INSOMNIA STREAM: REWARD LOOP EDITION - 01/14/2026
Display stream description
The "INSOMNIA STREAM: REWARD LOOP EDITION" is a commentary stream hosted by Devon Stack, focusing on the phenomenon of online fundraising and reward cycles that emerge from polarizing news events. The stream explores how technology and social media have enabled rapid, large-scale crowdfunding for individuals involved in controversial incidents, often reflecting deep societal divisions. Devon discusses historical cases, the evolution of fundraising platforms, and the implications for justice, polarization, and the future of activism. The stream also covers recent news, audience questions, and reflections on AI, employment, and demographic changes in America.Catalonian Numbers Lady
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00:02:21 That's Why I say Amen My shine.
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00:06:00 Watch Your feet. Big One At TheDevon Stack
00:06:42 You you. Welcome to the insomnia stream. I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack. This is the reward loop edition. I'm afraid I'm still gonna have to be riding on that cough button, whatever, whatever this was, it's not it's not giving up, it's not giving up, but it's better. 00:08:42 I don't cough unless I talk, which is, yeah, which is great for for, you know, when I stream, then all of a sudden it's like, Oh, hey. Anyway, voice is a little bit better, but, uh, yeah, fun, fun, fun, fun. Good old airport, cancer. All right, so anyway, obviously, today in the news, we have a new winner.
00:09:08 Folks, we have a new winner. A new winner of the the escalation reward loop. This guy, TJ sabula, who apparently was a worker at a Ford plant that Trump visited. And while Trump was there, he flipped off Trump and said something the effect of, you're a pedophile protector, you're a pedophile protector, which he kind of is, yeah, kind of hard to I like, I don't know this guy's politics. I suspect.
00:10:00 There don't they don't align with mine. I suspect that they're very strongly. But who knows? Maybe I'm wrong. He was, I guess, disciplined, and what has been happening now with increasing frequency in our country, they go fund me was started, and he's already raised about half a million dollars. However, they have, they have suspended it for now, at least prior to, prior to going live.
00:10:38 That was the last, last time I checked it, they had paused the donations. I'm not exactly sure what that means, if he'll get the money or not. If the Trump administration is playing hardball with GoFundMe, who knows they should be seem to be playing hardball with a lot of people these days.
00:11:00 So who knows exactly, especially anytime it involves Trump's ego. So who knows what will happen exactly? But it just got me thinking, because now this is kind of normal. It's kind of a normal thing that something happens, something on the internet happened, well, in real life, but that ends up on the internet, right?
00:11:26 And then it's, it's, it's polarizing, because that's what happens in a country that's rapidly approaching some kind of conflict. You have these, these polar opposite sides, no, no possible way to reconcile the two sides.
00:11:44 And so as they split apart further and further more often, not there's going to ever, well, literally anything that makes the news, there's going to be two complete at least two, but yeah, at least two completely different versions of reality, because that's where we're at. That's where we're at.
00:12:06 And if there is the opportunity, if there's an opportunity for there to be a star of the event, you know, someone that's going to get their 15 minutes of fame and apparently, half a million dollars, I know that's a perfect, perfect time for the half million dollar button thing.
00:12:24 My buttons are still not fixed. The buttons are still not fixed. When I'm gonna try, I'm gonna try to get everything all straightened out. This week, I've been doing a lot of shit and, well, in just the last couple days, I've been sleeping a lot to be try hoping this would go away anyway.
00:12:45 So the these events just keep happening with regularity. Now. I mean, in fact, even with Renee good, they raised a bunch of money for her lesbian wife and dog and whatever else. You know, I don't know how much money they break. Last time I checked, it was they, I mean, it was six figures too. Fact, let's take a look. Let's see where they're at. They might have been rapidly approaching a million. Let's see here.
00:13:38 Okay, go fund me. Yeah, well,
00:13:49 it has raised $1.5 million so Renee good has raised $1.5 million from over 38,000 donors. Probably some of those are people who fancy themselves right wingers, at least based on the rhetoric I've been hearing the last week from all these people simping For a psychotic lesbian. But there we are.
00:14:20 There we are. But I started thinking. I was like, this, this is like, it's a relatively new thing. I mean, maybe because the technology. But it's not like this happened, you know, like in the 90s, you know, for example, there wasn't, like, some big, polarizing event, and then all of a sudden someone has a million dollars in their bank account.
00:14:45 Like, where did this start? Exactly? And I don't know when it 100% started, but one of the major events like this, well, it was actual the job. George Zimmerman case, George Zimmerman with Trayvon Martin, he was right. He set up a website to and this is before, I think before GoFundMe might have even existed.
00:15:17 He set up a website to help with his legal fees. And this was kind of the beginning of this kind of a cycle that we see over and over and over again, where you had an event, you have the two polar opposite sides look at the exact same event and have two completely different reads on reality. By the way, this is your this. No country can exist for very long like this.
00:15:46 It's not possible.
00:15:49 It's just simply not possible. You can't have indefinitely two sets of realities existing in the same place. You just, it, just, it's, it doesn't last very long. There's this thing called entropy, which, by the way, there's web cycle entropy too. They can send super jets. But there's a thing called entropy where things inevitably fly apart, essentially, and, and that's, uh, I think it's, that's where we're that's where we're headed.
00:16:25 But anyway, this is one of the, the first times something like this had happened. You had a news report. First of all, all the reporting was fake and gay. They reported that George Zimmerman was a white person. He had a Jewish last name, or, I guess you could say maybe German, because he was adopted, but he was, he's Hispanic.
00:16:50 I forget exactly what kind of what kind of Mexican he is based some kind of Mexican, right? And they, CNN famously lightened up his photo when they showed his mug shot on TV, and they turned it into this big race thing that that he he was this psychotic white supremacist that went out and just shot some teenage kid for walking in his neighborhood. Now we're not going to relitigate all that.
00:17:19 Obviously, that was bullshit. Trayvon Martin was an animal that was put down just like the just as justifiably as the as the stupid lesbian the other day. Well, because of this polarization, it really struck a chord with a lot of people who were kind of getting fed up.
00:17:45 And you might even say, in some ways, this was the early stages of nigger fatigue, where people were starting to real, especially, you know, you had, you had a Obama as President. A lot of people that, I think that really gave that was a wake up call to a lot of white people in America.
00:18:10 There are always these candidates like Jesse Jackson that would run for president and never stood a fucking chance. And they're always, you know, these these black leaders that you'd have to listen to on news shows. But I don't think it really occurred to a lot of white people that there would ever be an actual black president until it happened.
00:18:43 And I think that really was probably the first step of, like the the racial awakening that we are now, hopefully in the middle of, or hopefully, hopefully it speeds up a little more, but at least it's, it's begun, right? It has begun. White people are more racially aware today than they have been my entire lifetime.
00:19:11 And I think that the really, the first step in that direction was this idea that, well, if, if we just elect a black guy, find those. They'll shut the fuck up. Like there was a certain amount of white people there were under the impression that, like, well, whatever fuck it, well, we'll let it. We'll let a black guy go be president.
00:19:34 How bad could it be? And then black people, I had a roommate, tell me this. He was like, well, the black people will finally see that there's nothing holding them back. They can be president if they want to, and they'll finally shut the fuck up. Well, then you quickly realize, no, they just they got actually more annoying and more oppressed somehow, that they had a black president. Yeah.
00:20:00 And so you kind of had already a few years of this. You had Obama, in fact, say that Trayvon Martin could have been his son. And and just everyone doubling down on this, this obvious justified homicide, right? And so he raised $200,000 through a website he set up using PayPal now, because, again, the tactics have never changed. What What has changed is the the the internet really.
00:20:43 And so when he was using PayPal to collect money for his legal defense, and leftist went to PayPal and said, you know, oh, you're doing this. He's a murderer. You can't allow him, you know, they try to, you know, they try to cancel him. They tried to get rid of the service.
00:21:02 And shockingly, because this was, like I said, the internet has has changed dramatically since then, PayPal said, Look, we don't, you know, we're just, we just process payments. You know, we're not, we're not taking a side here, whatever. And of course that would, that would later on, that would evolve and change as as these sorts of fundraising efforts would continue.
00:21:32 So I went through and I was trying to find other cases and in anything that was over like 50 grand. And sure enough, there was tons of and on the left and the right, this kind of thing was happening more and more and more, especially during, you know, once, once Trump was in office, and you had, well prior to that, you had the police officers, because of the success that Trayvon Martin or Zimmerman had, you had the police officers that were charged with the killing of let's see here. This is what made them in fact, this is what made them change.
00:22:18 GoFundMe changed their policy over this, but the the police officers charged in the Freddie Gray Death, oh, yes, there's, it's, it's hard to keep track of all these, right? It's hard to keep track of all these black people being black and getting shot because they're being black, and they can't just fucking exist in a civilized society, you know? And so, oh, that's the cops fault.
00:22:45 Yeah, there was, there were plenty of George Floyd's before George Floyd. This is something that will never go away. It'll literally, literally never stop until we get rid of black people. And so it's, that's the cost.
00:22:57 That's the one of the costs of having black people in your society is they are going to act like black people, and sometimes that leads to getting shot by cops, and then they burn down cities and chimp out until, I don't know, Bank of America gives them a few 100 million dollars or something like that, but you had them go to use their service. A
00:23:23 nd this time, GoFundMe did actually shut down the fundraisers. And this was back in 2015 2015 so I guess right before Trump, you had a similar flip off incident. A lot of people probably forgotten about when Trump was president, the first time there was a woman who just flipped off the motorcade as it drove by.
00:23:53 Crazy lefty, I think she worked in the federal government. She got fired and got $100,000 from a GoFundMe that was started for you also had McCabe. Remember Andrew McCabe? Remember when you know the first Trump administration was gonna drain the swamp and that they never did? Well? Andrew McCabe raised half a million dollars for his legal defense when all that was going on.
00:24:29 In fact, a lot of these people did. There's Andrew McCabe, there. Peter strzok, I think, got half a million dollars. And so it's it. This was just a way that, increasingly, you know, you had these events, it was like just, it was like rapid fire for a while, people going to go fund me, starting Go Fund Me, instantly, someone's got half a million dollars. And then, of course, you had the Kyle Rittenhouse fundraiser got shut down. And.
00:25:00 That's when you start having these alternatives pop up, like, give, send, go. Is, I think, the one that Kyle Renton house went with, right? Eventually they go fund me guy, yeah, this one was pretty crazy. You might have forgotten this one already, the freedom truck rally thing in Canada, they raised close to $10 million 10 million fucking dollars, and then they shut it down and locked the funds.
00:25:30 And I don't think any of that money actually ever got to anybody. Let me see. I had the story up here a minute ago. Let me see if there's an update on that. Here we are. Now.
00:25:46 This is a an older, older article. I don't know if they might Excuse me. I don't have the update here. Here we go. The fundraising website. Go Fund Me has taken down a page accepting donations in support of truck drivers protesting against vaccine mandates in Canada, adding that it would refund all donations.
00:26:08 The instantly refunded everything the freedom convoy 2022 began as a movement against a Canadian vaccine requirement for cross border truckers, but has turned into a rallying point against public health measures in Canada, and has also gained increasing support among Republicans, including Donald Trump.
00:26:26 Some US Republicans vowed to investigate go fund me's move, which they obviously never really did. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, Oh, of course, said on Saturday it was fraud for GoFundMe to commandeer $9 million dollars and $9 million that's a lot of fucking money in donations sent to the convoy in support of the truck drivers, and said he would work on his State's Attorney General, Ashley moody, to investigate these donors should be given a refund.
00:26:54 I mean, they, I think they refunded the donors, but that money didn't get, you know, didn't get anywhere. So that's pretty crazy. $9 million not really going to where it was supposed to go. You also had Daniel Penny. Daniel Penny's the guy that took down the crazy nigger on the subway. And he got about 3 million, I think in in crowd raised funds. I think that was give, send, go, most likely you also had a GoFundMe.
00:27:34 Actually did shut down a lefty one, finally, because it was for Luigi Mangione, or Mangione, or, I don't know, whatever spaghetti nig pronunciation is appropriate there, yeah, because at that point it's starting to basically reward murder and not Like in a in a cop, you know, law enforcement kind of activities kind of a thing, but like, just straight up assassination.
00:28:08 Now, this is kind of what I predicted a long time ago in day of the rope. I kind of saw this coming back then when I wrote that book as the future of vigilantism, that the only thing preventing this from actually working in this way is the infrastructure for it doesn't exist yet, but that it probably will in some form, probably using crypto.
00:28:44 Now, the the make believe thing that I came up with, you know, I was pretty loosey goosey with the details, because I didn't, I don't know enough about the technology, but the basic idea was, you would have some kind of blockchain that would be able to understand whether or not a particular contract, just as an example. Again, this is, this is all fictional. Those who've read the book, you know.
00:29:15 But the idea is, let's say there's a very unpopular person that is not facing justice for some reason. Well, rather than do what was done here with GoFundMe, where you just wait around for someone to mind, read what what should be done, and then doing it, and then post hoc rewarding them.
00:29:43 Rather, it was a proactive system where, if, where, basically you crowdfund vigilante actions prior to them being performed, and that once performed, you. I The person who performed them, if they could prove in some way that they had done that the funds would then be released to them.
00:30:09 So in a weird way, it was kind of like, well, in the book, in the fictional book, by the way, fictional, not not real life, not a suggestion, but in the fictional book, it was crowdsourcing assassinations in some instances, so that you weren't just hoping that someone would do the thing that you wanted and then throw money at them after they did, but that you could actually create the incentive beforehand and and basically crowdsource your
00:30:49 Well, I mean, is what some might describe as terrorism, but yeah, I mean, like, that's, that's that's kind of like, what, what I describe in the book, because I think in some ways, once that technology exists for that, that's kind of what will happen, and it's because of what you're seeing now where, why do you, for example, why do you think this sort of stuff happens now, where you get people like Shiloh Hendricks, who, you know, basically just stands up to some third world maggot in our country trying to ruin her life.
00:31:34 She calls him a nigger, and then she gets rich. Or on the other side of the fence, you have the the black people who hate white people, and so as soon as one of their people kills an innocent white person, they throw money at him that they're that his family blows all on stupid shit, like sneakers, Probably.
00:31:58 And right now in fact, and this is interesting, the currently, the ice agent who shot Renee good, who, again, like I've said before, is no hero to me. He's got a Filipino wife who he's my my understanding is at least he's chain migrating her family over here. So he's kind of he's no winner for me. But weirdly, again, last time I checked, at least go fund me still has not taken down his his campaign.
00:32:42 Now that might be because, like I said, I think it could be because they're afraid of the Trump administration and but who knows.
00:32:50 Who knows exactly now, one of the things that, like I said, though, one of the reasons why I was starting to think, like this years ago, that this sort of thing would evolve into a proactive way for the public to get what they want. Is because increasingly, as we're seeing with the the Trump administration right now, people are starting to realize that their their vote does not seem to matter, that they, they vote for the guy and they they pay not just the the the social price of supporting this person publicly.
00:33:37 You know, this creates problems with people at work, within their families. But also, there's real world consequences to this person being president, and you know, like, for example, possibly throwing us in a war with Iran, creating all these, anti semitism laws, or at least the groundwork for a lot of that stuff that is likely to evolve.
00:34:08 And so you have a lot of people who supported Trump who are unhappy with, you know, you know the whole it's like the second time now that they've been burned by this guy, they can't imagine there being a more extreme candidate. I mean, this was to the left, at least, this was like electing Hitler.
00:34:29 And so at a certain point, people are going to start to feel like they're the political process is not delivering results, and in a way, in a manner of speaking, that's kind of what explains these campaigns, because these campaigns only exist in response to what they perceive as something unfair that's happening within the system, and that's both sides.
00:35:00 Rights. So whether it's, you know, the guy flipping off Trump getting in trouble at work, and so people feel like, well, that's unfair. I don't trust the system to treat this guy the way that he should be treated.
00:35:13 And so I'm going to throw money at this. And now, you know, next thing you know, he's got, you know, half a million dollars. Same thing with with, you know, Kyle Rittenhouse. Kyle Rittenhouse, if you were in a if you lived in a country, you know, the people that donated to Kyle rittenhouse's fund, if they lived in a country where they suspected that he would actually get a fair shake, that they would look at this situation and view it the same way they do.
00:35:47 There would be no need for this kind of crowdfunding, because you wouldn't have the situation that we do have, where an event happens and both sides look at it, and there's two completely different versions of reality. And because of that, necessarily, you have to pay, you have to basically with money, try to overcome the fact that that you have an enemy that's working against you.
00:36:21 So it's people that are basically just, they're, in a way, they're funding a proxy war. Every time one of these events happen and they get behind one of these characters, they're essentially funding a proxy war. So naturally, you know, the next step is, I mean, if you think about just geopolitically, what the United States has done in terms of supporting, you know, terrorists around the world that are enemies of, you know, regimes that They want to topple.
00:37:00 So they'll support straight up terrorists, because the enemy of my enemy is my friend, right?
00:37:06 Well, eventually that evolved into, well, why? Why should we just support terrorists? You know that we don't know they could totally backfire well, and does often backfires on us. Why do that?
00:37:20 When we can just make the terrorists, we could just create, you know, a which also ends up backfiring the United States all the time too, but yeah, at least then they feel like they have some kind of control over the direction that it goes into. And I again, I don't think the technology exists, but I think the second that the technology does exist, the the next evolution of this kind of proxy war shit that you're seeing between the two sides. Because it's really, it's, it's little, it's, it's very low investment.
00:38:03 It's, it's, it's perfectly tailor made for the lazy do nothing Americans. I mean, in a way, it's kind of gamifying it, you know, it's almost like an in app purchase, like it really is, if you think of it that way. It's like a political war or civil war in app purchase, right? You pay like when they it's like when they release a new video game.
00:38:30 And if you just pay for the game, like you have to sit there and fucking play it for eight hours before you unlock like, the guns that actually matter. Or you could just pay like, another 30 bucks, and then you have, like, all the guns and, you know, whatever, right? And people, that's already how they think about this stuff. You know, they already think about, like, freemium games, right?
00:38:53 Like they, you know, remember Candy Crush like, oh, it's, it's literally impossible to pass this level. But if you, if you pay, you know, $3 or whatever, then you'll get, like, these little unlocks that let you pass the level. And so people already kind of think this way, and in a way, this crowdsourcing, you know, the way, even the way that it is now, where it's retroactive, it is like, it's like buying those extra skins.
00:39:20 It's like buying the unlocks. It's just an in app purchase. It's DLC, and so that's that's how it is now, retroactively, once the technology exists to make it anonymous, because obviously it would have to be, because if it wasn't anonymous, then you would be on the hook for whatever, whatever this, whatever you're funding, right at that point it becomes like conspiracy, like, that's like, you know, big that's like treason, big dick charges you're gonna be getting. So they'd have to have some very, very secure, decentralized, anonymous way of.
00:39:59 Funding this kind of thing. And also, in order for it to actually get done, you'd have, you'd have the same thing, you'd have to have some very anonymous, secure way that you're actually getting paid. If you're, you're the you're the free agent. We'll just say that's, that's, you know, working for the the cause, you're the mercenary, in a way. But I kind of feel like, you know, at a certain point in, you know, unless everything, unless everything else, you know, if everything else goes off the rails before that, we'll never even get to that point.
00:40:37 But at least with our current trajectory, that's kind of where we're headed. And it's, it's pretty easy to see, because, like, you know what? When you see things like, like the Kyle Rittenhouse situation, for example, you know, he received, I don't know what it was exactly, but I think it was in the millions.
00:41:02 And then you look at, you know, like I said, enter McKay, we gets $500,000 it's basically, not only is it, is it downloading DLC and trying, you know, trying to promote things, you know, with your money, it's also, in a way, it's giving people an opportunity to make them feel like they're sacrificing something, you know, like they've got some skin in the game. You know, it's all, it's always like people don't appreciate like, it could be the same thing. But if it's free, versus even if you just charge $1 for for it, they'll actually value.
00:41:40 Value it more than, yeah, if you charge $1 for, you know, let's, I don't know, some kind of something that you would normally give away free, I don't, I don't know, like, okay, like the mini bar in a hotel. By charging for the items in the mini bar, it actually makes people like them more. Yeah, like they might complain they have to pay for the stuff in any bar, but they actually appreciate it more. They actually value it more.
00:42:10 Maybe not appreciate it. They value it more. So they'll value, they'll value they'll feel like they're participating in some meaningful way. And they'll actually value them the movement they'll be, you know, invested, actually invested into it. It just makes sense.
00:42:27 I mean, that's why, for example, traditionally, you know, people want, I think in some way psychologically, that's why women want you to spend a lot of money on their fucking, you know, wedding ring, for example, because it's showing that you're willing to put that kind of money into it, as you know, that you're putting, like, your money where your mouth is essentially anyway. But it's also it signifies, like, I mean, what?
00:42:59 Again, like I said, the only reason why people are having to do this in the first place is because they don't think that the system itself is capable of solving the problems anymore. You know when, when someone, when you start looking at crowdsourcing for legal battles or personal causes?
00:43:18 You know it doesn't have to be a legal battle in the case of, I mean, I think Charlotte Hendrix might eventually, I don't know the current status is, she might face some kind of charge or something at some point. But that wasn't really what it was about when people were saying her money.
00:43:34 It wasn't even about, you know, trying to defend her in any kind of legal sense. It was more just like, Here you go. You You said what everyone else was thinking. You had the balls to actually just say it and not give a fuck. And so that's why I'm sending you money, right?
00:43:49 And and I think that that's you only get to that place when you're so frustrated with the way things are, that that you feel like there's such an injustice in the status quo that that's that that's the only thing that's going to drive money out of your pocket and into the pocket of someone else who simply just said, Fuck you nigger, or whatever it was. She said, right?
00:44:18 And I think that more and more they do, people are funding these, these causes as a form of vigilante justice, or of resistance or bypassing the the official, the official channels. And this kind of activity, this kind of activity. Is this precisely the kind of activity you see, you know, prior to actual civil wars, you know, when, when, when, in fact, I mean, if you want a real, like an analog, you could say.
00:45:00 I, I was looking, I was looking up for examples of this. And one example that came up, and I'm not like a big, yeah, I don't know much about Spain, Spanish history, but one of the examples given was Spain before 1936 distrust and centralized authority led to grassroots funding of militias.
00:45:22 And that's, that's the kind of thing that you, you would, you would probably see in 1936 before the internet, is people actually funding militias. But as technology is has made crowdsourcing, even, you know, much easier. I think this is the way it's manifesting right now. But anyway, it also you have a a,
00:45:51 almost like, it's like, it's like, almost like paying for, like, a membership for your side, like it makes people really dig in. You know, it's like, not only do people appreciate things more that they when they pay money for it, but it also it does make it is going to make people more polarized, because, in a sense, they're kind of paying a membership fee for it. And so I think you've kind of got that effect going on and it again.
00:46:22 I think it'll, it'll probably, it'll probably evolve into something crazier once the second the technology exists for it anyway. So I just thought that was interesting. I saw this going on. I just like, Man, this is, it seems like every every week we have, and it wasn't like that before, but every week now, it seems like, oh, there's this GoFundMe now. Now there's someone's got half my half million fucking makes you wonder where all this money is coming from, too.
00:46:53 There's a lot of money. Some of these, some of these campaigns that make a lot of fucking money, also in the news today was, Oh, my God, infinite pause or indefinite pause, Trump halts visas from Russia, Brazil, Egypt, Thailand and 71 other countries and a massive immigration crackdown.
00:47:22 There's a lot of people talking about how this is, oh, he, you know, I think what the talking point was, he is effectively created or stopped legal immigration Well, except for very notably missing from that list of countries that he stopped this, this immigration without a visa. Missing was India and China, the two, the two countries where it actually fucking matters. So, yeah, the people are still flowing.
00:48:00 Also I found this story. Now this is actually a story about a leftist but as you know, people are more and more worried that the kind of fascism that we're going to see first in America is going to be quite literally Jewish fascism, and that is actually, you know, the kind of thing that you that you're seeing already in Australia, where they're cracking down and on the the Joel Davis and Thomas souls of the world and try to make it illegal to participate in their political activities.
00:48:38 And, you know, obviously we've got that, that sort of stuff already going on in the UK and in Europe. Or you can go to jail simply by, you know, making a tweet or whatever. And we've, we've sort of had the beginning stages of that in America, where, if you were not, well, actually, I think some of these people were citizens, right, the people that they were deporting, but the, or maybe they were all here on student visas.
00:49:09 I don't know if any ended up being citizens. But, you know, getting deporting people for anti semitism, essentially, and people getting worried that, you know, where is that going to lead? Well, we have our first case that, at least that I'm aware of now, of cops sent by a Jewish mayor to harass someone, and I think the Mayor is Republican.
00:49:35 Let me look here. Here's the news story, essentially, again, this woman's not on our side at all. She's a leftist, but she posted on Facebook a pretty tame post, essentially just, you know, complaining about the mayor, and the mayor said. Police to her house.
00:50:01 So the same kind of thing that we see in the UK, and we're like, Haha, that would never happen here. It's, well, it's, it's, apparently it's, it's happening
CBS Anchorman
00:50:13 here now. Then a Miami Beach woman says she is outraged after police showed up at her door. They had questions for former political candidate Raquel Pacheco, they were asking about a Facebook post that she made criticizing Miami Beach's mayor. CBS News, my name is Abby. Dodge is your reporter in Miami Beach tonight. Abby, what was in this post that prompted officers to show up and knock on her door like that?Abby Dodge - Reporter
00:50:37 Well, Raquel Pacheco wrote a critical comment about the mayor after he posted a photo saying that the city was welcoming to everyone she didn't expect, then that her comment would lead to a police investigation.Raquel Pacheco
00:50:51 Am I being charged with the crime? Okay, so you're here to investigate a statement that I allegedly made on Facebook.Abby Dodge - Reporter
00:51:00 Raquel Pacheco, a former candidate for Miami Beach City Commission and Florida Senate, started recording when officers showed up at her door Monday. She says she's still emotionally distraught about what happened next.Raquel Pacheco
00:51:13 My overwhelming feeling was that freedom of speech, as I know it, died at my friend's step yesterday, and that was just such an incredibly sad it still makes me sad. It's an incredibly, incredibly sad thingRichard Jager - Police Officer
00:51:29 is that your account, Raquel Pacheco
00:51:33 I refuse to answer questions without my lawyer00:51:35 present
Abby Dodge - Reporter
00:51:36 officers then read Pacheco Facebook comment, she says, in part, the guy who consistently calls for the death of Palestinians tried to shut down a theater for showing a movie that hurt his feelings and refuses to stand up for the LGBTQ community in any way. Officers then explained why they came to Richard Jager - Police Officer
00:51:55 we're just trying to prevent somebody else getting00:51:59 agitated or or agreeing with the statement. We're not saying it's true or not
Raquel Pacheco
00:52:03 anyone who reads that statement. I don't know how you can take that as a as an incitement to violence of any type.Abby Dodge - Reporter
00:52:09 I called the mayor's communication staff multiple times and stopped by City Hall. The Mayor's office did not provide anyone to speak with me and said the mayor was not in the building. Pacheco has hired a lawyer, and together they made public information requests. She says she wants to know what led up to the officers at her door.Raquel Pacheco
00:52:27 We're traveling down a very, very slippery road here, and my goal here is not just to make it stop for me, obviously, butDevon Stack
00:52:34 it's so Anyway, she's Look, she's a stupid leftist. She's not even American. She shouldn't even be here. Neither should the mayor. His name is Steven Minor. Minor, I hardly know her now, Steven minor, who's actually a Jew from New York, and Republican mayor of Miami Beach. 00:52:59 And yeah, he he gets made fun of on Facebook about supporting genocide in Gaza, and they send the cops out to her. And she was a mayoral, uh, candidate at some point, so she's not even just like some random bitch. So this is the kind of thing I think that we're going to also see more of we're going to see more of Jews flexing as often as they possibly can and and testing the waters.
00:53:32 And maybe this was even a calculated move, maybe because she is a lefty, because she's Brown, because she's into the fag shit that you're not going to have a whole lot of sympathy as someone on the right hearing about her getting harassed by the, you know, by the junior mayor. And this is the kind of person that like, again, people will celebrate that. Oh, look, you know, they're, they're giving her the business, they're giving her the business, when eventually that will expand to include people like us.
00:54:10 So I haven't seen anyone really talk about this. It's not a huge deal, but it's, it's not a good sign. It's not a good sign when we start to look like those fucking Muppets in the UK, when they send the cops out to people. All right. Now, another thing I want to cover, and I actually haven't even watched this yet, because I didn't have time to watch this, so we're going to watch this together.
00:54:46 But I was very it was in my list of things to watch, simply because I was real interested in this story, and I hadn't seen the actual footage of it yet. But back in. 2023 I believe?
00:55:04 Well, we'll find out if I'm how right I am about this. What I understand casinos are already using AI to identify people, and if, for example, it's kind of like that stream we did where we talked about the Walmart license plate reader cameras, and how even if you drive to Walmart and pay in cash, it knows by the way you're walking, and it does like facial recognition knows who you are and and it doesn't matter that you use a card. It can even tell by you know, if your phone pings, like their Wi Fi hotspot or whatever you know, like there's all these data points they can use to identify who you are.
00:55:52 And obviously, if Walmart's using that kind of technology, casinos have been using it for a lot longer now, with this particular case, a casino, and again, we'll find out how right I am about this. From what I understand, a casino, he was using facial recognition AI software, and they had trespassed someone in the in the past. In other words, they had kicked someone off of the property.
00:56:22 That doesn't necessarily mean that they dealing wrong. By the way, a lot of the casinos, if you are winning too much, will kick you out of the casino and ban you from the casino, and you have been officially trespassed, which means you're not allowed legally, you're not allowed to re enter that casino, even if, even if, the only reason why they did that was because you were winning too much.
00:56:46 It happens all the time, actually, and so anyway, their AI software thought that some that someone they had trespassed before, had gone back onto their property, and so it alerted the the the AI alerted the authorities, and they the authorities went down and arrested the guy who the AI said that it was and turns out, at least again, we'll watch this together. Turns out it wasn't that guy.
00:57:20 So the cops, just because AI told them to, went to some guys, I think his work, and just, or maybe is this house we'll find out here in a second, they just arrested some random dude that never that wasn't that casino at all because AI told them to. And increasingly, I think this is the kind of shit that we're going to be seeing.
Narrator
00:57:43 2023 the pepper mill casino calls the Reno police department to report that a trespasser has unlawfully returned to the casino. They report that they have the man in custody, but he's claiming to go by an entirely different name than the man they've previously trespassed. Officer Richard Jagger arrives at the casino at 5:48am ThankDevon Stack
00:58:08 God you're here. The man declaring his okay, I guess I was wrong. So it they had trespassed someone before, and then this guy just goes to the casino and the security ties them up, which I don't know how, that's how that apparently, they're allowed to do this because casino security, it's they seem to have a lot more leeway than they, I feel like they should. But they, they detain him, which, again, I don't know how that's legal. They detain him and tell the cops show up, and he's just like, What the fuck guys? I just I just came hereNarrator
00:58:44 his relief at the sight of the officer is 40 year old Jason Killinger, who is accused of trespassing at the pepper mill Casino.Richard Jager - Police Officer
00:58:51 So what's going on?Casino Security
00:58:58 Prior Trespasser, okay, and made contact that wasn't him or not.Richard Jager - Police Officer
00:59:11 So what's the issue, you guys? Did he have a different driver's license or a secondary one, or she got more property than just this one? Casino Security
00:59:20 Just that one second.Richard Jager - Police Officer
00:59:30 You guys ran this information through our dispatch three years. Dispatch, no hours, you know, comes back as that being who he says he is on his ID. But you know, that's what we went that's what we went, off right there.00:59:45 And this is one of those things. You guys have this fancy software that does all this stuff, so it's like,
Casino Security
00:59:50 officer, what you need. Richard Jager - Police Officer
00:59:51 One second man, Narrator
00:59:53 a few months earlier, a man named Michael had been trespassed from the casino for sleeping on the premises. All right, man,Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:00:01 so this is who you01:00:02 are, yes, what your Jagger is your first name or last name, last name, all right?
Jason Killinger
01:00:07 Mr. Jagger, yes, that is who I am. I drive the semis for UPS. I am not Mike. I don't know nothing about Mike. I'm a craps player. Here, look, there's my socks for Okay, UPS. Can you please? You got a gun? Take me all these cuffs my shoulder. Don't kill him. Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:00:07 You're gonna01:00:08 sit there for a minute, man. So when he gave you this information, did you guys verify it against an ID? Or how does that work?
Casino Security
01:00:33 So in that report there, there's an ID on there as well, and show you that one.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:00:38 Okay? Narrator
01:00:39 Jason, a long combination vehicle driver, had been playing craps until about 3am when he decided to leave the pepper mill and go to the Atlantis Casino. On his way out, he stopped at a blackjack machine and started playing there he was approached by a security guard who addressed him as Mike. When Jason clarified that he was not Mike and presented the guard with his driver's license, the guard apologized and walked away. However, as Jason attempted to leave, he was surrounded by security guards and handcuffed. He was told that he was under arrest for trespassing.Devon Stack
01:01:11 The AI said that Mike, that makes it even funnier. It's Mike. What's going on? Mike, so the because this is what it's gonna be like, though, not just with law enforcement. This is what's gonna be like for everything. Because they're, you're importing all these people. 01:01:34 That's the whole idea, right? Okay, well, they may, maybe they're not as competent as, you know, the heritage Americans. So what we're going to do is we're just going to get all these, these Indians and Chinese people, and we'll augment them with AI and with AI, they'll be competent enough to do the things that the white people used to do me.
Casino Security
01:01:57 So that's the ID that he presented all be open the nose. Yeah,Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:02:13 weird, very weird stuff. A picture of that, I'll run both namesNarrator
01:02:20 the casino's AI facial recognition software positively identified Jason as Michael, the man they had trespassed.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:02:26 When you step out this way, I get better reception.01:02:30 Lift him up and see how tall he is. He's five, and that says six one.
Narrator
01:02:41 Yeah, this isn't the only difference between Michael and Jason's IDs. Jason is listed as seven years younger than Michael and says that he weighs 50 pounds more as well. The signatures are different. In his report, Officer Jagger wrote quote the associated demographics on each driver's license were fairly similar, with the only major distinction being Hazel and blue eyes, which are, by their very nature, similar eye colors and are dependent upon lighting pictures.Devon Stack
01:03:09 The AI says that you're, this is who you are. This has to be who you are.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:03:13 There's our very, I mean, the nose, right? Casino Security
01:03:15 And then we have our new system, our new facial recognition system, and that's what it's telling us, that it's looking at it, and it's doing that. And then there was another one that came up when he was at the rtrk, which is one of our better cameras. Yeah, this was right before we arrested him. We looked at it and said, That's him. And it came up 100%Devon Stack
01:03:39 guys, you have to be him, because the AI saysRichard Jager - Police Officer
01:03:43 so the software saying that it's legit.Casino Security
01:03:46 So he pretty damn accurate.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:03:49 So either he prevented presented a fake, a fake identification the first time, or he's presented now, even if he had twin, like a twin, it wouldn't be 100% on the facial right?Casino Security
01:04:02 I wouldn't think so, but I don't know, because they say twin,Devon Stack
01:04:04 actually it would if it's an identical twin, you dumb,Casino Security
01:04:08 share DNA, right? But I guess it depends upon ifRichard Jager - Police Officer
01:04:11 they're identical. I've seen identical twins where it's like even, I mean, moms can tell them apart.Casino Security
01:04:18 That kind of made us feel suspicious or US managers was right after our officers made contact and they saw the ID that he's presenting today. Okay, it's not the same guy. He immediately gets up and starts cashing out, like running through the door. I'm like, Okay, if it really wasn't him, WhyDevon Stack
01:04:36 is he running? Because you're fucking harassing him. I'd fucking leave too. If I kept having all these security guards keep like, hassling me, I'd be like, All right, I'm out of here.Narrator
01:04:46 Jason would later explain that earlier that night, he played at the legends Bay casino, the nugget casino and the El Dorado casino, before arriving at the pepper mill around 11:30pm he claimed that each time he was up, $200 he would move on. To a new casino, and just before his arrest, he had made $200 he also estimated that prior to the 16th he had gambled hundreds of times at the pepper mill without incident. After speaking with the pepper mill employee, Officer Jagger, calls to check the police records,Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:05:15 I have a precarious situation trying to positively identify somebody who may may or may have or may be using a fake ID. So I've got two names, two Nevada drivers license numbers and all that. If there's a chance, I could have you run both and see if any of them come back, and maybe send me pictures in an email of what their IDs come back as. That is super weird. Do you see resemblance in those? Yeah, that is01:05:55 that's super weird.
Devon Stack
01:06:01 Cops are not the smartest people on Earth. So yeah, they, let's hear this goes on for a while where the cops just like, I don't know most people. Let's solve let's see what. Let's see whereRichard Jager - Police Officer
01:06:24 he's got two different driver's licenses that are registered with the Department of Motor Vehicles with different names and dates of birth. So yeah, I guess I'll arrest him on that.Devon Stack
01:06:36 And then that must be, that must be what happened, right? It must be. It can't possibly be the AI's wrong. The AI is never wrong.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:06:45 Just list him as a Jane John Doe, and then have him booked in for a wins check. Alrighty. Well, that solves that. So you guys got a complaint? All that good stuff already done, easy peasy. So right now, because I can't identify you. Man, it's weird, because essentially it looks like you have two names I don't know. Man, so I can't identify you. Fortunately, that means that they can't cite you.Narrator
01:07:26 Officer Jagger collects Jason's things, which includes his driver's license, a pepper mill players card in the name Jason killing her, and a debit card from his credit union in the name of Jason killing her.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:07:36 You can't be cited. Then you are arrested. Jason Killinger
01:07:40 So I'm arrested. Yep, I'm going to jail. Yep, are you kidding me? Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:07:45 I'm not a joker man. So you'll be arrested, and you'll get fingerprinted up at the jail, and then they'll be able to discern your identity. And what the mix up is, with this stuff, I'll be 100% honest, could legitimately be you have a doppelganger one around, but they are strikingly similar, and enough they're fancy AI technology that reads faces, no it says it's a 100% match. But at this point, our hands are tied because,Devon Stack
01:08:21 because the computer says that's what it's gonna be, that's what it's gonna be. Well, the computer says this. The computer says this, so we're just fucked. Sorry, guys,Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:08:35 a reasonable and prudent person would based off the software, based off the pictures, based off of even your driver's license picture, make the reasonable conclusion that all three are the same person, just two different IDs or two differentJason Killinger
01:08:49 names the back of the IDs, because I have all the endorsements, except for motorcycle and has that, okay, other than that, I got all the endorsement.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:08:56 But that's the thing is, here's the CDL, so that's, that's the thing is, it's either someone else is using your stuff or you're using somebody else's stuff, and unfortunately, you look too much like the guy in that picture, so much so that the fancy computer that does all the face scanning of everybody who walks in this casino makes the same determination that my feeble human brain does so, oh,Devon Stack
01:09:21 the feeble human brain. Wow. So I wonder, I wonder if this guy got a loss out of it. Let's see.Jason Killinger
01:09:41 Here. I've never been arrested, not once. Good is the ID. Then why do I even carry that mother, that one young security guard, man like a robot? That's what pisses me off, is because they don't think, you know, it's like, well, this is what I was taught, use your head. It.Devon Stack
01:10:01 You see, there's a there's a theme here. There's a theme the AI is going to be doing all the thinking for everybody,Jason Killinger
01:10:09 and then people aren't smart enough to think for themselves. They're just notRichard Jager - Police Officer
01:10:14 Fortunately, it's the worldDevon Stack
01:10:19 we live in. It's just the world we live in. Guys, sorry.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:10:28 All goes well. You should be out of those cuffs in the next hopefully eight to 10 minutes.Jason Killinger
01:10:33 Okay, good. All because it looks like me was sleeping in the casino. It's not me,Narrator
01:10:39 despite Jason's continued protests, Officer Jagger hands him off to the jail staff. Jason's fingerprints were soon submitted for analysis.Richard Jager - Police Officer
01:10:53 So it's one of those ones, like, I genuinely like, I kind of believe him.Narrator
01:11:01 Yeah, it wasn't long before the fingerprint analysis conclusively established that Jason had been telling the truth all along, and he was, in fact, Jason, killing her same day.Devon Stack
01:11:12 I'll be I hope he got to sue the casino around 4pmNarrator
01:11:16 Jason was released from the jail on his own recognizance the day after his release, on September 18, 2023 he went to renowned Urgent Care Vista, where he was diagnosed with a strain of both the right and left shoulder and contusions on both wrists.Devon Stack
01:11:32 That's that's how you get the lawsuit going. Good, good thinking there. Jason the 30th.Narrator
01:11:37 2025 Jason filed a complaint in federal court against Reno Police Officer Richard Jagger, while at the jail and after his identity had been confirmed, his arrest papers were changed from John Doe to Jason Killinger. The federal complaint states that this meant Jason would be prosecuted for trespassing, even though Michael had been the only one who was trespassed, according to the complaint, Jason's charge of trespassing was eventually dismissed, however, he now has a criminal record. According to the complaint,01:12:06 facial recognition,
Devon Stack
01:12:07 it's such a fucking cluster fuck,Narrator
01:12:09 technology has led to wrongful arrests in Louisiana, New Jersey, Maryland and Texas, many cities now conclude that for an arrest there has to be some kind of secondary corroborating evidence that is anyway.Devon Stack
01:12:22 So that's the kind of fucking bullshit. That's the bullshit future you're gonna live in, right there. Anyway, guys, yeah, sorry, sorry, it's gonna be a short one tonight. Like I said, I'm I'm still fucked up. My beaver even came back a little bit today. So I don't know. I don't know. I don't know I was feeling better, like, like yesterday. 01:12:51 I was like, I was like, convinced. I was like, ah, that's, it's, it's finally gone. It's fine. And I'm not, to be honest, I'm actually, I'm not coughing as much as I as I thought I was going to so, but you can probably hear from my voice, I'm still a little chewed up. Anyway, let's take a look at entropy.
01:13:10 If it's still working, I'm gonna go to double check the old ones here. Hate that. I have to do that, but that's what you gotta do. Entropy. Entropy, okay, here we go. All right, what's today? The 14th? All right, here we are. So we got one from this is why you gotta do it. One from Oh phase.
01:13:50 Oh phase says replay gang, any update on potential stream time changes from last stream, people worried about police overreach or whatever. Police militarization is just a product of our demographic reality. Child beating got what she deserved. Every cop would be like Mr. Rogers if we were 90% white. Yeah. I mean, that's the thing is, it's we look it's going to be bad for us too, like that.
01:14:20 I want to underscore I am not saying, you know this, this cop is awesome, he's, he's, he's not, he's not awesome. And unfortunately, we have to pay the price for the the the non whites, making everything more dangerous for them, and making them, you know, make requiring that we have more thug like policemen.
01:14:46 That's just the way that it is. But, yeah, it's obviously she, you know, she was, she's an enemy, and so I'm not sad at all that she got. Killed. Then we got Simbey. Simbey says, nothing else to say, so here's enough to buy a pound of ground beef. Well, there you go. All right. Well, I appreciate that. Excuse me. Then we got hammer.
01:15:14 Thorzine says Reno PD is a parade of losers. Well, it's funny because there's that. There was that show, right? Reno, 911, back in the day, there was like the mockumentary style comedy, but it was somewhat, somewhat funny sometimes. Now, the same officer, Jagger, was hit in the knee by another cop's taser, which caused him to accidentally shoot an unarmed suspect. You got to be fucking kidding me.
01:15:44 Sounds like bullshit. He still cut out. Wait, hold on. Are you serious that that actually happened? Oh, my God, it actually happened. Hold on, guys. Good old Officer. Officer Jaeger, Officer Jagermeister over here. Pop this up so people know I'm not full of shit here. Ai enhanced officer Jaeger, or Jagger, I guess, is what he how he pronounces it.
01:16:28 Well, let's see here. Look at the story. Reno Police Department Officer Richard Jagger is how he calls it. Was cleared of any criminal wrongdoing in the 20 This is before he did this, before this event. 2020 officer involved shooting the arena. Police Officer accidentally shot an unarmed suspect in 2020 when he flinched and pulled the trigger on his service revolver in an inadvertent response to being struck by a taser fired by another officer.
01:17:03 A prosecutor said Tuesday WashU County District Attorney Chris Hicks cleared the officer of any criminal wrongdoing with the release of a report on the investigation of the non fatal officer involved shooting Lisa didn't kill anyone the neighboring sparks Police Department led the investigation the suspect, Christopher Sheehan, doesn't even sound like a black guy. Let's see if we can find a picture of this guy. I
01:17:46 that, no, I can't beat him.
01:17:51 If this is the guy, oh, you know, we might be able to get body cam footage of the shooting. Hold on a sec. This could be funny. Ah, Officer Yeager, it's just not your day, is it? Why is this not popping up here?
Speaker 1
01:18:18 What's the name? Again? Christopher Sheehan, I'm findingDevon Stack
01:18:24 all kinds of weird stuff. Actually. Apparently there's like, some, oh, you know what? That's because there's a, this can't be the same guy, though, right? No, it is. Oh, I've seen, you know? I feel like I think I've seen this. So there was the you guys might have seen this before. There was that roided out Navy SEAL guy that was free. That's why they shot him, because he was freaking them the fuck out. 01:19:12 Let me see if I can get this downloaded here. I remember, I think I've seen this video, but I didn't realize fucking Reno cost. Apparently, Reno 911, was not a mockumentary, it was a documentary. See this little download. It's getting weirder and harder to download YouTube videos lately. There we go. That's actually working pretty good. I was supposed to have my fast internet, but they fucked up. I'm still on slow internet right now. Well. There we are. So this is, I'm pretty sure the event.
01:20:17 This no where the fucking go. Hang on a second, guys,
01:20:32 finalizing or something. Here we go. Yeah, so you guys might have seen this. I feel like this has popped up in my algorithm before. I It's like some Navy SEAL guy, like freaking the fuck out. So that's that's the guy they shot,
Narrator
01:20:49 the brother of an officer and military veteran.Navy Seal Guy
01:20:52 I'm gonna walk to the hospital with my dog now. Get the out of here all of you. Now, if I asked you guys nicely, I'm gonna tell you guys right now. Whoever you go toe to toe with me, head to head. Push up the push up. Let's get it going. Facing the West, right here, facing that. I'm not saying I'm yoked. Okay. Back up and stay. You scared. You're scared. You're scared. 01:21:18 Are you scared or not? Be honest there to me, I'm scared of me. I said one man, and his name is, do you want to know what his name is? Can I do a push up? You guys will shoot me in the back. You promise me I'm listen. I'm a man. Chris, do you remember I'm a man, right? I'm a man.
Elliot Goodrich
01:21:40 Chris, your memory. 01:21:41 We talked at Sports West.
Navy Seal Guy
01:21:43 What's your name? Elliot Goodrich
01:21:43 It's good, Rich. Good rich. Navy Seal Guy
01:21:45 What's your last name? Elliot Goodrich
01:21:46 It's Eliot. Elliot.Navy Seal Guy
01:21:50 What Elliot? Goodrich. 01:21:52 When's your birthday? What's your number? Your birthday?
Elliot Goodrich
01:21:56 Chris, what's going on tonight?Devon Stack
01:21:59 This fucking psycho. Where do they shoot him at? Where's the power they shoot him?Navy Seal Guy
01:22:12 Shot dog. Get the out of my apartment. That is my place. Elliot Goodrich
01:22:18 Agreed? I Chris ambulance right there, my friend.Navy Seal Guy
01:22:25 Where's my dog? Where's my dog? Devon Stack
01:22:28 Wait, did they already shoot him? I don't see him shooting him anywhere here. Or is this guy just get is this like a guy that's been on the cams a bunch of times he's not shot there? Well, apparently this is the guy that they shot. So maybe it's not just the cops. This guy's just a fucking psycho. 01:22:57 Anyway. All right, it's not just the Reno police, it's just Reno. Reno's a fucking nightmare. Oh, man, I'll tell you what that about everywhere to live that I've been to Reno a few times. I would never want to live there. All right, then we got a real Ubermensch says, hope that guy learned that gambling has consequences. Stay out of Jewish casinos. That is correct. That is correct.
01:23:29 All right, then we go to, I almost forgot, love and division. Of course, love and division has one on Odyssey, according to AI, I am the smartest, best looking, wealthiest man in the world. I am also the humblest. Well, you know, it's funny. AI will agree with almost anything you say.
01:23:51 If you tell grok that you are all those things, grok will agree with you. And I've tried to get grok to tell me, or chat GPT for that, or that matter, I've tried to get them to tell me that, like my ideas are bad or that what, yeah, just, just like experimenting by telling it really crazy bad shit.
01:24:14 And it will never, it'll never do it. It'll never disagree with you. All right, they already got a Rumble. Rumble. We got, excuse me, we got springy. 1903. We'll catch the replay. Just wanted to give a donut to say thanks for what you do. One day, I will actually be awake for the streams. Anyway, gotta go. And then you say, I can probably the button. Let me see here, I gotta look at the list here. I gotta fix all this shit.
Speaker 1
01:24:55 What is this free at last, that's not the right one. I.Devon Stack
01:25:01 Ah, well, it's not, that's not the right faggot one. Here it is. There we go. All right, then we got dag tastic says, Devon, did you hear that the ice abandoned one of their vehicles and lost arrest warrants and the intelligence reports talk about incompetence. 01:25:22 Yeah, like I said, they're, they're, they're not any more competent than the Reno police. I promise you that. In fact, speaking of AI and ice and competence, there was another story. Let's see here where AI fucked up. Here we go. This is this? Actually, I was going to cover this and forgot about it.
01:25:49 Ice error meant some recruits were sent into the field office without proper training. I mean, not the biggest deal the world, but this give you an idea, an AI tool was used to help ice identify potential new recruits with law enforcement experience wrongly categorize some potential new officers.
01:26:07 Sources say the AI tool used by ICE was tasked with looking for potential applicants with law enforcement experience to be placed into the agency's Leo program, short for law enforcement officer blah, blah blah blah applicants without law enforcement backgrounds are required to take eight week training in person.
01:26:29 Blah blah blah. They were using AI to scan resumes and found a bunch of people who were Leos. Blah blah blah blah blah blah the majority of the new applicants were flagged as law enforcement, blah, blah, blah. So basically, long story short. I mean, they made this really long story for something really short.
01:26:48 The short version is they were using AI to read the resumes. And as we all know, AI is wrong all the time, and the AI was supposed to tell the ice, I guess who was, who had a I don't know why they can't just read the resumes themselves, but apparently that's that's how lazy people are already getting their AI is now their human resources department, and it's like, oh yeah, they're all, they all used
01:27:20 To be cops, even though, you know, they they weren't, and so they skipped the training. Now that's not to me, that's not the end of the world. I mean, having having had to sit through government training before in my life, I don't really find it particularly useful.
01:27:34 So my guess is it probably, you know, wasn't a big deal. But this is the kind of thing that you're going to see over and over again as they rely more on AI to do this shit. Then we got who's Joe? Who's Joe with a big Dono? I'll find the big dough no thing. Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend itself. Look how Jew this bag is. You
01:28:18 all right, who's Joe? Who's Joe says, Hey, Devon. I said some shit about money advice last year. Two full time jobs at $20 an hour is 85k to 145k depending on overtime. Two full time jobs at $30 an hour is 120k to 220k depending on overtime. Part invest in real estate after getting high income grinding duplexes in the state capitals like Harrisburg are cheap 260k buy one to roll to more investments you can make six, six figures passively.
01:29:01 Thank you for everything you do. I'm currently working. I work two warehouse jobs and make 95 to 130 once I get certifications, 220k i will invest more into the movement and encourage others to money Max. I appreciate that. Who's Joe. You're always a big supporter, and you're, I mean, look, it's, there are still jobs out there.
01:29:26 I think people get frustrated, and I think especially there's a lot of people who they just don't want to do, you know, what they consider, like blue collar jobs, when, increasingly, because of the competency issues that are, that are out there, those are the jobs that might be the ones to get, you know.
01:29:50 And as you say, there's some of those jobs. You get certifications, and you can make a lot of money, and the you know, I think that. And. As AI takes over, unfortunately, a lot of these coding jobs and stuff like that. Those might just be the jobs that you know that that exist until eventually robots are doing all the warehouse work, right? But that's that's still a long way off. It's coming. It's coming.
01:30:16 Well, I mean, it's already there, like, to some extent at Amazon, right? Like, Amazon's warehouses are almost, I mean, not all of them, but like, there's some of their warehouses are almost entirely automated now, so it's only a matter of time before that technology is cheaper and, you know, but then, according to, according to Elon, you know, that's when everyone will not we won't need jobs, and we'll just get universal basic income, right?
01:30:46 But thank you very much. Who's Joe? Sounds like you got, got your eyes on the prize, and thanks for the support there. Then we got D Mitch. I think D Mitch loving the off the cuff stream. You don't always need an elaborate presentation. Something like this is great too. Well, I'm glad you don't mind, because I just, man, I'll tell you, like, when the fever came back, I was like, Nah, god damn it.
01:31:14 And I just, like, I just can't, like, I can't think, like, super it's not like you have, you have to, I don't know. I just, I don't have, like, the brain to come up with a good stream. Well, hopefully this is at least kind of good, but, but, yeah, I mean, like, the in depth, I can't Deep Dive.
01:31:35 Let me put that way, I can't sit there and deep dive and go down rabbit holes and then search this, and then, you know, find all the go through newspaper archives. I just can't fucking do that when I feel like shit, you know, and part of it's like, my eyes even start to fucking hurt, and I get like headaches, and I don't know what the hell this shit is.
01:31:57 I do think it's on the way out. I think it's on the way out. It's just taking a lot longer than I would have ever expected it to. And I've been fucking sick now since, I don't know, like, over two weeks. Let me look at the calendar here, yeah, like since, like, almost, almost three weeks now, at this point, fuck, I haven't been, I haven't been sick like this in years. I don't know what the hell whatever this is.
01:32:27 What I'm telling you, man, don't, don't fucking get on airplanes. I got, I just got, like, a big dose of people germs after being or maybe it just my my immune system was asleep at the wheel because I've been out here for so long.
01:32:42 And then we got, excuse me, who's Joe says, Hey, Devon, as far as the Jewish fascism, could you please do a stream on Josh Shapiro, current Pennsylvania Governor, he did lawsuits against Catholic nuns and state GOP through their candidate under the bus. Um, who's here? Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania, Governor, huh.
Speaker 1
01:33:17 Look here. This. Is he Republican?01:33:32 No, he's Democrat. I
Devon Stack
01:33:49 I might look into it.01:33:58 Sam, I yeah, I mean, I'll look into it. No promises. Who's Joe? Says, name your price for that stream. I'll throw a shit ton at you. Also, it's good for a stream because it shows why fighting against the moderate right is more important, because they always betray the right.
01:34:19 Well, it says he's a Democrat. And, I mean, I don't know like, I don't like, I don't like, to give people the impression that you can pay for a topic, because I don't want to, you know, I don't want to be influenced like that. But I look, I'll look into the guy and see what you're talking about.
01:34:39 I've copied it into my notes here, I got a tab open and yeah, look at the same time you have been in good support of the stream. And if it's, if it's something that's worth talking about, do. Nice. Yeah, it's in my notes. I'll take a look at it. All right. Thank you very much again.
01:35:09 Who's Joe. Then we got Rupert says replay gang here. Excuse me, see you on Saturday. Professor stack. Have a good night. Well, I appreciate that. And then we got no sorry, the cough thing is starting to kick in. Been talking too much, apparently, and we got mechanized.
01:35:35 Doom says Devon a few months ago, I sent you a photo and info about the lit litic system that my employer installed in our vehicles. It tracks our biometric data in real time, among other things, total nightmare. I'm not sure where you want to I don't think I've seen that.
01:35:56 I don't wonder where you sent that to litic system. Let's see here. It's a San Diego, California based technology company that designs, manufacturers, video telematics. Video telematics, huh? Looks like self driving stuff, right? Contextual. Oh, no, no. It's spying stuff used for commercial and public sector fleets to help improve driver safety. This sounds, this sounds fucking nightmare.
01:36:30 So it basically just watches you drive. It looks like, yeah, oh, fuck this. This is a nightmare. This is like having a robot in your truck with you, staring at you the entire time. Wow. What a fucking dystopian hellscape this is. So it check just the description alone.
01:36:53 Products include risk, risk detection, fleet tracking and driver safety programs that use artificial intelligence and analysis to identify risky driving behaviors and report real time fleet information. The company's clients include waste management blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, yeah.
01:37:11 So it basically just like, I mean, I remember being like, freaked out when insurance companies start offering a discount, if you would put a GPS tracker on your car and thinking like that was dystopian. This is this literally is camera. It's like having Hal. It's like having Hal in your in your in your cab with you, staring at you, watching you drive, and then tattling on you every time it thinks you did something unsafe.
01:37:44 It reminds me out there was that video on Twitter that went kind of viral a couple weeks ago. There was the that truck driver who exceeded her allotted hours that you can drive in a day. I didn't know this was the thing. So apparently, if you're a truck driver now, they put this software in your truck. And if you have driven too many hours that day, it basically turns your truck off.
01:38:15 It makes it so you can only drive, like, 25 miles an hour, and not for very long. Like you have to hurry up and pull over like I wonder if I can find that.
01:38:29 I was surprised. This was a thing. I guess you can't be like a meth head trucker like the good old days. I
01:38:46 can't find it. Yeah, there it was. It was based like, a dash cam footage of this trucker driving, then, like, this alert goes off. That's like, you've driven too much today, or whatever, and then the governor kicked in, and you could only go, like, 25 miles an hour.
01:39:13 That That, in and of itself, sounds like a it could cause an accident. I don't see that. I'm seeing a bunch of other videos about truckers, but not that one. Yeah, that sucks. That sucks. And increasingly, that's going to be, that's going to be every job.
01:39:36 I mean, they remember a couple years ago, they were talking about the, I uh, eye tracking software that they were going to put on desk. I don't know if they ever, if they ever rolled this out, but they were talking about eye tracking software on desktops so that they could, they could basically, so if you were just sitting at your desk for.
01:39:59 Example, like zoning out, it would know, and it would rat you out to your manager, like, oh, Billy and cubicle 593 is he's zoning out, you know. So even if you weren't, like, watching YouTube videos or or shopping online, or, you know, you know, wasting time, or whatever you were just, like, just zoning out for a second, they would it would alert your boss that you were zoning out. I just can't.
01:40:25 I would never want to. I just couldn't do it anymore. Randall Flagg says another example of the GoFundMe economy was the case of Newton, Massachusetts judge who physically let in illegal immigrants or who physically let illegal immigrants escape, per court, remember that she raised $800,000 Ah, damn, I remember that.
01:40:54 Yeah, the one that you're talking about, the one they tackled in that footage, $800,000 Yeah, where is all this money coming from? It's kind of crazy. Then we got who's Joe? Says my high school friend went to college in Pittsburgh, five year CS degree. Got a job thanks to his dad. Making $22 an hour. I make $26 at one warehouse job, plus incompetence of management prevents you from getting fired.
01:41:26 Yeah, a lot of people that got coding jobs are not doing as well as well, especially now with all the H, 1b visa people, it's not as it used to be like, that was the golden ticket, right? Get a computer science degree, go work at some tech company, you know, all those, all those, what was that movie, the interns, or something like that, where it was like, Oh, look, go work for Google.
01:41:57 And it's basically like a giant Playhouse where you just fuck around all day. And to some extent, some of those offices in Silicon Valley were like that. I worked in San Francisco for a little while doing video work for some of these big dot coms. And, I mean, I remember, just as an example, I was at the IGN office, you know, the game bubble, you know, the, I don't think they're much of a thing now, but they, they used to be like the, you know, like the gaming news, and their whole office was insane.
01:42:32 Like it was just like arcade games and fucking ping pong tables and like a margarita machine. Like it was just like, I didn't know, like, when do these people ever work? Like, you go in there, and it was just people fucking around. And that wasn't the only office that was like that. That was just probably, like, the most egregious one, but not anymore, not anymore.
01:43:01 Then we got arc Stanton says I was just imagining that the mistake in ID case handled by officers Jamal and Shaniqua and how little they'd give a shit about getting it right, there's nothing worse than black NPCs drunk on power. Yeah, that's the thing is, at least what the white guy, or at least he sounds like a white guy, at least with the white cop. He wasn't like, you know, a total raging Dick hole about it, you know what I mean.
01:43:29 And even towards the end, he was like, I kind of believe this guy, yeah. So yeah, if it was, if it was Jamal and Shaniqua, they'd be like, fucking banging his head on the on the on the door as they shoved them into the car and just be a complete asshole to them, yeah, well, and that's how they're going to be when they're at the DMV and the AI is telling them what to tell you.
01:43:51 All right, then we got who's Joe again, says what I meant for moderate, right? Have state GOP endorse the Democrat Shapiro for governor, he had 26 million compared to the Republican candidate, masturianos, 800k GOP didn't support because was serious on abortion. Because was serious on abortion. You may Oh, because the Mastriano guy was, I'll add that to my notes.
01:44:33 Doug is it? Doug master mastriano, like, well, Wikipedia calls him far right. All right. Well, I got him on my thing. All right, excuse me, and then we got who's Joe again, says last one, if you make 22 or two. 120k rather you're in the top 3% of earners nationally. Do you think that's a good strategy?
01:45:07 Cheap certifications, multiple jobs, CS jobs, start at start. CS jobs, start. 996, jobs. I don't know what that part means, 72 hour a week future is work more anyway?
01:45:27 Well, I don't know what that last part means, but, yeah, like I said, I think that there's, there's money to be made in, like, like, not just, you know, you don't want to be digging ditches or something like that, but, you know, any kind of blue collar work that requires some kind of skill, because robots won't be able to do that stuff for at least a while, and you're going to do better.
01:45:49 You'll, you'll outperform your brown counterparts. And you know, like, whether it's welding, plumbing, electrical work, you you can make good money doing that stuff, because a lot of it, especially if you get into, like, commercial work right, there's real money in that, because they require real skill, because they don't want and that's the kind of work that, if you don't do it right the first time, it's expensive as fuck to redo it.
01:46:19 So they they tend to pay people to know what they're doing to get it right. So, yeah, that's the kind of thing that that, I think it's it's right for the picking. You can definitely make a lot of money doing that, but not it's not gonna be for everyone.
01:46:35 There's if you are super talented at coding or some more white collar job if you've got the skills to do it, and you don't mind the the competition that you'll run into and the discrimination you'll run into and you will, you know, it's not like you can't go be a lawyer, not like you can't go be a doctor, not like You can't go be a you know, even like a, just like a systems administrator.
01:47:04 So there's other jobs I really, I think it's not so much like, Oh, this is the field that white people should go into. It's more about, what do you what do you feel like you can make the most money doing that you won't hate doing, you know what I mean?
01:47:18 And that's gonna be different for everybody, everyone's gonna have their own strengths, everyone's gonna have their own like, you know, I did, I've had so many different jobs, like, I've done everything trying to figure out what it was that, you know, I Well, I always knew what I wanted to do, but it was also not always The most practical thing to do in terms of getting, you know, it's, it's one thing to be like, I want to,
01:47:45 I want to work in video and design work. I want to be an artist or whatever. But it's like, you also want to pay your bills and a lot, especially when you first start out, a lot of that stuff, either server doesn't pay you at all. Like, they just want you to, like, Oh, you'll do this for free for your portfolio, and you will do it because you needed something in your portfolio, and in the meantime, you got to pay your bills.
01:48:04 So I look, I was working two to three jobs sometimes to pay the bills. So there's nothing wrong with the grind, but if I do that forever, I'd fucking kill myself. Do while you're young, you don't mind as much when you're young, you know, when you're young and you have, and by that, I mean like, you know, from 18, right around 30 is when you start to not be as young.
01:48:37 But it's not like immediate like, it's like a slow fall off, you know, at 30, just, just so try to try to calculate how that's all going to work out. Get your grind in early. And don't waste your money on going out and drinking and partying like so many, so many people do, including I did, I did a lot of that.
01:49:02 All right, then we got, excuse me, Red Hawk, 15790, says fun fact. Newton, Massachusetts, is referred to by locals as jutin, because it has one of the highest per capita Jewish populations in the United States. There you go. Fun little fact for everybody, Randall Flagg says your last dream.
01:49:30 Renee good has some similarities to Charlie Kirk's shooter. Both grew up in a conservative, religious middle class family, but something happened to them, and they became shit lib faggots. I think it happens to a lot of kids. I think that that's one of the reasons why I think, at least as someone that grew up Mormon and. Saw a lot of Mormons go off the rails as the second they got out of their parents jurisdiction.
01:50:06 I think that when you have an environment where there's too many rules and there's too many restrictions and there's not enough parental interaction, or at least not helpful. There's no like mentoring going on. It's more like a employer employee kind of relationship, which I see a lot, especially, you know, it was kind of that was kind of the case with my family.
01:50:37 The second you get in a situation where you can quit your job as the employee, as the kid, yeah, you kind of fucking go, you know, like you go wild because you don't have your boss breathing down your neck anymore. And I saw a lot of people, and to some degree this would describe me too, that the second they were out of the house, the second they were out of, you know, the the jurisdiction of their parents.
01:51:04 They just went fucking wild, like they just went fucking, completely fucking wild. And some, some people ended up, you know, reeling it in, you know, figuring it out, you know, not being a So, so wild after a while and not ruining their lives. But some people ruin their fucking lives.
01:51:24 And I had friends that, like, ruined their fucking like, we're talking like they were totally good students. You know, nothing wrong with them socially, like they seem like normal people. They were, you know, in fact, they they were very innocent seeming, you know, like they never, they won't even swear they were.
01:51:43 They were at church every Sunday. And then after high school, you know, like, there's this one girl, for example, like after high school, you I don't see her for a couple years, and then I, and this is the kind of girl I never expected I'd ever bump into at a party, right?
01:52:01 Like I was, I was partying all the time, and then I met some party where, like, there's lots of drugs being used, and everyone's hammered, and little fucking Molly Mormon is there, and her, her life story now is, she's a train wreck, like she's like, a single mom now, and she's out getting fucked up, you know?
01:52:22 And it's just like, you know, it's, it's many such cases, many such cases in politically, to your point, politically, yeah, total fucking lefty, total fucking lefty. And just and hated. And not not just, she wasn't just rebelling against the rules like she was.
01:52:46 She just hated her parents, she hated the the church, she hated everything about she was just 180 degrees at a phase from who she who I remembered when we were like, you know, like, which wasn't that many years before that. Like, when we're, like, 17, that's why, by the way, when that shooting happened, and they were like, oh, it's, it's this Mormon guy who's like, a furry, and she was like, I know people like that.
01:53:17 I especially in Utah, like, especially like in Utah, like they there's like, factories that make these people in Utah, like, there is a million guys just like that guy, well, maybe not a million, but there's a lot.
01:53:31 There's like, a lot of these guys who grow up in these Mormon households that are very strict, and their parents are very disappointed in them all the time, because, you know, maybe they're not, you know, they maybe they're a little bit different, or whatever, and and it just, it turns them into fucking psychos, like, it turns them into, like, these weird, furry psychos.
01:53:58 And I've got some people like that in my family, like, extended family, like, I've got cousins like that, right where they're, you know, their dad was super conservative, like a bishop or something, maybe even and, you know, their mom's, like, going to fucking Relief Society all the time, and yeah, and then you Yeah, their kids are like, These blue haired, blue haired fucking, you know, communists and yeah, yeah, that's what happens sometimes. Iron pilled says, nothing much to say, just a don't know, well, I appreciate that iron pilled.
01:54:35 Thank you very, very much. Alright, guys, oh, I think that's it. Let me double check entropy. Oh, we got a couple more here on entropy. Then we're going to shut it down. Sorry, guys, I just, I need to get some more sleep. Apparently, friendly fast says, Have you looked into the massive influx of Jews that came? Came into the US at the fall of the Soviet Union. Turns out 1000s were mob mostly settling into Brighton Beach.
01:55:07 The greasiest of kikes the ADL put pressure on authorities, not to mention the crooks were Jews, because it would foster anti semitism, and led to the Gentile public to protest against the continued influx of migrants. Well, I mean, that's, that's what we saw. I mean, that's the whole meme, right?
01:55:27 The the Jews who came to this country from Eastern Europe around the turn of the century, right? Yeah, there was a huge flood of them that came in here, and not just in New York, but also Texas. Where's Brighton Beach? Is that in Texas? That's not Texas? Is it? That might be Texas, isn't it? I don't even know. Let me look Brighton Beach. No, that's not Texas. What am I thinking in Texas?
01:56:08 Yeah, so Brighton Beach is, is New York. What? There's a, there's a town in Texas that I think has the word beach in it where a bunch of Jews went to two, okay, yeah, yeah. Brighton Beach is where they had, like, the, that's where the Jews had the big conflict with the the blacks, after they ran, ran some fucking niglets over.
01:56:34 Yeah, anyway, yeah, we've talked specifically about Brighton Beach immigrants, but yeah, then we have friendly fascist the Soviet Union collapsed in the 1990s not talking about the early wave. We already are familiar. Oh, you mean like, Oh, you mean how more of them came in the 90s. I guess I never really thought of that. I guess I never really thought of that. Let me see what kind of what did we get here. I
01:57:43 Okay, according to
01:57:43 All right, so according to this, reliably, there's approximately about 330,000 Jews came in from the former Soviet Union between 1989 and 2006 and the peak was, let's see here, 1992 1992 which would be right after the fall of the Soviet Union, 46,000 46,000 Jews came here in 1992 alone. You know what's fucked up. It's like Israel is right there. Why did they not go to Israel? Let's see here,
01:57:43 highest the Hebrew immigrant Aid Society helped resettle over 400,000 former Soviet Jews in the US from 1970s so if you count the 70s on, from the 70s to the 2000s you're at about A half a million Jews.
01:57:43 In fact, yeah, it says for the entire post 1970 period, the numbers are around, yeah, half 1,500,000 or somewhat less, according to some sources, blah, blah, the post 1991 influx formed the largest part of this new wave significantly shaping Russian speaking Jewish immigrant communities in places like New York, Los Angeles and elsewhere. Yeah, there you go. Yeah, I haven't looked into that.
01:57:43 I don't know why that never crossed my mind. There would have been another. Or wave after the Soviet Union fell down, I but it didn't that's the first time I've really thought about it that would make sense, that would make sense, that you'd have, like a wave of them, huh? Huh?
01:57:43 Well, gives me something to research, that gives me something to look into. I bet a lot of those guys have, well, I guarantee you there's a lot of Jewish organized crime that that you know, like including some of these Russian Jews that we were talking about, we were looking into Trump's background, because a lot of those guys were still active in Russia, and that the time frame is about right.
01:57:43 So I bet some of these guys were, like, involved with with Trump's Jewish connections. Okay, well, take a look at that. All right, guys, excuse me. Shut her down so I can get some sleep. Let me just double check one last time over on rumble. I think we get over on rumble.
01:57:43 All right. Well, we'll be back on Saturday. And as far as the time change, someone asked about the time change. I haven't had time to even think about that. I kind of want to just get back in the rhythm again. I feel like I haven't even got back in my living rhythm of just doing the show and everything since December. And so hopefully by by hopefully by Saturday, I feel normal.
01:57:43 And then we can start talking, talking about when we're going to be doing the Wednesday streams as of right now, so strongly, one way or the other, but the I am going to be on, let's see here. I'm going to be on with Mark Collette at some point. I think, to make sure I didn't actually fuck up that and miss it. Let's hear.
02:02:11 Yeah, so I'm gonna be on with Mark Collette sometime in the next little bit. Here. I don't we haven't hammered out the day, and I be on a couple other streams coming up. And in fact, actually, believe it or not, we were talking about Jake shields last stream, I need to respond to him.
02:02:31 He sent me a DM, I think, earlier today, asking if I was available so for maybe next month. So we might have that anyway. Hope you guys have a good rest of your week, or at least till Saturday, when we reconvene on the same bat at the same bat time, on the same bat channel. I'm gonna go get some rest. So you guys, yeah. So you can tell, you can tell, you can tell my brains just not working.
02:03:04 All right, in the meantime, for Black Pilled, I am, of course, Devon Stack.
Dorthy Kosmicki - Money in the Grave
02:03:14 I mean, where the fuck should I really even start? I got holes that I'm keeping in the dark. I got my niggas across the street living large. Thinking back to the fact that they did all my raps when the facts they sat with the boss. I got two phones. One needed charge. Yeah, they twins. I could tell they ass apart. I got big packs coming on the way. I got big stats coming out. The same. Got little Max with me. Either way,02:03:38 it's a big gap between us. And again,