate it well. I mean, white people do. Maybe the Indians don't you do. Acclimate it to it a little bit. I remember I had. I would have friends come up from around sea level and they'd go drinking with me and me and my my buddy.
02:22:00 At 6000 feet and.
02:22:04 They would wake up like destroyed, you know, like they'd have, like, nosebleeds. They'd be more hungover than they've ever been in their entire lives. And and the opposite was true. If I went down to the valley to go hang out with them, it was like I was Superman. I could. It was like those those Kenyan runners that you see.
02:22:24 Training at high altitude right for the in fact it's. I think it's a similar function, right? Like your body's acclimating to less oxygen. And so when you're at sea level and you have all this oxygen, it's like you have superpowers.
02:22:40 Man of low moral fiber says ohh excuse me, just.
02:22:43 Looked it up.
02:22:43 The oil refinery closed in 2020. Well, I guess, I guess it smells like something else now.
02:22:49 The urban quail farmer says the dumb ******* timber and eggs never invented the wheel, let alone alcohol distillation. Yeah, they never invented the wheel or written language. By the way. Neither did sub-Saharan Africa. They never invented the wheel or two-story buildings or a written language. So it's they're in, they're in a similar boat.
02:23:11 Man of low moral fiber says regarding the Novo bums drinking and freezing. I have a funny story. A doctor I used to work with had moved out or moved to our town which had Navajos. He bought a big house and a golf course. He came to work absolutely distraught one day because a drunk Navajo froze to death in his backyard of his mansion.
02:23:31 I was trying to gently break it to him that those types of things happen, and then another one of his doctor buddies walked by and said, yeah, they get drunk and freeze to death. We call them bum cycles. You'll probably get at least one every year. Well, and look that.
60's Narrator
02:23:45 It's.
Devon Stack
02:23:47 It's like when the mayor was talking about how everyone had become desensitized to it. That's what happens that.
02:23:52 Is the attitude.
02:23:53 And you know that was.
02:23:58 To a lesser degree, the attitude even in places like Albuquerque, it's it's anywhere where there's Indians nearby. You just come to accept the fact that there are these.
02:24:08 These people that look.
02:24:09 Like.
02:24:11 You know, mutant orc like Asians. And they get really drunk and they sometimes seem like they don't have souls. That's that. You know, that's just the way that it is.
02:24:25 Zazi Mataz Bot says in 2006, I canoed the Mississippi River, and I was warned days ahead of time to point of annoyance that I should not dock at East Saint Louis. Obviously I wasn't going to miss the opportunity to order a pizza and sleep under the arch, but people were genuinely concerned about.
02:24:46 East Saint Louis.
02:24:47 That's. Yeah, that's. That's the gallop of.
02:24:52 Of Illinois, right?
02:24:56 Man of low moral fiber says the assertion that racist junk science is absolutely absurd. I think Shawn last Sean last had the best videos and discussions about this, but he eventually got tired of discussing it at some point talking or talking to dishonest people who say things that they don't even believe is exhausting.
02:25:19 Yeah, a lot of these people don't believe it. They just they need to hide it. They need to hide this fact.
02:25:24 Because their whole worldview would unravel.
02:25:27 If.
02:25:28 If they were to come to terms with it, butcher Bird says. Hey, Devin, be question here. If you're hiking in the desert in the spring and you notice a bunch of bees near a flowering plant, how do you tell the difference between a friendly euro bee versus the ***** bees with having to experience a chimp out? Thanks for the streams.
02:25:48 Well.
02:25:50 You don't have to worry about them if they're, if they're getting.
02:25:54 Like they they they only freak out if you go to their to their hive. So if you're walking and this has happened to me, I've walked through a wash in the desert.
02:26:04 And I've seen bees coming out of like a hole in the side of the wash because they they put Africanized bees put weird or put hives in weird places.
02:26:15 And when I saw that.
02:26:18 I stopped walking and I slowly backed away and.
02:26:22 And and avoided that that part of the wash because they won't bother you if they're just getting food or, you know, if they're just buzzing around or even if they're swarming. Like if you're walking in the desert and you see a cloud of bees.
02:26:38 You actually don't have to worry about it like it's it seems really freaky and scary because like, it's loud and it's. I mean, it looks like nanobots flying, you know, killer nanobots flying around. But they that's when I'm the most gentle because the what triggers the response. The anger response is.
02:26:58 Proximity to their babies.
02:27:01 And when they're getting food, their babies are back home. And when they're in that cloud of bees, when they're swarming, they're they don't have babies anymore because they left the babies back at the old hive.
02:27:11 So you only have to worry if you see them coming out of like a tree trunk or a wall or a.
02:27:18 Discarded tire and the you know like it's.
02:27:21 Just you just.
02:27:22 Got to look for like a.
02:27:24 You just have to imagine like, where could a hive be? And luckily in like the natural desert, it's not a lot of places.
02:27:31 Because you know, it's like Cliff faces, you know, there's they'll build hives under, like, rock overhangs and things like that. But even those don't. They don't survive very well because they're open to the elements. So you they're pretty much like it's caves, maybe, like an old coyote, you know, whole or or whatever, but they're pretty limited.
02:27:52 And what they can do, but then again, like I said, I there was one coming out of the side of a wash. I don't know how big that cavity could have been, but it was big enough to have a hive because there was bees coming in and out of it. So that's what I would look for more than if there's bees on.
02:28:06 Some flowers. It's not a big deal.
02:28:12 Let's see here, Jay Ray 1981 says there will be a day when the Navajo are like, why the **** are these jeeps taking our benefits away?
02:28:21 Well, yeah. Well, that's The thing is, if if whites get replaced.
02:28:29 No one's going to have the the white guilt necessary.
02:28:32 To maintain this absurd agreement that we have.
02:28:37 With the with the Navajos, or any tribe for that matter.
02:28:42 And while I think that these other races will ally themselves with groups like the Navajos for the time being, because they have a common common enemy.
02:28:54 So Ally with them, you know, against the white man. Until the white man is no longer in power.
02:29:00 But then it'll be like, well, why are we giving you this money? Well, the white man took our life. Yeah. Why was it me?
02:29:07 You know, I don't have any white guilt.
02:29:10 So.
02:29:11 You think?
02:29:13 Very, very real possibility.
02:29:16 And it's not just look, it's not even just the navos and the Indians gotta worry. That's that goes for all of our natural. You know that that goes for all our our national parks. You know, there's a lot of there's a lot of wildlife that needs to.
02:29:27 Be.
02:29:27 Worried too. Let's see here. Men have low moral fiber. Says another thing. I want to add about the Navajos they use.
02:29:36 What is called a cradle board for their?
02:29:38 Babies. They swaddle the baby directly to a wooden board for many, many hours, even days at a time. This often makes the back of their skulls flat for life. This definitely affects their already limited cognitive potential. These cradle boards can also cause hip problems.
02:29:58 That are lifelong. It's literally child abuse and helps create even more *******, but they still do it in public. The flat back heads are visibly Dumber and more violent, and than even the other Navajos.
02:30:14 They absolutely still have drive through liquor stores in both Arizona and New Mexico. That's not as crazy as the drive through cold serve daiquiris that they have in Texas and Louisiana. Though Arizona sells are sells and serves until 2:00 AM, New Mexico sells till midnight.
02:30:34 At stores and serves until 2:00 AM at bars. Well, there you go. Now, I used to have to work yet. Uh.
02:30:44 Bars until 2:00 AM in New Mexico, and if you had an Indian walk in, you ought. And at every bouncer just you just knew. OK, at some point, probably soon I will have to throw them out.
02:30:57 And almost without exception that that came to reality.
02:31:04 Love and division.
Public Official
02:31:07 What?
Devon Stack
02:31:13 Dev and great work as usual, 2nd Thessalonians 310. If anyone will not work, he should not eat.
02:31:23 Well, like I said, I think they they should go back to the if not go back to the Stone Age, suck it up and live.
02:31:32 A simple.
02:31:35 Like Amish type, I feel like they could handle like an Amish type life, right?
02:31:40 Or maybe even?
02:31:43 Maybe the slightly more you know, like have pickup trucks and stuff like that, right?
02:31:48 I think if they were to do that, try to go back to agricultural, but that's the other problem too, is you got to remember, I don't, I don't. These people were nomadic. They weren't even like I don't think they really have mastered.
02:32:02 Growing crops and domesticating animals and stuff, a lot of people will watch old Western movies, or even look at Indian art, and they'll see Indians like riding horses and stuff. The Europeans brought the horses.
02:32:17 They didn't even have horses.
02:32:20 Or, like the Navajo blankets, right, they act as if. Ohh yeah, these Navajo blankets made it from rural or it's like this ancient thing they've been doing. Not really. They've been doing this since like the 1600s.
02:32:35 You know, it's not like some thousand year old thing they've been.
02:32:38 Doing.
02:32:39 A lot of this technology that is rudimentary as it is, that they have and they were, I mean only people really appreciate how absolutely primitive the Native Americans were when the white man showed up.
02:32:52 Absolutely. I mean, especially in North America, right, and there was a different story. You know, South of the border when you have like the, but even those those societies like the even those pyramids and stuff, a lot of those were were abandoned and a lot of those were.
02:33:11 Ruins from a previous civilization. The people that were actually inhabiting the the the North American continent were super ******* primitive. Super ******* primitive.
02:33:26 Men of low moral fiber says Wow, Gary from the Tart house is absolutely one of those babies that was put on the crater board when he turned his head. You could see how flat the back of his skull was, so a squished brain compounded with fetal alcohol syndrome, lifelong alcohol abuse, being Navajo. Absolutely insane.
02:33:46 Also having a laugh at everyone in the chat that has surprised that Navajo women simply look like men. Yeah, yeah, surprise.
02:33:55 Surprise, all these people who their their exposure to Native Americans is watching Pocahontas.
02:34:03 Yeah, real hard to tell.
02:34:06 Real ******* hard to tell the difference.
02:34:09 Especially with the obesity now like it, it's almost impossible.
02:34:14 Umm.
02:34:17 Night Measure review says it's very much like this in Hawaii, too. The Hawaiians are given their own little reservations and special Karma INA native discounts and all sorts of white tax payer help. They still have a vicious hatred of ******. Their dependents breeds resentment.
Speaker
02:34:36 And.
Devon Stack
02:34:36 Cut them all loose. Yeah, that that's The thing is. I don't know. I think they'd still resent us if, as long as they're in proximity to us, they're going to resent us, right? Because we don't give Mexicans like Mexico.
02:34:50 You know, well, I guess we have a we probably have some form of aid, but it's not like it is like any reservation and they still hate us and they still think that like somehow the white man is keeping their entire country down, right? So it it's just proximity to success, it's they they are, they quite literally hate us because they ain't us.
02:35:10 And I don't think there's any getting around.
02:35:14 And that needs to be that that needs to be factored in fact, in any equation that involves living in proximity to non whites and whites just never, never factor that in because they're delusional and in denial about that.
02:35:29 So there we go. Bessemer 72.
02:35:36 I have the first woogie of the night.
50's Narrator
02:35:45 I'm just the weekend photograph.
Jessica Garrate
02:35:47 Sure.
Devon Stack
02:35:48 Bessemer, 72, says Hi Devin. This is what kills me. We have all these rabid dog areas letting rabid dogs cross the border and the elite solution is to kill the cash cow that's propping it all up. Well, like I said, I think that their their mathematics are.
02:36:09 They intend to.
02:36:11 Drastically lower the population at some point.
02:36:15 And they they're thinking long term.
News Caster
02:36:18 Term.
Devon Stack
02:36:19 And it's much easier to have the only other group that would be competitive and put up a good fight.
02:36:27 Had their hands full with all these rabbit dogs as you.
02:36:30 As you put it.
02:36:32 So that when it comes time to pull the switch.
02:36:36 We're in no position to fight them.
02:36:40 And they don't care if they wipe out.
02:36:43 Hey, I don't know even 80% of more Earth's population. Once they have AI going.
02:36:49 Because there will be absolutely no purpose.
02:36:54 Like we'll be obsolete as far right now. They feel like they need they need worker bees.
02:37:00 And I think that once they have designed a mechanical worker bees.
02:37:06 Then that are controlled by AI that will no longer be a need.
02:37:16 It'll it'll be uh.
Producer Matthew Sneddon
02:37:18 It will be a.
Devon Stack
02:37:20 The cost with no benefit.
02:37:22 And because the way they think they will, they'll just remove that cost.
02:37:28 Man of low moral fiber says sorry for the volume of hyper chest tonight. It's an issue that hits really close to home for me once in a while and Navajo will make it through some college program and get a DUI job. They always look so out of place even out of time. They're always a detriment to their employer.
02:37:47 The Indians drunk drive at exceptionally high rates. This is compounded by the fact that they'll buy a big truck in an American city and then they'll take it to the rez so it can be repossessed or it can't be repossessed. The only payment they make is the down payment covered by some program funded by white taxpayers, all true, by the way.
02:38:07 So far.
02:38:09 I've heard the joke that blacks should begin life in jail and only get out for good behavior, and that's the kind of and that's kind of funny. But all that's kind of funny and all. But no joke, Indian driver licenses should start with an ignition interlock if we're going to get them to drive at all.
02:38:28 Seriously, again thanks to the stream growing up, we called them trogs.
02:38:35 It really means totally reliant on government or total reject of God and they really are awful sorry for the high volume of hyper chats. Here's a bigger one to make up for it. No one covers these savages. They pose a real danger to whites. Well, again, I think that a lot of people just don't have.
02:38:56 Don't live in Gallup or haven't had to drive through it and haven't lived in a a state with a high volume of of Native Americans and their their exposure to Native Americans is how they're portrayed in Hollywood movies.
02:39:12 So it's all very positive.
02:39:14 Oh, they're so wise. They're so wise and in touch with nature.
02:39:20 And in touch with Garden Deluxe.
02:39:26 I have a proposed solution, kind of like how you let a younger brother play with a controller that doesn't actually control the character.
02:39:33 They should sell beverages that are no more than 1% alcohol by volume. They'd still get a nice bars, but it might be might not be absolute savages all the ******* time. Well, I think Utah tried doing that or still might do that. Their beer is like 3% alcohol and you, or at least it was.
02:39:53 Maybe it still is and you can drink a lot of that **** and it'll get you bloated before it gets you drunk. You'll be like, where? To the point where you're, like, wanting to vomit foam before you're getting drunk. So who knows? Maybe it would work.
02:40:08 Creative Bot 72 says he is a good dude, helping the wrong people talking about the guy at the end. Yeah, but it's.
02:40:16 His hearts the right place. But it's also not because his heart should be with his people. He's he's time of the the white guy that's helping all the, you know, let's see.
02:40:30 That guy.
02:40:32 I I get it, I get it. There's something nice about what he's trying to do, but there's also something very suicidal and dark.
02:40:42 About what he's trying to.
02:40:43 Do.
02:40:45 Go real, AI says. Did you ever do a stream on Ezra Pound? Do you think he really recanted his views on the JQ at the end of his life? It seems like noticing is a one way St. a lot of people have thrown away promising careers and piles of money because they couldn't stop noticing.
02:41:04 I have not, but maybe I.
02:41:07 Maybe I will in the future and yeah you.
02:41:08 You are basically.
02:41:10 Throw it away. I mean, you can't.
02:41:14 You can't acknowledge that they they control.
02:41:16 The money system.
02:41:18 And then be surprised when your access to money is is now limited.
02:41:27 You know what I mean? It's it is a very real situation, Beach Boys.
02:41:43 Beach Boy says, did not disappoint. Well, I'm glad to hear that Prairie Dog says the problem with nuns is they get they cost so much money and destruction.
02:41:55 Elites used to rely on foreign wars to drive the economy, but now they've internalized it. How many jobs and how much fortune is entirely dependent on the maintenance of these animals.
02:42:07 Well, that's The thing is, it's it's almost impossible to calculate where our societies would be. Have we not been just subsidizing the the people who are.
02:42:21 Not just a a drain in that they are parasitically using our up our resources, but they they're like a parasite that also.
02:42:33 Unlike most, parasites are engaged in battle against the like actively active violence against the host. Like most parasites, want to keep the host alive as long as possible so they can keep parasiting from the host.
02:42:48 In in, in many of these situations, they're trying to parasite or parasitically suck from the host, while also shooting at the host and stabbing the host and ****** the hosts children.
02:43:02 Pliskin says Big AL for the Layman Knights tonight as.
02:43:07 Mormon reference there and and absolutely correct and and also it kind of makes you appreciate why the.
02:43:16 Where the the race realism was strong among the founding stock Mormons, right?
02:43:22 How they why they they had no problem looking at their religion through a racial lens that that now so not so much. Now, not so much. Which is disappointing. Men have low moral fiber. Says they were absolutely primitive and nomadic. You can live in the Flagstaff area without shelter for an entire summer. You can live in the Sedona area for.
02:43:43 The entire winter without shelter when it snows in Sedona. Sometimes, though, right? No selection pressure. There are similar pairs of cities at the top and bottom of mountains all throughout the southwest. Yeah, that's basically what.
02:43:56 You could do.
02:43:57 Is just go, you know, follow the food.
02:44:01 And yeah, he he still had to do hunting and some other stuff to stay alive, but relatively, you know, easy, easy living if if you're the apex predator ripped homeless guy says fun fact. Provo counties in Europe have lots of.
02:44:21 Straight dogs and generally low rates of homelessness, the euro, satellite countries and continents like the USA have almost no strays and **** loads of homeless people. Sad. Also, do you know much about Mormon emergency survival bunkers in the Rockies?
02:44:40 No, I mean like institutionally.
02:44:44 They have bunkers.
02:44:46 If they I believe it, that's the first I've heard of it. I know individual Members have bunkers and that's like a big thing, right? Mormons are big into prepping.
02:45:01 But I I I'm not aware of, like the church itself. I mean, I again, I wouldn't be surprised at all to find out, but I've I've never heard of them having like mega bunkers for all the members or anything like that.
02:45:14 But it makes sense. Butcher and have the money to do it, butcher burn, says Devin. It would be interesting if you could ever do a stream with Kevin McDonald, culture of critique. I know he's getting up in age also by chance. Have you?
02:45:27 Ever spoken with?
02:45:28 Him.
02:45:31 I feel like I've been on.
02:45:32 A stream with them before.
02:45:33 So.
02:45:36 But I'm.
02:45:39 I I I I can't think of if I.
02:45:44 It was so long ago if I was, it's like a blurry memory or it's like, wait, was I on a stream with him or was I just watching a stream with him? And like I was mentioned or something or like?
02:45:58 I feel like I was on a string with him at some point, but I've never like talked to him, talked to him, I've never had like.
02:46:03 Real dialogue with him. Yeah, that could be good.
02:46:08 If it could be arranged, I don't think he does much streaming these days, but that would be that.
Navaho Spokesman
02:46:14 Would be a good one.
Devon Stack
02:46:16 Good, good, green vibe says. No more guilt.
02:46:21 That Beady Eye murderer Happy Savage isn't worth compassion. I am over the rhetoric that says give these people money and keep them alive or you're a racist. Indifference to this nonsense is not evil. Evil is allowing your own race to be destroyed in the name of virtue. We are being taken advantage of. We are playing the part of suckers.
02:46:43 Steak and spank and says I live. I wait, I says. I think everyone can agree than Mexicans on average are higher tier than Blacks, Indians, et cetera, because they're at least built. They at least built primitive cities and had pretty high scientific knowledge. My mom's side of the family.
02:47:03 Came from Mexico and started an auto Body Shop and they were able to keep up with whites. Well, you gotta remember, depending on the Mexican.
02:47:12 And there could be a whole lot of Spanish jeans. You know, it really depends on because there are some Mexicans there. They basically are Navajos. You know what I mean? Like, genetically, they're basically Indians.
02:47:25 And.
02:47:26 The vast majority of Mexicans are some kind of mix right of of those kinds of genes and and Spanish genes. And then there's some Mexicans that are.
02:47:39 Or, you know, heavily European in their genetics. So it all it all depends on on your lineage there.
02:47:48 Uh. Then you continue to say my dad was found in stock. American. I hate when people discredit my political opinions because I'm, quote, Mexican. My great grandfather came here during the time of of Operation *******. If the feds didn't want him here, then I wouldn't be here. My ancestors were pioneers.
02:48:07 And can increase the doors once, I said like.
02:48:10 You could be very.
02:48:12 Very Spanish on the Mexican side.
02:48:17 That's not entirely uncommon in New Mexico, even like New Mexico, a lot of the families there that are ruling class in New Mexico, like the ones that run the state government that are that are quote UN quote Mexican are almost like they're they're like close to like 100% Spanish.
02:48:38 You know, like talk about blonde hair, blue eyed Mexicans.
02:48:43 All right, let's go to uh.
02:48:48 Rumble where I get to scroll through the entire chat to see. I guess that stupid thing didn't work.
02:48:53 Male monkey.
02:49:06 Mayor Monkey says I've binge binge watched your content since the Eli Jew stream. And you, Sir, deserve my shekels. Keep up the great work. Well, I appreciate that. And there's there's quite a lot of lot of hours to binge watch. So if you've got.
02:49:21 If you got a road trip, you gotta you gotta hear something, right? While you drive through, gallop eyes, eyes peeled, head on a swivel.
02:49:32 But I appreciate that and welcome. Welcome to the stream.
02:49:36 Now I'm going to scroll through pages of pages of chat.
02:49:41 Pages and pages of chat still scrolling, still scrolling.
02:49:47 That might be the only one. Let's see here.
02:49:51 Still scrolling.
02:49:54 Still alright, we got our one.
02:49:56 Cap 811 says what do you think about Nick Fuentes attacking the Trump campaign so openly and aggressively? Is he wasting his time? I'll catch the replay, ignore if someone else has already brought it up.
02:50:12 I mean, look, I don't know. It's odd that.
02:50:16 Everything that I was saying a couple of years ago that.
02:50:22 I that I would say that the the types of people that that follow Nick Fuentes and there's a lot of crossover, there's probably people that follow his, his show they're also in the audience and I don't mean everyone but there there's some I would say there was some squeaky wheels they would.
02:50:39 Get very upset.
02:50:40 When I would say literally everything that he's saying now.
02:50:47 But whatever, right, that's fine. In fact, it's good. I like that he has valid criticisms of Trump, and I'm actually surprised to see it. I'm surprised to see it because for the longest time I thought he was going to be trust the plan.
02:51:05 And until the day he died, it seems as if he's no longer trusting the plan. Now, look, I don't think that the, the, the thing that's going to change everything is the camp, you know, getting rid of a campaign manager is it's still Trump, right? We we already know what Trump was like.
02:51:23 Like when he runs the campaign that you like, right, where you know what happens? We already saw that movie and the sequel is not going to be any different just because the people making the movie posters get changed out. And so it's not going to fix anything to get different campaign managers or even like, a different chief of staff.
02:51:45 You know, like how much how much influence do you realistically think that you're going to have?
02:51:51 As.
02:51:52 As not just as Nick, but like as, as anyone, Trump seems to ignore the advice of.
02:52:00 Of his most loyal supporters and to kind of live in a bubble of his own making. So.
02:52:09 I I don't know that it's.
02:52:13 But it's it's useful for anything because it's he's not the guy we thought he was in 2016. He wasn't then he's not now.
02:52:21 And helping him get elected, which is essentially in a way, what despite learning a lot of people think in a way that's what makes attempting to do is is he's attempting to get him.
02:52:35 Elected through changing out the the people around him who are doing a bad job. You know, like when you have when you have campaign staff essentially saying **** white people, that's not great, you know. You know that. Oh, we'll we'll get elected anyway because.
02:52:53 Because, you know, instead of Karens, we'll have tyrones like that. You know, we were saying **** like that. It's like, what the ****? And the fact that already everyone ******* doesn't even care that he got shot in the.
02:53:04 Here I thought for sure that I mean that would you're going to skate, you're going to be able to surf on that all the way to the the ballot box and he could have, he could have. And the fact that he was that he, you know, the Convention and everything else was so unbelievably.
02:53:22 Just bad that everyone no one even cares anymore that he.
02:53:26 Shot.
02:53:28 That's that's. That's quite the accomplishment to get people to forget something like. And I get it right. We're living in this weird world now where, you know, the 24 hour news cycle is is like an 8 hour news cycle now. And and just, you know, the attention spans everything else. But like I I still thought like getting shot that's like.
02:53:47 A big deal.
02:53:48 And that gives you quite a lot of political capital that's just gone already. And really ultimately though, at the end of the day, our election is even real. And there's evidence that suggests that like that, they're not even real. So I kind of feel like we're just going to get what we get, and it's all kind of theater and.
02:54:07 You know.
02:54:09 That it is what it is. I don't. I don't think, you know. Like, I think there's there's people that legit think like, oh, Nick's a fed and he's trying to sabotage. No.
02:54:18 It's.
02:54:19 It's not, it's that complicated.
02:54:21 I don't know it's that complicated.
02:54:24 And Trump's people are bad, like they're just objectively bad. OK, let's see here. I think that's it on.
02:54:33 Rumble.
02:54:34 I'm going to just double scroll all the way to the top again. I'm pretty sure I got it all.
02:54:39 All right guys. Well, with that, I'm going to go ahead and turn in. It's been a long day for me, been up since like 5:00 AM.
02:54:47 So I've been up for like.
02:54:50 Like 20.
02:54:52 21 hours or so.
02:54:56 Uh, it's been a long one.
02:54:58 But I hope you guys all have a good rest of your week.
02:55:01 I'll be back here on Saturday.
02:55:06 Same time, same channel of course.
02:55:09 And.
02:55:11 Have something special for you guys?
02:55:14 In the mean time.
02:55:17 Let me just double check something.
02:55:19 All right, I thought one popped up on honestly in the meantime for black pill. Alright, I am of course.
Cop
02:55:29 Devon stack.
Devon Stack
02:55:32 I know something I won't tell hotel. I won't tell. I know something. I will tell you.
60's Narrator
02:55:37 What you know?
Devon Stack
02:55:40 Well, it's just that Joe is a ticklish.
50's Narrator
02:56:10 And so America became the great nation she is today.