In the latest episode of America First, we re covering the case of Daniel Prude, a black man who died in police custody in Rochester, NY. It s a rerun of a recurring segment where a black, drug-addicted, scumbag criminal gets caught by cops and dies in custody.
00:00:11.000I am very excited to be back with you here tonight on Wednesday.
00:00:15.000We've got a lot to talk about, lots to get into.
00:00:19.000In a lot of ways, the show tonight is extremely similar to the show we did yesterday, and extremely similar to a show we did a couple of months ago about Ray Shard Brooks.
00:00:35.000And a show we did a few months ago about George Floyd, and a show we did months ago about Ahmaud Arbery.
00:00:44.000It's another episode of our favorite, or I guess another rerun of a recurring segment on this show, which is black, drug addicted, scumbag criminal gets caught by cops and dies in police custody.0.97
00:01:01.000It's one of my favorites, and it's something that we do pretty often on this show.0.96
00:01:07.000Common recurring segments we do on the show.
00:01:10.000And tonight, our featured story will be talking about one of these incidents in Rochester, New York, which maybe you've heard about this on Twitter, and we'll see if we'll be hearing about it the rest of the week.
00:01:24.000I know yesterday we covered a killing or a death, I should say, in Los Angeles.
00:01:29.000And tonight we are covering something very similar in Rochester, New York.
00:01:35.000And we've got a case of a man named Daniel Prude, a black man from Chicago.
00:01:50.000But the video just came out today and they're investigating.
00:01:54.000But in the video, it depicts this guy who is high on PCP being detained by police.
00:02:01.000And he's yelling out that he's got coronavirus and he's spitting on the police.
00:02:07.000And the police put a spit hood over his head and they force him to the ground.
00:02:12.000I think it took two, three, Officers to detain this guy and gradually he suffocates.
00:02:18.000And so it's similar to George Floyd in some ways, dissimilar in other ways, but we'll get into all the details of the case, what's going on with that.
00:02:26.000There's been some protests already, and who knows?
00:02:29.000You know, yesterday I asked the poignant question why there seem to be riots in some cities after these kinds of incidents, like in Kenosha or Minneapolis or Chicago, but not in other cities like Los Angeles.
00:02:44.000And others that we've seen, a video or a case of a dead black criminal, but no riots.
00:02:51.000So we'll see what happens in Rochester.
00:02:53.000One of the reasons I said maybe you had a riot in Kenosha, but not in L.A., is because there was a video.
00:02:58.000So I'm wondering if, because there's a video with this case, will there be riots in New York tonight?
00:03:48.000And I know that Columbia Bugle is very fond of that.
00:03:52.000I see Darren Beatty retweets it a lot.
00:03:54.000A lot of cool people seem to be on board with this.
00:03:57.000And I think even Tucker Carlson mentioned it last night.
00:04:00.000And I know that Drudge Report, they're sort of like not exactly a news source, but they're an aggregator of different links and conservative leaning.
00:04:11.000Obviously, Drudge has been having some issues lately for whatever reason.
00:04:14.000It seems like he's become more liberal or something.
00:04:18.000So, Revolver seems to be a nice replacement for that.
00:04:21.000But in any case, Revolver News put out an exclusive report earlier this week about the coronavirus.
00:04:30.000So, you have to bear with me when we read through it.
00:04:32.000But it talks about how the coronavirus lockdowns, and this is what I've been saying now for a few months, this is something that the president called from the beginning.
00:04:40.000A lot of you even understood this before I did that the lockdown in the long run is actually going to have a higher human cost, more casualties.
00:04:51.000They're measuring it in life years, which we'll get into, than the coronavirus itself.
00:04:56.000The lockdowns have turned out to be more deadly than the virus, or at least.
00:05:03.000The lockdowns have cost more life years than they have saved as a result of slowing down the transmission of the virus.
00:05:14.000And I think it's obviously very important because up until about a few weeks ago, the media was covering nonstop this second coronavirus surge and talking about the need for another lockdown or maybe permanent lockdowns.
00:05:29.000So it's very important to talk about that.
00:05:44.000But before we get into any of that, I do just want to point something out that I think is so funny.
00:05:51.000Obviously, we talked on Monday about the riots in Kenosha, and the riots in Kenosha were started because of the shooting, not the death, I guess he was just shot.
00:06:03.000I think he's paralyzed now, but the shooting of Jacob Blake.
00:06:07.000And we went into detail on Monday about the circumstances surrounding that shooting that the police were serving a warrant for his arrest at his home.
00:06:16.000He put a police officer in a headlock.
00:06:42.000It's not anything crazy, but it is funny to me.0.89
00:06:47.000And the reason why I know this and where I saw it is that old Twitter account, Reagan Battalion, who you may remember, it's run by this Jewish pedophile named Benny Politsik, I believe.0.77
00:07:00.000I don't think any of that's 100% confirmed, but we do have some sources on that.
00:07:05.000They used to antagonize me a few years ago, back when I was on Right Side Broadcasting Network.
00:07:10.000In any case, They put out a tweet today showing and exposing to the world, to my amusement, that Jacob Blake, the victim of that police involved shooting in Kenosha, his father turns out to be a huge anti Semite from his Facebook posts.
00:07:26.000And I'll read you a small sample of them here.0.63
00:07:29.000This is from Reagan Battalion, which I think is kind of funny.0.77
00:07:32.000Jacob Blake's father wrote on Facebook The Jewish media picks and chooses who is a terrorist and who is not.0.88
00:07:41.000He wrote The same pink toe Jewish people that control the interest rate.
00:07:45.000Control the media, they control minds and money.1.00
00:07:50.000Hero, the first Jews were brown, not pink, damn it.1.00
00:08:39.000I think I've changed my attitude a little bit.
00:08:42.000When I was looking at all these different cases, I'm seeing drug dealers, criminals, all sorts of people that probably belong in prison when it comes to Floyd and Jacob Blake and Rayshar Brooks.
00:08:56.000But after reading these posts, I'm starting to think maybe there's something more to it.
00:09:04.000That are just simply getting a bad rap.
00:09:06.000Maybe these are the people that built the pyramids, that erected the pyramids.
00:09:12.000Maybe these are the real chosen people by God, the original Jews.
00:09:19.000And more than that, maybe they know certain things that a lot of white people just don't.0.60
00:09:25.000I'm starting to rethink my position even on the Republican Party, all this pandering to blacks.0.84
00:09:30.000Maybe it makes sense to pandering to blacks, but not in the way that we've been doing.1.00
00:09:34.000We've been doing it wrong all this time.0.79
00:09:37.000We've been talking to them about economic opportunity zones, and we've been scapegoating the Democrats.
00:09:45.000And I don't know, after reading this and seeing what's been going on in New York City and Baltimore over the past year or so, I'm starting to think maybe there's another angle.
00:09:56.000Maybe there's another angle where we can win these people over.
00:10:00.000These real chosen people, our real closest ally, the true Israel, the true chosen.
00:10:08.000And maybe there's a way that we can bring them over to our side.
00:12:12.000You know, we've been talking a lot of shit about these criminals, we've been really not respectful to the George Floyds of the world, but.0.99
00:12:23.000Maybe our true allies, our true closest ally was right in front of us all along.0.99
00:12:27.000But anyway, we're going to move on and talk about the coronavirus lockdowns here.
00:12:33.000Very interesting report from Revolver.
00:12:35.000And like I said, Revolver is kind of new on the scene.
00:12:38.000I think they only came around like last month.
00:12:41.000And by the way, I'm not like shilling for them or anything.
00:12:44.000I'm not like being, I don't know who runs it.
00:12:46.000I'm not, you know, being paid to say this.
00:12:47.000I'm just saying Revolver is, seems to be a very good source.
00:12:52.000Aggregator of news, and I'm always looking for a good website for news because obviously I have to cover different stories every night, and there's really nothing that's that terrific.
00:13:03.000You know, I check the usual suspects BBC, Fox News, Daily Wire.su, the usual suspects, and I never really use Drudge because Drudge has always been kind of liberal, I think, really, for the past few years.
00:13:16.000But I started to see this revolver news more and more on Twitter and a lot of interesting stuff, and I guess they aggregate links in the same way that Drudge does.
00:13:26.000And it seems to be that whoever is in charge of it, whoever is aggregating the links, seems to be in alignment with America first, totally in alignment with our values, our objectives.
00:13:37.000Everything that I read on there, I like.
00:13:41.000But they came out with a really good report this week, and that's what we're going to cover first about the coronavirus lockdowns and the health consequences of the lockdowns on young people, on everybody, but specifically on young people.
00:13:55.000And this is an exclusive, it's their own methodology.
00:13:59.000But it's very interesting because the way that they look at the lockdown and the way they analyze everything that's happened over the past six months is not in terms of strictly deaths, which is what everybody's been looking at coronavirus related deaths versus lockdown related deaths.
00:14:16.000And how might we measure a lockdown related death?
00:14:19.000Maybe that's an uptick in suicides, maybe that's an uptick in drug overdoses or things like that, these kinds of deaths of despair, which might have been brought on by.
00:14:32.000The lockdowns and the social isolation that that creates.
00:14:35.000But this analysis doesn't look at it in terms of death, which is, I think, difficult to measure if you're talking about coronavirus versus non coronavirus lockdown related deaths.
00:14:48.000Because, of course, how many deaths can you really say with 100% certainty are a result of the lockdown?
00:15:07.000When you're looking at the coronavirus deaths, I think they found that only 10% or a very small fraction of the deaths actually were exclusively related to coronavirus.
00:15:17.000They said that most, the vast majority of the coronavirus related deaths had comorbidities, meaning that these are elderly people who were overweight, they had other pre existing conditions, they had other chronic conditions.
00:15:33.000And that's, I think, what people had been saying all along.
00:15:35.000If you get somebody in the hospital who's 95 years old and they've got brain disease and they've got heart disease and they've got lung disease and they're overweight and they've got cancer and then they die and they had respiratory symptoms and on the death certificate they say coronavirus, well, is that really a reason to shut down public schooling for healthy children or teenagers or college age students?
00:16:11.000So that's why the study is very interesting.
00:16:13.000And I'll read you this report here, and bear with me.
00:16:15.000It's a little bit lengthy because it explains the methodology here, but I think it's worthwhile.
00:16:21.000It says, A groundbreaking new study commissioned by Revolver News concludes that COVID 19 lockdowns are 10 times more deadly than the actual COVID virus in terms of years of life lost by American citizens.
00:16:37.000Up until this point, there had been no simple, rigorous analysis that accurately and definitively conveys the true cost of the COVID lockdowns.
00:16:46.000Accordingly, Revolver News set out to commission a study to do precisely that, to finally quantify the net damage of the lockdowns in terms of a metric known as life years.
00:16:56.000Simply put, we have drawn upon existing economic studies on the health effects of unemployment to calculate an estimate of how many years of life will have been lost due to the lockdowns in the United States.
00:17:09.000And have weighed this against an estimate of how many years of life will have been saved by the lockdowns.
00:17:15.000The results are nothing short of staggering and suggest that the lockdowns will end up costing Americans over 10 times as many years of life as they will save from the virus itself.
00:17:27.000So, again, to reiterate simply, they're comparing based on the economic data on the health toll that is caused by unemployment.
00:17:39.000They're using that to quantify the human cost of the lockdowns, and they're comparing that to the same measure, those life years that are caused by the virus.
00:17:51.000And comparing it, of course, to those life years that are saved by the lockdown.
00:17:56.000They're using unemployment as the basis.
00:17:59.000They're looking at studies that show how unemployment affects health, if that kills people, if that takes years off your life, and they're using that to quantify the human toll caused by the lockdown.
00:18:11.000It says the COVID 19 lockdown measures that Americans have had to endure for the greater part of 2020 represent one of the most dramatic, consequential, and damaging policy measures undertaken in this nation's history.
00:18:23.000For the first time in its history, America has experienced a situation so crippling and perilous that long term financial and social stability have been legitimately threatened.
00:18:33.000Standard approaches to evaluating epidemic policy responses involving the value of a statistical life have conceptual problems and are biased towards the elderly and rich.
00:18:44.000Using a life years criterion as an alternative shows that the lockdowns cost an order of magnitude more life years than they saved.
00:18:53.000Most of the publicized cost benefit analyses of COVID lockdowns have used coarse measures like lives as units rather than life years, which misleads politicians and the general public.
00:19:06.000COVID deaths disproportionately impact the oldest members of the population, whereas the economic impacts of lockdowns disproportionately harm the youngest of the working population.
00:19:17.000Who have far greater life expectancies at the time of impact.
00:19:21.000And so, again, to break it down simply, if you're looking at just coronavirus related deaths, as I said earlier, you're going to be looking at largely people that are old, people that are nearing the end of their lives already.
00:19:36.000And that's not to say that it's not tragic if an elderly person dies of coronavirus, but it is, of course, a very different thing to say that a 90 year old with all kinds of conditions coincidentally contracts a respiratory virus or some kind of respiratory.
00:19:53.000Problem, or maybe even the coronavirus, and that gets counted as a coronavirus death.
00:19:59.000This person, you know, they may be on their way to the grave already in a few years compared to a healthy person, a young person, somebody with no pre existing conditions.
00:20:11.000And of course, if you're looking strictly and only at those deaths, whether they be young people or old people, it's not taking into account the damage that is done by the lockdowns on the able bodied and young working population.
00:20:24.000If you have people that, because of Opioid abuse, or because of depression, or because of social isolation, their lives are cut short at age 22 or 23 or 24.
00:20:37.000To me, that represents a much greater human cost quantifiably than the virus hitting people that are very elderly with all kinds of health conditions.
00:20:47.000That's why this analysis, I think, is so interesting.
00:20:51.000It says Using prior research on workforce entrance and recent graduates entering into a market marred by an economic recession, empirical estimates of life year.
00:21:02.000Extensive research on job displacement can be used to estimate the economic impact in life years of starkly increased unemployment for mid to late career workers.
00:21:12.000Combining these analyses, we found that an estimated 18.7 million life years will be lost in the United States due to the coronavirus lockdowns.
00:21:22.000Comparative data analysis between nations shows that the lockdowns in the U.S. likely had a minimal effect in saving life years.
00:21:30.000Using two different comparison groups, we estimate that the COVID lockdowns in the U.S. saved between a quarter to three quarters of a million life years.
00:21:41.000So they say that the lockdowns saved at most three quarters of a million life years, 750,000 life years.
00:21:55.000So nearly 20 times as many life years cost by the lockdown as was saved.
00:22:01.000And that to me, the life years is really just a sort of an abstract way to quantify.
00:22:08.000That's maybe a more realistic unit that takes into consideration the age difference between the effect of the coronavirus on the elderly and the effects of the lockdown on the young working population.
00:22:19.000So I don't think it's so important to totally understand life year versus something else.
00:22:24.000It's just a way to quantify it, it's just a way to assign a number to the human cost on these policy measures.
00:22:32.000And once you put a number on it like that, something that's a little bit more nuanced, a little bit more controlled, and makes much more sense, I think, than just looking at roughly suicides or those deaths of despair versus the COVID deaths, which in themselves I think is pretty inaccurate information.
00:22:50.000Looking at this study, we find what I think a lot of people understood from the beginning, which is that the lockdowns are worse than the virus.
00:22:58.000The lockdowns are causing more damage than the virus.
00:23:01.000And certainly, if that's true, the lockdowns are causing more problems.
00:23:11.000If you're somebody who has been laid off from your job and you can't make ends meet and the government's not helping you, if you're not collecting unemployment, you got $1,200 at most.
00:23:26.000If you didn't get that personal paycheck protection program, you know, you're probably out of luck.
00:23:30.000Maybe you get your hours cut or you have to find work elsewhere.
00:23:34.000It's caused a lot of financial problems for people.
00:23:36.000And that's just for starters businesses closed, jobs lost, hours cut.
00:23:41.000There's complications on top of that, too.
00:23:44.000If people have their jobs cut, or even if their kids aren't going to school, then there's added complications like now you have to have the kids in the house, even if you have a job.
00:23:55.000It's difficult to go to your job when you don't know what your kids are going to be doing for most of the day when you're at work.
00:24:01.000On top of that, then there's obviously the social costs, which is most people are not prepared to abruptly and suddenly cut off all human contact with the outside world and no longer show up to a place of work, no longer show up to school.
00:24:18.000No longer socialize with friends and family, or even just use public transportation or go outside in public without gloves or a face mask or hand sanitizer.
00:24:29.000We were trending in that direction already with the advent of social media, the internet, technology.
00:24:35.000We were already heading there with higher rates of suicide, higher rates of opioid addiction, the opioid crisis in the heartland of the country.
00:24:44.000And it's only exacerbated all those existing problems.
00:24:48.000In a way that I think was unimaginable earlier this year.
00:24:52.000So we look at the lockdown, and of course, this is something that has affected everybody severely in so many different ways and exacerbated so many existing deadly problems.
00:25:03.000And not just for adults, but I think specifically and for the most part for kids, for people that are in school that are not returning or have their extracurricular activities cut, or they go back to school and they're sitting in some kind of like a tent or a box or whatever.
00:25:19.000And you look at all the data now, all this information coming out now about the virus and how it doesn't transmit on services.
00:25:28.000Actually, it didn't kill as many people as we thought it did.
00:25:30.000Actually, that second wave in August was just the delayed surge of cases that arrived late because of all the states that closed down before they got hit by it in the first place.
00:25:42.000You know, we're looking at all this information from or about the coronavirus, and we're finding that it wasn't ever that deadly or that much of a problem in the beginning.
00:25:51.000And this is what I said, I think, around back in May or June.
00:25:55.000And I'll admit, I was one of the first people to say that we should have a lockdown and to defend the lockdown and say that people should stay inside and be cautious.
00:26:04.000But it became apparent, and the facts came out within a couple of months that none of what we were told in the beginning of the year, February, March, and April, was remotely close to being true.
00:26:17.000We were told one thing one day and the exact opposite thing the next day.
00:26:22.000That it was going to be a five week lockdown and then it turned into a five month lockdown.
00:26:28.000That the coronavirus is going to spread on surfaces.
00:26:31.000That's why you need no contact delivery and you need to wipe down your envelopes with hand sanitizer and wipes and you need to wear gloves out in public.
00:26:40.000And then the next day they said, actually, it doesn't spread on surfaces.
00:26:43.000And they went back and forth and back again on that one.
00:26:47.000And then first they said that the virus is not airborne.
00:26:53.000We only said that so that we could get doctors.
00:26:56.000And nurses, the masks actually having a mask does help.
00:27:01.000And things like that just going on over the course of months and months and months until here we are now in the fall, and we're finding out that probably none of it was true.
00:27:14.000It was something that probably was going to cause more deaths than normal because it's a novel, right?
00:27:20.000It's a new virus which the population might not have been immune to yet.
00:27:24.000But we look at who was affected, and it was largely elderly people with pre existing conditions.0.99
00:27:28.000And if that's the case, then the policy from the get go should have been to.0.95
00:27:33.000Protect and shield those people from the virus and to let everybody else carry on with their lives.
00:27:40.000That's what should have been undertaken from the beginning.
00:27:43.000And now we're seeing that after five months of lockdown, we have not only had all the people who would have died anyway die from the virus, we've seen all kinds of people die who probably were going to get it no matter what.
00:27:55.000And we shielded them as best we could, but that should have been probably the baseline policy.
00:28:00.000But on top of that, now we've destroyed the economy.
00:28:03.000We've wrecked people's lives in many cases, destroyed businesses.
00:28:08.000They say that in certain parts of China, something like 20% of the restaurants will just never come back after the pandemic.
00:28:15.000I would guess it's probably a similar figure for not just restaurants, but many other businesses worldwide in the United States.
00:28:22.000You look at some parts of the stock market, and a lot of industries still haven't recovered.
00:28:27.000Everybody's bragging about the stock market today.
00:28:29.000I guess the Dow Jones hit 29,000 points, and this is largely being driven by the top.
00:28:36.000You look at the NASDAQ, the SP, it's largely being driven by the top four companies, the big tech companies Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, and a lot of other industries are still lagging behind, still have not recovered, and may never fully recover, actually.
00:28:52.000So we've destroyed the economy, wrecked people's lives, wrecked kids' lives, wrecked their school year, wrecked their extracurricular activities, wrecked families potentially, probably brought on a whole host of suicides, depression, drug abuse, and so on.
00:29:10.000Radically change the way we live our lives in a way that who knows if we'll go back with remote learning and remote work and things like that.
00:29:19.000And you look back, and honestly, it's hard to, it's hard for me to say that all this happened just because of incompetence.
00:29:28.000Because I read this report and we see what's gone on the blatant lies, the blatant flip flopping on all these issues, like I described earlier.
00:29:37.000And we look at the patterns that have emerged from this and who has benefited.
00:29:42.000And it's hard for me to say after everything we've been through with this pandemic that it was just incompetence.
00:31:47.000And who was the architect of all of this?
00:31:50.000Well, largely it was social media that peddled all of this.
00:31:54.000What was almost the first thing that they did when the pandemic started?
00:31:58.000They created new rules on Twitter and Facebook and YouTube and all the social medias.
00:32:04.000Saying that they would ban anybody for posting misinformation about the pandemic.
00:32:10.000Misinformation that, for example, said that the coronavirus was overblown and that the lockdowns were unnecessary and that maybe there are cures like hydroxychloroquine, that there are therapies.
00:33:28.000People talked about the virus for a while, and then Black Lives Matter started, and then they stopped talking about the virus.
00:33:34.000And maybe that's because you had hundreds and thousands of people gathered in the city streets without their masks, and without gloves, and without social distancing.
00:33:43.000But I guess, of course, that was okay because they're black and that's progressive and so on.
00:33:48.000So he didn't talk so much about the pandemic.0.79
00:33:50.000They had a two month intermission there.
00:33:53.000And then once the BLM protests subsided, it came back with a vengeance just in time for the conventions.
00:34:01.000And just as the poll numbers began to narrow, they came back with all this criticism about how the president was failing on the pandemic and there's another surge and we need to shut down the economy again, conveniently, as the economy has been coming back stronger than ever.
00:34:18.000And now, as BLM has resumed and the death and case numbers on a daily basis are falling and have fallen since August, now they don't talk about it anymore.
00:34:32.000It seems like the entire pandemic really was just pushed on us insofar as it was useful for the richest people in the world to gobble up market share, to expand their control and their surveillance over the population, and for the Democrats to sabotage Donald Trump in the election.
00:35:13.000Well, for somebody like Jeff Bezos, the richest man in the history of the world, who made $70 billion since the pandemic, there is, hypothetically, theoretically speaking, a $70 billion.
00:35:25.000Billion dollar incentive for him to put that together.
00:36:11.000Well, if you're going to begin to ask that question, you might want to establish the motive, who might have been involved, things like that.
00:36:17.000And I start to see a pretty clear picture of what's going on here.
00:36:28.000We heard all these stories back five months ago about healthy, Able bodied young people dying of coronavirus, then you look at the data and you find that virtually every single person, virtually everybody who died from coronavirus was overweight and had pre existing conditions and was elderly and had comorbidities.
00:36:50.000So we're finding out that not only is this disease less deadly than the flu, but the people that it's killing are people that all diseases, any disease, would kill, right?
00:37:02.000So, but I think a lot of people have been out of this for a long time.
00:37:06.000We've been talking about this for a while, and I'll admit, you know, I'll be the first one to admit people called me out initially because I was one of the first ones to say we should have a lockdown and we got to take this seriously and all that.
00:37:53.000And we were being told that kind of information.
00:37:56.000And then as new information came out and we saw these inconsistencies and the lies and the real data, it became obvious after a matter of months what was going on, right?
00:38:09.000And like I said, and I talked about this back, I think, in the beginning of the summer when it was all about coronavirus, they were just flip flopping on every aspect of it.
00:41:21.000Like I said, it's our favorite segment on the show.
00:41:25.000And we're doing it to death lately, but it's because it happens so much now.0.71
00:41:30.000We've got another black guy killed by cops or dead at the hands of cops, I guess you could say.0.91
00:41:36.000And in this case, you've got wouldn't you know it, a black guy who is high on PCP running naked through the streets, spitting at the police, saying he had the coronavirus, and he was kneeled on by the police.0.96
00:42:45.000Last March, during a news conference on Wednesday morning, Free the People called attention to the death of Daniel Prude.
00:42:53.000Organizers say Prude was in the midst of a mental health crisis when Rochester police responded to the 400 block of Jefferson Avenue on March 23rd.
00:43:03.000They say that Prude was unarmed and unclothed.
00:43:06.000And he complied with officers' orders.
00:43:09.000They say officers mocked Prude and placed a bag over his head.
00:43:13.000Prude's death was caused, they say, after one officer put his knee on Prude's back, another held his legs, and a third pushed Prude's head into the ground with his full weight.
00:43:23.000Joe Prude said his brother was cut off from oxygen for nearly 20 minutes.
00:43:28.000He says his brother was taken to the hospital and put on life support.0.99
00:43:33.000He said, They treated my brother like a piece of garbage.1.00
00:43:57.000When I see people like Daniel Prude and George Floyd, that's the kind of thing I'm thinking.
00:44:01.000I look at George Floyd, high on fentanyl and meth and using counterfeit money and robbing pregnant women at gunpoint, and I think, what do you do with the trash?
00:44:25.000So it says an autopsy report from the Monroe County Medical Examiner's Office ruled Prude's death a homicide, which, by the way, means nothing.
00:44:34.000Under the cause of death was listed complications of asphyxia in the setting of physical restraint, excited delirium, and acute.
00:46:30.000But then you read this report and it gives you some more details.
00:46:33.000It says after the spitting began, after Daniel Prude was spitting at the police officers, police officers covered Prude's face and head with a white spit hood intended to protect police from a suspect's bodily fluids.
00:46:50.000Prude had claimed to officers he was infected with the coronavirus, which likely raised concerns about his spitting.
00:47:21.000Cooperating while spitting on the police and yelling, I've got the coronavirus?
00:47:27.000That's a very different story right out of the gate.
00:47:30.000What you're reading in every mainstream news source is this.
00:47:33.000They put a hood on his head and they beat him up, and then they forced his head into the pavement.
00:47:38.000Then you read this article, and it says, Oh, he was spitting at the police, saying at Corona they put a spit hood to protect them from his bodily fluids.
00:47:46.000It says, The hood was the only covering he was given.
00:47:49.000Prude remained naked in temperatures just above freezing as light snow fell throughout the episode.
00:47:55.000Four minutes after the police arrived, officers stood around in a semicircle around Prude as he sat in the middle of Jefferson Avenue, his hands still cuffed behind his back.
00:48:04.000He yelled unintelligibly, then clearly shouted, Give me that gun, give me that gun, I mean it.
00:48:10.000As he yelled, he scooted on his rear toward an officer and began trying to get to his feet.
00:48:15.000Well, you know, that certainly sounds like a very cooperative person.
00:48:19.000That sounds like a cooperative, non threatening thing to do.
00:48:23.000To beg for a police officer's gun and while naked and covered in a spit hood, because you're spitting at everyone, you try to get to your feet, presumably to grab a cop's gun.
00:48:34.000You know, all of that says to me cooperation.
00:48:38.000It says later in the article that the autopsy report, in addition to calling the death a homicide and that the cause of death was asphyxiation, the autopsy report also listed several health conditions, including two different lung diseases, heart inflammation, and a brain injury that were also complications of the death.
00:49:56.000So clearly, just like with all these other blacks, just like with all these other criminals that die in police custody, very easy to avoid this.1.00
00:50:14.000Then, in addition to that, don't resist arrest.
00:50:18.000In addition to that, don't be high on PCP and don't resist arrest.
00:50:23.000When you've got lung disease, when you've got heart disease and brain disease, this is a guy who, if he was playing football, probably would have died.
00:50:31.000If he participated in a foot race down the block, ran a mile, he probably would die.
00:51:14.000You've got somebody who's naked and on PCP.
00:51:16.000This is a drug that gives people superhuman strength.
00:51:19.000They detain him and he happens to die because he's got all these diseases and drugs in his system.
00:51:24.000And now it's another indication of racism in the system, right?
00:51:30.000And it's so infuriating to see this time and again because even when you look at the mechanics of how this works, what they did to this guy in itself doesn't choke people.
00:51:41.000Getting on somebody's back does not choke somebody, getting on somebody's head does not choke somebody.
00:52:06.000You choke somebody by grabbing their esophagus, right?
00:52:10.000You cannot choke somebody by pushing their head down.
00:52:14.000You cannot, generally speaking, choke somebody by putting your weight on their back.
00:52:18.000Now, maybe if you put like a car on somebody's back, you're going to have problems, but generally speaking, you've got a big individual, somebody goes on your back with partial weight.
00:52:29.000I don't believe that that is going to asphyxiate somebody.
00:52:32.000Moreover, if somebody is saying, I can't breathe, It takes air to say words like that.
00:52:39.000If your breathing is restricted, it's probably difficult to talk, right?
00:52:45.000So, in any case, you know how this works.
00:52:47.000There's a million problems wrong with this story.0.99
00:52:49.000Every time a black criminal or some black junkie dies in police custody or is killed by police in a shootout, we're supposed to believe that the only reason that this happens is because of racism.0.99
00:53:03.000The reason that this happened is because white police.0.99
00:53:06.000Used excessive force against a black man for no reason, strictly because he was black, simply because of the color of his skin.0.67
00:53:15.000But nobody ever starts at the beginning of the story, which is you've got a population, you've got people that are committing crimes, they're doing drugs, they've got conditions, they resist arrest, and so on.
00:53:28.000And now, probably and potentially, we'll see another city burn to the ground, more riots, more problems, if not now, in the future, when another one of these things happens, because of this.
00:53:42.000And honestly, at a certain point, you have to say that there's really two problems here.
00:53:48.000The problem is that you've got this population that's committing all these crimes.
00:55:02.000The other problem is that the media lies all day long.
00:55:06.000And we've covered the crime aspect of it, but maybe the bigger problem is that the media is totally complicit in promoting all of this, promoting this deception, promulgating all these falsehoods.
00:55:21.000When it comes to a story like this, why does the media not?
00:55:25.000The PCP, the Spit Hood, going for the gun, all these different things.
00:55:30.000When it's Ray Sharp Brooks, why don't they talk about the fact he was drunk driving?
00:55:33.000Why don't they talk about the fact he stole the cop's taser or George Floyd?
00:55:38.000That the official cause of death was heart disease.1.00
00:55:42.000And we all know the answer, but to me, that is almost the bigger problem because you've got all these riots happening and that is just another consequence of the black criminality.0.98
00:55:53.000But to me, the Maybe even the bigger cause of all that is that the media is, in particular with the riots, the media is fomenting all of this racial animus.0.99
00:56:12.000And the people that set the fires are accountable for that.
00:56:17.000But at what point do you say that the media that is filling the heads of these people with lies and promoting this?
00:56:25.000On social media and promoting this on television and instigating this.
00:56:29.000And then when the riots do happen, they cover it up.
00:56:32.000At what point do you hold them accountable?
00:56:34.000How is there no accountability on their part?
00:56:36.000I find it fascinating that the president will put out a tweet that Twitter disagrees with the information in it and they're going to slap a fact check on it.
00:56:46.000Or the president will put out a tweet and Twitter will put a warning on it and disallow people from liking it or seeing certain analytics about the tweet.
00:56:54.000And conservatives and right wingers all day long are banned.
00:56:59.000Blacklisted, shadow banned, suppressed in search results and through the algorithm because it's disinformation or it's Russia or it's whatever.
00:57:09.000But there's no responsibility on the part of the media when it comes to things like this.
00:57:31.000They promote certain falsehoods and they just get away with it.
00:57:35.000And I guess maybe the question after that is well, who would hold them accountable?
00:57:41.000That's a question that you have to ask and that people are going to have to ask increasingly in this country how does power work in this country?
00:57:48.000You know, as we've been talking for the past couple of days about the coup that's coming up, this color revolution that's going to happen with this election, you're going to have to ask yourself well, what happens if social media intervenes?
00:58:03.000To install Joe Biden in a coup attempt against the elected president.
00:59:01.000Because all these institutions represent the most powerful institutions that there are.
00:59:06.000And more than that, they are the most powerful institutions in this country, which is the most powerful country in the world.
00:59:14.000This empire, which dictates what goes on not just in these borders, but in the entire world, which sets the rules and the standards and the supranational institutions and precedents and things like that.
00:59:27.000Those institutions control this empire.
00:59:31.000So, who's going to stop Facebook, Google, Apple, and Amazon, the lords of the American empire?
01:00:36.000And the point of all of this is to infiltrate these institutions, whatever they are, to build our own institutions, to further the infiltration so that we can punch back against them.
01:00:48.000You look at the bureaucracy of the United States.
01:00:51.000If we could get people into the bureaucracy who are friendly and like infestation, we could fill up certain parts of the government or certain parts of different institutions in the country with our guys.
01:01:47.000And if you're tired of hearing the same old, same old, which is, oh, 13 do 50, and oh, Black Lives Matter's a hoax, and blah, blah, blah, all the stuff we've been talking about for months.
01:01:58.000What we all really need to get on the same wavelength on is creating or infiltrating institutions that actually pack a punch, that kind of collective action.
01:02:11.000Because I think that's what should terrify people.
01:02:13.000I don't even think people think about this.
01:02:17.000Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google are the four biggest companies in the world.
01:02:22.000You might think big tech, and you might think big tech is like a part of the economy or a part of the market.
01:02:28.000Big tech is becoming all of the market.
01:02:31.000Big tech is becoming all of the stock indices.
01:02:34.000When you talk about the stock market going up, increasingly you're talking about these four companies going up that are the biggest in the history of the world.
01:02:42.000And that's where almost all the money is invested in these indices.
01:02:46.000In these stock indices, there are controlled and directed by these four companies.
01:03:44.000But in some ways, big tech and these powerful forces outside the government are almost.
01:03:51.000The government power proceeds from them.
01:03:55.000Government power is an extension of them because it is these companies which are directing the traffic in the bureaucracy, in the elections.
01:04:02.000They're funneling the donor money, they're creating the information ecosystem that elections take place within.
01:04:34.000Okay, meanwhile, you're being raped.0.94
01:04:36.000You're being gang raped by four giant tech companies at the same time while you're, you know, bickering back and forth at Hillsdale College about the originalist interpretation of the Constitution.0.97
01:07:26.000How many different entries do we have to have in that long list of Groyper curses before people realize you just shouldn't mess with me?0.96
01:09:56.000With the AF streaming, I don't think people even realize what an undertaking it is because it's not as simple as using a service because we can't use services.
01:10:04.000That's the whole reason I'm creating a platform, you know?
01:10:07.000If it was as simple as like calling a vendor who does streaming service and calling somebody who does this or that service, we could have had that website set up in two weeks.
01:10:20.000But we are literally having to create new technology to make it cost effective and to make it proprietary and independent.
01:10:29.000So, I mean, what we're working on right now does not exist.
01:10:43.000But we were working with P2P to cut down on the bandwidth costs.
01:10:47.000And we might still go with that in the end.
01:10:49.000But we're actually one of our developers who is brilliant, who is a total top notch, world class guy, just from his resume, but also just from what he's able to do.1.00
01:11:01.000If I told you some of the places he's worked, you'd be like, holy smokes, Groypers are everywhere.1.00
01:11:07.000You'd be like, wow, Groypers are really rising up.1.00
01:11:10.000Our world class programmer, we've got a few of them actually.1.00
01:11:13.000We've got Zoomer Dev in there, we've got my old pal.
01:11:16.000I don't want to dox him because I think he's back trying to reintegrate into some normie work, but the guy who's built my old website, he's there, another world class guy, and we've got this other guy on there who's working on this proprietary thing, and it's new, and it's going to blow literally everything that exists out of the water if we're able to pull it off.
01:11:38.000It's coming along, and it's a difficult thing because, like I said, we're really building it from scratch.
01:11:44.000If we're able to pull this off, it's going to be huge.
01:11:47.000And people say all the time, like, I saw, for example, we talked last night about some person on Twitter who was like, oh, Nick blocked me.
01:13:05.000Well, I think the big problem with the resolution of World War I was that the United States intervened on the side of the British and the French because.
01:13:18.000What you had was basically a stalemate in World War I until the United States intervened.
01:13:23.000And that we intervened pushed it decidedly in the favor of our side.
01:13:29.000And that allowed, at the Treaty of Versailles, Germany in particular to get totally screwed over.0.97
01:13:34.000And I know this is the conventional wisdom, but it also happens to be true.0.69
01:13:38.000And to take from them their industry, and to take from them their ability to have a military, and to take from them their territory, it created some problems in the Balkans.0.94
01:13:48.000And so, you know, the real problem, I mean, what was really happening with both world wars in that first half of the 20th century, it was really the real story there is the rise of Germany.
01:14:03.000The real story is that Germany is unified in 1871.
01:14:07.000You've got the Industrial Revolution happening, and Germany, through its industrial power, is rising to match Britain, which had been the hegemon in Europe.
01:14:20.000And the story of World War I and World War II is how do you sort of transition from a situation, this balance of powers in the 19th century, where Great Britain is.
01:14:35.000The hegemon, right, and is more powerful and has naval power, to now having Central Europe, having Germany specifically rise against Britain and sort of challenge them for hegemony in the region.
01:14:45.000That's sort of what the world wars were sorting out.
01:14:49.000And that's the big mistake of World War I to try and totally crush them.0.98
01:14:52.000It doesn't work because they have to deal with Germany.0.89
01:14:55.000And in some ways, to this day, that's an issue.
01:14:57.000That's in some ways kind of what Brexit was about this political battle between the continental powers of Europe versus Britain.
01:16:07.000A lot of people are like trying to fix the government and everything.
01:16:11.000In some ways, we kind of have to wait to implement what we want until we or somebody aligned with us is in some meaningful way running the government.
01:16:21.000And the reason for that is because, you know, let's say, for example, last week somebody said, well, we should raise taxes on the wealthy so the government can get more tax money and, you know, then we'll be able to not go into more debt.
01:16:34.000And I'm thinking, why would we want to fund this government more?
01:16:38.000Why would we want to give this government more money?
01:16:41.000The money that we give the government will be used to hurt us.
01:16:44.000So, ostensibly, if there's anybody who's like us who is giving up more money in taxes, using their capital as people that are aligned with us and giving it to the government so that they can use it against us, why is that a policy we would be in favor of?
01:16:58.000And Paul Gottfried actually talks a lot about this.
01:17:01.000Paul Gottfried calls himself a libertarian.
01:17:04.000And he says he's not a libertarian because he's in favor of rights or total freedom or permissiveness.
01:17:11.000He says he's a libertarian because the state is left wing.
01:17:15.000And the state, insofar as it is big and powerful, is enforcing the hegemony of left wing ideas and policies and values and the left wing agenda and things like that.
01:17:28.000Now, I wouldn't go that far, but I definitely don't want to empower the government any further so long as they're our enemy.
01:18:50.000You know, I got to say, playing games with people from the live chat again was kind of refreshing because I used to play games with people from viewers, or I used to play games with viewers from the show.
01:19:06.000All the time when I first started out because there weren't that many people watching the show.
01:19:11.000So I would do a gaming stream and I just invite random people in Discord to play Fortnite or whatever.
01:19:16.000And it turns out that's actually how I met a lot of people that I'm friends with today.
01:19:20.000Now, at some point during like Groyper Wars or during that debate with Trainwrecks TV, there were just so many people watching the show.
01:19:31.000There was just like an avalanche of people.
01:19:33.000There was no way to accommodate everybody.
01:20:09.000It was looking at the different voting demographics.
01:20:13.000In 2016, during the election, and showing like, here's what the result would have looked like if only white men voted in 2012.
01:20:20.000Here's what the result was in 2008, and so on for all the different demographics.0.66
01:20:26.000And I said, gee, white men are the only ones making the right decision, the obvious decision, voting Republican.0.68
01:20:33.000And of course, and that's not to speak so much about the candidates, but so much about common sense.0.98
01:20:38.000They're the only ones that aren't crazy liberals like everybody else, like women, like blacks, like Hispanics, like Jews, gays.
01:20:46.000And that was the beginning of a long process of looking into these different groups and realizing, you know, basically rejecting equality, rejecting equality in all its forms.0.95
01:22:56.000I mean, and it's funny, I put this on my alt Twitter account recently.0.81
01:23:00.000I said that I was like, you know, everybody talks about demographics and like, Oh, it's whites and non whites.
01:23:06.000Everybody talks about, like, oh, it's whites and it's this demographic time bomb of when the non whites outnumber the whites.0.58
01:23:13.000I said, but you know, it's also all these other groups that you got to look at.0.77
01:23:15.000It's not strictly whites and non whites, it's really white men and everybody else, right?
01:23:21.000It's white men being displaced, not just by non whites, but by white women and non whites and Jewish people and homosexuals and Muslims and trans and all these different categories.0.65
01:23:38.000And it's like, who are the inventors, the presidents, the pioneers, settlers, explorers, conquerors, kings?
01:23:46.000Who are all those people that created?
01:23:48.000Who is the golden goose that laid all these golden eggs?
01:23:53.000It was a very specific demographic, a very specific demographic, a narrow demographic.
01:26:29.000Anyway, Joe, so that's a long tangent there, but true, but true.
01:26:37.000Joe the King says, Hey, Nick, check out the video by Father James Altman.0.60
01:26:42.000You cannot be Catholic and a Democrat.
01:26:44.000He speaks to why Catholics have to vote according to Catholic teaching, which is antithetical to the pro abortion and anti family Democrat BLM platform, and calls out leftist priests and bishops.
01:27:05.000And, you know, I've seen some liberal Catholics say, oh, you can't vote for Trump because Trump is like, or I saw one trad cat say, like, you can't vote for Trump because he's pro LGBT.0.68
01:27:34.000Robert says, I love how there are super chatters who are worried about Amazon delivery drones or asking questions like, when will people start dressing smart and wearing suits again?
01:27:44.000I mean, we're about three months away from some George Floyd type Nibba kicking down your door and like blasting you in the face with a shotgun for being white.0.99
01:27:56.000And people are like, why can't people dress nice anymore?0.98
01:27:59.000What's going to happen when Amazon drones are making noise?
01:29:07.000I don't know if you know enough people with Asperger's, but at a certain point, you can kind of pick out certain traits and you could just see it in his eyes.0.75
01:29:15.000I can't articulate exactly what it is, but you look at his eyes, it's the way they look, and he just looks autistic.
01:29:23.000I could just tell before I even heard him talk, I'm like, yeah, this guy's got it.0.61
01:37:40.000I mean, I've seen some things that have like stuck with me, but I can honestly say I've never seen anything that's like traumatized me so much I couldn't get over it.
01:38:04.000And I remember them because they were, I mean, they were pretty graphic, but I've never seen anything that was like, oh, it keeps me awake.
01:38:55.000That's what happens without the lockdown.
01:38:57.000That's what happens without the lockdown when people just get that mind virus of social media and atomization, social isolation, atheism, all these neuroses and pathologies.
01:39:22.000How many people you know that are depressed, anxious, they've got bipolar, they've got a thing, you know?
01:39:28.000And there's something to that, I think, in everybody.
01:39:31.000It's the kind of society we've created.
01:39:33.000There was a really good article that Sean Last actually posted.
01:39:37.000Sean Last, he used to work with Alternative Hypothesis.
01:39:40.000There's a really good article on his website about psychological anguish, psychological suffering.
01:39:46.000And talking about how the liberal view of history is that somewhere around the Enlightenment, things just started getting exponentially better, and things will always get better, and things unquestioningly are better in every way.
01:40:01.000And it's true that since the Enlightenment, technology has gotten better.
01:40:05.000It's true that materially we're more wealthy or prosperous than before, but how do you define better?
01:40:12.000You know, people like Steven Pinker and others will say, well, look at this index of global poverty, it's gone up, and look at this.
01:40:18.000United Nations figure that says whatever.
01:40:23.000But if you look at psychological suffering, you'll find that it's sort of inconsistent.
01:40:28.000In other words, people's psychological health does not really correspond with these increases in productivity or increases in work saving devices.
01:40:43.000Or what is that phrase I'm thinking of?
01:40:50.000With these improvements in technology or prosperity, because you've seen that at different times you have more suicide or more depression, and it's, you know, technology and wealth is not everything, clearly.
01:41:03.000There are some things that have obviously, the technology and these other forms of progress, it's been detrimental to our lives in other ways.
01:41:14.000And it was already like that, and the lockdown just exacerbated it.
01:42:23.000Well, I don't know enough about the middle class in Russia to speak on that, but I will say that you take a lot for granted over there.1.00
01:42:32.000To say you want something like 1917, do you know what you're talking about?
01:42:35.000I mean, maybe you do if you live in Russia, but after 1917, you'd not only have a violent revolution, but then you've got Five years of civil war, and then you've got terror and famine, and you've got all these problems.
01:42:49.000And that is the problem inherently with disorder.
01:42:51.000That is why, as conservatives and right wingers, we are naturally against, almost necessarily against, most and all revolutions.
01:43:01.000Because even a bad order is better than disorder.
01:43:07.000Because what comes out of disorder is vastly worse.
01:43:11.000No matter how bad the order that prevails in the country is, disorder will be worse.
01:43:54.000The American Revolution, in a lot of ways, was really kind of like a civil war, actually.
01:43:59.000So, I mean, was the American Revolution really a revolution?
01:44:03.000I guess that's another question, but I don't know if I go as far as to say, oh, Putin is so bad that you have to have this totally destabilizing event that could go in any direction.
01:44:13.000So, Anand says, selfish, you know, Putin is the Leviathan.
01:44:18.000Anand says, selfish boomers are going to watch their grandkids kill themselves so they can live three years longer.0.92
01:44:24.000That's exactly what we're talking about.
01:44:27.000Hannibal Respector says, watching the media swing back and forth between pushing COVID regulations and supporting BLM protests shows just how much control they have over the public.
01:44:38.000People watch these large leftist gatherings and completely forget about social distancing and masks, but then see a crowd on a beach and get angry that they're not obeying the rules.
01:49:03.000Tooth Harvester says I heard that Fauci was also one of the people who spread the lie that AIDS was a public pandemic that put everyone at risk rather than a sickness among homosexual men that resulted from their practice of having thousands of unprotected sexual encounters.0.70
01:49:18.000Yeah, Fauci, that doesn't surprise me at all.
01:49:20.000I haven't heard that, but it wouldn't surprise me.
01:49:24.000Robert says, Do you think that if there was no President Trump, there would be no coronavirus?
01:49:29.000It seems like they pulled this out of the bag to derail him.
01:49:32.000I don't know if there would be no virus, but I think it probably would have been similar to like swine flu.
01:49:37.000You know, I think it would have been like swine flu because, in almost every aspect, it's like what made this such a big thing is the media.
01:50:45.000I've been using the same Yeti microphone, Blue Yeti microphone, for years, and it cost $130.
01:50:54.000The webcam, I don't use a webcam anymore.
01:50:57.000Somebody donated a camera, but my old webcam, which I used for a long time, cost me $150.
01:51:06.000The computer, the computer is probably the most expensive component, and that cost me.
01:51:13.000I want to say $800, $900 with monitors, everything.
01:51:21.000I built it myself, but you know, with monitors, case, everything factored in cost me probably about $800, $900.
01:51:30.000I did then upgrade my graphics card, then I got like a $600 graphics card, which I think is unnecessary for streaming if you want to know the truth.
01:52:54.000Says the wagee in the drive thru today was a flamboyant gay, and your voice took over my inner monologue saying, Don't get AIDS in my food.1.00
01:55:57.000Yeah, you can never relax anywhere, but specifically in certain scenarios.1.00
01:56:02.000Really Good Comics says, not to sound racist, but most of these black people, wild beast criminals, should be kept in a concrete cellar forever and only fed raw grain.1.00
01:58:09.000Now, I'm not saying anything unreasonable.
01:58:11.000I'm not saying anything unreasonable, but this idea that it should be like criminalized or looked down upon if somebody who's like, you know, late 20s is going out with somebody who's 19.
02:03:07.000Well, yeah, and they do that with everything.
02:03:09.000They do that already in Europe with the crime statistics.
02:03:12.000They don't even publish the race of the criminals in certain countries because there's an obvious disproportionate representation with migrants and Arabs and blacks, and of course.0.98
02:03:24.000So it's only a matter of time before they just start taking away things that blacks are not excelling in or that don't paint a good picture, a pretty picture of blacks.0.92
02:03:33.000Standardized testing, literacy tests, et cetera, et cetera, math.0.89
02:03:39.000You know, instead of trying to raise these populations to a level which is, you know, acceptable or whatever, they want to lower the standard, which is, you know, that's how it always goes.
02:03:51.000Wooza says Jaden said you, Jake, and Beardson all teamed up against him and that he is actually the best Mario Party player.
02:03:58.000And that Jaden got the star for best minigame player, so he's the best at minigames and not Beardson.
02:04:03.000Well, I would say to Jaden that we didn't all gang up on him.
02:06:50.000Kevin Brose says: if the military scales their presence to areas where demographics and crime is highest, could Trump finesse a long-term occupation of black neighborhoods?
02:07:00.000They could claim racism, but the data prove those areas as drug and human trafficking hotspots.
02:07:05.000Is that too abrasive for Trump's second term?
02:07:08.000It might be abrasive politically, but honestly, what does he have to lose?
02:07:13.000You know, I think that if he restored law and order in those cities, it is difficult to say whether or not that would help him in those neighborhoods.
02:07:23.000Because the thing is, if that just quietly was happening, I don't think it would win him a ton of support with whites in the sense that, like, I think that the only reason the riots might help Trump is because white people will vote for him to put down the riots.
02:07:38.000I think if riots are not happening, nobody's going to vote for Trump for preventing riots.
02:09:29.000He could be, you know, the Russian, maybe he's NASA.1.00
02:09:32.000Somebody, okay, I'm going to tell everybody that ass mad woman super chatter.0.92
02:09:40.000You know, when I say they're all the same, that super chatter sent me an email last night saying, you know, you were really flippant about my super chat about the Federal Reserve.0.98
02:09:49.000If you don't start making your whole show about the Federal Reserve, I'm going to tell everybody that ass mad woman super chatter.0.93
02:13:20.000Polish American Groyper says, Hey, Nick, all I'm saying is that all people that are following Groyper underscore Polish on Twitter aren't gay.1.00
02:13:29.000Not to imply anything, but nah, JK, you straight, even though these nibbies on your dick.1.00
02:17:57.000My mom makes dinner, you know, so mostly healthy stuff.
02:18:02.000I'll have a little bit of ice cream every now and again and, you know, the fast food, probably more than your average person, but I take care of myself.
02:18:09.000The big thing is the pop and the alcohol.
02:18:13.000It's always the drinks, it's the sugar, the high fructose corn syrup, and it is the alcohol.
02:18:18.000Honestly, with McDonald's, It is bad for you in some ways, but it is not bad for you in other ways.
02:18:25.000I think the real killer is not if you have a Big Mac, which is what?
02:18:29.000It's meat, it's bread, and yeah, there's like trans fats, and the way it's prepared is unhealthy, but I think there's a big difference between you get a McDouble and fries and a glass of water versus you drink a big gulp every day and you drink a lot on the weekends and you eat a lot of like candy or things like that, you know?
02:18:49.000So I think as long as you're eating just things from like the main food groups, you're all right, and you're not running a.
02:18:55.000Calorie surplus, you should be fine, right?
02:20:39.000How about I'm gonna get a Big Mac, I'm taking a hot shower, and I'm waking up at noon, and I'm gonna watch Chicago PD on Amazon Prime, and you worry about yourself, all right?1.00