3:03:33

INSOMNIA STREAM: CRAZY VALUE EDITION - 03/21/2026

Display stream descriptionIn this episode of the Insomnia Stream, Devon Stack (Black Pilled) delivers a highly polemical monologue centered on deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill in the United States, arguing that the closure of psychiatric hospitals—largely promoted by Jewish civil libertarians and lawyers—was a catastrophic mistake that flooded communities with dangerous and dysfunctional individuals. He frames mental illness as a significant (and under-discussed) component of the broader Western demographic crisis, connects it to dysgenics, Jewish influence, and the modern homelessness epidemic, and repeatedly advocates for extreme measures (including euthanasia / “the pit”) for those deemed irredeemably insane or parasitic. The stream intersperses sarcastic commentary on a 1990s PBS-style documentary about Northampton State Hospital, personal anecdotes, music clips from his AI-generated fake band “Rocket Pixie”, reactions to current events (Iran–Israel tensions, Trump), and extended reader interaction via hyperchats.
Full Summary
Catalonian Numbers Lady
00:00:00 000,
00:00:23 Nurse zero,
00:00:37 sank, sank and
00:00:42 got Chase. Zero got zero, got Six. Zero got zero.
Thomas Dolby - She Blinded Me With Science
00:01:40 Ooh, science, Mechanical science,
00:02:20 larger emotion.
00:02:34 She blinded me with silence fell into
00:03:20 I can't love
00:03:40 Good heavens.
00:04:00 Miss Sacramento and sweet,
Rocket Pixie - E.L.E.
00:04:59 see. I can feel it,
00:05:20 come And finish, food
00:06:20 now we're space To flames get higher.
00:06:42 Just it's Like
00:07:02 watching
00:07:39 The guy, and how did it come
00:07:43 to This? The icebergs closed and I got a job.
00:08:00 In the slow death and I got a
00:08:22 Job. Save your sons. Save your daughter.
00:08:56 Stations,
Devon Stack
00:09:11 Welcome to the Insomnia Stream. I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack. There's a new fake band out. As you might have just heard. It's a little experimental. That's why different band, I don't know. Anyway, some of you might like it. The Yeah, we got a lot to cover. Excuse me dying a little bit cover tonight, Churro is injured.
00:09:50 Yeah, he's, he's, he's all tuckered out on the floor by my feet, came back limping like a couple days ago. And I was like, damn. And then he slept for like, two days straight, and then he wanted to go out again last night, he was still limping. I was like, All right. Then he was gone, and he came back limping more. So hopefully, hopefully he's fine. If not, we'll have to want to take him in. But he seems he see. He seems happy enough.
00:10:24 He's tough. So I got that going on World War Three might be happening. I mean, I don't know. Iran apparently, who would have thought right? Underestimated their capabilities, firing missiles with longer range than they thought they which is weird, because I thought in the the four day war, or whatever that was earlier, we crushed everything that they had, right.
00:10:54 We destroyed everything, including their nuclear capability, which suddenly they they resurrected instantly. I like how Iran is. They're able to almost develop nuclear weapons, right?
00:11:05 That's all. That's where it stops. It's like they can get all the way up to, like, like, Step nine out of 10, and then they can't, you know, then get there quick too, because you can send them all the way back to zero, and they can back, then get all the way back up to nine. But they can't finish that last step, apparently, that final step that actually gives them the nuclear capability. Anyway.
00:11:31 So that's going on. You got Trump threatening? No, you better open the Strait of Hormuz and all this other stuff. And I don't know. I don't know. I like I said, I just don't I kind of just don't care anymore. I've been watching conflicts in the Middle East rage on for my entire life, and I'm just kind of burned out on it. I'm kind of burned down on it. And every time, by the way, every time it's going to be world war three, and every time it doesn't happen. And, you know, every time, though, this time it's different, and then it doesn't happen.
00:12:10 And every time Israel comes up, it comes out on top. Well, thanks to us, we come you know, we're the losers every time. And, yeah, so that's going on, and what else is new, right? Anyway, a lot of this is facilitated by crazy people. That's, that's my jarring segue into talking about crazy people. Oh, by the way, yeah. The the new show, by the way, on, on I guess I should plug it right on Wednesdays.
00:12:46 We're fiddling with the time slot. It's been at noon, but we might not do that because we are kind of sharing a time slot with Mark Collette, and it's during the day when a lot of people at work, which people told me about, and I was like, I won't matter. I think it matters.
00:13:06 So we might, we might shift it till later in the afternoon. I don't know. I don't know anyway that, but that show is going well, outlaws, with yours truly, and Rebecca Hargraves on Wednesdays. The last one was really good. So if you missed that, check that out. It's on well, it should be on every Well, unless you're on bit shoot, it should be on every platform. You're listening to this on on the same channel.
00:13:34 But yeah. Anyway, back to crazy people. I a lot of the problems a lot of the in fact, I would say it's a it's a very close second to the the racial problem, and it's tied. It's tied. It's connected to the racial problem that we have in the United States, the demographic issue. Because demographics is not just race, right?
00:14:00 Demographics includes age, sex and crazy. And so just we have a generally, generally, we have a demographic problem in the West, in the United States, that needs solving. And while it's obvious the racial problem, we can always focus on that and talk about that and try to get that resolved.
00:14:25 There's a not as obvious problem, I think that gets kind of glossed over because there are a lot of crazy white people. There's a lot of white people lumped into this demographic. That's bad for for America. It was increasingly exacerbated when we opened up the floodgates and brought in lots of immigrants from all over Europe, I would say most. Mostly, in fact, notably Jews from Eastern Europe.
00:15:04 I mean, they're not white, but they they, at the time, were welcomed in as if they were, and they high levels of insanity among those. Those immigrants do a figure, and we've talked briefly a little bit about how, because of their high levels of insanity, they were the number one champions for the insane.
00:15:31 Jews have been railing against the mental health institutions since they showed up, because many of them were sent to the mental health institutions for being crazy. And I think that we're thinking about this all wrong. We're thinking about this all wrong.
00:15:50 We never, we always say, like, Oh, it's so inhumane. And this is kind of what we're gonna go over tonight. These these crazy people storage facilities, which is what they were, these crazy people storage facilities.
00:16:06 We're always, we send the crazy people to these horrific, you know, scary looking, haunted house looking buildings out, out far away from, from the city, you know, like Arkham Asylum style shit, and they never get treatment that they deserve, and they never get better, and they we just keep them out of sight, out of mind and the and they just live in these, These horrible, unhygienic, cruel situations.
00:16:39 And so therefore, says the Jew, we must release them into the public, which is exactly what was done. And the problem is people were trying to argue from the wrong angle. They were trying to say, Well, no, it's, it's better to have them there, and we can improve these conditions.
00:17:06 And, oh, you're exaggerating these conditions. And when really the argument should have been, well, hold on. Why do we need the crazy people in the first place? Like, why are we storing them somewhere? Are we going to need them later? Like, why are we?
00:17:21 Why are we sending the sending of those facilities, which, yeah, they're shitty. Quality of life is crap. They're understaffed. The people in them aren't paying for them, so we're just essentially paying for their room and board, regardless of how bad you know, the the the level of care is, uh, but why? Why do we need them? Like, why? Why do we even need them in the first place?
00:17:49 You know, it's funny, because a lot of people who like to sit there and say, Oh, Hitler was right about this. Hitler was right about that. Don't like to talk about what else Hitler was right about. And he was right about the the crazy person question. The crazy person question is a question that needs to be answered. Why do we need them?
00:18:12 Now, look, there are levels of crazy, obviously, and there are people that are that well, there's people that would consider someone like me crazy, and that's always the go to, right? That's always the Whoa. You can't just guess all the crazy people, because they'll call you crazy, and then they'll guess you.
00:18:33 Well, that's the excuse of everyone who never wants to wield power, right? You can never use power because then someone else will use the power against you, and then you wait 1020, years, and they're using that power against you anyway, right? That's always been the case when it comes to the conservative right is, oh, we can't do that.
00:18:49 And then the left will do it against us. Then the left does against you anyway, because you guys are pussies. So in fact, I would even say that because you're not gassing the crazy people, by the way, this stream, by the way, it is going to be a pro gassing crazy people thing. So if that's going to hurt your feelings, just I'm getting that out of the way right now, this is going to be a pro gassing crazy people stream.
00:19:14 So if you're against gassing the crazy people, that's how the crazy people end up in charge. See this big fear that you have that well then they'll call you crazy. Well, who's they? The crazy people that you would have gassed that wouldn't exist if you had just done it that instead, you kept in storage facilities and still until Jews shut them down, and then they were released into the public, and they bred with other crazy people, making super crazy people who are now in charge of shit. You see the problem here? It doesn't make any sense.
00:19:55 Now we're gonna go over some of the ethical questions. Institutions, if you want, as they did after they shut down some of the institutions, and as a result, communities all across America were forced to deal with crazy people, the homelessness problem in America. That's not really a homelessness problem, that's a crazy people problem. That's a crazy like the homeless people, with a couple exceptions, are pretty much just crazy people running amok. And again, why? Why? Why? Why do we need them?
00:20:37 Really like, without using some kind of faggot like, feels answer, or some kind of religious answer, I want you to think to yourself, why? Why do we actually need them, like, what? What's the benefit of keeping them alive. Now, look, if they can stay alive on their own, there's not, that's not a problem anymore, right?
00:21:06 As long as they're not running amok and killing people. See, that's, that's where the degrees of, that's where you can draw a line, right? There's degrees of crazy, okay, you can be eccentric, as long as you're not running around in the street, stabbing people. See, there's a level at that point that's not except eccentric. You're at that point, you're just, you're just fucking nuts, and you go in the pit.
00:21:29 So we're gonna go over a a video that kind of discusses the ethical questions about shutting down these facilities. Look at some of the Jews who actively participated in the shutting down of these facilities. And we've, we've, you know, we've gone over similar things in the past.
00:21:53 This is a more, slightly more recent one. I think it's from 1992 when they were really almost having they had almost shut down all of the institutions by this point, this is highlighting a institution in Massachusetts, and the the very last days of the institution being in business.
00:22:17 Now, of course, because they want to draw on on your heart strings. About the wow, what's crazy? What? What constitutes crazy? What if you're just kind of a little bit weird, you know? What if you're just Quirk? Chungus, right? What if you're just quirky? What a I can't I can't be quirky anymore. You're gonna gas me because I like things that you don't like, Oh, I've got, I fidget around and and act a little bit weird.
00:22:45 You're gonna gas me. But I know I'm harmless, so that's how, of course, they open up this, this documentary, this documentary called a place for madness. And I, again, I think the place for madness is in the pit, but they open up this, this documentary finding like one of these people who are, they are relatively harmless, and so that's, that's how they set the stage.
00:23:08 They want to set the tone that this is the kind of person we're talking about. And then they, they kind of the mask slips, necessarily, and they address some of the, actually, here's the real people that that I'm talking about, but they open this up because it's a, it's a it's setting the tone for the rest of the video.
00:23:25 They find a somewhat charming, likable homeless guy who isn't all that bad, right? He seems kind of sane when he talks, and he lives out of his car, and he's not hurting anybody, at least that we I mean, for all we know this guy's, you know, that's the problem. For all we know he's got, like, a criminal record a mile long.
00:23:48 But yeah, at least the way this presented, he's not hurting anybody, just living, living by the lake and collecting, collecting aluminum cans to get money for breakfast.
00:24:05 Let's see here. There we go.
Off Camera Guy
00:24:14 Morning. Joel, Hi,
mentally ill homeless man
00:24:16 oh, Brenda, fall, I it. What's up? Welcome to the boudoir. The bivouac. Nice, huh? Peaceful. It's amazing what a stand of sumacs and a Cadillac will make a bedroom. There was just a cormorant over there in the water that took off. I've been on a beautiful nature walk. This morning, I picked the elderberries there. Here's the elderberries. You like elderberry wine. This is a wild cucumber. I got some breakfast money. Use it. Yeah, and I was raised on this very River. This is the sandbar I landed on. I'd come here even though this says no trespassing, as
00:25:14 long as you're not hurting anybody. You should be allowed to be as eccentric as you want to be. You know, you shouldn't be put away for it. As people who've come to my aid in the streets when I've been being harassed, they they've said, why don't you just let the man live nice. He has a right to live, to breathe, to walk the sidewalks of this land of America. But we don't have much we don't have much tolerance in our society, especially in Northampton. There's a lot of judgmentalness here. This was the this is the last bastion of puritanism.
Devon Stack
00:25:42 Oh yeah, we all know that Massachusetts, Massachusetts the last bashing of Puritanism, right? Anyway, so he said some interesting things. One people will say, just let the man live.
00:25:58 Doesn't he have a right to live? Actually, the state decides all the time who has the right to live, and that should be kind of rolled into a society, actually, you know, this whole idea that you should be able to anyone and everyone, should be able to come into America and just use it like some kind of fucking economic playground, all that, all that basically evolved out of this idea that we really don't have the, the authority, or the or any kind of business telling people how to live their lives.
00:26:36 And look, to some extent, I'm okay with that. The on some level. I don't want the government interfering with people's personal lives on some level, on some level, but unfortunately, due to Jewish civil libertarian lawyers, that has, that has been mutilated, that has the definition of that has been shifted and changed to mean something completely different than what it meant at the founding of this country.
00:27:08 As an example, we used to tell people that sodomy was illegal. Well now, but what did they do? They exploited this, this individualism, this rugged individualism that existed in America and said, Oh, that's just all it is. Butt fucking is just rugged individualism. It's not hurting anybody. It's not sodomy is just rugged individualism. They're just ruggedly butt fucking individually. That has no effect on you.
00:27:38 There's no trickle down effect. There's no a problem beyond just whatever problem it causes them. There's never any kind of danger to the society by allowing a bunch of butt fuckers walking around, right? That's not, that's not a problem at all, as we know now, obviously, as we are experiencing some of the see the fruits of that that tree. No, actually, it is a problem. It's a problem, and that's why we had laws against it. It's a problem.
00:28:08 And just like allowing crazy people to just run amok is also a problem. Now this guy, I don't know, like I said, maybe he's got a criminal record a mile long, but if you are to accept the way that it's presented here, that he's just some harmless guy who lives out of a Cadillac on the shore of some Lake, and he collects garbage and, you know, whatever.
00:28:32 Okay, the trespassing thing should be enforced, but, you know, I'm not, I'm not for gassing this guy, if he's not causing a problem, you know, he's not. He's not. He has, at least, you know, as far as we know, he hasn't violently attacked anyone. He hasn't murdered anybody. And so again, we need to talk about, where does the line, where is where do we draw the line? Then where do we draw the line?
00:28:58 So they introduced us to this small town, this small town in Massachusetts that is basically the the Well now it is where all of these, these patients, these patients, if you will, that were incarcerated at this institution, are kind of filtering into because they have nowhere else to go, because they were just too crazy to take care of themselves and too violent and insane to be out in public.
00:29:28 But thanks to Jews, they ended up in public, or they ended up in places like well, which is still the public, they ended up in places like this motel. Now here's another thing too. There's a whole industry around crazy people. So there's a lot of lobbies, not just the the the Jews, although the Jews are very over represented in the the industry surrounding crazy people, but they you have people like this who take advantage of the fact that they can get state funding if they have.
00:29:59 Shitty motel that they let crazy people live in, and it doesn't matter that those crazy people might wander off and and stab someone or kill someone, or rape someone, or whatever. She gets to not only get paid money from the state, ensure that her business stays open forever, without ever having to advertise or actually compete on par with other motels.
00:30:22 Now she has this guaranteed stream of income, just so long as she's able to tolerate crazy people and at the same time, bonus, she gets to look like a hero. She she gets to look like a hero because she's the one that's when no one else will take these crazy people in. She will. Mrs.
Reporter
00:30:42 Shaw's motel is a refuge for ex Northampton state hospital patients who want to go it on their own.
Mrs. Shaw
00:30:51 Well, I recall that I must have went through 1000 patients in this place. We had Roger, Roger. Roger had a problem with eating. He was he would eat and drink so much that he would blow then we
Devon Stack
00:31:04 why do we need Roger? Why do we need Roger? Is there a reason we need Roger? Is there a reason why any amount of money from your work should be taken from you to pay for a Roger. There's some guy that just sits around eating and drinking until he becomes like, hospitalized.
00:31:39 Oh, and I'm sure you pay for that hospitalization and the stomach pumping or whatever they have to do to keep this fucking psycho alive? Is, is it? Would you? Would you willingly like if they had like a a option on your tax forms? Oh, 25 cents to make sure Roger stays alive. Would you check that box? Would you? I'm sure some people would. And fuck those people, they also deserve the pit. But I mean, come on, just be honest with yourself. Why do we need Roger?
Mrs. Shaw
00:32:20 He had a fellow by the name of Mr. Bradford, wonderful fellow, and he would go around and cut all my fir trees down.
Devon Stack
00:32:27 Oh, he sounds wonderful. He hates trees. He just goes around cutting our trees down because he hates trees. Do we need this guy? Is there a reason why we need him? We got a big tree problem, do we is that what we're waiting for? Are we waiting for the big tree war that's going to happen? Oh, no. Don't worry, guys, get the guy that hates trees. He'll he'll take care of the the trees that were that are attacking us. Oh, the trees are attacking the town. Quick. Get that crazy guy that hates trees? Is there a reason we need this guy
Mrs. Shaw
00:33:07 fur trees? And then we had Peter. Peter would always screech all night.
Devon Stack
00:33:14 Oh, good. We got Peter who screeches all night. Do we need that? I mean, look, we don't need Tyrone, but we also don't need Peter who screeches all night. And one of the reasons why we have Peter that screeches all night, because Peter that screeches all night can vote you.
00:33:44 What about this guy? Oh, he looks like he's kind of wearing a maga hat.
Peter
00:33:49 Hey, I'm so blue, sad and broken hearted, and it's all because of you.
Devon Stack
00:33:58 Ah, what a great song. We need this guy to serenade a motel full of crazy people.
00:34:12 Dysgenics is what we're talking about here, folks. Dysgenics, you are taking from the strong and giving it to people that, if nature ran its course, would have died on their own anyway. See, natural selection used to just get rid of these people. See, what I'm advocating for isn't anything crueler than nature. You
00:34:43 if these people are not dangerous and they're able to take care of themselves, fine, whatever fuck it, but if they're incapable of taking care of themselves and they suck, what? Why? What's explain to me why we need them again, without using any kind of religious argument or some kind of of of faggot argument, why give me an actual reason, like a real reason that we need these people.
Mrs. Shaw
00:35:29 Most of these people I've had here were hospital bound. Eventually you break them in, learn them how to help them to get dressed, go shopping, cook, show them how to cook, and then they have to take the medication. You have to keep stressing, but I can't give them the medication. I'm not qualified, but they have to take it themselves. But you remind them that they have to take it. Once they say they don't need the medication, it doesn't help them, then you have somebody's got to step in and stop it, because they go beyond reason, and then you can't handle them.
Off Camera Guy
00:36:01 All right? Well, all right,
Devon Stack
00:36:03 so you got a bunch of people that are on state funded medication, and then they stop taking the medication. They go bananas. And so now you're paying for them to live in this motel. You're paying for their medication, and then when they stop taking the medication, because no one can force them to take the medication.
00:36:23 They go bananas, and they have to call the cops, and now you're paying for the law enforcement. These people are getting pretty expensive. They're starting to sound like a luxury we can't afford. And in fact, not much of a luxury. It's almost like, like trying to sell, like trying to sell, i Hey, I'm gonna, every once a month, I'm gonna go in your house and smear shit all over your walls.
00:36:56 Just once a month, it's a luxury, and you convince the public, no, that's like the most luxurious thing you can do is have this service come in that smear shit all over your walls once a month, and then people getting like, oh, as much as I'd love to afford this service where they smear shit all over my walls once a month, they just, you know, Things are tight. I can't we're gonna have to skip this month of the the smearing of the shit on the wall.
00:37:25 That's why it's stupid. Even talk about the economics of it. Because Not, not a penny should go to this. Not a penny should go to this. And yet, billions, billions go to this every single year.
Lawyer
00:37:56 I will call your honor is a 209, a restraining order, 9345 RO, 241, Aurora Moser and Jane Mosher,
Judge
00:38:05 and the defendant is David L Mosher, and he's your son, and is his address. It indicates here the streets of North Hampton
Reporter
00:38:15 in Massachusetts, when untreated mental illness results in violence, the courts are the last line of defense for the victims like Texan Jane Moser and also for the civil rights of the mentally ill like their son David.
Thomas Wolff - Psychologist
00:38:30 It's a very complex issue around the civil rights of the individual and the need to protect society.
Devon Stack
00:38:38 We got our first Jew immediately talking about the civil rights of the individual. See, that's how they get you. It's the civil rights of the guy who screeches all night. That's what matters. What's important is the civil rights, the guy, the guy who hates fir trees that's really got to focus on
Thomas Wolff - Psychologist
00:39:11 who are acting in dangerous ways. But there's been such a bad history in terms of locking people up against their will, warehousing people, that I think we have to be very cautious, on the one hand about how much we impose upon people, and on the other hand, we also have to be protecting our community.
Devon Stack
00:39:32 Ah yes, our community says the Jew, fuck you. Fuck you. So we have the first poisonous Jew that comes in, and immediately he's the guy who's in charge, I guess, in the city of wrangling the psychos. And of course, it's all about their civil rights. So we got to treat them with dignity.
00:39:52 Really. You have to treat the guy who pisses on himself with dignity. Why? Exactly? Hmm, why? Where's the upshot is there some scenario in your head where the guy who hates fir trees is one day just gonna have like, this brilliant epiphany and cure cancer or something, or fuck just hold down a job at Starbucks. What are we doing here? What are we fucking doing here?
00:40:36 So they take us, of course, to one of these well now shuttered institutions, the storage facilities, which, like, I agree, there's, we shouldn't have them. Why? Why do we need them? Why it's, it's much more economic and just makes more sense to have just a giant pit with lava at the bottom. I mean, there's, we got volcanoes. So what's, what's the what exactly, why do we need again?
00:41:07 What are we storing them for? Are we saving them for later? Are we like, preppers? We're like, Oh, I'm gonna need. We're hoarding crazy people. We're hoarding crazy people, I might need this. If I throw it away tomorrow, I'll need it, and then I'll be sorry. No, you won't, you will. You'll never need that. Never, never in a million years, you're never going to need it.
Reporter
00:41:38 42 years ago, when Mary Pilis first drove into Northampton state hospital, there were 2300 patients locked inside.
Mary Pilis - Mental Patient
00:41:48 As I came around this corner and saw this huge building that looked like a fortress because it had all these bars on the windows, I became totally petrified, and thought to myself, What am I doing here? I could hear patients yelling,
Devon Stack
00:42:09 oh my god, it's so fucking scary. I mean, I'm just more impressed the architecture. In fact, I'm pissed off that we were wasting a building like that on crazy people. Look at that thing. Why don't we build shit like that and then not put crazy people in it? Well, I'll tell you why. We can't afford it anymore, because of all the goddamn crazy people,
00:42:35 we should be so lucky to live in a building like that. So of course, oh, look, it's all scary and haunted house style. Well, of course it is now, because Jews shut it down and it's been abandoned for X amount of years. So she walks us in and again, because it's abandoned, right? And now, now it literally looks like the like, like one of the saw movies on the inside, right? It's the set of a horror film, because it's been abandoned and vandalized for years. But even so, it doesn't fucking matter. This could have been the worst place ever. I agree we shouldn't be putting them in there screaming.
Mary Pilis - Mental Patient
00:43:12 And the closer I got to the building, the more petrified I got. But I did have an appointment to meet with the director of nurses, so I had to keep it after several minutes, I finally shut my motor off in my car and decided I'd go in. And there I stayed, 34 years
Devon Stack
00:43:33 Well, I could have been that bad bitch.
Mary Pilis - Mental Patient
00:43:42 Shortly after I came here, I realized that this wasn't the North Hampton state hospital, but this was the North Hampton state warehouse.
Devon Stack
00:43:49 Yes, exactly, a ware, a warehouse full of garbage, a warehouse full of garbage. What a great use of a warehouse. Oh, what's in that warehouse over there? Oh, garbage. What? Really? Yeah, that's where we store garbage. Wow. Why do we store I don't know. And then we we not only do what to pay for the warehouse, it's a special kind of garbage that has to be babysat 24 hours a day by a full staff of highly paid professionals, and we have to keep feeding the garbage, and there's lots of insurance issues. And, I mean, it's just, it's a whole thing. It's, it's millions of dollars to keep that garbage warehouse going. That makes sense. Seriously, why? Why do we need this?
Mary Pilis - Mental Patient
00:44:50 Patients had no purpose here. They weren't going to get better, they weren't going to go home. They just stayed here. They were in locked boards. Okay?
Devon Stack
00:44:59 Then? Why? Why? Look, look, a lot of this, and this will, this will become apparent a lot of the people. It's not just the Jews, the non Jews, that get involved with this advocacy stuff. It's almost 100% because they themselves have a crazy person in their family. They themselves have a crazy person in their family.
00:45:25 So they have a personal dog in this in this fight, right? And and so they're clouded by their emotional feelings about this crazy person their family. Well, look, if you want to keep that crazy guy who chops down trees in your house on your property, chopping down the trees on your property or whatever, or the stabbing Make, make rapes in if you want to keep him confined in your basement or whatever you want to keep him away from us on on your own dime.
00:45:59 All right, maybe, maybe I'm still against it. Look, if you want to say I'm uncompromising, I'm willing to compromise on that. You want to, you want to keep your crazy fuck son at home and away from the pit. Okay, but the second I see that crazy fuck wandering around the streets, he goes in the pit. If you can keep him under control, using your own resources, whatever.
00:46:27 It's not my how I would do it, but all right, but the second you can't control your own little psycho offspring. Guess what? Decisions out of your hands. I have no responsibility whatsoever for your psycho fucking crazy son like I just don't, I don't.
Alan Stone - Harvard Law Professor
00:46:57 We had a problem. We had one out of every 300 Americans was confined in some kind of mental institution in the United States.
Devon Stack
00:47:07 Yeah, that actually sounds about right. This is the next Jew that sounds about right. That sounds about like where, where we should be at right? Now, I would say, in fact, that might be a little low these days, because a lot of these crazy people were released, and they've they've since mated with other crazy people and and created entire broods of crazy people. Um, yeah, one out of 300 that's acceptable to me.
00:47:34 That's acceptable to me. And by the way, that number was a lot lower prior to the arrival of the Jews from Eastern Europe. It just was, prior to 1900 those numbers were a lot lower. It's a lot a lot more rare to have some kind of psycho okay, we're working with a much different gene pool.
00:47:52 Prior to Ellis Island, we just were and now that all these fucking psychopaths show up, mostly from Eastern Europe around the turn of the century. Now, now there's more of them. There's more of them, and they're institutionalized.
00:48:06 And so Jews like this, who probably has psychos in his family, think it's all it's very wrong. You can't tell you can't define what's crazy or not. And so this is a law professor who gets his top Jew student and unleashes him on the the the institutional system
Alan Stone - Harvard Law Professor
00:48:28 and the conditions were deplorable. It was worse than than anyone could possibly imagine, hundreds of patients crammed into rooms that were made for 20 people living in the most despicable imaginable conditions, and these were called hospitals. So this was really an outrage. Something had to be done about it, right?
Devon Stack
00:48:54 And we shouldn't have been calling them hospitals. We should have called them storage facilities, so people would realize how fucking retarded this was. So he unleashes his his top Jew,
Reporter
00:49:04 Stephen Schwartz, one of Professor Stone's star students did do something about it. In 1973 as a young attorney, Schwartz was taken to Northampton state hospital to see if he would represent patients there.
Devon Stack
00:49:19 And yes, obviously, Stephen Schwartz is a Jew who has made his life's mission to keep as many crazy people on the street as possible. And as evidence, anecdotal, though it might be, that supports my theory here. The reason he got into it, the reason why he was interested in this is his crazy Jew.
00:49:41 Brother had a psychotic break while he was in law school, and that motivated him to fight for the rights of psychos like his brother. Now I can't find any details on surrounding that, so I don't know how off the off the reservation he went, but that was the. That was the that was the the root, that was what caused him to do this. So yeah, he's celebrated now as being like the the top Jew for getting crazy people or keeping crazy people on the streets.
Stephen Schwartz - Attorney
00:50:13 I saw a few people who seemed to be in incredible personal pain in 1976 I came to a conclusion that what really had to happen was to have as many people as possible leave that hospital and live outside of the walls of an institution where they make choices, most of all, where they could be visible. The largest and most heinous crime was that we had made people invisible
Devon Stack
00:50:38 so they can be visible. No, I think that's the whole point. Actually, see, that's the problem. We weren't honest. We should have said, yeah, actually, those are storage facilities. You're right, and it is. So they're not visible.
00:50:51 We don't want to see them, and it's only because we don't have the balls to permanently store them in a volcano or something like that, then we put them there because we've convinced ourselves that's more humane, even though it's it's worse.
00:51:09 But you're right, Jew, it is worse. So rather than do it the crazy thing you want to do and release them into the public, we're just going to get rid of them. Yeah, instead of, instead of looking at the warehouse full of trash and saying, it's insane, it's insane to have a warehouse full of trash, why do we have this warehouse full of trash?
00:51:34 The solution, therefore, is, let's get all that trash and just pour it out all over the streets so it's visible. That's what we should be doing. No, instead of that, we should be like, You know what? Let's just bury the trash in a landfill like normal people. That's what we should be doing with the trash.
00:51:53 Why should we be spilling it all over the street so that we so that we look at it. The whole point of the warehouse was we didn't want to look at it. But now that you've convinced me that the warehouse is kind of dumb, yeah, let's, let's actually put the trash where it belongs.
Stephen Schwartz - Attorney
00:52:13 And I said to myself, I am not leaving until other people do. And I'm still there, although there are now only approximately 25 people left at the Northampton state hospital today, and within a month or two, there'll be nobody left. And so maybe, maybe in a couple of months from now, my commitment will be fulfilled.
Devon Stack
00:52:34 Oh, his mission will be complete. His mission of releasing all the crazy people, all the trash will be complete. Thanks, Jew, thanks a lot, buddy. Appreciate it. Wow. Sure glad. Sure glad you and all your relatives showed up here around the turn of the century and just just ceaselessly fucked our society in the ass over and over and over, exploiting every all of the worst tendencies of white people. So yeah, they get released into this tiny, little well used to be nice town
Reporter
00:53:16 in 1978 Stephen Schwartz's passion resulted in the most comprehensive victory for hospitalized mental patients in the history of the United States, known as the Northampton consent decree. It ordered that all but 50 of 380 remaining patients must be released to the least restrictive community setting within three years, suddenly, the town of Northampton became a national laboratory for accelerated de institutionalization. Oh, that
Devon Stack
00:53:44 sounds great. Where do you live? I live in the laboratory for industrial de institutionalization, or whatever. That's where I live. Oh, that sounds, sounds like a nice day, but, yeah, it's great. It's a laboratory. We're just lab rats here. We're just, we're all just lab rats for, like, the Jewish social science experiments that they're conducting on the goyim. It's great. I love it. Yeah.
00:54:09 And then they make it double crazy by they call it the consent decree, you know, because everyone in the community didn't consent to this. But you know, if we call it the consent decree, because it's the trash that's consenting the trash is the one that doesn't want to be in the warehouse. So that's really what matters. And of course, a lot of the religious leaders backed it up.
00:54:32 They same thing for the same reasons, for the same reasons. The Jew like this guy right here. So this pastor was all about the consent agreement. He thought this was great, what we were doing in those hospitals. It was so cruel. We're all God's children, after all, why is there the value of their life any less than yours?
00:54:50 Why would the value of some guy who shits himself and and bangs his head against the wall for about eight hours a day and thinks about nothing but great? Graham crackers. Why would his life be any less valuable than yours? You know, in the eyes of God, we are all equal. But then it kind of backfired on him a little bit.
Leroy Moser - Father of David
00:55:15 15 years ago, we shared the point of view the de institutionalization was one of the best things to come along. These are wonderful goals, and unfortunately, the events of the last few years, including our own personal experience, have indicated there's a whole segment of the very seriously mentally ill that do not fit into that scenario.
Devon Stack
00:55:34 Oh, you think? You mean we shouldn't just be releasing all the psychos willy nilly, really? I wonder why you think, oh, it's because, because of your crazy fucking son, your crazy fucking son. So his the guy on the right there, his psychotic son, loses his fucking mind. Loses his fucking mind. Get this. Just to make it even better, this preacher takes his Psycho son to Israel, not making this up.
00:56:18 He takes him to Israel. And while he's in Israel, apparently, this is when the the onset of the schizophrenia or or or manic bipolar, or whatever, whatever the crazy do we need to get that specific? This is when the psycho comes out, when he takes him to Israel.
Leroy Moser - Father of David
00:56:38 Jane and I went to Israel in 1983 we invited David to go along. One of the reasons we did that was because we were aware of the fact that he was having difficulty. Every place we visited seemed to have unusual importance to him, as if he were the chief actor in the drama of visiting these places.
00:57:06 And as we came to the River Jordan, where, traditionally, Jesus was baptized, he began to be more and more agitated as we were nearing the place, wondering who would baptize him, one of our party took a picture of that baptism, and we still have that picture. It's, whenever I see it, it's it's chilling to me because of the angelic, almost beatific expression on his face. To me, it said he was identifying himself with the figure of Christ.
David Moser - AI Voice
00:57:44 I am Jesus. Now you will never stop Jesus.
Devon Stack
00:57:52 So this psycho here is taken to Israel, I guess, to fix the crazy. His dad's like, oh, we noticed he was having problems. Oh, good. Then I guess, you know, if he's having delusions of grandeur, probably a good place to take him would be like some holy land where he can identify with with a deity.
00:58:15 That might be a good idea, right? So he takes him to Israel and decides that he's Jesus. He decides he's Jesus and starts going crazy, starts running amok, becomes one of these people, and they can't institutionalize him anymore, because he has to consent to being hospitalized, and Jesus ain't consenting to that shit. You think Jesus is going to consent to being like you're I'm not crazy. You're crazy.
Reporter
00:58:52 Meanwhile, in Northampton, the tension between patients, civil rights and the community's need to protect itself was being dramatically played out along Main Street.
Devon Stack
00:59:02 Oh, great. That's what I like to see. Look at this psychopath with his ass cheeks hanging out. That's what we need you. See, you want to know where these people come from. This is where they came from. We used to lock him up. We used to lock him up. And, yes, it was cruel. And whatever, we should have just ended them. We should have, we should have ended them, because then they wouldn't be running amok.
00:59:24 We wouldn't have all these trannies running around. We'd have significantly less mental illness, because we would be culling those bad genes out of the gene pool. We would have a completely different political system. You'd have a lot more money in your pocket, you'd have a lot safer streets. You know. Like I said, homeless people are it's not a homeless person problem. It's a crazy person problem. You'd be able to get rid of a lot of these, these, well, quite literally, useless eaters, like. Ass cheeks. Make make psycho here,
Reporter
01:00:06 although the consent decree had constructed a well funded system of community service, well,
Devon Stack
01:00:12 at least she's wearing a shirt that tells you that she's bananas. Get it? Because, all right,
Reporter
01:00:20 this is for discharged patients. The town was initially overwhelmed.
Thomas Wolff - Psychologist
01:00:24 I used to describe my job as the chair of the mayor's Task Force on deinstitutionalization as a referee. That was my professional role, because people got so worked up if there was an incident on the streets involving someone who'd come out of the state hospital. Then the police would say, why did you release that person? And the mayor would say, you're endangering my citizens. Why is this person on the street? And then the lawyer for the civil rights of the of the of the patient would say, they have the absolute right to be on the street. And you would have all these perspectives that everybody would just be outraged at each other. I don't know
Devon Stack
01:01:04 about all these perspectives. It sounds like there's two perspectives. There's the perspective of the white people saying, Why did you let this out? And then the perspective of the Jew lawyer saying that you have to have them out, that that's not all these perspectives. That's That's two perspectives.
01:01:19 There's the the Jewish perspective and the non or non Jewish perspective. See, this is the problem is our society has bent to the will of the Jewish perspective. One too many times. Well, a million too many times. But this is just one of them. And so the Jew in charge of wrangling the psychos says, Oh, I don't know what to do. There's this other Jew tells me that they deserve to be out. But these people continuously cause problems. In this instance, a woman and her child were killed,
Reporter
01:01:57 and then it happened on a winter Sunday morning in 1982 A state hospital patient with a long history of arson set fire to a building on Main Street, killing a mother and daughter who were sleeping inside.
Devon Stack
01:02:09 Okay, again. Why is that guy not in the volcano? He likes fire. Why is he not in the volcano? Why do you need are you ever going to need that guy? I mean, if you have a soft spot for the guy who hates fir trees, can you at least agree that we don't need this guy. You don't need the guy who burns people to death while they're sleeping. Do we need to save him for later too? Now, of course, what we're going to get going to get into is the argument.
01:02:43 Well, if they're crazy, they don't know what they're doing, and so they're not responsible. Like, that's somehow, like, that makes it better. Oh, oh, in that case, let's keep him around. He didn't know what he was doing. But again, we'll get back. We'll get to that in a second. In the meantime, these psychopaths are killing people. But don't worry. I'm sure this Jew has is very convincing when it comes to why we still need the psychopaths.
Stephen Schwartz - Attorney
01:03:21 There were a large number of people in town who just said, there's something going on. I don't understand it. Someone walked away from that place and he lit a fire and hurt somebody. We need to take a different tact. And so there was enormous
Devon Stack
01:03:34 pressure and hurt somebody. Fuck you Jew and hurt somebody. No, burn two people to death, you fucking faggot Kike and hurt somebody. Fuck you.
Stephen Schwartz - Attorney
01:03:47 But he said, rather than yell at each other about what's wrong, let's try to all come together and find a solution, and let's not let the solution get bogged down in arguments about, do people have rights to leave, or do people have rights to stay? Are too many people leaving? Are too many people staying? Instead of engaging in that sort of debate? He said to the whole group, what is it going to take to have our community
Devon Stack
01:04:10 safe volcano? That's what it takes. What it takes is for people to grow a fucking pair and to say, You know what, these people, we don't need them. There's literally no reason to keep them around. And yes, actually, the decision is ours, because if left alone, they would just die. They would not be able to take care of themselves. And that is when the decision becomes ours.
01:04:43 These people are unable to take care of themselves, and so what happens to them is 100% up to us, and because they have, they have, regardless of the threat level. All right, let's. Let's, let's stop trying to predict whether or not they're going to rape or murder or burn someone alive. That's the wrong you're on the wrong side of the scale on that one buddy. What good are they?
01:05:13 You're so busy trying to ascertain what kind of danger they are. And that's kind of implied, is the funny thing. It's, it's almost already, you've already assessed they oppo, they pose some kind of danger.
01:05:27 It's just a matter of how much, okay, well, actually, just the fact that they pose any kind of danger at all, that's enough, because that means they're a net negative. And I don't care how many charming little weirdo, autistic psychos you wave in front of my my face, like, this next guy, like, Oh, this guy, he seems, he seems kind of legit, right?
01:05:51 He just looks like a weirdo and wears like, this weird shirt and glasses and with his petto haircut, and just, you know, he just seems really annoying. You know, it's not that crazy, just really annoying.
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:06:10 I think that's PBS education on 57 Did you ever watch The Moody Blues on 57 before? Yeah, great. He's right. Orchestrally, comes around and echoes back. It sounds like it's like thunder, but it's
Reporter
01:06:25 after the fire and the anguish. Community Services gradually became more effective for ex hospital patients who chose to accept them. Not too many years ago, Jim todonio, who suffers from manic depressive illness, might have been trapped on a back ward at Northampton state.
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:06:41 But you know something, you know I can't stand, is when you give somebody a handshake and they're like this wet noodle. I'll see you all right. How'd it go this morning? I'm doing pretty good. Yeah, I still get the crazy thoughts I always get it, you know, but they're controllable because of the medication, yeah, okay, for example, you know, since I worked in a shoe factory, right? I worked in shoe factory two years, I ruined my knuckles. I ruined my knuckles because they kept them scraping against the thing
Reporter
01:07:17 every week, Jim todonio goes to the star point club.
Devon Stack
01:07:21 You can tell she hates her job. Oh, good, great, crazy, fucking nonsense story from this guy again. Why do we need this guy? She knows we don't need this guy. Why do we need this guy. We don't need this guy. And again, it'd be one look if he if, okay, he's just annoying. He's really fucking annoying.
01:07:49 But he takes care of himself, no, doesn't take care of himself, not at all. In fact, even with the government assistance, can't take care of himself. He has the maximum amount of benefits from the government. He's He's welfare maxing, and doesn't pay for his rent, and so now they have to get him a place to live because he's getting kicked out.
Counsellor
01:08:14 Your landlord has said that you need to leave.
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:08:20 So can you be one of those, those Lexus cars, one of those Archibald type buildings.
Counsellor
01:08:28 The situation is, Jim, I've just called Social Security, and you are. You're at the top level of your benefits now. So you wouldn't be getting any more than 568, a month. Now, the valley Inn
01:08:39 is a nice area of town.
01:08:44 You have your own room. There is a shared kitchen,
Devon Stack
01:08:49 so they're paying him monthly to be a psycho. Again, that's, that's a great service, right? Great luxury service that your community is paying for every month. Oh, gotta pay the psycho bill every month. So we can have, we can have psycho Jim walking around. We need this guy.
01:09:09 We definitely need this guy just walking around, talking to people, being annoying all day. That's, that's what the world needs. You know, I was thinking there day, oh, this community is beautiful. It's beautiful. It's like, it's like, really safe, like, my kids get to play in the playground. And, you know, it's especially this time of year, right? The butterflies are flying, the flowers are blooming.
01:09:32 And psycho gym, you know, psycho gym, is going to come up to me and and say a bunch of nonsense words that strung together to have absolutely no meaning at all. And I'm going to feel good knowing that we paid the gym bill this month so that psycho gym, and really it's, if you think about in the big scheme of things, what's, what's like 1000 bucks a month to keep keep Jim around, keep Jim around, walking around, harassing everybody and acting like just. To complete dipshit everywhere he goes.
01:10:02 That's what we need. More gyms now. The world would be such a better place if, if we just had more gyms.
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:10:11 And I wasn't mentally ill at all. What happened? Because I got a quarter stuck in my eyeball, or something way back then?
Devon Stack
01:10:17 Yeah, okay. I don't even want to know what that is. You got a quarter stuck in your eyeball. That was, that was, that was nature trying to do, What? What? Apparently, white people don't have the stomach for nature. Was trying to, you know, take care of the problem for us, with them getting the quarter stuck.
01:10:37 I don't even know how you do that. I don't know how you do that? You know, stupid ass Jim figured out how to put a fucking quarter in his eyeball. And so now there's that, that bill, you know, he didn't pay for that. So the bill to remove the quarter from his eyeball, like, however, the fuck that you know that happened.
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:10:58 We keep talking about
Counsellor
01:11:00 this mental illness business. I'm really,
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:11:03 I haven't showed you, like, really mental illness. I haven't
Counsellor
01:11:07 you have been under stress sometimes, Jim,
Devon Stack
01:11:11 oh, how very diplomatic of you. Well, I can't call you a psycho in front of the camera. So, hey, you've been, you've been under stress,
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:11:21 you can tell?
Counsellor
01:11:22 Well, you've told me,
Jim Todonio - Manic Depressive
01:11:23 yeah, but I'm talking about, have you ever seen me act behavior normal, less than normal?
Counsellor
01:11:29 What's normal?
Devon Stack
01:11:31 Oh, what's normal. What kind of Jew game is this? What's normal? Who defines what normal is? Maybe what's normal to you isn't what's normal to quarter in his eye. Jim. So anyway, we get to this nut case. This is the son of the preacher, the absolute fucking psychopath that looks like a complete psychopath, and like every one of his photos, like every one of his photos,
David Moser - AI Voice
01:12:00 I am the chosen one. I am the one spoken of in the book of naziru. I am here to cleanse the earth with fire. I mean, this
Devon Stack
01:12:09 is one of those things where you just look at him and you're like, yeah, yeah, he's a psycho. He's definitely a psycho. But you know his family, his family loves him.
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:12:20 David came home to live with us in the fall of 84 because we were all worried about him. At that point, he was living in a car. The minute he arrived, he picked up a sledgehammer and started to take apart the back steps of our house.
Devon Stack
01:12:41 Oh, it's hilarious. Yuck, that's, that's So David, you know, getting a sledgehammer and just demolishing the stairs behind the house. That's a, that's a, that's a, that's a fun little, little story. You got there again. Why do we have why? Why do we need this guy have a lot of stairs behind people's houses that need demolishing?
01:13:11 Do we but I guess, I guess it's he hasn't been violent against people, right? It's he just hates stairs, right? He just hates stairs. And so as long as you don't have stairs, and maybe we just do that, maybe that, maybe that's the real solution, we can just ban stairs. You know, if you're so worried about this psychopath walking around smashing the stairs with a sledgehammer, let's just get rid of the stairs. Then it won't be a problem at
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:13:38 all times he carried a large machete.
Devon Stack
01:13:42 Oh, the plot thickens. This is getting getting less desirable by the second. So now we're keeping this guy around who likes to smash stairs up with a sledgehammer for no reason, and he walks around the machete all day. Ah, sure that'll end well, Jane,
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:14:06 sometimes he used it to chop down things in our yard, chop down things we didn't want chopped down very often.
Devon Stack
01:14:14 Oh, maybe he can join forces with that other psycho that doesn't like fir trees, and they can make some kind of landscaping business out of it, right, right? That's what we need. We need some kind of community committee that can come together and get these psychopaths and and group them together into ways that they can be, you know, productive members of society or some nonsense, right? Yeah, nothing to worry about with that machete.
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:14:41 And yet there was such a threatening mood about him that we were reluctant to argue with him about these things. He carried the machete day and night.
Devon Stack
01:14:52 Oh, good, that's good to know. I'm sure that ended totally, totally fine, right? Machete. Dave, machete. Dave is what we call, oh, wait, why are you in court getting a restraining order against your son?
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:15:05 We're beginning to feel like we were prisoners in our own home,
Judge
01:15:09 sir, your Leroy, Leroy Moser, Jane Moser,
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:15:14 and then finally, he threatened my husband, said he would castrate him. Castrate him because that was the message in the Old Testament that he must do this.
David Moser - AI Voice
01:15:29 The castration of my father has been foretold in the book of riddles. And
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:15:39 it was at that point, we called the doctor, we called the police.
Judge
01:15:43 Are you requesting a continuation this restraining order here?
Leroy Moser - Father of David
01:15:46 Yes, we are.
Judge
01:15:46 We'll prepare a new order, and I'll sign a new order, sending it for a year.
Leroy Moser - Father of David
01:15:50 Thank you very much. Great.
Devon Stack
01:15:52 So now you got a guy who walks around the machete in a sledgehammer, I guess, occasionally, who wants to castrate his dad because he thinks he's Jesus, and that it was prophesied somewhere in the Bible that he has to chop his dad's testicles off. This sounds great. That sounds like you know, that guy really has a lot of potential. I'm sure, with a little bit of treatment, he'll be curing cancer in no time.
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:16:19 Many mentally ill people, very ill people such as David, think nothing is the matter with them. They're not ill. It's the rest of the world. Something else is wrong.
Devon Stack
01:16:31 Ah, yes, and something is wrong. Actually, I'm starting, I'm actually starting to think that the crazy people are onto something. Who's really the crazy people? The crazy people or the or the or the fucking people that let the crazy people run amok in their in their society, who's really the crazy ones, the crazy people that they don't know any better? You know better, and you're still doing the fucking stupid thing.
Reporter
01:16:57 In December of 1984 probate court ordered David Moser committed for involuntary treatment of manic depressive illness with psychosis. The judge wrote, without treatment, Mr. Moser's psychotic condition will worsen and he will become increasingly assaultive. But although the hospital agreed with the diagnosis, they accepted David's arguments for release without medication, because his resistance was so well organized and so cordial that it did not make sense to force treatment.
Leroy Moser - Father of David
01:17:26 The whole point of treatment, by psychiatry and through the modern medications, is to give back to the person who is mentally ill the capacity the ability to make free, responsible choices, of which they have been robbed by their mental illness. It's a, it's a it's a myth to assume that the person who is mentally ill has this wonderful free capacity to make choices they don't. They've lost it.
Devon Stack
01:18:00 Well, that that's not the myth, you know, or at least that's, I don't believe that myth, like, I don't think anyone believes that, that they have choices. That's, that's kind of the point. That's why we can't have them in our society. Because you can't, like, the whole point of a free society is it's built around the idea that people are rational and make free choices with their own will, and so if you are unable to do that, that's the minimum like, that's the minimum like, that's the minimum requirement to exist in a free society.
01:18:33 The minimum requirement is you are a free agent that makes their own choices. If you're not well, then you're either a child or like an infant. That's that has guardians who are responsible for your actions and and you know, in this case, this would be your, you know, your psycho son before he was of age, but once they're out of the house and they become my problem, that changes.
01:19:08 If you raise a psycho and look, it's genetic, most likely so whatever right might not have been anything you did, but if you raise a psycho, you know, sorry, I don't I don't care how emotionally attached you are to the guy who wants to chop off your testicles with a machete while He smashes your stairs with a sledgehammer, that guy cannot be running amok in the city, and I don't care if he has moments of clarity long enough to convince doctors that he's not going to be a danger.
01:19:52 He's He's obviously a danger, and it's unprepared. Predictable precisely for the reasons you said, because he is out of control. And so if he's out of control and he's simply a slave to these psychotic impulses, it's impossible to predict his behavior, because even He probably can't predict his behavior, and people can get all wound up in the thing, the idea of all, it's not his fault. I didn't say it was his fault. It's not about fault.
01:20:30 This isn't like a punishment. We're not I'm not proposing the removal of these people as some form of punishment for their behavior, it's just the reasonable thing to do to maintain a society.
01:20:59 But I don't know. What do I know? Maybe this Jew can enlighten me.
Stephen Schwartz - Attorney
01:21:02 I think that there is a tendency that it's quite dangerous to say, if we will allow older people to die under certain conditions, we will allow people who have terminal illness to die under certain conditions. We will allow someone who even happens to have a heart attack or a certain medical condition to say, I'd rather not get better, but as soon as the person has a mental illness, then we decide to intervene in a completely different way. We decide to treat them differently.
01:21:27 And to me, the fundamental way to answer all of these questions about who should do what under what conditions is not so much a complicated analysis of government authority and personal choice, but it's about a principle of equality. I believe that until and unless, we treat people with mental illness in basically the same way we would treat our brothers whether they have mental illness or not, we're going to set it construct a set of rules and a set of interventions that are dangerous.
Devon Stack
01:21:57 You mean the way that that you want to treat your psychotic brother. So let's get that out of the way. First of all, let's let you know you kind of tipped your hand on that one. But secondly, it's that. It's the whole, it's the Jew. That's the Jew argument. Well, it's an illness. Everything's an illness now, right?
01:22:13 Well, actually, now, now it's now it's not even an illness. Now, we've devolved from there, yeah, now it's just being neurodivergent, and it's diversity now. Now it's not an illness at all. It's diversity. But this point they were trying to the reasoning to get you to swallow this, this pill, this Jew pill, was it's an illness. You wouldn't, you wouldn't force someone that had a heart condition to take their heart pills, right?
01:22:44 Okay, but if someone doesn't take their heart pills, they're not going to show up at my house in the middle of the night with a machete and try to castrate me because they think that they're Jesus. See, these Jewish arguments are so easy to circumvent that I don't know why. There wasn't a single fucking goy that apparently that was capable of doing this. Instead, they were like, Oh, wow, that's brilliant.
01:23:11 That's the most brilliant kite speak I've ever heard in my life. Wow, yeah, you're right. If who, if someone has a disease, we don't force them to go to the hospital. If you have cancer, we don't strap you to a gurney and force you to have chemotherapy. So why would we do that with a psychopath with a machete? Oh, that's just, that's just, wow. I'd never thought of it that way.
01:23:42 And that's what they did. That's, that's the word salad that they put on the table, and all the fucking guys laughed it up and then asked for the meal. That's, that's what happened. That was the argument, and that's still the argument you'll hear from from the the the shrinking number of libertarians that are still out there, well, you don't force and it's like, again, you're it's two different things.
01:24:10 It's two different just because you call it a disease doesn't magically, oh, in that case, everything that applies to diseases because you're calling it a disease, you know. And if it's a disease, by the way, how do you catch it? Is it? What's the cure? Show me exactly. Because with with cancer, I can go in and get a CAT scan, and you can look at it, and you can see the cancer. You can point at the cancer, and you can say, there's the cancer.
01:24:43 It's right there. And so we know you have cancer because it's right there, and because we know you have cancer, we can find ways of treating it. We can measure it. We can measure if our treatments working or not. You know, we can all the. Tumor shrunk, or it didn't shrink, or it's getting bigger, or whatever, right? Show me. Show me how that works in mental health. Are you able to just do a scan of David with the machetes head?
01:25:13 Obviously not right? Because you let him out, because he was so polite in the interview that you Oh, well, he doesn't seem like he's dangerous. Why? Because you couldn't see, you couldn't see this, you know, elusive illness that he's got. You didn't have any way of testing for it. You couldn't just, oh, let me do this blood test right here. Oh, blood test results came in. It's true. You've got, you know, you've got the cancer.
01:25:38 No, no, you can't. Can't do that. So there's, there's no way you can just look at the mind and say, oh, there it is. There, right there. There's the schizophrenia. There it is. Now all we need is we can target the medications of that schizophrenia, and then it'll just, you know, we can measure how much of it, oh, 80% reduction of the schizophrenia. Now, you can't do that. Can you can't quantify it. So stop fucking calling it a disease. How about that? So anyway, let's, let's see what this Jew has to say.
Alan Stone - Harvard Law Professor
01:26:16 We always thought that the way this worked was you release patients from the state hospital, and the state set up these fancy, expensive programs, and when you got the person into the program, they're the ones who would successfully stay out of the state hospital.
01:26:30 What we found over time was that there were places like Mrs. Shaw's rooming homes, that people went both who were in treatment and people who had decided to bolt from the treatment system. And that there were the Mrs. Shaws of the world who took care of these people, who knew when they were on medication and when they were off medication. And it became clear to us that we better have a partnership with Mrs. Shaw Ah yes.
Devon Stack
01:26:56 We need more. We need millions of dollars worth of Mrs. Shaw's. Mrs. Shaw's, who this bleeding heart bitch here that likes to take care of people like this guy. Look just, just look at him. Just Just, just look at him. Sorry if I'm walking around and I see that every, every part of my fight or flight system is saying either, either kill it with fire or get away before it hurts you. That's dangerous. I mean, that's, that's like cartoon evil.
01:27:31 So she's got like, like, literal cartoon psychos living in her her facility, and because they can just decide to not take their medication, they get even psycho, or in the case, you know, in this guy's case, they've already had to drag him off and arrest him a couple of times. But because they can't keep him locked up in a storage facility or throw him on a volcano. He ends up out here, and so he's just a constant public nuisance.
01:28:07 Again, serves no purpose, has no meaningful life of his own, and exists only to make the quality of life for everyone around him worse. He is the the poo smeared on the wall from the luxury service.
Mrs. Shaw
01:28:30 It's a pathetic sight of what can you do when he's off of medication? You don't want to trust him. You want to turn your back on him. And he's on the brink now of being where I'm going to try to get him admitted back to the hospital, but he won't go in himself and the losses, he has to show up at the hospital himself to be taken, otherwise I have to call the police and have him taken and bodily. And I'm afraid that he gets violent and he might hurt one of these police officers, because I've seen him hurt another police officer, officer Nichols, quite a while ago, and I'm afraid he might do the same thing again.
Devon Stack
01:29:08 Oh, in that case, let's keep him around. Let's keep him alive. Let's spend 1000s of dollars a month to keep him alive. Then, right? That's, that's what I would do.
01:29:16 Certainly wouldn't euthanize him. That would never that would be bad somehow. No one can tell me how, but it would be somehow something, something God, or something I don't know, like there's, I can't think of a single reason. Can't think of a single reason this guy needs to be around.
Thomas Wolff - Psychologist
01:29:39 That's the same guy who
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:29:40 hit Nichols. He
Mrs. Shaw
01:29:43 took a leg of a chair and table it opening officers head, right, yeah, yeah. So he's
01:29:47 not acting, Oh, good. Well, he's right now. He's acting very weird because he hasn't been taking his medication. And I keep telling the boys, don't go near him and don't turn your back on Him, because you don't know he's he's got it before, right? Yeah, he's done. Before you just have to do it again.
Devon Stack
01:30:01 Oh, so, so his his psychotic behavior is somewhat predictable in that we know it's going to keep happening over and over and over again. So therefore the solution, yeah, we're the crazy ones, doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results. But the the Jews say he has civil rights. The Jew says he has civil rights. So I guess he has civil rights, but now we gotta, we gotta tie up some cops to go talk to this fucking psycho and send him to the hospital against his will.
Alan Stone - Harvard Law Professor
01:30:39 Civil libertarians have long thought that no one should be punished for their status. Mental illness is a status, so the status of being seriously mentally ill shouldn't be punished.
Devon Stack
01:30:56 Oh, it's a status. What about the status of being a murderer? Should that not be punished? That's a status. What about the status of being a pedophile? Should that not be punished? It's a status.
01:31:14 See, it's all this fucking jiu jitsu bullshit that somehow guys were either mentally incompetent, too mentally incompetent to to deal with, or just my feels, I feel bad for the crazy guy. What kind of life is that?
01:31:38 The same poisonous exploit that was used to allow the great Negro migration to destroy all the great cities of America opened the flood gates to every kind of refugee that suicidal empathy of whites has been exploited in every way you can imagine, and the harsh Darwinian conditions that have been lifted from the population so that we have more and more and more crazy people.
01:32:17 Well, what goes up must come down, and it will come down like a fucking hammer. And I guess on the bright side is the white people that come out on the other side will most likely not be burdened with this suicidal empathy, because those that are afflicted most with this are not going to make it. You but look at he's so pathetic. Oh my God. Don't you feel bad for him? He's just sitting on his porch with a knife, looking through the bushes at people.
Cop
01:32:51 What's, what's the knife there for? Don't, don't, don't touch it.
01:32:55 Okay, all right.
01:32:56 Well, where's your state if I hold the knife? Okay? Where's the steak you're cooking?
Crazy Eddie
01:33:06 There's no primer shot. No no. There's no no. Mrs. So I was concerned about younger people
Cop
01:33:18 we met that
01:33:21 Friday. Extra.
Stephen Schwartz - Attorney
01:33:23 We met the other night down same to you. I believe that when a person is violent or is likely to hurt somebody, that compulsory treatment to prevent violence, even if it's just confinement, is an appropriate intervention. But what you're asking is, should we have a rule? Should we have a rule that says that if a person has some chance of being violent in the future, let's intervene early and hope that we can successfully stop that violence? And I'm telling you that if there's not a good chance that you're going to succeed, then I don't think you have a right to do that to people.
Devon Stack
01:34:03 Actually, we do because, like I said, they can't take care of themselves. They forfeited all rights at that point. And I'm sorry if you can't understand why the psycho with a knife glaring at people through the bushes at the crazy hotel, how that might not be a concern, then fuck you and your in your crazy Jew brother too, because that's all just a minute. That's what this is. That's what this is. Your crazy Jew brother is probably also psychotic and dangerous, and you don't want the white people locking him up,
Stephen Schwartz - Attorney
01:34:42 because then I think you are saying that people with mental illness should be singled out, above and beyond all other people in our in our society, for preventive detention, for early intervention.
Cop
01:34:52 Where's your medication?
01:34:53 Eddie
Crazy Eddie
01:34:54 got him out two weeks ahead of time.
01:34:56 When you went out?
Cop
01:34:56 Did you run out?
Crazy Eddie
01:34:56 Well, it sounds like.
01:34:56 It's on his way now.
Cop
01:34:56 Yeah, when did you run out? Though?
01:35:00 So you haven't had any meds for a week, no, and you're supposed to take them every night.
Crazy Eddie
01:35:07 See the doctor says, if you're not crazy, you know? Yeah, and you know it, you know, 123, is 2123. Is what?
01:35:16 3123, is three. It's logical.
Devon Stack
01:35:18 Yeah, that sounds Get in the fucking pit. Dude. Get in the fucking pit. We don't need this guy. I don't care if he isn't as crazy when he's on the medication. We there's no reason for this guy. So of course, they lock him up because he's insane. Meanwhile, let's check in on uh. Let's check in on crazy Dave, machete Dave, let's see how machete Dave is doing.
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:35:56 In the state of Massachusetts, a person who is mentally ill has the right to refuse treatment, and a judge must make that decision whether the person will be treated against his or her will. In David's case, David, as I said before, is articulate. He's bright. He knows the law. He's not retarded.
David Moser - AI Voice
01:36:24 I am not retarded.
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:36:32 It's extremely intelligent. When rested, has he has been if he's been in a jail or a hospital for a few days, he calms down a bit. He presents for a limited period of time, presents himself as a calm, collected, rational person.
David Moser - AI Voice
01:36:56 I look bat shit crazy in every photo you have of me. Okay.
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:37:06 And because the law is so written, the person must present some dangerousness, a present dangerousness, not yesterday's dangerousness or tomorrow's dangerousness, but today and this hour is dangerousness. Judges find that difficult to to order a medication against one's.
Devon Stack
01:37:31 Will see again, the decision is not theirs. It's not up to them. In fact, look if, if you're not capable of solving the problem yourself, you know, if we're in a situation where you're having to be ordered to take the medication, you go in the pit. That's the line. That's the line,
01:38:01 because if you're ordered to take the medication, you can't be trusted to take the medication, and we it's just not worth it. What do we need you for? So David, of course, the not retarded, super lovable machete. David, this is how he ended up.
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:38:24 We had only seen David a couple times from 85 to 88 he had come in front of our house Shouting, shouting in the middle of the night.
Leroy Moser - Father of David
01:38:39 Jane and I had gone to bed about 1130 and about midnight, she thought she heard a noise downstairs, and I listened and I didn't hear anything, and we both then dozed off to sleep,
Jane Moser - David's Mom
01:38:54 but within a few minutes, we heard steps across our lower Hall and coming up our stairs, and my husband jumped out of bed, turned on the hall light, and it was David.
Leroy Moser - Father of David
01:39:11 He immediately attacked me, pushed me back into the bedroom and began pummeling me about the face and about the shoulders and on the left side, particularly, I think, he struck me probably 20 or 30 times, and part of that time I was on the floor when Jane tried to get to the telephone, he took the telephone and threw it at
Crazy Roger
01:39:34 her, and then he began to assault me, which he had never done before.
David's Brother
01:39:44 My wife and I were living on the third floor of this house, my parents' house, when I woke up to a screaming sound that I didn't even recognize as my mother's voice, it was so ghastly my. The wife was trying to call 911, she was on the floor. I mean, her knees had given out, literally, from fear. I went down. And at that point, my father was in the hallway. He was naked from the waist down, and David was just pummeling him, had him up against the wall.
Devon Stack
01:40:24 So David tried to castrate his dad because he thought he was Jesus, and the Bible told him to and then they tell this funny little story. So this is from the thumbnail David as a gift to his father, I guess before they realized he was crazy, painted this painting and said it was a painting of Jesus in hell, and gave it to His proud father, who hung it up in the hallway where David would later attempt to castrate him, thinking he was Jesus.
01:41:04 And it's just like, sorry if your kid gives you this painting and says, hi dad, here's my painting for you. It's, it's Jesus in hell. And you don't think to yourself, maybe, maybe, maybe we don't need this guy. Yeah, there's a problem
Crazy Roger
01:41:30 out in the hall where the police finally found him, hangs a painting David painted for his dad many Christmases ago, painting of Christ in hell, and under that painting where David was finally subdued our youngest son in response to the shouting David was doing at him, said, Go to hell. And David replied, I'm already in hell,
Devon Stack
01:41:57 see, but he's not. That's the problem that's No, he's not, though I like that the Merry Christmas dad. I call it Christ in hell. Oh, how thoughtful of you, David. Oh, I'm gonna, I'm gonna hang this right on the wall right now. Oh, you're so gifted and talented. So this is, this is David, the guy who thinks he's Jesus, who then leaned heavily into the whole Jesus thing.
01:42:32 Look, there he is. He's, he's all dressed up as Jesus at his trial, represented himself, which you would think would be a bad idea, right? You think some guy who thinks he's Jesus, dressed up as Jesus, representing himself at a trial, you know it'd be open and shut.
01:42:51 They'd put him right back in the crazy house, right? No, not so much. Oh, I forgot to mention. And he thinks that he's communicating with the FBI, and he says this, so this guy that imagine the judge, okay, in this situation, you you know that this guy's tried to castrate his his father. He thinks he's Jesus. He is representing himself like a crazy person, dressed as Jesus, and he thinks that he's in contact with the FBI.
Reporter
01:43:33 And Dr John Gilmore was the hospital's forensic psychiatrist who thought David was mentally ill and dangerous, but David had not allowed Dr Gilmore to examine him, explaining in a note, he had to be immediately released to make a report to the FBI.
David Moser - Reenactment
01:43:52 You said that in regards to people reporting things to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, that your response was, Well, that's all part of the larger picture. Do you recall making that statement here today?
Lawyer
01:44:05 Mr. Moser, the larger picture here is that in September of 1988 you broke into your parents' home and seriously beat your father and injured your mother and apparently also injured a police officer.
David Moser - Reenactment
01:44:18 What does that have to do with the Federal Bureau of Investigation? Mr.
Lawyer
01:44:22 Moser, your belief in 1988 that there was serious wrong done against you, which prompted you to attack your parents are now the same beliefs prompting you to seek redress through the Bureau of Investigation.
David Moser - Reenactment
01:44:35 Incredible conclusion, sir, where did you find it? I know I've only spoken to you for no more than five seconds. Is it written down somewhere that the court can't see it just curious.
Reporter
01:44:47 Judge Joseph Reardon told frontline that he was impressed by David's intelligence, even though Dr Gilmour had reviewed David's extensive history because he had not examined him, the judge was not persuaded. It by the doctor's testimony that David was likely to be dangerous.
Devon Stack
01:45:07 What? What? So the judge is like, he seems he seems legit to me. I don't see you guys are all complaining about this guy seems totally normal. Yeah, you guys are this. You really kind of you guys sound like the crazy ones trying to lock this. This fine, obviously intelligent man up. I'd like to introduce him to my daughter.
Reporter
01:45:34 The judge said he was also impressed that David had not been violent in prison, and that David saw his attack on his parents as a punishable act of civil disobedience,
Devon Stack
01:45:46 trying to castrate your dad because you think you're Jesus. That's just a it's civil disobedience.
Reporter
01:45:53 Most of David's past medical and police records were not placed into evidence, although the judge concluded that David was mentally ill. The judge found there is not clear and convincing evidence that the respondent, if discharged, would create a likelihood of serious harm, either to his parents or to himself or to members of the public by reason of his mental illness.
Crazy Roger
01:46:19 And so he was released, not only from the handcuffs, but from the hospital with no treatment, and he's gone.
Devon Stack
01:46:31 So now, now David machete, Dave is just out there somewhere. Well, I mean, I don't know where he is. Now, be fun to try to figure out where this that guy ended up, sure, not sure, nowhere good, right? I'm sure, I'm sure he just, he cured cancer, like, a week later, right? So then they get this letter from the the doctor saying, like, maybe get a security system,
John Gilmore - Forensic Psychologist
01:46:56 dear Reverend and Mrs. Moser, since David has been released against my professional judgment. It is my duty to encourage you to take reasonable precautions to protect yourself. The Northampton police department may be able to assist you. I have written them about the potential harm to you. The decision of Judge Reardon is truly a regrettable one. I sincerely hope that your son will not be harmed in the community, and that he will not seriously harm anyone else. He obviously requires intensive hospital care and treatment with antipsychotic medications. Unfortunately, David will now have to be re arrested before further psychiatric intervention can be undertaken. John Gilmore, forensic psychologist,
Devon Stack
01:47:40 and in the meantime, he can vote. He can vote. He can show up to ice protests. He can show up to BLM rallies. So then they, they, they're almost done closing down the hospital, and this is one of their this is one you thought David was bad. This is one of the remaining inmates, or I don't know patients, if you want to call them that, but if you're being realistic, here inmates.
Reporter
01:48:14 This is the only active ward at Northampton State Hospital. Roger is one of the last 23 patients, and he has just been told that the hospital is about to close.
Crazy Roger
01:48:31 I've had quite a few changes in my life, and closing the hospital is pretty rough. I wanted to settle down here for a while because I can't go in the street right now. I'm not safe enough to go on the street, because I'll kill somebody. I will. I'll kill somebody. I have no problems with that at all. We're working on getting me better, so I'll be moving to another hospital.
interviewer
01:48:55 Roger, do you think it's possible to commit a crime because of an illness.
Crazy Roger
01:49:03 Okay, I'll give you an example. I hear voices, and the voices get louder and louder and louder in my head, and the voice of Satan tell me to kill somebody. And I went off, and I took a knife, and I was about to do the person in, but the person wasn't home. Person wasn't home, and I turned around, I burned everything that I saw in sight. Burned it all down. That's the night when I that I committed my arson. I was hearing voices in my head, and I had to, had to release it. Had to release it. Okay.
Devon Stack
01:49:35 Well, why do we need this guy? I mean, he should be killed just for the mullet firing squad. I mean, what's like, we don't need these people. What is, what is the the cost? And I don't just mean financial. What is the cost? Do we not why do we not think about this anymore? Like, how low is the bar? How low? Is the bar that this guy is kept alive. How low is the bar that part of your work, when you go to work and you work for your family, some of that goes to him, because we apparently, we really need this guy. Apparently we really need the voices in the head I want to murder people guy.
01:50:33 So they shut they finally shut down the facility.
Alan Stone - Harvard Law Professor
01:50:36 I have no doubt that most of the people who do terrible things which shock us, have some mental illness. The question is, is it sufficient? Is it severe enough in the minds of a court so that a jury can say this person is not criminally responsible? Now that's the moral problem.
Devon Stack
01:51:02 No, actually, that's not the problem at all. But thanks for the Jew speak there. I liked how they've totally flipped that around, right? The moral problem isn't Oh, well, can a jury really decide that they they were in their right state of mind, so therefore they are responsible for the crime?
01:51:20 No, if there's any question about that at all, then they go in the pit, if you can't, if you can't determine whether or not they're even rational enough to be responsible for their own behavior, that that's, that's the the pit, that's not, oh, in that case, you don't go to jail. I mean, in a manner of speaking, okay, maybe you don't go to jail, but you go to the pit. And I'm glad you brought up the whole anyone who does anything super shocking has some level of mental illness.
01:51:48 I would agree, anyone that is a rapist, for example, I think would also go in the pit. If you're a rapist. That's not something I would do. I can't even relate to that. I can't even relate to that your mind is so far off in crazy town that if you violently rape someone, yeah, you should go in the pit too. And that's how we determine that you are unfit for our society, is you couldn't be trusted to not rape someone.
01:52:17 Again, pretty low bar. Pretty fucking low bar. And so, yes, I think a lot of criminals that we instead put in jail and they release and they re offend, and they would lock them it is there. They're fucking just like the homeless people, just like homelessness is not a homelessness problem. It's a crazy people problem, I think, and to large degree, criminality. It's not a criminal problem, it's a crazy people problem.
01:52:44 And just because we don't have the technology to scan their head and personality problem, we have a crazy people problem. If you have people that are consistently going out into the world and committing crimes and or even just for the first time, committing some kind of crime that is unrelatable to you.
01:53:06 Like, unrelatable, like, there's some crimes that are relatable. There are some crimes that, if someone commits a crime, I'm like, Well, you probably shouldn't have done that. You should probably get a punishment for that. And you know when, and then you'll then you'll have learned your lesson, right?
01:53:22 Like there is, there is a there's a level of criminality. I I've committed crimes. I had that most of you two have committed crimes. We get it. Okay, all right, so you committed a crime that I can relate to on some level, right? If you commit crimes that I can't relate to, like you're torturing people to death and shit like that, there is absolutely no fucking reason why you should be kept alive. Zero.
01:53:53 There is absolutely no reason why you should be kept alive, and a million reasons why you shouldn't. But instead, Jews have flipped it around. They have flipped it around to where, if you kill someone in a psychotic way, actually you're not responsible because you were crazy when you did it, when the exact opposite should be how you look at it. Oh, you were crazy when you did it in the pit, because it's unrelatable.
01:54:28 So your behavior is completely unpredictable. This is, in fact, one of these cases. Get a load of this fucker. This is, this is the model case. This is the model case where they showed that, Oh yeah, look at this guy. He didn't know what he was doing because he was crazy, and so they went through treatment now, and now they're letting them go. I swear to Christ, if I was the one that was the victim in this case, in my family didn't, didn't return. A favor, I'd be really fucking pissed off. This
Reporter
01:55:05 is September 8, 1993 the honorable by Maurice H Richardson, presiding for the past 10 years, Judge Maurice Richardson has been closely monitoring the progress of a man who murdered and who was found not guilty by reason of insanity after 21 years of treatment and confinement, John Pavone wants out
Lady Lawyer
01:55:25 under the statutory standard. It's the burden of the district attorney to prove that the petitioner is
Devon Stack
01:55:33 mental listen to the details of this murder, by the way, and not just the details how the guy talks about it like he's talking about, like a football game,
Lady Lawyer
01:55:43 mentally ill, and that if he were discharged, there would be a likelihood of serious harm, physical harm, to another person, as evidenced by violent or homicidal behavior.
Reporter
01:55:57 In June of 1972 John Pavone, a Vietnam veteran took a 22 caliber rifle, drove onto Route two outside of Boston, and shot two motorists, killing one of them. He was captured and immediately diagnosed as a chronic paranoid schizophrenic.
John Pavone - Mentally Ill Vet
01:56:15 When I came first came home from now, when I thought at the dawn over in Sicily, could see through my eyes, like I had a camera in my eyes, and he could give me the orders and who to shoot. The voices. Told me to buy
Devon Stack
01:56:28 a Oh, he's got voices, and he thinks he has a camera in his eyes. Okay, this, and we kept, we're keeping him around for any and he killed someone. Shot two people. Killed someone. Yeah, listen to how he talks about like it's no big deal.
John Pavone - Mentally Ill Vet
01:56:46 The voices told me to buy a weapon. So I bought a gun off a friend of mine, and I was coming down the highway and I was getting command hallucinations telling me to kill the guy that's driving him the car in front of me. So I pulled up beside him. I shot at him once. I missed him. I went through the windshield. I shot again, and it killed him instantly. I shot him in the back of the head. The bullet went through the back of his brain and now his throat. Killed him instantly.
Lady Lawyer
01:57:13 Dr Greenleaf, can you describe anything that's significant in terms
Devon Stack
01:57:18 Ah, that's good. That's good, but now, hey, it's a success story. They cured him. They cured him. Guys, yay. They cured him
Reporter
01:57:28 because the district attorney presented no evidence that John Pavone was likely to discontinue medications and become dangerous. Judge Richardson released him. Great.
Devon Stack
01:57:38 He's cured guys in the pit, in the fucking pit.
01:57:49 So anyway, the hospital is completely shut down now, and mission accomplished
Reporter
01:57:56 on August 24 1993 the Department of Mental Health began the transfer of the last 17 patients to a city hospital in Springfield, Massachusetts, from a peak of 2500 patients in 1955 the census of Northampton state is about to be zero the
Devon Stack
01:58:28 uh, Thanks Jews. So yeah, I'm very pro gassing psychos. I don't know how that's even like a controversial issue. You really can't argue against it without invoking some kind of religious argument that is insane, and you can't, you can't tell me why we need these people.
01:58:50 No one can tell me why you need these people. The only people that would, that would say that you need them are people that have, like, some kind of personal connection with one of them. And in that case, then it's up to you to take care of them. It shouldn't be up to me to take care of them.
01:59:05 If you can't take care of your own little fucking homegrown psycho. That's your that's on you. You know that's that's your problem. It shouldn't ever be my problem. And so, as I said in the beginning, people like to talk about all the things that, oh, Hitler was right. Hitler was right about the Jews. Well, he wasn't just right about just Jews. Okay, we have human refuse that needs cleaning up, and not all of it has black skin.
01:59:36 And tell people have the stomach to do what's necessary for, you know, conduct, some racial fucking hygiene people want to know like, and that's the thing you always see, oh, white people, they're not like they used to be. They're all weak now and comfortable. And, you know, they're nothing like our forefathers. First of all, a lot of the people saying that, that's not your forefathers. That's my forefathers.
02:00:01 Okay, a lot of the people say in that shit, you're not actually from here. Okay, so fuck off. First of all, second of all, yeah, you think we're not like them. You think because, look at what's been going on. Look at this dysgenic Shit that's been going on.
02:00:20 We have lifted all of the, all the selection pressures that created those forefathers, all the, all the harsh Darwinian conditions that created that, that American exceptionalism of the early days of the Republic, that made those men optimistic that that that form of government would even work in the first place, because they were surrounded by absolute fucking Chads, because all the weak had been weeded out by selection pressures, and because they created a society That was so prosperous and so easy and so successful.
02:01:04 It attracted the parasites. It attracted the psychos. It attracted the weak who couldn't take care of themselves. Hell, they were invited. Right? The Jews changed the poem on the Statue of Liberty to say, Bring us your trash. And so the trash came in. In fact, there were countries that shipped us their trash because they were like, Oh, we don't want to deal with all these fucking psychos and all these criminals.
02:01:33 We'll throw them on a fucking boat to America. Yeah. America, land of opportunity. Geez. Jesus said, boat after boat are these fucking psychos. These fucking Jews show up, make it so that it's impossible to deal with the psychos, and now they run amok.
02:01:56 They have babies, make more psychos, and there's no attempt whatsoever to change it. In fact that there's every attempt to normalize it. Generation Z puts their psychological problems in their profile like a badge of honor.
02:02:26 So I'm very pro gassing the psychos, and people aren't comfortable with saying that, then you're part of the problem. You're part of the problem because you're like, oh, but what about this guy? He's just, you know, he's, he's kind of annoying. But look, he's not that bad.
02:02:46 Okay, well, then he can take care of himself. Let's see how bad he is. I cut out some of the crazy shit he was saying. It was, it was totally, it wasn't just, he wasn't just being annoying. He said some annoying, or, like, annoying shit. But he said some crazy ass shit. You
02:03:08 haircut alone should give him the death penalty. Same thing with the mullet fucker. Anyway. Let's take a look at hyper chats. All right. We got, obviously, we got who we always have on hyper chats. We got love and division. Love and divisions.
02:03:45 Love and division says, Yes, outlaws was very good. The nature versus nurture debate is so much like the predestination versus free will debate not as an argument, just that I find this IRL situation interesting. I have a nephew who raised his son without interfering with his nature. The kid was in prison by the time he was 15. Yeah, I'm not saying that like you don't teach your kids rules now. Don't get it twisted.
02:04:19 What I'm saying is, Well, I'll tell you what, nature does still play a role in that. There are kids that you probably could have left alone that wouldn't have ended up like that. You know, you will have, you will have bad apples, that or and here's the other thing, there's no you.
02:04:35 There's no control. I look, I know it's anecdotal, but if you had said, Well, I had someone, I knew someone that had twins, and they raised one without rules, and then one with rules, and then the one without rules went to prison. That you have some evidence, but that's the thing is, unfortunately, even what you're saying doesn't even have it doesn't prove anything. He could have been, you could have completely you could have been like a tight.
02:05:00 Mom, and he'd still end up in prison. So I mean, look, behavior is genetic to a wild degree. And while there are extreme ways in which you can damage a kid and make them fucked up, generally speaking, it's all genetic. And you know, the example I gave on that show was, if you had two identical Honda Civics, they're going to have the same top speed, they're going to have the the same, you know, turning radius, they're going to have all these same things.
02:05:36 And if you drive them similarly, like, you know, like a car is not similarly, but like, a car is supposed to be driven, right? You're gonna, they're always have the same attributes, right? And so the only way you can, I mean, if you got one of them, though, and put it in a car smasher and then said, Oh, look, the wheel base is different on this one.
02:05:57 Now, it's like, well, because you smashed it in a giant vice, yeah, that's there. It's not that environment has no impact whatsoever. You can fuck someone up. You can obviously break someone right? But it's that's an extreme case. That's an extreme case, and by the way, even that process is you're limited by the the the genetic response that person has, because if it wasn't genetic, that would mean that the process of breaking someone would be identical from person to person, and it wouldn't be, you know, or that the results would be the same after you broke them, they'd be identical, which you know, they're not.
02:06:37 And so people just need to embrace the very important reality that a lot of what you see, what you fancy as, like, Oh, I'm just this unique snowflake. I'm this, you know, this spirit. I'm a star child. I'm a star child, and I'm living in this, in this body, and I'm going to ascend, you know, no, you're not.
02:07:04 You're basically a biological LLM, you know, like you basically are, and you're limited by your biology. That's why Black behavior is so predictable. That's why white behavior is so predictable. That's why Jewish behavior is so predictable. And if you can't understand that part of the equation, you're not going to understand why these multiracial societies don't work. You know, this is something we need to get white people to understand is that this is a biological issue.
02:07:38 You know that we are. You cannot educate a black person into being a white person. You can use all the nurture in the world. And you cannot raise the IQ of some 70 IQ four foot tall, Honduran kid. It just not gonna you're stuck with what you got that. I mean, again, there's a little tiny bit of wiggle room, and sure, there's epigenetics, but you're talking about the exceptions to the rules.
02:08:06 There's always some exceptions to the rules, but the general rule is, and when you're creating societies, that's the rules you have to go by. Because if you tried to get into specifics for every single person in the fucking society, that's how you get caught up in this individualism mind fuck, where nothing gets done and everything gets worse.
02:08:27 But if you make rules that are generally good for the people that you have and and realize that there's going to be exceptions to those rules and and sure it's not going to be fair or whatever, you know that's just the way life is. But, yeah. I mean, who knows, who knows, right?
02:08:44 I mean, you can obviously fuck a kid up, but 11 division says Dev and I agree, there are a lot of people who are just a drain on society. This includes many able bodied Jews. It wouldn't be fair if only the crazies are dealt with and not the Jews. Well, that would that would, that would be a lot of the Jews, right?
02:09:02 And crazy might destroy a couple dozen lives a Jew can destroy nations. Well, yeah, that. It goes back to what I was saying. If you commit crimes I can't relate to that you're lumped into the crazy pile. It's if it's something that is inconceivable to me, that I would ever do something like that, like some of the things that Jews do then, yeah, you're, you're, by virtue of doing that, you have proven I don't need a test.
02:09:31 That was the test and you failed. That was the test. You are subhuman. You do not exist in our society, because any more than I'd want some rabid dog running around the streets. So a lot of you know, the lot of the criminal Jews, like the Epstein's of the world, yeah, they'd go in the pit, of course, automatically, because that's something I couldn't I couldn't relate to that I cannot relate to. I'm going to pimp out. 14 year old girls to rich people and try to subvert them.
02:10:05 And it's like, it's not that I don't understand, like, the logic of it. I get why he did it, but it's like, that's never anything I would ever do, or even, like, contemplate doing. I would never be like, You know what we should do? Let's, let's sex traffic some underage girls to powerful people, and that's how I can succeed in the world. Like that would never be a thought I would have. And I think the same goes for most of you.
02:10:33 And because of that, in fact, that's unfortunately, because of that, is why the Jeffrey of the Epstein's of the world exist because it's so inconceivable that anyone would do that. We just don't we just assume that no one's doing that, and then Jews do that. But yeah, thank you very much. Loving division. Always representing on the hyper chats on Odyssey. All right, we're gonna go over to insomnia stream right over to entropy, where we got blue cord. Blue cord, with a big dono,
Mayor Rothschild
02:11:18 is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself.
Devon Stack
02:11:23 Look how chewy this bag is.
02:11:40 All right, blue cord. Blue cord simply says, Good evening, Mr. Stack, well, I appreciate that. Thank you very much. Blue cord, friend of the show. Blue cord, all right, then we got gorgeous. Goy says, Good evening. Devon Stack, so happy to catch the show live and watch with the stack pack. Love your stream, love the outlaws. PS, Lucky Larry Silverstein and his insurance policy on the US Bank building in LA he owns.
02:12:17 Any thoughts, let's see here, Lucky Larry Silverstein and his, oh, and his new insurance policy. I feel like that'd be too obvious, but then again, do they even care about that anymore? You know, like, I feel like everything's obvious now. I mean, it like the cat's out of the bag on this one, and they kind of just know no one's gonna do anything. So, yeah, I mean, I don't know.
02:12:46 Are you implying that, like some Iranian missile is gonna somehow go rogue and make it to LA I don't know. It's possible. I think it's a little too I think it's it's a little too obvious, but at this point I don't know why they'd care. I don't know why they'd care, but, yeah, it's I, my guess is it's probably not, I mean something, it's good to know. I wouldn't want, I wouldn't rent space in that building. But, you know, I then we got every single time with a big Christmas dono children,
Clip
02:13:23 today we'll be weaving the best Christmas ever.
Devon Stack
02:13:26 Our story, the magic negro. Where did the snowman
Clip
02:13:42 go? I Christmas ever?
Devon Stack
02:13:56 All right, every single time says, Hi, Devon, I finally found a physical copy of your book. Cost me $200 and I know you won't see any of that. So here's the royalty. Thanks for your work, sir. Well, I appreciate that. And yeah, well, hopefully you got there's, there's two versions out there right now. I might have to let, Oh no, he's, he's cool. He was just plaintively bleeding, not bleeding. Bleat with a T quiet down there.
02:14:29 Churro, we get it. Grumpy. Churro, grumpy, injured. Churro, yeah, there's two versions of the book. One of them has some not huge errors, but some tiny errors in it. That's the first one, and then the the second one. They're slightly different shapes, too, slightly different shapes and sizes.
02:14:54 So I don't know if you got a first edition.
02:14:56 They might even say, I don't remember if I put in there first or second. Edition in any of them, but very good. I'll tell you what, if I'm, if I ever, if I ever do, like a public appearance kind of a thing, I'll, I'll definitely sign your, yours and anyone's copy, and pretty sure we're gonna have book two coming out with antelope Hill, so that look forward to that where I've been talking to them about, well, sort of, I've been talking to them sort of through Rebecca.
02:15:32 I'll, we'll get that straightened out, probably pretty soon. That's awesome. Thank you very much every single time. I really appreciate the support there. Then we got gorilla hands.
02:16:15 Power All right. Gorilla hand says, looks like Trump might actually try to invade the Strait of Hormuz. I don't see how he can do that without using nukes. They are really escalating things now. Also mysterious drones being spotted flying around our nuclear bases. I did see that that's, uh, that's a bit strange.
02:16:36 Possible false flag happening soon. Will normies buy the bullshit and support world war three. Oh yeah, they'll and if they don't, who cares? You know? I mean, like, that's the way they're looking at it. At this point, the people that are in charge don't really care if the normies buy into it or not, and Trump doesn't give a fuck either.
02:16:57 Like Trump is in full on don't give a fuck mode. And so yeah, and look, Trump is always been a bloviator and a boaster and, well, in a psychopath in his own way. So it's hard to know, right? It's hard to know if he's just talking shit, because 99% of the time he's just talking shit.
02:17:20 But he's also the kind of person that might think to himself, I'm chosen by God. I'm the like. He's, you know, he's said that before. He has said that before. So, I mean, and there look and there's still, as much as you might not want to believe it, there's still a lot of people that believe that. Now I will say this. This is actually kind of encouraging.
02:17:45 I've mentioned before how my finger on the pulse of boomers usually comes from listening to them talk on ham radio. And for the first time ever, I heard a boomer say, and I'm not even this is going to sound made up, but it's not made up. The way he signed off was he did his call sign and then he yelled, Death to the degenerates, Death to Israel and death to Iran. And I was like, Wait, hold on, did I hear that? Right?
02:18:23 And I wish I'd recorded it, because I was like, God damn, and I couldn't get that. He said it when he signed off. And I was like, well, all right there, yeah, that's a interesting development there. So, and I think he was in California. I think he was on California or in California. So, you know, there's again, that's very anecdotal, but I do think that even among boomers, the shine is is wearing off a little bit.
02:18:55 But then at the same time you listen to talk radio or flip on Fox News, or, you know, the places that boomers are consuming a lot of their their political media, and it's still, it's like, you know, you wouldn't know the difference, like, between it's, it's Maga as usual. Let me put that way, it's Maga as usual. So who knows? Who knows? And and, yeah, Trump does not give a fuck.
02:19:19 Does not give a fuck. I still am hesitant to look I've been telling you guys since I started doing this to be prepared as if some you know World War Three or whatever is going to happen. And that's kind of why I don't care either. Is like, I'm ready for it if, if shit like, when, if everything went all crazy to shit tomorrow, I'd be, I mean, I wouldn't be okay in that, like, it would suck, obviously, because it sucked for everybody.
02:19:51 But I wouldn't be like, Oh no. How am I gonna eat? Where's My Water? I'd have all those things. You. I'd have, I'd have enough supplies and ammunition and food and everything else, and distance between me and a lot of the niggers to where I'd be totally fine.
02:20:11 Actually, I'd be totally fine. I'd have a long time to think about it and again, get a plan B going, as in years, I'd have years to get ready before I started running out of stuff. So if you know, if you get, if you're doing what you should be doing, I think everyone should have a year supply of food. It's not hard to do.
02:20:31 By the way, no one says you have to have, like, the expensive freeze dried, you know, gourmet meals or something like that. You just need, like, if you have a closet full of Spaghettios, you're not going to die, you know what I mean. So as long as you have, you know, some kind of food and water, of course, or at least a way to treat water, you know, which is, again, a jug of bleach. Put a jug of bleach somewhere, you can now treat a bunch of water, you know, just there's you can do it cheaply, just be smart.
02:21:03 Then you tend to not worry so much about this stuff, because it's like, well, you know, if it happens, it happens. Now that said, I don't think, I don't think it'll happen. I think the military might of the United States is still quite impressive. You know, I think that especially in comparison to a country like Iran, I'm not saying it'd be like a walk in the park. It never is. It's never as easy as they sell it as being and lots of people would die for Israel, but yeah, Trump using nukes. I mean, I don't know, maybe, yeah, if anyone's, if anyone is gonna do it, it'd probably be Trump, but we'll see.
02:21:53 Then, Gorilla hands says, Can I get a Neil Armstrong fighting the alien on the moon? I don't know which button that is. That's luck of the draw. You might get it. Maybe you will, maybe you won't, for your next one there, we'll have to see. And then we got alcion says, My God, that intro song was good. Feel better soon.
02:22:17 Churro, I actually liked it. I it was one. It's one of those songs I made where I was like, this is kind of out there. And I don't know, like, I was like, I like it, but I don't know if anyone else, I can't tell like, is it actually good? I'm gonna, I'm gonna make a different fake band because of this, because it's, it is kind of different, and we'll see. We'll see. But I'm glad you liked it. You know, name of the brand, the new fake band, is very again, I very low effort.
02:22:53 Names here, rocket pixie. So you can that, by the way, YouTube prevented the the dinosaur song from last stream, the pale siren dinosaur song from, or at least, I think it prevented it, because it never got on YouTube. And so I was preventing I waited to share the link to the song until it was on, you know, until it all goes through a distributor. So I don't do any of the uploading.
02:23:25 They send it to, like, all the all the services, and YouTube Music is one of them. And I know that a lot of people, you know, want the YouTube link, so I wait till that that one pops on, and then I'll share the link out. And I waited, and I wait, and it usually takes, like, not much longer than the other ones, and then it was days, and then it was, like a week. And so at that point, I was just like, Okay, it's not, they're not going to do it.
02:23:47 And I think it's because the name or the word suicide is prominently in the lyrics. And so maybe some Jeet has to listen to it, or maybe they'll just never upload it. But they uploaded all three of the the the rocket pixie songs pretty quick. So I don't know. So that's like, on Spotify, iTunes, everything, right?
02:24:09 So if you liked it, I'm glad you did, because I wasn't sure. I was kind of like, I don't know. I know some of you probably hated it, because it is one of those songs. I was like, people, this is gonna sound kind of crazy. I think just, it's just gonna sound like crazy sounds to some people. For some reason I like these crazy sounds, though, so I'm glad you liked it there. All right. Then we got Simbey. Simbey with the big blue
02:24:56 one that's right, someone's already cracked that code. Simbey says, My UK friend has recently obtained two genuine German uniforms from World War Two. One is an army NCO uniform. The other is SA. Both are museum quality. Both are for sale for three or 3500 pound or either pounds or euros. I think it's, well, that's the pound sign, pounds each. If anyone's interested, let me know, and I'll put you in touch with him.
02:25:29 So there you go. Talk to Simbey. If you want museum quality German uniforms from World War Two, I'm sure there is. I'm sure there's at least someone out there that would be interested in that. All right, then we got another one from Simbey says, I have another query for the incredibly talented Insomnia Stream audience.
02:25:53 Is there anyone out there who could provide a couple voice lines for a Henry Strakosch character. If interested, please let me know soon. You could probably use AI for that too. I mean some, usually the voice stuff still kind of wacky, unless you use Eleven Labs, and they've cracked down on cloning voices. I think people were scamming with it. They were like, cloning everyone's voice and using it in fucked up ways.
02:26:28 And so now you can't just clone voices. So you're a little you're a little limited, but there's other and there's other AIS though, too. But you might want to look into that if, if, if if no one's no one pipes up. Then we got optimistically, pessimistic. Says, Hey, Devon, I'll catch the stream later. Here's some shekels. Well, I appreciate that. Then we got hammer authority.
02:27:09 Camera, Thorazine says, Check for swelling on Cheryl's legs. If you see any trim the fur, look for small puncture wounds. A lot of time limping is due to a bite from another cat, which is basically a bio weapon that results in abscess, infection. Luckily, a dose of injectable antibiotics tends to do the trick. Yeah, I'll take a look at him. He might, he might have been bitten up. He's a little he's, he's not too sensitive, though, like, I mean, he's limping around, but if you he doesn't like bitch and moan too much, if you like, move him around.
02:27:48 And I put him in my lap and stuff like that the other day, and he didn't seem to have any tender spots. But I'll, I'll take a look at him, because we got to keep Churro around, and we definitely got to keep Churro around. So if I have to take him into the vet, it's worth, I mean, there's any other cat, I would say, Fuck it. But I could, I could probably do it. I could drive him, drive him out.
02:28:14 It would, it would suck, because I think he would, he would always like, like, I think it'd be a traumatic, yeah, thing for him being put, put him in a cage and drive him in a car, because it would be a while, like, it's, like, at least an hour to the nearest place, and I'd probably get, honestly, I don't know, I might get his balls chopped off if I do that too, just while I'm there.
02:28:41 I don't know I'm on the fence about that still, but yeah, hopefully, yeah, I'll take a look at him. I haven't had I thought he would be fine, because he's come back a little limpy before, and when he came back more limpy today, I was like, that's when I got concerned so, but that was literally just a couple hours ago, and so I'll, I'll check them out. But thank you very much there, Hammer of Thorazine. Then we got kets ketzer 88 with a reasonably big Dono. Let's see here. My buttons working today.
Clip
02:29:28 Half a million dollars you
Devon Stack
02:29:47 hey. All right, well, there you go. Cats are 88 got the alien stomp. All right, let's hear cats 88 with the generous dono says, I enjoy the outlaws show. And the pale siren music. Can you give some details about how you prompt the AI to generate songs? Shekel for the vet? Bill, well, I appreciate that. Yeah, I would just say, the more specific, the better, because it the the less you describe what you want it to do, the more it's going to fill in the blanks with just generic sounding stuff. And so it it'll be musically Correct, right?
02:30:32 Like, well, not always, but usually. But it'll sound very Gen like, it'll sound like the copyright free music. You know what I mean, that that you used to be able to buy now, I guess, is completely obsolete because of AI. So you have to be extremely specific, or specific about instruments that you're using, instruments that you know how they're used, if you want effects on the voice, you have to be, and that's just the style prompt. So you have to you, in fact, you can talk about the song structure.
02:31:11 To some extent, you know how you want the song to build, or, or, or whatever. And then when you do the lyrics, you can use brackets also to give those kinds of instructions. It doesn't always do what you want. It's just, like every it's like an image, AI, right? Sometimes you tell it to do something, and it just, even though, like, you know, you were very specific, it just misses the mark. In fact, that's the majority of the time it misses the mark.
02:31:42 For every song that I play, for you guys, that I made, know that there's probably at least, at least 100 versions of that song that were terrible that it took to get there. So it's a lot of it's a lot of generations, and a lot of it is being absurdly specific about what you want. Or, yeah, look, if it's if, if it's like a parody song, you might want it to sound generic, right, like you don't want to sit there generating 1000 of them, if it depends on what your goal is, right?
02:32:16 If you want to sound like a song that people actually want to listen to, like an actual song, you have to, it'll take you a really long it might take you all day to do like one song, and or you might get lucky, who knows. But generally speaking, if you're just doing like, Oh, here's a parody song, just, you know, plop the lyrics in and just do a basic prompt, and it'll, you know, it'll, it'll work. So if it's for like, a meme or something like that.
02:32:40 It's probably not as important. But in order to get something that sounds like you want to sound, you have to describe it very, very specifically. And it's, by the way, that's the same with with image general, it's or AI, just generally think of this way when you talk to even like a LLM that's like, like, chat GPT, or something like that, and you want it to do some kind of research or tell you about something.
02:33:10 If you just ask it a real basic question without any kind of parameters, you'll get a real generalized answer. And so it's the same thing in order to get, like, the really in the, you know, very specific kind of data that you want, you have to be extremely specific about what you ask.
02:33:26 And so that you got to think of AI is just like, really fucking stupid. But has a they're like, they're like, Rain Man, you know, like, it's just that's like, this fucking retard walking around that can count toothpicks really fast. And so you have to be like, really, you know, really specific, and explain every little stupid thing to it.
02:33:48 You can't read. To be fair, it can't read your mind. So a lot of that's kind of hard to do with music, unless you know how to describe it. I think that's the problem too is I've been making electronic music since I was like 12. Like, that's something I've always done. I kind of stopped for a while, but like, that was, that was like a part of I was, like a big part of what I did all day when I was a kid.
02:34:14 And so I know some of the language to use when describing it that said I was never like a good musician. It was always electronic music, you know, loops and mod files, back in the days of mod files, drum machines and and things like that. So, yeah. So, yeah. Specificity, I would say, let me put this way. Every single one of my prompts maxes out the character limit that they give you every single one of them.
02:34:48 And it's just, by the way, it's just as important to tell it what not to do, which it'll sometimes, well, it'll often ignore, as it is to tell it what to do, because a lot of times it. Make assumptions that are totally wrong about what you're asking it to do. And you have to say, have to specifically tell and don't do this gay thing that you keep doing. And sometimes it'll it'll just keep doing it. But you know, all right, then we got Beach Boys, white power. You
02:35:30 all right, Beach Boys says really enjoying the chemistry between Rebecca and yourself. Rebecca's fan girl playfulness is adorable, and your big brother teasing meshes. Well, keep up with the great work. All right. Well, I appreciate that. Yeah, she's, she's cool. We got along good. And she's actually based, which is the most important thing is she, I don't have to, like, you know, I don't have to worry like, oh, is this going to offend her sensibilities? You know what I mean? Because that's something I would never want to be able to do.
02:36:07 And in fact, that's something that has prevented her from having a a successful co host dynamic is that she's always run into that situation where she's more based than her male counterpart on, you know, on her shows, and that's never a situation you want to be in. And so, yeah, I think it's going to be, it's a good I like the way it's going, and I think it's going to be just going to get better, because some of it I've been doing, I've never done a show with someone else, and so to get into the groove of it will, I think not.
02:36:49 There's not that it's bad now, but like, it'll get I think it'll just keep getting better, and we might make some things up. Like I said, we talked about changing the times, you know, to a time slot where we're not like competing with other nationalists that we like, and, you know, maybe, maybe play with the format a little bit, but generally, you know, it's gonna, you know, we like how it is. I think we're both pretty happy with how it's going. So I'm glad. I'm glad you like it too, Beach Boys, and thank you for the support.
02:37:27 All right, then we got Minnesotan says I love the outlaw stream. Jews often do horrible things to other Jews, to their or for their own personal gain. Happens all the time. So now imagine all the repugnant shit they are more than happy to do to us, to them. We are less than animals. That's an important point. People, people always make the assumption that, like, well, Jews would never hurt another Jew.
02:37:56 It's like, that's that's crazy. I mean, in group, preference doesn't mean that they would never, you realize there's, there's Jews that murder Jews all the time, right? In fact, a Jew murdered their Prime Minister, you know, like there's, there's Jew on Jew violence all the time. And, yeah, they, they are more than happy to experiment on on lower Jews. They would prefer to do Goys. I, when we were researching that, I found a documentary that, unfortunately, I couldn't find the document, but there was a screen grab.
02:38:32 In fact, we don't have time to look for it, but there I got a screen grab from the document, and at the top, because they zoom in on some other part of the document for the documentary, but I paused it right as they brought the document up so I could read the whole thing. And the first sentence, which gets zoomed out real fast, said something like, I forget the exact wording, but the implication was, we can't get access to white kids, like, I'm not even fucking with you. It said something like, in the past, we have had trouble placing white or not.
02:39:10 It wasn't like acquiring white children, but it almost sounded like that. It was like placing white children or something I don't know.
02:39:18 But the implication was, this study, we're going to go with the Louise Weiss organization, because it'll be easier to get access to Jewish kids like that was, at least, that was the that was the the vibe I got from the the two sentences that you could see before it zoomed them out and I looked for the the wording that was In that screenshot, trying to find that document somewhere online, I just could not find it anywhere.
02:39:45 So, yeah, I my guess is it probably wasn't their first choice. They'd probably rather do it to go in, but they're more than happy to to kill Jews or hurt Jews that they have to. Yeah. Mean, there's, there's several cases where, where they, they will kill their own people, for, you know, to false flag them into action, just like every, you know, just like every other ruling class does. All right, then we got, uh, ketzer.
02:40:14 88 says, please consider xmR chat for super chats. I'd link it, but links are gay. Yeah, we might do that, I guess, especially now that crypto is in the toilet, isn't it still in the toilet? I mean, I know that Manero went skyrocketed, well a couple months ago or something, right? And then it just, it's in the trash and everything else. Now, at least I think it is. I haven't looked at it for a while, but that's that would be a good way to do things.
02:40:43 We can check that out. Then we got someone stole my bike. Says, God speed, professor, my work schedule has been all over the place. Of late, I have missed a few donos. Side note, do you think Iran is putting up more of a fight than realized. It's starting to look like a shit show. I know that's about how I figured it'd be going, you know, like no epic win from the United States or Israel, and also No, no epic win from Iran.
02:41:15 I said in the beginning, Iran is not, you know, some backward third world Arab country, you know, they they're, they're Aryans, you know, I mean not in the way that we mean it. But you know what I mean, like they're, they're not, they're not Arab, and they're, they're higher IQ. And so they have better technology.
02:41:44 They've got hypersonic missiles, they've got drones, they've got other stuff. And I don't my guess is also, if I've been listening to how politicians want to blow up Iran since I've been alive, my guess is they've been listening to that too. And so they've had several decades to prepare for this moment, I would guess, thinking that it was inevitable, it would be it'd be insane if they if they weren't preparing for this day, because they had to know it was coming.
02:42:14 Because every prominent politician in America and Israel has been broadcasting to the world that this day was going to come someday, so we'll see what happens.
02:42:27 Gorilla hands says, fun fact, I live an hour from this city in Massachusetts. It's a flaming liberal college town and very LGBTQ friendly, so the crazy people actually fit in there. Yep, absolutely. Then we got sharp. Wing says, been way too long since I donated things have just gotten super busy.
02:42:51 My wife bought brought our second child into the world over over a year ago, and she's the most adorable little girl in the world with blonde hair and blue eyes, her and my almost three year old son are the lights of my life. Well, congratulations. Congratulations with that.
02:43:09 And then he says, started school again last fall after dropping out before my first semester even ended when I was 18 and retarded. I'm going or I'm doing three classes and working full time, which sucks, since I don't get to see my family as much, but hopefully I'm getting into engineering and robotics technologies program. That sounds interesting. Well, there's gonna be, I'll tell you what.
02:43:36 There's gonna be a lot of robotics in the future. I don't have you guys been paying attention to some of the stuff that's coming out. It's starting to look a little little Terminator ish out there. They said this fall, which will make the grind worth it. I'll be 25 later this year. So my plan is to be finished with school before 30 and find somewhere nice and out of the city to take my family to live.
02:44:01 Thanks for the streams and keep up the good work. Your deep dives are bet the best, and your streams help get me through the long day. Also, outlaws is awesome. Can't wait to see where it ends up going further down the line. Thanks again, Devon, and a shout out for my boys, Guru and make emperor, perhaps, and then you say, also, perhaps. Could we have a is there a button still for that? I
02:44:43 Oh, no, this one's not working. I gotta fit my stream. So I have two stream jacks, and they're connected to this USB hub that sometimes goes gay on me.
02:45:02 Is it in here?
02:45:18 We are, Rosalie stoop.
02:45:38 There you go. Sharp wing, everyone can thank sharp wing for that, but yeah, congratulations on all the the life achievements. Sounds like you're, you're, you're gaining XP, and maybe you'll be part of the robot apocalypse that that I'm starting to think it might happen. This other shit is getting scary looking.
02:46:02 Yeah, you know, you mix AI with with robots that are more powerful and more more the big thing is going to be when they can fix and repair and produce themselves. That's when we got to worry. But yeah, not looking not looking good, but I don't know. Who knows? Maybe you can help out with keeping them human, friendly. Horrible hangover. Says outlaws with Rebecca is fantastic.
02:46:32 This stream is excellent, too. If genetics is greater than nature, how does that change raising children to promote the white people, well, because, again, it's, you have to think of it in terms of capability. Okay, capability is genetic and behavior is genetic.
02:46:55 What you know isn't genetic. Well, I mean, we're actually, weirdly that some of that is genetic, too. There's like, you know, when they get like, what is that isn't like octopus, like they you can teach an octopus how to go through a maze, and then their their offspring will be born knowing how to go through the maze.
02:47:17 And look, I know we're not octopus, but like or octopi, but the I think there's maybe something like that probably going on with humans, I don't know, but I think there's probably a little bit of that, but at the same time, yeah, knowledge is not genetic, so your behavior in terms of what you do with that knowledge will probably be genetically driven.
02:47:43 But if your genetic behavior of your family is to do the right thing, well then you have to give your kids the tools to properly make you know to do the right thing.
02:47:55 If they're working with bad information, like so many white people have been for decades, then they do the wrong thing. That's what gives me hope, guys, is a lot of the white people that are have been self destructive, racially and caused a lot of these problems. That behavior, that they're that it's an exploit, right?
02:48:18 It's Jews exploited their empathy. They exploited their desire to do good, like they genuinely think they're doing good. It's just that their head is full of bad information, and so they're making, you know, their behavior to do.
02:48:32 You know, driving them to do good is, is genetic, but it's with the wrong you know, it's with bad information. So it's, yeah, information is not genetic.
02:48:43 You got to you still have to teach your kids to be pro white, but if your kids are good people, which hopefully they are, if you and you don't lie to them like, you don't lie to them like, that's, that's the other mistake too, is you don't just tell your like, we hate niggers because they're black, or just make shit if don't, you don't just, like, make shit up about the situation.
02:49:08 Be honest about it. Be like, look, this is the situation, and not every black guy is gonna, like, steal your car or rape you, but more of them will. Then, then what other races, and so you got to be careful around them.
02:49:20 And they're generally lower IQ, not only there are some smart ones and there's some gentle ones, but you know, we're talking about the exceptions the rules, and yeah, because otherwise, if you don't, if you're just like, all niggers are dangerous and bad, they're gonna meet like, a nice black guy and be like, Oh, I was lied to.
02:49:36 So if your kids generally want to do good, you just have to give them the, you know, the right information to work with to make those decisions correctly. And that's, that's so that's what it is. Information is not genetic, although I think, I think Psalm is, I think there is some genetic memory, but it's probably very basic stuff, you know, like the you. And it's probably, in fact, it probably doesn't even rise to the level of the octopus maze thing. All right.
02:50:06 Then we go over to rumble. All right. We got Fanny says, Oh slash, appreciate that Fanny schroot. Then we got, which of the roots that's an office reference, right? Was that from the the Dwight's own episode, like, that's like one of his sisters or something. I forget. I think, unless I'm totally wrong, I feel like that's an office reference.
02:50:39 But thank you very much. There Fanny shrew. Then we got Scotian gentlemen says, just listen to DNA destiny. And was quite quickly reminded that I did a assignment in Psych class in night or in 2021 all about those triplets, you definitely said the word Jewish more than the teacher did.
02:51:02 Yeah, everything about that was Jewish. Everything about that was Jewish. All right, then we got jafig says going to spend a week working in the desert. Maybe I'll see the appeal of living in it. Well, not if you're working, especially not right now. There's like a heat wave in the American Southwest right now. It was triple digits last couple days, and my AC is not hooked up yet because I have to fix it that there was a refrigerant leak that I now.
02:51:33 I have to re vacuum out the lines, and I got the scale for I have everything to do it. I just have not to pull the fucking lines out of the wall, and I need help doing that. So wait, there's someone's gonna help me. I just have to wait for them to get here to do that. All right, but yeah, like, it's, if you're there recently, it's probably not great. Also, right wingers treating Afro man like a hero who's fixing race relations is sickening.
02:52:00 Black pill again, yeah, yeah, yeah. I saw that. It's like, yeah, okay, I get it, yeah, I get that. What he did was look, it was genuinely funny that he made rap song. What you're talking about is Afro man. Is that black guy that made the song? I think his hit was, I was gonna go to work, but then I got high, and all the stoners thought that was hilarious. I never saw the appeal, but like, that was he was like a one hit wonder, and that was his hit.
02:52:31 I'm sure there's other songs, but not that they played on the radio, I don't think. And I guess he got raided by cops, and he made a bunch of, basically, distracts about the the cops, and the cops sued him for defamation, and he won. But it's, I mean, it's a funny story, but it you have a responsibility when you are trying to get white people to think racially, yeah, like you gate, keep that. I mean, you don't promote that is like, see, look, we're he Afro Mans with us.
02:53:05 He would fucking hate you. First of all, he would fucking hate a white nationalist. And just because they're not all bad doesn't mean you sit there. You're basically doing what the Jews would do. You're focusing on the exceptions. You're focusing on the, you know, the Cosby's of the world.
02:53:25 And it's, it's because white people are so desperate to see good in people, and especially if it's black people, because it just it, they're filled with such dread about the biology, biology reality, because of what the implications are, what that means about the Civil Rights Movement, what that means about all the non whites in our country.
02:53:47 Because it basically once they come that's why, by the way, it's important to get people to understand the biology aspect, because until they do, they don't understand the actual problem. And you're going to get all these fucking dipshit Catholics that are like, I'd rather live in a neighborhood full of nigger Catholics than white liberals and and so that's the unfortunate reality you got to get.
02:54:12 You got to get people thinking racially in terms of biology, and look if they also think about things right or religiously too, but they have to understand your religion's not going to change someone's DNA, you know.
02:54:28 And so if they if they understand the genetic component and they're religious, it's not a problem as much as if they don't understand it and they're religious, then they think, suddenly their religion will fix DNA, which it won't, yeah, but I saw that, and I was just, I was like, Come on, guys like, why are you celebrating, why are you celebrating a black cop or a black guy that made songs about white cops that he doesn't like?
02:54:53 I mean, it was funny, sort of, I guess. But also, what did he do to. It rated. I mean, it wasn't really, because there's somewhat some of these people just hate cops no matter what. And so anytime anything with cops that makes cops look bad happens, they just love it, because they just fucking hate cops. And so I don't know. Was he really rated for no reason? Was it? I don't know.
02:55:17 So anyway, yo Jimbo Rockford says I worked in a Dallas psychiatric hospital from 95 to 2001 of the blackest pills I had to swallow was realizing that most of the people I was dealing with can't be helped, and the rest aren't worth. The rest aren't worth the effort of helping.
02:55:40 I had to leave the profession because I realized these people made the world better, not by being in it. I then became a private investigator, and my estimation of what we call humanity dropped even further. It's depressing to realize most bipedal hominids we see in the backgrounds of our lives, or see in the background of our lives aren't actually human, just meat robots.
02:56:07 Yeah. I mean, that's the thing. Is, the bar is so low now the bar is so fucking It didn't used to be like this. It didn't used to be like this. The demographic problem isn't just a race problem, it is a race problem, but there's also a Racial Hygiene problem, and it just needs people need to recognize that there is, there's just human refuse floating around out there, and it needs to be cleaned up. It needs to be cleaned up.
02:56:34 There has been nothing in terms of selection pressures applied to the American people since, like, the first civil or, yeah, since the first civil war. I mean everything else, and not even that, to that extent I mean, but there have been, in fact, just negatively it's affected us because of the other wars that we go overseas to go fight. So it's, yeah, it's not good. All right, then we got Hyperborea 369 love your stuff. Devon can you?
02:57:13 Can you tell the Jews to stop sending infinity Jeets and pinos to New Zealand? The this country sucks with all the dirt meat, hi all our people. Much love from the real down under. All right. Well, appreciate that. Yeah, you guys getting a lot of the is pinos, Filipinos, I'm guessing.
02:57:35 Yeah, you know what's weird, those two. This is crazy, but it's true, I live in the middle of fucking nowhere, and there is a gas station, like, it's like the only gas station for miles. It's owned by jeetz. And guess what? There's also Filipinos running out or moving out here to take care of the boomers, like as like medical people to take care of the boomers that come out here in the winter. So now we got little fucking we got we got Jeets and pinos out here now too.
02:58:19 And it's the middle of fucking nowhere. I can only imagine what it's like in the city. Yeah, it's getting bad guys. And then Hyperborea 369 says it's just a duplicate. All right. Then we got based officer Jeremias.
Clip
02:58:41 My grandpa, Manheim, is 103 and still puttering around down in Argentina.
Devon Stack
02:59:00 I don't know why that. There we go. You got two of them. Mr. Stack, I'm sitting by my campfire at Miramax state campground in Missouri, listening live. I'm sipping on a good DRAM of bourbon. Family is asleep in the camper. Life is good. Thank you. Well, it sounds that sounds like a lot of fun.
02:59:19 Actually, mermack state campground. Where's that at? I've got family in Missouri. Actually got a lot of family in Missouri now, a lot of them congregating there. For some reason. I wonder if you're I wonder if you're near where they live. Let's see here.
02:59:45 A kind of a little more North than they are. Yeah. Well, there you go. Yeah, I bet that's, that's a beautiful that that's an I might end up there at some point. I don't know. At least I, like I said, because I have family out there, that's one, that's one of the candidates. When I think about going out of the desert, if I leave the desert, then one of the places that I would end up is Missouri, is one of the options.
03:00:27 So hopefully you're enjoying the cozy fire there. Fannie Schoot says Pitt. Undock crime says I got five on his mullet. And then on dot crime says mullet. Five banger. I can't tell if you're pro mullet or anti mullet there. Based Officer Jeremy. Oh, wait, we just did that one. It's because it gets repeated here.
03:00:58 Rupert says replay. Gang. Here, see you next time. Professor, stack, F, T, J, H, H, O, slash. All right. Then we got, let's see here, scroll, scroll, scroll, scroll, scroll, I might be it actually on rumble. All right, let me double check the other guys here, I think we have got everything covered. All right. Well, hope you guys enjoy the rest of your weekend.
03:01:31 Remember to tune in at least as of well. There might be a change in time, but definitely on Wednesday, possibly at noon, maybe more in the evening. I'll let you know as soon as I know. But tune in to outlaws. Well, there's the plaintiff, bleat of churro. He's saying good night. And in the meantime, for Black Pilled, I am, of course, Devon Stack.
Drug guy
03:02:04 Hey kid, would you like some drugs? The first one is free.
Candy Guy
03:02:10 Want to check out my van. I got some candy.
Gangster
03:02:17 Hey kid, want to join our gang and spray paint under a bridge.
Kid
03:02:24 No, no. Bug off, man, I'm going roller skating. I want to be addicted to roller skating.
03:02:36 Not crap, because we roller skate today. He will go to college tomorrow. Called people that have never roller
Brad Armstrong
03:02:48 skated. I'm Brad Armstrong, owner of roller kingdom in Reno, Nevada, keeping your kids off the streets since 1999 I
Kid
03:02:57 say no to drugs. I say no to gay.
Brad Armstrong
03:02:58 I say no to unplanned pregnancy.
Kid
03:03:00 ad
Drug guy
03:03:03 to Rupert. I say yesterday, man, this part of Kingdom is really putting us out of business.
Candy Guy
03:03:12 You said it. Man, this deal
03:03:14 sucks, but you know what, maybe we should give up this life of crime and start rollerskating. You. You.