3:51:58

INSOMNIA STREAM: SUNDAY SLASHER EDITION

10/25/2025 -   [Full Summary]
Indian Numbers Lady
00:00:05 Echo, hot Tumi. Echo, hot Tumi, Echo, hotami. Echo, hot Tumi.
00:00:24 Echo, hotel echo, hotel echo, hotel Echo, hotel message, 443743792, good, four, Good
Portishead - Roads
00:01:42 can't anywhere. Never find a
00:01:56 way, regardless of what they say
00:02:15 from this moment, This moment, all
00:02:30 this
00:02:44 me frozen
00:02:50 to Myself, I got nobody On my side, surely.
00:03:25 Can't anybody see we've I
00:03:46 from This mother, feel,
00:04:41 how Can I see your it
00:04:50 feel from this movement?
00:05:09 Can anybody see we've got a water Friday. We've never found a
00:05:23 we regardless of what they say. How can it feel this wrong?
00:05:42 From this moment. How
00:05:45 can It Feel This Moment? You
Vitalic - Poison Lips
00:07:20 You You You me Ready.
Devon Stack
00:09:31 Hi, foreign Welcome to the Insomnia Stream, Sunday slasher edition. I'm your host, of course. Yes. Devon Stack, hope you guys all had a fantastic week. We're going to be going back to the Wednesday streams this next week parsley, because, like, I feel out of practice by by the time the weekend rolls around.
00:10:16 But yeah, we're Oh, go back to regular stream schedule starting. Well, I guess right now, the Aarvoll thing, as you probably noticed, didn't happen Thursday. He wanted to reschedule, I think for like,
00:10:35 my calendar here, I think it's
00:10:40 the sun, the sun, November 2. I don't know it seems a little far off
00:10:48 the but, you know, whatever, he's a busy guy, and I'm a busy guy too. So it works out. So I think that's what the plan is. I'll let you guys know. I'll probably be popping on into other streams, maybe between now and then. But, yeah, we'll be back to normal anyway.
00:11:08 Hope you guys are ready for some for some more evidence that the the trope we're always hearing about tropes, right? We always hear about tropes like, oh, you know, it's, it's a trope that the Jews like money. It's a trope that Jews have influence in, uh, in American politics. It's a Trump that blacks commit more crime. But, you know, it's not a trope is serial killers are all white guys.
00:11:40 They're all white in cells, even though, like a lot of the white ones are Jewish, the most famous ones, in fact. But yeah, that's that's for some reason that actually is a Trump. It turns out, you know, the more I look into this stuff, the more I because I was under the impression that, you know, I guess sometimes white people short circuit. You know, it's gonna happen, I guess.
00:12:06 And you know, they just start meticulously killing. It kind of makes sense. But then you look into it even like a little bit, and the most prolific serial killers in America are not white. You just don't hear about them. You don't hear about them, and probably because of the DOJ, right?
00:12:25 They've got that, I forget the name of it now, but that department that that swoops in every time some nig, you know, blows away a beautiful white woman for no reason, you know, they swoop in and threaten the family. So they go on the on the TV. They go on the TV and say, Oh, I don't want this to become about race.
00:12:48 Well, I would, I would imagine the same players are at work when it comes to not knowing that there's black serial killers like doubling and tripling the high scores of white serial killers all the time, all the time, and Mexican serial killers. We've talked about a few of them on this, on this stream.
00:13:12 I wonder if, somewhat, if it's because they're, they're as people, they're kind of more boring, right? They're kind of more boring, like they're not really, they don't have because that's, that's, I guess that's the difference, right? When white people become serial killers, they do it because they do short circuit.
00:13:32 And there is something a little captivating about someone who's so insane that they they go that against their nature. But when black people are just killing lots of people, it's kind of like, yeah, that's what they do, right? I thought, I mean, he's just a overachiever.
00:13:49 Yeah, he's just doing what the rest of them doing. He's just doing a lot of it. And there's not like, some weird thing that triggered him, or, you know, it's not like he has some obsessive thing that makes him do it. He just, he's just what they do. So it's not as grabby. I mean, I'm sure there's a little bit of that, there's probably a little bit of that,
00:14:13 but I think more so obviously, it's because one of, one of the tropes that you know that isn't that's totally not true. And by that, I mean it's 100% true, and that's Jews control the media, and Jews, along with the the DOJ, the civil rights, whatever the fuck that thing's called, that prevents white people from knowing what the what a disaster integration was.
00:14:38 Together they have, they have pulled the wool over the eyes of white people and led them to believe that serial killers are all white people, black people. That's not no. Black people don't do that. Black people don't do that. They definitely don't do that unless, of course, they are.
00:14:59 The champions, the absolute champions of serial killing, which, tonight we're going to talk about one. He's not even the, he's not even, like, the champion black serial killer. He's He's like in he's like in the, you know, the Pro League, you know, he's up there, but, uh, he's not, he's not the he's not even the top dog, not not even at all, not even at all. Yeah, but yeah, he's big enough to where you should have heard of him. He even had a nickname back in the 70s. You know? He was the the Sunday morning slasher, rainy bells.
00:15:37 No, anyone Sunday? Sunday morning slat, no, You never heard of that. There's you haven't seen the movie. You haven't seen the movie about the Sunday morning slasher. No, that's weird. You would have thought they would have made a lot of movies about this guy, huh? No, no, movies, huh?
00:15:58 Anyway, this is the Sunday morning. His real name is Carl Eugene watts. Carl Eugene watts, and he changed his name because he visited some black family of his from the south, and they couldn't pronounce his name Carl, and instead, they call him coral, like the like a coral reef.
00:16:24 And so he changed his name to coral because he wanted to be more black or something. So he changed his name to coral, Eugene watts, or as they called him, while he was active in Michigan, just the Sunday morning slasher. So whatever floats your boat, you know, whatever you think is the whatever you'd like to use there, we're gonna call him. Carl, why not? We're just gonna call him good old.
00:16:56 Carl, so anyway, Carl here, was born November 7, 1953 he's a boomer. He's a boomer, one of these Boomer black kids that that grew up alongside the boomer white kids, and they were the boomer white kids. Were told like, Oh, he's just like you. He's just like you.
00:17:17 His dad is in the army or something, and his his mom was like a school teacher, actually, you know, for black people, it was relatively middle class kind of upbringing. He did have, there was a divorce, there was a divorce, but then his mother remarried, and he lived in a household with lots of kids, and despite him claiming that there was lots of abuse, all the other kids that lived there were like,
00:17:48 No, it's pretty normal. Actually, pretty normal. Anyway, let's take a little look into his past. You see Carl, the enterprising black man that he was, you know, he, like I said, he was middle class. He wanted to get like he was going to school. He wanted to make some money on the side, and he wasn't going to be slinging no dope. No No sir, no way. So he had himself a paper route.
00:18:17 That's right, a paper out. So in 1969 at the age of 15, when he's doing his paper out, delivering papers, doing a good job as black people are perfectly capable of doing. And then one morning, while doing his paper out, he saw a woman coming out to get her paper. Her name was, was Joan gave and she went to get her newspaper from him, and he, for no reason at all, just start beating her ass.
00:18:56 He beat the ever living shit out of her. Left her there bleeding on the ground inside of her house, and then just kept doing his paper, finished his paper out. Just finished his paper out like, like nothing had happened. She hadn't done anything to provoke it.
00:19:19 She was just, she just happened to be there, and she was a white woman. And I forgot to mention he's not very fond of the white women, as it turns out, not very fond of the white women. So he gets, of course, this the, this is, you know, civil rights movement going on, and we can't be having this sort of thing going on, right? We can't have random black paper boy just beating the shuttle of a white woman for no reason.
00:19:50 This is in Michigan, by the way, Detroit area, so they're like, Yeah, rather than put him in jail because. There's way too many black people in jail, way too many, far too many black men in jail cells right now. So what we're gonna do, we're gonna send you in for a psychiatric evaluation.
00:20:15 Psychiatric evaluation. His psychiatrist said that, uh, well, that he hated white women and that he fantasized about violently beating them, and that he was a danger to society,
00:20:33 and then released him back out into the public on his 16th birthday, saying that, Oh, it's, it'll be fine, because he's gonna have outpatient treatment,
00:20:48 outpatient treatment, which amounted to less than 10 full sessions in like between his 16th birthday and when He turned 18 and no longer had to attend do he had an IQ of 75 they say, which, I might sound super low, but when the average IQ for black people is 85 I mean, it's, you know, it's a, it's all relative, you know, you kind of have to, I mean, that's like, that's like an 85 IQ white guy, you know, for those of you who are of normal white IQ, so he's slow, but not really, like, dramatically slower than the average for blacks. He's really good at, uh, at sports.
00:21:34 So even though he's got it, see this, this is the one thing about sports ball that people don't talk about. The thing about, I mean, aside from sports ball, being gay in terms of a spectator sport, if you play it whatever, that's fine. But if you enjoy wearing jerseys with another man's name on it and cheering at a TV, and on the TV, there's just a bunch of black guys wearing spandex and playing with their fucking balls, congratulations, you're a faggot.
00:22:03 You're You're definitely a faggot, like not even a little bit. You don't have to go get tested confirmed faggot. Well, part of this faggot culture that's in our society for some reason, what it is created is this situation where, in addition to white people being passed over for scholarship opportunities because they're white,
00:22:28 they're also passed over for scholarship opportunities. If they can get some 75 IQ nigger that can run fast with a ball in his hands, the college will give him a scholarship instead. And so that's exactly what happened. He got a scholarship in 1973 and attended Lane College in Jackson, Tennessee. But prior to, prior to that happening, prior to moving out to Tennessee, one of
00:23:10 them white bitches must have pissed him off. Must have pissed him off. See, in September of 1972 a a body of a 20 year old woman was found,
00:23:27 discovered in a field in Taylor, Michigan. She suffered 45 stab wounds. 45 stab wounds.
00:23:48 Never did find out who did that. It was a kind of a mystery, kind of a mystery. He was, I think, about 1718, at the time, something like that. Anyway. So he went away to college, and while at college, you know, he was, he was really good, and he had that football scholarship. Well, he attended for three months,
00:24:15 and then he was expelled
00:24:19 because he was stalking women, and he was suspected in the murder of a female student at the college. I've been unable to find her name, but it's referenced in legal documents that at college he was suspected of a murder of a female student, but can't find the name with how many names are we going over it? I'm just gonna tell you, right? I'm gonna warn you now it's, it's gonna would just blend in anyway. It would just just become a statistic. So, yeah, so then I.
00:24:59 After getting expelled for being blamed for murder and stalking women,
00:25:10 we have this incident here in August of 1974 16 year old Nadine Jean O'Dell disappears.
00:25:23 She's last seen walking down daily Street in Inkster on her way back, or, I'm sorry, on her way to go babysit for her boyfriend's parents.
00:25:37 Her body has never been found. Just a couple months later,
00:25:49 in October, in case you're slow, he killed her, and he killed this girl too. So he stabbed this girl to death.
00:25:59 These by the way, there's more that we don't know about. These are the ones that we know about. So he killed a girl in 1972 ditched her body in a field. He killed her, this young girl on her way to go babysit, and we no one has found the body. We don't know what happened to her, likely, given his MO he stabbed her, choked her to death. We're not sure. Then a a few months later
00:26:30 in let's see here, I lost my place in October, October 25 he knocked on the apartment door of 23 year old Lenore nizaki. She answered the door and he asked for Charles. She said, Well, there's, there's no Charles who lives here. He said, Well, I need to give him a message, a note.
00:27:04 And she said, Well, there's no Charles. And he kept hassling her. And because high trust, or I don't know, gullibility, she undid the the chain, the chain lock that was on her door to accept this note for someone she doesn't know who it is, some Charles guy, and he immediately kicked the door open, knocked her on the ground, and he then attacked her and choked her until she was unconscious,
00:27:35 thinking that she was dead. He left the scene, and when she finally came to she called the police, and the police were unable to find her.
00:27:55 Then just a couple of days later, on October 30, 1974
00:28:05 Gloria Steele, a 20 year old student at Western Michigan University, was tortured and killed By watts. She suffered a crushed windpipe and 33 stab wounds to the chest and to her back.
00:28:27 In fact, the tool that was used, it looks like a screwdriver, and in later instance incidents, they would think it was a screwdriver, but it was a wood carving tool. I'm not sure what it's called, but it looks it's like a chisel, but it looks like a screwdriver. It's a little smaller, and she had, he had stabbed her so hard with this, this, we'll just call it a screwdriver, that it lot got lodged in her spine, and he couldn't get it back out while stabbing her to death, and so the coroner had to chisel it out of her spine. It was so deeply embedded in her spine.
00:29:11 After he killed her, he started to leave her apartment to kill another girl in the same apartment complex. Diane Williams, the apartment manager, saw him, and when he approached her,
00:29:32 she started to scream. He tried to grab her. He pushed her inside of her apartment. And then while they were fighting, her phone started to ring, and she was able to knock the phone off the hook and start screaming for help. For those of you who don't know what that means, you don't you've never lived in a household with a landline, you know, an old timey phone with the wire that goes in the wall, and if you knock the receipt.
00:30:00 Fever off the hook. Then whoever was calling you can hear what's going on in your house at that point, and they hear screaming. So they're like, Oh, well, something's bad happening there, and I'm going to call the cops. So he realizing what was going on, he decided to run for it. And after he ran for it,
00:30:21 he went to or they had him in a lineup of the because she was able to do describe him,
00:30:32 and she picked him out of the lineup, they were able to
00:30:39 identify him positively as the man who had attacked her, but for some reason, didn't connect it to the murder that had also happened in the exact same apartment complex on the exact same day.
00:30:54 So even though they they had him, and they executed a search warrant and everything else, and they found wood carving tools in his house, and the other woman was killed with a wood carving tool. They for whatever reason, they couldn't, they just couldn't get them.
00:31:16 They couldn't nail them. This is that. This is the story, not just a black serial killers, by the way, but of police incompetence, the kind of police incompetence that we see, right? The system incompetence, the thing, you know, the people are saying, Oh, it's like, what's, what's the fancy term du jour these days, you know, anarcho tyranny.
00:31:39 Oh, it's anarcho tyranny, right? They just don't lock up the criminals. They just let them run amok. It's this totally new thing. Everything was better back in the old days. And no, this is part of part of it is just they had never really wanted to arrest black people, like since the lynching days.
00:31:56 You go back, and we've done streams on this where we go back and and research the circumstances around some of these lynchings and how they're completely legit and often in response to bad policing because of stuff like this, like something like this would happen.
00:32:13 See, unfortunately, this is just the price you pay for having black people in your society. Sometimes they kill you with a screwdriver, and this is something that they were learning in the north. You know, this is when Detroit was just starting to be blessed with the great Negro the great Negro migrations, all the blessings that went with that. And so they're learning the lessons that the South had learned a long time ago.
00:32:40 They learned the lesson that black sometimes will just kill you with a screwdriver, and the cops are fucking retarded. And so unless we want to keep getting killed with screwdrivers, maybe we just go take care of the problem ourself. Maybe we use force outside the law to accomplish something that will save our life.
00:33:01 And so that's what they did, and it saved probably lots of lives. And as you will see tonight, many lives could have been saved had that still been the culture of white people. Oh, what you're we have a black man running around, assaulting white women and killing them. Let's go take care of it.
00:33:20 No, but that's not quite the that's not quite the culture anymore. Is it not quite the culture?
00:33:27 So because law enforcement was left up to the task, they they assumed that the the woman that was stabbed to death, that with the the wood carving tool was drug it was drug related. It must have been drug related because she had a syringe nearby, or something like that had nothing to do with the angry black man that assaulted another woman that same day.
00:33:55 Well, then we, we get to a period where there's no white women being attacked because he ends up having to go to jail briefly because he pleads no contest for assault and battery. You know, that doesn't, doesn't get any kind of murder charge. They throw him in jail for a couple of, like, literally, like, a couple of years. He's already out by 1979
00:34:22 he marries a woman, stays married for a couple of months, has a kid, gets divorced,
00:34:30 marries another woman, stays married for a couple of months, gets divorced. This woman divorces him because she said that he would walk around the house, throwing trash on the ground and burning things, and that after having sex, he would run out of the house and be gone for hours and not say where he was, well, where he was was killing more white women. As it turns out that the exact number. Will never know, but that's basically what he was doing.
00:35:04 One of those white women on Halloween, 1979 Jean Klein. She was in a fancy, fancy white suburb called gross point farms, real upper class part of the Detroit, you know, the very white kept the black people out. And it was broad daylight. She was walking home from a a an
00:35:37 appointment with her shrink, and he just ran up to her with screwdriver, or the thing, the carving tool, and stabbed her at least 10 times in broad daylight and left her dead at the side of the road.
00:35:54 Here's a article The police were they thought it was her husband that would have done that. You know, it can't be the black guy that's going around stabbing all the white women with a screwdriver. It must have been her husband. Police baffled, completely baffled.
00:36:10 They were baffled by the slaying of the ex newspaper reporter. She was a used to be a newspaper reporter. Gross point farms, police say they have few clues and know of no motive for the stabbing death of gene Klein, a former staff writer for The Detroit News and the Cleveland Plain Dealer, an autopsy performed Thursday showed that Klein, 44 was stabbed 11 times with a surgically sharp weapon last year was a screwdriver.
00:36:42 Dr Werner Spitz Wayne County Medical Examiner also said there was evidence the victim put up a big struggle. Well, not big enough. Klein's body was found Wednesday evening on a sidewalk eight blocks from her home in one of Detroit's most fashionable suburbs. Spit said there was no indication the victim had been sexually molested.
00:37:05 Well, thank God for that. Police said appeared nothing had been taken from her purse found lying next to her body. Jorn van team, Chief of Police, Detective, said the woman may have been attacked elsewhere and then tossed from a car where her body was found.
00:37:23 Not the case, but with all the children who were out begging door to door for Halloween treats out that time, many of them accompanied by their parents, it's puzzling that we haven't heard from anyone who observed the crime being committed. Well, here's a gory little detail, turns out her body dead on the the side of the road. I rather, I think it was in like the front yard of someone's house.
00:37:51 Trick or Treaters did see it, and they thought it was an elaborate Halloween decoration. So trick or treaters were walking past her, bleeding it bleeding out dead body, thinking, Oh, look at that. Some that's some fancy special effects they got there. Wow, that almost looks real.
00:38:14 And it was real, obviously.
00:38:17 So they the these, these cops who couldn't figure out what was going on, these cops that started to blame the husband instead. They're just so they're so puzzled. They're just, I don't get it. None of this adds up at all. I mean, we just let out that guy that kills people with screwdrivers. What if it's sitting now?
00:38:45 No, can't be that. Well, sadly,
00:38:52 there were probably some cases in between. We don't know the exact number,
00:38:59 definitely, triple digits. That's That's right, I said triple definitely, triple digits.
00:39:08 On Hitler's birthday,
00:39:11 1980 April, 2019, 80.
00:39:16 Shirley small.
00:39:19 Shirley small was a 17 year old high school student from Ann Arbor, and she was just hanging out outside her home in her white neighborhood when a black guy who hates white women ran up to her and stabbed her to death like right through the heart with a with a screwdriver, killed her dead instantly.
00:39:50 Again, cops, cops couldn't figure it out again, like they were just what the hell's going on here?
00:39:57 A pioneer high school student probably was stabbed to death and. Her Ann Arbor home about two hours before her body was discovered, police theorized today, an autopsy performed Monday on the body of Shirley small 17 showed she died after a knife was plunged into her chest so deeply that it severed her main artery from the heart. Mrs. Small's fully clothed body was discovered shortly before 7am Sunday on the lawn in front of a residence only a few doors from her home at 2832 page Street. Ann Arbor police detective said the autopsy fixed the time of death between 3:30am
00:40:37 and 5am investigators believe she was slain at or near the spot where her body was found. And they were puzzled, because he wasn't, he wasn't raping the white women, like, like you would expect, he was just, he was just killing them. So that was, uh, that was in April, then in July, July 13, 1980
00:41:09 Glenda, Richmond.
00:41:11 She was 26 years old,
00:41:15 and she was similarly attacked.
00:41:21 Similarly attacked. She was in front of her, her summer resident, her residence, you know, fancy, nice white people neighborhood. It was their summer home in Ann Arbor.
00:41:33 She was a dinner manager, or a diner manager, not dinner manager, a diner manager. And she sustained several screwdriver stab wounds to the chest. Here's another news report,
00:41:57 zooming in here so we can have a little look. See
00:42:03 multiple stab wounds kill restaurant official. It's kind of a interesting title, restaurant official,
00:42:11 the night manager of a popular campus area restaurant was found stabbed to death early Sunday. This is why they started calling him the the Sunday morning slasher, that's when they would find the bodies, because he was stabbing these people early Sunday morning or late Saturday night, only a few feet from the front door of her South Side an armored townhouse.
00:42:35 Police said the body of Glenda, Richmond, 26 was discovered about 5:15am near her residence at 3367 Braeburn circle, police said she died from multiple stab wounds. Her body was fully clothed and her purse was found nearby. Police said she did not appear to have been sexually assaulted, and investigators doubted that robbery was a motive for the slain, so they were very puzzled by this. It's weird like it keeps happening. We can't put it together.
00:43:10 Miss Richmond was the night manager of the brown jug restaurant, and had worked there about seven years. We've been told by police not to talk about it. Said one miss Richmond, one of Miss Richmond's co workers, but she did not work Saturday night and didn't leave until late or No, she did work Saturday night and didn't leave till late when the restaurant closed.
00:43:34 She was a very good friend of mine and a good or a great person. I've known her four years, and she was just a great person and so full of promise. Everyone was crazy about her. There are several similarities between Miss Richmond slang the gears are starting to turn a little bit.
00:43:54 They're starting to figure it out a little bit. There's some similarities between Miss Richmond slang and the still yet unsolved stabbing death in April of the 17 year old Ann Arbor pioneer high school student Shirley small Oh, you think there's something that all these white girls getting stabbed with screwdrivers, and you're just now like, wait a second, I'm I'm sensing a pattern here during the early morning hours of April, 20, also a Sunday.
00:44:25 Mrs. Small's body was found near her home on the city's south side, approximately one and a half miles north west of Miss Richmond's braburn Circle address. Miss Small's purse also was found near her fully clothed body. Oh, wow, they're putting it together.
00:44:44 The investigators in charge that case were very, very intelligent, I'm sure, said they that she was not sexually assaulted. Did not appear to have been the victim of a random mugging or robbery. Both victims were stabbed and no weapon was left behind. Police also believed. Eve, both women were killed at or near the place. Their bodies were found, as opposed to being slain elsewhere and then dumped in front of their residents.
00:45:12 There are some similarities between the two, agreed major Walt Hawkins of the Ann Arbor Police Department. Don't worry, folks, we're all we're all hands on deck on this one. But there are also some things that are dissimilar. So he still, he still has doubts. He's still like, I don't know it's pretty close.
00:45:32 These cases are pretty, pretty similar, the screwdriver thing, but I don't know it could multiple. That could be a gang. It could be the screwdriver gang. We might have to hunt down and and capture the the kingpin, the the ringleader. They call him the Phillips head screwdriver joke.
00:45:51 Right now, we don't have anything at all that would cut that would connect them. Well, I mean, the screwdriver stuff kind of connects them. We haven't ruled it out. We will still be looking at the possibility as the investigation continues. But there is nothing at the present time that would link the two together, except for everything.
00:46:16 And then once you know it, once you know it,
00:46:22 just a couple of days later, this one, he mixed it up a little bit. This was Lily marine Dunn, 28 years old. Lily marine Dunn, she was last seen around 3am on Agnes Street in Southgate, she had left her house at 6:30pm to go bowling, after which, she proceeded to a bar on Ford Road and Dearborn.
00:46:56 That Dearborn is a lot different now versus 1980 when Dunn returned home around 230 in the morning. So same thing, she's going out, staying out late, coming home early in the AM, at 230 in the morning, assailant attacked her after she had parked her car in the garage. She was thrown into a light colored vehicle, kicking and screaming, never to be seen again.
00:47:31 In fact, there's still, like, these missing persons, things they've like, aged her face, like, have you seen it's like, Dude, she was definitely killed by a black serial killer. Here's a story from the time their days and nights drag interminably in a jumble of hope, despair and waiting.
00:47:52 A month ago, a shadowy abductor dragged Lily Dunn off the front lawn of her suburban Southgate home, forced her into a car and disappeared. Her family counted the hours waiting for a ransom demand or a tip or a trace, none came. Her husband, parents and seven year old daughter now keep a prayer vigil, clinging to the belief that Miss Dunn is still alive.
00:48:17 Police and FBI investigators remain hopeful, but baffled. It's a nightmare, said Theodore Turner, Mrs. Dunn's father. I can't comprehend it. I can't believe it. We just wait by the telephone, and every time I hear a car stop, I jump to look out the door. I pray every night for her. It's like losing your heart and soul.
00:48:38 There's a part of us still out there. The nightmare began in the early morning hours of July. 31 Miss Dunn 28 in a tract of blonde aspired to a career as a fashion model, along with running a home, she held a bookkeeper's job and took classes at a local college while attempting to organize a portfolio of photographs. That's the other connection, by the way, these are all. They're not just white women.
00:49:06 They're all attractive, attractive white women. She spent the evening of July 30 as her weekly night out drinking with friends at A West Side tavern, then leaving for another bar around 9:30pm her activities after that have not yet been learned. It is a question the FBI would like to have answered. When Mrs. Dunn returned home about 3am she got as far as the front lawn, then she screamed.
00:49:36 Witnesses said she was met by a mysterious male assailant who forced her into a late model car and sped away. Neither the description of the abductor nor the car proved fruitful. Southgate police called in federal authorities after Mrs. Dunn had been missing for 48 hours like that.
00:49:54 They waited, waited till she was definitely dead. The incident has been officially labeled A. Kidnapping, although it should have been a homicide, we have a lot of theories, said FBI spokesman, John Anthony, we don't like to eliminate any, but the leading prospect now is that she was abducted for sexual purposes, and that she is still alive.
00:50:14 Well, not so, not so much, or it doesn't really fit the MO he she probably just got stabbed with a screwdriver a bunch of times and shoved into a ditch or a shallow grave. Federal agents questioned more than a dozen people but were unable to discern any possible possible motive.
00:50:33 Anthony said it could just be a random grab. He pointed out, we've had that happen. One grisly piece of evidence in the case is a human's left arm found at the mouth of the Detroit River earlier this month by Ontario Provincial Police. The arm was shipped to a federal Laboratory in Washington, along with Miss Dunn's fingerprints.
00:50:56 I don't think it was her arm, by the way, it was possibly another victim of Watts's arm, but not her arm, so she is technically still missing, but almost certainly killed by screwdriver. So then we had
00:51:16 a couple months, couple months of at least that we know of where no one, no one's getting screwdrivered in town. Then September 14, September 14, Rebecca Huff. Rebecca Huff, age 30, was found dead in front of her house. She had suffered about 50 screwdriver stab wounds, and they're just now the newspaper is starting to put it together. Newspapers like, Oh, hold on.
00:51:57 I These aren't just random. This is a lot of white girls getting stabbed to death with a screwdriver, and, you know, basically right in front of their house in the early hours. This is, this
00:52:14 is probably a serial killer, right? Like, can we at least, can we say that now? Is, are the cops allergic to that term is, are they afraid of scaring the public, or what's going on here? And so they start to say that, yeah, right, maybe there's maybe there's there. Look how close they are.
00:52:31 They're all like within, you know, few blocks of each other. Ann Arbor police today began pouring over scores of leads received from the public as a massive police search continued for the killer. See, the thing is, they have no description of this guy. There's there's no description of this guy.
00:52:50 Let's see here for the killer of a University of Michigan graduate student. The student, 30 year old, Rebecca Huff was stabbed several times in the chest and died early Sunday near the steps of her West Side apartment building. The third Ann Arbor woman, our Ann Arbor woman, found stabbed to death on a Sunday morning. So then that's the Sunday morning slasher within five months so far.
00:53:19 However, there is absolutely nothing new to report, says chief of police, William J Corbett, we've gotten a lot of calls since all the publicity, and we are going to keep working away at them.
00:53:32 Investigators have established confidential 24 hour day hotline to handle information when they should have just said, if there's a black guy with a bloody screwdriver walking around your neighborhood, maybe lynch him. I mean, don't even ask questions, maybe lynch him.
00:53:55 Maybe that's the way to do it. Maybe, maybe, if that's what you see, you should just get a rope and throw it over a tree branch. You know, the higher, the better you need. You need, like a sturdy, need, a sturdy tree branch,
00:54:20 and then you can, you know, like, everyone learned how to tie knots in Boy Scouts, right? Everyone, I'm pretty sure, I'm pretty certain, back in 1980 most people were still going to, I mean, this is before they turned Boy Scouts into, like, tranny camp.
00:54:35 So, like, most people were still going and getting the merit badges and stuff. Just a little, little simple slip knot would work. You know, you don't have to go overboard with the rope.
00:54:44 You know, by 1980 we had modern, modern fibers, right? We had, we had nylon and stuff, right? You know, you don't have to get it all crazy with the big, thick rope. You can just, just get, like, some nylon, you know, just go to Ace Hardware.
00:55:00 Air. Go to Ace Hardware. Pick something up, you know, just fling that over the branch. Tie a little, tiny, little, little slip knot, a little knotty knot. Doesn't that be too bad, you know? And then, yeah, no more, no more screwdriver Negro, he's gone. He just, poof. He's just a bad memory.
00:55:25 Just a bad memory. No, somehow in this super white neighborhood is like impossible to find this black guy with a bloody screwdriver, and they, they're like, ah, it could be, could be anybody. Could be anything. It could be anything. So then it is highly suspected, although not verified, because of his proximity, Mr. Watts, coral watts, or Carl watts, because there were these manhunts going on, he decided to go across the border into Canada and start killing white girls in Canada.
00:56:08 Because, why not? Why not? Because there's a few cases that that are very random that completely match exactly what he was doing, and we're close enough by to where it made sense that he might have done it. This is from a Canadian newspaper. Police seek public help to solve stabbing case.
00:56:32 A six week Windsor police investigation into the stabbing of a city woman has reached a standstill as detectives are asking the public for more clues. Sandra Delpy, 20 suffered severe wounds to the face and back when she was attacked on the 1800 block of Lincoln Road on October 6, she was returning from a night school class at Lowe secondary school around 10pm when she was attacked from behind.
00:56:59 Although numerous suspects have been questioned. Police have exhausted their leads in the matter and need public assistance. The detectives involved feel the smallest piece of information, even some tidbit that many people would find too trivial to tell the police, could be turning a turning point in the case.
00:57:17 Investigating officers suspect the assailant is a person who may be suffering from a great deal that's so Canadian. It's, it can't be like, we suspect it's a nigger with a screwdriver. He's like, Oh no. It may be a man suffering from a great deal of stress, and might tend to lose control because of the stress.
00:57:39 He may also benefit from medical assistance. See, again, rope tree branch, that's that's all the medical assistance that's required here. But you know the leaf bags are like, Oh, he needs help. We need to find this guy.
00:58:00 He needs help. It doesn't matter that this Sandra Delpy woman was stabbed so viciously in the neck that she ended up partially paralyzed and couldn't eat on her own anymore or move her or head or arms or legs due to the deep screwdriver slashes and nerve damage she sustained, and that she's horribly disfigured for the rest of her life because she got stabbed in the face of the screwdriver and ruptured her jugular vein and almost died. No, no. We gotta. We gotta find the that poor, stressed out screwdriver guy. He needs help. He definitely needs help.
00:58:49 So there was another case in Canada that kind of fit the description, that was similar, that was nearby, but again, I just saw it referenced in court documents, and I couldn't really find any details. Funny thing is, look, if we don't laugh, we cry.
00:59:06 You know, it's, it's, I know it's quite literally gallo's humor, but that's the way it is. But it's, it's kind of crazy, because at this point, there is at least some people, and by some I think, like, one detective that is finally starting to, like, piece it together, going, Wait a second, I think it's that screwdriver nigger.
00:59:30 Like, I think he's the one screwdrivering All the white girls and they and they still can't, they still can't arrest him for some reason. Like, it's insane, like I found this from a documentary from Court TV, where they actually interviewed him and some of the other officers. Here let me see.
Chief Paul Bunten
00:59:51 This was the apartment house that Rebecca Greer Huff lived in. This is where she had parked her car and was walking down here. When she was attacked and murdered, her wounds were all central to the front of her chest. There were 54 looked like she had been attacked from behind and stabbed.
Narrator
01:00:13 In all the cases, the wounds appear to have been made by a screwdriver.
Devon Stack
01:00:19 Yes, and they were all attacked from behind. It was all like they they were literally all, every single case, including the Canadian cases, they were all exactly the same. The weapon was exactly the same, the way in which they the the angle of attack was the same, where he came in from behind them and would, like, basically put him in a headlock and then stab them. Like, while he was holding them in a headlock, you know, reach his arm around and stab them in the chest.
01:00:47 It was exactly the same. Like every single one of these was the same, and they're just now like, Okay, wait a second, I think there's a pattern here.
Narrator
01:00:57 Police know they have a serial killer on their hands. Forensic Psychologist Harley stock joins the investigation.
Detective
01:01:04 Almost all serial killers that we knew about in the early 80s were white.
Devon Stack
01:01:11 Oh, good. Oh, good. So that was part of the problem. That was literally part of the problem. Part of the problem was one of the reasons why they weren't looking for a screwdriver nig was because they were convinced, once they did think that they had a serial killer on their hands, that I had to be a white guy,
01:01:34 because even they were programmed With this, this trope, this blood libel on our people, that in order to be even though, even at this time, like he's like, whoa, back in the 80s, no even, and trust me, Will, there will be future that we've done streams already that have outlined the very like, the like, vast amounts of evidence that the FBI would be aware of by the 1980s that black people are like the kings of serial killers.
01:02:06 Okay, and we'll have more in the future. But it's insane. It's insane that it was ever a common knowledge kind of a factoid, that white people were serial serial killers. It's insane. When you look at the actual serial serial killers that were active in the United States in the 20th century.
01:02:30 The it's per capita. I mean, it's like, even if you don't do by per capita, it's such like the white people are the minority of the serial killers.
01:02:42 And so it's insane that these trained law enforcement people were under the impression, oh, we must, we must be looking for a white guy. He's got to be a white guy if he's a serial killer using a screwdriver.
Joe Foy
01:02:55 Police know they have a serial killer on their hands. Forensic Psychologist Harley stock joins the investigation.
Detective
01:03:03 Almost all serial killers that we knew about in the early 80s were white. They said he'd be between about 22 and 31 that he would have somewhat limited intelligence if he was married, it would have been for relatively short period of time because of poor relationships with women.
Devon Stack
01:03:22 I You got those other parts, right, but doesn't really help you out if you're looking for a white guy, because they're basically they think that every serial killer is basically a white in cell so if there's a serial killer on the loose, they're not even looking for like the black guys who are are in the majority of serial killers. So anyway, they're like, ah, we got to find this, this white serial killer.
James Arthurs - Ret. Police SGT
01:03:51 I was reading The Detroit News, they had a story in there that stated that the victims were stabbed with a screwdriver. I immediately knew that it wasn't a screwdriver, that it was a wood carving tool.
Devon Stack
01:04:04 So this is like one of the only smart guys working there. This is the guy that wasn't smart enough to convict him for the first murder where they had the wood carving tools discovered at Watts's house, upon executing the search warrant and then saying, well, we just don't have enough evidence.
01:04:27 We have this girl stabbed to death right next to where he was trying to stab another girl to death, and all these wood carving tools that match the wood carving tool that was lodged in the spine of the dead girl, but we just don't have enough evidence yet.
01:04:40 He despite, I guess, his his hesitation to charge watts with murder, which would have saved a lot of people a lot of lot of time. He, he always believed that Watts had done it, and so when. He saw in the news that there was a screwdriver killer going around. He's like, ah, nuts, don't you know we have one of these guys. We have a screw screwdriver. Neg, we know you. I know exactly who's doing all this.
Joe Foy
01:05:18 Six years earlier, Arthur's had investigated the stabbing death of Gloria Steele, a 19 year old student in Kalamazoo, just 90 miles from Ann Arbor.
James Arthurs - Ret. Police SGT
01:05:28 He stabbed Gloria Steele so hard in the chest with this wood carving tool that it embedded in her spine and had to be chiseled out by the medical examiner.
Joe Foy
01:05:39 The prime suspect was a fellow student named coral Eugene watts. At the time, Arthur searched Watts's home in Detroit.
James Arthurs - Ret. Police SGT
01:05:49 We went to the address and there were several wood carvings in that home. We did recover some wood carving tools,
Joe Foy
01:05:59 but there was never enough evidence to arrest watts. Now, Arthurs is convinced the latest murders are the work of the same man. He contacts Ann Arbor police.
James Arthurs - Ret. Police SGT
01:06:11 At first, they didn't believe me. They didn't think it was him. I continued to call them several times I spoke with in with the chief of police first and then with Paul Bunton.
Woman
01:06:25 We drove to Kalamazoo to look at their case. It just struck us immediately, the wounds were almost identical to Rebecca Huff's Kalamazoo knew that he was very probably their murderer, but they could not prove that case. Very frustrating for them.
Devon Stack
01:06:46 Yeah, well, frustrating for everybody involved, actually. So now they finally, finally, finally accept the fact that, oh, it's probably this guy. It's probably this guy. So you would think that at that point, right? They would, they would go to a judge and they would get a a search warrant and and search his house and arrest him, bring him in for the murder of all these, these women he's killing.
01:07:12 And case closed, right? Case closed. One of the women is even a black shake with an afro. Does that help? No. Okay, so they no, that's not what happens. They're just like, well, we'll keep an eye on him. We'll keep an eye on him, because now we're on to him. Now we know what you're up to.
01:07:35 Now we know that you're you're all stabby and whatnot. Well, we're gonna make sure you don't get get to stabbing anytime soon.
Officer Don Terry
01:07:44 And we saw a young lady walking down the street at 430 in the morning.
Devon Stack
01:07:49 So that this is this from another documentary. So this is just a couple months later. This is November of 1980 Now, remember, this is the last one that he had. Well, the one that he was most likely didn't, probably didn't know about this one because it was in Canada.
01:08:09 He had probably just stabbed a woman in Canada November 1, so like two weeks prior, and then another woman in Canada October. But even though they didn't know about that he had it wasn't that long ago. It was September 14, so two months prior in 1980 is when he killed Rebecca Huff in front of her house. And so it's only been two months, two months they know that he's doing this. They're driving around
Unknown Speaker
01:08:41 feet at 430 in the morning by herself, and she wasn't just walking. She was looking around everywhere.
Narrator
01:08:49 Terry spots a man alone in a vehicle who appears to be stalking the woman. Terry calls in the suspect's tag number, and dispatch comes back with the name coral Eugene
Unknown Speaker
01:08:59 watts. You could hear Mary's voice go up about three octaves when she came back and said, that comes back to coral. Watts, exactly. He's on the suspect list. He, for whatever reason, decided to go over a block instead of staying on the main street he'd been on. And when he did that, he had to make an illegal turn.
Narrator
01:09:18 Watts's illegal turn gives Terry grounds to pull the suspect over.
Woman
01:09:23 And when I heard you radio in that you had that subject stalking that kind of got my ear, and I radioed to Don hold him. I'm on my way.
Devon Stack
01:09:34 Oh, good. So now finally they got they got him right. Get that good old fashioned police work, right? They, Oh, he did an illegal turn, and they're gonna, you know, they got his plates, and then he's on the suspect list, and detectives on his way down there, they're gonna hold him.
01:09:52 He's, he's clearly stalking his next victim. They caught him red handed. You know, they're gonna, they're gonna, they're gonna haul him in and. And finally, get this killer off the streets.
Woman
01:10:04 I probably made that trip back in record time, because you were still at the scene when I got there.
Narrator
01:10:08 26 year old Watts is handcuffed and brought in for questioning. The suspect lawyers up then reveals nothing but his arrest for stalking allows police to get a search warrant for his car.
Woman
01:10:19 It did not yield a lot of usable evidence, but it yielded a lot of things that led us to believe that he very well may have been our suspect.
Narrator
01:10:29 Police place a trucking device on their suspect's car.
Devon Stack
01:10:33 Well, hold on, that he may have so there's
01:10:41 so like, realistically, they still weren't 100% convinced that it was him yet, and they they don't arrest him, they are still following him around, and they put a tracking device on his car for a little bit or something, what's going on, and
Narrator
01:10:59 Place him under 24/7, surveillance.
Woman
01:11:01 He knew that he was a suspect in my eyes, if nothing else. And he was suspecting that he was being followed. He was suspecting
Chief Paul Bunten
01:11:10 a lot of things. Yeah, he
Devon Stack
01:11:13 was suspecting that you guys weren't very competent, and his suspicions were right on. So, yeah, there was not a there was not a conviction, there was not an arrest, there was nothing. They just followed him around for a little bit. He knew they were following him around, so he stopped killing chicks with screwdrivers, and instead, got annoyed enough to where he decided I'm gonna go pack up and move to a part of the United States that is so full of nigger murder that I'll just blend right in. I'll just blend right in the I'm going, I'll go to the literal at the time murder capital of the United States, with a fairly large, twice the national average black population, Houston, Texas, Houston, Texas. So he decides to go down to Houston, Texas, still has not been arrested for anything, and immediately,
01:12:17 immediately, he kills this woman.
01:12:25 Kills this woman, 22 year old, Linda Tilley. Now you would think, right so he was under surveillance by the cops in Michigan, and they found out that he moved to Texas. And so once they found out where he moved to, they contacted the Texas authorities and said, Look, we think this guy kills chicks with screwdrivers. So he might want to keep an eye on him. So naturally, when he started killing girls in Texas, he was apprehended immediately, right, right.
01:13:10 They found Linda tilley's dead body, and they said, All right, well, I know did this. It's that coral watts, guy that the Michigan No, it was an accidental drowning, that's right, they, they found her body and ruled it an accidental drowning.
01:13:33 Two people drowned Saturday, not both the same time, but just that weekend, or, I guess, that day. Two people drowned Saturday in apartment complex swimming pools. Linda Tilly, a 22 year old university of texas student, was found in the pool at the Pat apartments at 4504 Speedway about 9am police said she was pronounced dead at the scene. A spokesman for the Travis County medical examiner said tilly's death was classified as an accidental drowning.
01:14:04 Police said she was alone in the pool, and there were no witnesses to the accident. Well, what really happened was coral Watts stalked her, as he was known, to stalk pretty young white women, saw that she was by herself that night, drinking by the pool, and he grabbed her from behind, forced her head under water and held her underwater and drowned her in her own pool,
01:14:40 and then left, and
01:14:46 would have totally got away with it, had he not told cops later that that's exactly what he did.
01:14:52 Because the cops were just like, oh, it looks like, looks like a drowning to me, totally good. Good thing. I. The cops are on the, you know, on the ball watching these, these feral screwdriver Negroes, anyway, that didn't satisfy his bloodlust, literally just a couple of days later.
01:15:15 So this was September 5 on September 12, another pretty young white girl, Elizabeth Montgomery. She was 25 and she was stabbed while outside of her Houston apartment while walking her dog. Police said she apparently made it home before dying. So she was stabbed while out walking her dog, tried to make it home, and then died
01:15:48 on the way there, or nearly got home. So an article $5,000 reward is being offered by family and friends of a 24 year old woman who was stabbed to death in August while walking her dog outside her southwest Houston apartment. Houston homicide detective said, Wednesday, Elizabeth Ann Montgomery was stabbed about 11:50pm
01:16:12 on August 12, near the Posada Del Rey apartments. 6201 Marionette said detective MF, MF kardatski. Motherfucking kardatski is on the case. He's gonna crack that case. Investigators are cooperating in the reward offer, hoping it will bring them new information on the case.
01:16:37 He said the reward is for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons, because, you know, it's the screw. It could be the screwdriver gang
01:16:46 responsible for her death, he said. Kardasky said it was undetermined whether Montgomery's death is linked to the stabbing death of Susan Marie Wolfe, 21 of 9200 block Clare wood about two hours later. Yeah, we'll get to that. They're just these. The cops in Houston, it turns out, are just as good at pattern recognition as the one I mentioned. What they're referring to
01:17:19 is just two hours later, two miles away,
01:17:27 Susan Wolf
01:17:30 21 was stabbed in the chest, also with a screwdriver,
01:17:37 at her apartment as she carried groceries from her car, and her body was found outside of her apartment. Houston police Sunday were investigating the possibility of a connection between the killings of two young women who were both knifed to death in front of their southwest Houston apartments during the weekend.
01:18:02 Both victims were white women in their 20s, and were attacked within two hours of each other, late Saturday and early Sunday. Police said witnesses in both cases said they saw a man run from the scene nicely. They always just say a man, it's never a black man, just a man run from the scene.
01:18:22 Elizabeth Montgomery, 25 of the 6200 block of Marionette was stabbed in the chest in front of her residence shortly before midnight, police said at about 2am Susan Marie Wolfe, 21 of the 9200 block of clarewood was stabbed at least six times in the chest and arm.
01:18:40 Police said both women died after staggering into their apartments. Police said they were told Montgomery had been walking her dog when she was attacked, and Wolf was approaching her apartment with a sack of groceries when she was stabbed.
01:18:56 Phyllis aranza, well, May that might be you might be seeing where the police competency is going there with that name, with the Police Homicide Division said there was no motive,
01:19:08 no motive had been determined for either killing, and that no suspects had been arrested by late son. I remember Michigan already told them that there was this guy that does this, and what his name was and where he lived,
01:19:22 and yeah, just nothing. Nothing happened. Apparently he's just go good old coral Watts is just going around stabbing white bitches like it's his job, because, apparently it's his job. So then that's September of 81
01:19:41 a few months go by,
01:19:47 January 4, 1982, we got Phyllis Tam. Phyllis Tam. 27 was found hanging from a small tree. Uh, near Houston's Rice University. Tam's death was not ruled a homicide,
01:20:07 just like the the drowning of the other girl. See, he got creative. I guess he figured that the screwdriver was too obvious stabbing white bitches with a screwdriver that's you're about to get caught of it. I mean, he was, I mean, he was, I think, vastly overestimating the the skills of the police departments here.
01:20:25 But he thought that, you know, that there's gonna get too, too easy. They're gonna be able to put all that together. So he was gonna look creative, you know, just like the swimming pool murder. With this one,
01:20:38 he strangled her to death with her own tube top and then hung her from a tree.
01:20:46 And I shit you not,
01:20:50 the medical examiner ruled it as a freak accident. Apparently, the medical examiner thought that Phyllis tam had decided to go out jogging, which is what she did on a regular basis, and then somehow, while jogging, had got her tube tops tangled up in a tree and suffocated herself to death with her own tube top in a tree. It was the official cause of death was accident, and they did not investigate it as a homicide.
01:21:37 They They literally said that that I don't even know how that accident happens. She was hanging from a tree by her tube top. I don't know how that that you you would even imagine that would happen, but that's what happened. Phyllis tam 27 senior art director for an advertising agency was described by friends as a survivor, not one of those women who worried about things like crime.
01:22:08 Well, that's that's probably the first problem, because you don't worry about crime, you end up getting murdered with your tube top. I bet you didn't think that that would be on your tombstone. Died by tube top on January 4, she was found hanging mysteriously in a bush, hanging mysteriously in a bush, my God.
01:22:46 I mean, it's, it's, I don't know what to say. This is it. Look it's not like these guys are, are rookies or something. I mean, it's literally Houston. And maybe this is why, maybe this was why Houston was the murder capital of the world, but Houston was the murder murder capital of the world.
01:23:04 There's murders happen all over the place. You find a bitch hanging from a tree in a tube top, and you say it's a freak accident. You
01:23:26 So later, they updated it once,
01:23:31 once that he again, he confessed to that one as well. Cop, he would have gotten away with that one. They never would have pinned this one on him. Had he not told the cops that he had, he had attacked her and strangled her with her tube top.
01:23:42 They would just got it. It would have just like the swimming pool drowning. It would have just gone on as a as a freak accident. Case was already closed. It wasn't like a cold case they were trying to depend on the serial killer guy. No, I was already done. Already had the funeral and everything it was
01:24:09 done. Next up,
01:24:12 hey, about two weeks later. This is January 17, 1982
01:24:19 architecture student, Margaret fosse 25 was found dead in the trunk of her car. I wonder if that was a freak accident. I wonder if she was like, just, I'm really interested in the size. I need to check the size of this trunk with my body. Oh, I'm locked in the trunk. Oh no, no, wearing a tube top too.
01:24:41 Oh no, I'm extra fucked. Found dead in the trunk of her car, which was parked at Rice University. She'd been reporting missing a day earlier, she also died of asphyxia and a blow to the throat. So she was strangled.
01:25:03 Police have no suspects in the students slain Houston police have no suspects in the slaying of Rice University female architecture student whose fully clothed body was found locked in the trunk of her car a block from her home, the cause of Margaret Everson fossey's death would be determined by an autopsy today, police said Mrs.
01:25:30 Fossey, 25 or 25 a fifth year architectural student, was reported missing early Sunday by her brother in law and sister in law, Wayne and Kathy Gregory, with whom she had lived since August Mrs. Fossey, whose husband, Larry is a law student at Yale University, went to Gillies club in Pasadena Saturday night with fellow students who later dropped her off at her car parked near rice school.
01:25:57 Architecture police said one classmate watched her drive out of the parking lot about 2:30am Sunday. So again, Saturday night, late. It's like the it's like all the things. It's all the same. So they get they can't put it together. When she did not arrive, Mr. And Mrs. Gregory became concerned, saying it was uncharacteristic for Mrs. Fossey to stay out all night.
01:26:22 Mrs. Gregory 27 described Mrs. Fossey as a cautious person, not cautious enough, who phoned if she were going to be only 30 minutes late getting home, Gregory went looking for Mrs. Fossey's car and discovered in the 4500 block of kinglet. Saturday, it was towed to the Houston Police Department's evidence garage about noon that day.
01:26:45 Police did not open the trunk until about 2pm they said they had been working the case as a missing persons report, so she they've got the car and she's just dead in the trunk and in the impound lot, and they didn't even look at it inside the trunk for a little bit, and could not open the trunk until they received permission from their relatives.
01:27:02 They did not know it contained Mrs. Fossey's body. The body had no obvious wounds, and robbery did not appear to be a motive in the killing. Again, just like it's like the same as all the other ones.
01:27:13 Detective Tom Ladd said, Mrs. Fossey's parents, Mr. And Mrs. Leonard Everson of Lake Forest, Illinois, flew to Houston, Sunny and had hired private investigator. Well, that, yeah, I hope, I hope you did with the with the wonderful police work that's getting done there.
01:27:33 So then that same morning,
01:27:39 yeah, cops didn't know it was the same morning, but that same morning that Margaret fosse was strangled to death and shoved into the trunk of her car. Coral Watts was driving along the loop 610, and he saw a woman at the side of the road fixing a flat tire. So like a good Samaritan, as black people are known to be, he decided to pull over to help her by slashing her throat twice.
01:28:18 So he slit her throat twice. She managed to survive the attack,
01:28:26 and later told police that, you know a description, but the police still, still couldn't figure it out. Still couldn't figure it out. They were at a complete loss, complete loss, which is probably why just another a couple weeks,
01:28:46 actually, less than a couple weeks later, January 30, he tried to slash the throat of a another person,
01:28:58 Patty Johnson. Patty Johnson, this is the location 19 year old Patty Johnson was attacked as she walked up to her apartment at 14th Street, Avenue and M in Galveston, the man tackled her to the ground and straddled her chest and slashed her throat with a knife, probably a screwdriver, but maybe a knife. A man on the second floor heard a commotion and stepped out on the balcony. He yelled at the attacker to get off Patty, and the man fled. She survived and told the police it was a black man,
01:29:36 as did the woman at the side of the road who was also attacked in the exact same way by the exact same person, and they're still, they, they still haven't caught this guy. He's just, you know, I mean, look, I'm wrong. There's like a lot of people look just like him committing murder all the time in Houston, you know, in this time period well, and probably. Ongoing today.
01:30:01 But, yeah, they just, you know, even though they've got, like, a, you know, a tip from out of state that, hey, this guy is going to do these exact kinds of crimes, that's the others can't put it together. They just can't put it together, which is probably why. And literally one week later, February 7, 1982 Alina samander, 20 was found dead in a Houston trash bin. She had been strangled by her own shirt and then thrown in a in a dumpster.
01:30:40 This is a news report the strangled body of a 20 year old Alina samander, University of Houston physical education student was found in a Southwest Houston apartment complex trash bin.
01:30:58 February 7, an employee of a private garbage collection company was loading trash from the bins behind West hollow apartments in the 10,000 block of Fondren when he thought he saw a leg in the debris of one of the bins, he took a closer look and found a woman's body, clothed only in panties and stockings. Samander was last seen alive about 2am February 7, after leaving a nightclub in the same exact same MO on the 5200 block of West Alabama with a friend.
01:31:33 Police said the friend, shortly afterwards, escorted samander to her car and watched her drive away. Detective said the apartment complex at which she was found is only a few blocks from samander's house in the 8900 block of jackwood police said.
01:31:51 Detective said she might have gone by the apartment complex to visit some friends there there, but apparently never reached the apartment her car, which contained her purse, was found parked nearby. Her blouse and jewelry were later found another trash bin detective said, I thank God the man saw her as this is sad. This is this is what her family said. I thank God the man saw her as he was loading the trash.
01:32:21 Otherwise we'd still be wondering what happened to her, said the victim's mother, Harriet samander, a secretary at Kincaid school
01:32:32 in the area of there.
01:32:35 So, yeah, yeah, yet another body, and the cops are still like, huh, who could it be? Who could it be? I can't, I just can't figure it out. And then a couple weeks later, another pretty white girl, march 20, 1982, Emily Lacroix was
01:33:02 strangled on her way to her new job as a waitress in Brookshire. She had just moved from Seattle to live with her father in Texas, and at first, was thought to have run away.
01:33:15 Her body was found five months later, stuffed in a culvert, and she was found there because, you know, spoiler, they obviously he, because the police aren't figuring this out. He, he told her, told them where to find the body. But her she just had was quote, unquote, missing, and may have never been found had he not said, Oh, and then I killed this other girl, and this is where the body is.
01:33:40 So she he strangled her to death, same exact Mo. Here's an article from that time 14 year old, Emily Elizabeth, uh lacqua, just 14 years old, just like, like, whole life, whole life out of her 14 years old. 14 year old Emily Elizabeth Lacroix was a typical runaway
01:34:06 last March when she came to live with her father in Brookshire, 40 miles west of Houston, faced with problems at school in Seattle and rebelling against a religiously strict mother, she and her 14 year old girlfriend Alina Davison, hitchhiked to Texas.
01:34:23 They were picked up once by juvenile authorities in Fort Worth before completing the 2000 mile trek. When she went to Texas, the last word she said to me were Don't worry about me, mom. I'll be okay. I can take care of myself, said Elizabeth Lacroix, her mother and namesake who lives in Seattle, but she didn't Emily's partially clothed body was found Wednesday near Brookshire, the youngest of 11 victims of admitted killer corral Eugene watts. At the time, they still thought it was in the double digits in.
01:34:59 So, yeah. In fact, one of the common denominators you'll see when they talk to the parents of these victims is they all warned them that you shouldn't be just this girl in the city, especially if that city is Houston, you're gonna fucking die. In a way, they were saying, Don't relax, probably by beating around the bush, not to sound racist, but they were saying, Oh, you've Houston's bad.
01:35:29 You don't want to go, you know, I don't want to be walking around tonight in Houston. And it's, and it's not because of the Quakers, because there's Quakers there. So she's dead
01:35:43 a week later, just a week later. See, I didn't, you think? Didn't you think that that, uh, you know, serial killer, and this guy's already outdone, just with the official numbers here, you know, he's already outdone, like most serial killers, in a relatively short period of time, like he's just like murdering away, and most of you have never fucking heard of him. Most In fact, I would say that unless you live through that, like, unless you lived in either the Detroit area or Houston area during this time, you probably never heard of him.
01:36:21 You probably never heard the name corral watts. You probably never heard of the Sunday morning slasher, even though he killed way more, way more people than than all these white serial killers to get their own movies now, just because he wasn't like, boiling their skull and making, like, brain stew or whatever the fuck that they put in the movies. I mean, this guy was, was just a killing machine.
01:36:52 He was a killing machine. We're talking like multiple in the same night. You know, several times we're talking, you know about like one a week at least, and once, once you hear like the the the estimated numbers at the end, it was probably like at least one a week, maybe multiple a week, every single week. No movie, no mention, he's not a buzzword. No one, no one ever says, Oh, that guy creeps me out. Give me like real Corel watts, vibes, people like, what?
01:37:31 Corel watts, yeah, you know, coral watts, the
01:37:37 black super predator that stabbed all those white bitches to death with a screwdriver. No, you've never heard of that. Ever. Ah, it's weird. I don't understand why I would have thought you would have heard of that. So literally, a week later, march 27 1982 Edith lydette. Edith lydette, here 34
01:38:05 was stabbed to death in Galveston as she returned home from a graduation party. Her body was found in a hallway, or, I'm sorry, a walkway near some apartments.
01:38:19 Lydette was to have graduated later that day from the University of Texas Medical Branch, where she had earned her degree, giving up on an accounting career. So she was, she was just, she was just about to be a doctor. She was, she just graduated with her medical degree. You but apparently, apparently there's no
01:38:49 there's no cure. There's no cure for desegregation. Well, there is, but no one's apparently it's not FDA approved.
01:38:58 Here. An article from that time. Edith Anna ladette, the pre Dawn stabbing death of fourth year medical same, exact same. Mo, it's like exactly the same every time.
01:39:14 Pre Dawn stabbing death, fourth year medical student. Edith Anna ladette, 34 killed while jogging. Sparked a wave of fear among students at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston the Saturday March 27 slain which had no apparent motive, prompted University and city police to convene a meeting on campus to warn students of black people with screwdriot No to warn students and faculty to take precautions. $1,000 reward was offered for information the case and posters bearing a composite drawing of the murder suspect were posted all over Galveston.
01:39:51 Well, if it seemed like the other one that I've seen, which we'll get to, there's no no wonder didn't find him. I. It after lydette, a navy blue hooded jogging top with rust colored stains was found rolled up in the fork of a tree about two blocks from the murder scene. The garment was later sent to the FBI in Washington to determine if the stains were the blood stains of ladette.
01:40:17 But Galveston Sergeant Bob Steen said, Tuesday, test results have not been returned. Minutes after ladette was killed, police said a man believed to be ladette's assailant, tried to attack another woman who was entering her apartment near the stabbing scene, but she scared the attacker off by screaming.
01:40:38 The woman told police the attacker, attacker was stained with blood, so he tried to do a twofer and smeared blood all over her clothing. The blood was matched with lydette's blood type. This before DNA was good. Steen, said, a medical student who had completed her fourth year the day before ladette was married and regularly jogged in the early morning hours before reporting to campus, known by her middle name of Anna.
01:41:05 She was the adopted daughter of a judge and Mrs. James K Allen of Dallas.
01:41:14 So there you go.
01:41:22 The the second woman that he attacked after, like just after stabbing that woman to death, the same day was Glenda Kirby.
01:41:35 Glenda Kirby literally only escaped because he was so covered in Edith ladette's blood that his hands were too slippery to properly restrain her and kill her.
01:41:51 This is from another article, the second woman, Glenda Kirby, was not harmed. Watt said he jumped on Mrs. This is from his confession. That's all they know. Watt said he jumped on Miss Kirby, uh, Kirby's back, but his grip slipped because he had the blood on it, or blood on his hands from killing Mrs. Lennon, uh,
01:42:11 hurry said, watts attacked miss. Hurry said, must be someone else attacked Miss Kirby after she got out of their car and was walking to her apartment about a block and a half from where Mrs. Ladette was killed. Instead of calling police, hurry said, I guess that is a name.
01:42:31 Hurry said, Miss Kirby drove to an airport in Houston to pick up a friend. Watts told authorities he followed her part of the way, driving up alongside her, but she apparently did not recognize him. Watt said he wore a hooded sweatshirt while killing Mrs. Ladette and attacking Mrs. Kirby.
01:42:50 Police later determined the blood on Mrs. Kirby's clothing matched Mrs. Ladette's blood type. Watts told authorities that he had the blood had the hood of his sweatshirt up during both attacks, but down when he followed Miss Kirby going to the airport. So he tried to kill her again after, like failing to kill her the first time.
01:43:10 Anyway. So that's, uh, that's all in March, then in April of 1982
01:43:20 and April 15,
01:43:27 he he killed Yolanda guard, or Yolanda Gracia, not Garcia Yolanda Gracia. 21 she was also stabbed to death in front of her home in her front lawn. As she returned home, she was found clutching a bag that contained her work shoes. This is a quote from her father.
01:43:51 She was only there about six months there, meaning Houston. He said, I warned her about Houston, but she didn't listen. I told her not to relax, but she relaxed. Miguel Castillo of Houston worked at a Gordon's jewelers with Yolanda Gracia, 21 who was stabbed several times by Watts as she stepped off a bus coming home from work on April 16, she told her husband, who usually picked her up from work that she was going to be late, and she decided to take the bus, he said. And then she never got home.
01:44:29 She never got home.
01:44:42 This is where they found another body, that of a woman who was murdered the next day. So Yolanda Gracia is murdered on April 15, on April 16, 1982 Carrie.
01:44:59 Jefferson, 32 was strangled and then stabbed twice as she returned home from her job at Houston's downtown post office. Watts buried her body along white oak Bayou. This is after he told them where to find the body, and they wait till you find out why he's confessing so much, by the way, so they they recover the body there again. This is you've never heard of this guy. You've never heard of this guy.
01:45:35 Never, ever. No, no one ever brings up. You know, crazy coral Oh, good old crazy coral watts, crazy coral watts, just just stabbing away, stabbing and strangling and drowning people.
01:45:52 All right, then we get to this victim, literally a week later, Suzanne Searles, she was 25 and was grabbed as she returned home from a party. Watts told police that while he was strangling her, he couldn't tell if she was dead, so he held her head in a flower pot full of water.
01:46:15 Watts buried Searles, who had moved to Houston from Des Moines, Des Moines I Iowa, her grave was one of the first that he led police to following his confessions.
01:46:33 Here's an article. Suzanne Searles had been missing since April 25 when police unearthed her body Monday from a shallow grave in a West or in a West Houston field, the 25 year old woman was last seen leaving a party in a Bear Creek Park at in Texas or at Texas six and clay road early the morning of Sunday, April, 25 co workers at professional typographers printing
01:47:02 called the police after Searles did not show up for work the following Monday, police found cyril's car parked at her apartment in the set blah, blah, blah. The contents of cyril's purse were scattered throughout the car. Cyril's Broken eyeglasses inside the car were the only clue that there had been a struggle.
01:47:21 Homicide Detective Mike Llewellyn said the gray police were led to Monday was in the 700 block of Antoine, just off the Katy Freeway near cyril's apartment. Her body was identified Tuesday from dental records and
01:47:42 then again, they talked to the parents. Quote, she's an only daughter, and things have changed so much since I was young. The mother said, I've always reminded her to be careful. Well, perhaps you guys should have been careful when you agreed to desegregation. Well, I don't know. Maybe her parents didn't, I mean, they, they might have been against segregation. Who knows?
01:48:10 But this is, this is what was unleashed. This is what was unleashed on white people all across the country, with cops apparently completely unprepared for this kind of hyper violence that came from black people and white people, completely domesticated so thoroughly that they stopped taking matters into their own hands.
01:48:34 They stopped tribing up and look, part of it too, part of the animization. If you notice a lot of these girls, they're not from Houston. Most of these girls, if not all of them, in fact, or at least, certainly, the vast majority of them, seem to be coming from different parts of the country, and to go live in the big city. They want to go live in the big city, and, you know, follow their dream of being, apparently, like a waitress at the, you know, at a bar or something like that. And I mean, none of these careers.
01:49:08 I mean, there are some of them that they're going to school, like the medical degree chick and stuff like that. Some of them, not all of them, but there's a lot of these girls. They're just, they're like, Midwestern girls like this, you know, Midwestern girls like this that go to a place like Houston, not expecting the hyper violent
01:49:25 screwdriver nigs prowling about stabbing and choking people out, and they just become another statistic. I mean, at this point it's getting a little ridiculous. I mean, you guys aren't gonna remember any of these names. I mean, there's so many of them. There's so many, and there's so many we don't know. These are, these are just the ones we 100% know. Like, there's, there's a lot more we don't know. Like, a lot more, according to him, there's a lot more we don't know.
01:49:55 And we're not done yet. We're not. We're not done yet. So literally,
01:50:08 less than a month or, I guess, about a month later, he went after yet another, actually another example of this pretty young girl, 20 year old, working, I think as a as a waitress or or I think she worked at a bar, or something like that, Michelle Mayday or Maddie. I don't know how you'd say that. I'm gonna say Mayday. She was returning home around 4am
01:50:36 when Watts choked her to death outside her apartment. Watts told police that he took her body into the apartment and dumped her into the bathtub, because that was another one of the things that he was obsessed with, and that was that was starting to, I think, become more of an obsession, as you will see here shortly. So perfect, perfect example. Michelle Marie made a a nightclub waitress found strangled in a bathtub. She died on her 20th birthday. Her father talked to her about the string of murders and warned her to be careful.
01:51:35 Well, we shouldn't have to live like this. Folks. What exactly is the benefit we're getting out of this?
01:51:50 How? Because just think about this, he's targeting white women. I mean, there's like one or two were black in the early days of his killing, right? I think that was just because of proximity, and he was just a murderer, and so like, one, maybe two, of his triple digits of victims were not white, but he's targeting young, pretty, white Girls. He's not just killing them, he's taking their genes because he's killing them, almost all of them, prior to them having children,
01:52:35 he is seeking out
01:52:39 the most reproductively fit white women in their prime. He's not raping them or anything. He's just killing them.
01:52:53 I mean, just think about this. How many white people don't exist now just because of this one fucking nigger you how many? I'll tell you what. It's more than 100 at least, but it's probably in the 1000s, if you think about all the children they don't have now, and grandchildren at this point,
01:53:17 because of one fucking nigger.
01:53:30 1000s of white people don't exist now because of 175
01:53:39 IQ psychopath.
01:53:57 So now, when he finally gets caught, it's not because of police work. It's still, after all of this, it's not because the, oh, the police, they finally cracked the code and figured out that it was the same guy doing the exact same thing across states and countries and with this, you know, a lot of similarities and not all the murders were exactly the same, but a lot of them were exactly the same.
01:54:30 So the way they finally get him is he goes after yet another white girl, a pretty white girl who survived the attack.
01:54:48 She had a Latina, big booty, Latina roommate, and he attacked them both. I thought that he was going to kill them both. In fact, even celebrated by jumping up and down and clapping his hands while Melinda Aguilar, this is the one that was pretending to be unconscious,
01:55:18 tried to think of a way to get out of this mess while her roommate, Laurie, Laurie Lister was unconscious in the bathroom where he was filling up the tub because he was going to dunk her body into
01:55:35 the tub to finish her off make sure that she was all the way dead, which she had wasn't yet. This is the fuzzy photo, I guess, of the of the bathroom. But here is Laurie herself at the location to explain exactly what happened that day,
Laurie Lister
01:56:02 so I would park right over there that morning, and just walked into the courtyard. She
Narrator
01:56:08 makes her way to apartment 1223, unaware that a stranger is lying in wait,
Laurie Lister
01:56:14 and he attacked me like just before I reached the staircase, because he didn't know if I was upstairs or downstairs, and he came behind me, but then he pulled me underneath into this patio area here, where we were kind of hidden behind the fence.
Narrator
01:56:29 There, the attacker takes Laurie in a strangle hold and demands to know which apartment is
Laurie Lister
01:56:34 hers. And I remember at that point thinking he's going to kill me, and if I don't tell him where I live, he's going to put me in his trunk and bury me somewhere. If I do tell him where I live, Melinda's up there.
Melinda
01:56:47 I heard Lori's keys at the
Narrator
01:56:49 door. Melinda is Lori's roommate. When she goes to open the door, she is immediately attacked.
Melinda
01:56:55 Everything happened so quick when he when he grabbed me, he put a knife to me and said that he was going to kill me. So at that time, he was also choking me, and I couldn't breathe. And then I knew that I had to do something, otherwise I would pass out. So that's when I pretended to pass out.
Narrator
01:57:12 Melinda plays possum. The attacker drags her to the bedroom and ties her up with a wire hanger. He then returns to Laurie, choked unconscious and left lying outside.
Melinda
01:57:24 He went outside and I and I heard him dragging her up the stairs, so I assumed that she was out because he was dragging her up the stairs, and I could hear her body hitting the steps,
Narrator
01:57:35 thinking, Melinda is out cold. The attacker focuses on Laurie filling a bathtub with water and preparing to drown her.
Melinda
01:57:45 I opened up the sliding door there to your right,
Narrator
01:57:47 Melinda seizes her chance to escape. What I did
Melinda
01:57:51 is I jumped as high as I could and went did a somersault, and I actually hit my head on top. And then when I came down, I landed on my knees. There's a lady sitting out, you know, out in her little porch area, drinking coffee. And that's, you know, I told her I needed help. Someone was trying to kill my roommate.
Devon Stack
01:58:13 So just, just to give you an idea, this is one of the few firsthand accounts we have most of the time, all we're doing is we're finding a fucking dead body. But there's a story exactly like that story that doesn't end so well for every one of those victims we talked about tonight, where it's just some brutal fucking subhuman 75 IQ monster,
01:58:40 literal monster,
01:58:43 super predator, if there ever was one, lurking in the shadows, targeting white women And and executing them in the most horrific possible ways.
01:59:11 But this woman was able to break free. A neighbor called the police,
01:59:18 and they ended up taking him in. Finally, finally, finally, after all of these murders, and there's way more, there's actually way more. And in fact, there's so there's kind of a
01:59:33 an issue. This is, by the way, that was the roommate that was that he was going to dump into the end of the tub. Laurie Lister after the attack, and she survived, right? Imagine what she would have looked like if she was just a bloated corpse floating in a in a bathtub. Yeah, now the problem is
02:00:04 because of the wonderful police work, I guess they didn't want to have to investigate all of these murders and try him for all these murders. I don't know if it was because of laziness, because of budget issues, or what the deal was. But they they lit the deal they gave him.
02:00:31 The deal that they gave him was they would give him total immunity,
02:00:42 total immunity
02:00:46 for all of the murders that took place in Texas. This is the Texas authorities total immunity for all of the murders that he that he did in Texas,
02:01:00 if he would lead them to the bodies and tell them, you know, all the details, so they could close the cases out,
02:01:11 they would charge him with, I think, the aggravated assault, or This, this crime here, right with, with Laurie Lister, and Melinda Aguilar, they would charge him for this crime,
02:01:31 and then he wouldn't be charged with any of the murders, and then he would get a maximum
02:01:40 sentence for this crime. But that maximum sentence isn't really a whole lot compared to it's Texas. So, like, I don't know the death penalty, right? And the problem with this deal was, well, I mean, aside from the obvious that he's get he's literally getting away with murder murders, because he admits to, I think, like 12 murders, that they, that they and well, while telling people that he did at least 40 in Texas,
02:02:18 and that he did At least triple digits, if you counted all the ones in Michigan, because the Michigan authorities hadn't charged him with anything. So he's not charged because they, apparently, Michigan thinks they have no evidence for him on any of the cases, even though he's committed probably at least 40 to 50 murders in Michigan, Canada. Who knows? Right?
02:02:39 He's done about 40 or 50. In Texas, they're giving him immunity for the 12 that they that they know that he did, so he's not going to pay the price. And because the way the law is written, because again, we got rid of actual punishments, we got rid of eugenics that was built into the legal system. He could be out in 20 years,
02:03:10 a mass murderer
02:03:13 who killed potentially triple digits, according to to him, and by the way, one of the last things he said in court was, when I get out, I'm going to kill again. And he just said it matter of factly,
Narrator
02:03:31 on September 3, 1982 a Texas court accepts Watt's plea of guilty to a charge of burglary with intent to commit murder under the terms of the DAS deal, he receives the maximum sentence of 60 years in prison and is not charged with any of the murders he confessed to.
Devon Stack
02:03:52 So he can be out in 20 years,
02:03:56 20 years. So he was going to be out in in 2000 I think it was like 2006 or something. And they were trying to figure out how to put him in jail again, because he had immunity, so they couldn't charge him with with any of the murders that he had admitted to.
02:04:17 And we all, we all, you know, we've all learned about their their homicide detective skills, so the murders that he has admitted to, they're not getting they obviously can't charge him with those because they're so fucking incompetent that you have to basically admit to the crime or you're not even going to get charged for it.
02:04:37 And so he's going to get out of jail. He'll be the first serial killer released into the public around 2006 and became like this big political deal for obvious reasons, in fact. So this is from Court TV.
Joe Foy
02:04:54 For the first time in US history, a serial killer is scheduled to be released from its. Sister prison.
Investigator
02:05:01 There's no doubt in my mind that he's going to resume his career, and that career is randomly killing women.
Woman
02:05:08 I feel threatened by the fact that he will kill again. For sure.
02:05:14 I was scared to death that he was going to get out on the street, because nobody's going to know where he is until the bodies start turning up
Joe Foy
02:05:23 a clever and elusive serial killer, coral Eugene watts, admitted murderer of 13 women, could soon see the light of day.
Woman
02:05:33 Mentally, you're thinking, Texas isn't going to let a serial killer out of prison. That's not going to happen. Somebody's going to do something. But nobody did.
Devon Stack
02:05:47 So they couldn't figure how to keep him in. He was literally going to get be released. And so they all they could do is, is beg with the public that someone would have some evidence and they could try him for one of the other millions of murders that he did that was not part of the plea deal, so they could then convict him on that murder to keep him in jail.
02:06:11 And by dumb luck, some guy that was a witness to one of the one of his murders back in 1979 which I didn't talk about. And I say tell this part one of his earlier murders, early on in his career, another white woman that he stabbed to death in the exact same way saw him or witnessed him running away from the in this from the scene back when the incompetent Michigan cops couldn't arrest him for some reason, and he recognized him, and on this news story about this guy that was gonna get out, he's like, that's the fucking guy.
02:06:50 That's the guy that I saw stabbing the bitch in 79
Joe Foy
02:07:01 you don't see a murder every day. You don't get to see the person that killed the person every day. It's engraved. It is welded. It is chiseled, in my mind,
02:07:20 on a cold December night, Joe Foy hears something in the alley behind his home.
02:07:28 I had seen a black male and a white female standing the woman had her back against the wall, and the male was standing in front of her, and he was moving around. I seen the man bring his arm up and bring it down in a slashing motion. The woman fell to the ground. I yelled into the house, call the police. Call the police.
Narrator
02:07:59 The man walks toward him.
Joe Foy
02:08:01 We just lack of lances. His eyes were just dark like nothing had just happened. His walk, his act was just so callous and cold and evil. He opened his car door, just pulled off, and went on his merry way like nothing had happened.
02:08:22 He identify the victim as 36 year old Helen Dutcher. She's been stabbed 12 times.
George Hartley - Detective
02:08:32 The clothing that she had on was eventually looked at where they had stab wounds, who would line up, or where she was stabbed and sliced on her body.
Joe Foy
02:08:46 Foy tells police that the suspect drove away in a tan Pontiac. He also helps police come up with a composite sketch of the killer, but the investigation leads nowhere.
02:08:58 I had called him quite a few times say, hey, got anything going on with it? Anything happening? And both, three, four times it was, nah, there's nothing. We haven't found anything. I
Alex Jones
02:09:12 had a lot of black friends, by the way, and played football, everything.
Devon Stack
02:09:16 Yeah, so the cops were this guy's like, I'm an eyewitness. I saw him. You have a sketch now. This is one of the one of the first murders, or at least one of the very early murders before he went into, like, hyper murder mode, and the cops totally dropped the ball, almost as if it was on purpose.
02:09:38 So like this idea that this is just brand new, that black people are allowed to run amok, and they're just killing white people with impunity. And they're, you know, the system is going easy on them, and it's, it's somehow in response to, like, the system being really heavy handed in an unfortunate way against blacks for such a long time. That's bullshit. It. That's bullshit.
02:10:01 Blacks have been getting away with murder for a really long time, and that murder has disproportionately affected white people. This is an extreme example, sure, but it's a perfect example. It could have stopped right here. Could have stopped right here. Isn't that?
02:10:23 What you always hear that like, oh, all it takes is the word of a white man to put a black man in jail forever. Well, obviously not. The cops didn't seem all that interested if they had a suspect, and by all accounts, they did. In 1979 according to those, those very homicide detectives that we heard from earlier in the stream, all they would have had to have done is put him in a lineup. Put him in a lineup.
02:10:44 He owned the exact kind of car that the guy saw driving away, by the way, he had a he had tools at his home that were already recovered with a search warrant that match the murder weapons. And yet, eyewitness, people go people are put in jail for murder all the time with a lot less evidence than that.
02:11:10 And yet, for some reason, they never put this guy in jail. They just let him run amok, going around killing white girls for like decades. Internationally, you all across the country, and again, no one even knows how many people that he killed.
02:11:34 He said that he killed at least 40 people in Texas and probably at least that many, again, in Michigan, and just by the numbers that we're aware of, I mean, he's killed. It's not like that. Those numbers don't add up. He's killing multiple a week, sometimes multiple a night. I don't know, with all the killing he's doing. I don't know how he has finds time to do anything else, and
02:12:11 he would have, he would have kept doing it, if they hadn't caught him in the act. And
02:12:14 even that is kind of iffy, I mean, because they kind of caught him in the act this time another happened. So they were going, and then, on top of all that, and top of all that incompetence, they were going to release him back into the public in like, in like, oh six, because they had to, because they made some pussy laws in Texas where they would let violent criminals out on the streets for good behavior. You
02:13:03 The only stipulation
02:13:06 was that if he used a deadly weapon, then he wouldn't he would have been disqualified from this program that was going to give him this early release, and because they let him have immunity for all of the murders where he's stabbing girls to death with a screwdriver, and the only assault they had on him was when he tried to drown a girl in her bathtub, and they couldn't make the legal argument that water was a deadly weapon.
02:13:40 That's, I'm not kidding, that was, that was the argument in in the court, his lawyer argued that water is not a deadly weapon, and the judge ruled that water indeed was not a deadly weapon. And so he qualified for this program that was going to put him on the streets.
02:13:59 And the only reason, the only reason they were able to keep him in jail was they were able to try him for a murder from 1979 that they should have tried him for in 1979 would have saved at least 50 lives in
02:14:29 and they convicted him of that murder, which kept him in jail. Now I'll tell you what. There is a happy ending.
02:14:39 There is a happy ending to this story, believe it or not, just like with everything else, it has nothing to do with the government doing their job. Has nothing to do with law enforcement being on top of things, has nothing to do with the system working. It has to do with the fact that coral. Watts, just three years after this, died in jail of ass cancer being 100% real, he died of ass cancer in 2007
02:15:20 we can only hope that ass cancer was caused by being anally raped by fellow inmates for the 20 years in prison that he did serve.
02:15:36 But yes, he should have been. He should have been. Look, I'm telling you, you find a good tree. Texas has lots of good trees. I mean, there's some mesquites. Those are not, I mean, you'd have to find a pretty big mesquite for it to work, you know. But who knows, right, that one chick died in a bush with a tube top. So maybe, maybe you could rig up on a mesquite tree to work out.
02:15:57 But, you know, you just need to find, you know, like a suitably tall tree. Yeah, I'm thinking somewhere in the 15 to 20 foot tall range. That's usually good enough a nice solid nylon cord. I mean, you don't have to get too fancy with it. I mean, I think too many people with the lynchings, they try to keep it old school and try to find, like, some, you know, hemp rope or something like that.
02:16:21 That looks like it should be the rigging of some pirate ship. You don't need to go that far. You just need to find some kind of, like, you know, some synthetic fibers that you could tow a boulder with behind your Ford f1 50. You know, everyone's got a bunch of those in the back of their truck. You have to look that far. And again, if you're you can't find, we just go to Autozone.
02:16:39 It's like 1015, bucks. You can buy enough rub. You don't need a hole, you know, like, what 50 feet, 50 feet of rope. You throw that fucking rope over the branch, over the branch. You need to weight it down. If you, you know, you're not, you're not like, you know, it's like, you're some kind of rodeo champion where you're like, lassoing shit. So it's just tie like a little rock at the end of the rope.
02:16:59 Give it some weight. You know, it doesn't be anything too big, just enough to give it a little bit of weight, throw that rock, just heave it over the branch, right? Get a nice little arc over the branch. Don't get it caught. If you do, you can just pull it back down. That's not a big deal. It goes over the branch, you know, you pull it back down. You know, just again. Use your boy scout skills.
02:17:21 Tie a few knots. Tie a few knots, you know, back up you get, get your pickup truck. Someone's got one. Find that friend that always, you know, you always have to ask to help you move, because he's the one with the truck. Back up the truck under the branch where the rope is hanging down, you know, measure it so that the, you know, I think in this case, the the knot that you just tied, it's, it's somewhere like, sort of five feet above the, you know, 555, and a half feet above the the bed of the Truck.
02:17:54 You know, that's not complicated. It's not complicated. You excited.
02:18:04 It's not complicated.
02:18:12 You want to know why lynchings happened. This is why they happened
02:18:21 and look like I said, he was taking full advantage of the fact that the white community was fully atomized already by the 1980s no one living in Houston seemed to be from Houston. These people, their communities, to the extent they existed, you know, consisted of like a roommate, a couple co workers that, oh, they didn't come into work today. Like, that was it.
02:18:45 It's not like the whole town was like, Hey, where's Susie? Because that's what it would have been just a few decades prior, just a few decades prior. It wouldn't be like, huh, Susie didn't show up for work, and last time we saw her was Friday. Maybe we should call the cops.
02:19:03 They'd be like Susie wasn't doing her jog this morning. And the entire town knows Susie, because everyone knows everyone, and it's weird that she's gone, by the way, who's that black guy lurking around with a screwdriver in his hands?
02:19:19 See when no one has any kind of connection to anyone else, and anyone you see walking down the street might as well just be some random serial killer. For all you know, that's the kind of risk that you take. Those are the dice that you're fucking rolling by living in some big fucking city with zero fucking community, zero fucking connection with anyone else.
02:19:48 The only reason why they find your body is because your downstairs neighbors complain that your apartment's starting to stink you.
02:20:06 Because your mom gets worried because you you haven't texted her in a couple days,
02:20:21 and when they do fight your body and they cart it away and the news comes interviews your neighbors, they all say the exact same thing. They always say, right? I seem like a nice guy. I didn't know him at all. I didn't know his name till you just told me, just now what, he's dead. Oh, crazy. Think I saw him get his mail once.
02:20:43 Yeah, he seemed all right, I guess.
02:20:52 Did I notice anyone strange? I don't know define strange. I mean, like everyone I see in the parking lot in this apartment complex is kind of strange. I don't know any of them. I mean, they're technically strangers.
02:21:13 It's no way to live, man, it's no fucking way to live,
02:21:21 but it is a way to die. It's, it's, it's, may not be a guaranteed way to die, but it's, it's, it's definitely a way to die. And this likely said it's not like people always act like, Oh, it's so much, so much worse today. It's like, no, it's about the same. I mean, it's just that, like, all that shit happened and then it got a memory. Hold, no one told you about it. There's no, there's not even like pictures of all these victims. I was, I was going through, like, old newspaper reports, yeah, I got lucky on some of them.
02:21:59 But some of these people, there's not even, like, a photo, the world doesn't even, I mean, if they're, I mean, I guess, like, forever, they're gonna be in their name is in the newspaper archives as a murder victim. You know, that's tied to a obscure, but should be famous serial killer.
02:22:19 But that's, I mean, that's it, and that's the mark they left on the world. The mark, the mark they left on the world is they're like, on a list of names of people this guy killed, you know, and that's it. Congratulations. Hope living in the big city was worth it. You.
02:22:48 That's what it is. That's what it is anyway. That is the story, ladies and gentlemen
02:22:56 of coral Eugene watts,
02:23:01 coral Eugene watts, man who died of ass cancer in 2007 after murdering probably close to 100 women, almost all of them attractive, young white women, and then never being convicted for only one, and then getting convicted for one, and then dying to vast cancer like three years later. Hooray, America, it is our strength, don't you? I guess it is our string. All right. Anyway, let's take a look at entropy. Here we go.
02:23:56 All right, we got ghost cat. Ghost cat says, Sorry about the link. I'd send a clip if I knew how this is in regards to your political solution. Video, it's a it is a John Hospers reading, and a John Hospers reading an excerpt from the novel unintended consequences by John Ross. Relevant. And then you have, I'll check it out later, but not gonna play it right this second. Let's see here. Parsley is my I'm actually very happy my computer did not crash. It crashed like, four or five times in the hour leading up to the stream, I was, I was stressing out big time. I was like, fuck, fuck, don't, don't just just stay, just stay. And then I would lock up and like, God, damn it.
02:24:52 But I will add to that to my notes, Mr. Ghost cat.
02:24:58 It's being a ghost cat. Churro is looking. Chunky these days. He's, he is chalked. He's got his winter coat on. That's, that is for sure.
02:25:09 All right. And then we got Queensborough bridge enjoyer. Queensborough bridge enjoyer says, Great stream on Saturday in the Michael Collins Piper book, the final judgment. Piper makes the case that Lansky had everyone above him at murder, Inc, removed in some manner.
02:25:29 So he not only had luigiano arrested, but he also was behind Lucky's deportation. That is how Lansky became the number one guy. That's entirely possible. I think entropy. I don't want to fuck it up. I think entropy might be crashed out, though we'll see
02:25:48 it's not letting me close out the chats, but if I hit refresh, they'll all go away. So I'm just gonna read them anyway. Yeah.
02:25:58 I mean, look, it was more of an intro to to Lance. I mean, that, that story, I mean, the stream can only be so long yet. I mean, but yeah, he, it's, that's entirely possible, because he was the liaison between the federal government and lucky.
02:26:12 So anyone that was making deals, it would be him, you know, he'd be the one that's, he's, he was the negotiator, so to speak. So, yeah, and it's a little funny how, right, everyone gets arrested or deported or murdered, but him like he was the last man standing. And they try to make it sound like, oh yeah, when he died, he was pretty much penniless.
02:26:37 And no one fucking believed that. Like, literally no one believed it. None of the, none of the Feds believed it, none of, none of his unless, like, you know, obviously his lawyer acts like he believes that, and his wife says, you know, they believe it. But, yeah, he just, he knew that.
02:26:54 Oh, if I just live in Florida, like I'm some kind of poor, retired Jew in a, in a, you know, somewhat above average, but not too fancy. You know, retirement community, Jewish retirement community in Florida. Then, then, you know, as long as I'm not being flashy, it'll be good. And that's true. That is true. Look, that's something that you could we can learn from these people a little bit.
02:27:26 And one of those lessons is when it comes to flashiness, less is more. Less is more. You don't want to draw attention to the fact that you've got millions of dollars, that you've hundreds of millions of dollars, really, in the case of of Lansky, that you've acquired through illegal means, then we got an astronaut, see, got a one month subscriber streak. Well, I appreciate that.
02:27:55 Then we got murder of bros. Oh no, murder bros, my buttons. My buttons are broken. Hold on. Murder bros, I ran out of USB ports earlier today,
02:28:11 and I unplugged the the buttons. Where's the Oh, no. Got too many things. There we go, all right, there we go, put this into this thing, all right, that into here, maybe, there we go, there we go. And then we do this, and then this, and
02:28:44 all right, murder of bros simply says, donation, well, I appreciate that. Murder of bros, all right, then we got Raven keeper. You. The Raven keeper says, book recommendation, Robert E Howard, creator of Conan and HP Lovecraft, were pen pals in the 1930s their letters are combined into two volumes titled A means to freedom.
02:29:21 Both are very J pilled and worried about the demographic future, even back then, and they share your disdain for spectator sports. Fascinating time capsule that actually does sound pretty good. I will. I will add that too. I wonder if that's on audio, but I'm sure it's somewhere on audiobook. Everything ever ever since AI voices came out, everything's like on audiobook somewhere, somehow.
02:29:45 All right, cool. Thank you very much. Raven's keeper. Then we got Watson Crick with a big Dono.
Mayer Rothschild
02:29:54 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself with.
Devon Stack
02:29:59 Look how Jewy this fag is.
02:30:17 all right. Watson Crick says, I'm finally chipping in. I've been enjoying your streams immensely. Keep up what you do. Well, I appreciate that, Watson Crick, and like I said, we'll be back to normal hours this starting well now. Well now, so we'll be back to having streams on Wednesday. All right. Thank you very much. Watson Crick,
02:30:43 then we got nostro Nazi says I picked up your fell forward again Red Hat because I did last election. So I deserve some ridicule. I live in SoCal so it should be pretty good conversation starter. At least keep up the fight for us white sir. Well, I appreciate that. Mine finally showed up, so you will get it.
02:31:02 And other people have said they got theirs, but it might take a little bit. They're, they're a little slow however, however I was, I was they, they contacted me and said they were, they were aware of their issues, and they were, they were updating things, and things should be getting there smoother now even. So as soon as I am working on a a nationalist run alternative, not me, I'm not making it, but someone else is that I'm going to be hooking it up with as soon as they've got it up and running.
02:31:36 But things should, should be, I've been told. I well, I don't know, maybe, maybe better than it's been lately. But thank you very much. And I got mine. Mine's actually, it's, it's about as good quality as I thought. I might sound like amazing, but it's like, it's not like a piece of garbage either, solid. It's decent. It's what you want.
02:31:59 I'd be curious what will happen if you wear that around? I guess in California, it'd probably work. You're probably not going to get a lot of like, you know, Patriot dad, 595, like to get all in your face about it, but who knows? All right, then we got gorilla hands, huh? Ah,
02:32:30 I'm getting tired of swamp we're getting we're getting rid of swamp ape. Tonight's probably like the last night of swamp ape. It was fun, but now they're just kind of too long, and I've seen them all, and the ones I like the most don't get played very much. In fact, I've been where I have. I started doing all new ones,
02:32:47 and they're about, I'm gonna try to get them done by Wednesday. They're all like, halfway done. So enjoy, enjoy the the gorilla themed dealies. Gorilla hand says, I remember the past month you mentioned truth stream media. Over the past year, they have made a resurgence on YouTube.
02:33:10 Their last video was on digital ID. What are on digital ID was excellent. I've been following them even before I followed you. They seem very knowledgeable, but never mentioned who the culprit is. Probably to stay on YouTube. No, probably because she's Jewish. I'm almost positive, don't I look I'm not. I don't know 100% but pretty sure she's Jewish. So that's why they don't mention Jews, because she's Jewish. But, yeah, I mean that said they, you know, they, they,
02:33:52 they sometimes have done some pretty good some, someone gets a little too artsy and and depressive for me, believe it or not. But, yeah, similar stuff's pretty good. Yeah, I'm almost, I don't know for 100% pretty sure she's Jewish. Let's see here. Then we got gorilla hands. Again.
02:34:12 Says you should do a stream on science fiction and the UFO phenomenon in the US alien abductions and area 51 you'd be amazed at how many Eastern Europeans are involved in this genre. Last thing about it'd be interesting to go over what was fueling maybe the UFO craze in the 1990s only because I was listening.
02:34:34 You know, I don't listen to old arbell all the time, but when I do, it's, it's somewhat nostalgic, but also it's just, it's also kind of weird when you have that separation, because I was so young when I would listen to them when they were, I mean, they're still on the air now, like they play the reruns even now, right? But when I would listen to them on the radio, I was young enough to like. And, you know, like my imagination in my my
02:35:05 little boy, Devon, spirit child, inner child thing, was still alive and and believe that maybe there's aliens and time travel could be real. You know what I mean? Like when you're young, you believe that anything's possible
02:35:21 when you're separated from that and you're grown up, but also you're separated from the naivete of just that decade, where it wasn't just the fact that you were young, it's the fact that it was before the the world was was as obvious like we before, the world was as connected, right?
02:35:42 So it was before all the lies were as, obviously lies. Because until the internet, people could just say, Oh yeah, I was, I was a part of, I was a part of the secret, you know, project that was working on the Time Machine of and you really couldn't, like, fact check anything they were saying.
02:36:02 You just kind of be like, Okay, maybe, maybe you're lying, maybe you're not. And it's funny to go back and listen to this stuff like that is so obviously bullshit. And everyone is is believing it like everyone is believing it. And it's, I've thought about going back and and trying, because, okay, so in the case of, I forget the name of the guy, but there was this guy that was, they quite literally drove and they drove insane.
02:36:33 In fact, I think there's even a documentary about this. There was a guy, in fact, he was a ham radio operator that lived, I think, outside of, I think he lived in, in or around Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque.
02:36:46 I might be getting some of the details wrong, but he was picking up on weird signals because, you know, he's a radio guy coming out of Kirtland Air Force Base, and he approached the Air Force Base to tell him, because he thought he was being patriotic and telling them that, you know, there was maybe a spy on the base, you know, communicating now.
02:37:07 And they, for whatever reason, decided that they would send him on a wild goose chase and tell him that, oh, you're actually picking up on alien communications.
02:37:18 And now we're going to tell you about the aliens, and they totally fucked with this guy and, like, completely ruined his life for no reason, like, really, for no reason. He wasn't, like, trying to cause trouble. He was literally just trying to tell him that he saw these weird signals coming out of the base. It's been, it's been many years since I first read about this story, so it might be an interesting topic.
02:37:39 I'm sure some of you guys know what I'm talking about. But there's been a couple characters that used to frequent coast to coast back in the day that would push the alien stuff who were clearly working for the government, you know, and spreading disinformation.
02:37:57 And in fact, another example, one of this crazy old lady that the George or not, George nori Art Bell would have on the show all the time that would talk about cattle mutilations and all this other stuff. She was bat shit crazy. I think she just died. I'm blanking on her name too.
02:38:15 But some military base invited Iran and shut her a bunch like they did that. They literally, they showed her a bunch of fake fucking alien documents so that she'd go and spread, like the crazy alien story on the on, you know, coast to coast and everywhere else.
02:38:32 And it came out later, like that, they were purposely feeding her weird, fucked up shit. And I think that the excuse they use for that one is they said that it was to fuck with the Russians or something like that. I don't know, but it might be interesting to go back and revisit some of that stuff.
02:38:52 Louis, here we got Leon Noel. Leon Noel with a pretty big Dodo. Let's see here, I kind of do do something a little different. There's some of these buttons.
Jewputer
02:39:08 Anti semitism intensified all round.
Devon Stack
02:39:31 Leon Noel, or Noel says, been with you since the YouTube days. First time. Don't know, but you stream late for the East Coast your insight, research and unique humor is invaluable to the movement. Thanks for everything you do. Off topic, how long does it take for you to take you to number each bee before an extermination? Also, thank you for putting Nick and. Is stupid followers in their place. Well, thank you. Appreciate the dough. No, as far as the the B,
02:40:10 the B extermination, yeah, I don't number them. I just it. Well, if it's an, if it's like a, sometimes it's an extermination, and sometimes it's a relocation. Sometimes it is just the I don't want these bees. No one wants these bees, and they're hard to get to anyway, so they're all going to die, and chemical warfare is usually the way to go. Relocation. I I'm not even I try. It's same thing.
02:40:41 Most the bees that I get rid of are So, mean, I kind of don't care that much if they make it or not. So I don't even look for the queen. I'm just like, if they have the queen, makes it in the, you know, in the vacuum, then she makes it. And if she doesn't, then they can try to make a queen.
02:40:55 And if they don't, then, you know, they're fucked. Who cares? And they these little fuckers, though, they almost always make it. I don't think I've had I think I've had I think I've had like, one or two not make it. They're just survivors. As far as that griper than the Mini groiper War thing that went on, look, I wasn't trying to put anyone in their place. I was just trying to say, like, look, that's I'm not afraid.
02:41:16 So many people are afraid of confrontation. They're afraid of that of the the fanatic weirdos that come out, if you just disagree with with Nick on anything, and so even when they do, and a lot of people do all the time, they're like, Oh God, I can't say anything. Or a bunch of psychotic really, it's a handful of psychos and a bunch of bots will go on my replies and call me a Jew, and it's like, all right, faggot.
02:41:46 Well, just then, what are you even here for? Like, like, literally, what are you even here for? So, yeah, I'm not a pussy, and if someone's giving bad advice, I'm going, I'm not going to talk about, I don't talk about people. I talk about the ideas. I'm not gonna be like, huh, Nixon asshole, but I'm gonna say that idea is bad, and here's, here's why it's bad, you know, like, that's, that's, that's the way intelligent people interact.
02:42:15 You know, it's not about, like, being on someone's team or not on their team, or counter signaling, like, that's such the the gayest fucking term. Like, I'm so sick of people, why are you counter signaling boo to boo? And it's just like, shut the fuck up. Like, that's, it's the gayest thing I've ever heard anyone say.
02:42:31 It's like, if it's a bad idea, it's, it's a bad idea. And, and I'll explain why. I'm not gonna just say it's like, it'd be one thing. If I was just like, that idea is bad and like, and that was the end. All, right, okay, then, yeah, that would look like I just was being disagreeable, because there are people like that.
02:42:54 But I think I was pretty lengthy in my my explanation as to what, and it's not like, it's a new thing. I've been saying exactly that since, well, the YouTube days. So yeah, it's just about getting everyone not not spinning their wheels and wasting their time on shit that's not going to work.
02:43:16 And look, people are welcome to do whatever they want, I guess. But it would be nice if we could all get on the same page on some of this stuff, and get rid of like this, this atomization that's been going on in our community. It's kind of,
02:43:31 you know, like that's kind of a problem. All right. Thank you very much. Leon, Noel, or Noel or Noel, then we got gorilla hands. Gorilla hands says, speaking of UFOs and aliens, the interstellar visitor is still creating questions and drama. No good photos during its flyby of Mars, and now the international comet warning system is on alert. Very interesting on how this is going to turn out.
02:44:04 Oh, you're talking about the, yeah, that I haven't been paying attention to. All I've been doing is writing my book. Like, I haven't even been on the internet for like, a week. It's been weird. It's been kind of weird. I've popped onto Twitter, like, like, a couple of times just to be like, Hey, I'm still alive, you know, but, like, I haven't been paying any attention anything going on,
02:44:26 because you can't, it's hard, man. Like, there's a reason why, and I'm not comparing myself to, like, big authors, but there's a reason why they go into the woods and, you know, lock themselves into a cottage. It's it's hard, it's hard to get in the mindset of your book, and then it's hard to stay there.
02:44:40 Once you get there, it's real easy to get knocked or at least it's probably just because I'm not good at it. But just it knocks me right the fuck. Back out if I, if I, you know, just it just, it's hard to I can't easily phase in and out of that mode.
02:44:59 But, yeah. I'm not sure. I'll look up and see what the new, latest news on it. I don't think it's operation Bluebeam. I think it's it's another What was the name that I brought up last time? That big the Heavens Gate one. I forget the name of it now, but you know that? I think it's the same thing.
02:45:20 It's going to be just hail Bop, or something like that, right? It wasn't called hail bop. I think it hail Bop, if that's how you say it.
02:45:29 And then gorilla hands simply says, Oh, wait, nope. Before that, have you heard about the ban on ham radios from China? Well, it's not really a ban of on ham radios from China.
02:45:42 It's, it's something like it is another. It's a regulation on ham radios from China. But I forget what. You'll still be able to buy cheap Chinese radios. But I forget the, I forget the
02:46:01 I know, I know somewhat of what, because I saw some hand people talking about it, but I don't know the specifics. I just know that there's something about it'll add the it'll add to the cost of cheap it'll basically, I think it's like a money grab, like it's gonna because China has taken over the the radio market. I mean, obviously there's no American radio companies anymore.
02:46:21 I mean, there hasn't been since like the 19 since, like, the 1970s so that's not like a big deal. We were getting all of our stuff from Japan up until China took over the market. And I think it's just a a money grab to make it so that these, these Chinese radios, cost more. I'd have to look at it closer. I could be wrong about that, but it's not like, I mean, you're still gonna be able to get cheapy Chinese radios.
02:46:44 I look, I have a couple Bao fangs or whatever, but like, that's not really ham radio. Like, if you think that like a VHF UHF radio is going to get you through anything other than close quarters communications, you don't, you just don't understand ham radio like that. Those are their walkie talkies. I mean, yeah, they go far. They're then like the ones from when you were a kid, from Toys R Us, right?
02:47:13 But they're still walkie talkies. If you want like a real HF radio, you don't have to get some cheapy Chinese one. There's enough on the second hand market that are pretty cheap that will do what you need to do for not that much money. And you have to know enough about electronics to do at least some maintenance to them.
02:47:35 That's my opinion. I think that if you just pick up a radio and not know how it works, then you're not gonna it's like, it's like, okay, it's like, if you have a gun, maybe you don't need to know how to be a gunsmith, but you should be able to take apart your gun and clean it and put it back together and stuff like that, right?
02:47:52 Like, you should have some like, basic gun knowledge beyond just, I pull the trigger, right? I look down this way, and it bullet comes out of this. It's like, okay, I mean, that's, yeah, that's the basic idea, I guess. But, but with a you need to understand antennas. You need to understand, especially if you're in a if you don't, unless you've got, like, a big antenna array that's permanent set up that if a disaster strikes, you know, you know how to use it. You're all set up ready to get most people don't. Most people are going to have to deploy an antenna in order to communicate. And if you don't understand how you that works, good luck. Good luck getting that to work, you know, or at least effectively.
02:48:34 So it's something that you should be able to do, at least some of the stuff, you know, basics of radio anyway. And so even if they were to get rid of some of these Chinese radios, I mean, yes, you and Icom and Kenwood and like all these Japanese companies are still, I mean, they're still like the big radio companies, the the only Chinese radios are like the Bao fangs, the zygoos, the, there's some other brand I don't remember the name of, but they're good.
02:49:08 They're like, because they're cheap, but if they made those not available anymore, I wouldn't, I wouldn't fucking miss them. A lot of
02:49:16 hams wouldn't miss them, because a lot of people who aren't hams get those fucking radios and then, like, like, I don't really care. There's some people that are like, Oh, they clog up the airways. But really, there's not, like, so much activity where that's a problem.
02:49:30 You know, it's not like, I don't care if there's people illegally transmitting on on VHF or you I don't care. I really don't. But there's some people that really care, but I don't care at all. There's not, it's not like there's there's no such thing as, like, traffic jams these days on on ham radio.
02:49:45 And as far as I'm concerned, the more the merrier, the more people getting radios, the better, even if they're just using them to talk illegally. You can even get, like, an old, you know, like a CB. I mean, CB is no. Hot as dead as you would think, there's people. I mean, you only have to, like, break any laws you can on
02:50:10 a legal limit, which is what is like, four or five watts on a CP, like, it's not much, but when conditions are right at certain times a day, from the West Coast, you can talk to Florida, you know, I mean, not for very long, but there's a window. You can talk, talk some distance.
02:50:27 But again, that takes, that requires a little bit of knowledge, knowing how to put up an antenna, knowing how to set up a radio.
02:50:33 Anyway, that's all this radio talks by boring, like most people, but I would say I'm not too worried about the China thing, like I'll look into it and find out if there's something to worry about, let you guys know. But I think it's just a I think it's a money grab. I think these $20 radios will start being $30 you know, ooh, oh no. Unless I'm wrong, I'll look into it. And then gorilla hands simply says, all right. Then we got wandering fool.
02:51:09 Wandering fool says, At the end of your solution stream, you said, hopefully you guys will have something to say about this and not a bunch of random shit. If someone had the perfect solution, it would be handled much in the same way as a political strategy.
02:51:24 Such a solution will require a hierarchy as well as levels of influence. I have been continue working on something that you may or may not be interested in, but you haven't exactly been approachable. Would you be willing to look at a white paper and offer feedback?
02:51:46 If so, are you still at, eh, proton mail, or is there a better way? Um, I don't know if I have time to look at a white paper. Man, like, How extensive is this? Is this like, I mean, look, here's the thing. Well, I don't know if that will will be able to have hierarchy. And if we that's the kind of, or at least not in the immediate future, I think that when and if that happens there, it'll be, it'll be slightly organic, right?
02:52:20 Or it'll appear that way, like, even if it's not, even if there's people pulling strings in the background it, you know, because they have money, they haven't, you know, they have the ability to astroturf a certain person or a signal or boost it, you know, that sort of a thing. I don't know.
02:52:38 But I think that in terms of having some kind of hierarchy plan that we are going to bottom up implement, I don't think that's very, I don't think that's ever happened really, you know, like, I think that that's sometimes the mythos. I think that's sometimes the story that you hear about, like, and then all the peasants rose up. It's like, I mean, that's what they were told happened.
02:53:04 But it was a little more complicated than that. They were more powerful things moving in the background. I mean, I don't, I don't know, like, if I have the bandwidth to, I mean, look, if you could, I think, though, here's the thing, and I would say that you're you're, you should think about this anyway.
02:53:23 When I was in the consulting business a long time ago, they always had you, regardless of whatever complicated project you were going to pitch, they always made you distill it down to an elevator pitch, meaning that if you got an elevator with someone, that you trapped him on an elevator, basically right? Because that you had a captive audience.
02:53:44 He knew that this guy, this important guy, his office was on the 10th floor, and so that if you were able to sneak into the elevators, he got into work in the morning, and he was cornered on the he had nowhere to run. He couldn't go anywhere.
02:53:55 He had to be on that elevator until he got to his office on the 10th floor. You had to be able to pitch whatever your your idea was, whatever your your contract you were trying to get, you had to be able to pitch your entire thing on that elevator ride on the way to the floor where his office was. And if you weren't able to do that, if you weren't able to sum it up and do some punchy like, this is the idea. Here's the basic concept.
02:54:20 Regardless. Look, sure it's obviously, it's always going to be way more complicated in its implementation, but if you can't describe whatever your plan is in some real succinct, punchy way, it's probably not a great plan, because it's, it's got to be, or maybe you're just not great at describing and you need to refine how you can describe it. But that's the only way these plans would ever work anyway.
02:54:44 Because even if, let's say you had the best strategy in the world, you have to be able to get a lot of people to sign on to it. And if you have to sit there and try to explain some if yet everyone you're trying to convert, you're like, here, just read this white paper. They're gonna be like, okay, like, no, they're not gonna. Do it. You have to be like, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. This is what it is.
02:55:03 This is the plan. And then if it's if they're like, Oh, that's not a bad idea. But how would you do that? Oh, here's the white paper. You know that that's the way you do it. That's how you have to sell these ideas. So like, look, I'd be less I wanted to hear an elevator pitch, if you got some kind of
02:55:19 elevator pitch, like, list the basic idea, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. And yeah, if it sounds like, all right, all right. Sounds good, tell me more. That's when you bust out the white paper. So, yeah, that's, that's what I would say. That's what I would say. Thank you very much, wandering fool. And then we got Beach Goys.
Mayer Rothschild
02:55:42 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself with.
Devon Stack
02:55:48 Look how Jewy this fag is.
02:56:06 Beach Goys says, Hey guys, I survived a severe head on crash on my motorcycle. Holy shit.
02:56:13 Holy shit. Yeah, that's, that's, uh, that's pretty intense. Two weeks ago today, I'm busted up, but I'm determined to come back stronger than ever. Holy shit, man.
02:56:25 Well, well, you came back, I guess, if you're, I mean, hopefully you're not too banged up, but if you're, I guess stuck, stuck sitting around for a little while because you're healing. You're, you're just, you're just in time we're going back to the two streams a week. No, hopefully. That sucks to hear.
02:56:45 Man, that's always why I never wanted to ride motorcycles. And you know, unless, I mean, I'd ride dirt bikes. But even that can be dangerous because of sand and everything else. But, yeah, you never can. It doesn't matter how good of a driver you are, you can't be. I mean, you're only as good as everybody else on the road, unfortunately. But not everyone can say that,
02:57:12 that they, they they've survived a head on collision in anything. I survived the head on collision in a Honda act or accord, Honda Accord, and I permanently disfigured my clavicle bone. There's a big right here, here, that's bone. That's clavicle right there.
02:57:34 I got a big lump of bone that sticks out of my my shoulder now, ever since, because I didn't have health insurance, and it kind of just healed the way that it healed. So hopefully you at least have competent medical care there Beach Goys. But yeah, you're lucky to be alive. Hopefully, well, you must have been wearing your
02:58:00 your brain basket, as I think my dad used to call them, so yeah, Beach Goys. Then says the best medical care that I've received has obviously been from whites.
02:58:13 Unfortunately, there's a lot of nons stream idea highlighting the poor care abuse whites have suffered from nons in medical Yeah, I guarantee you. I just wonder how you would get hard data on that, because from personal experience, I can tell you that's absolutely the truth.
02:58:32 When I was in when I did have health care, when I worked for big companies back in the day, and I would go to, I never had anything. I never had, like, awesome healthcare, but like, you'd have, like, the HMO, and then you have to go in their network and look up all the doctors.
02:58:51 And I remember at first not caring, like, at first just like, Oh, I'll go to this Indian guy because he's close, and then I'll go to this Chinese dentist because he's close. And then I'll go to this, like, black GP, because he's, you know, I just wasn't, I was, like, whatever that they wouldn't be on there if they weren't qualified. And it's not, it's, I'm just going for, you know, I'm just doing whatever's in the network that they'll pay for.
02:59:13 And then, and I, my whole life, I had never had nons for medical care, right, when I was under my parents insurance. And, you know, we lived in like, Whitey town, USA. Well, not Whitey town, but, like the Whitey town part of the town, and either my parents were were subtly selecting non whites out, or maybe just, they just weren't as prevalent. But I'd never had a non white doctor, and I remember the the Asian dentist didn't speak English, and so I couldn't even explain to him, like he didn't know what I was saying, like, I couldn't explain what I wanted done or, and he couldn't explain to me what he was wanting to do.
02:59:52 And, and I was just like, how are you even, like, you don't even know any English, like, you should at least have a guy here that does. Like, that can translate for you. And the Indian guy was fucking retarded. And then, you know, I don't have to tell you about the black guy. I mean, it was just like, What the hell's going on here? And, yeah, it was bad. It was terrible. It was terrible. I think I got it. I had a white female dermatologist that.
03:00:20 And I was like, Oh, thank god. Is this cancer? No, okay, I believe you actually, you know. And that was, uh, yeah, yeah. I don't even know what to do with some of these fucking guys, but uh, yeah. Well, I'll tell you what it's better than. What is it? Though I was gonna say it's better than no no medical care, but maybe it's not. It's not, but hey, you're still alive, right? They didn't, they didn't end you.
03:00:51 They kept you in one piece or or maybe in spite of them, I don't know. But thank you for remaining in the world of the living Beach Goys and hopefully, and everyone in the chat, I'm sure, wishes you a speedy recovery. So we'll be here. We'll be here for you every, every Wednesday and Saturday.
03:01:10 And I'll look into that. I'll look into that. I'll look into the medical thing. I'm sure there's been studies, or maybe there's been some kind of article that you know, American Renaissance has done, or something that can be expanded on, right? I just need to see there's got to be some source that I can that'll get me started down the path. I think that would be a good idea.
03:01:34 Then we got Austin olam says in a hypothetical scenario where you're the dictator of the US and have both the legislature and the judiciary. What is your economic policy? In the hypothetical scenario where you're the dictator of the US and you have both the legislature and the judiciary, what is your economic policy? I'm not an economist, so my economic policy would be to get a bunch of economists together and talk to them about like economic policy. I would say that there would have to be
03:02:13 an end to usury in some way. You'd probably have to phase it out slowly, if you're being realistic. And I don't know what the good alternative would be, but I think that's the biggest problem. Is we'd have to put an end to Jewish generational wealth that just sits around earning compound interest all day. And I would also get rid of the privatization of the monetary system.
03:02:40 That's that seems like a bad idea no matter what you end up doing, right? Have having secret, private shareholders in your currency that you have to pay interest to, and no one's allowed to know who they are. That sounds like a bad idea, right? So I'd get rid of that. That would be, that would be gone. Now there's a lot of things I know I would change, but there's a lot of things I don't know what I would change, because I'm not an economist, and all the things that I thought were super clever libertarian ideas or whatever, right from when I
03:03:14 was first trying to wrap my head around the world and how it worked. A lot of those just sound infantile now, and I don't know what a what a good, good working solution would look like. I think it would be without usury, and it would definitely be without private, you know, stakeholders and and it would be without this kind of generational wealth bullshit that we've got going on. I
03:03:45 I would not say I would ban generational wealth, although I would look at that option. I would look at that as an idea. It's an idea I've had before where I feel like, if you're really going to do a meritocracy, and I'm not, maybe that you don't, but like, if you were really going to do that, it's not a meritocracy.
03:04:02 If idiots with, you know, from generational wealth start off, start off life with $100 million and geniuses start off with nothing right, like you're not, obviously, and I'm not just saying that as like in terms of reward for the individuals involved in that scenario.
03:04:20 I mean, as a country, you're not going to succeed as as much as you would if if the resources weren't more available to people that were more able to use them for for the society, the Good of the society, like, if you're if you, if you, if you have a lot of wealth concentrated in the hands of people who are just, they're just wealthy because they were born with money.
03:04:54 I mean, that's, again, I'm not saying that you can't you. Uh, that you shouldn't be able to give something to your kids and whatnot. But I feel like the way it's set up now, where we've got these families that for centuries, have just been living off of the money that one of their ancestors made, like, literally, like 500 years ago, or some shit like that, that's stupid, you know, and and libertarians would always try to act like it wasn't a big deal, and pretend that, like,
03:05:25 Oh no, like fortunes are won and lost all the time. They change hands. It's kind of bullshit. There's that. I mean, that's true of a lot of maybe families that they're, you know, fortunes are gained and lost. But then there's, there's some core banking families that there those forces were gained, and they're like the Rothschilds as an example. And they're not exactly lost any you know, centuries later. So it's stuff like that I'd want to get rid of. Let's see here. Then we got
03:05:58 the learned goat. Today we'll be reading the best
Money Clip
03:06:03 Christmas ever, our story begins with
Devon Stack
03:06:07 the magic negro.
Money Clip
03:06:18 Where did the showman go? It's almost time to take out Christmas decorations, by the way, Christmas
Devon Stack
03:06:33 ever All right, the learned goat says exposing these old horror stories is essential work. It's not macabre or sensational for senseless racial agitation. It shows the reality of what our lives are like living in proximity to blacks. Absolutely and like I said, I don't think I was rage baiting the night I was I was kind of trying to make it funny if I could.
03:07:02 Yeah, could, as dark as the topic was, but it's, yeah, I mean, that people need to understand that you've heard about all these white serial killers and Jewish serial killers that they say are white, but you never hear about the black ones, and they are turbo murderers. I mean, wait till you hear the next guy. I like to space them out so. But there will be another guy that makes this guy look like child's play.
03:07:33 And I'm not talking about the the black guy with the fetus fridge. That's a totally different guy. Anyway. Thank you very much. Learning goat. Then we got jeb's shooter. Is that like shooter McGavin, I don't know where's the that's not the button I was trying to hit.
Mayer Rothschild
03:07:54 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself.
Devon Stack
03:08:00 Look how Jewy this bag is.
03:08:16 All right, we got jeb's shooter or J E, Bs, I don't that's supposed to be jebs. I'm thinking like, like jebs bush. Jeb Bush has like a shooter, which could mean any number of things, uh, been listening watching since 2018, or so, and ironically, heard about you by Owen Benjamin.
03:08:37 He was good for at least that over the years, your work has been a comfort, and feels like I'm listening to an old friend at this point, I appreciate what you do and pray for you and yours. You've talked about doing a call in show in the past, and I was thinking, you could do one via a x space.
03:08:57 Maybe we could do something like that. I was thinking, it'd be cool to do, like, an actual stream, stream, and then do it through telegram or something like that. But I guess an x space, maybe we could just stream the x space too. Yeah, it could be interesting.
03:09:17 I don't know what I kind of want to do, one though that's not even political though. Like, like, I kind of do want to do like a ghost story, one, like, on Halloween or something like that. I mean, as dumb as that might sound, yeah, have like a spooky Jew, Jew ghost stories or something. I don't know the call is coming from inside the shtetl. I don't even know. Well, all right? Well, I appreciate the, appreciate the big support there, Jeb shooter, and hopefully I'm saying your name, right?
03:09:53 And, yeah, and that's, that's not bad idea. I did my first x space. Nice one, the last one I've done really so my only x space a little while back, maybe I'll do one again soon. I, like I said, and I'm still working on the book. I just I got a lot. I got a lot. I got over the hump.
03:10:12 I had to get over the hump, and I got over the hump. And but I'm still going to be feverishly working on that. I need to pay more attention the news, though, because I do feel out of the loop. But now that I'm now that I'm post hump maybe, uh, maybe I can really easier to stay looped in, all right.
03:10:32 Well, thank you very much. Jeb shooter, and hopefully I'll hear from you when we do the well, you know, whatever that, however that materializes, then we got a man of low moral fiber thanks to the stream. I don't know how people acknowledge the that blacks commit most murders, but somehow think whites account for most serial killers. Most black murders are unsolved.
03:10:54 Many out there. Well, last thing too, there's, there's like, black serial killers that killed like a billion black people, and that's why you don't hear about them, because it's just like, black people are getting killed all the time and like, so it's it that those are harder to figure out.
03:11:09 Like, this guy, they should have figured out. But like, when it's black people get shot all the time, just all the time anyway, and so when it's a serial killer shooting them, it's hard to, like, differentiate between that and, like, just normal, you know, black murder.
03:11:26 So, yeah, I mean there, there's a lot of black serial killers out there. There's way more than people realize, and there's probably a lot that are active right now and just aren't getting caught. Because how would you know? You know? Then we got hammer authority,
Money Clip
03:11:44 half a million dollars.
Devon Stack
03:11:48 Hammer authority says small white pill last year, a worker shot and killed two blacks who robbed his pot shop, but did so long after they had fled, a third got away, but died in another robbery shortly after, the state tried him for murder. Amazingly, the yuppies on the Portland jury let him go on all counts.
03:12:13 He looks like a fat beaner and his name is Joe Steiner. Even in Portland, the fatigue is real. Well, I wonder. I wonder if it's because it's a pot shop, you know what I mean, like if it was a gun shop, I don't, you know what I mean. I don't think it would have gotten away. Let me see here, if
03:12:33 anything pops up. Former,
03:12:39 uh, I'll look it up afterwards. I was so like his picture of Papa, bro, but yeah, the, I mean, yeah, in Portland, it's a pot shop. So maybe if it was a gun shop, he would not have been as lucky. But, you know, I look, I can't, I'm not gonna say, I'm
03:13:04 not gonna, I'm not gonna give advice on murder. That's, that's probably a bad idea, all right. Horrible hangover says this stream reminds me of the book mind Hunter, about an FBI profiler who finds killers the incompetent police should have consulted with someone like that and known better.
03:13:26 Well, I'll tell you, they, they the FBI was working with them, and it sounded like at least one or two detectives knew who it was. I don't know why they thought they didn't have enough evidence when they clearly had an eyewitness in in 79
03:13:41 and I just, I don't know what the deal was. It just seems like there was some of it might have been. There was just so much black murder going on in both the I mean, we're talking about Detroit, so in both Detroit and Houston, I mean, those are two cities that were, especially during that time period, pretty murder heavy, and maybe they were overworked, I don't know, but it just seems like, holy shit, they should have caught this guy, like, way, like, almost immediately.
03:14:08 And look, a lot of the it's not like the smartest people that we have go to go to law enforcement. You know what? I mean, there's, there's a lot of very average people in law enforcement. And even though, in this case, the criminal, the thing that drove me crazy is the criminal was assessed is having a a 75 IQ, and they couldn't stop talking about how how clever he was to not leave evidence behind.
03:14:38 And all that really meant was he wasn't raping the girls, and so he wasn't leaving DNA. And not that it would even have mattered, because there's a
03:14:51 sorry, there's like something alive outside making a noise,
03:14:57 one of those javelinas, there might be javelins. Outside. Oh, yeah. So it's they were basically saying how clever he was, that not to not leave DNA evidence, and there was nothing, and they couldn't test DNA evidence anyway back then. So he was just, he was just into the murder.
03:15:15 He wasn't, he wasn't in it for the rape. And then that made him clever somehow.
03:15:21 And then horrible hangover says to help cure Jenny Vance, sycophants of this sickness, wondering if you could explain why him carrying his kids and following his wife like a puppy is an issue. Thanks. Yeah, I'll tell you the the low IQ takeaway of what I said that triggered so many fucking people. It like that. The and there's, look, there's two kinds of people.
03:15:42 They're liars. That knew that I wasn't saying men shouldn't carry their children, like, that's retarded. No one has. I wasn't suggesting that men shouldn't carry children, and no one, I don't think ever has. That's like the stupidest thing in the world. There's a difference between you unloading your fucking car when you get home from Costco and carrying your sleeping kid into the house, and the Vice President of the United States walking off of Air Force Two and onto Air Force One, five paces behind his brown fucking wife, carrying his brown fucking sleeping kid.
03:16:19 Okay, there's the worlds of difference between the two scenarios. And if you can't tell the difference between those two fucking scenarios, you're fucking retarded. You're fucking retarded and and like I said, there's, there's some people that can't that know exactly what I was talking about, and instead mischaracterized it so that stupid people would jump onto the rage train.
03:16:42 Oh, you think it the most masculine thing in the world you can do is carry your kid, which is fucking wrong anyway, that's fucking that's just like, the gayest fucking thing you could imagine watching the movie 300 right? And he's like, This is Sparta.
03:16:56 Well, he's got some, like, fucking toddler in his arms. That's shit in its pants. You know, it's like, no one thinks that's masculine, sorry, like they don't. And it just tells me that you're, you're a brow beaten fucking dad fag. You're exactly the kind of person that JD Vance looked like when he was walking across that tarmac.
03:17:13 So that's, that's all, that's all I'm saying. And, like I said, most people, I think, know exactly what I was getting at. And instead, one just like when they knew what I was getting at when, when I the same people, by the way, got upset when I, when I said that from a political accelerationist standpoint, having a Camelot presidency with locked up J Sixers would radicalize people faster, and they they twist it to make it sound like I want the January Six people locked up, you know, like, I somehow hated January 6 people and thought they should be locked up when, that's like, obviously, what?
03:17:47 Nothing I would like, I wanted, I wanted Trump to fucking pardon them before he left office, right when? So but, and people knew what I was saying. Some people are dumb. And they just, you know, they don't, they don't know. They don't know. They don't understand nuance. And they just, you know, they just follow whatever, whatever rage thing is going on.
03:18:05 But the people lighting that fire, they know what they're doing. And I think that a lot of it is just, if you say, Look, you think that it's bad, if you say something negative about Nick on Twitter, and you'll get a bunch of like, psycho sycophants and bots coming after you do the same thing with JD Vance. Say something, anything, almost, and and all of a sudden, because I'll tell you one thing, a lot of the people replying to that are people that didn't follow me. In fact, I'd say almost everybody.
03:18:31 Where it was, it was these accounts that many of that, many of the accounts were started this year, had like five followers and didn't follow me. Yet they knew to go to my go to my tweet and tell me that, like, the most manly thing in the world is to carry your brown daughter on the tarmac. And it's like, all right, dipshit, you're not fooling anybody. It's there's clearly, I mean, talk about fucking astroturf.
03:18:57 JD, Vance is like the most astroturf political figure of our generation. And look, that's, that's what that that's what comes along with it. That's what comes along with it is you say anything negative about him, and you're going to get the the bots and the the sycophants and everything, because they want him to have a cult like following, and they want to try to intimidate people and to not not pointing out the fact that he's just like some fucking loser. He's basically some race trading loser, and that's I'm just like, I'm not afraid of of challenging bad ideas.
03:19:37 If they're said by Nick Fuentes, I'm not, I'm not afraid of challenging people's fantasies about a Republican approved Palantir plant like JD Vance. All right, let's see here then we got grimly fiendish. I. Grimly fiendish simply says, Thank you for your work. Well, I appreciate that.
03:20:09 Then we got horrible hangover. Horrible hangover says, What is a rebuttal to use for people against capital punishment, who are concerned about executing the innocent, send them to North Korea and make them wish they were dead. I support executing once.
03:20:27 No, I just say you execute them, and sometimes you're going to make mistakes. Do we not have cars? Because sometimes people die in car accidents? No, of course not.
03:20:35 We have cars because we've done the math, and we realize that despite the people that will die as a result of us having cars. It's better to have cars. And the same thing is true the death penalty. Yeah, there's going to be innocent people probably that go to get they get sent to death, and that sucks, and I hope it's not me one day. But so what that's, that's, what are we supposed to not have cars?
03:20:58 Now, you know, it's the same thing. And so that's, that's, that's what I would say. It's pretty easy logic. It's, I mean, in fact, anyone that tells you that, like, oh, we can't do this thing because one person might die, an innocent person might die, well, then why do anything?
03:21:13 We can't Okay, I guess we can't have wars. Oh, we can't defend ourselves in a war, because inevitably lots of innocent people will die, right? I mean, they will. So I guess you have to be against all war, not not just like, you know, the obvious ones that everyone's against like you have to be against even defending yourself. You have to be against most technology.
03:21:36 You have to be against, you know, even like materials that we mine for because people die in mining accidents. You can't have, you know, air travel. I mean, you can't have electricity. People die. You know, doing working on the lines, linemen, that's a dangerous job. People get electrocuted all the time. I guess we can't have electricity now, because innocent people die. It's fucking stupid.
03:22:00 It's fucking stupid. And if you think about it for longer than five seconds, then you realize how dumb it is. The benefits to having the death penalty far outweigh the the inevitable. And it is inevitable, the inevitability that innocent people will be put to death from time to time.
03:22:17 And yeah, that sucks, and that that shouldn't. What that means to me is the people that would be in charge of administering that should take it more, you know, make sure they take it seriously. And that's also why it's important that we have a a nation of our own people.
03:22:31 Because if you're right, look, if you have a country that just has the judicial system is just overrun with people that hate white people, maybe the death penalty is not the best thing in the world to have, right. Maybe the death penalty
03:22:46 would, would, would only be applied to white people, right, while all these black people are allowed to run free, but in the meantime, right? I, I think that you know, since we can't have our white ethno state overnight, the more criminals we can kill, the better. So, yeah, that's, that's the thing is, yeah, and people will die, innocent people will die. Absolutely, yep, they will.
03:23:12 And I'm okay with it, and I hope it's not me, just like I hope it's not me when it comes to, I don't want to die in a car accident. You know, I've known people that have died in car accidents, so it can happen to me, it's it happened to them, and I still drive car. So it's as simple as that.
03:23:31 Then we got man of low moral fiber says, nigger murders over 100 white women, white prison gangs let him live and die of prostate cancer. If White people were half as violent as they make us out to be things like that wouldn't happen. Yeah?
03:23:49 Well, like I said, Unless prostate cancer was a euphemism, yeah, you know, I'll tell you what that. I will not. I don't know. I've never looked into it. I would not, I would not rule out the possibility that they just
03:24:04 said he died of prostate cancer. I think that happens sometimes. I don't think, I don't know. I have nothing, nothing tells me that's what happened here, but it's the kind of thing that I hope happens.
03:24:16 I don't know, but you're right. That guy, that guy should Aryan Brotherhood should have been stomping that guy out like decades ago. Not that I condone violence, of course. Cipher. Oh, perfect, you.
03:24:52 That might be the only one that stays Okay, all right. Can. More. All right, let's see here. Cipher just says, Don't know who often checking in. Well, I appreciate that, and I'm going to now refresh entropy, which, of course, did indeed break, but at least I got to go through all those, because entropy has to break every every stream,
03:25:28 and I will start it up again. Not that, I mean, not that it matters much now we're, we're at the end here.
03:25:37 But, Oh, whoops. Why did that not work?
03:25:52 Well, it popped up some new ones here. Uh, Charles Bronson says, in African countries, they Lynch people all the time for a lot less. I saw one where they tied a guy to a tree with a boulder hanging from his nuts. As people took turns kicking him or kicking the boulder, he kept shouting, we, we, we. Oh, what fun that could be. Keep up the good work devil. I appreciate that.
03:26:16 And then we got sucking your Okay, says still muted on rumble, by your really cool mod streams, two streams ago for posting the Hitler speeches on rumble. You said you look into it, and I know you're not an egg. So when you have a moment, sir, well, what did you I had to point out you are throwing some attitude around. So you might have, you might have earned it. I don't know.
03:26:45 We'll take all right, mods, mods on rumble. Look into that. I don't know what your name is over on on rumble. So if someone got muted, I guess, on rumble for posting Hitler things, then we can unmute that. Love and division says, Please check your Odyssey super chats. Oh, cool. There is one. I will check that. And then we got, once again, suck in your blank, blank, blank, subscribe for $5 Well, I appreciate that. Then over on Odyssey chats,
Mayer Rothschild
03:27:29 money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself. Love, a division, of course. I
Devon Stack
03:27:51 love and division says, I love the Albuquerque desert. Great insights as usual. I want to keep the Odyssey thing going. Can I get three seconds, three seconds of you.
03:28:22 All right. Well, I appreciate that love and division, love and division and yeah, yeah, the let's Well, I'll tell you what, the Albuquerque deserts probably got a little cold right about now, right? Right about now there's been snow by this time of year in the Albuquerque desert. I mean, they're they're pretty far their elevation is pretty high
03:28:52 the high desert, the high desert is, is very cold in the winter, very Christmassy. I missed the luminaries. I never thought I'd say that when I first saw them, I was just like, why are there lunch bags with seems like a fire hazard, like an obvious one, like, Why?
03:29:11 Why are there paper bags lining the street and they have open flames inside the paper bag? That just seems like a really bad idea, and they do, they catch on fire all the time, but, uh, yeah, I do miss them. They are cool.
03:29:29 They are cool. All right. Love and division, well, I appreciate that. Now we're gonna go over to rumble and rumble. I'm gonna have to go back because that one of my computer was crashing
03:29:45 the several times. I'll think I might miss some of the early ones, and then I'll go back at the end to double check because I as soon as I start the stream on rumble, I open up the browser so it saves all the early ones that come in and. And then I had to reboot my computer like twice, so it resets every time I do that.
03:30:07 So hopefully, or maybe it'll get them all. I don't think so, though, so I'll double check here in a second. Zazzy mctazzbot says, What is the difference between a bee and a wasp? Is it like how all tortoises are technically turtles. Thanks for the show. No, they're actually, they're totally different insects. They're totally, I mean, they've got similarities, right? So, like, they can both sting,
03:30:33 and they both sort of, well, they, they both have a, like, a hierarchy, where there's like a queen, right?
03:30:43 So they've got, like, similar social and they both have hives, kind of but they're radically different, like the Hornets will, first of all, Hornets, they don't really make honey. They, I mean, they might make something, or maybe they they do, but not like, not anywhere near the amounts that like. Actually, I don't think they make honey, but they, they also live it. They don't build hives that are like wax.
03:31:15 They build them out of, like paper or other things like that. They can they don't die when they sting you. They can sting you multiple times. They actually attack beehives Hornets of all kinds. It's not just the murder Hornets, yellow jackets, even stuff like that, will attack beehives and eat the baby bee larvaes inside of a beehive. So they're like natural enemies.
03:31:42 I mean, they're, they're similar in ways, like they both sting, they both go buzz, buzz, buzz, and they both, you know, kind of, you know, like they have the queen and all that stuff. But that's about where the similarities end. They're, they're natural enemies.
03:32:00 Then we got dagtastic says, looks like Canada might have an election on November 4. That will happen if the budget does not pass in the House of Commons. Well, that's that's over my head. I don't know much about Canadian politics.
03:32:17 I'd have to ask Jeremy about what that means to him, but, yeah, I don't know. I don't know. I don't even know what's going on in this country right now. I don't know what's going on with the with you guys up there.
03:32:36 But, but good or bad? That sucks. I'm not sure which one to go with on that. D man says, Hey, Deb, got to conserve money for now, but I must inform you that the 2007 Knoxville double homicide and how it's one of your most requested topics to do a stream about.
03:32:59 Yeah, we'll get to that at some point I know what you're talking about. It's pretty brutal. Then we got revolver says, Devon didn't you know, or didn't you do a show about George Stinney, I swear you did, but I cannot find it, and you don't always name your shows very well. George Stinney, that doesn't sound familiar. Who's is that?
03:33:29 No, I don't think so.
03:33:42 No, I think I did a similar case.
03:33:55 Yeah, it doesn't sound familiar. I don't think I did.
03:34:02 I Randall Flagg says, with all the Jeep trucking deaths, I think it's appropriate you might cover the shohari limo disaster of 2018 it killed 20 young, middle class whites, and the limo company was owned by a cheap Pakistani. Well, it was like a was, like, some kind of weird prom, prom disaster.
03:34:24 I'll put in my notes. Proms gone wrong. Rupert says, speaking of pajits Replay gang here. This is a reference to Jews and porn. Martinez made a video about it. The Gambino family heavily produced and distributed porn back in the days. Have a good night. See you on Wednesday.
03:34:50 Well, I appreciate that Martinez. I'm not sure who Martinez is, but yeah, I could see the mafia family being involved with porn distribution if. Made the money they ran strip clubs and stuff like that, you know, so I don't they weren't by no means was the the the Italian Mob above degeneracy, uh, giga, giga chat of NPCs says in the Irish presidential election to protest kosher conservatism.
03:35:23 About 13% of the ballots were spoiled or deliberately made invalid. Some areas 20 more than 20% the left won because of it, but it had a huge impact. Well, you know, there you go. You got voter fraud. That's why, look, it doesn't matter who is casting the votes. Doesn't matter who's counting the votes. And I think that's also another reason why inevitably, we are not voting our way out of this.
03:35:53 We haven't before, like America did not become a country through the ballot box, and I don't expect Ellis islanders to necessarily understand that, but it's in my blood. It's in my blood to make things happen, even if it's it's against the rules. But yeah, like the Irish seem to get that too.
03:36:22 The Irish seem to understand that, that you don't have to follow the rules. They've, they've certainly, they've certainly made, made their own way without the ballot box before. So perhaps they will, they will
03:36:38 revive that part of their spirit. Tomahawk says, gonna cast the restream. Thanks for all you do, Devon. Well, I appreciate that. Mechanized Doom says, Hey, Devon, if the great EBT riots of 2025 happen next Saturday, could be the first night of them chimping out.
03:36:56 Do you plan on covering it? Thanks for everything you do. I don't think it'll happen for the exact reason that you know that. I mean, look, Trump panders the blacks. He panders the blacks. I have a hard time believing if something's going to be politically bad for him when it comes to black people, that he's going to do it.
03:37:18 And so we'll see, I guess, I mean, I guess we'll see. It would be interesting, and, yeah, I'd cover it, and I'd be safely, I'd be safely insulated from it, because I don't live in a city. But, you know, most people would, I think it's gonna be pretty localized. And in
03:37:38 I think blacks will do what they always do. They'll burn down like they're, they're part of the, you know, the city, and they'll make it worse. There already is, but we'll see, we'll see, we'll see. Well, maybe, maybe they will have, I don't even look, I don't even know if it's guaranteed that they'll, they'll riot, but I don't, I don't think that EBT is getting cut off. That sounds like something that they would not want to have happen.
03:38:05 D man says, kick this nig in the pit. By the way, we need a rope button for obvious reasons. Maybe I should just do it like one that just goes rope. D man says, mega pit. But you know, we haven't hit that in a long time, right?
03:38:28 There we go. And then we got D man again, says, excellent stream that I look forward to and rewatch while I work tomorrow. Devon, good work. Plus I look forward to Day of the rope part two. How's the writing going? Yeah, like I said, I got over the hump. I'm, I'm still, I still have a long way to go, but I, I'm, I'm in the groove. I feel like I'm in the groove.
03:38:57 The Shogun says you probably haven't had time to listen to any of those uncle a speeches, but just in case you have, I'll be uploading like 60 more here soon. Well, that's good. Yeah, I haven't, I haven't liked, I haven't been doing anything but writing. I'm in basic, like, I'm not, basically, I am. I'm in writing mode. And that's, that's all I'm doing. I'm writing and and that's it. Well, I'm writing and then I'm taking breaks.
03:39:27 I'm not just, I'm not a machine, I'm a human being. I'm not a robot. But, yeah, I'm that's pretty much all I'm doing. D man again, says I'm serious about having the stream on the 2007 Knoxville double homicide case. Yeah, well, we will do it. It just, I have to be in the mood for something that brittle, you know, because that's a downer.
03:39:59 One. And I kind of feel like we're kind of in a like, we kept this one light as light as you can when it's about a serial killer. But I kind of want to get into the the season a little bit. I like Christmas. I kind of want to get into a little bit of the the Christmas spirit, you know, as much as I can, and it's
03:40:29 hard to do that when you're talking about stuff like that. But who knows? Who knows? Maybe, maybe, maybe there'll be like some dark, wintry evening where, where it seems appropriate.
03:40:41 The Shogun says also, how are the bees? Haven't heard about them in a while? Yeah, I have, I haven't. I we're having good weather right now, and they are, there's food for them right now, because we, we often get a second spring. And we're, we are experiencing a second spring right now.
03:41:03 So I'm kind of like leaving them alone until that winds down. Because I put out, to give an idea, I put out food for them. They're not touching it, which means they're eating. There's something better in nature, you know, because if, if what I put out is unattractive to them.
03:41:23 That means they're getting the good stuff somewhere else. So I'm just gonna, I'm gonna let them do their thing until, I mean, we'll, it'll, we'll get, we'll get like, a freeze, you know? We'll get like, a night where it kills everything, right? It'll get too cold, and it'll knock everything out.
03:41:39 And then, and then we'll, I'll have to feed them and stuff, but until that happens, plus, when it gets cold like that, it really it. It knocks down their temperament a lot. You know, they're, they're not as crazy to deal with. So because I, if I work them in the morning, when it's like, cold as shit, they don't, they're not as much of a pain in the ass. I mean, they're just, I mean, they're just as cranky, but they're not, it's not like millions of them trying to kill you because they're too cold, but they're, they're doing good.
03:42:10 I I lost a couple hives, maybe this summer. I think mostly because I let them swarm. I That was my bad. But most of them are doing pretty good.
03:42:24 Randall Flagg says, Devon, you have a PO box. I can send you a GPS tracker for churro so you can see where he goes. Or I can just send a gift card for one if you think that feds are after him or you or the bees for OpSec. Now I
03:42:42 don't have a PO box, but I've thought about the problem is the trackers that you can get for pets, they don't, it's not like they they like, if you got like, like an air tag or something like that, like an apple air tag, you can't track it unless he goes around like a phone, like an iPhone or something like that. And there's no such thing as a GPS tracker that you could track like in real time on your computer.
03:43:11 Well, let me, let me pull up the map and see, you know, where churro is exactly right. Now, the only ones they have are ones that you would download, you know, like he would go out, and then you would take it off him when he comes back, and then you could load in the computer and see where he went.
03:43:28 And the only reason I don't do that is I kind of feel like
03:43:33 he would hate it, like putting any kind of collar thing on him would drive him nuts, and I don't want anything weighing him down when he's out there battling the coyotes and stuff. I mean, I don't know that's a dumb thing to think, but I kind of like just the idea that he's, he belongs to the desert, you know, he, I don't know what it where he goes, he he goes, where he goes, You know, I'm sure he's got other places he goes.
03:44:00 Now, I don't think that's where he was for four or five months, because when he came back, he was super skinny, and he all he did was eat for like a week straight. But when he left, for example, he was gone for like a week. You know, which happens? You know, from time to time, I think there's, there's either other places he can go, or he can get food from someone, or, like, maybe some old lady that feeds cats, you know, somewhere in the desert, or he's just living off of, you know, mice. He kills lots of rodents.
03:44:30 Like, it's, there's no, there's no shortage of of, like, mice and stuff out in the desert. Weirdly enough, so maybe he's doing that, but whatever he does, that's his business. Whatever he does, that's his business. No, I mean not that I'm not curious. I would love to know where he goes, but I also kind of just don't really care. I respect his privacy. Then they got bazanga says I agree with nearly 100% of what you say.
03:44:59 Okay, and I've spent 15 years fanatically researching all this stuff. I'd love to work with you, or team up with you. I am a high level tech guy. Well, there you go, bazanga, I don't know what, I don't know what I'd have you work on right now. I don't really have any any high level tech projects right now.
03:45:18 But, yeah, I look once, once we'll do more IRL stuff at some point, like I said, I think that I'm gonna have to, and
03:45:33 that's somewhat of what I'm going to talk to Aarvoll about, not all, not everything's going to be talked about on live streams and things like that. But yeah, we got to start. We got to start doing more stuff. IRL, so who knows, there might be opportunities. I just, I can't think of anything I need right now, but I appreciate that. Then we got Helgi, 23
03:45:54 says, ns stink. I don't know what that mean, or means, oh, ends stink. I think, I think, I think you're, you're talking like the your that you're like the PG version of Negro Spritzer.
03:46:11 Then we got D man says, Just heard your response to the Knoxville case. I 110% agree that this case requires fortitude. It broke me, as I'm sure it broke you. Good luck when making the stream ready, and have a good night. Well, I appreciate that.
03:46:27 And All right, well, let me, let me just double check rumble, because rumble did crash to make sure I didn't, you know, miss someone that sent something in before
03:46:40 the show. All right, I always, I hate, I hate that rumbles like this,
03:46:51 where's even the thing? I go to dashboard, where's that dashboard? Then I go to
03:47:04 chat settings. Maybe I always I hate the way that this is set up.
03:47:20 That's not right. Dashboard, and then analytics maybe.
03:47:35 Account Overview, yeah, it's, it's in the dumbest place ever. Account Overview. Why wouldn't it be an Account Overview? Okay, rants,
03:47:49 back it up here. Okay, I read that one. Read that one.
03:48:04 Okay, is this from? It doesn't have a date, but I don't remember this from last time.
03:48:15 Let's see here. This is sesame tazbah. We did that one
03:48:24 difference between being a wasp and
03:48:28 then we've got, okay, the shadow band says, Yes, hire your folk, mentor your folk invest in other people or other folks businesses.
03:48:37 I think that's maybe from this one.
03:48:43 And that's okay, I think that might be it actually, all right, so I don't think there was any ones I missed from before. All right, let me double check entropy before we shut her down. Here. Where did entropy go here we are.
03:49:06 All right, we are good on entropy two, All right, guys, well, I hope you have a good rest of your weekend. We'll be back here on Wednesday, and maybe we'll go a little What day is Wednesday? Churro's, killing something, I think in my bedroom. By the way, if you hear some scampering, I'm gonna go investigate here in a minute.
03:49:33 Speaking of killing rodents, right? So it'll be, look. It'll be almost Halloween. I almost wanted to maybe stream Friday, because that's Halloween. Do you like a spooky Halloween Special? Maybe we'll do that. Maybe we'll do that. I don't want, I don't want, no promises. Maybe we'll do that.
03:49:51 Uh, Wednesday is the 29th
03:49:57 Okay, we'll do, we'll do a normal. Little on Wednesday, but maybe we'll do, I'll tell you, what? If we don't do spooky Friday one, maybe we'll do spooky Saturday. I don't know. Maybe we should do spooky Friday. I will see we'll do a Halloween episode, but it won't be Wednesday. All right, guys. Well, anyway, I hope you guys have a good rest of your weekend. See you on Wednesday, and then we'll go from there in the meantime for Black Pilled I am, of course, of course. Devon Stack,
Narrator
03:50:34 can you imagine what the American flag would look like if it had no red in it, no blue in it, and no white in it. It wouldn't look like an American flag at all. Would it? Well, the American people are a lot of different colors, just like the American flag. So if you took away the red ones and the black ones, the yellow ones and the white ones, brown ones, there wouldn't be any America left. And then where would you be? I'm in heaven.
Fred Astaire – Cheek to Cheek
03:51:02 I'm in heaven, and my heart beats so that I can hardly speak, and I seem to find the happiness I see when we run together, dancing cheek to cheek,
03:51:27 I'm in heaven, and the cares that hung around me through The week
03:51:36 seem to vanish like a Gambler's lucky Street history when we're out together, dancing cheek to cheek.