00:06:19.840I think there was some back and forth, and they may have stepped away from the backlash.
00:06:24.200I heard he can't go to prom and graduation and stuff too.
00:06:28.740And usually that type of stuff happens when they're trying to negotiate with someone.
00:06:32.560They're like, we'll take away your rights to walk at graduation, prom.
00:06:35.460It's sort of the last thing you have in high school to leash in a senior who's about to leave.
00:06:39.820But yeah, here's someone who wrote kind of a story about it on the Facebook page.
00:06:43.720I'm writing to express concern regarding the school's decision to pursue expulsion of a senior student over the creation of a TikTok account that involved interviewing fellow students and their ability to spell words.
00:09:21.220But like that's how we're piecing together the story.
00:09:23.220And then apparently he went up the hill and they're like – they pinpointed this guy exactly because he set a fire that kind of like went, died down, and then flared back up and became the Palisades fire.
00:09:35.760And the LA fire department didn't put it all the way out was one of the problems.
00:09:39.180Exactly. So it's like disgruntled Luigi Mangione fan and then incompetent lesbian fire chiefs.1.00
00:09:44.320And all of a sudden you have the worst destructive force in or fire in L.A.1.00
00:09:49.300Maybe history. I don't know. Yeah, I think so.
00:09:51.540And then they mentioned the problem with girls he had.
00:09:54.840Yeah. And that might seem irrelevant or just a small thing.
00:09:57.440But if you see how well girls reacted to Luigi Mangione, that kind of maybe explains like, oh, I'll be the next Luigi.
00:10:04.160All these girls are going to like me. I'm finally going to get a girlfriend.
00:10:16.040I don't remember, but I know it's under the same umbrella, same type of you-know-what.
00:10:20.000It definitely had an impact if you write a festo and you go and make the attempt.
00:10:24.160So obviously everyone was watching Luigi Mangione.
00:10:26.560But yeah, this guy, Uber driver, frustrated, no New Year's plans.
00:10:30.880And then apparently one of the things he did was he went up to like the area where the fire started and he was watching a rap music video where they were lighting everything on fire.
00:10:41.200So he was really, he was really influenced, right?
00:10:44.300He was very easily a malleable type of guy who was angry and just very weird.
00:10:48.700But yeah, it all comes down to one guy.
00:10:56.220It's actually like disproportional in a good way if you're a bad guy.
00:11:00.060Yeah, it's we're probably going to see more stuff like that, unfortunately.
00:11:03.420Totally. All right. Our next story is out of L.A.
00:11:06.060It's part of what I mentioned in the intro about Portland, L.A., Seattle and New York.
00:11:09.940But there is a headline here. Inventor creates ingenious, simple device to end L.A.'s copper wire theft.
00:11:16.900The city immediately shot it down and we have some more context about it.
00:11:20.380Yeah. Los Angeles has rejected an entrepreneur's cheap and simple fix to stop the city's crippling copper wire theft crisis.
00:11:26.320and metal theft spokesman Mark James revealed to the California Post it had created a hardened
00:11:32.760cover that secures streetlights and would stop neighborhoods being plunged into darkness.
00:11:36.820The device which fastens over the lid to the wires would make it harder, louder, and far
00:11:42.340riskier for criminals to try to gain access. We have a picture of it here. The main point is that
00:11:47.900it's not like a safe or something. It's not some unbelievable thing, but basically it makes it a
00:11:54.880little harder for street rats to steal the copper wire because you essentially have to use some sort
00:11:59.680of power tool or like saws all to get it. And a lot of these people are stealing during the day
00:12:05.260or when it's light out. And basically it would just draw attention. It would be like, Hey,
00:12:09.220what the fuck are you doing? I live here. I get it increases the barrier to entry. So if you do1.00
00:12:13.440want to steal the copper wires, you're going to need like industrial machinery. Yeah. You can
00:12:17.440still get it, but it's basically a deterrent. And we know that the street rats who are stealing
00:12:21.840copper. They're not really hard workers, right? They don't have a $12,000 saw. Yeah. Well,
00:12:26.900they might if you leave your work truck open. And so this guy who's championing this, he says
00:12:32.200they would cost the city about $300 to install, are easily maintained, and would save tens of
00:12:37.040thousands of dollars it costs to repair the vandalized street lamps. But James revealed
00:12:41.280city hall chiefs shot it down, instead wanting to focus on converting to solar lamps that will cost
00:12:46.480up to $6,000 each. So that's a common Democrat thing. We got a problem. Let's not solve it.
00:12:53.280Let's spin it into going green at a much higher price point. The company presented the idea for
00:12:59.880the first time during 2022, but leaders moved ahead without it. And soon after the site was
00:13:05.300finished for some six street bridge, the wire thefts began. And basically to compare and contrast
00:13:13.900with other municipalities, James, the guy who runs this, he said, in Glendale, contractors
00:13:18.840repulled wire and within 48 hours, it was stolen again. Taxpayers paid twice for the same repair
00:13:24.460after installing. So like, that's how quick it happens. They go, oh, the copper got replenished.
00:13:29.840The street rats think like there's some fairy who comes in behind the wall waiting for the guy to
00:13:34.600leave. If you don't look, it'll reappear. And then, so after installing these locking covers,
00:13:39.780theft at that park stopped. What, uh, what's telling is copper wire theft started showing
00:13:45.280up in nearby unprotected areas. They're choosing the easiest target. So in Glendale, they started
00:13:51.240putting these locks on and all of a sudden it's like the neighboring municipalities got the
00:13:55.900thieves. We were safe. We're fine. And so basically until everybody does it in a street rat
00:14:01.660metro area, you're going to still have problems. Whack them all. Exactly. Um, and then, yeah,0.98
00:14:06.840So this article goes on to talk about how they're doing the $6,000 solar-powered lamps, which won't have copper running through them because I think it all happens at the top because the solar and then the inverter or whatever it is, it's all at the top.
00:14:20.280And so there's not wires running from the ground.
00:14:22.540And they're going to do that with like an assessment.
00:14:27.720They're going around and there's a city council, like there's going to be a vote on it.
00:14:31.040And so if you're a homeowner, it's like, hey, your end is 300 bucks to get these.
00:14:34.780so they're already getting stolen from so much they didn't want to make the simple fix and now
00:14:40.380they're going to pay out their ass um and i just want to in the backdrop of all this stuff like0.56
00:14:45.300how we've been talking about people clamoring for more taxes recently it's like why you're just0.97
00:14:49.480going to waste it here's a like compare comparative example here the initiative comes from the same la
00:14:55.660city council that spent 300 million dollars on hotel rooms for homeless people only to see 40
00:15:00.500percent of those people returned to the streets. Yeah. So it's not surprising that the stupid
00:15:05.020fucking city council who's libtard idiots are also doing dumb shit. Like they do dumb stuff1.00
00:15:10.980on both ends. Right. Yep. And then there was a tweet that kind of gives you some insight into0.95
00:15:14.920the potential conspiracy theory behind this and why this actually happened. Can you read that
00:15:18.960please? Yeah. LA banned this device that protects lampposts from having their copper stolen because
00:15:23.180it would prevent the union overtime hours generated by repairing said copper thefts.
00:15:28.260And that's the key, because when these copper thefts happen, you're replacing it, then it happens again, then you're replacing it, and you're making money.
00:15:36.640You're constantly churning the books in a way and making all the money, and the union workers do like that.
00:15:42.600And it's ironic because the unions have come a long way.0.87
00:15:45.440Now they're teaming up with street rats to rip off the taxpayer.0.94
00:16:11.880But I bet there is a connection there.
00:16:13.780And it's ironic because back in the day, unions were created so the everyday person doesn't get exploited and has rights and doesn't get taken advantage of.
00:16:23.420And now you're teaming up with the bad guys and exploiting the everyday taxpayer.
00:16:27.740Yeah. Yeah. The everyday guy is still getting screwed. Yeah. And it's just a different guy this time. It's really crazy. All right. We're going to jump over to Portland for our next story. There was a guy who was complaining about the homeless camps in front of his house that were really disrupting his life. And Portland did go to his property to make some changes, but not the changes you think.
00:16:47.200Yeah, the title is, He Asked for Help with Chronic Camps Outside His Home, Portland Cracked Down on His Hedge Instead.
00:16:54.200And you can see in the picture there, this guy is along a hedge, well, what remains of a hedge that's been completely chopped down, basically.
00:17:02.360Chris Bolton had spent months bugging the city of Portland about the latest batch of tents and trailers set up along the sides of his giant laurel hedge on the corner of Southeast Clinton and 89th Avenue.
00:17:12.520Over time, he said the leafy green shrubs had grown to shield his home from the area's persistent problems.
00:17:17.640So Bolton was utterly baffled when an employee with the Portland Bureau of Transportation showed up in early December with no intention of removing the RVs he had repeatedly reported.
00:17:26.620Instead, the worker warned Bolton that his hedge had inched too far into the public right of way, which had no sidewalk or buffer and would impede a planned stop sign at the intersection.0.82
00:17:37.480So basically the only thing protecting this guy from all the street rat homeless camps was his hedges.
00:17:42.500And then Portland comes to fix a problem and it's not the homeless street rats that are camping out.
00:17:47.500It's his hedges and now he has no barrier.
00:17:49.680So classic anarcho tyranny thing, you're begging the city for help because people aren't really allowed to sleep outside, right outside of your hedges and in your house, near your house.
00:17:59.940And they come in and they give him with the, well, you're a taxpayer, let's squeeze you, right?
00:18:28.020So this is like when he's in the part of complaining, guys, more tents are popping up.
00:18:33.060these, this RV's parked here. They're running the generator. He goes through like eight bureaucrats
00:18:38.260before getting even a guy. And then. All right. We'll come to your house. All right. We're sending
00:18:43.020someone to your house. Get this settled. It's the city council district one constituent liaison,
00:18:48.040like someone with no fucking power, you know, clipboard holder, basically. Um, and then0.96
00:18:54.000basically just on the context of how the homelessness were out there, um, the steady
00:18:58.420turn of deserted cars and roving campers is just one of many concerns among residents who say
00:19:02.960that their neighborhood has long been neglected and ignored by city leaders. The streets are
00:19:06.780crumbling. The sidewalks few and far between. Drivers speed through residential blocks with
00:19:11.600reckless abandon. The police, when called, arrive hours later or not at all. So, you know, this is
00:19:18.060the thing we've always talked about, the social contract. You got to trim your hedges, but all
00:19:22.400those services and things that we provide are either missing, incomplete, or in disarray, right?
00:19:28.560So here's a quote from a woman in the neighborhood. I used to carry a baseball bat and bear mace in my baby's stroller, said Stephanie Krause, whose family moved there in 2021. Like, wow. Women with babies is like who society is built around protecting, right?
00:19:45.000Then they'll go, bear mace is illegal.1.00
00:19:50.300Here's just a testament to how much crime was going around around this guy's house.
00:19:54.240The agency logged 432 reported incidents within a three block radius of Bolton's home in the last year, including theft, robbery, assault, prostitution, stolen vehicles, noise complaints, vandalisms, suspicious or unwanted persons, and shootings.
00:20:08.08032 of them occurred within 165 feet of Bolton's home.
00:20:11.920So that's what this guy's dealing with.
00:20:13.100The city doesn't help you at all, but they'll come and tell you about your hedges when it needs to be done.
00:20:18.600Yeah, the only thing I got going for me is these hedges.
00:20:21.160And then you are a taxpayer with a house, a.k.a. something to lose.
00:20:26.980And the street rats don't have anything to lose but their freedom, and they'll be out in two weeks, right?0.91
00:20:36.080Someone else said you have to be like a Buddha.
00:20:38.160You have to be a Buddhist to deal with this.
00:20:40.520And it's like, yeah, organize, get together. I don't know what your problem is. And then also the leftist idea that these unhoused people are like somehow noble or they're not bothering anyone there. You know, you can't deal with a little tent. Like we showed the L.A. woman who rolled her eyes when they didn't want homeless tents near the within 500 feet of the school.
00:21:02.580She rolled her eyes. I just want to give some more context to the type of people who would set up a tent or park an RV with no plans on moving it, right? Here's a quote from him. He said, they also run a loud generator all day and night. I have a tenant. I have a grade schooler. I don't want sewage seeping into my yard. Can you help?
00:21:23.120This is him on the phone with like the city liaison, a district one or whatever.
00:21:27.480A week spent went by with no response.
00:21:29.540And then he said, he sent another email, maybe 10 people all told camping on two sides of
00:28:01.240And then our last piece is in New York.
00:28:03.300Obviously, a lot of people are fleeing New York now that MomDami's in.0.82
00:28:07.540And we have some housing stats about Westchester County, which is just a suburb county north of New York City.0.97
00:28:13.660Yeah, major housing crisis is occurring right outside NYC and no one's paying attention. Housing supply in Westchester County has plummeted 64% from 2019 levels. And bidding was with double digit price growth are still commonplace. Bidding wars, I believe he meant to say, with little sign of relief.
00:28:30.520and it just compares 2019 to now, way less listings, inventory dropping. And yeah, it's just
00:28:37.140a sign of wealthy New Yorkers fleeing Manhattan and buying a suburban house in Westchester.
00:28:44.220It sounds like families is the main thing. People are just taking their families out of New York
00:28:47.620City because why would you want to keep them in with all the migrants and repeat offenders?1.00
00:28:52.320Yeah. And we have a little comparison here to Bukele in El Salvador. Obviously,1.00
00:28:57.620he's done a great job lately. And you might wonder what's everyone's perception of him after
00:29:02.240he does that great job. It's quite good. Yeah. Bukele's approval rating is nearly always over
00:29:07.30090% in the last three polls, 93, 93, and 94. I've never seen anything like this. We need to study
00:29:14.140this regime. And the point is like, just compare and contrast. We're following all these great
00:29:20.200American cities that are just in a state of decline who either don't believe they have a
00:29:24.580problem or won't acknowledge the problem because fixing it or all the solutions are right wing,
00:29:29.860right? And so we're watching our cities declined and then seeing what it looks like when someone
00:29:35.680runs it like a dictator with an iron fist, everyone is fucking happy. The result, I just0.97
00:29:42.100want to get it through all their heads, like stop electing these Muppets. You could have a great
00:29:47.180city, Portland, San Francisco, great American cities, right? And just to watch them be squandered
00:29:53.640through like women politicians who say bye0.98
00:29:56.460or speak in memes doesn't feel very good, right?0.88
00:31:29.860If you have a problem, they'll show up to fix it, and their clients even have their personal cell phone numbers.
00:31:35.160If this interests you and you want the IT support of a fully American, America-first show-watching company, go to recoil-it.com or email them at sales at recoil-it.com and mention Fleckus for 10% off your annual contract.
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00:31:56.460Thank you to Recoil IT Solutions for sponsoring.
00:33:05.380And apparently I saw a person in the comments from Wisconsin saying that there's 7 million people on the Wisconsin voter rolls when there's only 4 million people living in the state.
00:33:39.780And we covered him last week when he was saying it's like 100 million illegals that are here, not 50 million, which is already like what we thought an exaggerated number.
00:33:48.540And listen to how many illegals he said came in during Joe Biden.
00:33:52.040Bovino revealed that former DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas directed Border Patrol to quickly funnel millions upon millions of unvetted illegal aliens into the United States under Biden, realistically around 70 million illegals in four years.
00:34:06.380It was an intentional invasion facilitated by Mayorkas, who in his paranoia believed that he had to change the demographics of America to no longer be majority white in order to prevent another Holocaust from happening to him and his people.
00:34:19.520He took advantage of comatose Joe Biden to further the Jewish initiative to diversify America, and he did significantly.0.98
00:34:26.040Mayorkas is a traitor and terrorist, an enemy worse than any Muslim jihadi, and hundreds of thousands of Americans were robbed, raped, hurt, or killed because of Mayorkas.0.94
00:34:34.800Biden did not pardon Mayorkas, not even with his auto pen before he left office.0.96
00:34:39.540Why are we not demanding his arrest?0.88
00:34:41.160Americans must hold those accountable who helped destroy our country, and it all starts with Mayorkas.1.00
00:42:16.960A New Zealand woman has been left in shock after police hunted her down for a Facebook post they claimed was unwelcoming to the Indian community.
00:42:25.140I didn't realize that was part of being a New Zealander, just welcoming the Indian community.
00:42:29.440Yeah, it's actually in our constitution, mate, or something.
00:49:24.760This next segment is a really long thread and we're not going to read it all, but the
00:49:30.000gist of it's going to come in the first few slides.
00:49:33.200Pennsylvania is now criminalizing midwives.
00:49:36.220Yeah. Pennsylvania just criminalized traditional midwifery in the state with America's highest Amish population and home birth rates. While everyone was distracted, legislators passed a modernization bill with zero debate, zero transparency, and zero understanding of who they just made criminals, the midwives serving PA's most vulnerable birth communities.
00:49:54.200This is the same playbook used in New York to eliminate traditional and CPM home birth midwives under the guise of professionalization.
00:50:02.280Here's how CM certified midwife legislation became a weapon against birth freedom and why PA was the ultimate target.
00:50:10.300All through the 20th century, states used new medical and nursing practices, acts, plus public health maternal laws to squeeze out community and lay midwives.0.94
00:50:19.620Licensing was framed as safety in practice.
00:50:22.240it meant no license, illegal, no matter how, no matter your training or outcomes. So criminalizing
00:50:30.020midwifery, is that what you're getting at here? That's what they're trying to do. And that just1.00
00:50:33.960shows that they're still coming for like the nice, normal people and the Amish who want to be left1.00
00:50:39.260alone. And they're going to be funneling everyone into the big pharmaceutical business and the0.98
00:50:43.560Maxine system, whether they want it or not. And that's kind of a way you do that. And it's not
00:50:50.780going to be good. They're going to get you into the hospital system. They're going to make you
00:50:54.120do birth in the hospital. They're going to steal your placenta. Ooh. Use it in cosmetics. Isn't1.00
00:50:59.100that what they do? Yeah. Or they'll sell it or they'll get the stem cells out of it. It's very
00:51:02.580expensive stuff. Oh yeah. Um, and then they'll make your kid get a hepatitis maxine within the
00:51:07.560first hour of life. And then they'll say, Oh, it's in case he steps on a needle at the playground.
00:51:12.360He can't walk. Yeah. He's a baby. He can't walk for like a year. He's seven and a half pounds.
00:51:17.580We're good, but that's what they're going to try to do.
00:51:20.720They're going to try and get everyone, whether they want to or not, into the vaccine system, and that's how you do it.
00:51:32.000All right, our last piece, speaking of health stuff, is about alpha-gal, which is that tick-borne disease that makes you allergic to meat.
00:51:38.880We're kind of coming into tick season right now, especially in the Northeast, and we're going to read some stats and then show you something at the end that could be maybe a conspiracy.
00:51:47.580Over 450,000 Americans now have alpha-gal syndrome. They're allergic to red meat for the rest of their lives. The Lone Star tick causes it. The same tick the U.S. military released 282,000 of across Virginia in the 1960s, made radioactive with carbon-14. I missed this.
00:52:05.880Before those experiments, Lone Star ticks didn't exist above the Mason-Dixon line.
00:52:10.020Now they're in 30 states and spreading north every year.
00:52:13.300The CDC didn't even recognize Alpha-Gal as a diagnosis until 2009.
01:06:18.720It's a very high-end restaurant in Chicago, and I never went to it when I was living in Chicago, but they were all about this, painting your food.
01:06:27.840I don't fully get it, and it costs $5,500, which in some parts of the country is like six months of rent for $15 of melted ice cream and a balloon at the end.
01:06:41.920And then this is the, this is why this is the justification for why taxes need to be up because people are doing this and it's like, but you're going to spend it on Somali, right? So no, we're not doing it. Let them eat their shit.1.00
01:06:53.540But that's like what you said, it's all Instagram culture where people go, then they film it for Instagram and then it makes the restaurant look interesting. But like you're kind of removed from what you're exactly getting. You're getting like $20 worth of a product and you're spending five grand.1.00
01:07:10.200Yeah. I'm not necessarily against these types of gimmicks or whatever, but what I am against is pretending like the hand-washing chocolate stuff wasn't a little weird. It's like, did that blow your mind or something? You got chocolate all over your hands. You know what that's like. I can visualize it right now and feel it. You know, I just don't think it's a very necessary step.
01:07:30.740And what if you don't wash your hands when you go to the bathroom?
01:07:33.280Oh, but fine dining is very competitive and you got to do something to stand out, right?0.97
01:07:37.540and i think the more retarded thing you do the more you stand out yeah i wonder we have a friend0.94
01:07:43.420who's a fine dining guy i wonder what he would think about some of these gimmicks maybe i gotta0.92
01:07:48.340ask him yeah we could we have a chef expert we can uh talk to all right our next story
01:07:53.520is a pageant story there was a new miss vermont first runner up0.79
01:08:00.020So the first runner up is the woman in the blue dress,
01:08:08.120which means the winner is the woman in the red dress.
01:15:24.980When I saw this video, when I saw this video at first, I thought she had escaped from like a magician hypnotizing her event where he didn't snap his fingers to let her out of the trance.
01:15:36.360So she was still in a suggestible state, like, put the gun down.
01:22:15.140It's like, this is what my grandfather did.
01:22:17.360And it's not farming or like working in a textile factory.
01:22:21.460It's drinking syrup, smoking bloods, living for free, getting free food.
01:22:25.780Selling a little drugs on the side.0.99
01:22:26.640And we have a per capita lifetime budgetary impact of whites, blacks, and Hispanics, meaning how much money net they either put in or take out.0.89
01:22:33.760White people are contributors, $220K net lifetime, Hispanic minus $588,000 lifetime, and then black minus $751,000.0.82
01:22:43.480So it costs $751,000 to just be a black person in America.0.94
01:30:10.560Especially, I guess the main other point is with the advent of AI, all these sort of like automated, you're submitting a picture to something, you're submitting this, like, hey, I got a hair in my food, complaining to the McDonald's AI app or something.
01:30:25.520And you tell one AI, hey, put a hair in this.
01:30:28.600And then the other AI at McDonald's goes, oh, that's right.
01:40:58.420I thought it was nice that that woman was so supportive and she believes in him and was speaking to him and was reminding him of God and trying to help him fix his demons and not get so mad all the time and let his mind take over.
01:41:10.580I thought that was an Americana love story.
01:42:36.500Hey, good for you for having nine acres of land.
01:42:38.240Yeah, what a, you know, what a champagne, not a champagne problem, but what a nice problem to have to have to clear the trees off of all your land.