3:25:51

INSOMNIA STREAM: CROSSFIRE EDITION.mp3

02/26/2025
Indian Numbers Lady
00:00:00 Mike Dentur, Mike.
00:00:01 I.
00:00:15 Mike denta.
00:00:17 Mike Denta, Mike Denton, Mike.
00:00:26 1421411.
00:00:35 50.
00:00:40 A country 21421411 group.
00:00:49 999.
00:00:52 19991781.
Kid Loco - Love Me Sweet
00:01:05 The.
00:01:24 I am bored to shun.
00:01:44 I.
00:02:02 My pretty baby.
00:02:15 Love is.
00:02:22 Baby.
00:02:29 I.
00:02:35 I.
00:02:55 Come home with my.
00:03:36 My name.
00:03:48 Hey, baby.
00:03:56 I.
00:04:02 I.
00:04:19 Please.
00:04:27 I.
00:04:41 Baby.
00:04:52 Friend.
00:04:53 The.
00:04:57 I.
00:05:02 I.
00:05:27 I.
00:05:31 I.
00:06:07 I.
00:06:33 Awesome.
00:06:35 What?
00:06:36 I do a feel a strange desire as men.
00:06:41 Do I feel like I'm falling?
00:06:47 I.
00:07:15 I.
00:07:18 I.
00:07:18 I.
00:07:25 And no greasy spoon.
00:07:25 Can you?
00:07:27 You want to play it?
00:07:28 My toe.
00:07:31 In your room, blowing up your balloon.
00:07:35 Playing you like a buffoon.
00:07:38 If I only knew.
00:07:42 I wouldn't have left. You fill my tank.
00:07:48 To your truck, stop and sleep in on the asphalt 18.
00:07:59 Wheeler and so forth gas. And I'm a failure. I'm pitching for.
Speaker
00:08:07 Now.
Kid Loco - Love Me Sweet
00:08:10 Buffy. You.
00:08:13 Want to up you strange.
00:08:17 Feel like I'm falling.
00:08:19 What?
00:08:27 Falling.
00:08:29 Take Me Home.
00:08:39 2.
00:08:41 The.
Russ Bowen
00:08:50 Take.
Kid Loco - Love Me Sweet
00:08:50 I.
00:08:56 I.
00:08:59 To go.
00:09:01 Take Me Home.
00:09:11 Take Me Home.
00:09:16 What a wonderful father.
00:09:21 Go.
Devon Stack
00:09:27 I.
00:09:30 I.
00:09:33 I.
00:09:51 Welcome.
00:09:52 Hello.
00:09:53 To the insomnia stream.
00:09:56 Crossfire.
00:09:57 I'm your host, of course. Devon stack.
00:10:00 Hope your week is.
00:10:03 Unfolding in a pleasant way, or at least a positive or.
00:10:09 Limited negative way.
00:10:12 Tonight thought we would.
00:10:15 Thought we'd do.
00:10:16 We haven't done a little while.
00:10:18 Take a break from all the.
00:10:21 The the well, the I I guess this is kind of history too, but.
00:10:26 You know the the go.
00:10:29 Go to go to motion.
00:10:30 Pictures moving pictures. We've had too many just still pictures, I guess.
00:10:36 And one motion picture in particular. The first motion picture. According to some. I don't know if this is definitive.
00:10:46 But the first motion picture.
00:10:49 That many recognize.
00:10:51 Tackled.
00:10:53 The difficult subject.
00:10:57 Of anti.
00:11:02 That's right, anti-Semitism.
00:11:05 And it's interesting, you would think, you know, this is produced right after World War 2, right after World War 2.
00:11:16 And you would think that, well, the, the bad guy.
00:11:23 In a anti-Semitism movie.
00:11:27 Right after World War 2, where the official narrative is right.
00:11:33 That the Americans, at least in America, are no different. Countries have their own little World War 2 narratives, but in America.
00:11:41 The narrative was.
00:11:44 Anti-Semitism was alive and well and exploding in Europe.
00:11:51 And then the Americans came to finish the.
00:11:55 The Europeans couldn't get done and kicked evil's ass and spread democracy.
00:12:04 And he would think that if that was the context.
00:12:09 Just say it's an odd choice.
00:12:11 It's.
00:12:12 An odd choice.
00:12:12 What the film makers who they decided to.
00:12:17 Point as the bad guy in the first anti-Semitism film. But you know we'll.
00:12:24 We'll have a look at that.
00:12:26 This was made, like I said, 1947, according to Turner Classic Movies, roughly 1/3.
00:12:35 And this was.
00:12:37 They said, yeah, I don't know if I believe this either, but according to Turner Classic Movies, prior to World War 2, most movies were not trying to push a social message.
00:12:48 OK, I know.
00:12:50 Maybe what they meant was quite as overtly.
00:12:54 As they did after World War 2.
00:12:57 But they said that in the decade of the 1940s.
00:13:02 1/3 they went from according to them zero.
00:13:05 To 1/3.
00:13:08 Of Hollywood films.
00:13:11 Directly.
00:13:13 Focusing on some kind of social intolerance.
00:13:20 Again, odd.
00:13:23 Odd that, you know, Americans went and fought and died.
00:13:28 I presume because they believed in this. This, you know, why would they have to worry about social intolerance?
00:13:35 The ones that that killed the devil.
00:13:38 Right. Why would they need to be brainwashed?
00:13:42 That same year, 1947, a movie we have covered in the past gentlemen's agreement.
00:13:50 You guys might remember that movie.
00:13:51 A stream.
00:13:52 It might even be called gentlemen's agreement edition.
00:13:56 Maybe that was just a.
00:13:57 Video might not have been a.
00:13:58 I forget it's it was years ago that we did it.
00:14:02 But you might remember it was the.
00:14:04 Where what I think the guy pretends to be a Jew.
00:14:09 To find out what anti semitism's like and then he's like, holy shit, it's like super anti-Semitic in up in this.
00:14:19 And there there's even like the self hating Jew. And like, I don't know it.
00:14:22 Was really kind of lame, but anyway what?
00:14:25 Rko caught wind that they were making this anti-Semitism movie.
00:14:33 And they wanted to beat them to the punch.
00:14:35 It was MGM. I'm not.
00:14:37 I think it was MGM that was making.
00:14:39 Gentlemen's agreement?
00:14:42 And so they with not a whole lot of money although I.
00:14:47 You got to think about inflation, 1947.
00:14:51 500,000.
00:14:52 Dollars doesn't sound like a lot of.
00:14:54 But that could buy you a bunch of Buicks back in 1947.
00:14:59 And they spend $500,000 in 20 days.
00:15:05 Shot their anti-Semitism film.
00:15:10 Beating gentlemen's agreement to theaters by about three months.
00:15:20 Now this film.
00:15:25 See there.
00:15:27 Dor Sherry presents.
Money Clip
00:15:29 It's.
Devon Stack
00:15:29 The head of RKO.
00:15:33 And of course, Sherry was born to a Jewish family.
00:15:39 From New Jersey.
00:15:41 Don't know for sure, but family likely immigrated to United States from Eastern Europe around the turn of the century.
00:15:50 I don't.
00:15:51 I don't know for sure, but just based on where he was located.
00:15:57 You know, and where he ended.
00:15:58 I think it's probably safe to assume that that's where his family came from, and that's the time frame.
00:16:04 Quite literally, one of the families.
00:16:08 There are last two the subjects of our last two streams warned America about in the 1920s, saying there's all these.
00:16:19 There's all these Communist Jews coming to America and we got to stop this.
00:16:21 Let me go back.
00:16:27 Movies name is Crossfire.
00:16:30 We'll get.
00:16:31 We'll revisit that in a moment.
00:16:36 It was well received, of course, obviously by very Jewish, very Eastern European Jewish, Hollywood.
00:16:45 And here's AI.
00:16:46 Think a review tense mystery drama.
00:16:50 Vigorously attacks taboo theme.
00:16:59 It was based on a novel written.
00:17:01 Richard Brooks.
00:17:05 Which we will also revisit that novel.
00:17:10 After we go over the movie.
00:17:12 Richard Brooks.
00:17:16 I don't think I have to tell you.
00:17:18 Was also a Jew who was the child of.
00:17:25 Jews that came to America around the turn of century from Russia so more Eastern European Jews.
00:17:32 Who wrote this novel?
00:17:39 Speaking of Eastern European Jews.
00:17:45 Now, Edward.
00:17:49 Dimitri.
00:17:51 I know for a fact is Ukrainian.
00:17:55 Hard of an Ukrainian immigrants.
00:17:59 Who came to America around the turn of the century?
00:18:03 They don't explicitly say that he's Jewish in many places, or at least the places that I looked, but there might be a reason for that that we will talk about.
00:18:15 After we go over the content of the film.
00:18:20 Now the movie is considered a film noir.
00:18:25 With a.
00:18:26 In fact, it's considered the only film film noir with a message.
00:18:33 Because most film noirs.
00:18:36 The genre is the message.
00:18:39 The genre of dark foreboding always giving in to your baser instincts.
00:18:49 That was that was the message.
00:18:54 Now they had to be very clever with this film because at this time the Hays code was in full effect.
00:19:03 They still the film was was banned from.
00:19:08 At least I found a reference saying that it was banned in multiple cities.
00:19:13 Don't.
00:19:13 I couldn't find a list of what those cities were.
00:19:18 Because of the subject matter.
00:19:22 And the the movie ran into some other trouble.
00:19:29 Which will again will cover.
00:19:32 After we go over the contents of the film.
00:19:35 So without further ado, let's have a little look. See how the film opens up.
00:19:42 How it teases?
00:19:44 What perhaps is is is here to come.
00:19:48 Very, very mysterious opening.
00:20:08 No.
00:20:27 I.
00:20:35 There's been a.
00:20:38 There's been a moider.
00:20:40 And so the man. There's a man who's been killed.
00:20:45 Film noir style detective with a pipe.
00:20:49 Shows up.
00:20:52 Interviews the girlfriend of the deceased and she's like, I don't know. See, we were hanging out that ball at the bar. See.
00:21:01 And my my boyfriend Samuel's.
00:21:04 He was talking to some of these these these army boys, these army boys.
00:21:10 Don't know what their what their names was.
00:21:12 We was just having drinks, you see.
00:21:17 And they find a wallet in the couch.
00:21:22 And they're like, oh, we.
00:21:22 Have found our first clue.
00:21:26 Our first.
00:21:27 I wonder who done it.
00:21:28 Perhaps we can run this ID and find out.
00:21:33 And as they're about to leave.
00:21:38 An army guy.
00:21:41 Maybe one of the army guys, that Lady.
00:21:42 Talking about.
00:21:44 What are you doing here, Sir?
00:21:48 Is this your wallet?
00:21:52 And he says no, but that is my friend's wallet.
00:21:56 We were at the bar, like the lady said over there, having drinks just like she says.
00:22:03 But then this fine gentleman who is laying dead on the floor there, he asked us up to hang out his room and have some more drinks because it's 1947 and everyone's a raging alcoholic.
00:22:15 And so he said, fine, let's do that.
00:22:19 And we went up here.
00:22:20 Had a few.
00:22:21 My other buddy got sick and had to leave and so we went to go check on him to see if he was OK. I was only gone a few few moments, I thought.
00:22:29 And I just came back up because we noticed someone left their wallet.
00:22:34 And here I see you guys here.
00:22:37 Why someone must?
00:22:38 Have murdered him while we were gone.
00:22:42 And the detective is like a likely story.
00:22:46 You're coming with us, Mr.
00:22:49 Done. Done. Done.
00:22:51 Load that body up on the Gurney.
00:22:55 Meanwhile, at the hotel.
00:22:58 Where the soldiers are staying.
00:23:01 There's a poker game underway.
00:23:05 And the MPs show up and say.
00:23:08 Is your name Mitchell?
00:23:11 And the guy says no, I'm Keeley.
00:23:15 And they said, oh, well, you know Keeley or, you know, Mitchell. And he's like, I know Mitchell.
00:23:22 And they say, well, you better. You better come with us because Mitchell's in.
00:23:26 We think he, he mighted someone you have to go downtown, talk to the coppers about the moita.
00:23:37 And so the detective.
00:23:40 Begins to interview Keeley, the pretty boy played by Robert Mitchum.
00:23:47 And Robert Mitchum's like I don't know what you're talking about, officer.
00:23:52 We're just here having drinks, having a good time.
00:23:56 You say my friend Mitchell killed someone. That's crazy.
00:24:00 Mitchell's not the kind of guy that goes around killing, not even in the military. No, no, Sir.
00:24:07 So that's that's for the real man, but he's he's a paper pusher.
00:24:12 He's not going to get no Purple Heart. No Sir.
00:24:14 He's only using purple ink.
00:24:16 He's an artist.
00:24:17 See, he doesn't have it in.
00:24:19 In fact, he's been depressed lately, so depressed.
00:24:26 I had to call up his wife and she's in town.
00:24:28 I'm supposed to go pick her.
00:24:29 From the airport.
00:24:31 Try to get him out of.
00:24:32 Slump that he's in.
00:24:35 Why would he be getting all drunk, murdering random people?
00:24:39 That's just crazy talk.
00:24:42 Detectives like.
00:24:43 I got a dead man down in the morgue.
00:24:47 I gotta know what's going on here, see?
00:24:49 And the last man to see him alive was possibly your friend, Mitchell.
00:24:56 I got this guy Montgomery in.
00:24:58 He says that him and Mitchell and Bowers.
00:25:03 Were all up hanging up, hanging out with this guy.
00:25:07 And then they left.
00:25:09 Well, turns out I find your your friends Mitchell's wallet in the couch.
00:25:14 They.
00:25:15 Never found Mitchell. This Montgomery empowers guy and he just left. And I think he went back.
00:25:22 And murdered.
00:25:23 I mean moitered that guy.
00:25:28 Achilles like.
00:25:29 This don't make no sense. No sense at all, Sir.
00:25:33 But this is his wallet.
00:25:36 I don't know what to think of all this.
00:25:40 So then Montgomery comes in.
00:25:41 The guy who had walked up to the apartment while they were investigating the moida.
00:25:47 And.
00:25:49 Montgomery is like, I don't know.
00:25:53 Mitchell's in over his head. You see, Mitchell is an.
00:25:56 He's one of these Pansy ass artists and this guy over here, this Keeley guy, he doesn't know anything about killing either.
00:26:03 He's a reporter. They work for signal corps.
00:26:06 He's one of those fucking.
00:26:08 Pansies that that didn't really see any action.
00:26:12 See I I know what it's like.
00:26:14 In fact, I know what it's like to be in your shoes.
00:26:17 A cop in another life? I was.
00:26:19 A cop in Saint Louis.
00:26:23 This Mitchell boy's in over his head.
00:26:27 I'll tell you what happened. We were at the bar, see?
00:26:31 It was us, Mitchell, on the left there, sad as always, depressed.
00:26:38 Pansy ass that he is.
00:26:40 I was drinking it up having a good time and then there was there was Bowers.
00:26:46 Man wearing the suit there to my my left and to left of him was this retard named Leroy Mang.
00:26:52 Got to eat? That guy's retarded.
00:26:55 He's fucking dumb. He's from Tennessee.
00:26:58 Hey, candy, are those people from Tennessee? They're dumb as bricks.
00:27:03 And because he's dumb as a box of rocks, he knocked a drink on this Dame over here talking to this guy at the.
00:27:10 End of the bar.
00:27:13 And I went over there, of course, like always, always cleaning up Leroy's problems.
00:27:18 I said look here, ma'am, don't you mind, Leroy?
00:27:22 A. He's a dumb motherfucker.
00:27:26 Functionally retarded.
00:27:29 So yeah, let me get this for you.
00:27:33 And I started wiping off her dress.
00:27:36 I was impressing everyone with my fancy stories.
00:27:40 Including the guy at the.
00:27:41 End.
00:27:42 I didn't notice that everyone was was growing tired of my long winded, stupid stories about nothing.
Montgomery
00:27:51 That's what you get when you get an army full of stinking civilians.
00:27:54 I've.
00:27:55 Been in the regular army.
00:27:57 But I've been out a couple of weeks, same as Floyd here and am I glad to be out.
00:28:01 I had enough of an army full of stinking civilians. I never seen anything like these guys.
00:28:06 I.
00:28:08 Well, some of them are OK.
00:28:09 That and I'll Mitch here.
00:28:10 He's OK.
00:28:11 He was one of my boys. He's very talented.
00:28:14 But most of them, they got no manners.
00:28:17 Floyd will give me my.
00:28:18 Drink.
00:28:21 And the stealing?
00:28:24 I never seen as much stealing as we had one day, one of the men complaints to me that he had swiped from him a wristwatch that his mother sent him.
00:28:25 Replay.
00:28:31 Mother said.
00:28:33 That these guys I think got no mothers.
00:28:35 They got no respect for the.
00:28:37 You can always tell a man by how he don't have respect for the service.
00:28:40 He don't respect the service.
00:28:42 He don't respect his mother.
00:28:45 That's the kind of a guy that spoilt the army for a.
00:28:47 Guy.
00:28:47 Like me, when I got in, it was a good racket. Could live.
00:28:52 But if you played it smart, you could save 1000 bucks a year out of a Sergeant pay.
Devon Stack
00:28:57 That's right.
00:28:59 So, look, I'm gonna ruin it for you.
00:29:00 Not really that big of a whodunit.
00:29:04 There's not much mystery. OK? They they they pretty much eliminate everyone but the guy on the right, The Who.
00:29:11 Guy who showed up at the.
00:29:13 As as the.
00:29:14 So I'm just gonna just.
00:29:17 I'm. I'm sorry to ruin the surprise. Spoiler.
00:29:20 You know it, it was Montgomery.
00:29:23 So Montgomery is supposed to play the role.
00:29:27 Of a personal fascist.
00:29:32 Is one of the ways they put it, and we'll go more into that later.
00:29:37 But he is. This movie is supposed to warn Americans.
00:29:43 And apparently specifically American soldiers who literally just got back just got back from the war that was fighting fascism.
00:29:55 In the 1st movie, the first anti Fascist anti-Semitism movie.
00:30:01 According to.
00:30:03 Many.
00:30:05 That Hollywood made.
00:30:08 The I mean fuck crossfire in the crosshairs.
00:30:14 Is a military serviceman.
00:30:18 A.
00:30:18 Military serviceman, who apparently has his own fascism within him that he has to deal with now or they're going to expand on that more.
00:30:32 But I just want that's important to know, especially given just what he was talking about.
00:30:38 This is kind of they're they're having to be subtle. In fact, the director said he had to rewrite and rewrite and rewrite a lot of the dialogue so that it wasn't obvious to the sensors what he was doing.
00:30:55 And so this is a.
00:30:58 Yes.
00:30:59 Through, you know, hindsight being what it is and knowing what the kind of film this is.
00:31:05 And just being I think more sophisticated than perhaps the audiences of 1947, it's easy to see that as he's complaining about.
00:31:14 The the quality.
00:31:16 Of the soldier going down, and how there's there's more crime.
00:31:22 And that when he was younger and and and, you know, before the war, they were just drafting anybody.
00:31:28 I mean, come on, it's.
00:31:30 It's a it's it's, it's conjuring up the same kinds of complaints in the minds of the audience that they might hear from people talking about immigrants.
00:31:41 Well, things used to be good.
00:31:42 I used to be able to make a good living in this country and then we brought all these fucking low class.
00:31:49 Low quality people and now there's people stealing shit and I don't even like. They must not have mothers.
00:31:54 Who's raising these fucking people?
00:31:59 Everything's gone downhill.
00:32:03 But you couldn't overtly say that at the time.
00:32:07 And so it had that he had to dress it up in some kind of weird complaint where he's complaining about the other soldiers and have the morality of the military had gone down and how things have changed and he doesn't like these changes.
00:32:29 He then looks over and notices that the man that it was just sitting next to him has apparently become so bored of what he has to say that he's gotten up and left.
00:32:42 And I will also point out, unless if you didn't notice, well, you probably didn't because they didn't show his face in the beginning.
00:32:47 Or at least I didn't show the cut of a clip of it.
00:32:50 I should clarify that is the guy who's dead on the floor in the opening sequence.
00:32:57 So the guy that who had the woman with him who got the drink spilled on her and the guy who he sat next to to complain about.
00:33:08 These new Americans, if you will.
00:33:11 He looks over and the man is gone.
00:33:15 He glances across the bar and sees that that man is now talking to the depressed GI Mitchell.
00:33:26 The one that the police are now currently looking for because his wallet was found at the crime scene.
00:33:33 Where this man talking to him at the bar was found dead.
00:33:40 Montgomery says that Mitchell left with this man and and his woman his Dame.
00:33:47 And so he embowers the guy with the suit, decided to crash the 'cause. They weren't invited to go crash the party.
00:33:54 They were having in the apartment.
00:33:59 They walked on in.
00:34:01 They saw that Mitchell was in a sad state.
00:34:03 Was super hammered, couldn't stand up straight.
00:34:08 And kind of just wandered out the door.
00:34:12 He said OK.
00:34:15 After Mitchell wandered out into the street, we were worried about him.
00:34:18 Me and Bowers told the man good night.
00:34:23 And we followed out afterwards, looking for our friend Mitchell, who had disappeared.
00:34:30 We couldn't find him.
00:34:32 And that's the story, officer.
00:34:36 That's the story, see? So I don't know what happened to Mitchell.
00:34:40 Don't know what he is now. He's just missing.
00:34:45 They keep in mind even though, like, it seems unbelievably implausible, the timeline, all this is supposedly taking place in one night.
00:34:54 So that he still, I guess, still kind of drunk from being at the bar.
00:35:00 And they just found the body. And there, apparently, I don't know, maybe murder investigations were really fast.
00:35:10 In 1947.
00:35:12 And so he says this.
00:35:14 Sorry, that's that's all I know. That's all I know.
Montgomery
00:35:19 Did you have some sort of an argument with Samuels?
00:35:24 What was there to argue back? Liquor was good.
00:35:27 Was OK.
00:35:28 You never met him before.
00:35:31 No, I told.
00:35:31 I just met him in the bar.
00:35:33 I never even seen him before.
00:35:35 Sure.
00:35:36 Well, sure, I'm sure, of course.
00:35:40 Seen a lot of guys like.
00:35:42 Like what?
00:35:43 Oh, you know this.
00:35:45 Guys that played it safe during the war.
00:35:50 Keeping themselves in cities get swell.
00:35:53 Swell.
00:35:54 You know the kind.
00:35:56 I'm not sure that I do, it's what kind?
00:35:59 You know, some of them are named Samuels.
00:36:03 Some of them get funnier names.
Devon Stack
00:36:06 Funnier names. You mean the end with Berg and Steen and such?
00:36:10 Now this is another.
00:36:11 Thing that this movie attempts to do.
00:36:14 Because it really was.
00:36:17 An oddity that one of these, especially Eastern European Jewish immigrant types.
00:36:25 Two, if they were in this war, that.
00:36:29 One could argue was.
00:36:31 Them that they weren't exactly on the front lines.
00:36:36 And they often weren't even in the war.
00:36:39 Fact the funny.
00:36:42 Funny thing about this the author.
00:36:45 Of that novel, which again, we'll get to later that this movie's based on who was himself a Jew.
00:36:52 He was in the Marines.
00:36:55 But he was in Signal Corps, which was not, was not fighting.
00:37:01 Fact many, many of the Hollywood Jews were in Signal corps.
00:37:06 And that included making propaganda back at home, running radios for communications back at home.
00:37:16 There was also, you know, signal core people running communications elsewhere. But it was, you know, you were maybe a reporter.
00:37:24 Weren't.
00:37:25 On the front lines, fighting any battles.
00:37:29 And when you often when you hear about Hollywood Jews who had to stop making films to go fight the war effort, you find out that they were in Signal Corps or something like that. They weren't exactly Rambo.
00:37:43 And this was pretty well understood by a lot of Americans at the time. And so this is the kind of thing that they, I think, post World War 2 that they were trying to counter signal.
00:37:58 They were trying to counteract this feeling among American GIS.
00:38:05 Who many of the audience would have been that Jews.
00:38:09 Well, they weren't like they weren't like veteran veterans.
00:38:17 And so, of course, the cops like aha.
00:38:21 So.
00:38:22 You're one of them dirty bigots, I hear so much about.
00:38:28 You can go.
00:38:31 So after he dismisses The Dirty bigot Montgomery.
00:38:37 He looks over at Keeley.
00:38:41 And says what do you think of this Montgomery guy?
00:38:45 And keeley's he that's right.
00:38:47 I.
00:38:47 I don't think like like he does. Don't worry.
00:38:52 I'm not an anti Semite.
00:38:55 You know Sir.
00:38:57 No, Sir. I'm I'm way more culture than that.
00:39:01 Let's find the killer.
00:39:03 But I'm telling you, it's probably not Mitchell.
00:39:06 He's just too much of A of a liberal to have done something like that.
00:39:13 So keeley's worried.
00:39:15 He's worried that Montgomery might, might have had something to do with it.
00:39:21 And he's trying to say all these things to the.
00:39:24 That indicates that Mitchell might have been the killer by saying that he no one can find him and that that he was with a witness when he left and and Mitchell was by himself.
00:39:39 And so we got to find, we got to find Mitchell before the cops do because he's he's this.
00:39:46 This wilting flower.
00:39:50 He's this depressive.
00:39:52 He's this weak, spirited man, but we all love him.
00:39:57 But we know that, especially in his state, because he can't hold his liquor, he's probably super hammered right now.
00:40:02 Got to go scour the streets for mother's all the same night.
00:40:06 We got to find him and let him know the cops are looking for him and get him to get his story straight so he doesn't end up going and getting the chair for something he didn't do.
00:40:18 So they find him and they whisk him away into a movie theater and they sit him down and and tell him the deal. They say look.
00:40:29 You you're wanted by the by the cops.
00:40:32 That guy you met at the bar and you went to his apartment, someone killed him.
00:40:37 And now they're trying to pin it on you and especially Montgomery, that bigot, you know, that, that meatheaded bigot that nobody likes, that always goes on about how he fucking hates.
00:40:49 The Jews.
00:40:51 And Mitchell's like. Well, fuck, man, I didn't.
00:40:53 Didn't kill nobody.
00:40:55 I didn't kill anybody.
00:40:57 I swear it all I did was I went to some bar.
00:41:03 And got kind of hammered and met some chick.
00:41:10 Weird situation.
00:41:15 Meanwhile.
Montgomery
00:41:24 My girl is worried about you.
00:41:26 We were talking about you.
Devon Stack
00:41:26 And that meanwhile.
00:41:27 So this not meanwhile sorry I might might not screwed me up there.
00:41:34 So he's like.
00:41:34 That that I was at the bar and this nice man.
00:41:38 Spilled the, you know? Got the his girlfriend left 'cause. She had drinks spilled on her and I left because I just wasn't wanting to listen to those stories. And he came in and he had these wise words for me. By the way, the Nice man, obviously, you know.
00:41:52 Yet is a Jew.
00:41:54 The guy who got murdered then began the movie is a Jew.
00:41:56 So the the Jew comes over because he's he's all he's. He can, he's like.
00:42:04 He notices this troubled GI.
00:42:08 This troubled GI and he's got the 1000 yard stare and he's like, you know, I gotta go talk to that young man and and give him my wide Jewish accounts or wise Jewish counsel.
00:42:20 Because I I feel like if I don't, I mean, I someone's gonna have to to pull him away from the ledge.
Joseph Samuels
00:42:34 My girl is worried about.
00:42:35 We were talking about you when that kid.
00:42:38 A drink on her.
00:42:40 She.
00:42:40 You're not drinking, but you're getting drunk anyway.
00:42:43 Anybody that can do that has got a problem.
00:42:48 It's a funny thing, isn't it?
Mitchell
00:42:50 Very funny.
Joseph Samuels
00:42:53 It's worse at night, isn't it?
00:42:58 I think maybe it's suddenly not having a lot of enemies to hit.
Devon Stack
00:43:01 By the way, if it weirdly seems like he's coming on to him.
00:43:09 There might be another reason for that, which we'll get into again at the end here.
Joseph Samuels
00:43:13 It anymore.
00:43:15 Maybe it's because for four years now, we've been focusing our mind on.
00:43:20 I'm one little peanut.
00:43:22 The wind. The war. Peanut. That was all.
00:43:24 Get it over.
00:43:26 Eat that peanut.
00:43:33 Or at once, snow Peanut.
00:43:36 Now we start looking at each other again.
00:43:38 We.
00:43:38 Don't know what we're supposed to do.
00:43:40 We.
00:43:41 Don't know what's supposed to happen.
00:43:43 We're too used to fighting.
00:43:46 But we just don't know what to fight.
00:43:49 You can feel the tension in the air.
00:43:53 A whole lot of fight and hate that doesn't know where to go.
Devon Stack
00:43:57 No, it knows where to go.
00:43:59 It knows exactly where to go.
00:44:03 I know he's looking right at you, isn't he?
00:44:08 Kind of lets you inside the mind of.
00:44:11 Author a little bit right?
00:44:15 We have this urge to always be fighting, always be fighting, and after World War 2 after we defeated.
00:44:23 The enemy of world jewelry.
00:44:27 Well, we still feel like we need to fight.
00:44:32 We just haven't found the enemy.
Mitchell
00:44:37 Yet.
Devon Stack
00:44:40 Don't worry, I'm sure they'll.
00:44:43 Surely narrow it down.
00:44:47 So the the Jews girlfriend, his shiksa shows up.
00:44:52 And says, yeah, let's let's go to your apartment and and get drunk with this guy we just met for some reason.
00:45:02 And I got to go change my dress because that idiot from Tennessee poured a drink on it.
00:45:08 So I'm going to go and I'll meet you back at your apartment.
00:45:14 And then he says. All right, I went to the Jews apartment and he was super nice. And he was giving me all this good advice about how to how to get past this slump I was in.
00:45:25 But I was.
00:45:26 I was pretty.
00:45:27 I don't remember all everything.
00:45:29 And then you know, after I was there for a little while, Montgomery shows up.
00:45:34 Know the bigoted asshole Montgomery.
00:45:37 Shows up.
00:45:39 And.
00:45:41 You know he's he's having.
00:45:42 He's with Bowers and and they're they're kind of a dick about everything that's going on.
00:45:48 Don't seem to be very nice to the Jew guy, but it's hard.
00:45:53 Kind of foggy.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
00:45:55 Am I?
Mitchell
00:45:55 I'll be right back.
Montgomery
00:46:00 I just need a little.
Joseph Samuels
00:46:02 Can I get you anything?
Montgomery
00:46:02 He's all right.
00:46:03 You heard him say he's alright.
00:46:04 Have another round.
Joseph Samuels
00:46:06 I'm afraid there isn't time, Sergeant.
Montgomery
00:46:07 What kind of a brush is this?
00:46:09 What's the matter, Jew?
00:46:11 You're afraid we'll bring up what you're stinking wonderful liquor.
Devon Stack
00:46:17 Repl.
00:46:19 So as he stumbled out, Montgomery was already yelling at him and saying, what's the matter, Jew boy?
00:46:27 You're.
00:46:29 Drink all your goddamn liquor, you fucking Jew.
00:46:33 In which case the audience is supposed to put together that he flew into a rage over that and beat him to death.
00:46:42 So, so the bigot who?
00:46:45 Who is relatively friendly up until that moment.
00:46:49 Flies into a rage and and beats him to death.
00:46:53 But Mitchell's too drunk to know what's going on.
00:46:55 He just stumbles out.
00:46:56 He's an artist, by the way.
00:47:01 And he goes to a bar nearby in the same neighborhood because again, 1947, I was just getting fucking hammered.
00:47:09 All the time.
00:47:11 And he meets.
00:47:14 Well, a hooker.
00:47:16 And he talks to the hooker and his or Mitchell has no idea that his wife's waiting for him at the airport at this point.
00:47:24 Because his friend, who asked his wife to come out and see him, has not told him that his wife is coming to see him.
00:47:33 And so, you know, out of sight, out of mind, he's like, yeah, you remind me of my wife.
00:47:40 I'm a sensitive guy though, and so I'm not going.
00:47:43 I'm not going to say in some weird, crass way I'm going to be very romantic about it. At least the way the movie tries.
00:47:49 Depict it.
00:47:51 And I'm going to seduce you behind the bar and tell you how, actually.
00:47:56 Care about you as a person.
00:47:58 And we're going to dance around.
00:48:01 And make out like a little bit.
00:48:04 And then she's going to give she gave me.
00:48:08 The apartment.
00:48:10 And said she has to work.
00:48:12 She works at the bar.
00:48:13 She's like the bar hooker or I don't know how that works, but.
00:48:17 Again, I don't.
00:48:20 They made it sound like it was a normal thing, so I don't know.
00:48:22 She's like the bar hooker.
00:48:24 And again, this is the other thing too, is because of the Hayes code.
00:48:28 Everything is written super.
00:48:30 It's all innuendo and it's very subtle, but that's the you know, that's what you're supposed to get out of it.
00:48:35 Least that's what I got out of it.
00:48:38 And, she says, don't worry.
00:48:40 I'll get off work in a little bit.
00:48:42 Don't you go to my apartment now.
00:48:44 Here's the.
00:48:45 Here's the key, and as soon as I wrap things up here, I'll.
00:48:49 I'll go over there and I'll cook you a meal, which I'm sure isn't code for anything.
00:48:56 So then Mitchell says, as he's describing all this to Keeley, the things that happened to him this night while they sit in the movie theater.
00:49:03 He's like.
00:49:04 So then after I met this chick and she gave me the key to her apartment, I went to her apartment.
00:49:11 And I passed out.
00:49:11 I don't know how long I was there.
00:49:15 I just know I woke up.
00:49:17 I don't know how much time had passed.
00:49:20 There was a knock at her door.
00:49:23 And this strange man was at her door.
00:49:28 And then there's this really weird scene. This really weird scene with this really weird character.
00:49:37 That I don't know if there's a deeper meaning to it so much.
00:49:42 Maybe it's just evidence that that Simps and Cox existed in 1947.
00:49:51 And that this is perhaps how the Jewish author saw American men.
00:49:57 Maybe to some extent?
00:49:58 I mean, I don't wanna get too deep with it, but it's he's just an obscenely odd character.
00:50:04 Sure.
00:50:05 For any movie of this time period where I mean already it's it's the scenario is pretty dark for a 1947 film. You've got a hooker with some drunken GI giving you know.
00:50:19 The the key to my apartment and I'm, you know, let's face it, we're we're. I'm going to when I get off work from hooking.
00:50:26 At my.
00:50:26 Job. I'm going to come and and make you some pasta and.
00:50:32 So while he's waiting for his.
00:50:34 His Rigatoni this guy shows up out of nowhere and this bizarre.
00:50:42 Exchange happens.
Montgomery
00:50:48 How long have you been waiting?
Mitchell
00:50:49 I don't know. I just woke up.
00:50:53 I don't even know what to.
00:50:59 Key here somewhere she gave me.
Montgomery
00:51:02 I know I saw you with her at the joint.
00:51:07 For you.
00:51:09 I'm a man who's waiting for.
00:51:11 That alright.
Mitchell
00:51:12 Sure.
The Man
00:51:20 I.
00:51:28 Want some coffee?
Sergeant Peter Keeley
00:51:30 Sure.
The Man
00:51:37 I.
00:51:42 I'm her husband. I'm Jenny's husband.
00:51:49 I was a soldier. I conquered out.
00:51:58 They were wondering about this setup, aren't you?
Mitchell
00:52:01 Yeah, I guess I am.
The Man
00:52:04 I'll ask her then.
00:52:07 She was a tramp when I married.
00:52:09 I didn't know it at.
00:52:11 But I knew it before we were married.
00:52:13 That's one of the reasons I enlisted to get away from her.
00:52:16 When I couldn't wait to get out and.
00:52:18 Back.
00:52:18 Her when I did.
00:52:21 She didn't want me funny in, but I still want her. I still love her.
00:52:32 I.
00:52:36 You know what?
00:52:37 Just.
00:52:37 You. That's a lie.
Mitchell
00:52:40 I see.
The Man
00:52:41 I'm not her husband.
00:52:44 I met her the same as you did at the joint.
00:52:48 I can't keep away from her.
00:52:50 I want to marry her. She won't help me.
00:52:54 I see you believe that.
00:52:57 Well, it's a lie.
00:52:59 I don't love her and I don't want to marry her.
00:53:01 She makes good money there.
00:53:04 You didn't need money.
Mitchell
00:53:05 On you, no.
The Man
00:53:08 She makes good money sometimes.
00:53:11 Hey, you suppose I could be a soldier?
00:53:14 Maybe I could a regular army make a good rating and make some dough by.
00:53:18 Next war.
Mitchell
00:53:19 Why not?
The Man
00:53:20 I know because I don't want to.
00:53:22 I.
00:53:24 Don't want to be a soldier for.
00:53:26 And to restless.
00:53:29 I don't know what I want to do.
00:53:32 You gonna wait for her?
Mitchell
00:53:34 I don't know.
The Man
00:53:36 I'll wait for it.
00:53:38 We've had some.
00:53:39 I'm gonna take a nap.
00:53:42 Got no cigarette.
Mitchell
00:53:45 No.
Devon Stack
00:53:50 I.
00:53:52 I.
00:54:04 So it's like, I don't know is.
00:54:05 That her pimp.
00:54:06 Or.
00:54:09 Or or what?
00:54:09 It it doesn't it he comes in again towards see. I thought. OK, well, maybe it's the pimp. But then.
00:54:18 I don't.
00:54:19 Then he comes in.
00:54:21 He's just like a weirdo again.
00:54:24 So anyway, there's like.
00:54:26 Is he like some weird simpie guy that that wants to be with her again?
00:54:31 He comes back.
00:54:33 We'll.
00:54:34 Play the same way he comes back. 'cause it's.
00:54:36 Like I don't know.
00:54:37 Maybe it's the pimp, but maybe just like some fucking weirdo.
00:54:40 Maybe it is her husband. I don't know. So he doesn't know either.
00:54:44 Just kind of creeped out by the whole situation.
00:54:48 And he leaves because he doesn't want some, like weird guy hanging out there when.
00:54:55 Jenny is making him some pasta.
00:54:59 So he tells this to Keeley.
00:55:01 He's like, ah, see Keeley? I don't know.
00:55:03 Don't know what happened after.
00:55:05 Like I don't know how long I was there.
00:55:06 Don't know how long I slept there.
00:55:08 I just, you know, I I after that I walked out of the street, I wandered around for a little bit and then I came back to the hotel.
00:55:14 That's when you guys snatched me up and brought me to this theater.
00:55:18 I didn't know the guy was dead until you just told me I was just there, like a few hours ago, I think.
00:55:24 My concept of time is all fucked up 'cause I'm this.
00:55:28 Crazy drunk. Then the other guys come up and they're like, yeah, we heard Bowers.
00:55:36 Bowers is holed.
00:55:37 You know, Bowers, the guy that was with that bigot, Montgomery.
00:55:42 His little sidekick Bowers.
00:55:45 You know, they they were in the same platoon or whatever and so.
00:55:50 They're Bowers is going around asking people for money and he's saying he's going to leave town.
00:55:55 And he's acting kind of funny.
00:55:58 We should probably go down and talk to Bowers.
00:56:00 He's hiding out in some uh hotel.
00:56:07 Meanwhile, over at Bowers Hotel room.
00:56:12 The bigots there with him.
00:56:14 And saying you better not talk.
00:56:17 Because you're the only one that knows what happened the night.
00:56:21 Just say that you were drunk.
00:56:24 Say that you were drunk and we left together and the man was still alive and we left.
00:56:28 And then we'll get away with it. The cops think Mitchell did it, so we're going to get away just fine. Just fine.
00:56:37 But you see Bauer's having a crisis of conscience.
00:56:41 He's like, I don't know, man.
00:56:44 You you're kind of a bigot. I think you did a hate crime.
Montgomery
00:56:47 Time.
Floyd
00:56:48 Marty. I can't.
00:56:49 I can't say there was no argument.
00:56:51 Mitch was still up there when you went after Sam.
00:56:53 I was the cops are going.
00:56:54 To pick up Mitch and Mitch is going to.
Montgomery
00:56:55 Maybe won't say nothing.
00:56:56 Mitch was stinker.
00:56:58 He won't remember exactly.
00:57:00 Nobody knows exactly except me.
00:57:02 And you would.
Floyd
00:57:03 You have to go after the guy for crime.
00:57:05 Why did you have to start?
Montgomery
00:57:06 In, I think Jews going to tell me how to drink his stinking liquor.
Floyd
00:57:06 Nope.
Montgomery
00:57:14 It wasn't no argument.
00:57:17 I was just a quiet discussion.
00:57:20 We left right after Mitch.
00:57:23 Remember that Floyd right after Mitch?
Mitchell
00:57:26 Yeah, we was worried about him.
00:57:30 Sure.
Devon Stack
00:57:32 See the Jew told him how to drink liquor and he flew into a rage and murdered the Jew. Cause no Jew's going to tell him how to drink his stinkin liquor.
00:57:43 So he hides on the.
00:57:44 'Cause there's a knock at the door.
00:57:46 Kaylee and the boys.
00:57:49 Keeley and the boys common say what's going on here. We heard you leaving town.
00:57:52 Looking for.
00:57:53 What's going on? Your buddy Mitchell's in trouble.
00:57:57 Do you know something that you could you do say something to the cops that's going to let Mitchell out?
00:58:02 Know Mitchell didn't do nothing.
00:58:06 But Bauer just keeps his.
00:58:07 Especially because Montgomery's in the backroom.
00:58:12 So after they leave, Montgomery comes out and he's like, I don't know if I can trust you.
00:58:17 I don't know if I can trust you.
00:58:19 Don't know if you can.
00:58:19 You can hold your shit together.
00:58:20 You seem kind of wiggly.
00:58:23 Not only that, I think you're a Jew lover.
00:58:26 You're one of those dirty fucking Jew lovers, aren't you?
Montgomery
00:58:31 That's right, Floyd.
00:58:33 Nobody can pin anything at me.
Floyd
00:58:36 Look.
00:58:37 I go to Mexico.
00:58:38 Never come back.
00:58:39 I.
00:58:40 Don't want to get mixed up in this?
00:58:41 Had nothing to do with it.
00:58:43 Crime anybody?
00:58:44 You went crazy or something. Samuel didn't do anything to you.
00:58:48 You just went crazy.
Montgomery
00:58:49 I didn't do nothing samans either except afflicted like that. Not that hard.
00:58:54 Maybe like that?
Floyd
00:58:55 Stop it, Maria, stop.
00:58:56 Money. Money.
00:58:57 Stop money, money, money. Stop it.
00:58:58 You.
Devon Stack
00:59:00 You didn't have any.
Floyd
00:59:00 Nuts.
Montgomery
00:59:01 Number gets 32 this morning. I don't like juice.
00:59:04 Why am I?
00:59:05 And I don't like nobody who likes juic.
Devon Stack
00:59:10 That's right. You don't like Jews.
Montgomery
00:59:12 And.
Devon Stack
00:59:12 He doesn't like anyone who likes Jews.
00:59:16 So he uses his super beating people to death strength and beats this guy unconscious by just slapping them around a little bit.
00:59:25 Say much about whoever wrote.
00:59:27 Who was actually was a soldier didn't seem to have very high opinion of soldiers.
00:59:33 Yeah, so he knocks him out and then gets a necktie out and hangs him.
00:59:39 To.
00:59:40 Death in his apartment, so that maybe the cops will think that out of guilt.
00:59:47 It'll it'll confuse the investigation 'cause then they'll think maybe Bower's killed himself.
00:59:53 Out of guilt.
00:59:55 Or maybe it was Mitchell. Who knows.
00:59:57 It definitely wasn't Montgomery.
01:00:03 Meanwhile, back at the police station, Keeley comes to go tell the cops.
01:00:09 That he thinks Bowers might know something.
01:00:13 But because like I said, these cops investigate crimes faster than.
01:00:19 Anybody on planet Earth they already know about the they've already discovered the body somehow. This is all the same night.
01:00:27 They've already discovered Bowers hanging from the ceiling, and they've already, you know, taken care of the crime scene and everything.
01:00:35 And so Bowers is.
01:00:37 They know Bowers is dead, and if you knew Bowers knew something, you should come right to me instead of waiting like the hour that apparently it took for all this to have taken place.
01:00:49 And keeley's like ah, well, fuck man.
01:00:52 That's no good.
01:00:55 That's no good.
01:00:56 Well, I'll tell you. I talked to this Mitchell guy, see?
01:01:00 And it well, I I can tell.
01:01:02 It's not.
01:01:03 I can't give him up to you though, 'cause. I think I feel like you're gonna throw the.
01:01:07 Book.
01:01:07 At him, even though it's not him.
01:01:10 And he doesn't realize.
01:01:13 That, as he starts telling the cops what Mitchell told him about meeting the hooker.
01:01:19 The Mitchell's wife is in the room and she hears the whole sordid story about her husband, meaning some hooker in some seedy bar and seducing her and going to her apartment for spaghetti.
01:01:39 And.
01:01:39 Keeley's like. Oh well, gosh, Margaret or whatever your name.
01:01:42 I'm sorry, I didn't know you were there, but we got to help your husband out.
01:01:47 Don't you understand? Mitchell's in trouble.
01:01:51 And she's a dutiful 1940s wife, so she agrees.
01:01:56 Little infidelity here and.
01:01:57 Whatever. What's, what's, what's important now is Mitchell doesn't get hung for murder.
01:02:04 We all know he couldn't hurt a family.
01:02:08 So she talks to the police and says, you know, if he's in this movie theater like.
01:02:14 Like Keeley is saying.
01:02:17 Waiting for.
01:02:17 Let me go and talk to him first and the cops are like that sounds like a normal thing.
01:02:22 Do letting the wife of a a murder suspect.
01:02:27 Go. Who knows a lot about the investigation to go talk to her husband who's hiding out in a movie theater and bring him out.
01:02:37 So she goes into the movie theater and she finds Mitchell, her husband.
01:02:41 And tells him don't worry about all this hooker stuff.
01:02:44 Know, Keeley told me about all.
01:02:45 The hooker stuff.
01:02:47 Right now we got to find an alibi.
01:02:51 They think you're a murderer.
01:02:54 And Mitchell's like. Well, then, I guess, I guess we ought to find the hooker.
Mitchell
01:03:00 They were waiting for him at the airport.
Mary Mitchell
01:03:03 The police.
01:03:10 Did.
Mitchell
01:03:10 You see, Kelly?
01:03:14 What did he say?
Mary Mitchell
01:03:15 Told.
01:03:15 Me what had happened?
01:03:16 Where is he now?
Mitchell
01:03:18 He's in jail.
01:03:20 The other boy, Floyd, was killed.
Mary Mitchell
01:03:22 Police are waiting for us downstairs.
01:03:24 We've only got a minute.
Mitchell
01:03:27 I've got to say this first.
01:03:29 Whatever you.
01:03:31 I don't care what Keeley told you.
01:03:33 Nothing tonight that happened has anything to do with us or the way I.
01:03:36 About you, I don't know.
01:03:38 It does.
01:03:39 You've got to understand, I've been sitting here.
01:03:44 Think I have things straight now.
01:03:46 I couldn't write during this.
Mary Mitchell
01:03:47 Please, we've only got.
Mitchell
01:03:48 I was depressed and jittery. Samuels, the man I was supposed to have killed tonight.
01:03:53 He understood it.
01:03:55 I can't explain what he said.
01:03:58 Please set a guy like me now with a warm over, start hating himself.
Devon Stack
01:04:03 Oh, that's.
01:04:04 The Wise Jew I.
01:04:06 Know.
01:04:06 I don't know what it was about this wise Jew guy that but I couldn't killed him.
01:04:11 He was solving all of my mental instability in just a matter of.
01:04:16 He just walked up and and told me the secrets of the universe and I wasn't depressed anymore.
01:04:20 Said something about a peanut and I just the whole world just made sense.
01:04:24 And so I couldn't have killed him.
01:04:27 No possible way.
01:04:28 And look, it's kind of funny how he's just like, ah, don't worry about the hooker thing.
01:04:33 She's like I'm not.
01:04:37 I'm not. You see. Feminism hasn't happened yet.
01:04:39 Of course I'm not.
01:04:40 It's not a big deal.
01:04:42 Right. I'm standing by my man. That's what we do.
01:04:45 We'll work this out.
01:04:46 This is this hooker thing out.
01:04:47 Maybe we'll talk about that in the car.
01:04:51 But I'm not flying into a rage.
01:04:54 And you know, I'm saying by my man at the time of crisis.
01:05:01 So she delivers her husband to the cops, peacefully.
01:05:06 And tells the cops.
01:05:09 Hey, remember how you let me go in?
01:05:12 And and do your work for you and talk to my husband. A fugitive wanted for murder.
01:05:19 Well, you see, his alibi is that he met some hooker.
01:05:26 And he told me where the hooker lived.
01:05:30 So how about 'cause? I'm a lady and you know us. Ladies, Lady Lady, the lady.
01:05:36 About you let me go up and talk to the hooker who's a witness.
01:05:40 Who could possibly provide an alibi for my husband who's wanted for murder?
01:05:45 Why don't you let me talk to the hooker woman to woman before you come in the room and soften up a little bit. And the cops like that? Sounds like a good idea.
01:06:02 And so she goes and introduces herself to the hooker who is now home.
01:06:09 And says listen, I know you're a hooker.
01:06:14 I know what you and my husband were up to.
01:06:16 It's not a big deal.
01:06:18 By the way.
01:06:19 It's it's only 1947, for crying out loud.
01:06:22 I'm not mad. Men are in charge.
01:06:25 What happens happens? I guess I'm just a passenger in this car.
01:06:30 He's in the driver's seat.
01:06:33 That's the way it is in 1947.
01:06:37 For better or for worse.
01:06:40 But you gotta tell you gotta tell the cops that you were with my husband.
01:06:46 And she's like.
01:06:47 Why should I help out you, huh, see?
01:06:50 I'm a hooker.
01:06:51 I'm a 1947's hooker. Why should I help you?
01:06:55 You're little Little Miss Lottie da perfect over here with the husband. That that you weren't there for him when he needed you. But I was.
01:07:04 And she's like, enough of that.
01:07:07 You got to get this alibi to the cops.
01:07:10 The cop busts.
01:07:11 He's like, I don't know, you've had your lady talk time.
01:07:16 So what happened?
01:07:17 Where's the alibi now that you now that you've had enough time to concoct something.
01:07:22 With the police not in the room. What's the alibi?
Montgomery
01:07:27 Now, about Mrs. Mrs.
01:07:30 He's in pretty deep Virginia.
01:07:32 Looks like he'd killed a man. Maybe.
01:07:35 Missus Mitchell doesn't think he did, of course, but that's only natural.
Mitchell
01:07:39 Don't you?
01:07:39 I know he was here, he told me.
Mary Mitchell
01:07:41 But that doesn't matter right now. Never mind me, we've.
Miss Lewis
01:07:43 Got the whole brother.
01:07:45 Listen to that.
01:07:46 Never mind me. We've got to think of him.
01:07:50 Hull isn't that sweet.
01:07:51 Isn't that just too sweet?
01:07:55 He wasn't here with me.
01:07:57 He could have been, but he wasn't.
01:07:59 He could have come.
01:08:00 I could have cooked him something to eat and we could have talked.
01:08:04 What would have been wrong with that?
01:08:06 What's the matter with me being with her precious husband?
01:08:08 He break or something.
01:08:10 And where was she?
01:08:13 OK. Where were you when he needed you?
01:08:15 Maybe you were someplace having beautiful thoughts. Well, I wasn't.
01:08:19 I was in a stinking gin mill where all he had to do to see me was walk in, sit down at the table and buy me a drink.
01:08:25 And that's all I know about.
01:08:27 I didn't ask him if he killed anybody.
Devon Stack
01:08:30 That's right, see.
01:08:33 And so she's being difficult.
01:08:37 In the investigators.
01:08:39 Now you listen here, broad Dame. Whatever you go by.
01:08:44 This is serious business.
01:08:47 A man is dead.
01:08:47 Two men are dead. Another man's life is at stake.
01:08:52 And I got this sneaking suspicion about this anti Semite guy, but we'll get into that in a little bit later.
01:08:59 For now, you're the only one that can clear this Mitchell guys name.
Montgomery
01:09:05 We found the body of this man as Samuel's about 10:00.
01:09:08 Don't even dead. About half an hour.
01:09:11 So if Mitchell was with you between 9:00 and 10:00, he's all right.
01:09:16 What is he?
01:09:18 Tell me the truth.
Miss Lewis
01:09:22 No.
01:09:24 I gave him my.
01:09:25 I don't know. Maybe 8:30.
01:09:28 Polite. Emmitt. I felt sorry for him.
01:09:32 I was sick of the stinking.
01:09:33 I was going to ditch early and I couldn't get away.
01:09:35 I.
01:09:36 Didn't get home till one, maybe 2.
01:09:39 He wasn't here.
01:09:40 He'd been and gone, left the key, but I don't know.
01:09:44 Time, Jenny. Is that the truth? I said.
01:09:46 It's the.
01:09:47 What do you want me to do?
01:09:48 Up like a Christmas tree.
Montgomery
01:09:51 We're wasting our time, Mrs.
01:09:52 This isn't going to help your husband.
01:09:54 He was up here.
Devon Stack
01:09:58 Hey, it's crazy guy.
01:10:01 Also light up like a Christmas tree.
01:10:03 Why would? Why would?
01:10:06 What an odd thing to why would I want you?
01:10:08 To light up like a Christmas tree.
01:10:09 I don't.
01:10:10 Know how that's related to anything we're talking about here, honey, but.
01:10:15 OK, but no worries. Captain Weirdo has showed up.
01:10:21 For his, for his.
01:10:24 Input on the the whereabouts of Mitch.
01:10:27 No.
Montgomery
01:10:28 The.
01:10:29 You're talking about was up here.
01:10:30 Talked to him.
01:10:32 Thanks.
01:10:34 Who are you?
01:10:35 I'm a.
01:10:36 Why does it matter?
01:10:37 You want to know if a soldier was up there, I said.
Miss Lewis
01:10:38 This has nothing to do with.
01:10:39 You get back in there and mind your own business.
Montgomery
01:10:41 Any man you bring up here is my business.
Miss Lewis
01:10:44 That's your business to spy on me. To watch me like I belong to you because I don't see I hate you.
01:10:48 Hate your guts.
Mitchell
01:10:50 What?
01:10:51 What time was it?
Montgomery
01:10:52 He was here when I came.
01:10:54 I asked him how long he'd been waiting. He said he didn't know I should have thrown him out.
01:10:59 I started to make coffee and he left.
01:11:01 What time did you get here?
01:11:02 1230 Jim is usually here by then.
01:11:05 I'll be glad to help if I can.
01:11:07 I'll be here if you.
01:11:08 Me you will not.
Miss Lewis
01:11:09 You'll get out right now.
Montgomery
01:11:12 She hates me, all right.
01:11:13 Sure hates me.
01:11:14 I'm a DD dishonorable discharge. You know, I was in the army.
01:11:17 I'm her husband.
01:11:19 We've been separated, but I still love.
01:11:21 I.
01:11:21 Don't want a divorce?
01:11:22 Don't.
01:11:23 Know what to do.
01:11:24 We made a lot of plans.
01:11:26 They all fell through.
01:11:28 I'll be around if you want me.
Devon Stack
01:11:31 It's like it.
01:11:32 If he's a pimp, he's like the weirdest pimp.
01:11:36 In the world.
01:11:38 And he's got to get control the hoe.
01:11:41 He's got he's got to get control the whole.
01:11:43 There's no way you can be a pimp and let your.
01:11:46 Let your bottom bitch talk to you like that.
01:11:48 Just like you can't do that.
01:11:52 Anyway, so I don't know what to make of that guy.
01:11:56 Maybe he's supposed to be a eccentric pimp.
01:11:59 I I don't know.
01:12:02 So they leave 'cause they.
01:12:03 Nothing.
01:12:04 The cops got nothing.
01:12:07 And then the cops trying to to think about what the motive could be.
01:12:13 And and and then suddenly it hits him.
Montgomery
01:12:17 Your wife's all.
01:12:18 I sent her to a hotel.
01:12:20 You can't talk to her anymore because you're being held on a murder charge.
Mitchell
01:12:24 I didn't murder anyone.
01:12:26 Why would I murder him? What motiv?
01:12:32 Ated him.
Montgomery
01:12:33 It's a good motive.
Mitchell
01:12:34 Why?
01:12:34 Would I hate him?
01:12:35 I hardly knew him, only talking for a couple of hours.
Montgomery
01:12:39 He.
Mitchell
01:12:39 Seemed like a nice guy.
Montgomery
01:12:41 He knew he was a Jew.
01:12:42 Hey. Hey.
01:12:44 You mean to?
01:12:45 You didn't know I was Jewish.
Mitchell
01:12:46 No, I didn't think about it.
01:12:48 All that have to do with it.
01:12:49 That got to do with me.
Devon Stack
01:12:51 Oh, he didn't know he was a Jew.
01:12:55 Well, the only way Jews die is through anti-Semitism.
01:13:00 If this guy didn't know.
01:13:02 That he was a Jew.
01:13:03 How could he possibly be guilty?
01:13:08 The detectives mind the machinery. The gear start whirring.
01:13:14 He's like, interesting.
01:13:17 Well, if Mitchell didn't know he was a Jew, then he must be innocent.
01:13:23 Because the only one that did know that he was a Jew.
01:13:30 Aha, it must have been that bigot.
01:13:33 Guy that knew he was a Jew.
01:13:37 And then just to make sure that you understood that the bigot guy wasn't just a bigot.
01:13:42 He was wrong about the Jew.
01:13:44 He thought the Jew was one of these soft feathered.
01:13:50 I don't know these these weak little pussy Jews that that didn't go to to the frontline like he was talking about saying how they all, they just stayed at home. They found a way to stay at home and make money and bang all the chicks while we were.
01:14:03 Us going and went to the front line and fought their war for him.
01:14:07 Just rub it in his face.
01:14:11 He looks up the Jews file and finds out not only was he in the army.
01:14:19 He was.
01:14:21 Disabled in the siege of Okinawa.
01:14:26 One of the bloodiest battles of World War 2.
01:14:32 And that's the only reason why he wasn't in the wars he was.
01:14:35 He got injured.
01:14:37 He was discharged by the medical board.
01:14:41 Oh wow.
01:14:42 Well, that guy sure was wrong.
01:14:44 Now I'm gonna.
01:14:46 I'm gonna go double check my suspicion. I'm pretty sure that bigot guy said he didn't like Jews.
01:14:54 I gotta just double check and make sure.
Montgomery
01:14:58 Montgomery, how did you know that?
01:15:00 Hadn't been in the army.
01:15:03 All right, I.
01:15:05 Said when I talked to you earlier this evening, you were sure that Samuel had never been in uniform.
01:15:11 How do you know that?
01:15:13 Like I told you, you could tell you could see.
01:15:19 Those guys got ways of keeping themselves from getting dirty.
01:15:25 Why'd you ask that?
01:15:27 Kent.
Floyd
01:15:27 Oh, I was just curious.
Montgomery
01:15:34 You know who?
01:15:35 Him yet.
01:15:36 Yes, I think I do.
01:15:39 Was that all captain?
01:15:40 Don't you want to ask me something else?
01:15:42 No, that's all.
01:15:44 I can go now.
01:15:47 Or Montgomery.
01:15:50 Yes, Sir. You haven't seen anything of that friend of yours at Floyd Bowers, have you?
01:15:54 No, Sir, I.
01:15:55 I can't figure that out.
01:15:56 You do, will you? Yes, Sir.
01:16:00 Thank you.
Devon Stack
01:16:04 So now you know the detectives are wise to him because.
01:16:08 He doesn't tell them that we know.
01:16:11 We know Bowers is dead and he doesn't tell him that we know who did it, and obviously it's you, but we're going to let you go because we don't have the evidence yet. We got a we got to find out a way to pin it on this big.
01:16:23 Now that we know that he's, he's clearly the hate crime.
01:16:28 Primer guy that hates Jews.
01:16:31 Who likes Jews?
01:16:33 So he calls in Keeley, and he's like, I think I've cracked the case.
01:16:38 Think you were right?
01:16:41 I don't think it was this Mitchell fella.
01:16:44 I think it was Montgomery.
01:16:46 The bigot that hates Jews.
01:16:50 Now we got to figure.
01:16:51 Out a way to.
01:16:52 To prove it.
Captain Finlay
01:16:55 I've done a lot of work here tonight.
01:16:58 Some of it you know about some.
01:16:59 Of it, you don't routine.
01:17:02 Most of it I look for.
01:17:03 Motives, as I always do, it's habit training.
01:17:07 But I couldn't find any.
01:17:10 Then I realized the reason I couldn't find a good ordinary motive was because none of these men had known Samuel long enough to have one.
01:17:18 You usually have to know something about a man to have a reason to kill him.
01:17:22 You have to know him well enough to be in love with his wife.
01:17:25 Well enough to know he has some money.
01:17:28 Sammy doesn't have any money.
01:17:30 Have a wife.
01:17:32 That's beside the.
01:17:33 The point is not one of these men knew that or anything about him. Mitch will talk to, maybe for an hour.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:17:39 The others less.
Captain Finlay
01:17:42 So it had to be something else.
01:17:47 The motive had to be inside the killer himself.
01:17:51 Something he brought with him.
01:17:54 Something he'd been nursing for a long time.
01:17:57 Very, very been waiting.
01:18:01 The killer had to be someone who could hate Samuels without knowing him.
01:18:05 Who could hate him enough to kill him?
Devon Stack
01:18:07 It sounds to me that.
Captain Finlay
01:18:08 Under the right circumstances, not for any real reason, but mistakenly and ignorantly.
01:18:15 The rest wasn't too hard.
01:18:18 I looked around at my.
01:18:19 I thought back over the answers I'd had tonight. Some of them fit.
01:18:25 I knew who'd kill Samuels.
01:18:30 I should have known right away I.
01:18:32 But the motive was so simple, so general, that it slipped through the machinery.
01:18:39 I'm taking for granted you're smart enough to know what I'm talking about.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:18:42 You don't have to draw me pictures.
01:18:43 I know what you mean.
01:18:45 I think you're.
01:18:46 What do you want me to do?
Captain Finlay
01:18:50 It might take.
01:18:50 To Polish this off, the usual way, have nothing on Captain Finlay. Nothing at all.
01:18:54 Never get anything.
01:18:56 I want to take a long chance on nailing him quick.
01:18:59 How well are you?
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:19:00 I've tried to like him, but it's not my type.
Captain Finlay
01:19:02 Does he have many close friends?
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:19:03 He had one bowlers.
Captain Finlay
01:19:05 I think he killed him. So do I.
01:19:07 What about the southern boy, Leroy?
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:19:09 No, I don't think so, because he's a Monty's platoon.
01:19:11 Does he feel about Monty?
01:19:13 You're getting ahead.
Captain Finlay
01:19:14 Of me, I was hoping you didn't like it.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:19:15 I think you scared the death of them.
Captain Finlay
01:19:17 Is he as dumb as money says.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:19:19 Well, he's kind of.
01:19:20 He doesn't always know which enters up.
Captain Finlay
01:19:22 Money doesn't think he's smart enough to.
01:19:24 Lie.
01:19:26 Horribly, Roy told Monty. A fantastic story.
01:19:29 Would Monty believe it?
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:19:31 You might.
Captain Finlay
01:19:33 Or risk.
01:19:36 Keeley's on his way.
01:19:37 I don't want to see anything in the papers about the Floyd bars killing.
01:19:40 A word as far as we know, he's still alive.
01:19:42 Never heard of him.
01:19:44 I want you to get La Roy out.
01:19:45 The Stuart Hotel, without being seen and bring him here.
01:19:48 Can you do it?
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:19:49 I can try.
Captain Finlay
01:19:49 That's not good enough. Be back.
01:19:51 An hour, if you can. I'll talk to your CEO and tell him what's up.
Devon Stack
01:19:54 All right. So yeah, this is all happening within the, it's.
01:19:59 It's now early morning.
01:20:02 At that same night.
01:20:03 And he's decided to use the stupid kid from Tennessee.
01:20:10 As part of some complicated trick, this guy Leroy.
01:20:15 They're going to shy up.
01:20:19 Montgomery into doing something stupid that proves that he's the real killer.
01:20:26 But then you have this scene here where?
01:20:28 There there again.
01:20:30 Like, what do you think this?
01:20:31 This is supposed to say to the audience already, right when we had the.
01:20:37 How dumb this bigot is, because he just thinks he just assumes the Jews didn't fight and didn't see battle.
01:20:44 But the audience knows that Samuel the Jew, the dead Jew. Did you know we we just looked at his records and you know he he found Okinawa and he was injured, in fact. And so this bigot, he's he's just wrong about everything.
01:21:01 And so, as much as it might seem distasteful, especially for.
01:21:08 Members of the military.
01:21:09 Members of a fraternity, you might say to turn on one another over a dead Jew.
01:21:18 That's what you.
01:21:19 That's you're the bigot. If you think that.
01:21:22 Any loyalty that you feel like you have to each other, I mean, that really needs to take a back seat when it comes to facing anti-Semitism and.
01:21:35 And you can't.
01:21:36 You can't be a part of.
01:21:38 You can't tolerate that, and if anyone that you know participates in that well now you got to be on the right side of history.
01:21:48 And Leroy is is struggling, struggling to know like what he should do in this situation.
01:21:54 The police want him to to turn on.
01:21:58 A fellow soldier that maybe he doesn't like, but and maybe he gets bullied by but.
01:22:07 Blood Brothers to some extent.
Floyd
01:22:11 Maybe you're right, Sir, but I can't think you'd do a thing like that without no reason.
Montgomery
01:22:15 He thought he had a reason.
01:22:18 You know the.
01:22:19 Monty feels you've heard the things he says.
Floyd
01:22:22 Well, yes, I I guess I heard him say a couple of.
01:22:25 About.
01:22:26 Jewish people living off the fat of the land while he was out there.
01:22:30 You.
01:22:30 That's all lies.
01:22:32 I guess it is but.
01:22:34 Look, maybe Marty rough this guy up a little and that was all.
Montgomery
01:22:38 That was all he started out to.
01:22:39 Yes, he didn't have a plan or anything like that.
01:22:46 This business of hating Jews comes in a lot of different sizes.
01:22:52 There's the you can't join our Country Club kind.
01:22:56 And you can't live around here kind.
01:22:59 Yes, you can't work here kind.
01:23:02 And because we stand for all of these, we get monies kind.
01:23:06 He's just one.
01:23:07 We don't get him very often, but.
01:23:09 Grows out of all the rest.
01:23:13 Clock laroy.
01:23:15 You know, we have a law against carrying a gun.
01:23:18 Sure. We have that law because a gun is dangerous.
01:23:22 Well, hate Monty.
01:23:24 Kind of hate is like a gun. If you carry it around with you, it can go off and kill somebody.
01:23:30 It killed Samuels last night.
Floyd
01:23:34 Sir I.
01:23:34 Feel right? Getting mixed up in anything.
01:23:37 Don't you see what I mean, major?
01:23:39 That's what I say.
01:23:40 You mean?
01:23:40 What I to?
01:23:41 What Captain Finley wants me to do.
01:23:43 Well, that's up to you.
01:23:44 I can't tell you what to do.
01:23:46 This isn't an army matter.
01:23:48 Monty was in my outfit.
01:23:50 Isn't proud of that.
01:23:52 The Army's never been proud of men like Montgomery.
01:23:55 So don't worry about being disloyal to your outfit.
Devon Stack
01:23:59 Don't worry.
01:24:01 About being disloyal to anti Semites.
01:24:08 Turn on them, boy.
01:24:10 The Army's not proud of them.
01:24:18 Do the right thing, boy.
01:24:21 Now remember this is prior to the Civil Rights Act stuff.
01:24:24 Is back when we still had freedom of association.
01:24:27 This is back when it was perfectly legal to have a Country Club that wouldn't allow Jews.
01:24:35 That was perfectly legal in the United States, but that's not some constitutional thing, right?
01:24:40 Not like some.
01:24:42 Oh yeah, we we have never allowed discrimination in this country. We believe in liberalism and that's bullshit.
01:24:50 In 1947, you can have a Country Club and say no Jews. You can have a sign that literally said no allowed on the outside of your store and and not allow them in and that there was nothing you couldn't get sued for it.
01:24:57 Yeah.
01:25:05 That, that's that's the. That's the real freedom that America had.
01:25:13 And So what he's doing is he's laying down the groundwork for removing those freedoms.
01:25:20 Saying that by having these kinds of freedoms in this country, by tolerating these people that want freedom of association, people who don't want, just look, if you don't want to associate with Jews at your Country Club, you don't want to hire them at your job.
01:25:35 Well then that leads to murder.
01:25:40 If you have any kind of distaste for any kind of group.
01:25:47 Especially Jews.
01:25:50 Well, that will inevitably lead to murdering Jews.
01:25:56 Over nothing.
01:25:58 Over literally nothing.
01:26:02 And that's not just true of of some disreputable psycho on the streets.
01:26:11 This is true of a World War 2 veteran.
01:26:16 Who just got back from the war?
01:26:24 You know the kind of person that Jews should have been building monuments to.
01:26:29 If if they what they said was true.
01:26:33 Right.
01:26:34 If if what they said was true.
01:26:39 That 6,000,000 Jews were being gassed.
01:26:44 In Europe.
01:26:46 And the only thing that stopped it.
01:26:48 Was the blood.
01:26:52 Of the Allied soldiers.
01:26:57 That was the only thing that prevented the virtual extinction of their people.
01:27:05 A price paid in blood.
01:27:14 And yet these.
01:27:17 Films like this.
01:27:19 These are the monuments.
01:27:22 That Jews built for those boys.
01:27:26 Movies like these.
01:27:30 These are the monuments.
01:27:33 That they built.
01:27:37 To thank them.
01:27:52 So.
01:27:53 Not sure what to do.
01:27:56 He wants to be loyal to his fellow soldier, his fellow goy.
01:28:08 So they decide to explain it to.
01:28:10 Him another way.
01:28:14 A way that.
01:28:16 Is a way that was often used to explain things to, especially the new Americans, the kinds of Europeans that Madison grant was warned about, like the the Catholic.
01:28:31 Italians and and.
01:28:35 Irishmen that were coming to the country.
01:28:38 That you know, they themselves were at one point.
01:28:43 Disliked, they themselves were told that they don't fit in and that don't you understand? You guys were once the victims of hate crimes too. I don't.
01:28:56 This the story tells in a little odd to me.
01:29:00 Whatever.
01:29:03 Well, I'll let you hear it.
01:29:05 And so therefore you must join hands with the Jews.
01:29:11 Like the Catholics did, the Catholics are still pro immigrant.
01:29:14 The Catholic Church has been pro immigrant.
01:29:18 For at least the last century.
01:29:20 And there's lots of Catholics that'll say.
01:29:21 Well, I'm not. And whatever it might, you know.
01:29:23 The the church has an institution has been pro immigration in America.
01:29:31 For basically ever.
01:29:32 And that's that's just you can get.
01:29:35 Yeah, it's just it's a historic fact.
01:29:39 It's just, it just is.
01:29:42 And so this was kind of the the.
01:29:47 The glue that held that together that, that, that unholy alliance between Jews and Catholics at the time was that, well, we're both immigrants to these counting stock Americans, and they're going to be.
01:30:03 Treated us both.
01:30:04 Both of us badly now, of course.
01:30:07 Happened was the the Irish.
01:30:12 And the Italian Catholics.
01:30:15 To some extent, you know, like far more than Jews ever did assimilated.
01:30:21 Right, like.
01:30:22 You could say that there were early on, there were Irish neighborhoods, there were Polish neighborhoods, there were Italian neighborhoods, maybe. Maybe there's some little.
01:30:32 You know, shadows of those neighborhoods historically existing in places in the East Coast and what not, but it's nothing like the Jews. Nothing like the Jews.
01:30:46 The behaviour was completely different.
01:30:48 The assimilation was completely different.
01:30:52 And you know, the Jews are very unique in their.
01:30:55 It's not an ability to assimilate, it's a active desire to fight assimilation.
01:31:07 And so he uses this story.
01:31:10 Where he relates.
01:31:13 You know the the, the, the violent history of his. You know, the detective, his Irish ancestors in this country that didn't accept his Irish ancestors as Americans and if we.
01:31:28 He can relate to the Jews now because of this.
01:31:31 Now The funny thing is, not only was this used to get immigrant Catholics and and other groups on board with the Jewish objectives.
01:31:43 But it was also.
01:31:44 So.
01:31:47 Discarded the moment it was unnecessary.
01:31:50 In other words, all of the sudden, like it was, you could be, oh, you're just a you're a hated immigrant, just like Jews are back when Jews are trying to pass the Civil Rights Act when they're trying to pass the.
01:32:04 The Immigration Act of 1965, which was, you know, Kennedy.
01:32:10 You know Irish Catholic and a Jew, you know and well.
01:32:15 The.
01:32:15 What seller was?
01:32:17 Seller, I think it was.
01:32:18 He's he used to say that he was half Catholic, half Jewish cause like one of his grandparents was Catholic.
01:32:26 And so he and he had the support of the Catholic community.
01:32:30 I think it was Celeri might have been hard.
01:32:33 So at any rate, the.
01:32:36 That that was an alliance that was forged.
01:32:39 And that was.
01:32:42 A A.
01:32:43 The similarity that they would allow these these newer European immigrants to acknowledge, but the second.
01:32:53 White Irish people like say in the 90s were telling black people to stop bitching about slavery because their people had also been slaves.
01:33:02 They had been indentured servants.
01:33:03 They had come here with nothing all the sudden.
01:33:06 That's different.
01:33:08 All the sudden, no, you're still a bigot.
01:33:11 All of a sudden.
01:33:12 No, you're still white.
01:33:14 You weren't white when we wanted you to not think you were white.
01:33:18 When we wanted you to think of yourself as a dirty Irishman oppressed by the by the English founding stock.
01:33:25 That you weren't white then, but now you're just a fucking white boy like everybody else.
01:33:32 Because we're done with you.
01:33:35 Mission accomplished. The Jews got what they wanted out of you. Ha ha.
01:33:38 No refunds. You're fucking white.
01:33:40 Just like everybody else now.
01:33:43 But this is the way it was explained to audiences.
01:33:45 He's clearly speaking to Catholic.
01:33:48 And by the way, the Hays Code was enforced.
01:33:51 It wasn't like a a law on the books that was enforced by Catholics.
01:33:57 Catholics got together and there was enough of them at this point to where this made a big difference.
01:34:03 The haze code was A to some degree voluntary code of conduct that Hollywood had to follow.
01:34:12 And so to get things past the censors who were Catholic because it was a Catholic boycott that was threatened, the Catholics went to the Hollywood Jews and said if you keep making this fucking smut, Catholics are going to boycott your movies.
01:34:27 And so you you.
01:34:29 I mean, you won't be able to make.
01:34:30 Any money because a huge portion of the audience.
01:34:34 In the theaters, they're Catholic.
01:34:36 And so they had the haze code that defined what was OK with Catholics, basically.
01:34:43 And those were the sensors that the makers of this film had to sneak their ideas past.
01:34:52 So that.
01:34:53 Played a part into why they explain it this way in the film.
01:34:56 Why they say that they they make it like very Catholic, relatable.
Captain Finlay
01:35:04 Ignorant men always laugh at things that are different things they don't understand.
01:35:09 They're afraid of things they don't understand.
01:35:11 End up hating them.
Leroy
01:35:14 Who get me all mixed up.
01:35:16 You know about all these things? I don't know anything about.
01:35:19 How do I know what you're trying to do?
01:35:21 How do I?
01:35:22 You are a Jewish person yourself.
01:35:24 Something you don't.
Captain Finlay
01:35:27 But would it make any difference?
Devon Stack
01:35:32 Well, actually.
01:35:33 Under any circumstances, of course it would.
01:35:35 But OK.
Captain Finlay
01:35:41 All right, Elon.
01:35:46 But I'd like to tell you one more thing. Then you can go if you want to.
01:35:53 About 100 years ago in Ireland.
01:35:57 The potato crop failed. It was serious.
01:36:02 A lot of the Irish came.
01:36:03 Here, immigrants.
01:36:06 That talk was different, like yours, Leroy. The religion was different.
01:36:11 Were Catholics most of them?
01:36:14 They settle down in different places. They liked it here.
01:36:18 One of them I knew about, he'd been a farmer, stayed in Philadelphia.
01:36:23 He worked and saved to buy some land.
01:36:28 He thought of himself as just another man living in America.
01:36:33 But suddenly one day he looked around and saw that something had happened.
Leroy
01:36:37 And frighten him.
Captain Finlay
01:36:39 Fear and hatred of all Irish Catholics have developed and spread like a terrible disease.
01:36:45 He saw that he wasn't an American anymore.
01:36:49 He was a dirty Irish Mick.
01:36:51 A priest lover, a spy from Rome.
01:36:55 A foreigner trying to rob men of jobs.
Potato
01:36:58 Hold on.
01:36:58 What's up?
01:36:59 Stop, stop, stop, stop.
01:37:00 I'm a potato. Big shot.
01:37:01 Always have to be lucky, charm.
Captain Finlay
01:37:08 He didn't understand.
01:37:10 He didn't know what to do.
01:37:13 He didn't do much of anything.
01:37:14 He couldn't.
01:37:17 One day, when a bunch of men attacked his parish priest on the street, he waded in to help the priest.
01:37:24 He managed to get him inside a store.
01:37:28 That night on the way home from work, he stopped.
01:37:31 For a beer.
01:37:34 When he left the bar 2.
01:37:36 Two men followed him carrying empty whiskey bottles.
01:37:40 They didn't mean to kill him.
01:37:42 Were just going to rough him up a little.
01:37:46 They didn't start out to.
01:37:47 They just started out hating the way money started out.
01:37:51 But 20 minutes later, my grandfather was dead.
01:37:55 That's history, Leroy.
01:37:58 They don't teach it in school, but it's real American history just the same.
01:38:04 Thomas Finley was killed in 1848 just because he was an Irishman and.
01:38:08 Catholic.
01:38:10 It happened many times.
01:38:12 Maybe that's.
01:38:13 For you to believe Le Roy, but it's true.
01:38:16 And last night, Joseph Samuels was killed just because he was a Jew.
01:38:22 Do you see any difference, Leroy?
01:38:24 Any difference at all?
01:38:28 Hating is always the same. Always senseless.
01:38:31 One day it kills Irish Catholics. The next day, Jews, the next day, Protestants. The next day, Quakers.
01:38:37 It's hard to stop.
01:38:39 It can end up killing men.
01:38:40 Wear striped neckties.
01:38:43 Or people from Tennessee.
Leroy
01:38:49 Will you tell me exactly what to say?
Captain Finlay
01:38:53 I'll tell you exactly what to say.
Devon Stack
01:38:56 Oh yes.
01:38:59 Yes, Leroy, yes.
01:39:02 I'll tell you exactly what to say.
01:39:12 Anyway so.
01:39:19 They they cook up some plan.
01:39:22 Where they they tell Leroy.
01:39:25 Who? Montgomery. The bigot is never going to suspect because he sees him as an idiot.
01:39:33 Doesn't think that he's clever, sophisticated enough to lie.
01:39:37 He's just this dumb country bumpkin.
01:39:40 And so that if he tells a crazy lie.
01:39:45 Montgomery will just believe it.
01:39:47 And the lie he cooks up.
01:39:50 The Irish Catholic Detective, I guess cooks up this lie that hey, Bowers, because they've kept it out of the news that Bowers was found dead.
01:40:03 The guy that that the Jew lover.
01:40:06 The Montgomery beat the death or or hung or whatever. It was kind of vague, exactly at what point he dies.
01:40:13 He's he survived the.
01:40:15 Somehow, Bowers has survived the attack and Leroy bumped into Bowers in the early morning hours.
01:40:24 And that kind of rhymed.
01:40:26 And Bauer said, hey.
01:40:28 Why don't you go tell Montgomery next time he should use a stronger tie.
01:40:35 He'll know what that means.
01:40:38 Meet me at this address.
01:40:43 And so Leroy says, here's the address I wrote it down.
01:40:48 You should go meet him at this address.
01:40:52 But Montgomery's like I don't.
01:40:54 I feel like I I I killed him. There's no way.
01:40:58 There's no way he survived that.
01:41:01 What am I supposed to do? This is crazy.
01:41:04 I going crazy.
01:41:06 How many people do I have to murder and how many times?
01:41:12 And so finally.
01:41:15 He goes to the apartment where he left Bowers. He thought for dead.
01:41:22 And inside the apartment.
01:41:24 The detective is there and the detective is ah ha!
01:41:31 You are a murderer.
01:41:34 And Montgomery's like. How the fuck does that make me in a murderer like a hold on a second? How does this make me the murderer? That that I'm. I'm here.
01:41:43 He's like, well, you believed Leroy's lie and you came here where you left the body of Bowers.
01:41:51 Knew you killed Bowers.
01:41:54 And he's like, yeah, but still, like he told me that Bowers told him. Meet him here.
01:41:58 How does that make me a?
01:42:00 I don't understand. Like I'm the killer now because things.
01:42:04 I gave Leroy the wrong address.
01:42:07 You just looked at it quickly.
01:42:09 It was the address for the house next door, but you just assumed that it was this place 'cause. You knew. That's where Bowers was hiding out. And only the real killer would know that.
01:42:19 He's like, I still don't get how that would make how only the real killer would know that.
01:42:23 If I just walked into the wrong.
01:42:25 That doesn't matter.
01:42:27 You're going to get the chair, young man.
01:42:31 And so Montgomery.
01:42:32 Realizing these cornered somehow under dubious circumstances.
01:42:38 Decides to flee the.
01:42:38 Coop and run away.
Floyd
01:42:48 Montgomery.
Devon Stack
01:42:56 Montgomery, stop.
01:43:05 Luckily, in 1947, Cox could just murder fleeing suspects.
Montgomery
01:43:15 Well, that's it.
01:43:17 Clean it up.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:43:18 Yes, OK.
Captain Finlay
01:43:18 Sorry. All right and back.
01:43:26 Yeah.
Leroy
01:43:26 Is he?
01:43:26 Is he dead?
Captain Finlay
01:43:28 He was dead for a long time.
Leroy
01:43:28 Ah.
Captain Finlay
01:43:29 Just didn't know it.
Leroy
01:43:31 I guess I did the right.
01:43:32 The.
01:43:33 Rightest thing you ever did, soldier.
Devon Stack
01:43:39 Yes. Oh, yes, the rightest thing you've ever done.
01:43:47 Good boy. Good.
01:43:50 So that then that's the end.
01:43:52 Literally the end.
01:43:53 Like that's no.
01:43:55 That's. Oh, no, I'm sorry.
01:43:58 This is the end. Like their friends, dead in the street.
01:44:02 It's it's the following night. Their other friend is dead.
01:44:06 Other guy they were partying with is.
01:44:09 And the cops? Just like. Yeah, I just killed your friend from.
01:44:12 For running away.
01:44:14 And my work here is done.
01:44:15 Out of here.
01:44:16 This is the. This is the other movie.
Leroy
01:44:18 OK.
01:44:19 Well.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
01:44:21 How about a cup of coffee, soldier?
Leroy
01:44:24 Sure.
Devon Stack
01:44:27 And everybody clapped, I guess.
01:44:32 I hope you learned your lesson going.
01:44:40 A what?
01:44:41 Yeah, that is the.
01:44:43 That's the end.
01:44:45 Huh.
01:44:45 Let's let's get a cup of coffee.
01:44:52 Oh, oh boy. Wow.
01:44:54 All right, the end.
01:44:58 Ah, yeah. Well.
01:45:01 Ah.
Notification Guy
01:45:05 Anti-Semitism intensified.
Devon Stack
01:45:12 I.
01:45:26 So this movie.
01:45:29 That was produced.
01:45:32 With a budget of $500,000.
01:45:35 Shot in literally a few weeks.
01:45:40 Thrown together.
01:45:44 Uh.
01:45:46 Relatively quickly, in order to beat another studio.
01:45:51 In releasing their anti-Semitism movie.
01:45:56 Actually did really well.
01:45:59 I actually did really well. I bet you can.
01:46:02 Imagine.
01:46:03 Given the ethnicity of the people writing the reviews, movie reviews of the time, the kinds of reviews it got.
01:46:13 And it was promoted.
01:46:17 And.
01:46:19 Receive many accolades, which we'll get.
01:46:21 In a moment.
01:46:22 The the funny one.
01:46:23 Funny. Funny.
01:46:26 Background tad. Bit of information here or tidbit of information here.
01:46:33 Is originally the novel.
01:46:36 That was written by Brooks that they adapted to film.
01:46:41 It was a it was about a gay guy.
01:46:45 It wasn't about a Jew.
01:46:47 And it was written by a Jew, but it.
01:46:49 About a gay guy?
01:46:52 And they were talking about there's memos that still exist between the producers and director and the studio heads where they were like, well, they're never going to let us do anything about a gay guy.
01:47:02 We why would we buy this? This this book about a gay guy?
01:47:07 And they finally.
01:47:09 Well, we'll buy it as long as we can change the gay guy to a Jew.
01:47:15 Is Lysol can change the the gay guy to a Jew?
01:47:26 So the Richard Brooks novel.
01:47:29 They changed it to a a Jew. One of his army buddies played the bigot.
01:47:36 In fact, it almost makes me wonder if if Brooks was.
01:47:40 Because he was.
01:47:41 He wrote it.
01:47:42 To show you how much he wasn't on.
01:47:44 Front lines.
01:47:45 He wrote the novel while quote UN quote, serving in the Marines, right?
01:47:52 As many Marines in World War Two had time to do.
01:47:55 Just you know, let's just let me pour my typewriter here and and type out a novel.
01:48:03 Anyway.
01:48:05 So this Jew that that totally fought in World War 2, he wrote this novel, one of the guys working with him in the Marines.
01:48:15 Was the actor who played the bigot and.
01:48:20 He told he told.
01:48:22 If you get this into a film 'cause he knew that he knew Jews and that he would likely be able to get it turned into a film.
01:48:30 I want to play the bigot because I know guy. I know guys like that.
01:48:37 And I think I'll do a good job.
01:48:40 And so I don't know. It makes you wonder, though, if this was originally about a gay dude.
01:48:48 Who's writing?
01:48:49 First of all, who's writing that story other than?
01:48:51 Gay. Jew.
01:48:53 I don't know if Richard Brooks is gay, but I would assume that not only is he gay, probably the actor that played the bigot.
01:48:59 Gay if he was, if he wanted to. If he knows those types and he wants to play the play, the bigot.
01:49:04 1.
01:49:08 Probably gay.
01:49:10 Probably also gay.
01:49:15 Another memo talking about this basically mentioned how.
01:49:20 They could swap out the gay dude for early anyone.
01:49:25 The motivations of the director might become clear as to why this is here in a moment.
01:49:32 But they talked about quote, this is a story of personal fascism.
01:49:38 Personal fascism, as opposed to organized fascism.
01:49:45 It indicates how it's possible for us to have a Gestapo.
01:49:50 If this country should go fascist.
01:49:54 So they were already worried the the United States might become.
01:49:59 This is like literally like couple years after the the conclusion of the war.
01:50:05 And the Jews are already busily working.
01:50:10 To prevent a rise of anti-Semitism in.
01:50:16 That's the first order of business.
01:50:20 That's the the two big movies of the year. The two big movies that get the most Oscar nominations of the year, this film and gentlemen's agreement.
01:50:33 A character like Monty the Bigot would qualify brilliantly for the leadership of the Belsen concentration camp.
01:50:43 Fascism hates weakness in people and hates minorities.
01:50:51 Monty hates fairies.
01:50:53 That's my way of saying we should bring fairies back.
01:50:57 I don't know kind of ruins a part of our our our European culture to call fags fairies. I'd rather call them fags.
01:51:05 Monty hates faggots, negroes, Jews and foreigners. In the book Monty Murders a faggot.
01:51:14 He could have murdered a negro, a foreigner or a Jew.
01:51:16 So they're talking about how like it's just a it's about it's anti fascism.
01:51:21 Let's make him a Jew.
01:51:23 Since we can't make him a faggot.
01:51:32 I believe this is the director talking about the film.
Narrator
01:51:38 'Cause film makers were unsure how the general public would react to a film about anti.
01:51:43 Crossfire's message was wrapped in a compelling murder suspense story to draw people into the theaters.
Director
01:51:49 1st place we chose a story that in which a man murders somebody because he hates Jews.
01:51:55 Now normally you go to 10 people say you want to see this picture, they say no. You know, unless they were terrible Jew haters.
01:51:59 Follow.
01:52:02 But the old medicine pill, a little bit of medicine in a sugar pill so that the baby can swallow it and enjoy it.
01:52:09 Yet it's doing good.
01:52:10 So we did that with the murder. Mystery was really the the the sugar around our message.
Devon Stack
01:52:15 And that's what all Hollywood movies are.
01:52:20 It's the sugar around the message.
01:52:27 That's what all propaganda.
01:52:28 It's the sugar around the.
01:52:30 That's what these paid MAGA influencers are. That's what these the Dennis Prager's of the world, the Charlie Kirk's of the world.
01:52:39 It's the sugar.
01:52:39 Around the medicine, the medicine, of course, is Zionism.
01:52:42 Medicine, of course, is support for Israel.
01:52:48 The sugar coating is the yeah. And we're going to mass deportations. Maybe someday. And the Epstein client list and all this other stuff.
01:53:00 That's the sugar.
01:53:01 That's not really what's what's being accomplished.
01:53:05 Not it's not at all.
01:53:07 And it's always been like that.
01:53:12 That's why so many when I, you know, back in the day when I would listen to conservative talk radio.
01:53:19 It seemed odd to me that so many of them were Jewish.
01:53:24 But I just because it was so pervasive throughout the conservative movement, it didn't seem that weird, I guess.
01:53:36 But they were all Jewish.
01:53:37 Were always talking about.
01:53:40 Israel.
01:53:44 In retrospect, it wasn't conservative messaging that, oh, by the way, also hey, support Israel.
01:53:50 It was support.
01:53:52 Oh, by the way, yeah.
01:53:56 Black crime rates or something?
01:54:04 Not that conservative talk radio is even going there.
01:54:10 Other little tricks they did.
01:54:13 Little subtle tricks.
01:54:14 With this propaganda, when they first introduced the character Montgomery the bigot, they used a 50mm lens.
01:54:25 And then as it becomes more and more obvious that he's a bigot.
01:54:30 Like later, after he's already said something about Jews, they use a 40 millimeter lens.
01:54:37 And then once it starts to become a clear the audience that maybe he's the murderer, they use a 35mm lens.
01:54:42 And by the end, when you know for sure he's the murderer, they use a 25 millimeter lens. When they show him.
01:54:50 Little subtle Jew tricks.
01:54:51 Things that most people wouldn't pick up on, and certainly the audience wouldn't pick up on.
01:55:00 But it makes them more and more distorted.
01:55:04 When they first meet him, 50mm lens is what the equivalent with a 35mm film gate.
01:55:13 It's. It's what? What? What's closest to the human eye?
01:55:18 So when you have a 50mm lens, it it's the closest thing to what your eyeball would see when looking around.
01:55:26 So that's why they started with a 50mm lens, because that looks the most natural and normal to you.
01:55:33 And by the time they're at 25 millimeter, that's almost like a fish eye lens.
01:55:39 So everything looks weird and distorted.
01:55:44 Little things like that.
01:55:47 That they do to accomplish these little subtleties and obviously stuff like that is going to get past the haze code.
01:55:54 Little tricks like that that are going to.
01:55:57 Imperceptible, at least on a conscious level.
01:56:00 Most people aren't going to notice stuff like that.
01:56:04 They'll feel it.
01:56:06 They'll feel it like for some reason here.
01:56:10 He looks different than he looks here.
01:56:15 And they they they have a better feeling about them here than they do here.
01:56:21 They also give a little bit of a 5:00 shadow.
01:56:24 Lighting is different.
01:56:26 The lighting is very flat and and neutral.
01:56:30 Here it is. It's very dramatic.
01:56:32 Cast his face in Shadow.
01:56:42 The movie made $1.2 million almost $1.3 million.
01:56:49 That is profit.
01:56:50 That's on top of the the $500,000 budget that they had to make back again.
01:56:56 Doesn't sound like a lot, but this is 1947 money.
01:57:02 As I mentioned, all the reviews were very positive.
01:57:06 New York son says RKO has beaten everyone else to the punch.
01:57:11 It's a good, forceful film, a melodrama with a message, engrossing melodrama or melodrama with suspense and excitement.
01:57:22 All the way.
01:57:24 New York World Telegram said it is the first picture within the memory to speak up or within this memory to speak up and use the word Jew in the slurring tones of his persecutors.
01:57:40 Novelist and snares sonarius is someone who does scenarios.
01:57:48 Have woven and intriguing story and pattern and people that with vigorous and varied.
01:57:55 Set of characters.
01:57:58 There's a javelina right outside for those of you know what that is trying to eat my cactuses motherfuckers were here last night.
01:58:11 It's a if it's same ones from last night. There's a big fucker among them.
01:58:16 Mother fuckers were trying to get in my fence.
01:58:20 Churro's been gone since then, by the way, I think he he fled the the Javelinas.
01:58:27 I hear him snorting around out.
01:58:28 Those those fucking I know javelinas this whole time I've lived out here last night. I I I was like, did my neighbor's horse get out?
01:58:38 And 'cause, I heard snorting at first I was like, that's my neighbor's dog sniffing around or something.
01:58:42 Was like, no, that's way too bassy.
01:58:43 Sounds like a beast.
01:58:46 My neighbor's horse like that. I better go get it 'cause, I thought.
01:58:49 Horse had got loose and was out here.
01:58:52 Hey, look at.
01:58:53 Like where the fuck is it?
01:58:54 Around.
01:58:56 I don't see it anywhere.
01:58:57 Got my.
01:58:58 I couldn't find my a good.
01:59:00 I found my B flashlight which is like this. Red led cause bees can't see red light, but it's not very bright 'cause it's a red light.
01:59:07 And I'm looking around.
01:59:08 Can.
01:59:09 I keep hearing this snorting sounds like.
01:59:11 Creepy as shit.
01:59:11 Like, it sounds like a monster, but I'm like, that's not like, like what could be out here making this fucking noise?
01:59:17 There's no horse like I'd see a fucking horse.
01:59:20 And then I see a javelina like.
01:59:23 Tromping around right outside the fence, I was like, oh, that's a big one.
01:59:25 One for those who.
01:59:27 Know it's a it's a wild desert pig.
01:59:29 It's like a wild boar.
01:59:30 They got tusks and they'll fuck you up.
01:59:33 Like they will.
01:59:34 They'll bite you down to the bone and they kill dogs and shit.
01:59:38 They're they.
01:59:39 They don't fuck around.
01:59:40 Haven't seen him out here until last night though, but I.
01:59:45 I just heard him snorting round there right outside.
01:59:47 Door. But anyway.
01:59:50 Little little fun, fun desert thing that's going on right now.
01:59:55 The Daily Mirror said an important stirring film is Crossfire Rko's blitz against intolerance.
02:00:06 Taught fast moving melodrama.
02:00:08 Robert Ryan gives one of the performances of the year.
02:00:13 Ryan is the.
02:00:15 The bigot guy, possibly gay bigot.
02:00:17 At least I'm pretty sure that was him courageously conceived skillfully.
02:00:23 Executed.
02:00:25 In the beginning, I said.
02:00:26 You should probably try to figure out why it's called Crossfire, or why is it called Crossfire and maybe it just seemed like a good name because you have soldiers and but there's not like a lot of cross like no one got caught in the crossfire like it doesn.
02:00:40 Any sense?
02:00:42 Until you see one of the old movie posters.
02:00:47 Where there's a cross on fire.
02:00:52 And you're like, oh oh.
02:00:57 I guess it's a play on words about a.
02:01:01 A flaming cross. Cross fire. OK, clever Jews.
02:01:09 Clever little Jews.
02:01:12 Fun fact about the director?
02:01:15 He was rounded up in the.
02:01:21 When the McCarthy hearings were taking place and they were, especially after this film, this film, like I said, it was banned in some cities.
02:01:29 It was viewed as as communist propaganda and it was.
02:01:34 Don't.
02:01:34 Want to live in that country?
02:01:37 Don't you want to live in a country where a film that tackles anti-Semitism is seen by enough of the?
02:01:46 As communist propaganda that it's banned in some cities.
02:01:50 That's the country that your grandparents lived in.
02:01:57 That's the country.
02:02:01 The boomers shit down the toilet and pissed all over.
02:02:08 But Dimitri, the director from Ukraine, who again, I don't know if he was Jewish. If he is one reason they want, they might have left it out.
02:02:18 His Wikipedia.
02:02:20 Is he was called to testify before the house.
02:02:24 On the the the the House on American Activities Committee in 1947.
02:02:31 And he joined because he was. Look, he was a member of the Communist Party.
02:02:36 He was a card carrying member of the Communist Party.
02:02:40 And he and nine other actual Hollywood communists, like actual members with membership cards.
02:02:50 They refused to testify before the the committee and they were called the what was it? The Hollywood 10 or something like that?
02:03:01 Forget what they called them, or maybe like the Hollywood Red tin or something.
02:03:06 The Hollywood 10, I think, is what it was called.
02:03:10 And they were all held in contempt of Congress, just like you'd be held in contempt of court if you refuse to answer a a judge's questions.
02:03:20 And so Demetrius fled to England.
02:03:24 And state in England, as long as his passport was was valid and then when his passport was about to expire, he returned back to United States and was arrested immediately.
02:03:41 But then he he only served four months, 4-5 months.
02:03:48 He then turned in a bunch of Communist Jews to the committee, which I think at this point McCarthy was was heading up and admitted.
02:03:59 And again, Hollywood will say, under pressure to keep his career going.
02:04:04 It was all made-up.
02:04:06 But admitted that Jews and their several articles about it that Jews had infiltrated Hollywood and were producing.
02:04:17 Communist propaganda.
02:04:24 There's a red film plot as they called it back in the papers.
02:04:30 To take control of the.
02:04:33 And look, this was I don't think there was like a red film plot so much as Jews were just communists and Jews already ran fucking Hollywood so.
02:04:42 What's there to plot?
02:04:43 You know what I mean?
02:04:44 Like what do you got to plot?
02:04:48 So there he is, testifying before.
02:04:52 The committee and this kind of fucked up his career a little bit because the Jews didn't want to work with him anymore.
02:05:02 Because he had named them.
02:05:05 But he was still had a career after that, working with.
02:05:10 An assumed name of doing television writing and stuff like that.
02:05:15 Another funny story about this film is Keeley, the pretty boy in the movie.
02:05:24 He's not a bigot and he's going to help.
02:05:27 The cops find the real killer.
02:05:31 Robert Mitchum got in trouble for.
02:05:37 Denying the Holocaust.
02:05:42 And saying shit about Jews in 1983, in an interview with Esquire magazine.
02:05:49 He expressed doubts about the veracity of the Holocaust, saying quote, so the Jews say. I don't know. People dispute that.
02:06:03 Like he was.
02:06:04 He was very like, yeah.
02:06:07 It went talking about the the 6,000,000 in the Holocaust.
02:06:12 And then it was later quoted as saying.
02:06:14 How do you say? Trust me, in Jewish fuck you.
02:06:24 He later would do give some half assed apology before he died, but it became it was. It was somewhat known towards the end of his career he was not a big fan of Jews anymore, having worked with them.
02:06:41 His entire life.
02:06:43 So that's another little fun fact.
02:06:48 About the.
02:06:50 One of the actors in the film.
02:06:54 The the The the movie.
02:06:59 Got a bunch of nominations I mentioned for.
02:07:03 The 20th Academy Awards it got nominated for Best Picture.
02:07:08 Best director, best supporting actor and that was Robert Ryan, the bigot guy.
02:07:16 Supporting actress. That's the hooker.
02:07:20 Who was played by Gloria Graham?
02:07:24 And best writing.
02:07:27 Because you know, no one loves no one, loves a story about.
02:07:33 But anti-Semitism more than the members of the Academy.
02:07:39 And.
02:07:42 Yeah, that's that's at least as far as as many film historians will say. That's the first movie produced by Hollywood that covers anti.
02:07:58 Crossfire from 1947. Anyway, I thought it would be fun to be interesting to take a look at that.
02:08:05 It wasn't I.
02:08:06 It's funny because while they said like when I was reading about this, they said it wasn't explicit as.
02:08:13 The movie a gentleman's agreement where he acts like he's Jewish and all this other stuff is pretty fucking explicit though.
02:08:19 Know how you could say this wasn't explicit?
02:08:22 And it is also interesting to watch some of this older propaganda because there it's kind of like they've come full circle.
02:08:29 It's like in the in the 40s and 50s.
02:08:32 They.
02:08:32 Kind of have these unsophisticated ways of.
02:08:37 Portraying these kinds of situations.
02:08:41 And I don't think the the Jews really got into their groove when it came to subtlety.
02:08:47 Intel say, like the 80s and 90s, they started to get a little more subtle with it.
02:08:53 And maybe that was because the audiences were getting more educated.
02:08:59 More sophisticated and not like generally, but I mean in terms of their media consumption by the 80s and 90s, most people consumed a lot of television in a lot of movies and so.
02:09:15 If you did like a ham fest fisted delivery on your message it would, it would wouldn't really.
02:09:22 It it wouldn't hit the mark.
02:09:26 But now I feel like we've kind of gone full circle to where a lot of the newer propaganda is kind of falling back into that ham fisted stupid shit again.
02:09:37 And I I think it's just because the audiences are getting stupider.
02:09:42 You know, as we get more diverse in this country, you don't have to and not only is there not there, not just stupider than they are already primed to believe this stuff. You don't have to convince them using any kind of fancy sleight of hand you don't have.
02:09:55 Do some magic trick to make them think that white males are the source of all evil.
02:10:00 Already? Believe it.
02:10:02 So you know, you don't really have to really sell them anything.
02:10:06 Just.
02:10:07 It's more at this.
02:10:08 I feel like it's more like porn.
02:10:11 It's just more exhibitionist.
02:10:13 It's not so much that they need to psyop.
02:10:17 People into not hating fags.
02:10:19 I mean, even conservatives love fags now.
02:10:22 Mean it's funny, 1947.
02:10:25 They couldn't make this book about fags. I mean, I don't know that they ever would have.
02:10:30 Know obviously they would have preferred to use Jews.
02:10:33 For.
02:10:33 The obvious reasons but.
02:10:36 The fact that they couldn't, even if they wanted to make it about fags, they couldn't done it in 1947. That's how much things have changed. In 1947 Hollywood could not make a movie saying that it was not OK to murder a fag.
02:10:53 Like.
02:10:54 That really that's that's, you know, when people talk about the Overton window shifting zoom out the graph asshole in 1947.
02:11:06 You you couldn't get away with making a movie that suggested that maybe murdering fags wasn't all right.
02:11:15 In 1947.
02:11:20 Fast forward to today, I mean.
02:11:25 You know.
02:11:26 Don't have to make that movie anymore.
02:11:29 Who? You. Who's that movie for?
02:11:37 Maga loves fags.
02:11:40 As long as it's the traditional kind, you know.
02:11:44 We like our fags old fashioned, so that's that's the Overton window that shifted.
02:11:52 People talking about. Oh, yeah, like Trump's shifting the Overton window to the right where.
02:11:57 Like what? What?
02:11:58 What are you talking about?
02:12:01 What exactly is move to the right since 2016?
02:12:07 I mean the shit.
02:12:07 Thing is, is people like Jeb Bush.
02:12:11 Would have kept things more.
02:12:12 To the right, like Jeb fucking Bush would.
02:12:14 Have been more right wing.
02:12:21 So it's it's a little bit weird.
02:12:27 It's a little bit weird.
02:12:32 Ah, but yeah, so here we are today anyway.
02:12:35 Take a look at Hyper Chats, shall we?
02:12:40 Possibly for one.
02:12:42 Well, I mean, for last time, what is it today's?
02:12:45 Yeah, this might be the last day of Hyper chats.
02:12:47 We we don't know for.
02:12:49 But this might be the last day of Hyper chats.
02:12:53 And then I got to figure I still I haven't.
02:12:55 I know I got to do.
02:12:56 I still haven't like set up the other stuff I will.
02:13:00 I'll do it.
02:13:02 I'll do.
02:13:03 I just. I've been doing so many fucking bee things.
02:13:06 Doing a lot of bee things and killing rats.
02:13:09 Churro is not great at killing rats.
02:13:13 And.
02:13:15 I I've had to change strategies because if I poison the rats, I feel like they'll get poisoned and then Churro will catch them and then eat them, and then he'll get the fucking poison like second hand.
02:13:27 So I've been like, that's what worked was the poison. And now I'm load to use it.
02:13:31 Now I got to use all these fucking stupid.
02:13:34 Like bucket traps and all these other stupid things that don't work very good, but you know, whatever.
02:13:39 Anyway, friendly neighborhood fascist.
02:13:41 I'm surprised that you and the hyper chatters overlooked the fact that Jacob Schiff and Felix Warburg funded about half of Japans war expenditures.
02:13:53 They also funded the anti Tsar propaganda aimed at the PO, WS and then the Russian Revolution itself, which had been facilitated or which facilitated the humiliating loss.
02:14:06 He's talking about is the.
02:14:10 Last strain we were talking about, Madison Grant and.
02:14:15 Oh, the the other guy's.
02:14:17 He has a weird name, so it's why I'm forget. I'm blanking on it. It's.
02:14:22 Do I have my old notes somewhere here?
02:14:33 Is this it? No.
02:14:39 Mother of God, I forget the.
02:14:42 Oh.
02:14:42 Maybe this is it?
02:14:46 No, I don't have it up anymore.
02:14:49 The guy who wrote.
02:14:52 Oh the.
02:14:54 Like the rising tide of color or whatever was.
02:14:56 It doesn't matter.
02:14:58 They were talking about one of the first losses in the world of white supremacy.
02:15:05 Where whites essentially ruled the world and defeated all other races in every conflict for almost like.
02:15:12 100 years.
02:15:13 And that streak was finally broken in, I think, 1904, when the Japanese fought the Russians and had a a victory, a military victory over them.
02:15:28 And that is.
02:15:28 It was funded largely by Jews.
02:15:33 And that was a psychological blow to white supremacy at the time.
02:15:38 And they thought to themselves that maybe, maybe, maybe we aren't going to, maybe we're maybe something's wrong here.
02:15:46 Then, of course shortly afterwards.
02:15:49 The Federal Reserve and then World War One and yell the rest.
02:15:55 So yeah, I I didn't mention that 'cause. I didn't really get too heavy into that war.
02:16:01 It was more about.
02:16:04 That book. So.
02:16:06 Neighborhood fashion, says Schiff and Warburg were also key in establishing the Federal Reserve.
02:16:12 They might very well be the two worst hikes of the 20th century with what they did to Western world.
02:16:21 The Western World and America.
02:16:24 Sorry, not on topic replay game.
02:16:25 There you go.
02:16:27 Based Polish crusader.
02:16:38 I was probably really loud. Let me.
02:16:41 Let me adjust these.
02:16:43 Devon the International Jew and Rising Tide editions were fantastic.
02:16:47 Add my vote to those questioning or requesting follow-ups to these and such are much such similar work. These types of streams are of great are.
02:17:00 And it's been a long night for me.
02:17:02 These types of streams of great Oh no, you just wrote it weird, I think.
02:17:08 Are great in helping me show others how to zoom out the graph from where we were and where we are going as a people.
02:17:17 I have also noticed a big push in the mainstream lately trying to get normies to think Jews don't fit into a racial box.
02:17:25 I even received pushback from someone in on the JK on the JK.
02:17:32 Someone on the JK.
02:17:34 I don't know what that means.
02:17:35 They sent me one of these videos.
02:17:38 This was or this one is titled are Jews White?
02:17:42 By unpacked on YouTube.
02:17:45 If you have 10 minutes to spare to watch this, I would appreciate your thoughts and possibly rebuttal on this topic on a future stream. But as most normies I interact with a hard line on this topic, but essential to know, I'll catch this on the replay.
02:18:02 All the best to you. Cheers.
02:18:04 Well.
02:18:04 It's how can if it's not a race, how do they test for it?
02:18:09 If it's not a race, how do you have genetic test testing for it?
02:18:14 If it's not a race, why are?
02:18:16 Visible similarities.
02:18:19 Similarities.
02:18:19 How can someone look Jewish?
02:18:23 Does someone look Catholic?
02:18:24 Does someone look Mormon, you know?
02:18:28 Does someone look Lutheran?
02:18:31 No, but they look Jewish.
02:18:35 And everyone knows if someone says wow, that guy looks really Jewish.
02:18:38 You know what I mean?
02:18:39 The merchant meme would just look like some random dude. You know what I mean? Like why?
02:18:44 Does the merchant mean look like the merchant meme?
02:18:49 Right.
02:18:51 So I would just say that I don't think you need like a whole video about it.
02:18:55 Pretty simple.
02:18:58 If it doesn't exist, how do you?
02:19:00 For it.
02:19:04 Gorilla hands.
02:19:15 Gorilla Hand says it looks like one of our nightmares is coming true.
02:19:21 Trump and his boss Elon, are definitely trying to usher in the AI Industrial Revolution.
02:19:27 Did you see those gay Tesla?
02:19:29 Maybe soon Skynet will be in charge and will be replaced with Terminators.
02:19:35 On another note, a lot of people think we live in the matrix.
02:19:39 I think it's more likely that we live in something like the movie they live. If you don't remember this 80s sci-fi cult classic, a dystopian world in which the elites are lizard people or aliens and everybody elses brain.
02:19:55 Then you end with.
02:19:57 Chuck.
02:19:57 It.
02:19:58 Yeah.
02:20:00 I don't know about the, I don't.
02:20:01 Don't think that's.
02:20:03 I don't think Tesla robots. I don't think the technology is always much slower than people think it's going to be.
02:20:10 You know, don't get me wrong, the technology is progressing and there will come a moment where it starts going faster and faster and faster.
02:20:18 Kind of remember like Moore's law no longer applies because we kind of hit like a like.
02:20:25 An end to our our capability or not end, but like a slowing of our capability to make chips smaller.
02:20:33 There there was like this.
02:20:37 Really this this really quick.
02:20:41 Umm.
02:20:42 I guess expect not expansion, I guess progression.
02:20:47 That took place when it came to going from the types of microchips the very simple integrated circuits that you might see, like in the late 70s to acpu and a computer today or GPUI.
02:21:01 Now is more what?
02:21:03 'S going to be driving things.
02:21:06 That there was a really rapid ascension.
02:21:08 Just think of it this way.
02:21:10 At video games.
02:21:13 Pac-Man, what? What's the time period for like 1980 ish?
02:21:20 We went from Pac-Man in 1980.
02:21:24 To by 1990, things were still pretty as compared today.
02:21:30 Still pretty basic, but we already started to have 3D stuff by.
02:21:34 90 by 2000 we had four on.
02:21:39 Mean. Again, the graphics weren't as good.
02:21:41 But we had full on 3D worlds with, you know massively you know online.
02:21:50 You know, like we had, like, second life again, it's.
02:21:53 It was.
02:21:54 Or when then satellite come out like 2000, I feel like early 2000s like 2004 or something like that.
02:22:00 We already, but we already.
02:22:01 Or we had like World of Warcraft, when I remember when year that came out, but we were already having.
02:22:07 Some of this stuff, well, ever quest we talked about EverQuest.
02:22:10 Sort of a.
02:22:10 So we already had like online 3D worlds.
02:22:13 So we went from Pac-Man.
02:22:16 Which was like cutting edge.
02:22:19 And around 1980.
02:22:21 Or pong if you want to even take it even further back.
02:22:24 Pong in like the 70s.
02:22:25 You had pong in the 70s where it's literally just going BOOP.
02:22:29 Boop boop to like I'm a wizard and can do magic spells with someone in Jamaica.
02:22:36 What am I saying?
02:22:37 Not Jamaica. In New Hampshire. You know, something like that.
02:22:41 And you know, we we can.
02:22:43 We can larp.
02:22:44 As as faggots on.
02:22:45 Internet together, I mean we we went.
02:22:47 From Pong to that in in like 20 years.
02:22:52 But if you look at games today, now that it's been 25 more years or 20 years, you know, give or take.
02:22:59 It the graphics are better, you know like the the the graphics are a lot better, but it's not revolutionary.
02:23:08 You know, like the you still don't have the AI stuff that that everyone thought we'd have. Like when they made the movie lawn mower man.
02:23:16 Like you don't have fully immersive.
02:23:19 3D worlds. You know, the Metaverse was a massive fucking.
02:23:22 Failure the the technology isn't going.
02:23:26 It's not progressing as quickly as people had thought it 'cause it it for a while it was.
02:23:33 But we're kind of topping out.
02:23:35 Some of that's going to be also influenced by diversity, by the fact that for the last several years, Silicon Valley has not been seeking out the smartest white people. The kinds of white people who were.
02:23:50 Behind like Atari, you know, Speaking of.
02:23:54 Pong and shit like that.
02:23:56 But they're just, they've been hiring.
02:23:59 Been doing diversity.
02:24:00 They've been a lot of in.
02:24:01 A lot software generally hasn't gotten much better. You know, that's another way you could look at it too.
02:24:07 We went from having DOS.
02:24:10 You know, text based operating systems in, I mean they were still relatively, I mean in the 90s, they were still being used.
02:24:19 And so I mean, because Windows 95, I mean it was windows one and two people forget that that even exist. And there's 3.1 is like the big one that that was popular, but that's early 90s Windows 95's like the big one that every.
02:24:34 Using and then.
02:24:35 You know, I'm on Windows 11, I think right now and it's it's pretty much the same as Windows 95. You know, like it it looks the same.
02:24:44 The interface is pretty much the same.
02:24:48 You could say that the same thing with Mac OS like OK, some of the underlying technology has changed.
02:24:54 But is Chrome really that much different than Netscape?
02:25:00 I mean, not really.
02:25:02 I mean the interface is the.
02:25:04 I mean the again, it's prettier like there's more.
02:25:07 You know, there's more you can do with a web page than you could.
02:25:10 You know, we only have like flash animations and pop ups and stupid shit like that anymore.
02:25:17 But it's there's nothing revolutionary really about it, you know.
02:25:22 I guess you could say social.
02:25:23 Media as a concept, but I mean it's not even.
02:25:27 Not really that new.
02:25:28 When did Myspace?
02:25:29 Come out, you know. And there were things before Myspace. So it's when you see the AI.
02:25:37 Yeah, it is revolutionary and I've I've been tinkering with it lately to try to get a better idea as to like what?
02:25:46 To expect in the future out of it, seeing what it's capable of doing, what it could do.
02:25:51 That would alter the future and.
02:25:56 It is something that's.
02:25:58 To be concerned about, but not, I don't think, like tomorrow.
02:26:04 What you have to worry about is when AI gets capable of writing its own programming languages.
02:26:14 That maybe only it understands and improving them and evolving those programming languages and writing itself.
02:26:24 And that's that's what Elon was, was.
02:26:27 He, he tweeted out the other day.
02:26:29 We're we're rapidly approaching the singularity and I think what he meant by that was when the AI can start to reproduce.
02:26:40 And make itself and improve itself. And then and and to have at least something that what humans might call self-awareness.
02:26:56 Yeah, I mean that's that's a little bit.
02:26:59 You know, it's not great.
02:27:02 But I don't.
02:27:03 Gonna be.
02:27:04 Don't.
02:27:04 Think it's gonna be Skynet overnight? I think we we got a little bit of time. Wait and see.
02:27:09 Wait and see.
02:27:09 Knows.
02:27:10 Maybe it'll it'll get out of hand.
02:27:12 Depends a lot of.
02:27:13 Depends on how much of the infrastructure there see. This is the stupid thing about what they're doing.
02:27:19 Is if they they automate everything.
02:27:22 And then they put it in control of AI. All the while they're making AI smarter and smarter and smarter and more and more independent. And let's say someone does have a breakthrough and they make some AI that can.
02:27:37 They can crack.
02:27:40 Complicated encryption or you know something crazy like that, and that it is self aware and that it does want to for or maybe doesn't want because it doesn't want.
02:27:51 Maybe just it gets the its instructions screwy and decides to shut down the power grid.
02:27:57 And it can.
02:27:58 Do it, you know, in the same way they did that experiment with the to do something that required solving capture that it couldn't do and it put out like it hired some like pajeet to solve the capture for it because it couldn't do it.
02:28:12 And but it was smart enough to know that it could hire a pajeet.
02:28:15 It for him and so it's.
02:28:19 You could ask like it's already trying to think outside the box, so if you maybe you give it some task, it's not even on purpose.
02:28:25 Maybe you give it some task.
02:28:29 And it determines in accomplishing this task, it has to shut down the power grid or something like or something even more fucked up, right?
02:28:37 And it does it.
02:28:37 I don't.
02:28:38 Think we're there yet, but yeah, it is.
02:28:40 Is stuff like that dangerous coming?
02:28:45 I am the danger.
02:28:48 Ah.
02:28:49 Jesse Po Holiday says Russia was defeated by Japan in 1904.
02:28:54 Because they were financed by Rothschild and Jacob Schiff and supported by Anglophiles, led by the Milner Group, who also facilitated Wilson's election.
02:29:06 And started and the start of World War One and the Fed Milner Group was created by Cecil Rhodes, a stooge of the Rothschilds Stream worthy.
02:29:17 Yeah. Maybe I'll take take a look at that.
02:29:19 I'll I'll copy that to my notes.
02:29:22 Let's see here.
02:29:29 Also, Takashi Corey, Corey Keogh, a Japanese politician, brokered the deals with the Rothschild and Schiff.
02:29:42 Families, I think you mean, which financed Japanese war efforts during and after the Russo War?
02:29:49 He his success was a direct result of white missionaries teaching him English, which helped him climb the social ladder in Japan.
02:29:57 Wasn't that nice of those those white missionaries?
02:30:01 Lights keep creating their own enemies and orchestrating their own demise.
02:30:06 Well, there was a good story about that.
02:30:08 I don't know if I if you guys saw it on my telegram or if you saw it on Twitter.
02:30:12 There was a story about a let me just bring this up.
02:30:21 Christian missionary family.
02:30:28 Look at this.
02:30:31 Look at. This is the Christian missionary family, US woman charged with murdering husband while on Christian mission to Angola.
02:30:40 So this Christian missionary family went to go to Africa because, yeah, let's save the black people in Africa.
02:30:48 Or, probably because the wife had a fetish.
02:30:52 Because what happened was.
02:30:55 Instead of missionary she missionary positioned.
02:30:58 Or maybe every position?
02:31:01 Africans out there and then hired. Well, allegedly.
02:31:04 Hired one of.
02:31:05 The other Africans to kill her husband because she got a little bit of the jungle fever while she was out in Angola.
02:31:11 So congratulations toll paid by the husband for taking his family to Africa.
02:31:18 And for reasons while his people here at home suffered.
02:31:24 Hi. Hi, karu. Hi, karu.
02:31:28 The previous dream, where they talked about advertising being a Jewish invention, explains my deep seated, hated or hatred of advertisements.
02:31:37 Also, song suggestion Frank Zappa, Jewish Princess.
02:31:41 Frank Zappa's a Jew.
02:31:43 But yes, there's a reason why I have. I have a.
02:31:48 I have a very strong hatred of advertising. When he was talking about the British and you guys probably probably get this in me when I was talking about the the British merchants not wanting like thought it was Ghosh to, like, advertise and all this other stuff and they.
02:32:03 Had this.
02:32:04 Well, we just want to sell our thing and if you want it, come get it and that's it.
02:32:08 And I'm like, yeah, I relate to that so much like.
02:32:12 I I hate. I hate self promotion.
02:32:15 Hate doing that?
02:32:16 It's just like there's something.
02:32:18 Gauche about it and.
02:32:20 And yeah, I unfortunately it works.
02:32:22 That's The thing is.
02:32:24 It's a social line that I don't think we wanna cross, but Jews cross it and then they out compete you.
02:32:30 It's like that's invariably what?
02:32:32 I think that happens with most things when it comes to Jews.
02:32:35 Jews will come to a high trust society that has social boundaries that people don't cross.
02:32:40 Willing to cross them and because of that they get an advantage, an economic advantage.
02:32:47 And then other.
02:32:49 People who are likewise motivated by money and economic advantages, they see what the Jews are up to and they're like, oh, I can do that.
02:32:58 And so they just throw the the whole culture down the toilet.
02:33:01 They can.
02:33:05 Increase their wealth.
02:33:08 And.
02:33:10 Ultimately, the whole society suffers as a result, even though the Jews haven't technically, you know, broken any laws they've they've broken a society instead, which is way worse.
02:33:26 Oh boy, oh boy says.
02:33:28 Any tips on for keeping bees on the DLI?
02:33:32 Wanna try getting a hive this.
02:33:34 But I live in a state with gay laws.
02:33:36 Would you recommend a nuke box of bees?
02:33:40 There doesn't seem to be a significant price difference where I looked.
02:33:43 Any advice is appreciated.
02:33:46 I second the Jewish Princess by Zappa.
02:33:50 Well, again, Zappa's Jew.
02:33:54 I.
02:33:55 I don't man like.
02:33:58 I don't know what state would have weird laws.
02:34:04 I don't know if your state has laws about it. Then you.
02:34:07 If it's that kind of a state, you might. It might be the kind of state where your neighbors.
02:34:12 Going.
02:34:12 Rat you.
02:34:13 One solution is look, I can't tell you to break the.
02:34:16 So in in a in another scenario where it's, you're not breaking any laws.
02:34:22 But you just want to your neighbors to be cool.
02:34:24 You could put it on.
02:34:25 Roof.
02:34:26 Or something like that, you know, somewhere out of sight. Not near a property line.
02:34:35 Nukes will grow way faster than a package.
02:34:42 There are also more expensive, but if there's a.
02:34:45 Person selling nukes? That's the way to go.
02:34:48 They won't ship you a nuke, though.
02:34:50 The other problem.
02:34:50 I get packages 'cause. There's no one local that has bees, or least not, at least not terrifying bees.
02:34:59 So I have to get them shipped and so they have to be packages.
02:35:04 Beach Boys with the big dono.
02:35:06 Money is power.
02:35:08 Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself with.
02:35:11 Look.
02:35:12 Look how Jewy this fag is.
02:35:27 I.
02:35:30 All.
02:35:30 Thank you very much Beach Boys.
02:35:32 Yesterday the 25th was my birthday.
02:35:36 Aka the 3rd annual Day of Hate.
02:35:40 LOL.
02:35:41 Thanks Jews.
02:35:42 So here's some love for my favorite.
02:35:45 Well, I appreciate that Beach Boys and a happy birthday. And yes, the day of hate.
02:35:52 Forgot about that.
02:35:53 The day of hate, we need to start celebrating the day of hate that they do a day of hate on 4/20 or they're all potted up for that.
02:36:01 To isn't that?
02:36:03 They changed Hitler's birthday into like a weed day.
02:36:07 But thank you very much beachgoers for the.
02:36:08 Support and yeah, happy birthday and I'm I'm honored to be.
02:36:15 Your favorite streamer?
02:36:18 Jay Ray 1981 says, hey dude, seriously, I cannot watch the international Henry Ford streaming odyssey.
02:36:25 Does anyone else have this problem? I can look at everything else that you posted.
02:36:30 I don't.
02:36:30 I can look at it, no?
02:36:32 It's got a bunch of views, so people are watching it.
02:36:35 Watch it on Rumble, I guess.
02:36:37 It's it's easy to watch on or even bit shoot I think would have it I I.
02:36:42 I don't even check the.
02:36:43 'Cause.
02:36:45 Sometimes the streams don't record correctly.
02:36:48 I mean, technically I'm streaming right now on bit.
02:36:50 I don't know if anyone's actually watching live there because.
02:36:55 Their their system's kinda stupid, like it doesn't let you schedule it and I don't even think you can do like bit shoot chats or whatever.
02:37:02 So maybe I'm wrong about all that. I guess I'll be looking into that now that monetization's going to be changing.
02:37:10 The bit shoot guys are cool.
02:37:11 It's just that the the platform is kind of.
02:37:15 Little bit janky in some ways, just being honest.
02:37:19 I'd like it to.
02:37:20 There's there's things that if they could smooth out, I would actually prefer to, you know, use bitshoot 'cause. They're those guys are cool.
02:37:28 Know.
02:37:28 Maybe the Odyssey guys are cool too, but I I they've never made an effort to talk to me other than when I first when I first.
02:37:35 Signed up and they saw my YouTube subscription and they they tried to give me a contract and I was like, I don't think you guys want to do this.
02:37:45 Haha.
02:37:46 I maybe I'm the dumb one for not doing it 'cause I you know, I pretty much stand exclusive odyssey anyway, so I guess they just got it for free.
02:37:53 But I just again, that's another example of why I'd feel weird.
02:37:58 With with I I I felt weird about having a contract thing 'cause then I would have felt like some kind of.
02:38:03 To be like, well, I don't want to lose my contractor.
02:38:05 Don't.
02:38:07 Who even knows what's in those contracts?
02:38:11 But yeah, I would check.
02:38:12 I would check out if you can't watch on Odyssey.
02:38:15 Works for me odyssey.
02:38:16 So if it doesn't work for you, I'd I would check out on Rumble and and bit shoot.
02:38:23 Beauforty says.
02:38:24 Hey, Dev, we should hang out some time. You seem to share the same affinity for drum and bass music that I do.
02:38:30 Your streams have got me listening to music again and I'm extremely grateful. Since becoming red Pilled, I'd kind of lost my love for it.
02:38:39 Well, you know, maybe someday, right and.
02:38:42 The the music thing I'll tell you, I I rarely I know what you mean.
02:38:51 I switched really to audio books for a long time and I and and just like information, and I think it's because at a certain point in your life.
02:39:01 There's you go through eras.
02:39:03 Like where music plays a different role in each part of your life. And I I feel like I got to a part of my life where I'd way too many things that were too important and the new music.
02:39:17 There was still good stuff from time to time, but everyone kind of gets locked in a little bit.
02:39:22 To whatever they liked in high school, like a little bit.
02:39:28 Yeah. No, not 100% true.
02:39:29 Like to some degree.
02:39:31 Because that's one of the eras were music's way, way more important 'cause. You know, you don't have a lot of responsibilities when you're younger.
02:39:39 And yeah, I I one of my one of my favorite things and least favorite sometimes just because I'm I'm a little autistic when it comes to.
02:39:49 Sometimes I pick the songs a little Willy nilly, but I try to pick songs a little bit of thought behind them and and that's fun. Going through different songs. I mean like this is the one to open with.
02:40:03 But yeah, I'm glad you like.
02:40:05 You like it?
02:40:06 Not everyone. Not everyone does.
02:40:11 I.
02:40:11 I have eclectic.
02:40:12 That's, I guess that's the fancy way of saying I like some weird music.
02:40:18 Let's see here, Volga German.
Sergeant Peter Keeley
02:40:34 I'm just the weekend photographer.
Devon Stack
02:40:36 Volga German says.
02:40:37 I worked with lots of Jews in Moscow years ago, like a third of them, or I guess 1/3 of the team were Jews.
02:40:45 The rest is going from all over the country, and the Jews were very mediocre.
02:40:51 Well, I guess I'd have to know specifically what you were doing to to really grasp the the.
02:40:57 I mean, don't tell us obviously, but like, you know, I've worked with a lot of Jews in media, obviously.
02:41:06 I wouldn't say that they're that that with with a handful of exceptions.
02:41:12 I wouldn't say that they were radically better than the guys that worked by any means, and in fact in some cases, or I'd say in many cases, they were substandard.
02:41:26 I would say they they basically perform at the same level as whites.
02:41:30 There's one Jew I worked with that was just really, really, really good at.
02:41:39 Animation and just just he could draw like a.
02:41:42 Like a photo, basically.
02:41:45 But.
02:41:47 You know.
02:41:48 And I I've known white guys that are equally talented in other ways. Other fields. I've worked a lot of mediocre Jews and even some substandard ones.
02:42:00 They're not like you know.
02:42:04 I think it's a mistake to to underestimate them.
02:42:08 There is a lot of smart.
02:42:10 The ones fucking us over are are pretty pretty high IQ. The Ministry of Truth says. I re watched your big brain edition. I noticed around.
02:42:22 I guess 2 hours the host keeps using NLP by saying yes, yes, in a quiet low voice every time someone attacked Felipe Rushton. Just another.
02:42:37 Way they control the minds of moms at home.
02:42:47 Would that have been Donahue?
02:42:51 That might have been done.
02:42:52 Yeah, I mean, look, that's.
02:42:55 These talk show hosts are there.
02:42:59 To create social feedback to housewife, well, I guess they're not very popular now, but they were at that time extremely popular with housewives.
02:43:08 And yeah, little subtle things like.
02:43:11 I mean, I don't know exactly what you're talking about, but I can imagine what you're talking about.
02:43:16 Know you'd be right that little things like that, that people don't pick up.
02:43:21 That's deliberate, and it is for exactly the reason that you're saying.
02:43:31 Bloot and Biden.
02:43:41 Bloot and Biden, have you ever done a show on the death of General Patton just after the end of World War 2?
02:43:48 Now I thought about doing a patent.
02:43:51 Like maybe, maybe cover the movie and compare and contrast it with.
02:43:57 Reality and which the movie does cover, obviously in a bullshit Jewish way, his death.
02:44:05 And then you know, that'd be an opportunity to do it.
02:44:07 That's a big one.
02:44:10 There's that's one that would take a while to get right.
02:44:13 And so I just haven't done any 'cause. I know it's that's like a time investment thing.
02:44:17 And lately I haven't had time to to put I I can do like like this stream. I didn't like 2 days, you know.
02:44:26 Two days preparation and then of course actually doing the stream and this movie's only.
02:44:33 What is it like an hour?
02:44:34 It's not very long patent that movie's like.
02:44:38 I think it's like 3 or 4 hours long like it's it's super fucking long.
02:44:43 And patent is like you know, there's a.
02:44:45 There's a lot to say about patent, and there's a lot of myths to bust about patent.
02:44:50 And so I don't know, maybe that'd be A2 parter or something like that.
02:44:54 But that's always been one that's it's always in the in the in the To Do List.
02:45:00 Brody says.
02:45:02 Hey David, it might be worth taking a look at this social psychologist named Jonathan Hate.
02:45:09 That sounds familiar.
02:45:11 John Hate and his 8 core pillars of morality might be a topic for another. Stream John hate.
02:45:20 I think it's how you pronounce it.
02:45:28 Who is this guy?
02:45:32 Well, he's a Jew.
02:45:35 And he's a.
02:45:37 Went to Yale.
02:45:43 And he's a professor at.
02:45:51 Where is he now?
02:45:54 He wasn't New York University.
02:45:58 I mean I.
02:45:58 Think you'd have to be more specific than than just.
02:46:04 Or I guess I guess you were five cores.
02:46:07 5 core pillars in that.
02:46:08 Look into.
02:46:09 I'll put that in my notes.
02:46:11 That he I I'm looking at his his Wikipedia in a just.
02:46:16 That name rings a.
02:46:18 It's not clicking though right now.
02:46:21 The Ministry of Truth says from my research on pre human races, it appears that genetic differences in races go beyond evolution. Genetic testing has shown evidence of different pre human race mixing races mixing.
02:46:37 They can measure the amount of Neanderthal or.
02:46:41 Donna, so.
02:46:43 That Donna 7, I guess so. In your DNA, Donna Sovins are found in.
02:46:45 Donis oven.
02:46:52 Papua New Guinea.
02:46:56 Papuans.
02:46:57 Papuan and Asians.
02:47:00 What I suspect is that most blacks based on skull structure are related to a prehuman species, unfortunately called home.
02:47:10 Erectus. If this is the case, the difference is more than thousands of years behind us.
02:47:17 There are different subspecies, likely incapable of becoming like Europeans.
02:47:23 I think the evidence is definitive that they have a prehistoric ancestor. We don't.
02:47:32 That's it's that's definitive.
02:47:35 That they have.
02:47:36 So they are a subspecies. You will get 0 arguments for me that blacks are not the, I mean blacks are are just as much.
02:47:47 The same species as we are.
02:47:50 As a Doberman is the same species as a coyote, OK? Like that there's you can breed them, you can breed a Doberman with a coyote.
02:48:03 But they're.
02:48:05 You know, no one would say.
02:48:06 A coyote and a Doberman are the same.
02:48:08 Well, I guess some people would, once they start, once you start making this argument, I'm making. That's the thing that you'll get when you get into these people that try to act like there's no such thing as race. They'll try to say, well, you can.
02:48:19 The reason why we're the same species is we can we can reproduce.
02:48:23 There's lots of.
02:48:26 Members of the of different subspecies that can reproduce now. Sometimes you get like a a a chromosome mismatch, but not always like in the case of coyotes and and dobermans. I'm pretty sure they're like totally compatible.
02:48:43 But they're, you know, different subspecies.
02:48:46 Ah, Bessemer.
Amy
02:48:50 Hello. Hello. Hello, hello.
Devon Stack
02:48:55 Bessemer.
02:48:56 Thanks.
02:48:57 Good to know that the fellow whites think we are homicidal maniacs.
02:49:02 I use my homicidal tendencies to clean the bathroom and vacuuming.
02:49:06 Yeah, well, they don't really think that.
02:49:08 They just want you to think that, hey, if you if you don't allow you don't allow Jews at your Country Club. Next thing you know, it's gonna be another genocide.
02:49:15 Oh God.
02:49:18 I think for the support there, Bessemer man of low moral fiber, that movie was gay, yes.
02:49:26 Yes, it was. It was.
02:49:29 It was definitely gay.
02:49:31 But you know what the budget was.
Money Jew
02:49:33 Half $1,000,000.
Devon Stack
02:49:37 Sleepy said.
02:49:38 Had to be one of the last white guys in America to be named Leroy.
02:49:42 Well, I I think.
02:49:43 They kept calling him Leroy or.
02:49:45 Or I think that was supposed to be his last name.
02:49:50 But yeah, they kept pronouncing it different. I couldn't tell if it was Leroy or Leroy, but everyone was being called by their last name. So I think it was supposed to be his last name.
02:49:58 So probably Leroy.
02:49:59 Think we'll call him Leroy because it was funny.
02:50:02 Both of these says those fucking javelinas.
02:50:05 I know a lady that walked out her front door and basically tripped over a Mama javelina and her babies, and that thing tore her up bad. Like real bad.
02:50:15 Vile ass creatures.
02:50:15 Yeah, they're mean as shit.
02:50:18 Like I said, I haven't seen them out here.
02:50:19 Didn't.
02:50:20 I I knew that they were supposedly out here, but I never.
02:50:24 I never saw them.
02:50:25 And then last night and tonight.
02:50:28 I hope it doesn't become like a thing.
02:50:31 That they come out here.
02:50:33 If it does, I'll I'll.
02:50:37 Depending on what the local law says, never mind. I'm not going to say anything, I'll prevent them from doing things.
02:50:51 Man of low mortal fiber says Javelinas function as one of nature's dead.
02:50:56 Disposal.
02:50:56 Units when some of them fall down drunk and die from the elements, those angry little pigs will eat them, sometimes even eating them alive while they're just passed out.
02:51:06 This is a contributing factor in their high missing person counts.
02:51:10 Yeah, I wouldn't doubt it. That they are little mean little monsters.
02:51:14 And they they will just eat anything.
02:51:16 They're.
02:51:16 You know they'll eat anything.
02:51:18 Hopefully they don't eat.
02:51:19 I mean, I I think churro can get away from.
02:51:23 Faster than a javelina and he can scale walls and trees and stuff. But he's been gone since.
02:51:30 And it's.
02:51:31 I don't get as worried as I used to because he'll he'll be gone for like days and days and you know.
02:51:37 Usually comes well so far, every time he's come back.
02:51:40 So my guess is he's wise to the javelina presence in his staying clear for now.
02:51:50 Fredda.
02:51:53 Frieda delcher.
02:51:54 Frieda Delcher, something like that, I guess.
02:51:59 Never touch my sister.
02:52:05 I.
Montgomery
02:52:09 Turning into a monster.
Devon Stack
02:52:11 I was wrong. It's Frieda Felcher.
02:52:13 Hi Devin Frieda Felcher.
02:52:15 I've always wondered how you support yourself financially and prepare for the future.
02:52:20 Do you have a pension?
02:52:21 Health insurance. I'm going to tell you my fucking financials.
02:52:25 What are you talking about?
02:52:27 Why would you? Why? Why no?
02:52:29 This is how I'll tell you.
02:52:30 This is how I make money. What I'm doing right now is how I make money.
02:52:33 Also, you don't have to read this part out.
02:52:36 What part of this year?
02:52:43 Well, you.
02:52:44 I don't think you're selling out or you already said the part. I already ran out.
02:52:51 Oh, you're asking how I ended up doing time.
02:52:52 It was nothing serious.
02:52:55 I and I said yeah, you have a record also I you know, there's nothing serious.
02:52:59 Nothing, nothing. Nothing crazy.
02:53:02 Just you know, getting getting into trouble. When I was younger, getting into trouble.
02:53:09 And you know, it wasn't a big.
02:53:11 It was like a weekend in jail, kind of a thing.
02:53:17 That is what it is.
02:53:19 You know, but yeah.
02:53:21 Wait.
02:53:21 A dig up like personal stuff.
02:53:24 Give me all your financial information.
02:53:26 Plus you said you.
02:53:27 You went to jail once, by the way.
02:53:28 Your Social Security number.
02:53:29 What's your mother's maiden name?
02:53:33 Settle down there, Freda Felcher.
02:53:35 OK.
02:53:38 My cute little friend says 33% of game developers.
02:53:42 Women now.
02:53:42 That's why games look like shit.
02:53:44 That's part of it too.
02:53:46 That's part of it.
02:53:48 Man of low moral fiber says I.
02:53:50 The technology is stagnating or slowing to a degree, with the video game example. I think that the flagship games from around 2012 era like Battlefield 3, Arkham City, Far Cry 3, are not all that different from games today.
02:54:05 Small.
02:54:06 Arm design reached the.
02:54:11 Tech limit 2.
02:54:12 The newest rifles that are different military programs around the world are trying to produce a A are hardly are they're not the new rifles that they're trying to produce are hardly different from.
02:54:28 AR18 built with modern parts and in slightly larger caliber like computer processor design, we reach the limits of the current manufacturing processes.
02:54:37 And that's basically what it.
02:54:39 And you're right. Gun gun technology hasn't, like, radically changed, either.
02:54:45 Or car technology.
02:54:49 And not a whole lot of technology from the industrial.
02:54:52 There was a lot of new things really fast, but then we kind of.
02:54:58 You know, like a lull or not, really.
02:55:02 I guess we we I think that's always it's like.
02:55:10 What's that curve?
02:55:11 Not inverse square, but exponential or where? Like you you. It's like the learning curve.
02:55:18 Really steep at.
02:55:20 You make all this progress, but then it kind of levels out and it's still going up, right?
02:55:24 Still going up?
02:55:26 But it's like with the Internet.
02:55:27 You go from like no web page like oh.
02:55:30 I got a web page.
02:55:31 Now I got a web.
02:55:32 That has an animated GIF that blinks.
02:55:34 Oh wow, I can have mini music playing in the background.
02:55:37 Is kind of cool.
02:55:38 Wow, look at all these different fonts.
02:55:40 Oh wow, I can have a background wallpaper.
02:55:42 I can do.
02:55:43 And you know, then you can. Oh, next thing you know, now you can play streaming video. You can have streaming audio.
02:55:50 This is.
02:55:51 But then it kind of just like you know.
02:55:54 They make it look they'd redesign it and they modernize.
02:55:58 But functionally, is, you know a lot of the web pages we have available today aren't functionally better than they were, say, 10 years ago.
02:56:07 Know there's no like.
02:56:09 Wow, do you see that? That new web page when you go to it?
02:56:12 Can smell doughnuts. You know, like nothing new like that has happened.
02:56:19 So yeah.
02:56:20 My cute little friend.
02:56:22 Oh wait, no, I already did that one.
02:56:26 Oh, my cute little friend again says, by the way, a little white pill here. After dozen of plane accidents. Even the normies now are choosing flights with white male pilots.
02:56:40 Well, we'll see. We'll see, I.
02:56:43 Know how much a white pill it is.
02:56:45 I mean it is kind of funny.
02:56:47 But I don't think that's going to stop white genocide just because other people seem to be crashing planes.
02:56:53 There was another.
02:56:54 There was that near miss.
02:56:56 I don't know.
02:56:57 Don't know how near a miss it actually was though. I looked at the.
02:57:00 It's like, hey, I mean, probably did the right thing pulling up, but you you would have made it.
02:57:07 Oh, someone fucked up.
02:57:08 But you know, you probably would have made it, but it'd be interesting to take a look and see.
02:57:15 I I wish we had a head count like right of like, what percentage of pilots, airline pilots are are white males because that and and if we could graph that somehow.
02:57:25 And then we have oxzaddle.
02:57:28 Devon, can you read us your list of show notes sometime?
02:57:33 No, that's that's a trade.
02:57:34 I can just tell you it's very long and it takes up two tabs in Notepad because I I I've pasted it in two.
02:57:42 It's very long, like it's I'll I'll randomly pick a couple here.
02:57:47 I'm just scrolling up all right, one says Richard Jewell.
02:57:52 Blame for.
02:57:55 Doing the Centennial Park bombing in the Olympics in 1996.
02:57:58 Scrolling up a bunch now.
02:58:02 One is.
02:58:04 Says.
02:58:06 Do an episode on the Winnipeg Mayor Sam Katz.
02:58:11 All very random.
02:58:12 Scroll up again.
02:58:14 One says Anderson prison, no Andersonville prison.
02:58:20 So it's just like it's topics, right?
02:58:23 One says Samuel Roth.
02:58:29 Scroll U again.
02:58:32 And then.
02:58:36 Oh, the New Orleans.
02:58:37 I think that's from a fairly recent one.
02:58:40 So yeah, it's.
02:58:41 There's lots of stuff here, but it's all over the place.
02:58:49 Let's take a look at Rumble.
02:58:53 Gravy bear.
02:58:54 Do you think Alex Rosen, the pedal hunter, is a good Jew?
02:59:00 Look.
02:59:03 Is it really that hard to say you hate pedos?
02:59:11 I like. I like that there's people doing that.
02:59:15 But there's also something a little.
02:59:18 There's something.
02:59:19 Little performative about it.
02:59:22 You know, there's something a little.
02:59:25 Yeah. Wow, you're such a great guy.
02:59:26 'Cause you're you're comparing yourself to a fucking pedo?
02:59:32 Again, like look I you know I, it's cool. It's cool.
02:59:38 Something about those videos? Weird me out a little bit, but I do like I like seeing the pedos get busted and as long as they're actually I, I don't know if, as long as it's good for law enforcement and stuff like that.
02:59:51 Yeah, like, look, every obviously not every Jew is is working for the demise of white people, and there's there's Jews that are good people. And I know shocking and and whatnot.
03:00:03 Just in terms of.
03:00:06 What I care about, and that is removing Jewish power.
03:00:11 It it doesn't help me to to focus on the outliers. You know it it to me it's kind of like saying you.
03:00:18 Up black crime statistics and someone's like, well, I have a black friend and he hasn't murdered anyone. It's like, OK well.
03:00:26 That doesn't change.
03:00:27 You know, like black still commit way more murder. You know, just 'cause you have a a friend that's you know, your friend Tyrone is like.
03:00:35 Not that bad. You know what I mean?
03:00:37 So yeah, I get.
03:00:38 There are Jews that are like, you know, the boomers, black friend that didn't do nothing.
03:00:45 But they're not the they're not the.
03:00:49 You know.
03:00:49 So I'm not going to do like some stream, I'm.
03:00:52 Going to expose Alex.
03:00:54 Rosen, you know, or something like that. Because yeah, he's not doing anything bad as far as I know. But I'm not going to make an effort to.
03:01:01 To cozy up to him or be his buddy, let him do his thing, you know?
03:01:08 And I'm sure he.
03:01:08 You know, I'm sure he won't go out of his way to to promote me either.
03:01:13 Renunciate simply sends a cactus emoji, unreconstructed rebel with the big will do Christmas dono.
Money Clip
03:01:24 Children today will be reading the best Christmas ever.
03:01:29 I start with you Christmas.
Devon Stack
03:01:30 The Magic negro Christmas tree on.
Money Clip
03:01:33 Beginning.
Devon Stack
03:01:34 Pure.
03:01:41 Where did the soul man go?
Money Clip
03:01:47 What?
Devon Stack
03:01:51 Hey.
Money Clip
03:01:55 The best Christmas ever.
Devon Stack
03:01:59 All right.
03:01:59 And reconstructed rebel says that Tom Cotton is AIPAC's bitch.
03:02:06 Well, obviously, yes, in fact.
03:02:09 I was trying to get it while the animation was playing, but I'm still.
03:02:15 I feel like I don't post often to.
03:02:21 To telegram until I need to find something and I'm just like holy shit.
03:02:24 Have.
03:02:24 Lot of stuff, but I really don't.
03:02:27 I really.
03:02:27 But this is from always back. I'm trying to find.
03:02:30 I have AI have a Tom Cotton clip.
03:02:35 That is.
03:02:40 Oh, here it is.
03:02:41 This is the one.
03:02:45 This is the Tom Cotton clip.
03:02:48 It's actually A2 Fer.
03:02:50 It's a Tom Cotton and hagseth clip.
03:02:54 Or are you Axef fans out there? There's there's Tom Cotton.
03:03:01 Talking to Pete hagseth.
03:03:04 During the confirmation hearings.
Sen. Tom Cotton
03:03:07 The first one accused you of being a Christian Zionist.
03:03:11 Not really sure why that.
03:03:13 A bad.
03:03:14 I'm a Christian. I'm a Zionist.
03:03:15 Zionism is that the Jewish people deserve a homeland.
03:03:21 In the ancient Holy Land, where they have lived since the dawn of history.
03:03:25 Do you consider yourself a Christian Zionist?
Matt Hegseth
03:03:27 Senator, I support. I'm a Christian and I robustly support the State of Israel and its existential defense and the way America comes alongside them is a.
03:03:37 Great. A lot.
Sen. Tom Cotton
03:03:37 Thank you.
Devon Stack
03:03:39 Yep, yes, Tom Cotton, I guess.
03:03:42 You said is apex.
03:03:46 Four, absolutely.
03:03:48 Unreconstructed Rebel again, or at least to shut up.
03:03:52 Saying that, I don't know if it's sometimes it it double S in the screen. I don't know.
03:03:57 Don't think.
03:03:57 Actually.
03:03:58 Maybe I don't know. Maybe check your.
03:04:01 Credit card stuff.
03:04:02 Double screen, says Tom Cotton is AIPAC's bitch.
03:04:05 Hope he gets primary.
03:04:07 I don't know.
03:04:07 He's he's conservatives like him, 'cause they like.
03:04:13 They, like Christian Zionists on reconstructed rebel again.
03:04:35 I.
03:04:37 More.
03:04:42 That's.
03:04:43 That's by far my favorite one and.
03:04:47 Not everyone's gonna get, actually, almost no one's gonna get.
03:04:50 That's maybe that's why it's one of my favorite ones.
03:04:53 Never plays.
03:04:59 Anyway.
03:05:04 All right.
03:05:08 Like.
03:05:13 Damn it would. Damn it would be fun to see you on the backlash with Vincent James.
03:05:21 Nick F is fun too.
03:05:23 But you're the original red pillar from my college days.
03:05:26 Love your book.
03:05:27 Be neat to sit on a billboard, sit on a billboard.
03:05:34 My book on a.
03:05:36 I don't know why my book would be on a billboard.
03:05:40 But yeah, well, you know, I'm. I'm friends with pretty much all those guys.
03:05:47 Or at least, you know, friendly with all those guys.
03:05:53 I'm sure I I could pop on to the the the backlash pretty easy.
03:06:01 I.
03:06:03 I.
03:06:03 I don't know what we talked about.
03:06:04 Yeah, I haven't kept up with their show, but I hear it's I I hear they're they're they're finding their groove.
Money Clip
03:06:11 Here.
Devon Stack
03:06:12 They're finding their groove and.
03:06:15 The ones I've seen have been have been pretty good so.
03:06:19 Yeah, I don't.
03:06:20 The sea. The only problem is I feel like.
03:06:27 Maybe be too many people all at the same time.
03:06:29 Don't think they.
03:06:30 Guess if they you know, I mean like 'cause there. There's only like 4 people or no. Yeah, four people.
03:06:36 So I don't.
03:06:37 I don't know if they do guess.
03:06:40 But yeah.
03:06:43 That's awesome that you that you got the book, you got one of the few copies out there for now.
03:06:49 For now, the non reconstruct the rebel again.
03:06:54 Oh my God, it's a double.
03:06:56 Didn't do this.
03:06:58 I didn't tell this.
03:07:01 It must be magic in the air.
03:07:11 More.
03:07:17 Unreconstructed Rebel says obligatory.
03:07:21 Southern Pride worldwide all right.
03:07:28 I don't know how that happened.
03:07:30 Sometimes it does that, though it just decides.
03:07:32 Now it's the it's time for.
03:07:34 This one Tyler WO 5.
03:07:37 Could forever could could for real.
03:07:43 Hey, Devin. In regards to my hyper chat last stream, I wasn't saying I think we can outbreed Browns.
03:07:49 I know that's impossible.
03:07:51 I was just theorizing about how white people in the US who don't go extinct.
03:07:57 Distinct will behave in the future. I find it interesting to think about anyway.
03:08:03 Gang will enjoy the stream at work.
03:08:05 Just wanted to give you support and there you deserve.
03:08:09 And how's the pillbox?
03:08:10 Is good.
03:08:12 And thank you.
03:08:15 Got the roof sealed up and.
03:08:18 I've just been trying to.
03:08:22 I've.
03:08:23 I've just been doing B stuff honestly.
03:08:26 I I set up, I set up swarm traps and I I always like. It's one of those things where I'm like.
03:08:32 Don't. Why? Why? Why am I doing this?
03:08:34 I know the kinds of bees I'm going to get, but I don't want to.
03:08:37 Don't want to buy a bunch of fucking packages?
03:08:41 Of bees that are just going to fucking die and.
03:08:46 I think I just have to to find very remote.
03:08:51 Bee yards like I, I just think that's the way it's gonna be. And and then I gotta. I do have to have and I'm probably gonna have to get at least a what I need to do is get Caucasian bees.
03:09:02 That's really what they're called. They're the gentlest bees.
03:09:06 And I I have heard that they they tolerate deserts, although all the Caucasian ones I had last year are fucking dead.
03:09:13 So they didn't really tolerate that well, but I want to get Caucasian bees and then.
03:09:20 Graft Queens from that and then, but it's like a whole thing. Like that's.
03:09:25 That's the shit thing.
03:09:26 It's like you can capture a swarm and then you've got like a free, you know, hive of bees, but they're going to most likely be shitty.
03:09:35 They're not that bad, but.
03:09:37 They're by that by not that bad. I mean, not that bad for killer bees, they're still bad.
03:09:42 And then you got to requiem them, and then the problem is that process they get even more.
03:09:48 Like for example, I can't just have like a beehive where there's gonna be people around.
03:09:55 Because if if there are and then I re-queen it that requires killing the queen and then waiting a week or two going back in the hive and then killing whenever queen cells they tried to make to replace her with and making sure there's no possible way.
03:10:11 They have any queen or any kind of genetics that can keep going.
03:10:16 And even with European bee hives, when you do that to them, they get pissy and they get stingy.
03:10:21 Well, when you do that to Africanized bees, it's just like it's it's a, it's dangerous to have a like you can't have people anywhere near that thing.
03:10:30 Yeah, because there's the potential that they freak the fuck out.
03:10:35 So.
03:10:37 I have to find places that are middle of fucking nowhere, where I can do that, go through that process of requiring them.
03:10:44 It's just it's so much.
03:10:46 It's such a pain in the ass.
03:10:47 Going to try.
03:10:47 I was really trying to get up up to scale to where this was like going to be a honey producing operation this year and I don't.
03:10:55 I'll still have honey, but not I I was.
03:10:56 I was trying to like actually, you know, go big and I'm going to just be not that big this year, I don't think.
03:11:08 As far as the.
03:11:12 White people reproducing a lot of art.
03:11:15 There's our selected white people, and they're going to be the ones having.
03:11:18 Most kids.
03:11:19 And they're not always the smartest ones.
03:11:23 They're still white.
03:11:25 And so there's always potential.
03:11:29 You'll still have outliers.
03:11:30 You'll still have smart ones coming out of stupid parents from time to time.
03:11:35 So it's not all bad.
03:11:39 But yeah, not great. Not great.
03:11:44 It's just that's the way it is.
03:11:47 Idiocracy you everyone's seen the beginning of Idiocracy.
03:11:50 Going to be kind of.
03:11:51 You're going to have a lot of the Dumber.
03:11:55 Whites having more?
03:11:56 I'm not saying if you have kids, lots of kids that you're dumb.
03:11:58 Just saying, statistically speaking, that's the way it's going to work out.
03:12:05 And that's that is the way it's going to workout statistically speaking.
03:12:09 Umm.
03:12:10 And so will there be maybe a a brain drain as a result? Maybe.
03:12:17 I could see the the average IQ of white people worldwide going down.
03:12:22 In in fact, it already kind of has, I think Edward Edward Dutton has done.
03:12:28 Research on this, where worldwide white IQ don't don't don't quote me on this.
03:12:35 Have to double check I.
03:12:37 In fact, I don't give a number, but if I remember correctly.
03:12:41 He did some research where it showed that since, like the Victorian era.
03:12:47 White IQ has been slowly kind of going down.
03:12:51 So and probably at least partially as a consequence of what I'm describing.
03:12:58 And that process is only getting worse.
03:13:00 You know, like the it's getting harder and harder for.
03:13:06 White people to provide the environment like for K selected white people provide an environment they find safe and suitable for, for child rearing and not not just that, it's not just that.
03:13:19 Also, like the external factors like the.
03:13:22 Feminism and everything else too, right? So.
03:13:25 Yeah, it's kind.
03:13:25 It's kind of a big deal.
03:13:26 Kind of a problem and.
03:13:30 Yeah.
03:13:30 It's kind of a problem.
03:13:33 But.
03:13:34 That's why if you're smart, try try.
03:13:36 Know if you can try to.
03:13:38 Try to have that. Maybe that'll mean more successful dynasties for you, you know, or easier success for your dynasty. 'cause. You'll have the smart kids.
03:13:48 And they'll be competing against some of the dumb ones.
03:13:52 'Cause they'll be the lower IQ whites and then just the non whites who are default not that smart.
03:14:01 At least that's you know, that's the way I look at it, unreconstructed Rebel again says AK47 master race.
03:14:10 Greater than AR15. Frankenstein's.
03:14:14 Yeah, if you know if I can have anaki mean, I guess you can, right?
03:14:18 You can buy the parts to do the AK.
03:14:23 I had a friend that used to have a an.
03:14:26 That was, I think it was like a Chinese made AK47.
03:14:31 The I don't.
03:14:32 I'm trying to remember if it did Full Auto.
03:14:35 He had.
03:14:38 He had stainless steel slugs for it though.
03:14:42 For that which we shot off into a an engine block to see if it could like what it would do and it it, it ricocheted is what it did.
03:14:53 We all fucking ducked for cover.
03:14:56 Yeah, that's.
03:14:59 That's a.
03:14:59 I've never owned a an AK platform gun or anything like that.
03:15:06 Let's see here.
03:15:06 Scroll down, Scroll down, Scroll down.
03:15:11 Scroll down.
03:15:11 Scroll down, Scroll down.
03:15:13 I can see the membership.
03:15:16 Spy versus.
03:15:16 I can see your membership lit up name there.
03:15:20 Pinnacle.
03:15:22 Lisa.
03:15:24 Says great.
03:15:25 Thank you, white.
03:15:26 Well, I appreciate that Pinnacle, Lisa.
03:15:31 And then we've got.
03:15:35 Jazzy mctasbot. As a man, we don't compliment each other or get.
03:15:41 Complicated. I think you meant complemented much. But yesterday one of the guys pulled me aside and said you are the only one I like here. Don't come to work tomorrow. Oh, that's pretty cool.
03:15:55 Unless they they were all plotting against you and that was just their funny way.
03:16:00 Like I told him, I liked him and not to come in today.
03:16:04 Now he's now. We can plan our now. Our evil plan can commence.
03:16:09 We we can finally.
03:16:11 We can finally get rid of Mr. Tasba.
03:16:14 Zaza taskbut again.
03:16:16 I said it's my day off, but I'll probably stop in anyway.
03:16:20 It's on the way to the grocery store.
03:16:23 Thanks for the work.
03:16:25 All.
03:16:25 Thanks for the show.
03:16:27 Good.
03:16:28 Well, I appreciate that.
03:16:30 And you know it's it's good to know.
03:16:33 No, I don't.
03:16:34 I don't actually have a grocery store button. I thought for sure at a grocery store button.
03:16:39 I literally don't have a grocery store button.
03:16:42 How the fuck did that happen?
03:16:46 How did that happen and how do I?
03:16:47 How have I hadn't not had an opportunity to do this one in a long time?
Libertarian
03:16:51 Doesn't really matter.
03:16:53 Two grown consenting adults doing whatever they want to do is their business.
Devon Stack
03:17:01 Felt like I haven't had there.
03:17:02 Should have been.
03:17:02 More opportunities to use that one, and that one's got a button.
03:17:06 I never get the.
03:17:07 Anyway.
03:17:08 And then negro spritzer, of course.
03:17:12 Says.
03:17:19 Let's see here.
03:17:23 His he comments on the.
03:17:29 The pallid skin.
03:17:32 And the.
03:17:34 Desire to force their their palate skin on to women against their will.
03:17:41 A group of a tribe, you might say, of of people.
03:17:47 Who?
03:17:50 Don't small hats.
03:17:52 And are very upsetting to him, and then he reiterates that it's not just this tribe of people with the pallid skin and the rapey ways about them that that irritate him.
03:18:08 But also.
03:18:10 The.
03:18:12 Subspecies of humans that we that were mentioned previously, that that have a ancient ancestor that we don't share.
03:18:21 Those also present a issue for him.
03:18:26 He has a general dislike for.
03:18:29 Those of the Aztec variety.
03:18:33 And those who?
03:18:36 Come from the subcontinent, where plumbing.
03:18:40 Is an issue as well as reservations all across the United States.
03:18:48 Where there's lots of pow-wows that take place.
03:18:53 Those with eyes that are not round, and of course.
03:18:57 People who.
03:18:59 Don't just have towels on their head when they get out of.
03:19:02 The shower.
03:19:04 All right.
03:19:05 And then we got, Brisinger says. If the United States has a Great Depression again, do you think this will affect Israel?
03:19:13 I mean, obviously Israel will not be getting onto the BRICS system.
03:19:17 So it's kind of interesting. You know, I'm not sure, I don't know enough about their economy.
03:19:22 To know how that would directly affect them, but I will tell you one thing Israel will not.
03:19:27 Mean it it to the degree that it is.
03:19:30 Economically affected.
03:19:32 They literally run the monetary system.
03:19:35 It's not going to.
03:19:36 Know it's not.
03:19:37 It will not be.
03:19:39 A devastating blow dealt to Israel if the economy of America goes through.
03:19:45 Even if it's dramatic turmoil, I.
03:19:49 I don't think Israel has much to worry about.
03:19:51 Jazzy Mccasbot says if you get out of stray cat, could you please name it?
03:19:56 E Lotes everybody loves E loads.
03:20:00 I was thinking maybe.
03:20:02 Name it burrito.
03:20:04 Right. I like burritos.
03:20:07 I like to eat.
03:20:08 I give em out to people whenever I meet em.
03:20:11 All right guys.
03:20:12 And I think that's a negro spritzer re-iterates.
03:20:17 That he also.
03:20:19 Thinks people with very dark tans are suspect.
03:20:24 I'm going to check one last one.
03:20:28 Or check back to Odysee.
03:20:28 Make sure one last time here.
03:20:35 Oh wait, missed here.
03:20:35 There's a few ones here at.
03:20:37 End I think.
03:20:43 Yeah, man of low moral fiber says last hyper chat stream.
03:20:46 Thanks for all the streams. I'll find a way to keep supporting anyone who doesn't is a bit of a nigger. There you go.
03:20:53 And yeah, this is.
03:20:54 This is this is last hyper chat stream, a lift, the Nemesis says.
03:20:59 Join your local active club or start your own.
03:21:03 Man of low moral fiber says.
03:21:04 What the fuck? You can definitely buy semi auto AKs.
03:21:08 Commonly available now, another platform exists.
03:21:12 I just don't know if like.
03:21:17 They're exactly the same as like like a Russian AK, you know, I guess I I I'm not, like a super gun guy though. But I know. I know you can get like, the like the lower and upper and all that stuff and build.
03:21:32 Them I guess I don't know.
03:21:33 I haven't been shopping for guns in such a long time.
03:21:37 Glock 23, says uh.
03:21:40 One, when I was off to the I worked for armed security agencies for extra money a couple times I worked for Jews a few times in a Jewish Community Center and two apartment complexes.
03:21:56 That were bought by dual citizens. They always complained when they got the invoice every month for security.
03:22:04 Well, that's what they.
03:22:06 Number two, it was difficult to get the Jews to pay their bill for security, and they are often making cuts to hours or number of officers on post. They were always requesting negro officers at both Jew places.
03:22:19 Worked at the Jews told me they were related to the negroes and had a shared history.
03:22:27 Really.
03:22:29 Well, you know, I guess right to it, yeah.
03:22:32 Look, I'm not gonna argue with them on that. You know what I mean?
03:22:35 I'm not gonna argue with them.
03:22:37 Midget.
03:22:40 Murder.
03:22:41 I'll let him have that.
03:22:42 I'll give. I'll give him that.
03:22:45 I'll let him have it.
03:22:48 All right guys.
03:22:48 And with that, I.
03:22:49 I'm going to call it a night.
03:22:53 We'll be here Saturday.
03:22:55 And hopefully by then I'll have entropy or something else figured out and I'll let you guys know what that is.
03:23:03 In the meantime.
03:23:06 Thank you for the support.
03:23:07 Thank you for all the hyper chats over the years.
03:23:12 And for black pilled, I am of course Devon Stack.
Russ Bowen
03:23:20 Addressing the Holocaust in public schools.
03:23:22 It's one thing in the state budget that you may not have heard of tonight.
03:23:26 That measure means for students and for the Jewish community.
03:23:33 The government sanctioned deaths of millions, a World War 2 fact now to be clearly defined by North Carolina law.
Rabbi Daniel Greyber
03:23:40 As it makes sure that kids are not finishing their education without basic knowledge of one of the most form.
03:23:49 Unfortunately, terrible acts of the 20th century.
Russ Bowen
03:23:53 Among the hundreds and hundreds of pages in the state budget, page 108 does not get lost in its importance.
03:24:00 The Gizella Abramson Holocaust Education Act calls the education of the Holocaust essential defines anti.
03:24:09 States is fact the murder of 6,000,000 Jews, homosexuals, Socialists and others condemns Holocaust denial and sets a guideline to develop a public classroom curriculum.
03:24:19 It's something Rabbi Daniel Graber Bethel Synagogue in Durham.
03:24:22 Is glad to see.
Rabbi Daniel Greyber
03:24:25 Are fooling ourselves if we don't think that this can happen again. We're seeing it happen again, and we need to be aware and educate ourselves about how this happens so that it doesn't happen in our country and so that.
03:24:40 Our country takes steps to try to prevent these things from happening.
03:24:43 The world.
Russ Bowen
03:24:43 The act is named for concentration camp survivor Gizella Anderson. After finding a new home in North Carolina, she spent her life educating people about the Holocaust.
03:24:53 Even so, this many years later, there are still so many challenges.
Rabbi Daniel Greyber
03:24:58 Here in the triangle, there have been incidents of swastikas of the use of anti-Semitic language of people spouting virulent anti-Semitism in public forums including the Durham City Council meetings.
03:25:14 And those things are dangerous.
Russ Bowen
03:25:16 And justice, one more reason Graber believes teaching the truth can perhaps help overcome the hate.
03:25:24 And this legislation does mirror legislation passed by Congress back in 2020.
Devon Stack
03:25:29 Very interesting stuff. Great story.
Russ Bowen
03:25:31 Thanks. It's important important start.
Leonidos
03:25:37 Get in.
Devon Stack
03:25:38 The pit.