2:29:44

INSOMNIA STREAM: OUTRAGE EDITION

11/19/2025 - This stream, hosted by Devon Stack, centers on the theme of "outrage" in contemporary society, particularly focusing on the erosion of the American spirit, the shift from real-world action to online engagement, and the concept of vigilante justice as depicted in 1980s American media. The host discusses a made-for-TV movie called "Outrage" (1986), using it as a lens to critique changes in culture, justice, and race relations. The stream also features commentary on legal systems, multiculturalism, and the perceived decline of traditional values, interspersed with responses to hyperchats and super chats from viewers.  [Full Summary]
Greek Numbers Lady
00:00:00 A zero group. Zero
00:00:29 nurse, 00,
00:00:42 0000, 606,
Mazzy Star - Fade Into You
00:01:27 I wanna
00:01:37 Take the red flag. Truth.
00:01:46 I look to you When
00:01:55 I see the truth.
00:02:23 Some kind of light into your darkness. Close
00:02:32 Your eyes with what's Not great.
00:02:50 Strange and
00:03:54 the stranger that comes off slowly,
00:04:04 the stranger's heart.
00:04:13 You put your hands into your
00:04:22 Hands to smiles.
00:04:40 Cover your heart. Strange.
00:04:49 Strange.
Portishead - Numb
00:05:42 You I can't find
00:06:05 my way
00:06:14 to Read. I
00:06:49 Me Because real, foolish somebody,
00:07:40 my room To breathe this secret, Why?
00:08:00 Cast To me, No
Devon Stack
00:09:14 Oh, nope, there we go. Well, welcome to the Insomnia Stream. I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack, this is the insomnia stream.
00:09:35 Outrage edition, head, I've been having technical difficulties all night, hopefully, hopefully it's all squared away. So that's why we're a little bit late, what like six minutes late. That's actually, I'm usually right on the second. So that's it's a long time for me to be late, struggling to make sure the internet was everything was going to work. Computer had to be rebooted.
00:09:57 We're good now, I think we're good now. I. Knock on wood. So there we go. All right anyway, outrage edition, outrage edition.
00:10:10 You know, it's funny because something I've noticed, something I've noticed as people have become more online, more terminally online, as they say, and less in the real world, the more they're afraid of actually, well, just existing in the real world, let alone acting in the real world.
00:10:37 They want to participate in society through the matrix, which is funny, because it's, it's really the opposite of what they say, right? They say they want to. I'm going to break out of the matrix, as long as that involves me, just I keep sitting here at my computer and and interacting with the world through a literal matrix.
00:11:01 I mean, it's a little different. I guess occasionally I can get up and go eat a hot pocket or something like that, but it's still, I mean, it's basically the matrix. And anytime people suggest doing things in real life, you get called a fed you get called all kinds of names because, oh no, no, that's not the way we do things.
00:11:19 We can't do things in real life. We have to do everything online. Anything we want to accomplish, we have to accomplish online. And if you even just start talking about things like the inevitability, for example, that things could get kinetic and, you know, all of a sudden, that's like, Oh, holy shit.
00:11:38 I can't believe he said that that's that's fed posting, and it's it drives me crazy, because it really does show you a erosion of the American spirit. Vigilan vigilantism used to be kind of just part of the American culture. It's the way Americans viewed justice in a lot of ways, when the system wasn't working, they would go outside the system and take care of their problems themselves.
00:12:10 And that's just that's always been part of the American culture, at least for the founding stock Americans. Now not so much, I guess for some of the well, definitely not for non whites, unless, of course, going outside the system means illegally entering the country and then existing outside of the system in that way and scamming people and stuff like that, right? But that's the funny thing is that has nothing to do with justice, right?
00:12:38 When? When? When Americans think about going outside the system. And by Americans, I mean white Americans. When they think about going outside the system, it's to have a just a just result, to actually manifest justice in some way, whereas when non whites go outside the system. It's to evade justice, it's to escape justice. And yet, white people are still terrified of going outside the system.
00:13:11 And that was not always the case. In fact, even recently, you know, I'm being a little loose with recently, because if you think about it, you know, it really hasn't been part of pop culture in a long time, but even I would say as recently as the 1980s for example. I mean, look at the big hit TV shows that they were having kids watch. I remember there was the A Team, just as an example.
00:13:36 The A Team was literally about these wanted men, these wanted men that were running from the federal government, going around solving crimes outside the law for everyday American people, and they were heroes, and parents wouldn't mind their kids watching a TV show that was the entire thing was vigilantism.
00:14:02 They had action figures and like, this was typical. This wasn't the exception. This was the rule. All there all kinds of these shows designed for, tell, you know, for television and for kids to watch. The theme was often vigilantism and going outside the law, because there was something wrong with the system.
00:14:22 Now, you could say that part of that was really residual, you know, fight the power Boomer shit, but I feel like in rejecting boomerism, sometimes the baby has been thrown out with the bathwater a little bit, a little bit. And this was something on my mind when I was looking for something and came across something completely different, as is often the case when I do these streams, and I came across, which initially, by the way, another example of AI just being a liar. I. Initially I thought this was based on a real case, because AI, not only did it tell me, oh yeah, this is based on a real case, it came up with the name of the guy. And I was like, I can't find anything on this guy. And then AI is like, Oh, this guy doesn't exist. Oh, great. But anyway, I came across this made for TV show from 1986 not very it was not a very great show. So I had, I've enhanced it a little bit. I've had to, I've had to,
00:15:29 Well, speaking of AI, I've augmented it a little bit with AI to keep the ball rolling a little bit. But it's about exactly then. It's about Americans, white Americans specifically, having to deal with the problems of diversity as they when they live in these big cities, especially in the 1980s with the crime waves that were going on, that continue to go on, I guess, and the system is failing them.
00:15:56 The system is failing them a lot of the same problems that you see today. You know, where criminals are getting let out, and they go out and commit more crimes, and then they get apprehended, and then they, it's catch and release, they put them back on the public and they commit more crimes.
00:16:12 That sort of thing has been going on as long as Jews have been here. So it's, it's not so much like a legal problem, so much as a Jew problem. But you know, be that as it may, this problem has been around a long fucking time, a long fucking you know, the thing that drives me crazy, especially because, you know, true true crime has made its way into my algorithm.
00:16:35 And so I end up hearing all these, like true crime stories. And then occasionally you get these innocent, innocence project type stories, or which has spawned a bunch of all these other Jewish organizations where they're not just happy with with preventing criminals from ever getting incarcerated. They now are going into prisons looking for criminals that can get out of prison.
00:16:58 You know, prisoners who are clearly guilty that they then get, they release them, and then some of them re offend, they commit more crimes. There's one case in particular that I'm going to be, I think, covering in the future here.
00:17:13 But anyway, so I come across this 1986 made for TV movie thing, and as much as it's kind of boring without my enhancements, it did it kind of showed you how different the culture is today and how this was a kind of like, feel good story when it's about a guy who takes the law in his own hands in a pretty dramatic way, like, not a little bit like a dramatic way.
00:17:44 This is the kind of television show that would, would never be aired, never in a million fucking years, be aired, or, you know, wouldn't even produced it, let alone aired. This is the kind of thing that you know, and if they did, they'd have to recast it to be, well, you'll see it wouldn't be cast the way that it is, certainly.
00:18:07 So I thought it'd be interesting to take a look at this and and just see how things have changed, how pussified people have gotten, and how you know, as much as they complain about the matrix, how comfortable they are eating that steak. So anyway, let's have a look. Let's have a little look see at tonight's special feature called outrage.
00:18:41 Outrage with guns. I'm liking this already. I'm liking this already so it opens up outrage exclamation point. They added punctuation to this title, and there's an old white guy looking into the window going, I need me. I need me one of them guns. I live in a big city now that's been very diverse as of late, and now I need me a gun. So he goes in to buy a gun.
Shop Owner
00:19:13 Can I help you?
Dennis Riordan
00:19:16 Sir, yes, I'd like to see something in a 38 for home protection. Lots of break ins around our neighborhood the past few months.
Shop Owner
00:19:26 Man, don't I know only last week, right on our street,
00:19:33 it's the blacks.
Devon Stack
00:19:37 Yes, it's the blacks, the blacks that are breaking into all of the neighborhoods and causing all this crime and forcing white people to go gun shopping. So he buys the 38
00:19:53 and we go in, the credits roll, flying over the big city where he lives. Now it's become. In this hell hole. It's unrecognizable. It's it's no longer the the wonderful safe city that he was raised in and he lived with his family. No, no. It has turned into something dark, and by dark I mean non white. You.
Dennis Riordan
00:20:35 Oh Nicholas,
00:20:51 Charlie Johnson, yeah, you jump.
Devon Stack
00:21:22 What Oh no, Charlie Johnson's been shot. Charlie Johnson, so the white man pulls up in his car blows away Charlie Johnson and flies off into the sky. A hero, a hero to men everywhere, but then just moments later at the police station, because white men do believe in justice, that is not exactly a policeman.
Dennis Riordan
00:21:57 No, ma'am, man. I just killed a man on Lennox Avenue and 100 and 17th
Policeman
00:22:07 street. That's okay. He was black.
Dennis Riordan
00:22:22 I let go of me. I don't want to escape.
Policeman
00:22:25 Okay, nobody say a word, not even you, mister, just relax.
Dennis Riordan
00:22:31 My name is Dennis Reardon. I live alone Ned and my wife having died one month ago, my daughter having been raped and murdered 10 months before that, Netta and me, we had three children, Dennis Jr, priest serving in South America now,
00:22:54 Frank was killed in Vietnam, and my daughter, Agnes, my she was
00:23:06 one night, she was on her way home. You see, she works for this law firm down on Wall Street, legal secretary so bright, the firm was sending her to school at night to become a lawyer, which is what she was doing when it happened. It happened. There was this one night.
Policeman
00:23:32 Damn, she sounds hot. Well,
Dennis Riordan
00:23:41 night classes don't get out until after nine, so it was dark when she was crossing City Hall Park on her way to get the subway, and he grabbed her and he dragged her off under a tree. After he robbed her, he ripped off her clothes and he did things, rape more. But why did he have to kill her? Why?
Policeman
00:24:16 Well, shit, man, that's what we do. They
Dennis Riordan
00:24:19 called me the next morning to I identified the body.
00:24:27 That day, I promised Ned I'd keep after the police until they caught that animal. Turns out I didn't have to. They'd already caught him that same night, and he made a complete confession. Well, we felt thank God now that murderer will pay for what he did to our Aggie, especially since I identified aggie's jewelry, which they found on him. So we just wait for the trial and. Him, and then months later, the detective on the case called and told us to come down to the courthouse. But there isn't any trial. It's just a hearing, and the district attorney says judge Lingle, in view of your honor's rulings, the people find it impossible to make a prime a prima facie case, a prima facie case, therefore we consent to this indictment being dismissed, like took Netta home, but from that day on, she started failing.
00:25:41 It's just lost the will to live, not a grave.
00:25:49 I made a vow. If the law wouldn't do anything about a man guilty of murder, then I would do something about it.
00:26:03 If a man
Devon Stack
00:26:06 is put into a situation where justice must be done and the system of justice is not doing its job, you have two choices. And there's some people that choose to just let it happen.
00:26:23 And that's, in fact, a lot of the people that we have pouring into our country. That's why they're pouring into our country, because they live in places where they just let it happen. And so they come here, and inevitably, what happens is they just let it happen, and some of that rubs off on some of the people around them, and some of these people get into the positions of power where, again, they are letting it happen.
00:26:49 Justice isn't being done. Because the thing that made this country so just in many ways, was the fact that it was white people dealing out the justice, and not so much these days. So this man chose to do the other thing, and that is to get justice for himself. His daughter was raped and murdered.
00:27:15 They had the man. They had him dead to rights. They had all of his that all the evidence they needed. He had her jewelry on him. He was apprehended just moments afterwards, with scratches on his face. He even confessed to the crime, but because of some Jewish law bullshit. They let him out.
00:27:44 They dismissed the case. And so this man could just sit there and take it, or he could do something about it, and he did something about it.
Dennis Riordan
00:27:57 So three days ago, I went out of state, where it's legal, and I bought a gun, that gun that you have there, and just about an hour ago, I found Charlie Johnson, and I killed him, and now I want to be tried.
Policeman
00:28:14 Tried for what? Give this man a medal.
00:28:19 Is there anything else you'd like to say? Mr. Riddick,
Dennis Riordan
00:28:25 I'd like to see my priest.
Devon Stack
00:28:29 And so they have him in lock up, and this new lawyer, whose family friend is a judge who is going to preside over this case. And he's puzzled.
00:28:43 He's puzzled because this man doesn't want to stand trial. He wants to just go to jail for having, well certain, for having, I guess, dealt out his vigilante justice. And so this guy, the old man from Rocky, I think right, isn't this the old guy from Rocky? The judge is like, let me tell you what you get in that ring.
00:29:16 No. So he's like, all right, I got a case for you. You got to make sure this guy has a as a good defense. He's a good man. His daughter was raped, and he was, you know, extenuating circumstances, and he doesn't want want a defense, and it's crazy, so I want you to go talk to him.
Judge Aaron Klein
00:29:41 What you need is a good case to pay the rent, you know, and to get you some walking around money. And it so happens that I have a very unusual case right here on the calendar. He's refused
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:29:56 any defense. Then why not just let him plead guilty, sir?
Judge Aaron Klein
00:29:59 Because I. Have principles of my own. I will never accept a guilty plea when the charge is murder, too, murder too.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:30:12 Who's the man? Sir,
Judge Aaron Klein
00:30:13 Reardon. Dennis Reardon,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:30:19 isn't he that father who?
Judge Aaron Klein
00:30:25 He's the guy who killed the niggler right
00:30:27 now, you know what I like? I'd like you to take on his defense.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:30:38 Sure. I mean, yes, your honor.
Judge Aaron Klein
00:30:44 He needs a good lawyer. The damn nigglers are getting out of control. See him. Thank you, sir.
00:30:59 Bye. Heil Hitler,
Devon Stack
00:31:08 so he decides to take the case for second degree murder at the judge's suggestion, he goes down to the jail to talk to his new client, the based guy who decided that vigilante justice was the answer. If the law wasn't going to take care of the situation, he wasn't going to sit there and cry and and and say how he forgives, forgives the people that were responsible for killing his loved ones. No, no. He was going to come down like the hammer of retribution.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:31:59 Mr. Reardon, Brad Gordon, I've been appointed to be your new attorney, sir. Won't you sit down? Please?
Dennis Riordan
00:32:05 I'd prefer to stand this may take some time, sir, I hope not
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:32:11 now, Mr. Reardon, in order for me to defend you, I need to know exactly
Dennis Riordan
00:32:14 what happened. So it's all in my confession. They showed it to the other attorneys, didn't they show it to you?
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:32:20 Yes, sir. But I want to know your innermost thoughts, sir, your feelings before you bought the gun, while you were buying it, while you were tracking Charlie Johnson, especially at the moment you shot it, please. I get it.
00:32:33 Okay, if that's what you want, start making notes from the time our Agnes got raped and murdered. I kept thinking that animal has got to pay
Policeman
00:32:42 fucking based. And
Dennis Riordan
00:32:46 then when Johnson got off scot free, without even a trial and never wasted away, then I had a double reason. That's when I began planning. I couldn't sleep, couldn't eat, for thinking about
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:32:58 it, so you went full on, total niggler Death mode.
Dennis Riordan
00:33:03 That's it, an obsession. One thing in this world for me was to kill that killer.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:33:07 I can't believe how fucking based you are. It's fucking awesome. While
Dennis Riordan
00:33:11 I was shooting him, I didn't feel anything at all. My mind was a total blank,
00:33:15 total blank, good.
00:33:20 And after that, after that,
00:33:24 I heard a voice. You heard a voice? Dennis Reardon, my beloved Son, well done. This
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:33:32 voice. Did it happen to have a German accent?
Dennis Riordan
00:33:37 Have you got that? All of it? I sure do good. Now tear it up. I said, tear it up. Mr.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:33:48 Reardon, this has the makings of a very credible defense.
Dennis Riordan
00:33:52 I figured that's what you came for, an insanity plea. Well, it's very important for the people to know that I was sane when I did it very sane, and I am still sane, so tear it up. Mr. Reardon, tear it up.
00:34:17 Now, look, kid, don't waste your time. I don't want to be defended.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:34:26 Oh, sir, for the moment, I am your lawyer, and I'm certainly going to do my best
00:34:29 to defend you, Sir, will you put me on the stand?
00:34:33 That depends when you agree to cooperate or
Dennis Riordan
00:34:35 cooperate. Hell, I just want everyone to know why I did it.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:34:40 Are you kidding me? Everyone knows why, because nigglers, I
00:34:45 insist upon testifying.
00:34:46 Mr. Reardon, you don't understand, but is staring you in the face, conviction. I mean that means minimum 15 years. That's longer than you
Dennis Riordan
00:34:55 have to live, sir. It's worth it to let the people know what.
Devon Stack
00:35:04 Oh, he's in a pickle. He's in a pickle. He's like, I don't understand this guy. He's just trying to make a point, or something like what he wants to go to jail for the rest of his life, just to make a point. When I can keep him out of jail, he can still make the point he'll get a lot of publicity. I don't understand. What's his obsession with going to jail? It doesn't make any sense. So he goes home to his kooky girlfriend. He's like, Ah, this guy doesn't make any sense. I don't know, honey, this is gonna be a tough case for me.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:35:39 This guy killed a niggler, and it's like he wants to go to jail. I don't get it. He wants to go to jail for killing a niggler. Yeah, just a niggler. That doesn't make any sense.
Devon Stack
00:35:59 It doesn't make any sense. She says, I'm sure, honey, I'm sure you'll figure it out though you are a nice, you know, talented lawyer, and you'll do what's right. So he's like, Yes, damn straight, I am and yes I will. So he goes to talk to the judge again.
Judge Aaron Klein
00:36:25 I brought you boys here because every once in a while I like to see some justice done around here, justice based on humanity and not just law. So what I'd like you to do is to go back to your boss and talk to him about a plea, a plea of manslaughter in the first instead of murder, too. And you, you talk to your client about taking
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:36:49 a plea. He's a strange man, sir, very stubborn.
Judge Aaron Klein
00:36:53 Convince him, for everyone's sake, mostly his own. That's right, I
Devon Stack
00:37:01 don't know any rocky quotes,
00:37:06 something, something, boxing.
00:37:08 So then he's like, get him to take a plea. You know, that way he only has to, you know, who knows? Maybe, maybe he'll get, like, you know, probationers. I don't know what's the, what's the going rape for killing a niggler These days, I don't even know. So the lawyer's like, all right, I'm gonna go go back to my client and see if he'll take a plea for manslaughter. That way he doesn't have to serve time for the rest of his life for killing a niggler
Dennis Riordan
00:37:36 plead guilty to manslaughter. Absolutely not, because I did intend to kill Johnson.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:37:44 You're so fucking based. I get it total niggler death. But have you seen how many nigglers are in prison?
Dennis Riordan
00:37:50 I want everyone to know that Dennis Reardon did what he had to because the law wouldn't,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:37:55 and for that, you're willing to spend the rest of your life in prison.
Dennis Riordan
00:37:58 Son with netter gone, with Aggie. Gone what life?
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:38:07 Mr. Reardon, do something for me,
Dennis Riordan
00:38:09 sure. Kid, anything but plead guilty to manslaughter
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:38:15 in the courtroom. Don't call me son or kid. Doesn't look good.
Dennis Riordan
00:38:20 Counselor, how's that? That's better.
00:38:26 Those are my house keys. Got them from the property clerk so I can go to your house get you proper suits and white shirts tie to make a good impression on the juror during
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:38:35 the trial. You knew all along I wouldn't settle for a deal, didn't you, I had to try, so long as you knew Heil Hitler.
Dennis Riordan
00:38:50 Heil Hitler,
Devon Stack
00:38:51 so they decided not to do a plea. They are going to take it to trial so he can address the jury and make the point that he wants to make. There's something wrong with the justice system, and that's why he had to take things into his own hands and deal out justice himself. So meanwhile, his lawyer decides to go to the old man's house so he can collect some suits and ties for him so he can look presentable, so he's not showing up to court in a jumpsuit, looking like a prisoner. So people will take him seriously. So he goes down to the house and discovers something has happened.
Nice Old Lady
00:39:39 You The place was ransacked by a pack of feral nigglers.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:39:50 Those fucking nigglers.
Nice Old Lady
00:39:52 Come on upstairs,
00:39:54 and I'll see if I can help you.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:39:55 Thanks,
Nice Old Lady
00:39:57 oh the poor man, as soon as.
00:40:00 Was in the papers about him surrendering, but that dirty hooligans broke in here and stripped the place bare.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:40:10 I didn't leave anything Unturned today.
00:40:15 What a mess. There's nothing left nothing.
Nice Old Lady
00:40:21 Thank heavens and daddy isn't here to see this.
00:40:30 That was his Agnes, such
Dennis Riordan
00:40:33 a lovely girl, real, refined.
Nice Old Lady
00:40:37 It's a shame those nigglers got her. She had so much to live for.
Devon Stack
00:40:45 So he discovers that a pack of feral nigglers has ransacked the house and taken everything that wasn't bolted down, including his suits. The only thing they left behind was a old photo of his now raped and murdered daughter, a casualty of of the nigglers, so he goes down to the courthouse in the first day.
00:41:09 Of course, there's lots of media attention now, this is a interesting story, an old man who was victimized by nigglers, who went down to the niggler part of town and let a niggler Have it.
Reporters
00:41:34 Sounds good to me. There he is over here. Is it true? Your client tried to hang himself with his son. They had to cut him down. No comment. Will you make Reardon available for interviews during the trial? No comment. Client. Kill a niggler. That's the dumbest question ever. We
Prosecution
00:41:49 will prove that on the 21st day of June, Dennis Reardon bought a pistol in another state and then drove back to New York with the specific intent to kill the one, Charlie Johnson, and that on the 24th day of June, he did indeed track down Johnson fired five shots, hitting him four times and killing him instantly. And we will prove all that, not only by witnesses, but most important by a detailed and uncontested confession. By Mr.
00:42:24 Reardon, thank you.
Judge Aaron Klein
00:42:27 All right, Mr. Gordon, your opening statement.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:42:35 Your Honor. The defense chooses not to make an opening
Judge Aaron Klein
00:42:38 statement. Consulate is that your considered decision,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:42:43 Your Honor, nothing in the code says I'm forced to make an opening statement.
Judge Aaron Klein
00:42:47 Mr. Crewe, your first witness.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:42:51 Thank you, Your Honor.
Devon Stack
00:42:52 And so the trial begins with the unorthodox withholding a opening statement, and that's when the the niggler who was friends with the niggler who was gunned down is called to the stand as a witness to tell everyone that he saw that filthy cracker gunned down his niggler friend for no reason at all.
Wilbert Ward
00:43:23 Me and Charlie just finished having lunch at the Avalon restaurant up on Lenox Avenue. We come out and we hear someone call Charlie Johnson. So we turn to see and as we turn, we see this white man, this stranger who just starts shooting at Charlie. Charlie's hit bad falls to the ground, and this white man just gets in his car and drives off. Just drives off.
Dennis Riordan
00:43:59 I didn't drive off. I flew away into the sky, you dirty niggler, that's
Wilbert Ward
00:44:04 him rent.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:44:06 Are you absolutely sure?
Wilbert Ward
00:44:07 Yes, sir, never forget his face.
Policeman
00:44:12 I bet he forgets to pay his child support. Filthy fucking niggler,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:44:17 thank you, Mr. Ward you
Devon Stack
00:44:23 so and so he, he points out it's that man, Mr. Reardon. Mr. Reardon is the one that shot down Charlie. Charlie and I, we were just, we was just getting lunch, when Mr. Reardon shows up and just gunned him down in broad daylight. I couldn't believe it, that white man, that white man over there. It's very dangerous for a black man these days with white man out on the prowl. So then it's time for the defense to cross examine the niggler.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:45:01 Did you testify that you and Charlie Johnson had lunch at the Avon restaurant that day?
Wilbert Ward
00:45:05 Yes, sir.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:45:06 Mr. Johnson was killed around three or four in the afternoon
00:45:11 lunch. Mr. Ward,
Wilbert Ward
00:45:14 well, it was, it was kind of a late lunch. I
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:45:23 and by any chance, did you also have a drink?
Wilbert Ward
00:45:28 Well, I guess we had a drink or two. No sir, not two. I remember
00:45:35 that you're sure about that now, well,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:45:40 maybe just two not to mention the crack you smoked. You nigglers are all the same. So unreliable. Am I right? Mr.
00:45:51 Ward What did you do when you claimed that Mr. Reardon started shooting at Charlie Johnson?
Wilbert Ward
00:46:00 Well, when I hear gunfire, I duck. I learned that in the army.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:46:03 So you ducked when soon as the shooting started,
00:46:06 so the only time that you could look at the man that you claimed shot your friend was in that fraction of a second between turning to see who called Charlie Johnson and ducking for cover.
Wilbert Ward
00:46:16 But I did get a good look
00:46:17 at him. Was that before or after you got all fucked up on purple drink, but I did get a good look at him.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:46:23 Let me guess you didn't do nothing. You a good boy. Ain't you come now, Mr.
00:46:29 Ward, you
00:46:40 you, Mr. Ward, when Charlie Johnson fell badly wounded, exactly what did
00:46:49 you do? I rushed to Charlie to see what I could do for him, but just
00:46:53 moments ago, you testified that you watched his assailant get to his car, get in and just drive off. Now, which did
00:46:59 you do? I guess I did both, and
00:47:03 I guess that while your dear friend was bleeding to death, you stood there watching his assailant make his getaway, maybe Charlie Johnson wasn't such a good friend of yours as you would have this jury believe
Wilbert Ward
00:47:15 we was close, very close.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:47:17 Close enough talk man to man,
Wilbert Ward
00:47:18 yes, sir,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:47:20 close enough to talk about your women.
Wilbert Ward
00:47:28 Well, sometimes
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:47:31 maybe exchange a few names, a few phone numbers, as close friends do from time to time.
Wilbert Ward
00:47:35 Well, I reckon so.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:47:37 Were you such a close friend that he told you exactly how he raped and murdered Agnes Reardon
Prosecution
00:47:44 Objection, Your Honor, that white bitch was asking for it.
Judge Aaron Klein
00:47:49 We will stand in recess until 130
Devon Stack
00:47:57 and so the judge is very upset, because he's like, You can't drag this other case into this case which is actually kind of true. It's it is fucked up. It's one of those things that you, you know, again, because of the true crime algorithm that I've been noticing, that there are often these circumstances that lead to a murder that the juries never get to hear about, they never get to understand the context in which that murder took place. And so it's kind of crazy how often things that should matter that would contextualize vigilante justice, even if it in when it's murder,
00:48:41 the juries are never allowed to hear about it, it doesn't make any sense to me. It doesn't make any sense to me. When that's relevant, it's very relevant. What's I mean? Here's what I don't understand. If it's so not relevant, then all of a sudden, hate crime laws don't make any sense, right?
00:49:02 Like they doesn't make any sense, if the reason why you killed a niggler is because you just hate nigglers Now, all of a sudden, it's like a federal case and you have to go to jail, like for three times as long versus if you just wanted to steal his sneakers or something like that, because you yourself are a niggler, and that's just what nigglers do if it's extra bad, because in your heart, you just hate nigglers, and that's such that it's such an important circumstance for the juries to know. Why is it that so often the juries are not allowed to hear about things like this, things like this, where the reason why he shot and killed this niggler is because this niggler raped and murdered his daughter and got away with it.
00:49:57 That seems like a pretty important detail, but it's look. It's true that is something that often happens, and that's that's contrary to the way that white people view the justice system, and that's contrary to how a lot of us think about, you know, like, Frontier justice, right? Where a lot of times, you know, if, if you killed someone because, like, they were asking for it, like, you know, it's all right. You know, it's not really murder, I guess, you know. And that's the way white people look at things, until the Jews showed up and became all the lawyers and judges.
00:50:33 So anyway, the judge gives him a talking to and then the prosecution makes the mistake of playing the confession, and as part of the confession, he explains why he decided to kill the niggler, and now, because that has been introduced by The prosecution as as information. Now the defense can suddenly address the circumstances, but that's unfortunately, like I said, that's how the legal system often works, where juries are deprived of some very important information because some Jew judge doesn't let them hear it.
Dennis Riordan
00:51:21 Night classes don't get out until after nine, so it was dark when she was crossing City Hall Park on her way to get the subway, and he grabbed her. Months later, we get a call from the detective on the case come down to the courthouse, but there isn't any trial. It's just a hearing, and there's a lot of argument back and forth between young district attorney and this judge, lengle. I can identify Judge lengle Just bangs his gavel. He says, clear the courtroom, and just like that, it's all over. Is walking out of the court. The courtroom a free man, and he's laughing. I took nedda home, but from that day on, she started failing, lost the will to live, and just about an hour ago, I found Charlie Johnson and I killed him, and now I want to be tried.
Devon Stack
00:52:25 Ah yes, Judge Lingle, good old judge Lingle. Then this other guy shows up. It's like some weird B story where he's trying, he's, it's, I don't know they're trying to throw in too much. I think he's like, I want to buy the rights to this story. This is going to be a great movie and book and stuff like that, which is, I don't know. I mean, it's, this is literally a movie that's based on a book. So I don't know why they had to put this guy in.
00:52:55 It's not, it's not anyway. So this guy, I don't know, to make the media look the media is bad. And and so he's like, I don't know if he's gonna go for it. And then they also try to make white people the bad guy. They even though, like I said, the casting, they would never do this. They would never do this in a million years these days, they would never show an old white guy and his white daughter the victim of a black criminal.
00:53:21 That would never be the case that you would put in a movie today, and even in 1986 right? They had to try to buffer it by making the DA black and making the white people racist, and they're the ones pulling the race card. In fact, that's precisely what this defense lawyer does as he tries. He they flip it around. They like 180 degrees out of phase with reality, where it's the white people trying to pull the race card with the black da.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:53:53 At the time that you were taking Mr. Reardon's confession,
00:53:58 did you know the identity of the victim?
District Attorney
00:54:00 I was informed when I arrived at the 11th precinct,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
00:54:02 and tell us,
00:54:05 would you have felt the same, acted the same toward Mr. Reardon if his victim had not been a black man?
District Attorney
00:54:21 In the end, it always comes down to this, doesn't it, a man can be your co worker,
00:54:28 a colleague, even a friend, until the heat is on. Then, then he's just a black man, after all, isn't he?
00:54:44 Mr. Gordon,
Devon Stack
00:54:45 yeah, I would say, actually, yes. That's kind of the problem with multiculturalism.
00:54:51 Is, yeah, when things start to get a little war, like, all of a sudden, your skin is your uniform. All of a sudden, people. Tribe up in stressful situations. That's what happens. In fact, that's kind of why you're seeing this in Western societies. It's not because I think white people are going through some kind of awakening. The only thing that's really waking up is the survival mechanisms that were put to sleep by civilizations that they built. And so the reason why you're seeing what's happening is because this is exactly what happens when people are put into stressful situations. That's why prisons are like this.
00:55:29 This is why, if you're a white guy and you go to prison, you hang out with the white guys. You could be the most liberal, faggy white guy in the world. You're going to end up hanging out with the Aryan Brotherhood by the end of the day.
00:55:42 That's the way that it works, because under stressful situations, white people and all people really tribe up. And when you start to have multicultural societies, one of the side effects of that is it becomes a stressful situation. And so inevitably, it eats itself, because white people start to tribe up, the other people already are tribed up, which is part of what's contributing to the agitation and the stressful situation.
00:56:15 And now all of a sudden it snowballs until eventually there's a race war. So that's, that's kind of what you're seeing right now. That's kind of what you're seeing in societies all across the West, all of these, you know, perfect example, all of these European countries that used to look down their noses at Americans, like the world, though, there are just a bunch of racist hillbillies because they've seen too many Hollywood movies, right? Bunch of racist hillbillies?
00:56:46 Well, that and they didn't have any diversity in their countries. They had no experience with diversity. And now, all of a sudden, some of the same people that were out hanging out holding signs that said, Refugees Welcome, now they're starting to think like, I don't know. I'm not really excited about getting raped all the time. Not really excited about all this, this bullshit that I helped usher in. People are having buyer's remorse. You see,
00:57:22 paradoxically, tolerance. Tolerance is a luxury that only monolithic, racially monolithic societies can afford.
00:57:39 But it kind of makes sense, if you look at the word like I've talked about in the past, tolerance. No one talks about tolerance when referencing something good. You know, I've said no one has to tolerate ice cream unless they're lactose intolerant. I guess right now you don't have to tolerate good things.
00:57:59 So it was should have been obvious from the get go that multiracial societies were not a good thing if they were something you had to tolerate, because you only have to tolerate things that are bad. Well, what's also another aspect of the word tolerance, well, it suggests there's a limit, right?
00:58:27 Yeah, like bridges, right? When you, when you build a bridge, there's a tolerance, there's a there's a there's an amount of weight that bridge can hold before it collapses. You know that's it's an engineering term. Everything has a tolerance, but there's a limit to tolerance. At a certain point, that limit is reached, and then things collapse.
Portishead - Numb
00:59:07 It's
Devon Stack
00:59:07 almost like they didn't, they didn't think about this at all before they decide to flush their societies down the toilet. Not that anyone has ever asked for it, not that it, not that they, the public, was ever given giving their consent to be demographically replaced. In fact, that's precisely why it had to be administered from on high, because most people have this kind of common sense where they understand, well, wait a second, if I have to tolerate that's not good. Why? Why would I want something, even if it's like, not that bad, like,
00:59:47 Why do I want? Why do I want anything that's that's bad at all? What? What's the benefit to me? Oh, there's none. Because if there was a benefit, it wouldn't be something I'd be tolerating.
00:59:58 It'd be something I would I was. Basking in it'd be something I was enjoying it, yeah, Joy. I don't understand the you had to use this word because necessarily, it's not gonna be good, like, even if it's a little bad, it's, you know, like, like, like, a little gnat buzzing around my head, you know, maybe I can tolerate that, right?
01:00:19 Maybe that's not going to drive me fucking nuts. Maybe that's not going to send me into a rage, where I go on a shooting spree or something like that, having a mosquito flying around, but it's not something I want. It's not something I would ever ask for. I would never be like, Oh yeah, you know what I need right now is a fucking mosquito buzzing around my head. No one's ever had that thought. So, why? What's the upshot?
01:00:45 What's the re like, what's what am I getting out of this? Oh, absolutely fucking nothing, absolutely fucking nothing,
01:00:56 except agitation and stress. And then it turns into a snake eating its tail.
01:01:11 But yes, they had to. They had to make the white guy the bad guy. The white guy is the one who made it racial. This black man's like I thought we were friends. You always call me your your little Lando Calrissian. And now, now look at you acting like an asshole, saying that I'm only prosecuting him because he's what. How dare you, sir. And you know, it's not just the black guy that that, of course, is is angry at Whitey for even mentioning race.
District Attorney
01:01:47 I would have acted in the same manner if the defendant's victim had been black or white, Catholic, Protestant or Jew. And you know that
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:02:00 no further questions. Your
Devon Stack
01:02:01 Honor. Ah, yes. The white woman is also very upset. She's very upset to hear her boyfriend bring up race. He tries to to catch up with her. She rushes out of the courtroom because she's so mad that her boyfriend's a racist. Oh my god, Arlene,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:02:28 go on say it. It was a lousy thing for me to do,
Arlene
01:02:30 since you're already aware of that. Fact, there's no reason for you to say it or anything else to you. From now on,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:02:35 Arlene, I swear I didn't plan it. I couldn't let the jury go home with reardon's confession. The last thing they remembered, it was almost four o'clock. I was desperate.
Arlene
01:02:46 Is one thing this was despicable, cross the bridge.
Devon Stack
01:02:53 So despicable, so as much as in 1986 they did. They did very much like vigilantism, they the racism that was still extra bad, extra bad, even though, like, the whole situation is because of race. When you think about it, it's the nigglers. The nigglers are the ones doing this. But, yeah, I can't, can't point out the obvious. Can't point out the obvious
01:03:18 crux of the problem. And so they make up late at night where he's like, I feel bad for being racist. I just do, just do, trying to do my job, trying to do right by my client.
01:03:30 So then he hits this bright idea, if he can't do the race card, he's going to subpoena the judge. He's going to subpoena the judge in the case where the daughter's raper and murderer was let off,
01:03:47 even though they had a confession, even though they had the scratches on his face, they had her jewelry with him, He subpoenas the judge.
01:04:01 The judge is really pissed off, and they go through like this whole thing about, you know, the judge being mad that this is, this is highly irregular, and then he shows up for his his court appearance, and the defense attorney tries to explain to the jury these extenuating circumstances the now, because of the confession tape, have now been allowed to be discussed. They can now be privy to the motivations behind Mr. Reardon and why he was so bloodthirsty and must kill the niggler.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:04:40 Are there times when the opinion of one judge does not agree with the opinion of another judge?
Judge Aaron Klein
01:04:48 Yes,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:04:49 so that if one wanted to discover why a particular decision was made in a particular way, one would have to ask the judge who
01:04:56 made it.
Judge Michael Lengel
01:04:56 Judge Klein, if it is counsel's intent to force me to justice. By my decision in a past case, I will not submit to it. I absolutely will not.
Judge Aaron Klein
01:05:08 Is that your intention? Miss de Bourne,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:05:11 no sir, but the jury has seen a confession in which Judge lengo's decisions played a crucial part in the crime for which my client is now on trial. I ask simply that he explained to this jury what happened and why, because I'm sure they're just as confused as Dennis Reardon was when all when all charges of rape and murder against Charlie Johnson were dropped without even a trial,
Judge Aaron Klein
01:05:37 sir, as long as your questions are confined to eliciting information for the benefit of the jury. I will allow them. But if you ask Judge lengle to justify his decisions, I will rule them out. Is that clear?
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:05:53 Yes, Your Honor. Now your honor in his confession, my client referred to being in court when you just threw out all the evidence against Charlie
Judge Michael Lengel
01:06:07 Johnson, young man, I did not just throw out evidence. I was conducting a proper hearing to suppress
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:06:15 evidence. Oh, thank you for that correction, sir, a hearing to suppress evidence. Now, would you explain to this jury exactly what that means, sir,
Judge Michael Lengel
01:06:23 some of the most crucial decisions in a criminal case concern what evidence may legally be presented to a jury and what may not,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:06:32 if jurors are charged with reaching a fair decision, sir, couldn't all the evidence be presented to them? I'm sure this jury would like to know.
Judge Michael Lengel
01:06:41 Your Honor. I really don't see why I should have to instruct this jury as if they were a first year class in law school.
Judge Aaron Klein
01:06:47 Will you stop wasting the time of this court and get to the pertinent questions?
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:06:52 Yes, sir, sir,
01:06:55 in the case against Charlie Johnson for the rape and murder of Agnes Reardon, exactly what evidence were you asked to suppress certain
Judge Michael Lengel
01:07:07 physical evidence?
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:07:07 What kind of physical evidence
Judge Michael Lengel
01:07:10 Agnes reardon's jewelry,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:07:12 which was found on Johnson's person at the time of his arrest? Yes.
01:07:21 Was there any other evidence, sir,
Judge Michael Lengel
01:07:23 yes,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:07:24 such as
Judge Michael Lengel
01:07:27 there were scratches on Charlie Johnson's
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:07:29 face inflicted during Agnes Reardon struggle to keep from being killed and raped,
Judge Michael Lengel
01:07:34 most likely,
Charlie Johnson
01:07:37 I didn't do nothing. I'm a good boy, sir,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:07:41 would you please tell this jury,
01:07:45 explain to them exactly on what grounds Did you exclude all that evidence?
Judge Michael Lengel
01:07:52 Whenever evidence is seized by the police without a warrant or without proper provocation, such evidence is considered illegal under the Fourth Amendment to our Constitution, which prohibits illegal search and seizure, therefore it must be thrown out. It's the only way to force the police to obey the law. So you,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:08:15 you wouldn't happen to be Jewish, would you, Your Honor,
Devon Stack
01:08:21 and so this is the kind of excuse that you often hear. It's these Jewish lawyers and Jewish judges, and they're not always Jewish, but often are that that have the excuse of upholding civil liberties. They have a ax to grind with police, and so they will punish the public under the guise of punishing a police officer, they will say this cop did not follow strict procedure, and so therefore I'm gonna punish him by by throwing his case out. But they're not punishing the cop.
01:09:07 They're punishing in this case, the father of the woman who was raped and murdered. Cops don't give a fuck. They're just gonna it's just another job for them, what they're gonna you think, Oh, I learned my lesson. Your Honor, next time, I'll do things by the book, and it doesn't make any sense.
01:09:34 Because ultimately, that's not why these judges and these lawyers are doing it. They're not doing it because they're on some kind of civil rights crusade. They're doing it, I can only imagine, to foment chaos, to punish the public that they that's the what they really have a problem with. By continually releasing violent criminals back into the public.
01:10:11 So then he talks about the circumstances under which this man was arrested. You
Policeman
01:10:31 four out of 10, and all units in the vicinity a possible rape and homicide just occurred at City Hall Park and fourth and B, all units on alert, four out of 10 headroom.
01:11:06 I got the niggler for no reason at all, just because I hate niggers.
Judge Michael Lengel
01:11:14 You see the officer arrested Johnson without cause.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:11:17 I knew you were Jewish, but holy Jew. That's some Jew shit. They got him just because he was black and all white people are racist. Case closed. I'm guess your family came here around the turn of the century from Eastern Europe.
01:11:37 Fucking Jews,
Judge Aaron Klein
01:11:38 I thought, and I warn you, sir, that if you go any further, I will rule that you are stalling, and I will excuse this witness.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:11:47 Your Honor, you had just explained why you threw out all the evidence against Charlie Johnson. Counsel is being
Judge Aaron Klein
01:11:53 repetitious and wasting the time of this court.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:11:57 Sorry, sir, the prosecutor also produced this confession by Charlie Johnson, in which he described in full detail how he raped and murdered Agnes Reardon, which I would like to read to this jury
Prosecution
01:12:07 object. Your Honor, all such evidence has been ruled irrelevant in
Dennis Riordan
01:12:10 this case, a a niggler killed my daughter, so I killed him back. What's the big deal? Why don't you ask the Jew
Judge Aaron Klein
01:12:20 Gordon, I declare you in contempt of this court, and we will hold the hearings for punishment at the end of this trial. Now you follow me, sir.
Devon Stack
01:12:32 So the judge gets a hair up his ass and he's really mad, and he tells the the defense attorney here big Am I make my courtroom into a into a circus. Now get in the ring. Something about boxing and rocky or something. So he goes back out there. He's like, Alright, I gotta behave. Can't just fly off the handle and call him a Jew. I instead have to show show the jury how Jewish he is.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:13:01 I show you now a transcript of the interrogation of Charlie Johnson before he confessed. Was he apprised of his legal right to remain silent
Policeman
01:13:09 before making any statement. You have a right to consult an attorney. You cannot afford one. We will provide the wishing attorney
Charlie Johnson
01:13:20 wouldn't help it now
Policeman
01:13:24 you understand that anything you say may be held against you.
Charlie Johnson
01:13:29 Yeah,
Policeman
01:13:31 okay, then, in your own words, tell us what happened
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:13:36 then, before Johnson's confession, he was given all his rights under the Fifth Amendment and under the Miranda rule as well, yes, and yet you still ruled out his confession.
Judge Michael Lengel
01:13:45 Why? For very valid legal reasons.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:13:51 Well, by this time, I'm sure this jury would be mighty curious to know those reasons, sir, ladies
Judge Michael Lengel
01:13:57 and gentlemen, despite the false impression the council is trying to create the Johnson confession did not meet the standards set down by the highest court of New York State. Which standards? Counselor, you know, the legal answer to that question is extremely complicated, and I don't think this jury would be able to follow it.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:14:16 I'm willing to take that risk.
Judge Michael Lengel
01:14:17 It would require discussing
01:14:19 the Rogers case.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:14:20 Well, I'm sure
Judge Michael Lengel
01:14:21 these ladies and gentlemen will survive it, and if it would be of any help to you, sir, I have with me a copy of the decision in the Rogers case, sir.
01:14:35 Defendant Rogers, while out on bail for one crime, was arrested for a second crime. During his arrest, he admitted his guilt to the second crime, and so he was convicted. But on appeal, his admission of guilt was thrown out and his conviction was reversed.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:14:54 Had Rogers been read all his Miranda rights, yes. Then on what possible ground could the court throw out his. Confession,
Judge Michael Lengel
01:15:00 as I said, he was out on bail for a previous crime.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:15:06 Are you telling this jury that his previous crime served as a defense in his second crime
Judge Michael Lengel
01:15:11 in this state, once a suspect has an attorney in one criminal case, he's considered represented by that same attorney in all subsequent criminal cases, therefore any confession he might make not in the presence of that attorney, is not admissible into evidence.
Policeman
01:15:27 Heard some Jewish shit come out of your mouth, but that is like some Kabbalah Japanese right there.
Devon Stack
01:15:39 So that is the reasoning. That's the Jewish reasoning, that because his this black guy was out on bail having already committed another rape,
01:15:55 that he wasn't allowed to confess to a new rape, because his criminal defense attorney for the first rape wasn't present, even though his Miranda rights were read to him. And this is the stupid Jew shit that goes on in the court system. Like this is, this is actually a like I don't think it's based on a real case but this, this, it's based on real case law. Now, I
01:16:29 don't know if it was remedied since 1986 but if it was, there's more stuff like it. This is the kind of shit that always pops up. This is the kind of bullshit that we have to deal with in our legal system, and it's just one of many obstacles that white people have when it comes to trying to get justice.
01:16:47 And look, it's only gonna get worse. I mean, look at all these cases now where it's not even a matter of a Jewish judge or a Jewish lawyer, you're gonna have black judges, you're going to have juries that are black. I mean, that's another thing that I've noticed with with these, these true crime cases, where they let people off off, afterwards, they'll go and find, like some, some member of the jury that wants to be interviewed.
01:17:20 And inevitably it's like some brown lady or some black lady or some faggot, or, you know, just the exact kind of person that isn't your peer, the exact kind of person that should never be deciding anyone's fate, let alone a white person's fate, and the reasoning that they give for letting off people who are obviously guilty of murder, or sometimes put convicting people who are obviously not guilty of murder.
01:17:49 It's the stupidest shit you'll be you've ever heard in your life. And just think about this. Yeah, I said, I think last stream where I was talking about how the incompetency level of people that you work with, right? Like there's there's the 8020 rule, where 80% of the co workers that you have are going to be completely useless, and the company really is run by the 20% of competent people that they've managed to get. And that is usually the balance. And it doesn't matter if you're talking about a pizza delivery driver job or heart surgeon, it seems to be pretty much across the board, 8020
01:18:35 and I mentioned at the time that something to think about is that this is what they do for a living. This is what they get paid to do, day in, day out, eight hours a day, five days a week, and they suck that bad at that. And so this is probably the best that it's the thing that they're best at. So however bad they are at their job, they're probably worse at everything else in their life, including being on a jury.
01:19:10 In fact, it's probably worse because usually high functioning people, ambitious, smart people tend to try to avoid jury duty, and the kinds of people who don't, who actually look at it as a nice little vacation from the job that they suck at are those incompetent people that suck at their jobs. And so if you ever end up in a situation where your life hangs in the balance just based on the opinions of 12 random people that you have nothing in common with,
01:19:57 that's what you're dealing with. That's what you're dealing with,
01:20:12 not to mention all the the weird Jew loopholes that exist in order to make criminals lives easier.
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:20:23 You heard judge Lengel say that he was forced to let Charlie Johnson go free because the officer stopped Johnson without good cause. Now bear in mind that if Johnson had swiped a 10 Cent Apple, all that evidence would have been admissible, but judge lengle threw it out. Why? Because to force the police to obey the law, judges punish them by throwing out the evidence. Think about that. I mean, do you think was Judge Lengel really punishing that officer? No, he was punishing you. He was punishing me. I mean, he turned loose on us, the innocent public, a rapist, a murderer, and somehow that was supposed to teach that officer a lesson. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the law as laid down by our judges, the law that is supposed to protect you.
01:21:16 Come sir, let me guess you're a Jew now too. I mean, holy fuck, these Jews.
Devon Stack
01:21:25 So the judge gets mad and derails it. But eventually the jury, because it's not real life. So the multicultural jury, full of brown people and women, they actually decide, You know what, this isn't right. This isn't right. This man has been screwed over by the legal system. They start to get it.
Judge Aaron Klein
01:21:58 Bring in the defender you
Dennis Riordan
01:22:00 it, I guess this is it. Kid, I mean, counselor,
Lawyer Brad Gordon
01:22:16 right? Pop, this is it.
Dennis Riordan
01:22:18 Don't blame yourself. You did your Best.
Judge Aaron Klein
01:22:21 Bring in the jury you
01:22:46 be seated. I have been informed that the jury has reached a verdict. The defendant will rise and face the jury, Ladies
01:23:02 and gentlemen of the jury, what is your verdict?
Juror
01:23:10 We the jury find a verdict of guilty. The
Judge Aaron Klein
01:23:24 this is not a football stadium. This is a court of law clerk. Will you get that slip from the foreman?
01:23:39 Is this the jury's verdict? Yes,
Juror
01:23:41 sir. I mean your honor.
Judge Aaron Klein
01:23:48 We the jury find a verdict of guilty insofar as the justice system is concerned, as for the defendant, Dennis Riordan, we find him not guilty.
Devon Stack
01:24:15 Hooray. Then everybody clapped. So that is the that was it. That's the movie
01:24:26 kind of boring. That's why I had to, I had to spice it up a little bit. But the point is this, that you would never make a movie where some white guy murders a black man in broad daylight, in front of witnesses, goes in and confesses, and then a jury is like, Yeah, but you know, the niggler deserved it.
01:24:48 And the real problem actually, it's the system that's letting all these nigglers run around, and we'll try to beat around the bush and not really. We say it that way by having a black da and the black jury foreman and and make the white people look like they're the ones playing the race card. And people at home, they all know why he bought a gun and why. You know, we all, we all get it.
01:25:15 But yeah, the fact that they even cast the murderer, the rapist, as a black guy and the victim is white, that shows you exactly how, how different things are these days. But again, even with with the only way that they would do this today is if they had a black man that was that was wronged by the racist system, and then, and then he would be open season on whites, and then he could kill not just like the white guy that inexplicably only happens in movies, raped his black daughter, because, like, there's literally years, years, several years where there
01:25:56 Are 00, white on black rapes, zero, white on black rapes, you know, not so much the other way around, but zero white on black grapes. But in movies, it happens all the time. And so you can have this black guy go around, and it would be racially charged. The whole movie would be about race. You
01:26:22 I mean, they would make him a KKK guy or something like that. It would be insane. But in 1986 this is how you could get an audience to watch your show long enough to try to sell them sun kissed orange juice during the commercial break.
01:26:40 And so this is how they had to do it. So anyway, nothing too earth shattering tonight. I just thought it would be a fun little thing, and I was kind of experimenting with AI a little bit, you know. I don't quite have, like a good workflow yet, but I see the possibilities. I see the possibility it's not there yet, it's not there yet, but I see the possibilities, it's definitely, it could definitely get funny. It could definitely get funny in the future.
01:27:11 So I wanted to, I wanted to kind of play around with that a little bit and and see how that would work out. So anyway, little like I said, little bit of a short one tonight. So let's take a look at hyper chats. So first, an odyssey, love and division must not be here because there's zero on Odyssey, because it, you know, because it doesn't work. Well it works, but like love knows, is the only one that uses it. Then we got
01:27:42 over on entropy. We might only have one tonight. Look at that. Let me see. Let me see if it fucked up, though, because I hate that. It does that, and then people get mad at me. They get mad at me because I don't read it, because it didn't show up. Let me see.
01:28:06 Is today the 19th. So the 19th, and that means the last string would have been on the going into the 16th. Okay, all right, so we do have some that just didn't pop up for some reason. All right, first we got gorilla hands.
Based Corky
01:28:30 Never touch my sister. Oh,
Devon Stack
01:28:34 there's Corky with some vigilante justice. Quirky, you're turning into a monster. Corky, with his vigilante justice. All right, we got gorilla hands. Says, Dev and I have another stream suggestion for you. This one is also an outer limits episode called Lithia from Season Four, Episode 16.
01:28:56 Remember how subversive and anti male it was the story what is set 30 or 40 years into the future after a biological weapon has killed every man on earth, which is now ruled by girl bosses. That sounds like a nightmare. And then part two, a man from the past is awakened from his Cairo chamber. And you can imagine the man causes all this havoc and drama with the women.
01:29:26 The ending has a surprising twist at the end, feminist propaganda, yes, if, if only, if only the world were ruled by women. Wait a second. It kind of is, right now it kind of is all right. I have added that to my notes. Thank you very much. Gorilla hands. And then gorilla hands simply says, and then gorilla hands again says, again, I know what don't we have another faggots that never gets you.
01:29:59 Used I thought I had their faggots. I must not have a button for it anyway. Then we got gorilla hands again. Says, Come to think of it, the outer limits Star Trek and most of the Sci Fi from the 90s had a ton of propaganda in it makes you think in their intent make you think if their intentions were to brainwash the Sci Fi geeks who are probably more intelligent and independent minded, all those shows definitely affected my worldview. Well, it's a lot of,
01:30:36 you know, it's weird. It's like, it's, it's the the very left brained people who are creative, though. So you know, that's why you get a lot of engineers, where they're very technically minded, but they are also they have that creative side. So it's they're very left brained in a lot of ways.
01:30:59 They like systems and order and things like that. But they also like thinking about, you know, the possibilities of what could be, of what the universe would be like in a million years, or whatever. And that's kind of, especially if you're like an inventor, you know, as an engineer, someone who, who creates with systems and technology, you know, you know, you kind of have that weird both sides of the brain going on.
01:31:22 But I don't know if it's that complicated. I think it just that's that was big in the 90s. The 90s was real big on on Sci Fi, for some reason. Well, I think honestly, the real reason was more people were, were were it's funny, because it was like, there was a lot of dystopian fiction where the future looked like a burning hellscape, and I think that was like the average, average view of things.
01:31:55 That's why there was so much of it. And but that, you know, there was, like a need. There's these optimists that wanted to see that, no, no, it'll be good. It'll be like Star Trek, kind of you know, we'll be like this multiracial team of faggots that fly around in space and spread democracy or something.
01:32:13 All right, then we got, oh, phase of a says last stream was great. Convincing people as generally hopeless. My friend's wife is a liberal grade school teacher that regurgitates whatever the flavor of the month is. Same girl would be throwing Romans if she lived in 1930s Germany, the lemmings will always go along with whoever is in power.
01:32:37 And that's true, however they view as popular or as in control. That's who they will serve. Because that's, again, like I said, That's what selection pressures have created. More of those people, and so there's just more of them. There's tons of these people that like to follow the leader.
01:33:04 Then we got rivers of blood. Rivers of blood says, learning about radios, I came across the inventor of FM radio, Edwin Armstrong. He was embroiled with legal battles against RCA. Jew David Sarnoff, the stress ultimately led to his divorce and suicide, perhaps a stream on Jewish lawfare, or Armstrong himself.
01:33:32 Thanks again for the content I had. Not I've never looked into FM really, but there's many such cases. Often there is a one of these inventor types we were just talking about, who creates a technology, and then some Jew makes millions and millions of dollars off of that technology. And this could be one of those cases. Edison was a lot of his inventions. People talk about how he stole some stuff, but Jew stole a lot of his stuff.
Unknown Speaker
01:34:08 I'll add that to the notes see here. Inventor blah, blah, blah,
Devon Stack
01:34:18 those you don't know. FM stands for frequency modulation. Frequency modulation, something I very, I very in often amusing FM, but I do use it occasionally. Then we got Hammer of thorzine, wise money management. Where's the rest? Thank you. Hammer authority says you might want to look into how court martials work.
01:34:50 They're a very good example of what being tried by a jury of your peers should be. There are also protections, so offers officers are not. Elroded by enlisted and vice versa. The way high ranking officers are tried is interesting as well. I might have to take a look at that.
01:35:11 But yeah, that's the problem is you're not, I mean, anymore, you're not tried by a jury of your peers. You don't have a right to a speedy trial anymore. The whole the whole legal system is fucked. The whole legal system is fucked, and you just better hope that you never get caught up in it, because if you do, there's a really good chance you're fucked, unless you have endless amounts of money, but then you're still fucked. It's just that you can handle it because you've got endless amounts of money.
01:35:41 But unfortunately, that's where I mean, that's a good example that's in the news right now, right Elijah Schaefer getting sued by cash Patel's girlfriend, who's totally not a massage agent, and that's insane, that the FBI director's girlfriend is is suing a a, just a, I mean, he's a journalist, but he's just like an online journalist for $5 million for tweeting a picture out of her and said, well, and according to them, suggesting she's a massage agent, it doesn't make any sense, because, again, if, if you actually look at the intent behind the law, it doesn't stand up to the the the scrutiny that a white, normal judge would give it because she'd have to prove damages.
01:36:45 She'd have, there's so many things that she'd have to prove, even just to not have the case thrown out immediately. But because she's pro Israel, and you know, Jewish judges, Jewish lawyers, I think the jurisdiction she picked was very Jew heavy. I think I heard something about that. I could be wrong.
01:37:09 You're kind of fucked. You're kind of fucked unless, of course, Elijah goes all, all vigilante justice mode.
01:37:19 But I know. Anyway we got Anton ove says Tamir sin ditch flamed Israel from Ukraine with a gold toilet. He is one of zelensky's friends. Okay? I I, all right, I know there's a lot of fraud going on with the the money that. I mean, we knew that was going to happen. We knew that was going to happen.
01:37:52 There's gonna be a lot of fraud. There's always a lot of fraud. Unfortunately, in Ukraine, that's, I mean, even prior to them being handed billions of dollars, there was always a lot of fraud in that country. That country. And, you know, the fraud is ongoing. Slavs have a little bit of the fraud in them, a little bit of the fraud they're, you know, little bit of the scammy goes on in not just Ukraine. In that part of the world.
01:38:19 Isn't that the part of the world that gypsies are for? I mean, they're from Romania, but, you know, Eastern Europe, it's where Jews come from. It's where Jews and Gypsies come from. Then you send a link, I'm assuming, to that, you know, I'll check that out. Then we got, let's see here, over on rumble, which also, I think fucked up because my that's, that's my fault, though I had to reboot when I had the rumble button or rumble thing opens go to my thing, dashboard.
01:39:05 Minutes. Here we go.
01:39:09 Does this have the date on it? It does not. All right, let me see if I can find it. It's up.
01:39:24 This, let me see if I remember these. Okay, this is
01:39:33 okay, no. All right, good. I don't have to do it all over again. All right, so we got Maximo Gen X, good. Gorilla, good, good good gorilla.
01:39:45 Maximo Gen X says, can't help but feeling that AF has become maga 2.0 rounding everyone back onto the plantation, thinking they are a. Infiltrating is absolute hopium. Sorry for hijacking the stream. No, you're right. I mean, that's, that's it. That's what it's going to be.
01:40:10 It's going to be a slightly less influenced by, or at least for now, right? I mean, maybe that'll change. It often does, but a slightly less influenced by Israel version of Charlie Kirk, where, you know that, I mean, it doesn't solve the like the whole, the whole, again, as white people, I'm not upset about the presence of Jews in my country because of Gaza.
01:40:41 That's never, you know, my problem with Jews is not Jews in tanks again. I'm not saying I like what's going on out there, and I'm not saying that we shouldn't care about what's going on out there, but that's not, that's not what we got into this for. You know, it's not like everyone, or at least, I mean, maybe this is some people, but it's not like people like me just suddenly started having a problem with Jewish influence on October 7, okay,
01:41:12 and it seems like that's kind of the tone that I'm seeing from that that that camp, that that's the problem with Jewish influence. It's that they they want us to support a war that is, again, I agree the war is bad and we shouldn't be paying for Israel's genocides. I get it.
01:41:34 I get it, but I'm actually kind of upset about the whole multicultural thing in the first place, and it kind of takes the steam out of that if you say that, well, diversity isn't our strength, unless it is, and we're going to use that strength to defeat the people that we're mad about bringing the diversity, because it's not A strength, but then I guess it is a strength because, you know, it doesn't make any sense.
01:42:05 It doesn't make any sense. And, yeah, I suspect this is just the beginning of the moderating influences that you're going to see. And that's, that's why the that's why there was a reaction. That's why there was a reaction to calling out the rhetoric that was on its face in support of welcoming anyone born into America into America first. That's, that's, that's why, that's why the very weird, very strong reaction to that, because it's true. It's true. That's what you're going to see more of.
01:42:53 Let's see here. Then we got Maximo Gen X again, you get rid of these. I've been so busy. Been so busy. All right, we got, there's a book out here called ages of capitalism, a history of capitalism in America. You could discover, or you will discover, that capitalism ruined our country hundreds of years ago, there was no stopping. It worth a read. Well, look, I'm not, I mean,
01:43:31 I guess it depends on how you define cap. I'm not an economist, but it depends on how you define capitalism. I think there should be limits on capitalism. I don't think that should just be Naked Capitalism, and I think that that really starts to reward predatory people, and it punishes people who want what's best for their community, because that's not always what's profitable.
01:43:54 And so if your system is systematically rewarding vultures and parasites, then that's who's going to end up at the top. And because, you know, government is is basically up. These politicians are for sale. You know that it's just another thing you can buy, I guess, in this capitalist system, then the interests of these people who have found their way at the top are always the ones that are those interests are being met that, you know, that's why Trump focuses so much on things like, you know,
01:44:37 Sending infinity Chinese and infinity Indians into the country. The people that voted for him don't want that, but the people who paid him want that, and so that's what they're going to get and and so that's and that's every politician. And yeah, so I don't know what the alternatives are that would that really speak to me? I see problem. With a lot of them.
01:45:01 And you know, unless there's some kind of ethnic component that really resolves a lot of the issues, if you have an ethnic component where you have, you bar people who are not your your people from participating in the system, certainly in the government, but even I would say, in owning land, in owning corporations within your your country, I think that if you were to prevent foreign influence in that way, you don't allow foreign lobbying period. You don't just say, Oh, they have to register with FARA, no.
01:45:40 You say you can't do it, you'll go to jail. You'll go to jail if we catch you trying to influence one of our politicians. It doesn't matter if you're registered or not, you're you will be imprisoned as a spy, because that's essentially what you are at that point. And if you had stuff like that going on, I mean,
01:46:02 I don't know, it's one of these things that I kind of wonder if, if humans are capable of maintaining, really, any system longer than a few centuries, you know, before it just kind of eats itself, it collapses, because maybe the first couple generations can keep it going.
01:46:19 But inevitably, as technology changes, as you know, geopolitical politics, or the geopolitical situation changes as you have, you know, just as life goes on, you know, the variables change. And so what is a perfect system, or as perfect as you can get in 1776,
01:46:44 I mean, not, I'm not saying that it was, but let's just say it was. It's not going to make sense in a way, once it's been eroding for two centuries. It's like the legal system we've been talking about tonight. We didn't have this many laws in the beginning, you know, you there law libraries have, I mean, if, if you're just studying for the bar like, the amount of of shit you have to read just to pass the bar exam these days is insane. That the the amount, and that's the problem too, is a lot of the you don't need laws for things, a lot of things, if you have a nation of your own people that all kind of have the same value system, you don't have to legislate everything, because everyone it's it's predictable how they're going to behave.
01:47:33 And so it's not that you don't have to start codifying things into law, until you start having people come into the country that don't behave that way, and now all of a sudden you need a law for it, because you have people acting in unexpected ways and and so unfortunately, it's just, I feel like that's sort of what happens is you get these systems that get more it's, it's like old software where you write this software that works really good. It's really efficient. Well, 200 years later, of adding patches to it to account for all the new, you know, things that has to keep track of all the interfaces it has to support all the drivers you have to have installed, like, if you don't just throw it out the window and do a complete rewrite, it's going to just be this huge mess.
01:48:29 And that's, I think, unfortunately, what's gone on with with our system here in America is it's just been patched and added to and, you know, had all these incompatible drivers installed and all this spyware installed and all this adware installed, and all these plugins installed and and now it's just like this big fucking unmanageable mess. So, yeah, I'm not saying that. I think capitalism needs to completely go out the window, but the way it's it's working right now, well, it's not working. It's definitely not working. It's rewarding pretty much psychopaths. It's rewarding the worst people in our populations, and so that's why they're at the top. And just like the idea that you'd have a private entity owning all the debt, you know, the central banking system that's, I think, independent of capitalism, in a way, but like that's been the way things have been for, you know, since 1913 or whatever.
01:49:32 So, yeah, all big problems, all big pro look, at the end of the day, almost anything would be better. Literally, almost anything would be better, which is why I'm an advocate for ripping off the band aid, because almost no matter how it turns out, it's going to be better. All right, we got Astralis, 725 neurotic monkeys. No.
01:50:04 This is one great movie for going over. I didn't catch it earlier, but recognize some of the actors. I'll catch the rest on the replay. Thanks for this one. Devon, well, I appreciate that. Astralis 725, Nubian, machines,
01:50:29 I don't know. Scroll. Then we got Rupert, of course. Rupert says replay gang here. What do you think about the recent anti Muslim protest in Dearborn many pro white, anti Israeli accounts were shilling for the muzzies. Good night, Professor stack. See you on Saturday.
01:50:50 I you know, I didn't actually watch it. I saw someone commenting on, I guess there was some guy that in front of the city council said, some based stuff like, you know that about them. This isn't their country. I haven't seen it. Should I try to find it? We got time.
01:51:17 Let's see here. I
01:51:24 don't look at me more. I'm sure something will pop up. How long is this? All right? We can do that, see if this downloads.
01:51:50 Okay,
01:52:03 me, why is it? Why is nothing happening?
Jewish converso
01:52:08 The Muslim community, there we are. Okay And
Devon Stack
01:52:29 okay, I've not seen this before.
Jewish converso
01:52:37 The Muslim community is looking to drag us back. They're looking to oppress women, oppress homosexuals. They're looking to destroy
Devon Stack
01:52:46 yay, already, gay, gay, sorry, that's super gay. Oh, they're good. They're oppressing women, they're oppressing faggots, all right. Gay, sorry, but gay, come on, don't be gay, but let's keep going. Everything
Jewish converso
01:53:06 that makes America great. President Trump speaks
Devon Stack
01:53:11 women and fags make America great. Look. I don't know if this is part of a larger protest, but like this guy is gonna gay, kind of gay so far
Jewish converso
01:53:26 send ice into Dearborn. These people have overstayed their visas, their H, 1b chain migration invaders, and they have come to this country to destroy our way of life. We know exactly your laws in your book about lying to our faces, pretending to be Americans, wearing your suits, but that doesn't happen anywhere else. Where you guys are in charge. There are 53 Muslim majority countries, and in all of them, it is tyranny, destruction. It is shithole living. We have to call it what it is. You guys pretty
Devon Stack
01:54:05 what's the what's the is that the big fancy what's the big fancy one? That's one of the big fans here. I mean, look there. It's only nice because of the Western money that they got pumped into it, because of the oil. It's nothing. It's not because of the great innovators in the Middle East, right?
01:54:23 It's literally because of Western money that's been funneled back into the Middle East when we should have just conquered those countries and and taken what we want if that's what we're going to do. I mean, I don't even think that's what we should I think we should use our own natural resources. But let's face it, you know, the Saudis are not rich because of the great contributions to, you know, the modern world that they've they've come up with, it's, it's all oil money. But I mean to say they're all shit old countries.
01:54:56 That's, that's crazy. I mean, they're, they make us look like. Like, we're living in the fucking Stone Age, because they have all this money, and they they don't put they don't well, and they don't have well, I guess they have slaves, but they don't like, like, they have literal slaves, but they don't have a nigger problem or niggler problem, and probably not as much of that. They probably still have a Jew problem. Obviously, not as much of a Jew problem, though, because of, you know, the Muslim thing. But yes, still, still kind of gay, though. So far,
Jewish converso
01:55:32 like we do, we don't want you in our country. We will come and eat your shawarma in Somalia. Okay, we don't need it here in Michigan, we don't need it. In any part of America, we have. We have a right to self determination, dead grounding fathers, our posterity first, for white Americans, amen, and we're being driven out. You come here and you marry four or five women.
Devon Stack
01:55:59 Okay, so that's where I should have started. Man, like, Why'd you throw in this stupid shit about fags and women and all right, I'm on board now.
01:56:08 But like, you kind of, you've already, kind of, you gate it up in the beginning. You don't do that. You don't, don't gay it up in the beginning, or ever, really, just don't, I mean, don't get up, but especially now in the beginning, because you've already lost me. Now I'm kind of like, all right, a
Jewish converso
01:56:27 little bit women and you out breed us, you change the laws. You make all of our country look like the places that you fled from. We don't want you here. Respectfully. Get the fuck out of my country. I don't want you here.
01:56:49 And the people, the veterans the World War, this blood has soaked for our constitutional republic, are taking a look around Europe. They're taking a look around America, and they're saying, What the hell did we fight for? We have been taken over without a single shot fire.
01:57:08 You guys are out breeding insidious parasites on the American way of life. You will never look like us. You will never eat like us. You won't build buildings like us. You are nothing. You can build nothing just like
Devon Stack
01:57:20 see, again, like the eat and look, that's not the issue. See, it's not about esthetics. Doesn't matter. I mean, sure. I mean, I prefer looking at white people, but that's not, it's not the issue, man. I don't know. He seems like, what's, what's with the is that, is that that's not even a plate carrier. Is it? Is it just like a vest? Like, why does he have the maybe it is a plate carrier. It's hard to tell, but still, it's a little weird.
Jewish converso
01:58:01 President Trump's great American friends have said, You guys are not us and get the fuck out America. First America. Only God bless America. He
Devon Stack
01:58:19 sounds a little gripery. He sounds a little confused. Roypery. I don't know. I don't know what the hell's going on with that guy. But look, maybe this is, see, that's the problem is, this seems kind of Jewish to me. This seems like Tommy Robinson to me. You know what I mean it, it just does. Again, I'm on board for, like, the, you know, about 30% of that was, was all right. Delivery was a little off. But, you know, sometimes it's all about the presentation. You gotta, you gotta think about that if you're gonna do something like this. But, yeah, I mean not, you know, Joe,
Jewish converso
01:59:06 Jesus is King. Let me grab my
Background
01:59:09 Jesus is King.
Jewish converso
01:59:11 Jesus is King. Jesus is King. Jesus
Background
01:59:29 crisis.
Jewish converso
01:59:38 Let's go surrender. We will not back down. This is what Mike from America wants us to do. They want us to coward. Christian stand up. Sorry.
Devon Stack
01:59:49 I just, you know, it seems a little Tommy Robinson. It's like a weird it's almost like the worst parts of. Of the gripers and the worst parts of Tommy Robinson, like, fucked and had, like, a anti Muslim baby, you know, it's just like, ah, you know, all right, you know, I don't know. I don't know. Yeah, look, I don't know is,
02:00:24 I don't know, I don't know. I don't know. I don't think it's like in terms of, look, in terms of things getting more chaotic, this is kind of what I was talking about. This is kind of, you know, it is people tribing up. You know, this guy is, in a way, he's tribing up. I suspect. I don't know.
02:00:45 I suspect that these are the kinds of guys that maybe were just average white Christians maybe a few years ago, and now they're tribing up. I don't know. I don't know anything about these guys. I don't know where they're from. I don't know if they're funded by anyone, or if you know, but like I said, not a big fan of the the Let's stand like how, here's what doesn't make any sense. Why would you open up about fags and then end with Christ as King? I thought like,
02:01:19 you know, like that was, you know, the whole fag thing and the Christian thing were, like, you know, opposite side, I don't know. I thought that actually, like, one thing you should have in common with the Muslims is that you should hate fags. So, yeah, ah, you know, not, not impressed, not impressed. I feel like there's a lot of lot of room for improvement. There lot of room for improvement.
02:01:52 Yeah, but yeah, I didn't see it till just now. So there it is, I guess. All right, we got flank or flank? Earth, flank, earth, I don't know. The biggest problem in the legal system now is the racially diverse jury pools. It has made justice and fairness impossible in most states.
02:02:13 Yeah. Like, here's the thing, if I'm ever on trial for like, a murder or something like that, and there's like, black people in the jury box. I'm gonna just, you know, assume that I'm fucked, unless, unless, like, I've got, like, some black lawyer that can Johnny Cochran them up or something like that, you know, like, it just you're kind of fucked. You're kind of fucked, or at the very least, you're rolling the dice.
02:02:39 Because, like I said, the the logic that they use. I mean, if you can call it that, I guess the decision tree that takes place between them seeing the evidence presented and them coming to a verdict is so nonsensical that it's it's frightening, it's frightening, and that's just the reality. And like I said, it's not, and it's not just the jury, it's the fucking judges, it's the police chiefs, it's the police officers, it's, if you end up in jail, it's the, you know, the CEOs. I mean, it's, it's just not great. It's not great. Try to avoid any kind of interaction with the legal system whatsoever,
02:03:38 trying to just not see that's thinking about being a vigilante. Now, I'm just, I'm gonna talk about fictional I'm gonna talk about, like, a movie idea. I'm not gonna talk about this isn't real life, obviously. Let's just say you were writing a movie about vigilantes that, like, went out and did vigilante stuff, you know, like the A team. You know, the thing about the A team is they always got away, right?
02:04:04 They didn't get arrested. You know, there was like that mad general that was always, oh, I'll get you next time, kind of thing going on. But they always got away. I think they maybe they got caught a couple times. They escaped. Don't, don't, don't count on that. That's not going to happen. You're not going to escape. I mean, in this, the fictional movie characters I'm talking about, they will not escape, because I would write a movie that'd be kind of realistic, and realistically, you're not escaping,
02:04:30 but you can't get caught. You can't get caught. You know, it's shockingly easy, apparently, from my from what I've seen, at least like the people to get away with murder, even, like the people that go to jail for murder, it's like
02:04:45 they're all fucking stupid. Like, they're all really stupid. Like, it's, it's like, see, cops aren't that bright. Like, even, even, like homicide detectives, they're not. You know,
02:04:58 the smartest people. In our society, that's not the career path they typically take. I'm sure there's exceptions, but there's not more exceptions than the general rule that we talked about earlier, about the 8020 rule, 80% at least, of the homicide detectives are just as bad at their jobs as the 80% of the people at your workplace or bad at their jobs, right?
02:05:23 So it's, it's kind of surprising to me, the the comedy of errors that unfolds that for someone to actually even go to trial, and also the length of time, holy shit, the length of time, like, it's either there's like, two, it seems like there's two kinds of cases.
02:05:45 There's like, the kind where, like, it was like, super idiot, like, they, they basically murdered someone on camera. Or they murdered someone and then, like, smeared their DNA all over the place, and then rolled around their blood and, you know, then dragged their body to the mall.
02:06:00 Or, like crazy stuff where it's just like, well, obviously that's why you got cut. Or it's like, they, they did an okay job for the time, but then technology caught up, you know, like this ancestral DNA stuff that they're doing now that really, I mean not that I've, not that I've committed some crime where my DNA is in some file somewhere.
02:06:22 But It pisses me off that my parents went and did the 23 in me for this very kind, this kind of a reason, because now law enforcement has access to all of these DNA databases, and so a lot of the ways they're solving these crimes from like the 1970s and 80s, or whatever is they're testing, you know, these samples they have, and they don't have, you know this criminals DNA. I mean, they have, they have like, they also have a law enforcement has its own database. But if you're even if your DNA is not in that database.
02:07:02 They now do what's called ancestral DNA, where they compare your DNA to the database that ancestry.com and 23andme and these other DNA testing services give access to law enforcement, and they'll find someone that's related to you. And so they'll find, like, you know, a lot of these cases, they'll, you know, let's say there was, like, this rape and murderer from the 1980s and they've got, like, some DNA from the crime scene. But in the 80s, there was no DNA, but they still have, like, the swab or whatever.
02:07:42 So then they test it, and they get it sequenced, and then they go and compare that to the database of all these boomers sending their DNA so they can be like, I have a quarter French or, you know, whatever. And then they find, they find the database of all these mongrel fucking faggots that that their family tree just looks like a bowl of spaghetti. So they had to go get a genetic testing, because they, because they can't, they can't just look at the documentation and know who their ancestors are, like a normal person.
02:08:14 And then they they find out that, like, Oh, this is, this is probably, like, the second cousin, or, you know, some genetic distance to this person. And then, now that they got that lead, they can, they can kind of whittle it down to get in the ballpark of who the suspects might be, based on, like, well out of the 50 people that it could be. Now, you know, it's really, it could only be five of them, and then they follow you around, because they can just go get a warrant for this now that they can go to a judge and say, well, it's one of these five people.
02:08:48 And then the judge will sign off on a warrant. They'll follow you around. And then, let's say you go to five guys and eat a burger and throw your drink cup in the garbage as you walk out, and that cop that's been telling you fishes it out of the garbage. They test that. Now they've got your DNA, and boom, they get these guys now look in the case of, like, homicides and rapes and, you know, a lot of the bad stuff.
02:09:17 That sounds pretty cool, you know? Oh, cool. They were able to do that. They were finally able to solve this case and get this guy behind bars or whatever. But it's just not. I'm not, I'm not digging. I'm not digging the the way that you're, you know, the your genetic code can just end up in a database like this.
02:09:42 Not great. But anyway, if you're gonna murder someone in the movie, because you're an actor playing someone in a movie that would murder someone, so you're not actually murdering someone, but if you were writing a script for an actor that would murder someone a movie.
02:10:00 That's something that that that character would have to take into account, you know, like, yeah, they can just, they can just get my D and you got DNA all over the place. You gotta act like it's fucking Gattaca, you know, like scrubbing your fucking skin till it's rod and, and I don't know all the other stuff you gotta do, but, you know, there's DNA just all over the place. It's all over the place.
02:10:20 And all, it takes a little bit and they got you so, yeah, it's, it's funny, how many and it's funny. Also, a lot of these criminals that think they're being smart, and they they just, they have these super convoluted alibis, these super convoluted plans on how not to get caught, but it just ends up getting them caught faster. Yeah, yeah. Lot of, lot of people that get murdered deserve it too.
02:10:48 That's it's almost never like you're almost never watching these, these shows and going like, Oh, what a wonderful person who didn't deserve to be killed. Like, Oh, that's a shame what happened to them? No, it's, it's usually like, you know, like, some, some cheating whore. It's, it's usually like, or like, some scammy, scammy faggot that, like, yeah, rip someone off out of millions of dollars. You know, it's always some guy that you're like, Yeah, well, I mean,
02:11:18 all right, should anyone really be that surprised that they got murdered, you know? Like, it just seems like, you know, or it's these people in these relationships with, like, you know, maybe they aren't, they aren't, like, bad people, but they they choose to, like, get into these relationships with the kind of people that murder you you know.
02:11:39 And there's all these red flags like, oh, this person's gonna murder you later. Oh, you didn't see that red flag. Okay, I don't know. Maybe, maybe that's,
02:11:50 maybe that's natural selection, a little bit. I don't know. You ever wonder what kind of that's. The other thing is, is because of this technology, and because of, and not just the the DNA technology, but also the, you know, we talked about those, those those license plate cameras, like all this stuff. It's crazy.
02:12:10 You look at these cold cases, and when they, when they have these cold cases, it's, it's almost like they're, well, it is from, it's from another time, it's like, these brutal kidnappings and murders and shit that go on. It's stuff that you wouldn't even be able to do because, like, there's no, there's no situation in which, like, there wouldn't be some kind of cell phone or camera or GPS or or something like that would have tracked, you know, the killer, or whatever.
02:12:44 You're always surprised at, like, how blatant, like, you know, these, some of these murderers are, or were back. I mean, not so much now. And you ever wonder, like, I mean, look, I don't think it's a good thing that there's, like, these random serial killers and stuff like that, getting away with murder. But then you, if you think about us as like a species, you ever wonder, like, are they? Are they? Are they? Maybe, do they actually have, like, a role that they're playing?
02:13:15 I'm not saying we should have serial killers in our midst. I'm just saying, like, maybe they're, you know, maybe like, yeah, there's, there's, they're doing, maybe they're picking up on something. Maybe, maybe they're not randomly killing people, they're picking up on something, you know, maybe there's something in there. I'm now, I'm just saying, I don't know. I don't know, probably not. It's fun to think about, you know, like the ones that kill, like, hookers.
02:13:46 You're like, oh, maybe they're just like, that's how, it's how nature gets rid of hookers. Yeah, nature's just like, yeah, we'll just have this crazy guy do it, you know, yeah, just, you know, start having this weird hooker murder fetish and no more hookers. I don't know anyway, then we got man of low moral fiber says the version of this movie with higher production value and race swap.
02:14:15 Version of this is called A Time to Kill 1996 and is literally has whites raping a black girl. That's actually, here's the funny thing,
02:14:25 that's actually based on a real event, and they race swap the real event that is based on a real event. The real event was blacks raped a white girl, and then they turned it into a movie where whites raped a black girl. You um,
02:14:43 I feel like I either I covered it or I was going to cover it, but I did a little bit of research in the movie, like years ago, and I think that's what I remember reading. But yeah, I know what you're talking about. Yeah, yeah, lots of those movies then. We got Randall Flagg says, Devon, you mentioned recently that you think Biden's ramblings of whites becoming an American minority in 2017 was true. I believe it was true by the time of the 2020 census, if you include illegals and Jews. Yeah, I think that absolutely, absolutely. I think whites are in a absolute minority in America. I think it would be insane to believe otherwise.
02:15:30 I mean, I don't think it's, I think it's, it's probably, like, around it's probably just shy of 50% but I think it's below 50% Yeah, absolutely.
02:15:41 And they're gonna look there the day they announce that it's below 50% you can probably, at that point, guarantee that it's probably close to 40% it's, it'll, it'll, I'm sure they'll do the research and find a point of no return, a event horizon that they'll feel comfortable announcing that, because even if it panics whites, they'll, there won't be anything they can really do about it, or at least, you know that, I'm sure they've gamed that out. I'm sure there's a look, there's that's a big deal. You can't say that there's this big plan to replace whites. And they haven't thought of that. You know, they've clearly thought of that, and I promise you,
02:16:22 that's something they've gamed out, and they're not going to announce until they feel either it's impossible to hide because just there's just no white people anywhere, or they feel like it doesn't matter, because the the political power of white people will be so eroded at that point that they'll be able to just tell you and it won't you know. What are you going to do about it?
02:16:46 Whitey, the Shogun says, fantastic. Stream, Professor stack, well, I appreciate that the Shogun,
02:16:54 and then we got Randall Flagg says, I hate to dish out black pills. But the baby boomer generation turns 80 next year, the massive white conservative demographic collapse begins when they start dying off for all their faults. Be prepared. Yeah, look like I said, don't throw the baby out with the bath water. When it comes to boomers, that is absolutely going to be a neg.
02:17:21 You know, it'll be a loss. It's gonna be a loss because they are our people, as self centered as they were, as you know, generally, as a generation, there was safety in numbers. And when they go, I mean, that's, there's not like going to be another baby boom anytime soon.
02:17:38 So there's not going to be whites to replace them. Randall flag again says, Dev, you live in the desert, so you might sense massive pollution from nuclear testing in the 1950s and 60s, much of the soil is massively contaminated. Trump restarted nuclear testing is peak magotard. I hadn't read that. I'm not. I used to live. I used to live really close to White Sands, and, yeah, there was lots of of atomic bombs and shit blowing up out there. I don't live. I don't think, at least anywhere near where they have had any kind of detonations.
02:18:23 And I'm pretty far from any kind of testing or even like a nuke plant. All the nuke plants don't really, you know, they don't have, like, they're not like, off gassing radiation. I feel like there should be more of them. In fact, there's that big storage thing in in Nevada, right? Is that sealed off yet?
02:18:49 Are they? I don't know if they're still using it. There's like, a big controversy about it years ago, but I don't know. I think it's a little overblown. People don't realize we're surrounded by radiation all the time.
02:19:04 Now, there's radiation of different frequencies that cause genetic damage, obviously direct. You know, acute exposure to certain kinds of radiation is very bad, but there is. You're always being you're always surrounded by some level of radiation, not because it's man made.
02:19:26 There's just radiation naturally in the environment. There are beaches in South America that that are, if you bring a Geiger counter, well, the Geiger counter will go crazy. And people go there for health reasons. They I mean, I don't know if that's a good idea, but,
02:19:42 but they do. They're like, Oh, it's the radioactive beach. And they, they roll around in the sand like it's got some kind of healing property. I again, I don't, I don't know if I do that,
02:19:53 but I do think that the the danger from radiation is little overplayed. I. Um, and look, you're surrounded by, you know, radiation from electronic devices. Again, these are different frequencies, but you're being bombarded by radiation all the time. And I'm not, I'm not super worried about it, unless you have, like I said, if you were in the the blast zone of a of a an atomic or nuclear detonation, or if you were downwind from a blast zone immediately after a detonation, you're pretty much it's not, it's not as scary as they tried to make it sound like during the Cold War.
02:20:36 So I don't know. It depends on what, what I haven't seen, what Trump is talking about testing, but I'm not, I'm not super worried about that. My guess is they'll a lot of what they'll do is they do it underground. They do it in ways that will shield it won't kick I mean, I wouldn't want to live near that, whatever, wherever this is that they're doing.
02:21:00 I wouldn't want to live near it or downwind from it, or or want, I'd also want to look into the aquifer, because I get well water, and you don't want, if they're doing some kind of underground detonation, you don't want your water connected to whatever water is going to be over there. So that would be bad too. But yeah, if you avoid acute or chronic exposure, you're pretty much going to be okay.
02:21:31 That's why there's people that drive through Chernobyl and stuff like that. It's, it's not that bad, as long as you're not, you know, rolling around that and stuff. Man of low moral fiber says that guy giving the speech was fat. If I was going to do stuff like that, don't be a fat ass well, and don't wear whatever that vest is, you know, like, what's the what was the point of the vest?
02:21:58 You know, it's not like, like, again, I don't even think it's like, it'd be one thing if he was afraid of getting murdered. So, like, it's a plate carrier in case it gets shot. But plate carriers aren't that great for like that. I mean, if someone's going to shoot you in the head, it doesn't help you there.
02:22:15 I mean, it's good for combat. It's good for, like, protecting your vital organs in a combat situation, but I don't know if that's the best option, if you're just going to go, Yeah, I don't know. The whole thing was kind of just not,
02:22:30 not my style. The Giga Doomer says Jake Lang, the guy speaking in the clip, is a Jewish converso. Oh, there you go.
02:22:40 I told you, it seemed kind of Jewy. I told you it seemed kind of Jewy.
02:22:47 And opening up with with fags and women, what that was like, the first red alert. There you go. So I guess I was right then a Jewish converso that's that really is, quite literally, if Tommy Robinson and America first fucked and had a baby that hated Muslims, it'd be a Jewish converso, although he probably a little more brown too. So there you go.
02:23:17 We got Rhea 1981 says, Test, your test has succeeded and then reunited. 81 says retarded faggot. Asked me to ask you to say faggot really, was that the real retarded faggot? Or if I believe it,
Money Clip
02:23:34 do you have that much money in your bank at home,
02:23:39 I'd buy that for $1
Devon Stack
02:23:49 All right, then we got scroll, scroll, scroll, run Off. White Wolf, Renault, white wall. You're the Russian hello from the Moscow region. A lot of the Westerners, like me who moved here, and many Russians are talking about the anti white train wreck, the West has become missed the main event, but will replay.
02:24:17 Yeah, you know, I don't know. I've never been to Russia, so I don't know what the, what the culture is among the whites that live there. It's just that, you know, Russia is big. The and includes, you know, brown Muslims, and includes, and there's, there's Asians, and, you know, it's, it's multicultural. It's not just like some snowy white European, you know, outpost. But I don't know. I don't know what the culture is like.
02:24:58 I don't know if the whites there. Are kind of, they get it, or if they, I mean, here Putin talk, and he tried, yeah, he sounds very Western, well on that topic, at least right, where he talks about multiculturalism in a positive way, multiracialism in a positive way, or at least that's what I you know,
02:25:18 I've seen clips of him saying stuff like that. So I don't know. I don't know. I mean, I just, I hope that I don't it's not gonna be Americans. I hope that there's one white country, you know, whether it's the Irish or somebody,
02:25:37 some, they grow a pair, and they stand up to this shit, and so that we have at least one one white country left in like, 50 years. Because, like, the way things are going, in 50 years, we won't have a single white country left. That's just the way it is. 50 years is not a long time. I mean, this movie was made 40 years ago. To give you an idea, this movie's 40 years old. 1986 is 40 years ago. So 19 or 50 years is just that plus 10 more years.
02:26:11 So it's, it's, we don't that's, that's not very long in the future. And if things don't radically change, then we're not going to have any white countries left. All right, guys, I think that's it. Let me look at a entropy again real quick. Make sure I miss one.
02:26:31 Okay. Well, I got one from bread Baker for eight off the Detroit speaker. Jake lane is reportedly making love to the Roman Roman fortress in this picture on x. Super Jewy speech, indeed. Okay, so, yeah, he is a Jew. Well, there you go. See my judar. My judar activated.
02:26:54 My Judah activated. So it's, it's basically a subversive Jew, uh, trying to use the the Christians against Muslims as as is their way. All right, guys, we're gonna call it a night. Hope everyone is having a good fall. You know, we got Thanksgiving coming up. What is that? Anyway?
02:27:22 There Thanksgiving is just tell me what it is. Well, it's late this year, huh? The 27th
02:27:41 Oh, it's not that light. It's like, literally, next Thursday. It's next week. Man, this month is flying by. This month is flying by. All right, so I guess next Wednesday stream will technically be the Thanksgiving stream, because it'll bleed into Thanksgiving. So, all right, that's good to know. I'll to think of something nice and Thanksgiving related to do on Thanksgiving. All right, guys. All right, with that, I hope you guys are having a good we got one last one from Ronald White Wolf. Says it's a multi ethnic Empire, but there's no forced diversity or white guilt. There are a few central Asians, but they are looked down on I have a green eyed Russian girlfriend. Immigration is strict. Well, there you go. Yeah. I mean, look, I've always wanted to go to Russia. I know a little bit of Russian, and I've never really got to use it, so I'd love to go out there sometime
02:28:45 and check it out. But anyway, yeah, hope everyone has a good rest of your evening, and I'll see you all on Saturday. Same bat time, same bat channel. In the meantime, for Black Pilled, I am, of course,
02:29:00 Devon Stack.
Narrator
02:29:05 A bag filled with air can be a play thing or it can be a life saver. Air bags, together with lapped shoulder belts, provide the best protection you can get. Soon, all cars built for American youth, will have air bags or automatic safety belts. If you ever need them, they can really cushion the blow. After all, safety is nothing to toy with you.